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B. C. FRIDAY MORNING. JULY 7,1911\nNO. 71\nBIG CONSTRUCTION\nHeavy Work from Kamloops\nto Hope\nw. p: tierney gets\nSECTION OF LINE\nTotal Cost Eighteen Millions.\nTo Be Completed in\nTwo Years\nWith the contract for the construction of a section of the Canadian\nNorthern railway between Hope and\nKamloops closed. W. P. Tierney, the\nwell known contractor, reached the city\nlast night and registered at the Strathcona.\nThe section for which Mr. Tierney\nhas been given the contract by the\nNorthern Construction Co. and P.\nWelsh of Spokane represests a particularly heavy, portion of the 173 miles\nwhich are to be built between the two\npoints and extends from North Bend\nto Lytton and will cost, according to\nthe estimates of engineers, approximately $1,000,000.\nAlong the line between Hope and\nKamloops, whloh will cost nearly $18,-\n000.000 .Mr. Tierney estimates that\nfrom 26 to 30 tunnels would have to be\nconstructed, which will range from ?>0\nto 2,000 feet. The work will occupy\ntwo years.\n. Before leaving for Nelson Mr. Tierney arranged with his son, George Tierney, to commence the building of the\nwarehouses and camp buildings at\nNorth Bend.\nMr. Tierney will be here until the\nbeginning of next week in connection\nwith some (Steam shovel work which\nhe is carrying on for the C.P.R. at\nWade.\nDetailed Contracts Awarded\nVANCOUVER, B.C.; July 6\u2014The\nNorthern Construction Co. of Winnipeg\n. and P. Welch of Spokane, contractors\nfor the building of the 163 mile section\nof the Canadian Northern railway between Hope \u25a0 and Kamloops, have\nawarded sub-contracts as follows:\nPalmer Bros. & Henning of Vancouver, Hope to Tale, 14 miles; Barnes &\nJordan, Spokane, Yale east 14 miles;\nGeorge Chow, Spokane, 5 1-2 miles;\nGeorge  Cunningham  & Co., Tacoma,\n5 1-2 miles; W. P. Tierney, Vancouver,\n11 miles; B. A. Griffin & Welch, Spokane, 19 miles to Lytton; Grant, Smith\n6 Co., Seattle, Lytton   to   Spence's\nBridge, 23 miles; Twohy Bros., Portland, Spence's Bridge, east 41 miles;\nGrant, Smith & Co., 60 miles to Kamloops.\nThe work will prove the heaviest\nsince the construction of the C.P.R.\nthrough the Rockies and Selklrks and\nwill cause an expenditure of from $15,-\n000,000 to $18,000,000. The grade will\nhave to be blown out of solid rock\nalong steep banks and the canyon of\n. the Fraser river. In all three miles of\ntunnels will have to be driven, two having lengths of over 2,000 feet.\nThe contractors have already wired\nfor their outfits and three weeks will\nBee the construction camps along the\nroute. Owing to the conditions of the\ncountry difficulty will be experienced\nin securing camp sites. A majority of\nthese camps will be located on the\nC.P.R. or opposite side of the river,\nwhich will be spanned at frequent intervals by wire suspension bridges to\nfacilitate the transportation of equipment and supplies. Two years is the\nperiod assigned for the completion of\nthis big undertaking.\nTO SUPPLY ROSE\nTREES TO CITIZENS\nNelson Improvement Association Wants\nto See Rose Carnival Here\u2014Meet-\n.    .    lng Tuesday Night\nWith the object of holding within\nthe next few years an annual rose carnival on Dominion day the question will\nbe discussed at the next meeting of the\nNelson Improvement association on\nTuesday night at 8 o'clock in the board\nof trade rooms, of purchasing rose\ntrees in large quantities for distribution\nat a low cost price to citizens willing\nto plant them in their gardens.\n\"There 1b no question but that Nelson can grow as fine roses as any\npiece in the world,\" said J. E.Annnble,\nPpeBie*,gt of the association yesterday,\nv \"ana *\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0.(\u00ab fw0 or three years we\n>*uou!d be Ik& p08ition to hold a very\nla>*yye cari^ai of roses here, slml-\nat    pflat which-* such n huge BUCCesa\nshould pUW.    Ore.   The association\nin Inrge quafi80 tne c,,wb and bushes\nsition to disflnw and tn\\be In a post a very low eoife tnem \\ members\nThe matter of \\. ,       \\\nNelson's two narVA Improv^eut of\nWMod. as will the genfi! J* aU? dlB\"\ncleaning up the city\/*? w*8\"^ \u00b0f\nHarvesters Excursions from\nWest As Well As East\nNEW DEPARTURE BY\nRAILWAY COMPANY\nTen Thousand Men from Pacific Coast to Aid in Harvesting Prairie Crop\nWINNIPEG, July S\u2014The Canadian\nPacific Is rousing to a sense of its\nresponsibility In harvesting what at\nthe present time promises to be the\n200,000,000 bushel crop of the Canadian\nprairie west. It was stated this morning at the company's offices that a\nnumber of enquiries had been telegraphed to large employers of labor all\nover western Canada, asking whether\nthey could spare men.\nNot Encouraging\nAnswers received to date show that\nthe labor situation Is not encouraging.\nInstead of being able to spare men.\nemployers say they have not enough to\nmeet their normal requirements. It Is\npossible, though, that an altogether\nnovel experiment will be made of\nbringing in from 7,000 to 10,000 men\nfrom British Columbia points, mainly\nfrom Vancouver. It has been pointed\nout to Sir William Whyte, that owing\nto the exceptional labor conditions prevailing at Vancouver,- a large number\nof men are out of work. The Canadian\nPacific has been asked to grant the\nsame cheap harvesters' fares from the\ncoast as are offered from eastern Canadian points. There 1b little doubt but\nthat these will be conceded and that\nthe prairie west in Its hour of need\nwill thus get help from the Pacific\nprovince. Rates will be extended to\nSeattle and all points In that territory reached by the Canadian Pacific.\nFOR COMBINATION\nOF BUILDING UNIONS\nMembers of the Different Trades Will\nDiscuss Question at Mass Meeting This Evening\nWith the object of considering the\nquestion of forming a union of an the\nallied building trades In the city a\nmass meeting of workers engaged in\nthe various branches of that Industry\nwill be held this evening at 8 o'clock\nIn Miners' union hall.\nRepresentatives will be present from\nthe Stonemasons' union, the plasterers, the bricklayers, the carpenters, the\nplumbers, the I.W.W. and other unions\nconnected with building.\nIt Is anticipated that there will be\nsome Interesting discussion at the\nmeeting and the hall is likely to be\ncrowded with members of the different\ntrades.\nC. P. R. INSTALLS\nWHARFINGER\nArrange to Facilitate Lake Shipments-\nFreight for Trout Lake Must be\nSent to Sheds\nIn order to facilitate the handling of\nfreight to and from Kootenay lake\npoints John Hamilton, local freight\nagent for the C.P.R. announces that in\nfuture a wharfinger will be in charge\nof the city wharf from 7 o'clock is the\nmorning to 5 o'clock daily except Sundays.\nMr. Hamilton in a circular letter\nsays; \"Shippers should arrange to get\ntheir freight for lake points to the\nwharf aa early as possible, In order\nthat shipments may be forwarded the\nsame day, as we cannot undertake to\nget shipments away promptly unless\nshippers co-operate .and deliver their\nfreight at the wharf at least 30 minutes\nbefore the steamer Balls.\n\"It Is Important that freight for the\nTrout lake district should be sent to\nthe freight sheds, Instead of to the\nwharf.\"\nR. L. Borden\u2014And They Told me Laur ler Was  the   Only   Man   Who   Could\nApproach Him.\nREADY FOR ELK CONVENTION\nATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July fi.-Head-\nquarters for the national convention of\nthe Elks were established at the Hotel\nStrand today by Grand Exalted Ruler\nHerrmann nnd other Brand lodge officers\nof the order. The advance Eiiard of dele-\ngates and visitors is putting in on appearance and an attendance of fully 100,-\n000 Is expected when the convention is\nopened Saturday.\nFARRAR-DAVIS WEDDING\nLONDON, July 6.-Of Interest to Americans in London was tlie wedding hero\ntoday of Mins Norah Davis of Philadelphia and the Rev. Pereival F. Farrar.\nThe bride Is a Bister of Richard Harding\nDavis, the novelist, while Mr. Farrar is a\nson of the late Dean Farrar, and Is rector of the church at Sandrlngham, which\nis attended by the king and queen.\nOttawa Defeats Belgians\nAfter Exciting Race\nHTNLEY, ON THAMES, July 6.\u2014\nIn the third heat of the Grand Challenge cup rowed here today the Ottawa\neight rowed the Belgians, considered\nthe most formidable crew here, to a\nstandstill in the fast time of 7 minutes\n13 seconds. Never was a result received with such vociferous cheering\non this historic course, for there was\na feeling that foreigners were going to\nlift the cup again.\nIn the first heat today Magdalene\ncollege, Oxford, won In even better\ntime, 7 minutes and 9 seconds, and well\njustified their headBhlp of the river in\nhome waters.\nIn heat three of the Diamond Sculls\nanother very popular surprise was occasioned when Dewar of London beat\nthe German champion, Bernhardt Von\nGasaz, the favorite. The race was a\nprocession.\nHeat two was won by Jesus college,\nCambridge, from the Thames Rowing\nclub by one length, in 7 minutes and\n; seconds.\nWas Good  Race.\nHENLEY, July 6.\u2014The race between\nthe Belgians and Ottawa was close at\nthe start.   Both stroked 42 to the minute and were level for the first  10\nstrokes. The Belgians them got slightly In front. The Canadians came\nup and caught the Belgians at the half\nmile in 3 minutes nnd 25 seconds. The\nCanadians then forged ahead and out-\nrowed the Belgians whose stroke and\nnumber seven broke down. The result\nwas received with great cheering.\nInjured Muscle.\nThe Belgian coach, when interviewed\ntoday after the race with the Ottawa\neight for the Grand Challenge cup,,\nadmitted that his crew waB outrowed.\nUrban Holmes, who rowed seventh for\nthe foreigners, reports that he injured\na muscle of his stomach In the race.\nExperts say that the crew, although\nwell trained, was not as good as the\nCanadians.\nConfident of Victory.\nIn the race for the final for the cup,\nMagdalene and Ottawa will row, the\nformer being fancied as winners. The\nBelgian and English rowing men say\nthat the race will be the greatest ever\nwitnessed. The crews are very powerful, and Ottawa is very confident.\nHeat four of the Diamond Sculls waB\nwon iby Powell of Eton, who beat\nBourne of New College, Oxford, easily.\nHis time was 8 minutes 41 seconds,\nWill Be Respected in Morocco\nNegotiations\nROYAL VISIT TO\nDUBLIN CASTLE\nKootenai) Flashes ]\nCRANBROOK, B. C, July 6.\u2014Clyde,\nthe four-year-old son of A. A McKln-\nnon, was run over between 4 and 5\no'cIock last evening. Mrs. McKlnnin\nsaw the boy lying in the road and\ncalled to him to come in, but on receiving no reply went to him and\nfound him in an unconscious condition,\napparently having been run over by\nsome heavy vehicle, possible an automobile. The boy's condition is somewhat Improved today and hopes are\nbeing held out for his recovery. MrB.\nJ. D. Cranston left yesterday for\nPasadena, Cal., to spend the summer\nwith her daughter. A. Carney of Kaslo\nis in the city. Dan Montgomery was\nInstantly killed this morning at Horseman's camp at Skookumchuck by being\nstruck by a falling log. He was only\nyears of age. His parents reside at\nLiverton, Bruce county, Ont. Mrsr B.\nMurgatroid and family left this morning for Slmcoe, Ont., where they will\nspend the summer. The Cranbrook\nboard of trade has Bent an Invitation\nto the Calgary Automobile club to visit\nCranbrook when on their trip through\nthe Pass.\nHALCYON, B. C, July 6.\u2014The work\non the government roads around Halcyon Is progressing rapidly. The lake\nwater is fast receding, a fall of nine\nInches being recorded during the last\n24 hours. Mrs. J. A. Bertois arrived\nfrom CaBcade for a visit to the Bprlngs.\nMias S. Johnson of Grand Forks, who\nis nursing L. Ness, reports his condition\nas very Berloua.\nTRAIL, B. C, July G.\u2014The baseball\ngame played here yesterday between\nthe merchants and the clerks resulted\nIn a win for the former by a score of\nseven to four. Mrs. Oddy and Miss\nTruswell spent tbe day at Rossland.\nMrs. Ellard and two children will leave\ntomorrow for England where they will\nvisit relatives.\nCRESTON, B. C\u201e July 6.\u2014R. Wnma-\nley, of the Creston Valley Investment\ncompany, sold a 20-acre tract of good\nland to A. C. Harshaw, trainmaster of\nthe C.P.R. at Macleod, today. The\nprice was in the neighborhood of $3,500.\nA recent offer of $20,000 was mnde for\na ranch, said to be that of Attwoods,\nbut the offer was rejected.\nFARRON, B. C, July 6.\u2014Farron has\nloomed up with a \"white hope,\" a personage by the name of \"Young ChriBt-\nmas,\" connected with the C.P.R. To\ndate he has seven victories to his credit\nand two draws. HIb manager will, in\nall probability, try and arrange a match\nwith Streiter, the Cranbrook fighter.\nMIDWAY, B. C, July, 6.\u2014The Kettle\nValley railroad has two work trainB\nworking dally now, and the construction work west of this place is rapidly\nnearlng completion. The laying of steel\nand ballast work continues to advance\nand about 25 miles of rails are now in\nposition. To day was the hottest day\nexperienced in Midway in many years.\nThe temperature registered 98 in the\nshade around the dinner hour.\nREVELSTOKE, B. C, July 6.\u2014One of\nthe severest wind storms this year was\nrecorded this afternoon throughout the\nSlocan dlBtrlctandlnthe neighborhood\nof his place. Telegraph wires were\nswept from the poles, trees were uprooted, and havoc was played with\ncommunication with eastern points.\nLinemen were sent from all sections to\ncope with the badly shattered telegraphic conditions.\nFARRON, B. C, July 6.\u2014An event\nwhich caused a good many bets to\nchange hands, especially between Eholt\nand Farron, was pulled off here in the\nform of a checker game between William Gowan and J. Willis. The final\noutcome of the match was a victory\nfor Mr. Gowan, the Eholt man.\nEHOLT, B. C, July 6.\u2014Mr. Longton,\nthe census enumerator, arrived the\nearly part of the week and after counting the heads at this place left for\nGreenwood. Miss Vanvleet, the teacher\nof the Eholt school, left Tuesday for\nher home in the east, where she will\nremain until the commencement of the\nnext term.\nTRAIL, B. C, July 6.\u2014Mrs. M. B.\nDolun'a father, who has been Beriously\n111, is on the road to recovery,\nKASLO, B. C, July fi.\u2014J. L. Re-\ntallnck arrived in the city yesterday\nfrom Nelaon. Fishing here Is better\nthan it has been for many days. Everyone is making good catches. One catch\nwas made yesterday of four salmon\nwhich weighed GO pounda.\nNEW DENVER, B. C, July 6.\u2014Mrs.\nH, Guylord and family returned yesterday after spending six months at the\ncoast. Mr. and Mrs. Ranklne, formerly\nprincipal of the New Denver public\nschool, arrived to Bpend their vacation\nat this place. Mr. and Mrs. O. V.\nWhite of Spokane are spending a few\nweeks here. Much rain and a high wind\nhave been continual in this district for\na fortnight.\nMAKES INVESTMENT\nIN CITY REALTY\nW. Qravss, new Arrival From Old Coun.\ntry, Buys House and Eleven\nLots\nNewly arrived from the old country\nend attraoted by the possibilities of\nNelson real estate W. Graves soon after his arrival here purohased through\nR. J. Steel, a house and five lots and\na block of six. lots.\nThe house and five lots were the\nproperty of A. H. Bennett and are located on tbe cemetery rpad.\nThe other property which has been\npurchased 'by Mr. Graves for Investment purposes consists of six lots on\nKootenay street, belonging to W. H.\nJones.\nState Tour of Four Days-\nLords Dispose of Veto\nBill Clause\nLONDON, July 6.\u2014Communications\nregarding Germany's action in Morocco\nare still passing among the British,\nGerman and French governments, but\nlittle Is divulged beyond the fact that\nGreat Britain made it clear that she\nintends faithfully to fulfill her treaty\nobligations toward France. Premier\nAsquith had promised a statement in\nthe house of commons today, 'but\nwhen the question came up Mr. Asquith\nhad to admit that negotiations were\nstill in a state of flux. He added: \"I\nwish it clearly understood that the\ngovernment considers that a new situ-\ntion has arisen in Morocco wherein It\nis possible that future developments\nmay affect BritiBh interests more directly than has hitherto been the case.\nWe are confident that diplomacy will\nfind a solution and in the part which\nwe will take therein, we will have due\nregard for the protection of those\ninterests and the fulfillment of our\ntreaty obligations toward France.\"\nThere is no truth in reports of a\nsplit in the cabinet over Morocco affairs.\nArbitration Treaty.\nLONDON, July 6.\u2014The government\nis ao satisfied with the progress of the\nAmerican-British arbitration treaty that\nSir Edward Grey, secretary of foreign\naffairs, was able to announce in the\nhouse of commons today that there was\nevery prospect that the peace pact\nwould be signed very soon.\nNo Confirmation.\nLONDON, July 0.\u2014There Is no confirmation to be had here of the alleged terms of a secret treaty between\nFrance and Morocco, reported to have\nbeen signed In Paris early in the\npresent year. \"We have heard nothing\nabout it,\" was the statement made In\nthe foreign office today.\nClause Two Passed,\nLONDON, July G.\u2014The lords passed\nclause two of the Veto bill, as amended,\nby a division toddy, and debate proceeded on the new clause moved by Lord\nCromer, providing for the appointment\nof a joint commission of the two houses\nin respect to bills other than money\nbills.\nIreland to Welcome Royalty.\nDUBLIN, July fi.\u2014All Dublin, and in\ntruth, all Ireland, is on the qui vive\nin anticipation of the coming of the\nking and queen. Crowds are pouring\nin from all points, and it is estimated-\nthat the normal population of Dublin,\nabout 350,000, will be swollen to 1,000,-\n000 by Saturday, the day on which\ntheir majesties will make their entry\nInto the city.\nThe royal visit to Dublin will extend\nover four daya. The official arrangements are calculated to keep their\nmajesties busy almost from the hour\nof their arrival until their departure.\nThe date of departure falls on July 12,\nthe day the Ulster Orangemen hold\ntheir great annual celebration. Some of\nthe leaders among the Orangemen\nhave not been slow to take offense at\nthe king departing from the country\non that anniversary, and have petitioned him, Inatoad, to visit Ulster's capital,\nBelfast. As all the arrangements for\nthe royal visit were concluded months\nago, however, It was impossible to make\nany change In the Itinerary.\nTheir majeaties are expected to arrive at Kingstown on the royal yacht\nVictoria and Albert early Saturday\nmorning. They will land at Victoria\nwharf at about 10.30, and will be received by the Lord Lieutenant and\nCountess of Aberdeen. On their arrival at Dublin castle the king and\nqueen will be received by the lord\nlieutenant bearing the sword of state.\nThe appartmenta which their majeaties\nwill occupy at the castle have been\ncompletely refurniahed and redecorated for the royal visit. A new and\nmuch-needed supper room has been\nbuilt at the back of the state apartments. The additions and alterations\nhave allowed a room with a beautifully\ndecorated celling, which hitherto was\nnot available, to be added to the viceroy's residential apartments. During\nthe royal visit it will be utilized ns a\nsmall dlnfng room.\nOn the afternoon of their arrival\ntheir majesties will leave the castle\nand proceed to the Royal College of\nScience for the opening ceremony.\nAfterward they will be escorted to\nTrinity college, where an address will\nbe read, to which his majesty will make\na reply. Leaving Trinity college, the\nking and queen will go to the Phoenix\nWILL  INVESTIGATE FRUIT\nGROWING INDUSTRY\nOTTAWA, July 6.\u2014Under the\ndirection of J. A. Ruddick, dairy\nand cold storage commissioner,\nW. H. Bunting, a prominent fruit\ngrower, will conduct an inquiry\ninto the fruit growing industry\nof Canada. Mr. Bunting will inquire into all phases of the business, including the possibilities\nof over production.\nSERIOUS  LOSS TO\nWINNIPEG  EXHIBITION\nWINNIPEG, July 6. \u2014 The\ngrandstand of the Winnipeg industrial exhibition Is* blazing\nfurioualy and will probably be\nburned to the ground. The exhibition Ib scheduled to open for\n10 days on July 12 and It will be\nimpossible to erect a new stand\nin the five days' intervening.\nPark race course, and will drive thence\nto the Viceregal Lodge. The first day\nof their visit in Dublin will conclude\nwith a slate banquet at the castle.\nA full program has been prepared for\nSunday, beginning with the attendance\nof the king and queen and their suite\nat the service in St. Patricks cathedral,\nfollowed by a visit to the Artane Industrial school. Later In the day their\nmajesties will inspect the pensioners\nand girls of the Drummond Institute\nat the Royal hospital. A visit to the\nfamous Leopnrdstown race course and\na state banquet at the castle will be\nthe chief events of IMonday. During\nthe day his majesty will hold a levee\nat the castle. The queen is expected\nto find time to receive an address from\nthe women of Ireland and also to pay\na brief visit to Coombe hospital.\nTuesday the king will inspect the\nRoyal Irish Constabulary at the Viceregal Lodge, and will also attend a review of the troops and the presentation\nof colors in Phoenix park. In the afternoon there will be a garden party\nat the Vloergal Lodge, and in the evening a court will be held at Dublin\ncastle.\nWednesday afternoon their majeatlea\nwill leave Dublin for Westland Row\nstation. On arriving at Kingstown they\nwill depart for home on the Victoria\nand Albert. On their w\u00a3y to England\ntheir majesties will make a three days'\nstop In Wales for the investiture of the\nPrince of Wales at Carnarvon castle,\nwhich event will take place on the day\nfollowing the departure from Dublin.\nINVITES OHIO\nEDITORS HERE\nPublicity    Commissioner   .Commences\nCampaign to Bring Two Hundred\nNewspaper Men  Here\nSeeing in the visit to western Canada\nof the 200 Ohio editors an opportunity\nto obtain publicity for the Kootenays\nand at the same time to provide the\nAmerican newspaper men with the most\nattractive trip that could be found on\nthe continent, H. H. Currie, publicity\ncommissioner last night dispatched a\ntelegram to the Ohio Editorial association Inviting the party, or a section of\nit, to visit tho Kootenays during the\nfirst fortnight, in August.\nWith the object of making the Invitation more forcible Mr. Currie sent\na letter to all the boards of trade of\nthe interior and the coast suggesting\nthat they endorse the invitation and\nsecure if possfble an extension of the\nitinerary of the party. The telegram\nto the prospective visitors was as follows:\n\"Ohio Editorial association, care the\nPlain Dealer, Cleveland, O.\u2014Apropos\nnews dispatch, 200 Ohio editors tour\nthree prairie provinces first fortnight\nAugust, Kootenay district, British Columbia cordially Invites you extend itinerary include Canadian Switzerland,\nor divide party latter portion of tour\nsame end. Resources unapproached,\nscenery unrivalled, await inspection.\nSeconding invitations follow. Wire reply Nelson Publicity Bureau.\"\nFollowing are extracts from the letter sent to the various boards of trade\ninterested in securing a visit from the\nparty:\n\"In the above wire I did not feel entitled to speak for more than the Kootenay, but I have no doubt all portions\nof the province will second the invitation nnd will gladly co-operate in securing, if possible, an extension of the\nitinerary in question so as to cover\nBritish Columbia from the Alberta\nborder to the coast, whether of the entire party or of a representative part\nof it\nAccordingly I would ask your board\nif in favor of this move to wire an invitation on behalf of your own locality.\nI am addressing this letter to all the\nboards of trade of the interior and.the\ncoast. If all net, I think we should be\nsuccessful in attaining our object. The\nvalue of the visit of the Ohio editors\nin the way of publicity, doeB not require discussion.\nR. K Scarlett, acting district passenger agent, is co-operating with the\npublicity commissioner nnd has wired\n(o Winnipeg for the itinerary of the\nparty ,and Fred A. Starkey, president\nof the Associated Boards of Trade, has\nlready seconded Mr, Currle's invitation. The Kcotenny Press association\nhas also acted.\nARE FEARED\nOrangemen   Will  Be Ready\nWith Reinforcements\nTRAINS HELD TO\nBRING FORCES\nNews of Attack in Hull Will\nBe Signal for Rush of\nReinforcements\nOTTAWA, July 6\u2014The Evening Journal says that grave trouble in the capital is evidently anticipated by Orangemen when they parade on July 12.\nIt has been learned that Orangemen\nwho intend going to Pembroke and\nother nearby towns on the twelfth, are\nmaking arrangements with railway\ncompanies to leave excursion trains,\nwhich take them to these places all day\nat various points, at which celebrations\nare being held. The object of this is\nthat at the first intimation that their\nbrethren in Hull are in difficulty, the\nOrange parades at these places will\nbe called off and thousands of Orangemen will be rushed to Hull as reinforcements.\nThe sane heads of both Orangemen\nand Catholics are finding it difficult\nto see how they will prevent something very nearly like a second \"Battle\nof the Boyne.\"\nEIGHTEEN DIE FROM\nHEAT IN TORONTO\nSultry Wave Grows in Intensity\u2014Death\nList  Breaks all  Past\nRecords\nTORONTO, July 6\u2014Today's weather\nconditions are disappointing. Most people expected to find it considerably\ncooler this morning but the actual report issued by the weather office showed the temperature at 8 o'clock was\nthe highest It has been since Monday,\nand the humidity was 10 points above\nthe highest mark since the heat wave\nbegan. Eighteen deaths from the heat\nwere reported yesterday, breaking all\nrecords in Toronto. A cool wave, however Is promised for tomorrow.\nBRANDON ENUMERATORS SAY\nNOT SUFFICIENTLY PAID\nGreat   Effort   Being   Made   to   Include\nEvery   Resident  of Wheat  City\nIn Census\nBRANDAN, Man., July 6\u2014Every possible effort is being made by Census\nCommissioner Bawden, who is in\ncharge of the work here to include in\ntho count every person In this district.\nSince Mr. Bawden bas opened his office In the evenings at the commercial\nbureau, he has a large number of\nnames of persons who have been missed by the enumerators in different\nparts of the city. The complaint, is\ngeneral among the enumerators that\nthe price paid, five cents per name,\nis entirely inadequate in this country\nand most of those who have been on\nthe work would have declined it had\nthey known the difficulties surrounding it.\nWILL FURNISH\nDATA REQUIRED\nW. B. Farrls Speaks of Interest Being\nShown in Columbia  River Navigation  Scheme\n\"The Columbia river navigation\nscheme in BritiBh Columbia, is not being dropped by any means,\" remarked\nW. B. Farrls, chairman af lb.? board\nof trade committee in charge nf thai\nwork last night. \"I have been in frequent communication with Ottawa on\nthe subject and have received most, encouraging replies.\n\"While Hon. William Templeman 's\nin British Columbia I propose to see\nhim with repart to the project and\nwill also write to Senator Boatock. The\ndifficulty, of course, is in educating\npeople to believe in the possibilities ?f\nopening up the river to navigation b'-it\na great deal of interest Is now being\nshown in the project and I have no\ndoubt that before long some definite\nstatement as to progress will be made.\nPersonally I am not one whit discouraged and believe more strongly every\nday In the practicability of the undertaking.\n\"Mr. Currie of the publicity bureau\nhas promised us his assistance in gathering statistics and with the help of\nMr. Beeston, secretary of the board of\ntrade and such data as I already have\nIn my poBBession, we will shortly bo\nIn a position to furnish Mr. Lyon of the\nWashington and Oregon commission,\nwith a wealth of valuable Information\non the subject.\"\n PACK TWO\nChe Bail? $t\\oa.\nFRIDAY   JULY 7\nIt is simply impossible for this\nspace-saving IDEAL Folding\nBed to close accidentally. It is\nself-balancing in any position.\nWorks with aprings, not weights, and is so light and perfectly balanced that a child can operate it. All metal\n\u2014therefore vermin-proof. No parts to work loose, wear\nout or break. Bedding kept in perfect order, always\nopen to ail. Canopy permits artistic draping\u2014open or\nclosed it ii a handsome piece of furniture.\nBe sure and ask for the IDEAL Folding Bed, and see\nthat it bears our trade mark Ask for name of dealer\nnearest you.\nWrite for Free Folder No. fi\u00ab2\nIDEAL BEDDING CLVi.\nMONTREAL \u2014 TORONTO - WINNIPEG 20\nHOKE   SMITH   FOR   SENATE.\nATLANTA, Ga., July G.\u2014The senatorial situation is attracting much attention with the near approach of the\ndate when the Georgia legislature will\nchoose a successor to Senator Terrell\nin the United States senate. The balloting will begin next Tuesday and all\nsigns point to a spirited contest. Senator Terrell, who was appointed to fill\nthe seat of the late Senator Clay until\nthe legislature could choose his successor, is a candidate for election to\nthe full term of six years. The leading\ncandidate, however, appears to be Hoke\nSmith, who was secretary of the interior under President Cleveland and\nwho has just been Inaugurated for the\nsecond time as governor of Georgia.\nGovernor Smith, it is understood, has\nlong aspired to a seat in the United\nStates senate and his supporters are\nnow preparing to make a strong fight\nfor his election. On the other hand, the\nanti-Smith element, which includes\n- many prominent politicians in all sections of the state, will leave no stone\nunturned to prevent his election. A\nnumber  of  other   candidates   for   the\ntoga are receiving more or leaa attention. One of those whom It Is believed\ncould make a formidable showing\nshould he decide to make an active\nfight is Pleasant A. Stovall, the Savannah editor. \"Tom\" Watson, the former\nPopulist leader; W. A. Covington, one\nof the authors of the state prohibition\nlaw, and several others have announced\ntheir candidacies.\nLingerie coat s for children are\nmade of dotted swiss over pale rose or\nblue china silk. These, with the lovely\nlingerie hats shown In the best shops,\nmake cool, attractive costumes for the\nlittle ones.\nThe newest lingerie collar for a\nsmart, simple frock is shaped like a\nsmall cape or kerchief, extending several inches over the shoulders and almost reaching the waistline in the back.\nIn front the ends are cut in deep points.\nThe popular and fashionable top\ncoat made of satin or crepe de chine\nhas the wide sling sleeve, which was in\nstyle in mediaeval days. It is not so\nlarge as its ancestors and has a wide\ncuff, which shows tbe color and the reverse si tie of the satin.\nYou Know the Signs\nof biliousness\u2014the out-nf-sorts feeling, headaeli e, dull eyes,\ndizziness, bad taste, sallow skin, sick stomach. Get rid of these\nas soon as they show and you will be happier and feel all the\nbetter. You can do this easily and prevent return of the troubles.\nBiECHAM'S PILLS\nare a natural, safe and reliable corrective. A few small doses of\nBeecham's Pills will prove their value to you \u2014 they will tone up your\nsystem, remove the signs of biliousness, help you out of stomach and liver\ndisorders, keep your kidneys nctive and your bowels regular. Tried and\nalways effective, Beccbam s Pills are the family remedy which always\nShould be on Hand\nPrepared only by Thomas Beechim, St. Helens, Uncaslitre, England.\nSold everywhere In Canada and U.S. America.   In boxes 25 cents.\nMake Your Shopping Easy\nYou can save many weary steps and\nmuch time and trouble by reading tbe\nadvertisements In The Daily News even\nmore carefully than you have before.\nThey are well worth reading, and\nmost of them are mighty interesting,\ntoo.\nSome of them tell ol special prices,\nothers mention new goods or articles\nregularly carried in stock that perhaps\nyou never knew could be had there.\nYou might be actually Inside a store\nand still not know that they were offering certain special prices, or had\njust opened up certain fresh goods, or\nnew styles. But if you read their ads.\nyou will be kept posted.\nPerhaps there are some stores you\nought to know better than you do. Read\ntheir ads in The Daily News and you\nmay find that it will pay you to deal\nthere more.\nIt Is safe to say that there Is hardly\na day that The Dally News does not\ncarry some ad that would save you\nmoney\u2014sometimes a few cents, sometimes a few dollars.\nIs it not worth your while to find\nthat saving?\nBy Reading Daily News Ads.\nCANNOT CURE\nWITHOUT REST\nDoctors   Who    Have Made   Study of\nTuberculosis Advise That It Should\nBe Made a Business.\nThat no consumptive can hope for a\ncure of his disease without following\nthe most rigid routine with regard to\nrest is the conclusion of four interesting articles in the Journal of Outdoor\nLife, for June, by Prof. Frederick S.\nLee, of Columbia university, New York;\nDrs. Lawrence Brown and F H. Heise\nof ihe Adriondack Cottage sauitorium\nTrudeau, N. Y., and Dr. Joseph H.\nPratt of Boston, and William H. Rosa\nof Steven's Point, Wis.\nProfessor Lee, writing on the subject, \"The Physiology of Exercise and\nRest,\" shows by experiments on dissected frogs the way in which excer-\ncise tires the muscles, and in fact, all\nthe organs of the body. He says:\nMust Have Rest.\n\"There is no known antidote for fatigue, unless it be rest, and all that\nrest implies. Sleep allows the reparative process of rest to be preformed\nmost quickly and completely. A moderate) degree of fatigue, or even a considerable degree when not too often\nincurred, is not detrimental to a\nhealthy body, and is even to be advised. The healthy body 1b provided\nwith great recuperative powers, and\ndoes not rapidly succumb to even excessive demands on its energy. But it\nshould be allowed the proper condition\nfor recuperation, and that condition is\nadequate rest. There is danger when\nthe fatigue of one day's labor Is not\neliminated before the next day's work\nis begun. The effect may then be\ncumulative, the tissues may be in a\ncontinued state of depression, and the\nend my be disastrous.\nDrs. Brown and Heise in an article\non 'Properly Regulated Rest and Exercise in Pulmlnary Tuberculosis,\" hold\nthat the action of the poisonous germs\nof the disease on the body is very\nsimilar to that of over-exercise. The\npoisonous irritation caused by the\ngerms gives the organs and tissues of\nthe body a double load to carry. They\nemphasize the Importance of rest In\nthe treatment of tuberculosis, but also\nInsist that properly regulated exercise\nIs very necessary.\nDr. Pratt, who was founder of the\nfirst church tuberculosis class in the\nUnited States in the Emmanuel church\nin Boston, claims that in the treatment\nof tuberculosis absolute rest, even in\nbed, must be extended over a period\nof months, before the consumptive\nshould take any exercise.\nMake it a Business.\nMr. Ross, who is himself a cured\nconsumptive, and a writer of considerable prominence, holds that unless resting becomes a business to the tuberculosis patient, he might as well give\nup his fight for health. \"The day's\nwork should consist of rest,\" he says,\n\"rest should be considered as the reward of a good day's work, like the\nevening of a slippered ease to the tired\nbusiness man at the end of the day.\"\nBUILDING  STATISTICS OF\nNELSON  ARE   PUBLISHED\nInteresting   Figures  of   May   Returns-\nActivity In Building Exceeds AM\nPast  Records.\nif building returns for May can be\ntaken as an Indication, activity in the\nbuilding line throughout the country is\nveritably rampant. At no previous time,\nconsidering the large number of cities\nreporting, have the gains been greater in number or the individual increases of more striking magnitude.\nComparative figures submitted to Construction show an average gain for 32\ncentres of G5 per cent, the permits totalling $18,747,894, as against $11,324,-\n89S in the flame period of last year.\nBut seven decreases In all are noted,\nand only five of these can really be\nconsidered aB being on the reverse side.\nMontreal, for instance, where the permits amounted to $1,703,120, the loss\nwas less than one per cent, while In\nthe case of Stratford the comparative\ntotals represent so little as to Indicate\npractically nothing one woy or the other. Saskatoon, with a decrease of 43\nper cent, suffered the greatest loss\nfrom an Investment standpoint. Fort\nWilliam Is the next in this respect with\na decline of 55 per cent. Ottawa, with\na falling off of 17 per cent, is third, and\nPort Arthur and Peterboro' follow with\ndecreases of 67 and 46 per cent in the\norder named. Saskatoon, as it was,\nregistered a total of $489,000, while Ottawa's amount was in excess of the half\nmillion mark.\nCalgr.ry's heavy investment, amounting to $3,616,812, shows a remarkable\nstate ot development, as does also Toronto's total of $2,643,755 and Vancouver's amount of $2,488,050. In fact all\nsections with the seven exceptions previously noted, experienced a most\nmarked advance. Winnipeg, where new\nwork amounting to $2,229,480 was undertaken, reversed the leSB favorable\ncondition cf the previous month. Brandon, in the same province, with an investment, of over half a million, is 166\nper cent ahead. In Saskatchewan, Re-\ngina, with a total of $1,036,190, jumped\nforward 160 per cent; Prince Albert advanced 740 per cent, and Moose Jaw\nannexed a gain of 44 per cent. Other\nwestern gains are Edmonton, 118 per\ncent; Medicine Hat, 89 per cent; and\nVictoria, 11 per cent North Vancouver,\nwhile not submitting comparative figures, Indicates by her amount of $52,-\n068 a very wholesome condition.\nA notable feature of the month waB\nthe marked reversal of conditions in\ntne eastern maritime district Halifax,\nSydney and St. John, which were behind the two previous months, are all\non the \"upside,\" the former noting an\nadvance ot of 207 per cent and the latter two places gains of 378 and 30 per\ncent i.i order named.\nIn Quebec, aside from Montreal's total and the figures of Westmount,\nwhich gives a gain of 23 per cent, sta\ntistics are unavailable, although It Is\nciefln'tely known that Quebec City and\na number of the smaller municipalities\nundertook a substantial amount of\nwork. This also is true of other unheard from centres In the various provinces, many of which are establishing\nnew records with each succeeding\nmonth.\nAb to the immediate outlook, it might\nbe said that at no time in the past has\nthere been so much important work in\nprospect. July and August should record tremendously large totals although\nlabor troubles which threaten at the\npresent time might interfere to some\nextent with operations in one or two\niinponant centres.\nPermits for Permits for\nMay, 1811.      May, 1910,\nMerlin,   Ont.         S55.200 \t\nBrandon, Man      (21,428 $232,89\nBrantford,  Ont.   ...      W,823 25,805\nCalgary; Alta    3,(310,813 525,066\nEdmonton,  Alta.   ..     501,425 231,055\nPort   William,   Ont.     116,375 259,230\nHuHph,   Ont      244,770 38,600\nHalifax,    N.    S.    ..     111,460 36,200\nHamilton, Ont      539,005 202,625\nKingston,  Ont        20,470 19,535\nLondon,   Ont      195,470 87,105\nMed.   Hfer,    Alta...       rT7,776 40,949\nMontreal,  Que    1,703,140 1,709,200\nMoose  Jaw,   Sask..     2SS,950 207,000\nNelson,   B,   C        10,945 \t\nOttawa,   Ont      538,445 061,150\nPeterboro, Ont        67,108 124,845\nPort ^rthur, Ont...       42,550 131,975\nP.   Albert,  Sask....      93,350 11,100\nReglna, Sask    1,036,190 397,040\nSaskatoon,   Sask   ..     489,000 859,350\nStratford, Ont         2,100   . 4,600\nSt. John, N. B. ...      40,600 31,000\nSt.  Thomas,   Ont...      34,315 33,550\nSydney,   N.   S      124,120 25,92S\nToronto, Ont    2,6(3,765 1,870,890\nVancouver, B. C...  2,488,050 941,570\nN. Vancouver,   B.C.       52,008\nVictoria, B. C      287,335 26\nWindsor,  Ont        69,790 2_,_\u201e\nWinnipeg,   Man    2,229,480 2,104,460\nWestmount,  Que,...     326,600 26\t\nFIXING THE BOUNDARIES.\nPreliminary to Organization of Rocky\nMountain Reserve.\nThe faces of the eastern slope of the\nRocky mountains, set aside a few\nmonths ago by the dominion government as the Rocky mountain forest\nreserve, have a tremendous influence\non the life of the provinces of Alberta\nand Sasketchewan. Not only are they\nvaluable for the timber they supply,\nbut their preservation and proper management mean much in the way of regulating the flow of the streams which\nissue from them. For use in irrigation\nand the generation of power it Is desirable to have a steady flow of water\u2014\nnot a torrent in spring, which becomes\na drled-up stream bed in summer. In\nthus equalizing the flow of water the\nvalue of forests at the headwaters of\nBtreams Is universally acknowledged\nOf great importance to the agrlcul\nture of the prairies, too, is the regulation of the rivers so as to maintain\nthe level of the moisture in the soil.\nThe first work undertaken in connection with the reserve was the locating\nof the boundaries. Two parties of the\ndominion forest service were engaged\nall last summer (1910) In making out\nthe boundaries ot the reserve. One of\nthese, under Mr. G. H. Edgecombe;\nB.Sc, worked south from Cal\ngary to the international boundary: tbe\nother, under Mr. P. Z. Caverhill, B.Sc,\nstarted at Calgary and worked northward to a point almost due west of La\ncombe. It is expected that during the\ncoming summer the rest of the eastern\nboundary of the reserve will be located\n\/as far as its northern boundary (some\n50 miles north of the latitude of Edmonton). A full report of the work done\nduring the summer of 1010 has just\nbeen published.\nLand Included in the  Reserve.\nThe boundary as fixed by order in\ncouncil was found to a large extent unsuitable, and tbe recommended boundary Is in almost all cases* to the east\nof it. The main principal followed in\nfixing the eastern boundary was to exclude from the reserve all lands suited\nfor farming. The altitude, or height\nabove the sea-level, was another important consideration in fixing the line.\nMany valleys are included in tbe reserve which are quite suitable for graz\nlng.\nWhat Firee Have Done.\nImmense damage has been done to\nthe reserve by forest fires. Probably\n75 per cent of the area has been burn\ned over. In the north, Mr. Caverhill\nestimates, 80 per cent of the country\nhas been burned within the last 50\nyears\u2014-60 per cent of this within\nthe past 25 years.\nThe abundance of lodgepole pine (a\nnear relative to the eastern Jack, or\nBanksian pine) and poplar on many\ntracts In the reserve is a sign of fire\nhaving passed over them, These trees\nare the first to spring up on burned-\nover land, and by their rapid growth\nthey distance other trees and form the\nfirst foreBt, in the northern part of the\nregion about 75 per cent of the country\nis covered with a forest of lodgepole\npine, unmixed with any other species.\nOn nn area of 800 square miles covered by the \"southern\" party the distribution of the land was aa follows:\nTimber, D per cent; spruce and pine\n\"poles\" (a tree of \"pole\" size is one\nfrom four to eight inches in diameter),\n31 per cent; pine and poplar, 26 per\ncent; poplar, IP per cent; open grazing\nland, 14 per cent; bare rock, 10 per\ncent\nGame-and  Mineral  Resources\nGame waa plentiful in all tbe region\ntraversed. Bull, cut-throat and grey\ntrout abound In the rivers, and, in their\nrespective districts, duck, grouse and\nprairie chickens, moose, elk, sheep and\nmany kinds of fur bearing animals are\nfound. .\nAmong the mineral resources of the\ncountry are the eonl-beda, oil-fields (in\nthe south) and quarries of building-\nstone,\nFor slippers, soft little crushed rosettes of tulle or chiffon, in some' instances sprinkled with crystal beads\nto resemble dew, are exceedingly pretty\nas are also the buckles of pearl or colored beads.\nThe .vogue of stripes is very pronounced in bathing coBtumeB and the\nnumerous accessories, stripes are advantageously employed for sailor col\nlars, cuffB, border bands nnd as finis)\nto the waist line.\nSTEEL BARGE\nNEARLY READY\nWill be Launched Early Next Month-\nAll of Steel and Cost Fifty\nThousand Dollars\nConstructed wholly of Bteel the new\nC.P.R. barge for use on Kootenay lake,\nwhich has been built at a cost of approximately $50,000 at the Fairvlew\nshipyards, will be ready for launching\nby Aug. 1.\nThis barge, the only one of its kind\nin British Columbia, marks a new era\nin lake transportation in the province\nand it Is expected that it will be followed by others of the same type within the next few years.\nIt was constructed by the C.P.R. at\ntbe shipyards from plates supplied and\nrivetted by !Polson's 'Iron Works of\nToronto, and will carry about 17 full\nsized cars. It will be used chiefly on\nthe run between Procter and Kootenay\nLanding and will prove an ideal icebreaker for the West Arm on th* rare\noccasions when that branch of the lake\nbecomes blocked with ice.\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nMAYOR   SELOUS   RECIPROCATES\nTo the Editor of The Daily News;\nSir\u2014I have read with much gratification Judge Forin's letter in today'B\nissue. As a patriotic Englishman I cannot sufficiently thank the judge for\nhis generosity and self-abnegation in\ndoing violence to his feelings and donning the much despised court suit. I\ntremble to contemplate the disastrous\nconsequences to the British empire and\nits august monarch had his honor the\njudge refused to make a \"guy\" of himself for the empire's sake.\nWould the coronation have been postponed or dispensed with, or perchance\nwould his majesty have declined the\ncrown altogether If the ceremony were\nnot graced by the presence tof his\nhonor.\nThe (Judge's personal remarks regarding my unworthy self fill me with\npeculiar gratification. When one is not\nparticularly good oneself It Is surely\nmost uplifting to know that one is\npresent in the thoughts of the Great,\nthe Good, the iPure. I accept\nwith heartfelt gratitude hlB honor's offer of the loan of his cast-off clothing\nand in return will beg bira to accept\nray copy of the Merritt Herald of May\n26, which contains the following appreciation of his honor's many virtues.\n\"A Miscarriage of Justice\"\n\"We have no hesitation in declaring\nthat Judge Forin of Nelson is a diBgrace\nto the bench. The attitude of Pharisaical prlggishness which he adopted in\nhis misguided endeavor to prevent the\nperformance in NelBon of that painfully Innocuous musical comedy, 'The\nQueen of the Moulin Rouge\" will be\nremembered by many and he has now\nshown that hia heart is ns bad as his\nhead by a sentence of outrageous severity, which displays to the \/full Ills\nmediaeval outlook upon life. There\nused to be a pleasant custom In the\nmiddle ages of burying a suicide al\nmidnight at a cross roads with n stake\nthrough his heart and there still re\nmains\u2014a blot upon the statute book\u2014\na certain mediaeval enactment punishing attempted suicide with imprisonment. This statute obviously dates\nfrom the limes when the laborer was\nthe chattel of his lord and master and\nsuicide or attempted suicide was therefore a combination of malicious mischief and grand larceny. The law is\none which Is generally allowed to remain n dead letter in this day and\ngeneration, and advisedly so, but occasionally we meet with a judge with\nthe temper of a Jeffreys and the heart\nof a Pharisee who enforces It and\npunisheB it to the limit. Such a one is\nJudge Forin. The case we refer to Is\nthat of F. H. Taylor, an English laborer, who, for attempted auicide, was\nsentenced by that paragon of clemency\nand wisdom to two years Imprisonment\nin New Westminster, the maximum\nsentence for the offence. It was pleaded in extenuation that Taylor had been\nsuffering from rheumatic fever which\nhad Induced insomnia ' and it was\nshown that he had attempted suicide\nto escape from the agonizing tortures\nwhich he waa suffering and the torment of sleepless nights. The plea\navailed him nothing with the stonyhearted bigot who sat on the bench and\nhe was given the maximum penalty\nwhich the law allows. It waB also\nbrought out that the accused had a\nwife and family in England. Whether\nthey are dependent on him or not,\nwe do not know, but as laborers' wives\nare not usually possessed of private\nmeans, it Is only fair to suppose that\nthey are, and we would like to know\nhow they will fare for the next two\nyears. We believe that Judge Forin\nla a leading light in one of Nelson's\nSunday schools. One wonders If be\never reads the New Testament. Another thought that occurs to us is what\nsentence he would have pronounced\nhad the prisoner been some prominent\nyoung society woman of Nelson instead\nof a fever-racked, toil-worn \"Bhovel-\nstlff.\" The learned judge's reasoning\nseems to have been: You are poor. You\nare sick. You were bo tired of .your\nlife that you decided to put an end\nto it. This is a horrible offence against\nsociety and we shall therefore punish\nyou by branding you as a felon and\nshutting you up for two years.\n\"We do not know Judge Forin and\nwe are not of a vindictive disposition,\nbut we do hope that before he dies,\nhe may be able to find out by personal\nexperience, Juat what rheumatic fever\ncombined with' insomnia feels like. Of\ncourse In his case he would have proper nursing and the best of medical\nattention and when he was convalescent\nInstead of being dead broke and having\nto hunt a job, he would be able to go\ndown to southern California or elsewhere for a change of climate.   Under\nLadles Summer I \t\n&,,\u00bb   Fred Irvine & Co. |?~\n26o. pair up.      I\nLadles\nLong Silk and\naU shades\nHOLIDAY\nGOODS\nLadies Summer Dresses\nIn plain colors, light blue and light pink, lace trimmed. On sale from\n13.50 each up to $15 each.\nA Splendid Lot of Lingerie Dresses\nfor the hot weather wtih lace collar and Dutch neck, long   or   short\nsleeves.   On sale from $3.50 to $26 each.\nLadies' Millinery\nA number ol white net and laoe bats (or summer wear at sale prices.\nBargains In all ladies straw hats.\nAU girls' and misses' dresses on sale at cost prices to clear.\nSummer Dress Muslins and Silks\non Sale\nLadies\nNeckwear.\nA fine lot of\nJabots,\nDutch\nCollars\nStock\nCollars and ties\nLadles'\nWash Belts.\nLadies Summer\nVests from 10c. each.\nLadles' White\nCombinations\nfrom 65c. each.\nHack!        Hack!\nHack!\nIf you can't find what you want give me a call. I have closed\nhack, open back, Rubber tired hack; three seated reversible carriage\nonly one in B.C.; three seated express carriage, two seated express carriage; one seated buggy; one express wagon.   All new.\nStorage at the City Cab Co. Tel. 18.. Big John, John W. Lincbaugh.\nno conditions, therefore, can he suffer\nwhat his victim did, but some slight\napproximation of those sufferings\nmight work wonders in opening his\neyes to the fact that what the church\nregards as a sin should not necessarily\nbe punished by the law as a heinous\ncrime in the twentieth century.\n\"In conclusion we wish to offer, our\nslncerest apologies to Judge Forin if\nthe account of the trial in the Vancouver NewB-Advertiser, from which we\nglean our facts, has led us into doing\nhim an Injustice. If, however, that account is correct ,we believe that two\npetitions ought to be circulated in the\nNelson district, one praying for a free\npardon for Taylor and the other praying for the removal from the bench of\na man for whom there Is no longer\nany sphere of judicial usefulness, now\nthat the Spanish Inquisition has ceased\nto exist.\"\nHoping that his honor will consider\nthis a fair exchange.\nHAROLD SELOUS,\nNelson, July 6, 1911.\t\nCENSUS AT PHOENIX.\nTo the Editor of The Daily News.\nSir\u2014The local census-taker, Mr. Mac-\nPherson, called on me this morning,\nhaving been attracted hitherward by\nmy letter in The Daily News.\nHaving talked with him, I am rather\ninclined to believe that my fears regarding suppression of - population In\nPhoenix, at least, are not well founded.\nI take this step because I would not\nwish to be guilty of any injustice.\nHe tells me that the only transients\nhe is instructed to overlook are commercial travellers. Also, that Phoenix\nwill not show up as well as it ought,\naB, owing to the recent shut-down at\nthe local mines, many who are now\nhere were enumerated elsewhere.\nW. H. BAMBURY.\nPhoenix, B. C, July 8.\nLittle boleros are very chic. They\nare slightly full, and many are edged\nwith ruffles and frills of silk. They are\ncut low and fastened at the waistline\nWhen you want to clear your\nhouse of flies, see that you get\nWILSM'S\nFLY PADS\nImitations are always u\/atisfactory\n FRIDAY  JULY 7\nCfie \u00a3aup fix va\nPAGE THREE\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n(p5^\nBe a Well Man!\nIf you are a sick man, suffering from any disorder, we\nours you PERMANENTLY. Tou do not have to linger\nalong Buffering from disease, because we are medical\nSpecialists with many years' experience treating and\ncuring successfully all men's diseases.\nHonest Treatment\nA sure and permanent cure In all Diseases of men.\nNervous Weakness, Varicose Veins, Hydrocele, Nervous\nAilments, Blood and Skin Disorders, Sores, Ulcers, Kidney, Bladder and Rectal DlsorderB,-*nd all special ailments common to men.\nBest Anatomical Museum in the Northwest\nConsultation Free\nIf you cannot come to Spokane for free  consultation\nnow, frite for our free booklet\nDr. Kelley's Museum\n210 Howard Street\nSpokane, Wash.\nNews of Sport\nReciprocity\nPublic Meeting, Opera House,\nNelson, Monday, July 10,1911\nAddresses by Dr. Clark, M.P., Hon. Wm. Templeman,\nMinister of Inland Revenue, John Oliver, Pres.\nP.L.A., M. A. Macdonald, and others.\nDr. Clark made some of the most notable speeches in the reciprocity debate In the house of commons and his address should be heard\nby all Interested in this widely discussed question.\nEveryone welcome.   Seats reserved for ladles.  Chair taken at 8:15\nsharp.   Auspices Nelson Liberal association.'\nH. C. HALL, President H. E. DOUGLAS, Secretary.\nGOD SAVE THE KINO\nA WEEK OF\n!ECREATION\nAND^QLLITY\nINCLUSIVE tJCUfllC   J\nGolden Potlatch\nAn Absolutely Unique Celebration of the Arrival of the\nFirst Golden Treasure\nfrom the Golden North\nSotneof tbe doings of Potlatch Wtek\nAerial Flights Dally, by Curtiss, Ely and others\nThe Wonderful Hydroplane Traveling by Air,\nLend sod Sea.\nWater Fetea and Sports.\nReview ol the U, S, Battleship*.\nDally Historical and Artistic Pageants.\nCoronation ol Kins and Queen ot the Potlatch.\nParades of All Nations.\nJapanese Feast of Lanterns.\nChinese Monster Dragon Parade.\nIndian Dances and Ceremonies.\nFloral Parades of Women and Children,\nMusic by Cilery's and Other Great Bands.\nNightly Dances end Masquerades,\n,YOU MUST NOT MISS IT\nREDUCED SATES OH ALL LINES-ASK ANY AGENT\n.. The ..\nColdstream Estate Nurseries\nVernon, B. C.\nhave a very fine assortment of\nFruit Trees, Ornamental and Shade\nTrees and Shrubs\nBUDDED STOCK A SPECIALTY.\nAll trees offered for eale are grown in our own nurseries on the\nColdstream estate.\nGeneral Agent Local Agent\nV. D. CURRY, Vernon. G. LEECE, Nelson, B.C.\nHome Grown Fruit Trees\nWe have a large supply of\nApple Trees, also Plums, Cherries,\nPeaches, Pears, etc.\nrtl guaranteed home grown stock.   Write for catalogue   and   price\nt to\n'ft\u00bbe Riverside Nurseries\ng 120 Ac.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nDai,y Ne\\s Want Ads Get Results\nINFIGHTING NOT\nUNDERSTOOD THERE\nEnglish  Fans Call  It Foul\u2014Want only\nScientific Boxing at Long\nRange\nLONDON, July 6.\u2014 In view of the\nprospective match between Jack Johnson and Bombardier Wells for the\nheavyweight championship of the world,\na great deal of talking is going on\namong Englishmen concerning pugilistic methods. And the concensus of\nopinion throughout the BritiBh Isles is\nthat of all the dirty fighters on earth\nAmericans are easily the dirtiest.\nThe popular English theory is that\nHhe two fighters should stand well\napart from one another, with figures\nstiffly erect and left arms extended,\nand spar for \"points.\"' If one of the\npoints also happen to be a knockout,\nwell and good. But of Infighting the\nEnglishman has no notion. The moment the two men are so close together\nthat their bodies touch or their arms\nseem Interlocked the Briton wants them\nto separate and start over again. If\none of.them strikes his opponent without doing so the blow is immediately\nclassed as foul. Naturally then, Englishmen see a great deal of what they\nthink is foul fighting by American professors of the art of ringcraft.\nEnglish comment, on the recent fight\nbetween Papkle, the American, and\nJim Sullivan, the Briton, very aptly illustrates how ignorant the Englishmen\nare concerning the rules of the sport\nat which they profess to be so efficient.\nReferee Eugene Corro, who really\ndoes understand the rules, says that\nPapke fought and won fairly. \"Leave\nthis to me,\" he shouted Impatiently\nfrom the ring, during the progress of\nthe battle, in answer to the storm of\nhisses and cat-calls with which the\naudience greeted an exhibition of the\nAmerican's prowess as an inflghter,\n\"the lad'B entirely inside the rules.\"\n\"Cestus,\" the \"Sportmen's\" fighting\nauthority, another man who knows the\nrules as they really are, agrees, though\nsomewhat quallfiedly, with Referee\nCorrl. \"Cestus,\" be It understood, dislikes Americans exceedingly, and never\nspeaks well of an American fighter if\nhe can help it. So he is less cordial\nthan Corrl in his expressions, but he\nadmits nevertheless that Corri's decisions were correct In every particular.\n\"Though the American's fighting was |\nnot of the cleanest, he wrote, in his\nstory of the battle, for the \"Sportsman,'\n\"he never infringed the rules. The\nsympathy was with Sullivan, but Papke\ncommitted no fault, though he perhaps\nwent close to the line. And Sullivan\nwas by no means blameless and frequently did a bit of sly clinching.\"\nBut except for Corri and \"CestuB,\"\nthe English were a unit in lauding Sullivan and denouncing Papke.\n\"Papke went to any extreme to win,\"\nsaid the Express. 'He butted, he held\nwhenever it was tolerated. The tacticB\nwere not those of the iboxer we welcome in England.\"\n\"The astonishing point was that the\nAmerican; was not disqualified early in\nthe contest,\" declared the Mail. \"When\nhe dealt the knockout blow, a short,\nright-arm blow to the body, he was\napparently holding with his left.\"\n\"Papke Is a clumsy, unscientific fighter,\" commented the Star, \"and his\nmethods - of butting and holding are\nintolerable. The fact that it was an\ninternational contest perhaps explains\nthe exaggerated leniency of the referee,\nbut It leaves one with a feeling of regret that Papke was not a worthier\nwinner.\"\n\"It could only have been the tolerance sometimes mistakeningly extended\nto a visitor, to Great Brltlan,\" said the\nChronical, \"that accounted for the fact\nthat the referee did not disqualify\nPapke before the American got in, what\nto my mind, wasl a foul blow.\"\n\"The crowd took Papke's triumph\nrather cooly,\" reported 4|hje Leader.\n\"They could not forget certain incidents of the fight that left a rather\nnasty taste in the mouth. Meanwhile\nthere Is no reason to be ashamed of\nour British champion.\"\nIt was Jem Mack who Invented the\npresent English style of boxing; and\nfor piling up points it has never been\nimproved on. The whole end and object of an English fighter's existence\nis to hold his adversary at a distance\nwith his left, to keep on tapping out\npoints everlastingly and occasionally,\nwhen the adversary Is disorganized,\nto cross with his right and land genuine wallops. The American gladiator,\nplunging at him head-on, with both\nhands ready for action and apparently\nIndifferent to points, Is something the\nEnglish pugilist cannot understand.\nIt looks to him like an invitation to\npunch Ills man. He accepts it, only to\nfind the blow's recipient inside a guard\na fraction of a second later, pummelling\nhis body. Whereupon the audience\nshrieks \"foul,\" and the newspapers set\nup a chorus of lamentations about the\ndirtiness of American methods.\nOf course, if the Englishman and the\nAmerican are both on their feet at the\nend of the specified rounds, the latter\nIs    generally    hopelessly   outpointed.\nPapk\u00ab3 was outpointed by Sullivan five\nto one, until near the end of the ninth\nround. The audience supposed Sullivan was winning. It never occurred\nto anyone that the American was deliberately allowing his antagonist to\nmake points In return for the privilege\nof picking the right spot for the landing of a knockout when the psychological moment arrived.\nIf Jack Johnson and Bombardier\nWells get together there will probably\nbe a lot of bets to be had at big odds\non Johnson. It will not be altogether\nindiscreet to take the little end of a\nselected few of these wagers. Not. Indeed, hut that Johnson will be the likelier candidate, but Wells, is quite good\nenough to be worth risking a little\nmoney on\u2014if sufficient odds are offered\u2014even against so formidable an\nantagonist as the negro.\nBombardier Wells Is distinctly\nEnglish fighter. His only style is of\nthe point-making variety already con-\ntemptously referred to as so vulnerable\nto American methods of attack. It must\nbe borne in mind, however, that the\nEnglish style is weak in practice\u2014not\nIn theory. If It can be made as good\nIn practice as in theory It is ideal. Almost no English fighters are able to do\nthis. They make a prodigious number\nof points in stopping their American\nopponents' rushes, but sooner or later\nthere is nearly always a failure to stop\na rush, and then it is all over.\nIf, however, an English boxer is so\nclever as to make absolutely no mistakes, he has only to wear his man\ndown sufficiently, and finally to finish\nhim at long range. Weils' boxing Is\nas near perfection as is humanly possible. As a supplement to this extraordinary skill he has the bnormal\nreach of 79% inches. At point-making\nit Is doubtful if he has an equal. And\nunlike, the points made by moat of his\nbrethren of the English ring. Wells'\npoints are not mere ornamental taps.\nThey are knockout wallops. It will be\nunsafe for even Johnson to regard them\nlightly. Bombardier has fought, approximately, 50 battles, and all .but two of\nthem ended in knockouts In his favor.\nIt is true that his antagonists were\n\"dubs,\" but they were the huskiest\nkind.\nLAME BACK\nTo have a lame back or painful studies\nmeans Disordered Kidneys, and the sooner\nyou have the Kidneys nnd Bladder In a\nperfectly healthy condition the sooner you\nwill enjoy life. As far as we know, there\nla only one remedy that Is guaranteed to\ncure you, and that ts FIG PILLS. If they\ndon't make you a strong, healthy person\nIn two weeks, your money will be refunded.\nAt all dealers, 25c per box, or The Fig Pill\nCo., St. Thomas. Ont.\nHOW JACKSON,   400 HITTER,\nWAS  FORCED  INTO  BASEBALL\nJoe Jackson, the Cleveland recruit,\nhas batted around the .400 per cent\nmark all season, In spite of the efforts\nof the American teams to \"get his goat\"\nand the work of the \"Pitchers Trust\" to\nfind \"his weakness.\" Jackson was fair\nly forced into baseball. He signed his\nfirst contract to keep the manager of\nthe Greenville team of South Carolina\nleague from nagging him, and in 1009\nJackson tried five times to quit the'Athletics. Eight times Connie Mack sent\nhim back to Philadelphia. Jackson preferred to cut meat in his father's butcher shop and play Independent ball\nonce or twice a week.\nThe youngster was a pitcher then. He\npitched for teams i around his home\ntown, and the manager of the Greenville team saw him work.\nJackson finally signed with Greenville, and won the first three games\nhe pitched. Then an outfielder took\nsick and Joe played center field. He\nnever pitched again. He batted .320\nand led the league.\nSam Kennedy, scout for the Athletics, went to Greenville to look, at an\ninfielder. He signed Joe and took him\nto Philadelphia.\nKennedy went to Greenville and took\nJackson back to Philadelphia three\ntimes, and Stock Seybold took him back\ntwice. Then Mack sent him to Savannah, and he played good ball. Jackson hit .305 in the South' Atlanta league, leading the league.\nJoe cinched the pennant for New Orleans in 1910 by breaking up both\ngames of a double header at Memphis.\nHe made four hits in four times up In\nthe first game, and three hits; in three\ntimes up in the second game. His batting average was .394.\nWhile the Naps were in New York\nplaying the Highlanders, Jackson,\nwhose heels were raw from blisters, was\nready to play in his stocking feet. He\nwas wearing slippers, but put on his\nball shoes, unlaced, prepared to bat, if\nnecessary, and kick off his shoes as\nhe ran to first. Jackson playedi in his\nbare feet in South Carolina. They\nused to sprinkle the outfield with tacks\nand glass, but the young star didn't\nmind that.\nMUST  BE  REPLAYED.\nNEW YORK, July 6.\u2014The protested\nChicago-Pittsburg gome of the morning\nof June 30 will have to be played over.\nThis announcement was made at the\nNational league headquarters tonight.\nChicago protested the game and President Lynch sustained the protest nnd\nordered the game to be played over.\nadmit that the best team won, and that\nIf the victors had showered a few more\ngoals into their opponents' net it would\nhot have been more than they deserved.\nVancouver literally played rings\naround the once great team. They\nshowed that New Westminster had not\nonly met their match, but that they had\nopposed to them a team of world-beaters. Vancouver would not be denied.\nTheir object was to avenge the defeats\nof the past and see chalked up another emphatic win.\u2014Exchange.\nHOW   LOUIE   LONG  DIED.\nTho newspapers throughout Canada\nanH tlw United States have the killing\nof Louie Long, the Spokane prize fighter, so entangled that his friends have\nrequested us to give as near a true\nversion of the affair as can be had,\nsays ;he Calgary Herald. The following story, which is written by E0 Cuff\nand forwarded to the Herald, in order\n\u2022to give the true account of the affair,\nis bas\u00b0d on the statements of Long's\nfriends who witnessed the killing:\nLong fought Tom Forbes on the\nnight of May 29, but realized little\nrevenue from the contest. He left the\nnext day for Opal City, where he met\nMrs. Rlely, or Helen, as she 1b known\nAt Opal City Riley was met and after a\nOpal City Riley was met, and after a\nconference with the woman, agreed to\ngive her up, but needed money to reach\nPortland. Long borrowed the money\nfor her of his friends and Riley apparently started for Portland, but went to\nMadras Instead. Long and the woman\nleft Opal City for Redmond, and Riley,\nusing the money obtained from the\nwoman, purchased a revolver and followed in another auto. About two\nmiles this side of Hillman Long's auto\nbroke down and Riley caught up to\nthem. It is thought that Long was repairing the auto and did not see Riley\nuntil he was close to him. He was shot\ntwice, and Long tn his dying struggles\ngrappled with Riley and Riley shot him\nthrough the back. The woman, who had\ncrawled out on the other side of the\nmachine, was ordered by Riley to come\nto his side and then told to turn her\nback, as he was going to kill her. This\nshe refused to do, and Riley, apparently losing his nerve, shot low, wounding\nher in the thigh. The body of Long\nwas brought to Spokane and taken to\nthe establishment of Chad Irvin.\nRiley has been bound over to the\ngrand Jury and refused bail. The Ad-\nams woman, who was with the Long\nparty, Is held on $250 bonds.\nLouiB Long waa buried June 3. Many\nfriends and acquaintances attended the\nfuneral, six automobiles formed the\nprocession to the grave, and the services over the body by Rev. Mr. Lily\nwere very impressive.\nThe grave had been dug by Tom\nForbes, who had been Long's last opponent in the ring. After the services\nthe earth was put back by Ed Cuff,\nwho had been with Long about three\nyears, and he wished to perform this\nlast service for his old friend and\ncomrade. .\nIt was to second Cuff with his fight\nwith Rice that Long waB returning to\nRedmond and thence to Bend. Upon\nthe news of Long's death, Cuff postponed his contest.\nLong's brother at Eugene was communicated with, and he instructed\nLong's friend to bury him.\nLong leaves many sorrowing friends\nin the Redmond district.\nFOUNDATION  STONE LAID\nOF CALGARY'S NEW FIRE HALL\nCALGARY, Alta., July 6.\u2014On the occasion of the laying of the corner stone\nof the new central fire hall this mom-\nnig, eulogistic remarks were passed in\nreference to the city and its progressiv-\nness by some of the visiting firemen.\nThe newest jabots are broad at the\ntop, narowing down toward the lower\nedge. There is a one-sided effect in the\ntrimming, the deep ruffles adjusted to\nstralghter strips. Some show the touch\nof black velvet in the form of buttons\nor bows. And all are particularly lovely.\nSPORTING SPOTLIGHTS.\nAt this stage the question might be\nasked aa to whether New Westminster\nwill \"come, back.\" Unless new blood is\nintroduced'thls seems impossible, New\nWestminster has for a long time contented itself with believing that there\nnever would be a team produced which\nwould prove conquerors of the red\nshirts.\nThe victories so far gained by the\nTerminal city's aggregation this year\nmight help in awakening them to the\nfact that the downfall of the champions\n1b inevitable so long as Vancouver produces the form which has been in evidence at all the games played at the\nrecreation park this year. Summarizing the goals scored by both teaniB\nthis season Is ample justification for\nmaking such an assertion.\nNew Westminster Burely has no excuse to offer on the battle as presented.,\nNo sportsman would do otherwise than j\nJust Taste It\nThat's all we ask of you in regard to our\nStone Ginger Beer\nand Other Bottled Drinks\nA trial will quickly convince\nyou that they are the finest carbonated beverageB you ever used.\nLook for our name on each bottle.\nNelson Soda Water\nFactory\nTelephone 24, P.O. Box 732, Nelson\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nThe Stores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality\nGreat Semi Annual\nPre-lnventory\nClearance\nSALE\nAs this company's financial half year ends on July 21st, we are\ninstructed to reduce stocas prior to taking Inventory, by holding a great\nclearance Bale for two weeks from\nMonday, July 10, to\nSaturday, July 22\nAstonishing values will be offered,\npartments:\nespeclaly  in  the following  de-\nk\nDry Goods, Clothing, Gents' Fur\nnishings, Boots and Shoes, China,\nCrockery and Glassware\nTo give some idea of the remarkable values during this sale we\nmight mention that some articles in the above lines will be sold\nAt Half Cost Price\nOthers   at   cost and all at very considerable  reductions  from\neven the usual good values.\nWatch this space for further particulars.\nWatch Our Windows During This Sale\nLower\nArrow Lakes\n1440 acres of bench land, west of Renata, where young orchard land is\nselling at ?600 per acre. This would m site a good subdivision and sell well.\nTwo creeks through property and several springs. Soil a rich, deep, sandy\nloam.\nA Chance for the Right Party at $10 per Acre\nB. C. United Agencies\nReal   Estate and  Fruit  Lands\nBaker St., Nelson. 15 Armstrong Block, Calgary.\nFor Sale\nThree lots, 9, 11 and 12 acre , partly cleared, at 4-Mile, West Arm.\nOne of the most beautiful and desirable locations on the lake.\nWolverton & Co., Ltd.\nWanted, Everybody to Get Familiar with the\nK. C. Brand\nproducts, which will be noted for purity\nand excellence and manufactured only\n'      by\nThe Kootenay-Columbia Preserving Works\nManufacturers of Jams, Jellies, Bottled Fruits, Etc.\nP.O. Box 102, Tel 156\nNelson, B.C.\nROBERT C. TEVIOTDALE,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\n Che Bail? Jletoa,\nFRIDAY i ;.i. JULY 7\nCpe \u00a9ailu J&rtWJ.\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company, Limited\nW. Q. FOSTER Manager\nFRIDAY. JULY 7\nCANADIAN  NORTHERN COMING\nThe announcement that the subcontracts have been let for the construction of the Canadian Northern\nmain line along the Fraser river from\nHope to Kamloops, a distance of 1C3\nmiles, means that work Is to be commenced at once and it is promised that\nIt will be carried through with the\nleast possible delay. Work is under\nway on various other portions of this\ncompany's transcontinental line in British Columbia as well as in other provinces and It is only a question of a\ncouple of years until the Canajdian\nNorthern has a line from ocean to\nocean, thus fulfilling the ambition of\nIts promoters, Sir William Mackenzie'\nand Sir Donald Mann.\nTh,e company, however, is not confining its energies to tbe construction\nof its main line. Branch lines are\nunder way in every section as feeders\nto the main trunk system. This applies in at least five provinces, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan,\nand Alberta, while a proposal Is before the Dominion government to give\ncompany access over the Intercolonial\nto the maritime 'provinces, where it already owns a number of lines in Nova\nScotia.\nIn the provinces of Alberta and Sas\nkatchewan it is particularly active,\nand at least one line, which it is proposed to construct in the former, Is of\ndirect Interest to the people of the\nKOotenay. This Is a. line south from\nCalgary to the Crow's NeBt Pass. The\ncompany has already received assistance from the Alberta government for\nthis line in the shape of a guarantee\nof bonds and that it proposes to proceed at once with the work of construction Is shown by the fact that It\nhas already secured land for terminal\npurposes in the town of Macleod. A\ncharter is also held from the Alberta\ngovernment under similar terms of assistance for another line running to\nSouth Kootenay Pass, which affords an\nentry to tbe Flathead country.\nIt would be foolish to suppose that\nthe Canadian Northern does not. Intend to extend these two lines beyond\nthese two points. Either one or both\nof them will be extended through British Columbia either to connect with\nthe main line or proceed by an independent route to the coast. Either of\nthese alternatives would be in keeping\nwith the policy of the Canadian Northern in other portions of Canada.\nEvery mile of railway which the Canadian Northern railway will construct\nin the Kootenays will add to the general prosperity of this district and will\nalso stimulate development by opening\nup new territory. (With the coming of\nthe Canadian Northern a new era will\nopen for the Kootenay, for besides the\ndirect benefit which will accrue from\nits construction Ub invasion of this territory will mean increased activity in\nrailway construction on the part of the\ncompanies already in this field. It will\ngive the people competition in railway\nconstruction and the sooner that comes\nthe better for the country.\nWIRE  WOUNDS\nMy mare, a very valuable one, waa badly\nbruised and out by being caught In a wire\nfence. Some of the wounds would not heal,\nalthough i. tried many different medicines\nDr. Bell advised me to use \u00ab....aRD'S\nLINAMENT, diluted at first, then stronger\nas the sores began to look better, until\nafter three weeks the sores have healed,\nand best of all, the hair 1b growing well,\nand Is NOT WHITE as is moat always the\ncase In horse wounds. F. M. Doucot,\nWeymouth.\nSmall\nHouse\nRush Sale\nOwner Leaving\nTown\nThis four room house is one\nblock from the car line, has\ncity water and electric light\nand has been quite recently\npainted and thoroughly renovated. Owner leaving town in\na few days must sell. Is furnished and at\n$900\nwe consider it a very good buy.\n$200\nWilt Handle It\nand the balance to suit purchaser. Don't delay but look at\nthis today.\nMcQuarrie &\nRobertson\nReal Estate and Insurance\n410 Ward St. Nelson.\nTHAT   AITKEN   KNIGHTHOOD\nThe knighting of Sir Max Altken, as\none of the coronation honors, has\nevoked very considerable comment\nthroughout the press of Canada and\nthis comment is almost without exception adverse. The Canadian Mining\nJournal, for example, in its lasue of\nJuly 1, says:\n\"In the eyes of Canadians nothing\ncould well detract more from the dignity of coronation week than the announcement that the organizer of the\nCement Merger had been decorated\nwith a knighthood. Of Itself this might\nbe a matter of congratulation. But\nwhen our most eminent economist, our\nleading educationist, and several other\ndistinguished public men are awarded\ntrifling honors, and upon a young man,\nwhose business reputation is not yet\ncleared of a serious stain, a knighthood\nIs bestowed, It Is time to call a halt.\n\"Knighthood and other formB of\nroyal recognition are the rewards of\noutstanding service to the public. Sir\nMax Aitken has performed no such service. His claim to distinction Is based\nupon a remarkable facility in organizing mergers, In persuading the public\nto buy* securities at an enhanced price\nand in reserving for himself a disproportionate share of the spoil. His spectacular irruption Into English politics\ngave him advertisement. More advertisement, of a different nature, was\ngiven him when Sir Sanford Fleming\naccused him publicly of 'unhallowed\npractices In the realms of high finance.\nAnd now his name stands upon tbe list\nof those whom our King delights to\nhonor!   It Is to laugh, or to weep!\nMlnard's Liniment cures Garget in cows\nFraternal Prescription for\nNervous Wrecks ^\n(From   \"Medical  Reports.\")\nThousands of men, nervous wrecks,'\nhave found the following \"fraternal\nprescription\" a blessing and a boon.\nSuch men lack aggressiveness, they\nare timid, nervous, easily discouraged, lacking In self esteem and confidence. They suffer from cold extremities, thin, watery blood, nervousness, sleeplessness, frightful\ndreams, trembling hands and limbs,\nunsteady gait and an absolute Inability to perform the ordinary natural and rational acts or duties such\nas any healthy normal  man can.\nA vigorous man works, plays, eats\nand sleeps always with the keenest\nenjoyment. The greater his exertions\nare the stronger becomes his appetite and slumbers.\nThe nervous man seems always\ntired and worn out. Retiring brings\nno relief. Sleep brings no refreshment, all because ot on abnormal\ncondition of the nervouB system,\nbrought about by\u2014well, no matter\nwhat\u2014the desire Is for relief and\nfreedom with rich, \u2022 red blood surging through the body supplying the\nsensitive nerves with all the power\nof sensation, so that sleep Is refreshing, food Is delicious, work is play\nand play Is pleasure.\nThis treatment Is thorough, simple\nand eorrect. The Ingredients are\nused In filling various prescriptions\nand can be obtained of any well-\nstocked druggist and mixed at home\n.without embarrassment or questions.\nObtain three ounces of syrup sar-\nsaparllla compound in a six-ounce\nbottle. To this add one ounce of\ncompound fluid balm wort and let\nstand two hours. Then add one\nounce of tincture cadomene compound (not cardamon) and one ounce\nof compound essence cardial. Mix,\nshake well and take a teaspoonful\nafter each meal and one when retiring until a vigorous, bounding,-,\nnew health takes hold of the tired,\nexhausted nerves. Only a few weeks'\ntreatment will astonish, and rejuv- ,\nenate, because the treatment is the\nright thing at the right time, and\ncontains  no deceptive opiates.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nGoing\nEast?\nIf so travel in comfort and Btyle,\nCosts no more for the best.\nLow Return Rates\nNow in effect. Tickets on sale\nJuly 19, 20, 26, 27, 28. August and\nother dates gladly furnished oh\napplication. Tickets are good via\nCrow's Nest or Revelstoke routes.\nGood on Great Lakes steamships.\nStop overs allowed within limits.\nYou can vary your route returning.\nTake the direct way.\nFor further particulars apply to\nR. K. SCARLETT, City Ticket Agt.\nW. RAYMENT, Depot Ticket Agt.\nW. J. WELLS, D.P.A., Nelson, B.C.\nPend d' Oreille Lands\nHAVE THE3E ADVANTAGES\n(1) Soli which experts agree has no peer In B.C.; (2) mildest climate; (3) Abundant water; (4) easy olearing; (5) excellent roads; (6)\nfree range for cattle covered with excellent feed.\nBut most Important of all Is the price.    We have listed with us\nsome of the best land in the valley and we can offer blocks from 20 to\n640 acres at prices varying from   -\n$12 to $50 per Acre on Easy Terms\nThe prices will infallibly double as soon as construction commences\non the new railroad.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nP. O. Box 316\n412 Ward Street\nWESTERN FLOAT.\n(By R,  T. Lowery.)\nCreston is full of bees, all making\nhoney.\nThere are 17 telephones in South\nFort George.\nThere are 2,900 Indians In the Lytton\ndistrict.\nNew potatoes appeared in Keremeos\non June 24.\nCreston expects to have a cricket\nclub this summer.\nEddie Doolan of Sirdar has invented\na water wheel.\nFor all purposes the tax rate of Chil-\nUwack Is 18 1-2 mills.\nFort St. James Is distant 139 miles,\nfrom Fort George.\nThere was a cheese factory in Chil-\nllwack 20 years ago.\nThe Imperial Oil Co. Is putting in a\nwarehouse at Merrltt.\nTen men are working at the marble\nquary near Lardo.\nA Dutch hank Is to be established in\nCalgary, Alberta.\nFernie pays its dog catcher and\npound keper $2.50 a day.\nW. Hillyer has opened a roller rink\ntn Revelstoke.\nTuberculosis caused the death of\nHenry Cantin in AbbotBford.\nQuesnel expects to bave a beet sugar\nfactory in a short time.\nAt Trail the Boy Scouts have built\na bridge across George creek.\nSeveral sawmills have already been\nburned in British Columbia this summer.\nLouis Lobsinger and his bride have\nreturned to Merrltt from the east.\nA mail clerk Is to be put on the\nsteamer Okanagan on Okanagan lake.\nThe Orangemen will celebrate at\nHedley, and Salmon Arm on the 12th.\nThe Anglicans will build a church\nthis summer In South Fort George.\nFred W. Hennlng is now manager of\nthe Premier hotel in Prince Rupert.\nMr. Lind, formerly of Hedley, is now\nrunning the Balllie hotel in Lytton.\nThis season the first fruit shipped\nfrom Summerland went east on June 21.\nJ. T. Fink has gone on a six weeks'\nvacation to the Fort George country.\nUp the Skeena river church services\nare now being held at Copper city.\nIn Kelowna the business men take\nlittle interest in their board of trade.\nKing & Gibson have embarked in the\nretail lumber business at Princeton.\nBefore the end of the summer the\nE. & N. railway will be completed to\nAlberni.\nIn Kelowna the eelephone company\nhas orders for 46 more Instruments.\nIn Cranbrook the school grounds have\nbeen seeded with lawn grass and\nclover.\nPrince Rupert will enquire into the\ncost of establishing a small debts\ncourt.\nWork will begin this Bummer on the\nnew J75.000 postoffice building at\nRevelstoke.\nNew Denver will be 20 years old next\nDecember. It was first called Eldorado\nCity.\nSo far thiB season sockeye salmon\nare scarce in the water of northern\nBritish Columbia.\nThe city of Enderby will borrow $5,-\n500 for park, water and other purposes.\nSouth of AbbotBford the V. V.. & E.\nrailway will build two miles of trestle\nwork.\nIn Wilmer, John McConnell was fined\n$150 for supplying Itquor to an interdicted man.\nIt cost the city council of Ladysmitb\n{25 to clean up on the streets for Dominion day.\nJ. G. McCallum has the contract for\nbuilding the $60,000 postoffice at Cranbrook.\nLaBt month Fort George complained\nbitterly abou the slowness of the mall\nservice.\nD. C. Drain is enlarging his hotel at\nBlairmore by the addition of more than\n20 rooms.\nNorman Gra'nt. and Falkard have\nopened a carpenter and Joiners shop In\nEnderby.\nE. Chesley was the conductor who\ntook the first regular passenger train\nout of Prince Rupert.\nJohn Hutchinson, formerly of Cranbrook, has built a residence and settled\ndown in Merrltt. \u25a0\nA man In Abhotsford waB recently\nfined $20 and costs for carrying concealed weapons.\nP. Burns & Co.- will build a packing\nplant 'at Edmonton, Alta,, that will cost\n$500,000.\nThere waa a potato famine in Robs-\nNelson Brand r AS!\nMade from Kootenay fruit and cane sugar by Canadian workmen. If\nyou are farseeing and have an eye to the future, as well as the present\nyou will ask your, dealer for Nelson Brand Jams,\nWe are not trying to make Nelson Brand as cheap as we can, but as\ngood as we can; a little less profits today perhaps, but with thoroughly\npleased customers means bigger sales and more profits tomorrow.\nNelson Jam Factory\nThe Sanitary and Up to Date Jam Factory\nJ. A.  McDONALD, l-roprletor.\nBOULEVARD HEIGHTS\nMOOSE JAW, 8ASK.\nYou know how fast Moose Jaw has been growing, especially the last\nyear or bo.   It has outgrown Its old residential conditions.\nBOULEVARD HEIGHTS Is a high class park and boulevard section\nfor discriminating home owners. It is in the line of growth northward\nfrom the business centre.   Lots are bound to Increase in value rapidly.\nFor maps, prices and full information apply to\nD. A. McFarland\nKootenay Orchard Association\nWard St., Nelson, B.C.\nHigh Grade Building Materials\nWe bave always in stock lime and cement, common brick, pressed brick,\nfire brick, fire clay, plaster of Paris, wood fibre, crystal finish. All kinds\nand sizes of window glass.  See us for prices on all kinds of building material.\nJOHN BURNS &. SON NELSON, B. C.\nThe Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nW. R.THOMSON, late C.P.R. Boat Bars, Manager and Proprietor.\nBeggs Lochnagar-Balmoral Scotch.\nD. & J. McGallum's Perfection Scotch.\nRenault's Pure Grape Brandy.\nPabst Blue Ribbon Beer.\nSTORE, VERNON ST.\nP. 6. Drawer 1099\nFor Nines, Millmen, Wo havs tlmo chMks<ami \u00bb\u00ab*\u00bb\n\u25a0z r       \u2014 =r-   In ajl sizes.    Payroll  sheets, payroll\nLumber tamps. Etc. oook8, etc.\nEverything you require at Thomson's.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer Phone 34 Nelson, B. C.\nland last week, and a few old spuds\nbrought five cents a pound.\nAt Revelstoke this spring the Columbia riyer rose to within five and a half\nfeet of the high water record of 1894\nIt is estimated that the total pack\nof salmon this season In British Columbia will be between 700,000 and 800,000\ncases.\nA young man In New Westminster\nwas given three months for supplying\nan Indian with liquor.\nIt is reported that by next month the\nFort George Indians will be ready to\nsell their lands at that point.\nA short-order restaurant has been\nopened in Sandon. History is beginning to bo repeated in that old camp.\nJames Long died in Revelstoke last\nweek. He came to that city In 1892,\nand at one time < was manager for\nBourne Bros.\nJ. Lestock Reid, who recently died in\nWinnipeg, was one of the oldest surveyors in the west. He oame west 41\nyears ago.\nThe break In the bulkhead at Barker-\nville has been repaired, and the town\nwill be safe from another flood for\ntwo or three years.\nF. B. English and his pack train ot\n95 are taking over 5,000 pounds of merchandise from Quesnel to the Hazelton\ncountry.\nC. H. Cottreil 1b putting up a five-\nstorey building at the corner of Cam-\nbie and Robson Btreets In Vancouver,\nat a cost of \u00a555,000.\nMrs. Allison, the oldest resident of\nPrinceton, has gone to California to\nvisit relatives for three months. She\nIs accompanied by her daughter.\nWild cattle are numerous on Graham\nIsland, and will attack human beings.\nTbey are being killed off as fast as\npossible by the settlers.\nArrangements have been completed\nto finish the survey of the Cariboo,\nBarkerville and Willow River railway.\nWork will begin on it next year.\nThe Slocan Record states that Dan\nMcLeod is developing a Krumbare lead\nnear the head of the lake, and expects\nto make shipments this fall.\nThe Canada Northern railway has\nbought $250,000 worth of property at\nMacleod, Alta., and that road may be\nextended to the Crow's Nest Pass next\nyear.\nThe Princeton Star says that from\na reliable source It has learned that\nconstruction of the grade from Coal-\nrnont to Cogulhalla pass will begin in\nabout 90 days.\nIt was proposed some time ago to\nstock Graham Island with 30,000 goats\nand sheep, but the project fell through\nowing to the freight rates being too\nhigh.\nThe sherriff 1b now looking for W.\nA. Stevens, Dan Greenwalt and Mrs.\nDan Greenwalt, in connection with) the\nalleged salting of the Steamboat mineral claim. N\nThe old man's home at Kamloops is\nto be enlarged at a cost $126,000. When\ncompleted it will take care of 155 inmates. At present there are 87 In the\nhome.\nTwo men recently made a trip to\nFort George from Oregon on motor\ncycles, all but the last 60 miles, and\nthat they had to walk, owing to the had\ncondition of the road.\nThe New Michel Reporter states that\nthree tlmeB Inside of 24 hours a resident of that town became a grandfather. This is a unique record never\nheard .of before In the world.\nThe leading experimental farm In\nBritish Columbia will be at Burnaby,\nnear New Westminster. The provincial\ngovernment has let contracts for $400,-\n000 worth of buildings to be erected on\nthe farm.\nAt a meeting recently held in New\nMichel It was decided to change the\nname of that town to Natal. One man\nwants It called Eye Opener, but that\nname was too fatal In the eyes of' the\nmeeting.\nAlthough It was his first offense, a\ndrunk waB recently fined $250 in Now\nWestminster because' he had to t>e\ntaken to the police station In a hack.\nBooks You Should Take\nWith You On Your\nSummer Vacation\nWe can recommend any of these.  They are all good.\nMEMBERS OF THE FAMILY, by Owen Winter, (author of the Virginian) $1.26.\nTHE STORY GIRL, by L. M. Montgomery, author of \"Anne of Green\nGables,\" \"Anne of Avonlea,\" and \"Kllmenny of the Orchard.\" The previous books by this author have all been good but this is the best.\nOnly ?1.B0.\nADVENTURE, by Jack London, $1.25,\nWHEN SOD LAUGHS, by London, (1-25.\nTHE WOMAN HATERS, by Lincoln, author of \"The Depot Master,\" \"Oy WMttaker's Place,\" etc., $1.26.\nTHE PRODIGAL JUDGE by Vaughan Kester. Don't fail to read\nthis one as It is a dandy.   Get one now, $1.26.\nLook them over.   We have all tne late ones.\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 502\nMail Orders a Specialty\nTheCanadianBank\nof Commerce\n8IR    EDMUND   WALKER,   C.V.O.,\nLL.D, D.C.L.,  President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen.'Manager\nCapital    910,000,000\nRest      8,000.000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by The Canadian Bans of Commerce are the moat convenient form in\nwhloh to carry money when travelling.\nThey are negotiable everywhere, self-\nIdentifying, and the exact amount payable in tbe principal foreign countries\nla printed on tho face of every cheque.\nThe cheque* are liaued in denominations of\n910, 920, 950, 9100 and 9200.\nand may be obtained on application at\nthe bank.\nIn connection with tta Travellers'\nCheques The Canadian Bank of Commerce baa Issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to thoae about\nto travel,\" whloh will be sent free to\nanyone applying- for it. ,\nNelaon Branch, J. 8. Munro, Man-\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital All Paid-up ......914,400,000\nRett ..912,000,00<\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal, G.C.M.G., Hon. President.\nR. B, Angus, President\nSir Edward S. Clouston, Bart, Vice-\nPresident and General Manager.\nBranches In British Columbia\nArmstrong, chllllwaclt, Cloverdale\nEnderby, Greenwood, Hosmer, Kelowna\nMerrltt, Nelaon, New Denver, Nicola,\nNew Westminster, Penttcton, Prince\nRupert, Rossland. Summerland, van\ncouver, Vernon, Victoria.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Man.\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO\nCapital Authorized.. ,10,000,000\nCapital Subscribed....'..., 0,913,000\nCapital Paid-up .$ 5,793,000\nReserve Fund $ 5,793,000\nO. R. Wllkle, President\nHon. Robert Jaffray, Vice-President.\nBranches In British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook, Fernie,\nGolden, Kamloops, Michel, New Michel,\nMoyie, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver,\nVictoria and Wilmer.\n8AVING8 DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at current rate from date of deposit\nNelson Branch: J. M, Lay, Manager,\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nINCORPORATED    1869\nCapital Paid-up   .9 6,200,000\nReserve and Undivided Profits 9 7,200,00\nTotal Assets 992,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nH. S. HOLT, President\nE. L. PEASE, Vice-President and\nGeneral Manager\nOne hundred and sixty-five branches\nIn Canada and Newfoundland; 14\nagencies In Cuba and Porto Rico; Ave\nagencies in British West Indies. London\nEngland, 3Bank Bldgs.. Princes Street,\nE. C; New Tork City, 68 William street\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings departments at all\nbranches.\nNelaon Branch, A. B. Netherby, Man.\nEast Thro9 Boundaryland\nTraOel the Northern rim ot the\nUnited States\u2014through\na scenic country on the\nGreat Northern\nRailway\nThe police In that city are not nro-\nvided with wheelbarrows.\nBan designed exclusively to be car-\nrial with the frock ot lingerie are fash\nioned rroef ftoe-fcby Mah and Filet\n'MsteTcord. \u00bb\u00ab wlHt. cotton or sou-\n^io\u00abo\u00bb combined, usually fin.\nwith ttor taw\" of cotton.\n FRIDAY ...........vi....*. JULY 7\nCtje Sail? fima.\nPAOE FIVE\nfe51\nBell Trading Co.\nToday's\nSpecials\nBananas\nOff a or Three CI\n\u2022JtJv Dozen for V1\nCherries\n2 for 25c\nRaspberries\n25c Basket\nOnly a Few Crates\nStrawberries\n$2.50 a Crate\nBell Trading\nCo.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers\nMlnard'a Liniment Cures Colds, etc.\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable D'Hote and a la Carte\nHUME\u2014E. E. Nlcoll, Proctor; (J. F.\nMcHardy, Crescent Valley: A Heymann\nMiss Watt, E. Epstein, Alfred Phelps,\nA. Hlgglnbotbam and family, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Beard, Medicine Hat; John Paton, Winnipeg; C.\nL. Samuel, Montreal; J. S. Blatler,\nGrand Forks; Alec Cheyne, R. M, Balmer, W. F. Roberts, Miss Annable.-Mlss\nFoote, R. Andrews, city; Rev. J. W.\nWeBtman, Mr. and Mrs. D. B. McKenzie,\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Hinebaush, Calgary\nMr. and Mrs. Clarion, St. Louis; Frank\nL. Strachan, Toronto; Edward Stokes,\nO. M. CulUn, Boston; M. Koptpa, Japan;\nAubrey P. Dumont, city; Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. M. Dulllsan, Midway; Bruce White,\nJoseph Posslow, Spokane.\nBest on the\nContinent\nthat Is what authorities aay regarding the medicinal qualities of\nthe water at Halcyon Hot Springs\nThe Sanitarium la now under\nnew, management and has been remodelled from top to bottom and\nnow offers every facility for the\ncomfort and convenience of patrons.\nRates 112 and 115 per week or\n12 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014Mrs. W. J. Farmer,\nCastlegar; Mr.\" and ~MrB. Cooke-Hurle,\nSweetgrass; J. S. Boycott, Harrop; W.\nE. Zwioky, Kaslo; W. 0. Scott, Winnipeg; Rev. and Mrs. Philip C. Hayman,\nCreston; Mr. and Mrs. W. Crosbie, R.\nW. Saunders, Moose Jaw; Mr. and Mrs.\nQ. E. Whitney, Fred W. Richards, H.\nMarklns, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith-\ners, Montreal; T, Kenna, Balfour; W.\nP. Tierney, Frank Cooper, R. E.\nBullock, F. A. Meskins, Vancouver; W.\nO. Grose, Montreal; Dr. B. B. Ilsley,\nVernon; Munroe Archibald, Trail; Mr.\nand Mrs. H. L. Agnew, Prince Albert.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.  LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRates: $1.50 to 92.00 per day.\nIleal Tickets, 17.00 per week.\nBusiness men's lunch, 36o.\nQueens\u2014J H. Whltehouse, Castlegar: O.\nO. Winatand, W. Lindop, C. Llnd, J. Variance, J. E. Porritt, O. Larson, Kaslo; W.\nMcLennan and wire. Greenwood: S. Ma-\ndill, Toronto; J. Walker, Pitt Meadows;\nMrs. B. E. Snyder, Miss I. Snyder, Winnipeg. .     '\nAsk for Minarets and Take no Other.\nTo Get the Full Value\nOf Your Daily News Subscription\nThere are two principal ways In\nwhloh a good paper such as The Dally\nNews may be of benefit to you.\nIts news columns keep you In touch\nwith what la happening from day to\nday. They bring the latest news, not.\nonly of your local district and province\nbut of all Canada and the United States\nand the more Important events all over\nthe world.\nBut the advertising columns of the\nDally Newa bring to you each day Information still more valuable, becauae of\nmore real assistance In your everyday\nlife. They help you to epend your Income ao aa to get the greatest possible\nbenefit from every dollar. They make\nshopping easy. They, keep you poated\non prices, and bring you timely notice\nof any especially low prices whloh enterprising merchants are able to offer\nfrom time to time.. They Inform you\npromptly of the arrival of new goods\nand of the latest styles.\nIf you need plumbing done, or electrical fixtures put In, or your watch repaired, or your lawn mower sharpened,\nor most anything else fixed up about the\nhouse, a glance through the ads In The\n- Dally Newa will quickly find someone\nwho makes a specialty of doing what\nyou want done.\nIf you wlah to rent or buy a house,\nor purchase a piece of land for cultivation or Investment, the real estate announcements In The Dally Newa will\naave you lots of time and trouble.\nIn fact, no matter what you want, the\nadvertising columns will help you find\nIt It pays to read them regularly and\ncarefully.\nDaily News Ads\n\\\t\nSt. Leon\nHot Springs\nHotel\nARROW  LAKE\nThis splendid hotel la now under\nnew management and guests are\nassured every comfort\nRates: $2 per day; $12 per week.\nH. COUSINS, Proprietor.\nMadden House\nThoa. Madden, Prop., Baker 8t.\nRates: $1.60 to |2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, (7.00 per week.\nA Comfortable Home\ni MADDEN\u2014E. A. Walton, Proctor; G.\nPorteous, Thomas C. Porteous, Queens\nBay; D. A. McGregor, S. J. Reuter,\nKaslo; John T. Price, Ymlr; R. M.\nGuille, J. S. W. Butatens, Grand Forks;\nJ. Serson, Creston.\nUnion Men, when tn Nelon\nPatronise\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon Streets.\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\n\u25a0   Only\nLAKEVIEW\u2014A. Stewart, W. H.\nMurphy, Rossland; T. Shanks, J. O'Con-\nnell, Sandon; H. Lapolnt, Toronto;\nMrs. Murphy, Vancouver.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms; $1 a\nday and up.   Best 26c. meal In\nNelson.\nBest brands ot liquors and\ncigars served by union men.   .\nN. MeLEOD, Proprietor\nSILVER KING\u2014W. Mclntyre, F.\nDillon, Slocan; A. E. Cleverly, Napoleon\nMr. and Mrs. Gibson, Eholt; J. Wheeler,\nD. McLean, A. Hartman, oity.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelaon.\nRANSOME  A  CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, G0o. up\nAmerican plan, 11.25 and H.H\nMeals Be.\nALL WHITF LABOR.\nSpeolal Rates Per Month\nTREMONT\u2014C. Carl, Berlin; E. O.\nBourke, Belfast, J. Fraser, Salmo; J.\nSaborn, G. Busk, W. Taylor, A. Morris,\nCrescent Valley.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAme.lcan and European Plana.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGrand Central\u2014L. E. WIekerson, Proctor; B. Foote, W. Poote, J. Mattloe. Erie;\nR. Anderson, Sandon; Q Desmond, Silver-\nton; W. M. Davidson and wife, New Denver; P. Bower, Aberdeen, Wash.: J. Mann,\nCascade; J Nlohol, Creston; J. Carson,\nBrandon.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nStrictly  Union  House\nHeadquarters for miners, amel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad man.\nRates: 11.00 per day up.\nNELSON * JOHNSON, Props.\nKlondyke\u2014P. Moran, A. F. Gelm.\nSMBRBROOKE\u20143. L. Olson, city; T.\nCeylon,. Slocan City; D. Mcintosh, Spokane; Dan Bergeson, Koch; N. W.\nMorrell, Paulson; H. Cartln, Revelstoke\nC. Chalmers, Winnipeg; T. Rldgeway,\nCrescent Valley; 3. Swanaon, Comapllz\nW, Hlokey, Whitewater.\nNELSON PLAY\nTRAIL SUNDAY\nSmeltermen Have Strengthened up and\nFast Game  is Expected\u2014Cranbrook Coming\n; The Nelson baseball team plays In\nTrail next Sunday. Trail has strengthened up considerably since the two\nteams met nearly a month ago and may\ngive Nelson a bard game. Trail 1b\nclose to Rossland and may have some\nof the Golden City men in their lineup.\nThe Nelson team will be nearly the\nsame as when they defeated Marcus\non July 1, except that Moore, infielder,\nwho played with Nelson at Kaslo will\njoin the team today for the balance\nof the season. Moore has great class\nand is a great strength to any team\nin this section of' the country.\nNext week it is hoped that the strong\nCranbrook team will play here. Nelson\nhopes to even up then for a long string\nof defeats at their hands,\nDISTRICT CENSUS\nNEARLY FINISHED\nCommissioner  Docksteader Will  Have\nMajority of Lists in Tomorrow-\nNelson's Slow Roundup.\nThough the citizens at large displayed\nno vehement Interest In the effort being\nmade to assist the census enumerators\nto get a correct count of Nelson's population, 20 more names were added to the\nlist yesterday, according to the report received last night from the publicity bureau, A few of these were personally reported, but the majority were secured\nthrough the Interest of three or four Individuals.\nA. B, Docksteader, census commissioner, expects ,,to have the report of every\nenumerator of the Kootenay and Boundary In his hands by tomorrow night, except In the case of four enumerators,\nwhose work has been of a special nature.\nThe co-operation of the cltfsuns can still\nbe effective, as It Is morally certain that\nthe city roll is far from complete, through\ncircumstances that entail no reflection on\nthe enumerators. All names should be reported to H H. Curie, publicity secretary,\nat the publicity bureau, where they will\nbe secured by the enumerators, creoked\nover, and followed up.\nGEORGE TUNSTALL\nMARRIED AT COAST\nEx-Nelson Man Weds Miss Marguerite\nDuchesnay\u2014Spending Honeymoon\nIn California\nGeorge C. Tunstall, Jr., waB married\nin the church of Our Lady of the Holy\nRosary at Vancouver on Tuesday to\nMiss Marguerite Marie Duchesnay by\nRev. Father J. A. Bedard, late of Nelson and an old friend of the bridegroom. The witnesses were Mr. and\nMrs. B. Howard.\nMr. Tunstall was for several years\nIn Nelson as agent for the Hamilton\nPowder Co. and is now a resident of\nVancouver, where he represents the\nWestern Explosives Co. He is a son\nof the lale George C. Tunstall, who\nwas gold commissioner In Nelson In\n1890, 1891 and 1892 and who later was\nappointed government agent in Kamloops.\nThe bride Is a niece of a Mr. Duchesnay who was employed by the C.P.R.\nas a civil engineer in the Kootenays\nfor some years,\nThe happy couple are spending their\nhoneymoon in California and will, on\ntheir return, take up their residence\nin Vancouver.\nNATIONAL.\nAt New York\u2014New York 12, Chicago\n6.\nAt Brooklyn\u2014Brooklyn 1, Pittsburg\n10.\nAt Philadelphia\u2014Philadelphia 9, St.\nLouis 13.\nAt Cleveland\u2014Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 0.\nAt Chicago\u2014Chicago 1, St. Louis 8.\nNORTHWESTERN LEAGUE.\nAt Tacoma\u2014Tacorpa 0, Vancouver 1.\nAt Spokane\u2014Spokane 29, Victoria 8.\nAt Seattle\u2014Seattle 4, Portland 6.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo  doors  from postofflee\nVernon Street.\nRates $1.00 and J1.26 per day.\nEvery convenience given to the\ntravelling  public.    Electric  piano,\na\"d    Union   bar     In    connection,\nwhere the best wines and liquors\nKootenay\u2014P. Dldlsch, Spokane; P.\nGrenier, Mrs. Grenler, Moyie; S. Gibtch,\nG. Kraljevleh, P. Klglach, Fernie; J, W.\nWlllamson, R Williamson, Indian Head;\nP. Vetter, S Vetter, M. Prlca, G. Sudar,\nA. Solah, Tahk; L. Vendrano, P. Kublch,\nQ. Olive, Grand Forks; J. Slattery, Trail;\nJ. MoNabe, city.\nNelson Cafe\nLargo and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeala Served at all Hours\nElegantly furnished rooms In\nconnection; $1.00 a day and up.\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON\u2014Mrs. F. Hawes, Ainsworth\nA. J. Blaney, Proctor;  H. \\V. McNamara, Nelson; A. Sutherland, Spokane;\nB. S. Clute, W. J. Lewis, J. Jenkin. C.\nBotzin, Marcus.\nROYAL\u2014R. J. Bush, Fruitvale; H.\nW. Clay, Red Hill; R. Cullins, Saskatchewan; T. Drousfield, 10-Mile; M.\nE. Eade, H. C. Code, Vancouver.\nManhattan Saloon\nHas been renovated throughout,\nand the bar Is at all times stocked\nwith tbe best wines, liquors and\ncigars.   Large glass of beer lOcts.\nWe have comfortable, well furnished sleeping rooms In connoe-\ntlon, by day, week or month.\nBARTON & McKAY, Proprietors.\nTENDERS    FOR    MINERAL    CLAIM\nFORFEITED TO THE CROWN\nTenders will be received by the undersigned up to 12 o'clock noon on Thursday,\nthe third day of August, 1911, for the undermentioned mineral claim, which was\nforfeited to the crown at the tux sale held\nat the court house In Nelson, on the 6tli\nday of November, 1906.\nTo be considered, all tenders must be\nat least equal to the upset price which is\ngiven below, which Is equfvalent to the\namount at which said claim could have\nbeen purchased by the owner or owners\non the above date, together with taxes\nand Interest which have accrued since\nthe tax sale. Inclusive of the cost of the\nadvertising for tenders and crown grant\nName of claim, Canadian Queen. Upset\nprice, |UML   Lot No. 33*0.\nmuch tender must be accompanied by a\ncertified oheok for the full amount.\nthereof, payable t\u00bbt par at Nelson, B. C,\nIn favor of the undersigned.\nThe cheques of all unsuccessful tenderers\nwill be immediately returned.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, this 30th day of\nJune,   19U. W.   F.   TEETZEL,\nGovernment  Agent.\nHOUSEHOLD NOTES\nCoveir your bed pillows with a\nbasted-on pillow-case of old thin muslin, which will keep the ticking from\nhead-stains\u2014and the featherB from collecting possible disease germs\u2014and will\nmake the top pillow-case look whiter\nthan when put directly on the ticking.\nA burned or scorched cooking vessel is rough, even when perfectly clean.\nSmooth the surface with a piece of\nemery and grease and heat it thoroughly before using. Do not use for foods\nthat must be cooked several hours.\nStarchy foods, especially, are liable to\nburn.\nWhite woolen fabric, as cashmere,\netc., can be cleaned at home with hot\nsifted potato meal in a large howl, Into\nwhich the material is put and rubbed\nas though being washed, afterward\nbrush out the meal and shake out the\nfabric; If not clean .repeat tbe operation\nwith some hot, dry flour.\nTo clean a net waist put it in a\ntwo-quart fruit can filled with gasoline.\nBe sure that the top is well screwed on.\nLet it stand overnight. In the morning\nshake the can back and forth. The motion will churn the dirt out of the waist.\nSometimes, if the article Is very soiled,\nfresh gasoline must be used in tbe\nmorning.\nA piece of white soap is quite an adjunct to any embroidery outfit. Rubbed\nalong the line taken by threads that\nare to be drawn from linen, it will\nmake those same threads draw much\nmore quickly and easier. Rubbed on\nthe under side of the cloth when doing\neyelet wprk, it stiffens the linen and\nmakes it easier to do the work evenly\nand uniformly.\nCotton blankets are washed differently than those made of wool. Soap\nthem well with laundry soap, fold and\nallow to soak In tepid water. Wash\nthem In an hour or so and place in a\nboiler of hot suds to steam, not boil.\nRinse in several waters. Use a very\nlittle blueing and dry them double on\nthe line. Press dry on the wrong side.\nQuite the contrary is the process of\nwashing woolens, for hot water cannot\nhe used on them. Dainty quilts, liable\nto fade, should first be soaked in a\ntub of cold water, containing a half\ncup of turpentine to set the color.\nTo wash real laces, make a suds of\ntepid water, white soap and borax.\nBorax will whiten the lace and loosen\nthe dirt. Place the lace In a bowl,\ncover with a towel and allow them to\nsoak. Change the water once or twice,\nand rinse the articles several times. In\nthe last rinsing water add a few drops\nof glycerine. Stir It through the warm\nwater, dip the pieces and lay them upon\ntowels to dry. Do not stretch or pull\nthe laces. Cover them with tiflBue paper and press with a medium hot iron.\nAll real laces have some oil in the\nthread. It Is free from alkali. Never\nuse blueing.\nFADS.\nFor the frock of linen there is a\nhag made of white or colored linen to\nmatch, either daintily embroidered or\nperfectly plain, the only ornamentation\nbeing the owner's monogram.\nA smart white serge suit has cherry and white striped revers, with cherry colored buttons. With this is worn\na close shaped hat of geraniums, with\na green net how at the back.\nTransparent wraps of marquisette\nchiffon silk or voile are being displayed.\nThey are draped, trimmed with wide\nlace, .fringe and half embroidery, and\nlend a lovely color note to any costume.\nLingerie collars ot all descriptions\nare much sought after on bathing suits.\nThey are circular, V-shaped and square\nof the sailor Btyle. Both sheer and medium-weight batistle and linen are employed.\nThe vogue of thq elbow and three-\nquarter length sleeve has given a fresh\nimpetus to the long buttoned or mous-\nquetalre glove, which for summer wear\nis shown In a number of  materials\nWo attend to rour\nPLUMBING\npromptly and wall.\nB. C Plumbiaj & Heating Co.\nVictoria Stmt, oaar Optra Bouis\nTaltphont Ml\nS\u00a3 Meagher & Co. SS\nLast Two Days\n=0f Out*\nFree Gift Sale\nFive Wore Free -Gifts Today. Are You\nLucky? Here Are Two Big Blouse Bargains That Are Almost a Gift Anyway\nThere have been 17 lucky people got their purchases for nothing\nso far, there will be five more today and eight tomorrow, when this\nunique sale will end. Think up everything in the dry goods way that you\nare at all liable to want this summer and come and get it now. You\nhave a good chance of getting what you want for nothing; anyway\nyou'll save something big.\nHere are two blouse specials for Friday buyers. Aren't they worth\ncoming after?\nWash Blouses Worth Dp\nto $2.75 - \u25a0 - \u25a0\n$1.50\nThere are about five dozen in this special bunch; they Include\nlingerie blouses and tailored linen and vesting blouses.\nHigh neck, low neck, long sleeves, abort sleeves, klmona sloores.\nAny style you fancy most you will flnd, if you come early enough. The\nsizes run from 34 to 44. There are many here that regularly sell at\n$2.75 each, but for today's selling we have put in tbe bunch at one price\n$1.90 each.\nSI Blouses Worth Up to AQ AA\n Today <PU\u00abVU\n$9.00\n37 blouses in thiB lot, made either of Taffeta, Paillette, Japanese\nor Marquisette, in a variety of colors including white and black. Some\nof these regularly sell at $9, but it will he the early bird that gets the\npick at $3.00.\nunder the name of \"Fabric Gloves,\" including silk, silk mesh, suede, lisle and\nchamolsette.\nWATER NOTICE\nI, Walter Balla-Headley. of Proctor, B.C.,\nrancher, give notico tliat I Intend to apply\nto the Water Commissioner at his office\nin Nelaon for u license to take una use\n10 cubic inches of water per second from\nPearson's creek, in Kootenay district. The\nwater Is to be used on aublots B., C. and D.\nof sublot 1 of lot 306, group 1, Kootenay,\nthrough wnleh the creek runs, as per plan\nNo. 731C, in Nelson land registry office,\non area of about 30 acres, for domestic and\nNOTICE.\nIn the matter of an application for the\n.jsue of a duplicate certificate of title\nto lot 8029, Group 1,  Kootenay district.\nNotice 1b hereby given that it la my\nintention to Issue at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof\na duplicate of the certificate of title to\nthe above mentioned lot In the name of\nJohn E. Annable and Allan A. Burton\nwhich certificate is dated 27th May, 1U08\nand   numbered   8714A.\nSAMUEL  R.   ROB,\nDistrict   Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B.C., June\n29th,  1B1L\nNOTICE\nNotice is hereby given that starting\nWednesday, May 24th and continuing\nthrough June, July and August all\nstores of members of the Nelson Retail\nMerchants' association will be closed\nWednesday afternoons.\nil\nWATER NOTICE\nI, Alfred B. D. Borrow, rancher, ot\nFruitvale, B.C., give notice that on the\n14th day of July. 1911, I intend to apply\nto the Water Commissioner at his office\nin Nelaon, B.C., for a license to take and\nuse one-third cubic foot of water per second from an unnamed small stream running from mountain, entering block 31, subdivision of Fruitvale, B.C., at the southwest corner, In Ymlr division of West\nKootenay district The water Is to be\ntaken from the stream about 100 feet above\nsaid southwest corner of block 31, Fruitvale subdivision, and is to be used for\nirrigation purposes on block 31, Fruitvale,\ncomprising 10 acres.\nALFRED  E.  D.  BORROW.\nDated June 14, 1911.\nTENDERS     FOR     MINERAL    CLAIM\nFORFEITED TO THE CROWN\nTenders will be received by the undersigned up to 12- o'clock noon on Thursday,\nthe third day of August, 1911, iot the undermentioned mineral claim, which was\nforfeited to the crown at the tax sale held\nat the court bouse In Nelson on the 2nd\nday of November, 1908.\nTo be considered, all tenders must be\nat least equal to the upset price which Is\ngiven below, which Is equivalent to tbe\namount at which said claim could have\nbeen purchased by the owner or owners\non the above date, together with taxes\nand Interest which have accrued since\nthe tax Bale, Inclusive of the cost Of the\nadvertising for tenders and crown grant\nfee.\nName of claim, Shlloh. Upset price,\n1107.24.    Lot No.  3847.\nEach tender must be accompanied by a\ncertified check for the full amount thereof,\npayable at par at Nelaon, B. C, in favor\nof the undersigned.\nThe checks of all unsuccessful tenderers\nwin be immediately returned.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 30th day of\nJune,   1911.\nW.   F.   TEETZEL,\nGovernment Agent,\nExtra Good Buys\nIN THE SLOCAN VALLEY-\n200 acres choice land suitable for mixed farming; 13 acres cleared and\nseeded to timothy hay; 80 to 1W> acres moro suitable for hay growing, easily\ncleared. Balance of land suitable for fruit growing. Buildings consist of\nlog bouse, stable for nine head of cattle, chicken bouae. Implements .consisting of plough, tooth and disc harrow, mowing machine, seeder and other\nsmaller tools.   Price 932.50 per acre, f 2,500 cash, balance one and two years 6 P.C\nHOWSER LAKE\u2014100 acres adjoining Hawser townslte. Good land, f30\nper acre.   Terms.\n157 aores, in good locality.   A re\u00bbi good buy.l 12.60 per acre.   Terms.\nFruit and Farm Land* \u00a5\\    C$4>    T\\*.--*Z^ Insurance\nCity Property gj\u00bb Ola 1\/6111S Timber and Mines\n505 BAKER ST.\nP.O. Box 487\nNELSON, B.C\n Cfi* $ail? fitta*.\nFRIDAY  JULY 7\nWill You\nTrade?\nWe have 39.80 acres of land\non , the Columbia river,\nbounded on one side by C.\nP.R., and Rock creek on\nanother. One mile from a\nstation, and adjoining school\nand ranches the owners of\nwhich won't sell for less than\n$200 per acre. Our client\nwill take in trade vacant lots\nor any city property to the\nvalue of $1000. This is a\nbargain for someone. Call\nand see location and blue\nprint of property.\nShort Summer\nSeason This\nYear\nAre you prepared for the\nwinter with a nice comfortable house of your own? We\nhave another snap\u2014not an\nimaginary one\u2014on Victoria\nstreet, near fire hall. Two\nfine lots with excellent view.\nThe lots are worth $800,\nand the stone work is worth\nanother $300. The cottage\nis surely worth $700. Come\nin and let us show you this\nplace.\n$1,800 on Easiest\nTerms\nWestern Canada\nInvestment Co.\nRed Estate, Fire Insurance\nand Investment Brokers\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Manager.\nALEX. CHEYNE, Secretary.\nOffice Baker St, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 254 P.O. Drawer 1042\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at tbe fol\nlowing rates:\nPrivate ward patients, week $20.00\nSemi-private ward patients, week 15.00\nAddress  applications  to matron at\nhospital\t\nELECTION COMING IN\nNEW SOUTH WALES\nIndependent   Supporters   of   McGowen\nMinistry Withdraws Adherence and\nGovernment May be Defeated.\nMELBOURNE, July 6.\u2014The Independents, upon whose support the Labor\nministry in New South Wales has been\ndependent since it took office, have become dissatisfied with the polocy of\nthe government and have decided to\nwithdraw their votes. In consequence\nof this decision the party In power can\nonly count on a majority ot one, and is\nliable to be defeated at any time. The\ngovernment is anxious to avoid dissolution, but the Liberals are doing their\nutmost to bring it about as they feel\ncertain of regaining the treasury bench\nin the event of an appeal to the country. The rock on which Mr. McGowen's\nsupporters split was the compulsory\narbitration bill which the Labor party\nhad pledged itself to carry.\nDeputations from the women's reform leagues In Adelaide have waited\non the government demanding that lessons should ibe included in the school\ncurriculum pointing out the evil results\nwhich follow the use of -cigarettes.\nFavorable consideration of the proposal\nwas promised.\nMr. Tudor, on behalf of the federal\ngovernment has been negotiating with\nthe strikers in the sugar industry at\nBundaberg In an attempt to settle the\ndispute between masters and men. The\nminister finds that the only settlement\nthat can be made is to remit the duty\nimposed by the excise authorities, and\nin this way enable the sugar growers to\npny the increased wages demanded by\nthe men. The cabinet, however, will\nnot hear of this solution as the loss in\nrevenue  would  be at least   \u00a3150,000.\nSome nmusing Incidents marked the\ninauguration of the compulsory military\ntraining scheme of the commonwealth\non Saturday last. The cadets paraded\nIn force in Adelaide, and while the\ncorps were passing through the streets\na small boy threw a bag of snuff\namongst them. The violent outbreak\nof sneezing that followed wholly incapacitated the lads from further duty.\nAnother corps drilling in the city found\na football kicked into their raks. Immediately a wild scrimmage followed,\nto the entire subversion of the discipline.\nLOST\u2014Black leather pocket book containing engineer's certificates, valuable only\nto owner.    Finder pease return to Dally\nNewB office and receive reward.\nGREET SPEAKER WITH\nHOOTS AND HISSES\nReference to Socialism  Leads to Disturbance at Vancouver Meeting\nOne Man Arrested.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 6.\u2014Timely\ninterference of the police at a big\nmeeting held in the horse show building last night at which Pastor Russell,\nthe noted Brooklyn and London divine\nwas the speaker, nipped, what for a\ntime promised to be a disturbance serious enough to bring the meeting to a\nsudden termination. The huge building was packed to its capacity.\nHoots and Hisses.\nIt was during the course of the remarks of Pastor Russell, in which he\nreferred to Socialism as being practically identical with anarchy, and that\nsocialism would never, bring the kingdom of God, that the disturbance arose.\nHoots and hisses greeted the speaker\nat this statement, completely drowning bis next words and almost putting\na stop to the meeting. Pastor Russell\nsought to proceed with his address but\nthe uproar- continued and It was not\ntill the police were to be seen going\nto that section of the hall where the\ndisturbance seemed to have originated,\nthat the speaker was allowed a hearing.\nNot content, however, with the disturbance they had already created, the\nrioters with cries of \"equal rights for\nall,\" \"down with slave drivers,\" and\nother such shouts, began to leave the\nbuilding by the rear door to the Btreet\nat the back of the building where they\ngathered and began to harangue loudly\namongst themselves.\nOne of their number, who it is alleged made 'himself more troublesome,\nthan the rest, fell foul of the police\nand was quickly placed under arrest.\nAt the police station he gave his name\nas Henry Fitzgerald, claiming to be a\nprospector recently returned from\nSteamboat mountain. The arrest of\nFitzgerald seemed to have the desired\neffect on the remainder of the gathering outside.\nLOST\u2014On  Tuesday, a pearl brooch with\ncoral   center.    Return    to    417    Hoover\nstreet. 71-2\nLOST\u2014Black leather pocket book containing engineer's certificates, valuable only\nto owner.    Finder please return to Dally\nXews office and receive reward   .       69-6\nLOST\u2014Sliver chain purse bag Thursday\nforenoon on Stanley street between Gore\nand Robson streets. Reward on returning\nto Mrs. Wickes, corner Gore and Stanley\nstreets.\nCUNARD LINE\nCANADIAN SERVICE\nDo you know you can travel between Canada and England by the\nold reliable Cunard line direct\nCanadian service, sailing from\nMontreal, London and Southampton.? LOW RATES\nTo London, 3rd class ocean, $29,00\nFrom    London,   -3rd   class\nocean    528.75\nCabin (onedais)... .$42.50 and up\nTbe excellence of service for\nwhich the line Is so well known\nis being maintained in its Canadian service.\nFor lull particulars apply to\nany Cunard line Canadian service\nagent or write to\nH.  E.  LIDMAN\nGen. Agent. Can, West.\n445 Main St., Winnipeg, Man.\nA Really Genuine Offer\nWrite me for particulars about Kings' Bay, B.C.\nWe Give Free a\n$1,500 Bungalow\nW. R. Haldane\nSales Manager, Slocan Lake Fru It Lands Company.\nImperial Bank Building Nelson, B.O.\nJILTED CLERGYMAN __\nAT ALTAR STEPS\nDaughter of Earl of Liverpool Creates\nSensation in English Society-\nBride   Disappears.\nLONDON, July 6.\u2014Lady Constance\nFolia time, daughter of the first earl of\nLiverpool, and half sister to the present earl, who is controller of King\nGeorge's household, has given England\na real sensation. She jilted a preacher, as he waited for her at the altar,\nwhile a big crowd were gathered in\nthe church for the wedding. Rev, H. A.\nHawkins, the would-be bridegroom, 1b\na fashionable clergyman of the Church\nof England. Lady Constance is 21 and\nRev. 'Mr. Hawkins is two years her\nsenior. Where Lady Constance now is\nonly her relatives know. It is believed\nthat she fled to the continent when she\nleft the Earl of Liverpool's town house\nyesterday. Rev. Mr. Hawkins, who was\ndeeply humiliated, hurried away from\nLondon last night.\nChurch Was Crowded.\nA big crowd of society people filled\nSt. Peter's church, Eaton square, one\nof the fashionable marriage churches\nof London, for the ceremony. On account of her brother's position near\nthe king, as well as her own popularity in society, Lady Constance's wedding was to have been the event of the\nseason. The organist played the voluntary and then waited. Twelve\no'clock passed and at 12:12 the society people began looking back towards the doors. At 12:20 they wondered, and- murmured questions passed from pew to pew. But the bridegroom that was not to be felt no anxiety. He knew that brides take a\nlong time to dress.\nEarl Was Uneasy.\nThe real scene of excitement at this\ntime was in the home of the bride-\nelect, at 44 Grosvenor gardens, overlooking the grounds of Buckingham\npalace. Tbe bridesmaids and pages\nhad arrived. The dowager countess\nwas dressed, carriages waited in the\nstreet, when Lady Liverpool, hysterical with surprise and distress, called\nall the servants and Questioned them.\nWhen 1 o'clock had come and no\nbride, the Earl of Liverpool could bear\nthe annoyance no longer and quietly\nsent to enquire the cause of the delay.\nLady Liverpool had just learned all\nthat was known. In broken gasps the\nmother told the news that had been\ngiven her by her daughter's maid:\n\"Lady Constance went out juBt before 10 o'clock, Baying she had forgotten to buy Bomething and she had not\nreturned.\"\nBroke The News.\nThe Earl of Liverpool, pale and agitated, went to the vestry to break the\nFruit Land Investments\nImproved and unimproved lands.   Write for our list of\nproperties.   Plans, photos and full particulars furnished.\nWholesale and retail dealers.\nToye & Toye\nWholesale Dealers in Fruit Lands\nPhone 328 : Box 147\nblLLETTS\n.LYE .\n,FOR MAKINGSOAPi\n| SOFTENING WATER |\nI REMOVING OLD PAINTl\nUNINFECTING SINKSj\npaOSETS.DRAINS.ANDi\nIFORMANYOTHER PURPOSES!\np THE STANDARD ARTICLE!\nISOLD EVERYWHERE!\nnews to the distressed bridegroom\nand leading him out by the vestry entrance drove away with him to Grosvenor gardens. Mr. Hawkins had to\nhe carried to bis carriage. The king\nwas represented at the church. It was\nto King George's representative that\nthe Earl hastly communicated what\nhad happened and left him to tell the\nothers. Last evening the earl received a telegram from Lady Constance\nsaying: \"I am quite safe. I changed\nmy mind and do not wlBh to be married.   I left London by train at noon.\"\nRUMORED THAT CONSOLIDATED\nHAS BOUGHT SANDON MINE\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nNEW DENVER, B. C, July 6.\u2014O. E.\nLeRoy, who had charge of the Ottawa\ngeographical survey party in the Slocan\ndistrict last season, arrived in town\nyesterday afternon and will spend a\nweek or two in the district on special\nwork.\nW. D. Thompson, assistant manager\nof the Dominion Express company, of\nVictoria, and son of Amos Thompson,\npostmaster here, is spending his vacation with his parents. He reports Victoria as having made great strides during the past year, real estate being\nespecially active on Douglas street\nsince the government decided to erect\nthe new postoffice there.\nIt is persistently rumored that the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting company of Trail has taken over a well\nknown Sandon property In addition to\nthe Richmond-Eureka, which they have\nbeen working for some time, but the\nrumor has not been confirmed officially.\nA. H. Falrchild, a well known Vancouver and Cobalt mining engineer, has\nbeen spending a week or two In the\ndistrict examining several properties\nfor prospective purchasers.\nT. Ranklne, formerly principal of the\nlocal school, but now principal of the\nArmstrong school, arrived today from\nthat town accompanied by (Mrs. Ranklne, to spend the summer camping at\nTrout creek. They were met at the\nwharf by a number of friends who were\nglad to see them back.\nEnchanting bags, both little and\nbig, are shown In the shops. Some are\ngorgeous affairs of metallic lace over\nshimmering satin or lusterless silk of\nsome deep, rich color. They are jewel\nstudded or ornamented with tiny roses\nof metallic; lace or not, and are swung\nfrom fine metallic cords and soutache\nbraid twisted.\nBrunot Hall\nIdeal Preparatory School for Girls\nAdmits to any college; unusual advantages In Music and Art. Complete\ncourse In Domestic science. Pine gymnasium. Splendidly located in a wholesome and Invigorating climate. Individual instruction and home care. Get\nfurther Information and booklet from\nMiss Julia P. Bailey\n2209 Pacific Avenue\n Spokane, Wash.\t\nDay School for Girls\n904 Stanley Street\nMrs. ArmbriBter is now prepared to take pupils at the above ad-\nEvening classes for adults In\nFrench, German, literature and history, English lessons to foreigners.\nThe day school opened on\nJuly 3 for one month and will reopen again Sept. 1.\nP. O. Box 1012\nCarpet Cleaning\n10c PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suits cleaned and pressed, 7Bo to $2;\ndyed, *3.\nLadles' Skirts cleaned, $1; dyed, 12.\nGloves cleaned, 36a to 60c,\nBpecial rates for hotels, restaurants ant\nsteamers.\nFamily washing, rough dry, 3Ec down.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n601-408 VERNON STREET.\nTelephone 146. PAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nDry Batteries\nhave a good hot spark for your motor\nbut During tho races It will run faster.\nJust received shipment of Rapid Fire\nCells, dlreot from the factory. Brery\n\u00bb11 tested before leaving tbe store and\nguaranteed to register from 23 to 25\nmperes.\nThomas Sargent\nMotor Boat Supplies\nP.O. Box 172 ' Tel. 44\n806 Stanley 8t\u201e Nelson\nWANTED\nSmall Fruits of Every\nVariety\nstrawberries, raspberries, currants, gooseberries, blackberries.\nAlso alt kinds of tree fruits. Sat'\nisfactory prices offered and same\ncan be obtained on application to\nthe\nKOOTENAY-COLUMBIA\nPRESERVING WORKS\nNELSON, B.C,\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FUHNISHED.\nTHE WORKWOMEN'S EMPLOYMEN'\nAND  REAL ESTATE AOENCY.\nWA^TED^Teanister^paltresBes7^30 ttfl;\nhousekeepers, 130; girls for general\nhhousework, 925; a good tie Job in flight\nW. Parker, 312 Baker street.   Phone 283.\nB. C. UNITED AGENCIES\nReal Estate Employment Agents.\n311 Baker St., Nelson\nBox 232 Phone 391\nWOMEN'S    EMPLOYMENT    OFFICE\nPretty cottage for sale. Mill street.\nWaitress wanted.\nOver Poole Drug Store.\nEntrance: Josephine Street.\nBusiness Directory\nAUCTIONEERS\nc7a. vfA^ERUAjr^c6^9?a^oxl\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER.\nAuction rooms and warehouse Ward St.,\nnext opera house.   Box 474, Phone 18.\n20-tf.\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nW. CUTLER, COLLECTIONS OP ALL\nkinds. Returns promptly made. Ward\nstreet, next opera houae. 20-tf.\nCARPENTER8 AND BUILDERS\nbuilding homes. Delighted customers our\nbeat advertisement. P. O. Box 106. Phone\n101. 27-tf.\nCARPENTERS\u2014Persons wanting good\ncarpenters apply to United Brotherhood\nof Carpenters, Box 203, or at regular\nmeetings, Wednesday, 8 p.m., Miners'\nUnion hall.\nMARTIN, ROBB & THOMPSON\u2014BUILD-\nera and Contractors, Victoria street, next\nopera house, P. O. Box 496. Special attention given Jobbing and repair work.\nEstimates given. 66-tf.\nA88AYERS\n0. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAfER AND\nChemist, Box A1108, Nelson. B.C. Charges\nGold, silver, copper or lead, SI each\ngold-silver, 11.60; silver-lead, (1.60. Prices\nfor other metals on application.\nPRIVATE   MATERNITY   HOME\nNICE LOCALITY AND HOME COM-\nforts. For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson, B.C.\nWHOLE8ALE  PRODUCE\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine street\nNelson, B.C.\nOBSTETRICS\nMRS. KENNY^WEuTlHifpLEASED TO\nreceive maternity patients at her home.\nExcellent testimonials. 224 Observatory\nstreet   P. O. Box 173, telephone A54.\n20-tf.\nMRS. GOLDFINCH RECEIVES MATER-\nnity   patients   at   719  Josephine   street.\nPhone 460. 70-26\nHOUSE CLEANING.\nVACUUM CLEANING, WINDOW CLEAN-\nlng, Chimney Cleaning. Don't worry\nabout spring cleaning. Let us do It for\nyou. Terms moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed. Nelaon Vacuum company, Stanley\nstreet   Box 166, Phone 19.\nCARPETS CLEANED AND RELAID-\nchairs, etc., upholstered anew, Jolnerlng,\nrepairing by tne tlay. satisfied customers. Immediate attention to letters.\nStewart Joiner. Nelson. 66-6\nHAIR  DRESSING AND  MANICURING\nMRS.  J. M.  HOULDING, HAIR DRESS-\ning and Manicuring.   710 Josephine street\nFOR  RENT\u2014Cottage.    Apply to William\nGosnell, Brewery office. 46-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014One furnished front bedroom.\nInquire woom 8, Aberdeen block.       62-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms.   Apply\nJ. W. Gallagher, 102 Baker street    66-tf.\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms,   705 HaU street,   between   Baker\nand Victoria streets.\nFOR REN T\u2014Unfurnished housekeeping\nsuite in desirable locality, close in; large\nfront room, 2 bedrooms and small kitchen.\nReasonable rent to right party. Apply to\nL, Dally News. 68-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Large bedroom, with use of\nbath. Apply 201 Silica. (8-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Nice large room, with board.\nApply 912 Vernon at \u2022       68-6\nFOR RENT-Wlth or without board, furnished bedroom.   616 Victoria st.       68-6\nFOR   RENT\u2014Largs,   airy,  well-furnished\nrooms with use of bath.. 601 Hall street,\ncorner Baker. 69-12\nFOR RENT\u2014Three   furnlBhed   rooms  for\nhousekeeping, 919 Silica Btreet 70-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Comforable bedroom, 824 Observatory street 70-6\nFOR  RENT-Nlcely furnished rooms, 712\nJosephine street. 70-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Two comfortable rooms with\nuse of telephone nnd  bath.    Apply 412\nSilica. 71-6\nFOR RENT \u2014 Unfurnished housekeeping\nsuite In desirable locality, close In: large\nfront room, 2 bedrooms and small kitchen.\nReasonable rent to right party. Apply\nto P. O. box 1118. r'_\nFOUND.\nFOUND\u2014Fountain pen.   Owner may have\nsame   by  proving  property  and   paying\nfor  this  advertisement.\nFOUNDr-A small sum of money.   Owner,\ncan have same at residence of A, Sostad\non Smelter hill. 71-2\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Salesmen Ho! Salesmen want\ned to sell the most complete line of\nnursery stock in the Northwest. Cash\nweekly, capital City Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. 272-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman, exclusive territory.\nComplete line Yakima Valley grown fruit\nand ornamental stock. Steady position.\nCash weekly. Outfit free. Toppenlsh\nNursery company, Toppenlsh, Wash.   61-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman to sell our complete\nline of guaranteed nursery stock; good\nterritory;   terms 'liberal.     Yakima   Valley\nNursery company, Toppenlsh, Wash.    67-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Several men, single or double,\nto buy first choice main lake fruit\ntracts, 6 acres up. One-quarter down,\nbalance easy terms. 800 aores east of\nMirror Lake to select from; (60 to $160 per\nacre according to location. Give references,\nnationality and amount you have to invest Honeymoon riace, Kaslo, B.C.    62-tf.\n8HERBROOKE HOTEL\nNilson, 8.C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. Ma\/\ntion.   Cuisine unexcelled; well heats)!\nand ventilated.\nBoyer Broe., Proprietors\nWANTED\u2014A few carloads    dry    fir    or\ntamarac   cordwood.    Apply  A.   Larson,\nCastlegar, B.C. 68-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Land   to   dear   on   contract.\nLowest estimate for slashing, stumping,\neto.     AddresB   Kemp   &   Ashfortb,   contractors, Willow Point 70-6\nWANTED-School girl, about 17 years, to\nhelp  with  housework in summer holidays.    Apply   I.   C.    Campbell, Willow\npoint.  66-tf.\nWANTBD-Good   general   servant,   small\nfamily.   Apply 802 Carbonate street. 68-tf\nWANTED\u2014Principal   for   Hume   School.\nAddress Secretary, Box 656, Nelson.   68-6\nWANTED\u2014Furnished   cottage   of  4   or   6\nrooms, close In; or three furnished housekeeping   rooms,   well   furnished.   Address\nW. B. R, Dally News. ah\nWANTED\u2014LessonB   given   In   shorthand\nand    other   subjeota.     Apply    \"Tutor\/'\nNews.  _\"\"'\nWANTED\u2014Circular saw filer wants position;   steady,   sober  and   10   years'   experience.   Address L. E. Nickerson, Proctor, B. C. 69-13\nWANTED\u2014Position by first class stenographer, Bmart at   figures,   some   knowledge of lumber business.   \"Stenographer '\nNews office. TO--\nWANTED\u2014Bookkeeping   to   do   In   spare\ntime.   Apply A. C. C. 70-6\nWANTED^Grader. Man familiar with\ngrading pine lumber under Mountain association rules wantea at once. Must\nthoroughly understand shop grading. The\nNicola Valley Pino Lumber Co., Canford,\nB. C. TO-6\nWANTED\u2014Immediately, a few active lads,\nNot  under 14,    Apply Kootenay-Colu..i-\nbla Preserving works. 69-tt\nW^TED^enTleman stenographer familiar   with   lumber  mismess    and    office\nwork.    Apply   British   Canadian   Lumber\nCo.,  Crescent Valley, B. C. 71-tf\nFOR   SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014For quick sale we are offering 20 acres of excellent fruit land; five\nacres cleared, with 300 six-year-old apple\ntrees of choice variety. Balance of land\neasily cleared, with unfailing spring which\ncan be taken over every part of It; with\na good wagon road running through the\nproperty, and It Is only 200 yards from good\nsidewalk. Price (2,600; easy terms. We\nhave a good many other similar snaps.\nApply to Lindsay Launch & Boat Company,\nLtd., Griffin Block, Room 8. 89-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Fruit lands, 820 aores in famous\nFend d'Oreille valley, about 6 miles from\nWaneta and 3 miles north of International\nboundary on Interprovlnolal highway; admirably adapted for fruit raising; excellent\nland: plenty of water; admirable climate;\nrapidly developing district; large proportion\nof land can be plowed without preliminary\nclearing; (35 an acre for block or would\nsell In parcels of 20 acres each; terms, ThiB\nIs a snap and great chance to make money.\nWrite Box 966. Nelson, B.C.\t\nFOR  SALE-\u00ab0 acres,   subdivided   tracts,\nfirst selected fruit lands.   Harris, Honeymoon Place, Kaslo, B.C. 12-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014At a saennce, a brand new\npiano.   Owner desires particularly to sell\nIt at once.   Address E. L. F., Daily News.\n18-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014A beautiful level 30 acre tract\nof land below city of Rossland. Soil Is\nAl and plenty of good water; one-half of\nIt Ib in good state of cultivation. If taken\nat once, price low and terms easy. Apply\nto J. R. Cranston, Rossland, B.C.       44-tf,\nFOR SALE\u2014One Brunswick Balke-Collen-\nder pool table; cues, balls and table In\nfirst class condition.   Worth (300, will sell\nfor (176 cash.   Apply D, Dally News.    68-6\nFOR   SALE\u2014Upright   Bell   piano,   exceptionally fine tone, reasonable price.   Ap-\nFOR SALE\u2014Launch, with house and complete accessories.   Very moderate price.\nGeo, H. Playle, 405 Baker street. 69-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Seventy-five acres of choice\nland on the banks of the Slocan river,\none mile from the postoffice, railroad\nstation, school houae and saw mill employing 126 men. Never-failing mountain\nstream, easily accessible; good houae, IV\nstories high, 20x26; good hen house am\nsmall barn; 12 acres cleared, 20 that can\nbe cleared for (20 per acre, and the balance for (30 per aore. Land Is free from\ntook and every foot workable. 100 young\nfruit trees and 10 acres In clover.   Price,\n?6j per acre with terms.   Apply to C. W.\niester, Crescent Valley, B. C. 69-8\nFOR SALE\u201418 foot launch,  new;  speed.\n9% miles; price moderate.   Apply to P. O.\nbox 12,  Nelson.\nFOR SALE\u2014Three pair work horses.   Enquire F. L.    Churchill, Rossland, B. C.\n70-12\nFOR SALE\u2014Nearly new pair ranchers'\nboots, size eight, Dayfoot solid leather,\nhigh tops, cost is, sell for (5, express\npaid. Pair packs, bIzc eight, good order,\n(2.   Box T,   Dally News. 70-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Household effects, Including\nrange, carpet, mission rockers, sewing\nmachine, kitchen cabinet, bedroom furniture, etc. Apply Capt. Patterson's cottage, High street, opposite Andrews. 70-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Three pair work horses. Enquire F. L.  Churchill,  Rossland,   B,   C.\n70-12\nFOR QUICK SALE\u2014New six-roomed cottage; bearing fruit trees, one block from\ncar line   Reasonable price,    Apply \"Cottage,\" Daily News. 71-6\nFOR SALE\u2014First class saddle pony, 9\nyears old, sound and broken to harness;\nwill weigh around 860 lbs. Price, (80.\nTelephone B 171. C. W. Lester, Crescent\nValley. 71-6\nFOR SALE\u2014SNAP\u201420 acres, 7 acres\nslashed, balance very light clearing.\nGood boat service, postoffice, store,\nschool. Soil excellent. No rock. Can be\nhad very reasonably. Owner leaving country.    X,  Dally News. 71-6\nTO  RAY CRI8LER\nTake notice that I, David Thomas Evans,\nof Moyie, B.C., hereby give notice that I\nam the solo owner of the motor launch\nknown as the \"Laura,\" and that no other\nperson has any Interest whatever in. the\nsaid motor launch In any way or to any\nextent.\n66-6 DAVID THOMAS EVANS.\nPhysical Culture, Etc.\nLessons in tbe above given by a\ncompetent Instructor,   For particulars\napply\nInstructor, P.O. Box 637, City,\n\u00bbOmWRECTORY_\nNELSON HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nINK ft WARD, Props.\nGin Rlckeys.   Only place carrying Limes.\nR088LAND\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND.\nB. C.-Green & Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will find light,\noomfortable sample rooms, a apeolal aJn-\ning room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. O.-\nThs only up-to-date hotel In Phoenix;.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath room hi\nconnection. Steam heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot  James Marshall, Prop.\nGRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB.C.\u2014Finest flre proof hotel In Boundary,\nAmerican and European plan. Commercial travellers wlU find light oomfortable\nsample rooms.  M. Frankovltoh, Prop.\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B. C.-MOST\nmodern and up-to-date hotel In Ymlr;\nlocated directly opposite depot; best a*\ncommodatlon possible. Dming room is\nconnection.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAB\nJunction. All modern. Excellent oooom*\nmodations for tourists and drummers.\nBoundary train leaves hers at 9.10 a.m.\nW. H. Gage, Proprietor.\nPUBLISHERS AND  PRINTERS\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPubllshers of Ths Daily News: subscription H par year by sarrisr; (E per year\nby mail. Conunsrslal Job printing of all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed. flf\nBaker street Nelsoa. R O.. Phone 1U\nTRAIN AND STEAMER TIMETABLE\nC.P.R. trains leave Nelson for:\nBoundary and Intermediate points at 8\na.m. doily, except Sunday.\nSlocan City and Intermediate points at\n8.30 a.m. dally, except Sunday.\nRossland and Intermediate points 9.80\na.m. and 7.26 p.m.\nVancouver and Intermediate points 7.26\np.m. daily.\nGreat Northern trains leave Nelson for:\nSpokane and all Intermediate points, Including Salmo and  Sheep Creek,   7.46\n^  n^, daily, except Sunday.\nC.P.R. boats leave Nelson for:\nKootenay Landing, connecting with all\n\u00a3olnts east, 6 a.m. dally,\nardo, Kaslo and  Intermediate points\n7 a.m.,    Mondays,    Wednesdays    and\nFridays.\nKaslo and intermediate points 7 a.m.\nTuesdaya, Thursdays and .Saturdays.\nCrawford Bay and intermediate points\n8 p.m., dally, except Sunday.\nC.P.R. trains arrive In Nelson from:\nBoundary   and   intermediate points 7\n\u00a7.m. dally, except Sunday.\nlocan   City   and   intermediate   points\n6 p.m. dally, except Sunday.\nRossland and Intermediate points 11.05\na.m. and 9.36 p.m. dally.\nVancouver and intermediate points 9.86\np.m. dally.\nC.P.R. steamers arrive in Nelaon from:\nKootenay   Landing,    connecting    with\ntrains from all points east at 7 p.m.\ndally.\nLardo, Kaslo and intermediate polnte,\n6.30  p.m.,   Mondays,   Wednesdays  and\nFridays.\nKaslo and Intermediate points, 3.80 p.m.,\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nCrawford Bay and Intermediate points,\n9.30 a.m., daily, except Sunday.\nGreat Northern train arrives from:\nSpokane   and   Intermediate  points  6.46\np.m. dally, except Sunday.\nWanted, Bids for Packing From Utlca\nMine on 12-Mlle from Mine to Rail,\nroad.\nWanted, bids for packing 100 tons of\nore during the months of August September and part of October before rawhlding\ncommences, and for rawhlding LOOO tons\nduring the months of November, December,\nJanuary and February from the Utlca\nmine, on 12-Mile creek to the railroad.\nFifty cents per hundred will be allowed for\nback freight from the railway to the mine.\nThere Is a first class government trail, all\ndown hill, regular grade from 13 to 13 per\ncent, in first class condition. Comfortable\nBtables at both ends of the route. Ore\nbeing a lead ore weighs per saok from\n126 to 136 pounds per sack. Lowest bid\nnot necessarily accepted. A guarantee of\nthe amount of ore will be furnished and\na reasonable guarantee will be expected\nfrom the bidder for the fulfillment of his\npart of the contract The packing and\nrawhlding bids will be let Independently\nof each other. All bids for rawhlding\nmust be In by August 1, and for packing\nby July 16. Contracts awarded within a\nfew days after the opening of bids. Direct\nbids to be sent to .\t\nC. F. CALDWELL,\nManager.\nKaslo. B.C. 60-11\nAssignee's Sale of Groceries\nAs assignee for the creditors of Messrs.\nStewart & Co., recently doing business In\nthis city as retail grocers, I herewith Invite tenders for the purchase en bloc, or\nseparately, of the effects held by me under\nthe assignment They consist of the following: Merchandise, store furniture, office furniture, one delivery wagon.\nInspection of the above can be effected\nat any time prior to 10th July, 1911, on\nwhloh date all tenders that will receive\nconsideration will be opened.\nNo tender necessarily accepted.   Terms.\nAll communications to be made to me\nat P. O. Box 878.\nDated 26th June, 1911.\nT. M. RIXEN,\n61-10 Assignee.\nNOTICE  DELINQUENT CO-OWNER\nNotice to W. c. Wells\nNotice Is hereby given that I, George R.\nDevlin, oo-owner together with W, C.\nWells in the \"Devlin Lode\" mineral olalm*\nsituated on Sheep creek and recorded on\nthe and day of July, 1909, unless you, within a period of 90 days from the first publication of this advertisement pay to me\nthe sum of $4,60, mousy expended by t \"\nIn performing the assessment work,\ngether with half <ttia costs of traveUji* -,,\nand from the claim, and together JC\u2122 ,a11\nthe costs of this advecti\u00abemein1trf\u00a3'\u00a3L!r\nterest In tho said data, will b^\u00a3^|rel\nin me, your co-owner, \u2014*\u2014J\u2122\u00b0\nrequired expen\nolalm under \u25a0\nAct.\"\nThis notice is .\n26B of the \"MJBrTinnn\n.ider section\n\u00bbB. DEVLIN-\nj^^^^T^mmMOld.  WelghS\n FRIDAY ................ JULY 7\nCpe Sail? fim\u00bb\nPAGE SEVEN\n(pfoO\nCALGARY\nSafety and Profit for Small Investors\nThe only REAL investment in the world is REAL ESTATE\nLand  is wealth \u2014 above accident   and  beyond   business   risk\nIn the next few years Cal gary must even surpass her own unparalleled records of growth and her suburban real estate Is sure to double and treble in value. Population and land values move together.\nDrop us a line today\u2014rig ht now\u2014so we may write you a per sonal letter explaining the unusual merit of our proposition.\nWestern Provinces Co-Operative Realty Co., Ltd.\nKenneth Campbell, Managing Director.\nHarold  Brett, Secretary-Treasurer.\nRoom 16, K.W.C. Block,      Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 188      P.O. Drawer 1107\nASSESSMENT WORK\nIS STILL ACTIVE\nMany Certificates Granted to Owners\nof Claims\u2014Ymlr and Sheep Creek\nCentres of Work.\nWith hundreds of miners in the hills\nto tbe south of Nelson, prospecting and\ncarrying on assessment work on claims\nalready located, the majority of the\nrecord number of certificates of work\nbeing issued this summer are for claims\nin that district, the Sheep creek and\nTmir camps commanding the greatest\nattention. The following are recent\ncertificates granted by Stephen H.\nHosklns, mining recorder:\nTo Thomas Wilkinson for the Lost\nand Pound, Wild Horse creek; to G.\nD. Bell for the Nevada, Nevada mountain; to Dougal McEachern for the\nKing George, near Brie; to Gus Sch-\nwinke for the Lucky Boy fraction,\nSheep creek; to Joseph Bernard for\nthe Second Chance, and Juno, near the\nKeystone mine; to Mike O'Donnell for\nthe Shamrock, Nugget fraction and\nGolden Fawn fraction, Fawn creek; to\nA. H. Green for the Devlin Lode,\nSheep creek; to Thomas Brown for the\nAngels and. Angels fraction, Sheep\ncreek; to William Allen for the Dolly\nVarden fraction and Lula fraction, Bear\ncreek; to J. G. Devlin for the Devlin\nLode, Sheep creek; to Barney Crllley\nfor the Blue Bird, White Bear and\nCub, Fawn creek; to Thomas Brown\nfor the Black Prince, Beasley Siding;\nto Ed PeterB (or the Jay Eye See, near\nYmlr, and for the Protection, Wild\nHorse creek; to R. S. Penrco for the\nFox fraction and Judy, Cook creek; to\nJohn Halm for the Maggie, Eagle creek;\nto M. Murphy for the Lucky George\nand Helena, Sheep creek; to A. L.\nStewart for the Deleware fraction, Summit creek; to William Blals for the\nGold Hill, Wild Horse creek.\nPROSPERITY COMING AGAIN\nTO SLOCAN DISTRICT\n\"Conditions In the silver-lead Slocan\ndistrict, British Columbia, have shown\nremarkable improvement, within the\npast few months,\" writes Sidney Norman in the Los Angeles Mining Review.\n\"The Standard at Sllverton, on Slocan\nlake, owned by John A. Finch and\nGeorge Aylard, is developing into one\nof the really big mines of the northwest and will largely Increase shipments' as soon as its new concentrator\nhas been completed. The Rambler-\nCariboo, at McGuigan, has recently\nfound a body of very high grade galena\non the 1200 ft. level and expects to\ntrace it down to the 1450 ft. level within\nthe next few weeks. The old mill, destroyed tn the forest fires of last year,\nwill be replaced by a new plant directly\na site has been decided upon,\"\nNUGGET MINE IS\nPROGRESSIVE PROPERTY\nThree years ago the Nugget mine was\na prospect with about 50 feet of underground work, sayB the B. C. Mining and\nEngineer News. In this short space of\ntime $250,000 worth of ore has been\nextracted with only a temporary 4-\nstamp mill equipment; the average\nwidth mined being approximately five\nfeet, and the average value being \u00a725\nper ton.     The purchase, development,\nalton's\nV  CONCENTRATED        r\nLemonade\nIs the real thing.    A Pure Lemon\nproduct   It has the delicious flavor\nof the fresh ripe fruit   Contains\nno other acid.\nEach bottle makes half a gallon of\ndelicious lemonade\u201412 glasses for 15c.\nAT ALL GROCERS AND  DRUGGISTS WW\nUiu \u25a0' i\u00abju\u00ab\u00ab\nWHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS\nStandard Brokerage Company\nVancouver, B.C.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nUnion Men, Why Don't You Use\nPride of Alberta Flour\nThe only flour In Canada tha \/carries a union label on every eack.\nQuality ot flour unsurpassed. Pice $2.00 per 49 pound sack. If you\ncan't get this from your grocer c .11 or write.\nFront Street\nTaylor Milling & Elevator Co.\nNelson, B.C.\nand equipment cost of this property has\nbeen paid out ot the profits during this\ntime. The three veins being developed\n(six have been discovered) have proven\nto be remarkably persistent, both vertically and horizontally, and It is estimated that these veins will produce\nover $1,000,000 of ore above the No. 4\nlevel, which is from 150 to 500 feet\nbelow the apex.\nMARKETS\nLOCAL QUOTATIONS\nFOODSTUFFS.\nLake of Woods, per bag $2.00\nRoyal   Household  2.00\nPurity  Flour 2.00\nGold Drop Flour 1.90\nftobln Hood Flour  2.00\nMothers Favorite  1.76\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, creamery, per lb 28 to .40\nButter,   dairy,   pBr   lb 25 to .3o\nCooking   Butter,   per   lb 20 to .30\nCheese, Canadian, per lb 20\nCheese, Swiss, per lb 36 to .40\nEggs, fresh, per doz 50\nEiggs,   case,   per   doz 35\nVEGETABLES.\nRadishes,   per hunch 2 for  .05\nTomatoes, pea* lb 20 to .30\nCelery, per hond 6 to .03\nCarrots,., per   lb 05\nDry  Onions,  per lb 05\nLettuce,   per   lb 10 to .15\nTurnips,   per   li> C to .08\nSpinach,   per   lb 15 to .25\nCucumbers,   each    15 to .25\nFRUITS.\nStrawberries,   per   crate 52.50 to 0.50\nStrawberries,   per   box 12Vj and .15\nOranges,    per   doz 25 to .60\nBananas, nor doz 40 to .50\nLemons,   per  doz 35\nHoney, comb, per lb 25\nMoney.  1-lb.  1nra   35\nPrunes,   per   lb 20 to .35\nCherries,    per   lb 12& to .20\nMEAT\nBeef, wholesale  10% to 11V.\nPork,   wholesale   17 to .19\nMutton, wholesale  14\"& to lfl\nVeal, wholesale  13% to .IB\nFrozen beer, retail  12% to .25\nFresh killed  beef,, retail   14% to .27\nPork, retail  , 20 to .28\nMutton, retail  15 to .25\nVeal, retail  15 to .25\nHams,   retail    18 to .28\nBacon,  retail   21 to .28\nLard, retail   17 to .22\nChickens, retail  25 to .28\nSausages, retail  16 to .is\nAT THE THEATRES.\nThe subjects being shown at the Gem\ntheater are \"The Temptress,\" an Imp.\nfeature, a fine drama In which the quality of the picture Is strength. \"The Qol-\nonel and the King,\" a ThanhouBer. In\nthis film Marie Ellne (the Thanhouser\nkid) takes tbe leading part. Her great\ncharm Is her personality. \"The Crisis\"\nand \"The Joys of Persecution\" are both\ngood Powers comedies. The above films\nare by the finest makers In the country\nand of recent release.\nGRAIN FIRM FAILS.\nCALGARY, Alta., July fi.\u2014The Sovereign Grain company has failed or suspended, after being In business in Calgary for about ten weeks, the firm\nwhich conducted a speculative grain\nbusiness with a private wire from Winnipeg closed its doors this morning.\nThere are caps, hosiery, shoes, sandals, sunshades, bags and even long\nbath, or, rather, beach cloaks which accompany the dainty, chic little suit for\nwear In the surf. The hosiery and\nshoes are always in the darkest possible shade, as being less striking and\nin better taste.\nMlnard'a Liniment Cures DiphtheHa.\nHAMMER DRILLS\nIn the mind of the mine manag\norlty of the \"B.C.-ll\" Telescope Fe\nfor up holes. Its principle is righ\nconcentrated upon operating the h\nNo energy is consumed in the fr\na rough hole. The force of the bio\npoint, and the maximum cutting rat\npower.\nThe number of wearing parts is\neach part is made for endurance.\nRand designs are governed by j\nand embody the most advanced ide\ner there can be no doubt of the superi-\ned Hammer Drill over the piston drill,\nt;   the entire  power  consumption  Is\nammer.\nictlon of reciprocating a long steel in\nw is perfectly directed to the cutting\ne is accomplished with the minimum ot\nreduced to the limit of efficiency and\nears of successful rock drill experience\nas in hammer drill construction.\nCANADIAN RAND CO., LTD.\nSPOKANE\nVANCOUVER\nLARGER SCHOOL\nIS PROPOSED\nImportant Matter to be Discussed at\nAnnual Meeting of. Hume Ratepayers\u2014Election of Trustee\nThe annual statutory meeting ot the\nratepayers of the Hume school district\ntakes place In the school house tomorrow.\nThe object of the meeting Is to elect\na trustee in place of A. -S. Horswlll\nwhose term expires, and an auditor, and\npaBS upon the estimates prepared by\nthe trustees for next year's expenditure\nwhich will include a proposal for the\nenlargement of the school building.\nThis has become necessary in order to\nkeep pace with the rapid growth of the\ndistrict and the school population.\nPlans and estimates will be submitted\nby the trustees.\nAs this is the principal occasion of\nthe year provided by the school law\nfor discussion of school affairs by all\nthose interested, whether as taxpayers\nor as parents, and as the government\ngives the residents of the district a\nlarge measure of \"home rule\" so far as\nthe school management is concerned, it\nis hoped that the residents of the district will he well represented at this\nmeeting.\nThe time of the meeting as fixed\nby statute is 10 o'clock Saturday morning, July 8, hut as this hour Is not convenient for many the trustees would\nbe glad to know ot any who wish to\nattend but who are unable to do so at\nthat hour, in order that if necessary\narrangements may be made to adjourn\nthe meeting when the formal business\nis disposed of and continue It on the\nevening of some later day.\nTO ADDRESS FRUIT GROWERS.\nCORVALLIS, Ore., July 6.\u2014Superintendent R. W. Allen of the O. A. C.\nexperiment station at Umatilla, will\naddress British Columbia fruit growers\nIn a three weeks' series of lectures,\nbeginning July 11. He will begin at\nKamloops and travel south through the\nOkanagan district, giving field demonstrations in the afternoons and stere-\noptican lectures in the evenings on\norchard irrigation. Mr. Allen has been\nconnected with tbe college since his\ngraduation there in 1907, and at Umatilla is devoting himself to variety\ntests ot different fruit trees and some\nexperiments in building up the soil,\nwhich Is extremely sandy. There are\nmany problems to meet there, including a maximum rainfall of only nine\ninches for the year, together with heavy\nfrosts. The temperature Is mild and\nthe altitude low. On a 40-acre tract he\nis studying the most economical\nmethods of applying water and conserving moisture, as well as the use\nof commercial fertilizers Buited to that\nsoil.   '\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nA choir practice will be held In St. Paul's\nPresbyterian church this evening at s\no'clock.\nTiie raffle for the mounted *polt hide\nwill be hold at the Lakeview hotel this\nevening  at 3 o'clock.\nScandinavian Aid and Fellowship socletr\n^fleets tonight at the Kugle ball at S\no'clock.    Election of officers will  bo  held.\nErnest Harrop, merchant nnd postmaster of Harrop, was in the city yesterday\non business. He was accompanied by his\nson,  Xoel.\nWith one car out of operation owing to\nsome minor trouble, S-lti passengers were\ncarried n the street railway on Wednesday, an exceptionally heavy number for\none car.\nAll Odd -Fellows are requested to meet\nIn the lodge room next Sunday n#rn!ng\nat id o'clocjk to attend the annual memorial services. All visiting brothers are\ninvited to be present. Carriages will be\nsupplied  for the  Rebekahs.\nThe five ladles who got their purchases\nfor nothing at Meagher's Free Gift Sale\nyesterday were Mrs.Shachan, Miss Hanson, Miss McCallum, Miss Evans and Mrs.\nT. W. Barrow. Today and tomorrow are\ntbe last two days of this Free Gift Sale.\nJ. I. Lewis, tenor vocalist, late of The\nMountain Ash Royal Welsh male party,\nwhich sang at Windsor before the king\nand queen and also toured the United\nStates with great success, will sing at\nthe Gem theater on Saturday evening\nnext.\nAt a very largely attended meeting of\nthe Association of Church Helpers of SL\nSavior's, presided over by the president,\nMrs. F. A. Starkey, and held in tbe parish\nhall, many further details titan those already announced of the fancy fair to be\ngiven in Eagles' hall on September 11 and\n12 were discussed and arranged. All members of the congregation are specially Invited to assist the Church Helpers In making the fancy fair in aid of tbe rectory\nfund an unqualified succesB. Tho ladles\nin charge are greatly pleased at the numerous offers of assistance so far given,\nbut they are specially anxious that every\none connected with St. Savior's should Join\nIn tbe undertaking and they will be glad\nof obtaining still further names than\nthose already enrolled. Ladles willing to\nassist, who have not already given their\nnames can report either to the president\nor to those In charge of the various\nbooths.\nBe convinced of the superior quality ot\nCurlew lee cream. The strawberry ice\ncream Is flavored with the fresh fruit\nC. H. Bean, the Palace Confectionery.\n64-tf.\nFISHING WATER\nBoats for hire on Pool at Slocan Junction,\nmost famous fishing water of British\nColumbia. Fly fishing par excellence. Try\ngrasshoppers for the big fellows. All conveniences at C.P.R. Creel Lodge. J. Kllley,\nlodsekeeper. 37-tf.\nThe semi-annual, pro-Inventory Clear\nance Bale of the Hudson's Bay stores\nwill commence on Monday, July 10th,\nand continue until Saturday, July 22.\nAstonishing values will be offered In\nboots and shoes, dry goods, clothing,\ngents' furnishings, crockery, china and\nglassware. In these lines many goods\nwill be offered at half cost, others at\ncost and all at considerable reductions.\nSee their advertisement on page 3 and\nIt will pay you to watch their windows\nduring this sale.\nAway on your outing or staying at home, you'll want sohi\u00a9 cool outfitting for the spring and summer months. Your comfort and good appearance both demand it.\nWe've a splendid line of Man's \"Beldngings.\" Toggery, that has a\npedigree and noted for its goodness.\nCool soft shirts In new and breezy patterns by a splendid\nmaker. Handsome new spring shirtings, $1.00 to $4.50.\nNeckwear that's just right for the season. Some splendid\nwash ties, guaranteed not to fade, 25c, 35c. to $1.00.\nCool Athletic underwear or the regular style if you prefer\nit.   The best makes and fabrics, 50c.( 75c, up to $1.75.\nThe new soft collarB, new hosiery, gloves, belts and everything\nchoice in summer outfitting.\nNew Straw and Panama Hats in great variety. A correct style for\nevery face.  We're Hatters as well as Clothiers and Haberdashers.\nEmory & Walley Sft\nHits and\nSterling Silver\nSpoons\nWe carry all the leading designs\nincluding Louis XV,, Kentlworth\nand several others. Coffee Spoons\nfrom $3 a dozen up; teaspoons\nfrom ?5 a dozen up; dessert\nspoons from $29 up; soup spoons\nfrom $29 up; berry spoons at $5;\nsugar spoons at $2. Call and inspect our stock before buying\nelsewhere.\nJ. J. Walker\nOPTICIAN   AND JEWELER\nAuction Sale\nAuction Rooms, next Opera House, Sat\nurday Evening, July 8 at 7:30\nWe will offer by public auction at\nthe above address, a quantity of jewellery, suitable for presents, consisting\nof ladles' chains, bracelets, brooches,\nrings, etc.; gent's Alberts, pendants,\nstiver pencils, match boxes, etc., also\nclocks, watches, and musical Instruments, to commence at 7:110 Bharp, Saturday evening, the 8th Instant.\nTERMS:  CASH.\nW. CUTLER\nAuctioneer\nne GEM\n.. Latest and best films shown ..\nIn Nelson\nOverture, Orchestra\nIMP FEATURE\nThe Temptress\nThanhouser Feature\u2014The Colonel\nand the King.\nPower's Comedy\u2014The Crisis.\nThe Joys of Persecution.\nOn Saturday evening MR. J. T.\nLEWIS, the eminent vocalist,\nmember of the Mountain Ash\nRoyal Welsh Male Party will sing.\n10c.   ADMISSION   10c.\nNEW  CALGARY  COLLEGE\nIS   NEARING  COMPLETION\nCALGARY, Alta., July G,~The new\nMount Royal college, Calgary, is near-\nnig completion and will be ready for the\nopening of classes in all departments\nby Sept. 1. The building will be very\ncomplete in every way, and thoroughly\nfurnished throughout. In the basement,\nwhich Ib high and light, will be found\nthe kitchen, pantry, dining ball, household science, and manual training\nrooms, also the laundry and boiler\nroom. On the main floor will he the\noffices and library, the conservatory of\nmusic, commercial and academic recitation rooms, and the principal's residence. The west building will be the\nladies' residence, and Is provided with\na large number of rooms for students\nand teachers, together with two reception rooms. The east building is\nthe boys' residence. In which there are\na similar number of rooms, with parlors and rooms for the staff. The staff\nfor the new college, in music, classics,\nEnglish and modern languages, bookkeeping and shorthand, mathematics,\nscience, expression and physical culture\nhave all been engaged. Persons of\noutstanding scholarship and successful\nexperience have been engaged. The\ncourses of study have been outlined\nand will appear In the new calender,\nwhich is now In the hands of printers.\nAny information concerning details will\nFor Watering\nLawns\nIs your lawn service in order for\nuse this hot weather?\nI can supply all your requirements, Including hose, nozzles,\ntaps and sprays.\nE.K. Strachan\nPlumbing and Heating\nTelephone 262 313 Baker St.\nWe Tailor for\nBusiness Men\nEspecially for those who appreciate correct styles, with the suggestion of individuality, and the easy\nand graceful fit ouly to be had\nin custom made suits.\nFor this style of suit we would\nsuggest the smooth faced worsteds\nof which we have a fine range for\nyour selection.\nDave Small & Co\nMerchant Tailors\n507l\/2 Baker St. Nelson\nThere Never Was\na Day\nBtnce we began selling groceries when\nthis WBS not the best grocery for you\nto deal with regularly. You want good\ngoods at a reasonable price consistent\nwith quality.   We have them.\nHazelwood gutter. 2 lbs, 75c.; Gilt\nEdge* Butter, 3 lbs. $i; Dewar and Watson's sweet pickles, per bottle 35c;\nextra large tin of nice juicy pineapple,\n35c; Jacobs' Kiel Finger biscuits, per\npkt. 20c. \u2022    ... .\nJoy's Cash Crocay\nThe Little Store -with the Big Stock.\nCorner Mill and Josephine Sts.\nPhone 1\u00bb P.O. Box 637\nRanches for Sale\nEighteen acres on West Arm, 400 to 600\nfruit trees In bearing; five acres under\nperfect cultivation; good water; no house.\nPrice {5,500. Terms $2,600 cash, balance In\none, two and three years, interest at 7 per\ncent.   Lake frontage.\n120 acres, 12 cleared; good creek; some\nfruit trees planted; good house; chicken\nhouse and barn. Price $2,600 cash, or 11,000\ndown, balance In one and two years, interest at & per cent,\n8% acres unimproved, on West Arm, $200\nper acre, one-half cash.\nil acres close to above, on wagon road,\n$150 per acre. Good water on both properties.   Terms offered,\nR. J. STEEL\nRoom 7, Griffin Block.\n8TREET RAILWAY TIME TABLE\nDown Up\nLV.              Lv. Lv. Lv.\nStanley &    Ward & Ship Ward &\nIrmes.         Baker. Yard.     Baker\n6.30             6.40\n7.30             7.40 7.00 7.15\n8.30             8.40 8.00 8.15\n0.30             9.40 9.00 9.15\n10.30           10.40 10.00 10.15\n11.30           11.40. 11.00 11.15\n12.00            12.10\n12.30           12.40 12.00 12.15\n1.00             1.10 12.30 12.45\n1.30             1.40 1.00 1.15\n2.00             2.10 1.30 1.45\n2.30             2.40 2.00 2.15\n3.00             3.10 2.30 2.45\n3.30             3.40 3.00 3.15\n4.00             4.10 3.30 3.46\n4.30             4.40 4.00 4.15\n5.00             5.10 4.30 4.45\n5.30             6.40 6.00 5.15\n6.00             6.10 6.30 6.46\n6.30             6.40 6.00 6.15\n7.00             7.10 6.30 6.46\n7.30             7.40 7.00 7.15\n8.00             8.10 7.30 746\n8.30             8.40 8.00 8.15\n9.30             9.40 9.00 9,15\n10.30           10.40 10.00 10.15\n11.30     to 11.00 11.15\nCar barn\nSaturday evenings and on any special\noccasion both cars will make one extra\ntrip.\nNotice will be given of any change\nin time table.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGREEN   BROS., BURDEN  & CO.\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and B. C. Land\nSurveyors.\nSurveys or Lands. Mines, Townsltes, Timber Limits,  I0t*.\nNelaon, 616 Wurd St.,  A.  H.   Green,  Mgr.\nvictoria, in Fembarton uidg., F. C. Green.\nFt  George, Hinntnond St., F. P. Burdtra.\nJlggE^E*\nPERFECT\nDelicious and Appetizing\nTHE   PALACE   CONFECTIONERY\nC.  H.  BEAN 414 BAKER ST.\nbe gladly furnished by the principal.\nRev. G. VV. Kerby, B.a.\nThat kind of lattic work made of\ncords or straight bands of the material\nwhich was once called macrame and\nused for mantle lambrequins has returned to high favor as a trimming for\nall manner of gowns, under the old\nname. It first came out on one-.piece\nlinen frocks that were full of color and\nmade to wear in tbe afternoon. It\nthen found its way to one-piece serge\ngowns and to coat and skirt suits of\ntaffeta, satin and silk serge.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial  Land  8urveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice 'phone B86; residence 'phone B74\nOffice; Over McDermid & McHardy\nBaker St., Nelson. B.C.\nGEORGE  H  PLAYLE\nChartered Accountant, Auditor\nNelion, B.C.\nE. H. SMITH\nAccountant, Auditor and Fire Insurance\nRoom 7, Griffin Block. Nelson, B.C.\nR. H. LEY\nProvincial Assayer\nLate of the Hall Mines Smelter.\nTwelve years experience In B.C.\nores.   Control and umpire work a\nspecialty.\n312 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite Court House\nSHARP & IRVINE CO., Brokers SH-Sn Paulsen Bldg., Spokane, Wash.\nThe Time to Buy Good Stocks\nIs when the market Is dull and you know they are worth the money. The\nfollowing stocks look cheap to us and should be bought to hold\u2014they will make\nyou big money.\nLucky Jim Zinc Stewart\nInternational Coal McGMIIvray Coal\nFor further Informal ion write or wire ue.\nCaledonia\nGranby\nSTOCKS\nWE WILL BUY\n2 S. A. Scrip 1725.00 10 Consolidated Smelters\nWE WILL SELL\n1000 Royal Collieries  t .08% 2500 Lucky Jim\t\n600 Kootenay Gold Mines  1.2S\nE, B. McDermid\nBaker Street\nNeison, B. C\nA\n PAGE EIGHT\n\u00a3>U Bail? fitrob.\nFRIDAY  .v....... JULY 7\nFor Sale\n$2,100 will buy you one of Nelson's most up-to-date homes\u2014five\nrooms and bath. Small cash payment, balance can be paid In small\nmonthly payments, or terms to\nsuit purchaser.\nEight sub-divisions with lake\nfrontage, averaging 20 acres per\nlot; some partly improved. Large\nstream of water running through\nproperty. Close to steamer landing.  Price average $50.00 per acre.\nFive acres of lake frontage on\nWest Arm. Ideal spot for summer\nhome.   Price $500 on easy terms.\nCroasdaile, Nawdsley & Co\nBox 626 Nelson. 8. C.\nSummer Home Sites\nOn Kootenay Lake\nHouses for eale or rent\nLots in city or suburbs.   Half,\none and two acre blocks near city\nlimits.\nLand on Kootenay lake, Slocan\nriver,  Silver King road, Granite\nroad and Kootenay river.\nF. B. Lys\nGriffin Block, over Dom. Express.\nA\nBeautiful\nProle\ncan be entirely lost,\nunless .the posing is\nsupervised\" by an artist. This particular\npart 'of successful\nphotography bas been\nthe object of our\nearnest study.\nOur\nalways show pleasing\nresults. Our habit of\nproducing perfect\nphotographs has earn-\nI ed for us an enviable\nf34993; record.\nI's Art\n715 Baker 8t. Phone 46\nNext Door to Keotcnay Steam Laundry\nRed Mite\nKiller\nFor Poultry\nHouses\nUse it once a week during\nthe hot weather.\nInsect Powder, Moth Balls,\nBedbug Poison, Household Ammonia, Sulphur, etc.\nDoctor's prescriptions filled\ncarefully.\nMail orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist      Nelson, B.C.\nTOO  LATE TO  CLASSIFY\nFOUND\u2014Yosterday In the Royal Bank of\nCanada, a diamond ring. Owner can\nhave property by applying to A. B. Neth-\nerby, manager, and paying for this advertisement.\nEconomy ST\nWide Mouth\nQuarts, per dozen .  $1.75\nPints, per dozen  1.50\nExtra tops, dozen 25\nAlso Mason's $1.25 and $1.00\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nNo Rough Edges\nWe have a special machine to\nsmooth down the edges on collars and shirt neck bands, ensuring greater comfort for our patrons. This is only one of the reasons why you should send your\nlaundry to us.\nCall up Phone'128.\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nBaker St., East\nFor Rent\nWe have for rent two up to\ndate dwelling houses, each\ncontaining three bedrooms, dining- room, parlor, kitchen, pantry, basement and electric\nlight One of these has an efficient hot air furnace and\nboth .are well sleuated. These\nrent for $22 and $27 respectively inclusive ot water rates.\nWe have also several other\nsmaller houses for rent ranging from |12 to 920 per month.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nBruce White Is at the Hume,\nMrs. J. M. Ludwlg is on a visit to\nfriends  In  Tees water,  Ont.\nBorn, on July 5, to Mr, and Mra. G.\nJolllffe of Eholt, a son, stillborn.\nThere will be a meeting of the library\nboard   at  8   o'clock tomorrow   evening.\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Seaman left last\nnight for a six weeks' visit to the coast\nC. F. McHardy of Crescent Valley was\na vlBitor to the city yesterday, registering\nat  the  Strathcona.\nThere will be a concert by the city band\nat the band stand on Vernon street this\nevening at S o'clock.\nMrs. \"W. J. Parmer of Castlegar was a\nvisitor to the city yesterday, registering\nat tiie Strathcona.\nDavid Little, superintendent of the\nSecond Relief mine at Erie, returns to\nthe property today.\nThere will be a concert at the hand\nstand on Vernon street at S o'clock this\nevening by the city band.\nThe Loyal Orange lodge meets tonight\nat 8 o'clock in the Eagle hall for the consideration of Important business.\nA. W. Constans, manager of the Athabasca mine, returned last night from a\nvisit to the coast. He goes up to the\nmine today.\nL. B. Reynold;:, manager ot the Eureka\nmine on Eagle creek, returned last nfght\nfrom a vacation spent at Colorado\nSprings, Colo.\nW. H. Pearson, Jr., of Toronto, a director of the gasworks, left lost night\nfor a week's visit to Vancouver. He will\nreturn to the east via Nelson.\nWith a fall of two and a half Inches\npesterday the water In the lake, according to the Nelson Boat & Launch company's guago, has fallen to 16 feet one-\nhalf Inch.\nin from Kaslo yesterday, W. E. Zwickey\nstated at the Strathcona that a force of\nmen wore engaged upon the construction\nof a. new bunkhouse to accommodate lOo\nmen   at  that well-known property,\nI The annual picnic of the Methodist Sunday school will be held at Proctor on\nWednesday, July 12. The tickets, by error,\nbear the date of June 12. No one on this\naccount would miss attending the event at\nwhich ft good time 1b promised to one\nand all.\nA. Heymann, the Vancouver mining\nman, who has the Eureka mine at Sheep\nCreek under bond, reached the city lost\nnlpht and proposes to make a visit of inspection to the property before returning\nto the coast.   He Is at the Hume.\nThe following officers have been elected\nhv the I. W. W. for the ensuing half year:\nPresident, A. L. Elliott; vice president,\nIT. S. Blondin: necretary, J- W. Johnstone;\nrecording secretary, C. G. Johnson; treasurer, Luther Marshall; conductor, E.\nLitchfield; warden, E. Pearce.\nWith a shipment of first class strawberries from members of the Kootenay\nFruitgrowers' 'union and others, J. A.\nMcDonald's jam factory yesterday turned\nout 2,200 bottles and five pound cans of\njam. A sample presented to The Dolly\nNews proved the Jam to be fully up to\nthe high standard which Mr. McDonald\nhas set for the products of Kootenay s\naatowi. factory. *'\nA public dance will be held at the Nelson Boat' & Launch company'B pavilion\nthis evening at 9 o'clock, Wilkinson's orchestra,    i'lekets. BOc.    Ladles free.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nMining Rails\n81b. - 121b. - 161b.\nPrompt   Shipment   from  Stock\nWood-VaOance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale amd Retail\nTORONTO HAMILTON\niimusEs\nNelaon B. C.\nWINNIPEQ VANCOUVER\nREALTY FIRM\nEXTENDS SCOPE\nWestern Canada Investment Co. Lease\nLarger Offices\u2014Will Increase Staff\n\u2014New Departments\nThat the Western Canada Investment\nCo. has found it necessary, owing to a\nlarge increase in business to obtain\nlarger offices and that the building\nat the corner of Josephine and Baker\nstreets had been leased for that purpose for two years, was the statement\nmade by J. E. Taylor, president of the\ncompany, last night.\nIt Is proposed that the new offices\nshall be fitted up In the most modern\nmanner and arrangements have already\nbeen made to have the building painted\nand otherwise renovated.\nMr. Taylor stated that the company\nproposed to extend the scope of its\noperations by adding an Insurance and\na loan department, remarking: \"With\nthe experience we have had in dealing\nIn tea] estate all over the Kootenays,\nthe Western Canada Investment Co.,\nwith its increased staff will be in an\nexceptionally good position to advise\nclients having money to loan regarding\nsafe investments and to protect them\nagainst loss. Our past experience places\nus In a position to give a correct estimate of values.\"\nThe new offices of the WeBtern Canada Investment Co. will also be the registered office of the Elford Boat Co.\nand of the Edgewood Lumber Co.\nCONTRACT TO BE\nAWARDED SOON\nImprovements to Rifle Range Expected\nto  Cost Approximately Twenty\nThousand Dollars\nAccording to a prominent member\nof the Liberal executive last night notification Is expected within the next few\ndays from Ottawa that a contract has\nbeen let for the carrying out of the\nlong-delayed improvements to the rifle\nrange.\nIt was stated that these improvements would cost In the neighborhood\nof $20,000 and that when completed\nNelson would he possessed of as fine\na range as any In the province.\nAt present there are a number of\nChinamen ranching on the land covered\nby the range and these are being given\n30 days notice to quit, their land having been purchased by the government\nsome time since.\nWILL   ERECT  PUBLIC   HALL\nAT SLOCAN JUNCTION\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nSLOCAN JUNCTION, July 6\u2014A well\nattended meeting was held on July 5\nat the residence of Martin Anderson.\nGerald Ashby was unanimsuoly elected\nchairman. The chairman Informed\nthose present that the meeting had\nbeen called for the purpose of discussing the advisability of erecting a pub-\nWEDDINGS\nAlso Wedding\nAnniversaries\nAll weddings are happy events, and always rendered more so by\nnumerous beautiful and useful gifts. Why should the anniversary be\noverlooked, Indeed it is not. For our experience proves to us that the\nbest pieces of ornamental Jewels are bought by married men. Why?\nBecause the prize they won on the first anniversary Is worth more than\nthey bargained for\u2014and so mos men are men. They want to square\nup and indeed the beat Is none too good.\nOur stock is especially adapted for these cases and most happy\nresults have been obtained.\nIt's a treat\u2014come in.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nManufacturer of Artistic Jewelry\nChickens of All Sizes\nWe have Wheat, Barley, Corn, Oats,\netc, tor' poultry and have 'cracked\nWheat, Cracked Corn, etc., (or the\nyoung chicks.\nScratch Food Is a balanced ration ot\nwhole grain, sunflower'seed, etc.\nChicken Chop la a balanced mash.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Ltd.\n\/\/ You Want to Keep Cool\nand Comfortable\nand be well dressed have one o our Semi-Ready summer suits at $16.\nSemi-Ready is the guaranteed clothing.\nGuaranteed to Pit\nGuaranteed to Wear\nGuaranteed to Look Well.\nThe only goods that are one price for the Dominion of Canada.\nJ. A. GILKER\nSole Agent for Semi-\nReady Clothing\nBaker Street\nNelaon, B. C.\nLeave Your Orders Now\nFruit Ranching In EC.\nMr. Bealby's New Book. Price $1.25\nThis hook is now on sale. We ex pect to sell hundreds, as it is most\ncomplete. We are sole agents for this publication. Save time and write\ndirect to us.   Postage 10 cents extra.    We will reserve a copy for you.\nNelson's\nKodak House\nPoole Drug Co., Ltd.\nThe Rexall Store\nDruggists\nof Ability\nHaving just received from the print*\ners a number of cards with latest cor*\nrect list of fire alarm boxes in this city,\nwe will be pleased to send copy to anyone upon-request.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nlie ball at Slocan Junction, where entertainments, readings, dances, etc.,\ncould be held and services of any denomination take place. He stated that\nthere was a report In the district that\nthe building of the church for the two\ncentres of Bonnlngton and Slocan Junction had been dropped but that was\nnot true. The church would certainly\nbe built on the site kindly presented by\nJ. T. Bealby. What had happened at\ntbe general meeting last week was this\nMr. A. P. Durrant having stated that\nthe affairs in the parish were unsatisfactory, a motion proposed by Thomas\nWheildon, vicar's church warden, and\nseconded by himself (Gerald Ashby) as\npeoples' churdh warden, had been\nunanimously carried to this effect:\n\"That owing to unsatisfactory state of\naffairs in the parish nothing further\n(otherwise than the matters already\ndecided upon) be done with reference\nto the erection of the church until\nafter the general ohurch committee of\nthe parish had had an Interview with\nthe bishop early In August.\" The chairman hoped that the bishop would acquiesce in the strong views of the people of Bonnlngton and Slocan Junction\nin (which case the church building\nwould be proceeded with and already\n$800 had been subscribed. The secretary had omitted to send In a report of\nthat meeting to The Daily News, hence\nthis erroneous impression had got\nround. It seemed that a public hall\nwas most necessary for the place\nwhich had largely increased in the last\nfew years, for entertainments and social intercourse generally.\nA discussion ensued and a plan\ndrawn by Martin Anderson was submitted to the meeting. A motion proposed by O. W. Humphrey and seconded by C. Patey that a hall be erected\nupon the plan proposed by Mr. Anderson, or something similar was unanimously carried. The site was kindly\npresented by Martin Anderson. The\nfollowing were elected trustees: Gerald Ashby, C. Penwick, O. W. Humph-\nrey, T. Killey. John W,_Moore,_\u20aceciI\nRanch Properties\nWe have good ranch properties for sale on easy terms In all parts\nof B.C.   If Interested in any particular district call on us or write.\nGoldhlll Station\u201413 3-4 acres on Lardeau river, adjoining town-\nsite, 2 aores cultivated and planted to fruit trees commencing to bear.\nLog house 40x70 ft.   A fine piece of land for $1,100.\nCreston\u201440 acres In this splendid district close to transportation.\nTwo acres slashed.   Price ISO per acre.\nMaryivllle\u2014300 acres, 75 acres of which 1b open prairie ready for\nthe plow, 125 acres cleared and partly stumped, 15 acres cultivated,\nsmall house, only S25 per acre.\nTrail\u2014(4 miles, Rossland 5 miles.) 76 acres on wagon road, nearly\nall level bench land, well burnt over, good soil, no waste, never fail*\ning creek, log cabin 16x18 ft. Price $2,000.\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nPatey, Thomas Wnieidon, T. D. Yeat-\nman. O. W. Humphrey was appointed\ntreasurer. Martin Anderson kindly\nconsented to apply to various lumber\ncompanies as to the materials required.\nIRRIGATION  PIPE FOR\nTOWNSITE AND ORCHARD\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCOLUMBIA GARDENS, B.C., July 6\n\u2014-The past two weeks have been busy\nin the orchards, large quantities of\nstrawberries being shipped to local\npoints and the factory at Nelson.\nEverything this season promises well.\nThere will be a big crop of potatoes\nwhich are In an advanced condition.\nWork Is plentiful among the settlers.\nMr. Hunter and his two sons from\nSpokane are paying a visit to the valley. Mr. Hunter is well satisfied with\ntbe prospects this season and the future. A six inch pipe 1b being put in\nfrom Sayward creek which will irrigate\nthe townsite and top benches. More\nland is being cleared and there are inquiries for new locations. Tho Great\nNorthern bas a big force of men at\nwork fencing the railroad and the influx ot so many has made this quite a\nlively place.\nAbout 1,000 chickens are being reared\nby the various ranchers and quite a\nnumber of cattle which cost nothing\nto keep in tbe summer, feed being\nplentiful\nHay making Is In full progress.\nMICHIGAN BAR ASSOCITION\nBATTLE CREEK, Mich., July 6.-The\nannual meeting of the Michigan State\nBar association, which began a two days'\nsession here today, has attracted to this\ncity many distinguished representatives of\nthe bench and bar. Attorney General\nWIckersham Is on the program to deliver\nthe annual address. Other prominent\n(speakers will he Prof. James C. Knowl-\nton of the University of Michigan, A, B.\nEldredge of Marquette, Thomas E. A.\nWeadoctc of Detroit, and Grant Fellows\nof Hudson.\nMETAL MARKETS.\nNEW YORK, July 6.-Sllver 62%c; standard copper,  tl2@12.2a-,  dull.\nLONDON, July 6.-Sllver 24%. Lead,\n\u00a313 6s 3d.\nProtect embroideries that come to\nthe bottom of the skirt by placing a\nBcant ruffle of lace back of the scallops\nThe lace should extend a half-inch below the scallops. This adds to tbe\nappearance of a lingerie frock.\nThe way. to 'handle large rugs is to\nbave a pole heavier than a clothes-prop.\nPreferably the pole should be round,\nbut will answer If the edges are rounded off to make It octagonal. Roll the\nrug on this, and it can then be lifted\nand carried easily.\nLukewarm water and.fine soap will\nremove fats from fast-colored woolens,\nwhile tar and wagon grease will yield to\nlard  rubbed on, then soaped and al-\nEmpire Theatre\nAlumlnized Screen\nPROGRAM   FOR TONIGHT\nThanhauser    Feature\u2014Three   of\nThem.\nEssany Features\nThe Sea Voyage.\nTrailed to the Hills.\nThese films furnished by the\nCanadian Film Exchange, Calgary.\nPictorial Planlste, Miss Frances\nJaynes,\n10c.   ADMISSION    10c.\nMatinee on Saturday at 2:30.\nAdmission 6c. and 10c\nthe leading business College of the\nNorthwest\u2014where young people can\nreceive a thorough business training. Shorthand, typewriting, bookkeeping, commercial .law, etc, Is In\nsession 12 months In the year. No\nentrance examinations. Board and\nroom at very reasonable rates. We\nsecure positions for our studenta\nOur new beautifully Illustrated catalogue sent free upon request Write\nfor It now,\nH. C. Blair\nPrincipal,\nFirst and  Madison, Spokane,  Wash.\nEstablished 1898\nThe Sign of the Fleh\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House\nEverything for the fisherman.\nE. SUTCLIFFE\n411 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nlowed to He for an hour or so. Afterward wash alternately in water and\nspirits of turpentine.\nWhen a gas mantel breaks and the\nfilmy ashes fall apart, do not throw\nthem away. They make excellent silver polish. One woman saves these\nashes and sprinkles them over the\nlogs in her gasgrate. The effect is\nbrilliant when the gas is lighted, .\nWe had some pieces of brass chain,\nand found them splendid to run through\nthe hems of the table covers when in\nuse on the porch in summer. Such\n''loaded\" covers do not blow off easily,\nconsequently they save quite a lot of\nannoyance and laundering.\nWhen eggs are high and it 1b almost\nimpossible to obtain fresh ones at any\nprice, put into the cake batter one less\negg than called for1 and add one table-\nspoonful more ot milk. This makes a\nsatisfactory substitute, and will help\nout In many a difficult place.\nTry sprinkling your clothes with\na corn broom one that has worn rather\ntbln will be found to be more satisfactory. This moistens the clothes much\nmore evenly, and obivateB the necessity\nf dipping the hands into water, which\nis often very disagreeable. Small\npieces, such as handkerchiefs and napkins, may be easily and quickly sprinkled by using a machine oiler filled\nwith water.\nFIRE!\nThe Store of Quality\nTeat and Coffees\u2014We carry all\nthe standard brands and a splendid selection imported in bulk,\nand can please the most fastidious.\nFruit Jars\u2014Our prices for these\nare tbe lowest In the city.\nFruits and Vegetables\u2014We can\nsupply everything in season and\nyou will always find our prices\nright.\nGroceries, Provisions, Flour and\nFeed\u2014Our stock is complete and\nour service is always prompt\nYours for business.\nA. S. HORSWILL\nBaker- St Phone 10\nFruit Land\ntM aores on Columbia river one\nmile of waterfront, at a bargain,\n17 per acre cash or 111 on terms.\nGet busy and call up the\nCabinet Cigar Store\nG. B. Matthew\nPhone B114\nNelson, B.C.\nP.O. Box 38\nPretty Teapots\nGood taste In your teapot Is as\nimportant as good taste in your\ntea.\nOur newest designs are durable\nand tasteful, charming colors,\ngraceful shapes. Tou can always\nget tbe full rich aroma of the tea\ntram the old Brown Bettys.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO* NELSON..\n321 Baker St p.o. Box 588\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1911_07_07","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0384088","@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":"1911-07-07 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1911-07-07 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\/1.0384088"}