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B. G. SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 6. 1912\nNO. 70\nMOTHER CATASTROPHE\nTO EXCURSION TRAIN\n|wenty-0ne Killed and Thirty\nInjured\nFreight dashes\ninto passenger\nfnly One Aboarfl Train Escapes\u2014Coach Crushed\nLike Paper\n(By Dally News Leased wire.)\nJ LATROBE, Pa.) July 5\u2014Twenty-one\nlortont w\u00bbr\u00bb killed and 30 injured, a\nlumber fatally* at a result of a wreck\nhi* afternoon on tho Ligonier Valley\nailway at Wilpon.\nAn    overloaded    passenger    coach,\nfusbed by an engine was struck hy a\nouble header freight train of coal\nars, crushing the coach like paper and\npreadlng death and Injuries to all but\nne aboard the train.\nThe passenger train had started\nfrom Ligonier. It consisted of un en-\nline and coach, the engine pushing the\nteach. The freight train was made\n|ip of coal cars, and was being pulled\ntwo heavy engines. The impact\ns terrific. The passenger coach\nWas practically laid open and the pas-\nIengers either crushed dr thrown like\nhot through the air. It was the first\natal accident it Is said In the histury\nf the Llngonier road for the past 40\n'ears,\n\u25a0v Tho Dead\nO. W.'Aubley, Pittsburg, civil engineer, body crushed.\nMatthew Nlepon, Pittsburg, crushed.\nMary Rhoddy Ligonier.\nFrank E,  Beatty,    engineer,    head\n(crushed.\nMrs. Harry Dillon and baby, Wllpen,\n[crushed.\nW. Campbell, Wllpen.\nFrank McConnaughey, Ligonier, en-\nIglnfier, scalded to death,\n; George\"' ByerH,    Ligonier,    fireman,\ncrushed.\nLouise Tthoddy, nged 18 years.\nJ.  M.   Ankeny,    Ligonier,    fireman.\n|dled on way to. hospital.\nMrs. M. Esse, Wllpen.\nThomaB Murr, Latrobe, crushed.\nGeorge Tosh, Wllpen, body crushed.\nMike Hudock, Wllpen, side crushed.\nJ   Frank  Overton,  aged    10,    Wilpen,\n(mutilated. ^\nMrs,    John    OveHon,     mother    of\n|Frank, died on train to Pittsburg.\nUnidentified boyi. aged 12.\nTwo  unidentified   foreigners,  badly\n|crushed.\nA majority of the Injured, 30 In all,\n|were residents along the Wllpen line.\nThey were brought to a hospital here\n!or sent to hospitals In Pittsburg when\nIt was found that they were In a critical condition. Among them were Dr.\nJ. W. Johnson of Ligonier, hurt Internally and will probably die. Dr, C.\namlii of Ligonier, crushed, may die.\nHiss Esther M. Matthews, a nurse,\n[employed at the home of George Srieft\njof? Ligonier, president of tho Ligonier\nValley railway. Walter Seren, Mc-\nKeesport, clerk In a bank at that\nplace, in a critical condition.\nIThe Injuries of thu others were all\nsevere, constating of broken bones and\ncontusions. The train was well crowded, every seat In the coach being occupied with persona returning from a\nFourth of July celebration. The\nfreight engines plowed through the\nwooden coach crushing it as If it were\npaper. The coach was ripped to\npieces. All the occupants were hurled\nHo the roadbed, some in the path of the\n\u25a0engines and others partly imbedded In\n\u25a0the cinders and crushed stones beside\n|the rails. *\n|EDMONTON NEEDS\nANOTHER COMMISSIONER\n(By Dally News Leased Wire;)\nEDMONTON, Alta.,    July    5\u2014With\nIthe increase of civic business at the\ncommencement of November there will\nbe need for an additional city commissioner. Such will he the recommendation of the special council committee\nnext Tuesday night.     \t\nNEW CHAIRMAN\nMEETS COLLEAGUES\nTwo of Members of Railway Commission  College  Friends  of  Chairman\u2014Joint Commission,\nfBy Dally News Leaned Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 6.\u2014The arrival of\nH. L, Drayton, the new chairman of\nthe railway iboard, at the offices of the\nboard yesterday was in the class of a\ncollege reunion. Both he and the assistant chief commissioner, D'Arcy\nScott, were classmates together at Toronto university and they went through\nthe law school together. That was\nsufficient of an Introduction, but it\nwas cemented a little later when Commissioner Maclean came Into the room\nand there was a further recognition\nof college chums. So that Mr. Drayton's Introduction to the railway commission was of the happiest nature.\nHe had, of course, met Dr. Mills before\nand the only member of the hoard to\nwhom he had to be introduced was A.\nS. Goodeve.\nK is believed that the actual assumption of duties by II. L, Drayton\nwill be followed by negotiations for\nthe establishment of a Joint commission to exercise supervision over\nthrough railway traffic between Canada and the United Stages on much the\nsame lines os the waterways aro now\nregulated. It will be recalled that two\nyears ago the basis of such an organization was ngreed to by the late\nJudge Mabee ond Chairman Knapp of\nthe Interstate commerce commission.\nIt was never given effect to however,\nthe late government not wishing to\nmix It up with reciprocity. The present ministry has not dealt with It\neither, but shortly before his death\nJudge Mabee strongly urged that the\nmatter be taken up as there are many\nabuses which cannot be remedied for\nlack  of jurisdiction.\nTho commission would be composed\nof portions of the two existing bodies\nin the United States ond Canada and\nsteps for its formation are anticipated.\nCABINET APPROVES\nPROPOSED SITE\nBritish   Columbia  Building   to  be  on\nStrand\u2014One of tho Busiest Corners of  Empire\n.'Special tn The Dolly News,)\nVICTURIA, B.C., July ii.\u2014One nf the\nmatters dealt with, by tbe premier on\nthe occasion of his last trip to London\nwas that of much needed accommodation\nfor the ever growing business of the\noffice of the agent general. So tar did\nbis enquiries anil tentative arrangements\nprogress that on bis return be was able\nto lay tht! matter before bis colleagues.\nAfter full discussion of the plans proposed, tbe provincial executive at a\nmeeting held today, ordered that Instructions lie sent to Hon, J. H, Turner to\nenter Into negotiations with tbe London\ncounty council for the acquisition of a\nsite on tlie Strand. The property which\nit is proposed to acquire has a trontage\nof 50 feet und occupies the corner near\ntho Gaiety theatre, one of the busiest\ncorners in tbe empire and in tho heart\nof the metropolis. The locution is In\nevery way convenient for all who bavu\nbusiness with tbe representative of\nBritish Columbia In London. The site\nwill permit of the erection of a building\nwhich will bo a credit to the province.\nIf the arrangements with the county\ncouncil are carried through on fair\nterma the construelon of a provincial\nbuilding will be undertaken ut once,\nwherein the future headquarters of the\nagent general will be established. The\nstructure will permit ample accommodation' for a' splendid display o[ exhihtts\nof the province's resources, which will\nalways be open to the public, ns well as\nspacious offices for the agent general\nand his staff. There will also be a\nlarge library aad reading room kept supplied with tlie latest and fullest information as to all purts and Interests of\nthe province, which citizens of British\nColumbia visiting London us well as\nthose haying business with the office\nmay take advantage of,\nIt Is expected that Mr. Turner will be\nable to report satisfactory results of bis\nnegotiations soon after he receives lite\nInstructions from the government, and\nthat within the next two years at the\noutside British Columbia will haw Its\nown building In the imperial metropolis\nto serve aa a constant reminder of the\nstrong bauds of sentiment and trade\nwhich unite tills portion of the empire\nto the motherland.\nDOMINION AID\nFOR REGINA\nThirty Thousand  Dollars for Cyclone\nVictims\u2014Ten  Thousand  Dollars\nfor Chicoutimi.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 5.\u2014The government\nhas completed arrangements In com\nnection with the grant of $30,000 for\nthe relief of the Regina storm sufferers\nand the following message was sent\ntoday to the mayor of Regina:\n\"Dominion government has authorized an Immediate contribution of $30,-\n000 in relief of the citizens of Regina\nand vicinity who have suffered In the\nrecent cyclone catastrophe, Please advise whether permanent relief committee has been formed and If so ask their\nchairman to communicate with m***\nhow the fund Is to be administered and\nother information he may deem relevant. Would like to have at earliest\npossible date for the Information of the\ngovernment authoritative report os to\nthe extent of the disaster with as many\ndetails as possible. Please accept my\nassurances of our most sincere sympathy In the great calamity which has\nbefallen your community and our best\nwishes for the speedy restoration of\nyour beautiful and progressive city.\"\nA similar message was sent to the\nmayor of Chicoutimi announcing the\n$10,000 grant to the fire sufferers In\nthat town. Tn this ease also information as to the appointment of a permanent relief committee was asked for\nAn official list of casualties in the\nRegina cyclone reached Actlin? Premier Perley today from Mayor McAra,\nconfirming the list already published.\nhot;weather\nreduces yield\nEDMONTON  POPULATION\nGROWING RAPIDLY\n(By Dally News Leased \"Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Alta., July 5\u2014The\npopulation of Edmonton and the districts surrounding It grew last month\nat the rate of nearly 2G per day according to figures compiled at the immigration office for the   month.\n\\Seven Vacancies Now\nIn Upper House\nIV   (By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n>\\j}^WA^.Jjli\u00ab---fr--T':.iT i.Kyening\nCitizen says:   ''Major Beattie, M.P^of-j\n\u25a0London, Is prominently spoken of as\n'successor to the late Dr. Wilson, sena-\nr for St. Thomas. There are now seven\n(vacancies in  the   upper   house,  four\nhrom Nova Scotia, caused by the deathB\n(of Senators Miller, Ross, Comeau and\nMcKay, one from Prince Edward Island\nJdue to Senator Macdonald's death, and\n[two in Ontario owing to the disqualification by non-attendance of Senator\nSullivan of Kingston and the death on\n[Thursday of Senator Wilson.\nJohn Stanflela\\ M.P., chief Conservative whip, is not averse to succeeding\nSenator   McKay of Truro;    Clarence\nJameson, M, P., has aspirations for\nthe seat of Senator Comeau, and Joseph A, Gillies, ex-M.P., Is tho probable .successor of Senator Miller. In\nsuccession to Senator Sullivan names\nmentioned include Dennis Murphy,\nex-M.P., the Ottawa capitalist; George\nGordon, ex-M.P. for Nlplsslng, nnd\nThomas Blrkett, ex-M.P. for Ottawa.\nMr? Gordon resigned to provide a seat\nfor Hon. Prank Cochrane. Three of\nthe vacancies were held by Liberals,\nso* there will bo a net Conservative\ngain of six when the positions are\nfilled.\nManitoba, by the boundary extension\nbill, will also be entitled to two more\nsenators, though special legislation\nmay be needed. The likely selections\nare Dr. Schaffner, M.P., and Daniel\nSprague of Winnipeg,\nBut  Damage in  Saskatchewan Is  Not\nSerious\u2014Rains  Have  Revived\nCrop\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSASKATONiN, Sask.. ,luly I*..\u2014Crop reports from over GO points in the central\nand northern parts ot the. province have\nbeen received by The Phoenix covering\ntlie present conditions and the effects\nof the recent storms following a season\nof unusual beat. In general, It is conceded that the very promising yield will\nbo reduced by G to 10 per cent by the\nhot spell, which is also expected to mil'\nterlally affect the length of the straw.\nHowever, there is still every Indication\nof a bumper crop.\nThe beat coming so early in the season, while not doing any great harm\nowing to the fact that there was plenty\nof moisture In the ground, had the ct-\nfeet of bringing tbe crop on .very rapidly and from a number of points it Is\nreported that the grain Is already lieadeu\nout. This is particularly the ease along\nthe Canadian .NurUVe.ru railway' to-* th*-*\"\nnorth of the city. The storms were of\nu very spasmodic character and hy no\nmenus general, but following them thero\nlias been much cooler weather and showers In many sections, the general effect\nbeing to permit of mure moderate\ngrowtli.\nGenerally speaking, the rains hav\nbeen so plentiful that not only lias th\ncrop been revived but there Is enough\nmoisture In the grutind to maintain\ngrowth for a period estimated from a\ncouple of weeks to the end of the season.\nThe reports are very varied in detail\nos to the conditions existing, but on the\nwhole, the drouth appears to have done\nvery little damage and there is now nu\ndemand for rain, while the winds have\nhud little effect and there baa been no\ndamage to speak of. All reports agree\nthat the crop is a week to two weeks\nuhead of last year.\nEntertainment Planned For\nBritish Visitors\nSPECIALVTRAIN to\nTRAIL SMELTER\nR. F,\nGreen andJIV, R, Ross\nDid Effective Work at\nVictoria\nNEW BUILDINGS\nARE DELAYED\nWork   on   Departmental   Buildings   i\nOttawa Not Likely to be Started\nThis Year\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 5.\u2014It will likely be\nyear or so before any construction work\nis begun on the new department buildings In Ottawa. The report of A. W.\nTodd, lanseape architect, as to the most\ndesirable layout of thu buildings has not\nbeen received and when It Is It cannot he\nconsidered before tlie cabinet ministers\nreturn In the full, i After that there will\nhave t\u00ab be a decision as to the preparation uf plans and whether it will do\ndone by the departmental staff or by\ncompetition among outside architects.\nTlie Job will he a big one and the preparation work will be heavy, Su, making\nallowances for tlie necessary delay, no\nbuilding uperutluns are likely until well\non in next summer, even if then.\nVETERANS MUST\nWAIT FOR GRANTS\nPayment Delayed by Auditor\u2014Twenty-\nFive   Thousand    Applications-\nThree Thousand Passed.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 5.\u2014Twenty-five\nthousund applications have now been\nreceived for the ,$100 grant to the veterans of Ihe Fenian raids, not more\nthan one-third of whom can possibly\nqualify. Already 3,500 applications\nhave been examined and passed upon\nfavDRibly, Warrants were Issued for\nthe $100 In eacli of these cases, making\na sum of about (300,000. At one stage\nfew weeks ago the veterans were\nunder the impression that the money\nwould come In a very few days. But\nthen the auditor stepped In and said\nthat the veterans would have to wait.\nThe auditor Is, of course, within his\ntechnical right In acting ns he has.\nTwo courses remain. The government\ncan by means of a governor general's\nwarrant, make the money Immediately\navailable or thdy can leave the\" whole\nmatter over till next session, when the\nmoney for tho grants can he voted by\nthe legislature In the usuul way. It Is\nthought the former bourse Is the one\nthe government will adopt. So many\nmembers of the ministry are now out\nof the city and actually out of tho1\ncountry that it is likely no action will\nbe taken In the matter till the return\nof Mr. Borden und his English colleagues,\nJ. S. Munro, W. G. Foster and E. K.\nBeeston left on tlie qoust train last\nnight for Kevelstoke, Where tomorrow\nthey will meet and welcome to Kootenay the members of the party of British business men who are . to arrive\nhere tomorrow evening. The party\nwill he met at the station by a reception committee and vfill be formally\nwelcomed to the city hy Mayor Ann\nable.\nOn Monday the visiting financiers\nwill be taken by speclitl train to Trail,\nwhere they wf 11 be shown over the\nConsolidated company's smelter and\nrefinery, the greatest plant >of the kind\nIn the northwest. On the return from\nthe Smelter City the party will be\ntaken over the Nelson'city and West\nKootenay Power & Light company's\nplants at Bonnington Falls and given\nan opportunity to see Borne of the tremendous potential power which is\nunder partial development in Kootenay\nriver,\nBoard of Trade Luncheon.\nAt 1 o'clock on Monday the British\nvisitors will be guests at a hoard of\ntrade luncheon at the Strathcona hotel,\nwhich Is expected to he very largely\nattended by business men and others.\nSpeeches will be delivered by some of\nthe guests,\nIn the afternoon a launch -trip will\nbe taken up the west arm, stops being\nmade at various points to enable the\nvisitors to see some of tlie ranches.\nArrangements for meeting tbe business men, who will b^^ti)-4-roughly ren\"\nresentati\\^\"'of~lTie\"purlyAvhi('h Is now\nvisiting Canada and which represents\nmany hundreds of millions of capital,\nand for their entertainment In Nelson\nwere made at a meeting of the board\nof trade, council and the publicity\ncommittee yesterday afternoon.\nTo Show Chief Industries.\nFeeling that the visitors hoye probably been surfeited with' banquets and\nsimilar function's the meeting decided\nthat they would probably prefer while\nin this district to be given an opportunity of getting into touch with the\nchief Industries. It was at tljo suggestion of W. O. Miller that the trip\nlo Trail was planned for Monday\nmorning as It was thought that In the\nshort time ut disposal there could be\nno better method of bringing forcibly\nto the attention of tiie business men\nthe immense importance of the mining\nindustry and the stage of development\nand production which It has attained.\nOne of Kootonay's many Immense\nwater powers will be fieufi at Bonning\nton and lumber rrfills ut Castlegar and\nnear Granite, Fruit growing and Ihe\nscenic beauties of Kootenay lake will\nhe cinphnHi\/.'id in tlie afternoon,\npounciary   District   incluuud.\nIn ureter that all the Kootenay\nBoundary district may be brought lu\nihe attention of tne visitors it w*i\naeclaeit Unit Invitations to meet in\nurlilsn business men here should be\nsent to tne mayors of ail the cities lu\ndistrict, io the local members ot\nparliament and to the presidents ui\nHie various hoards of truue. Many are\ntherefore expected from urund Works,\nGreenwood, rnoeni.v Kosslund, Trail,\niCaato, Creston and other points to alu\nin welcoming the party and in placing\nbefore it the varied resources of the\nuliied Kootenay and Boundary districts.\nIn addition lo tlie special committee\nwhich will meet the party ut Revelstoke will be a. second contingent\nwhich will leave the city this evening\nand meet the visitors at Nakusp.\nAmong this second welcoming committee will probably be Cupt. J. C. Gore,\nseveral members of the city council,\nJames Johnstone and A. G. Carpenter.\nWelcome at Station.\nAt the stutiou here tomorrow night\nwill be a reception committee comprising Mayor Amiable, Fred A. Starkey,\npresident of the Nelson board of trade;\nW. R. Maclean, M.P.P.; W. O. Miller,\nsuperintendent of the C. P. It.; W. F,\nTeeUiel, government agent, und us\nmany of the presidents of outside\nboards of trade und mayors of other\ncities as aro present.\nTho chief executive officers of the\nBritish Columbia Cupper company und\nthe Granby company are also being\ninvited to the oily tu aid hi the welcome to the visitors. John L. Relul-\nlack of Kaslo urtd J. S. Deschumps of\nKosslund are among those who have\nbeen invited ,by the president of the\nassociated boards of trade.\nEffective Work at Victoria.\nTho special train to Trail on Monday morning will leave the Nelson\ndepot at 7:40 o'clock and will return\nhero at 1 o'clock, when the luncheon\nwill be held at the Strathcona hotel.\nThe party will commence the lake trip\nat 2:30 o'clock In the afternoon.\nThat the visit to Kootenay by the\nBritish (thunders is Uie result of\nstrenuous work by Hon. W. R. Ross\nand R. F. Green, M.P., Is shown by\nthe following telegram from Mr. Green\nat Victoria, which was received yesterday by Mr. Currle:\n\"After camping with Mr. Palmer all\nday Hon. W. R. Ross and myself secured a promise from him that a representative delegation of British manufacturers would return via Nelson\nand the Crows Nest.'\"\nCommittees struck yesterday In connection with the entertainment of the\nparty were:\nFinance\u2014E. W. Wlddowson, A. G.\nCarpenter and T. A. Robley.\nEntertainment\u2014Fred A. Starkey,\nHugh W. Robertson and C. R. Hamilton, K.C.\nThose present were: W. V. Roberts,\nin the chair; E. K. Beeston, II. H.\nCurrle, H. W. Robertson, J. S. Munro,\nMayor Annablc, C. F. Mcllardy, A, G.\nCarpenter, F. A. Starkey, Capt. J. C.\nGore, W. O. Miller, J, V. Murphy, R.\nW. Hinton, C. A. Cotterell, C. R. Hamilton, K.C.J W. G. Foster, .Tames Johnstone, J. A. Irving, E. W. Wlddowson.\nDUKE IN NELSON\nOCTOBER SEVENTH\ntTty Bally News Leaped Wire.)\nVictoria, B.C., July 6\u2014Lieutenant Governor Paterson was today\nadvised of the program, of the tour\nof the Duke of Connaught In British Columbia during September\nand October as follows\nKamloops, Sent. 17; Vancouver,\nSept. 18-20; New Westminster,\nSept. 21; Prince Rupert, Sept. 23-\n25; Nanaimo, Sept. 27; Victoria,\nSept. 27-Oct. 3: Vernon, Oct. 4;\nPenticton, Oct. 5; Robson, v'a Arrowhead, Oct. 6; Nelson, Oct. 7.\nHe leaves Kootenay Landing on\nthe latter date for the east.\nBELMONT'SCHOLAR\nIS TOP OF LIST\nResults of High School   Entrance Examinations   in    Rural   Schools-\nSuccessful  Pupils.\nespecial to Tim Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, July 5.\u2014Rural\nhigh school entrance examination results announced today show that out\nof a tolal of 420 candidates 274 were\nsuccessful. Frederick O. Roberts of\nBelmont school, Langlcy municipality,\nobtained 818 marks out of a total of\n1,100 and ranks first in tbe province.\nFollowing are the results In Kootenay\nand vicinity:\nBurtondale\u2014Marlon   Sanderson,   GOO.\nGlenbank\u2014Dorothy Kirk, \u00ab3S; Maude\nH. Gardner, CUE.\nNakusp\u2014Joseph A. Parent, 681,\nTrout Lake\u2014Martha A. Johnston,\nC20;   Oscar E. Jacubson, 600.\nCranbrook Centre\u2014John \u2022 O; Wilson,\n087; Lauretta M. Armstrong, 678'; Bertram   Murgatroyd,   669.\nAshton\u2014E. Powers, 667; Olive Hi\nWhite, C44; Florence M. Bathle, 041;\nLouise K. Elmer, 034; Carl Allan Gill.\n012; Jack B. Haslam, oil!).\nOrovllle\u2014Lister Dow, 504; Augusta\nII. Doyle, 585.\nNon-municipal schools\"\u2014 Joseph\nBlake, 551;   Michael C. Mackey, 550.\nCanyon  City\u2014Muriel K. Knott, 039.\nCreston\u2014James A. Lldgate, 096;\nAlice Heath, 690; Bessie M. Hurry,\n688;  Stanley Hendreu, 550.\nErickson\u2014William R. Lung, 660.\nGreenwood\u2014Charles K. MeArthur,\n660; .Toy M. Cummins, 611; T. Worth?\nIngtou Fair, 011; Richard C. Taylor,\n98;  Ward Storer, 504.\nPhoenix \u2014 Theodore McCammon,\n.02;  Laurel Plckard, 550.\nIngram Mountain\u2014Robert Bruce,\n5G5.\nMidway\u2014Eric W. Jackson, 699.\nFernie\u2014Arthur R. Woodhouse, 750;\nJulia K. Wilmot, 698; Edgar C. Dudley,\n693; Nancy D. Wood. 077; Ernest M.\nWeslby, 071; Clifford Stuekwell, 069;\nJames P. Graves, 051; Harper Erdman,\n051; Andrew T. Ingram, 608; Ellen\nBebb, 002; Oscar M. Anderson, 650.\nCoal Creek\u2014Frederick W. Smith,\n591.\nMichel\u2014Gladys M.  Hulchinson,  611.\nNew Denver\u2014Cecil J. Dawson, 006;\nIvan E. Brouse, 665; Hazel Dean Bur\nkitt, 568.\nBY\nTerrific Storm in Bad Lands\nTerritory\nLIGHTNING PUTS\nTORONTO IN DARK\nElectrical Development Tower Struck\u2014Street Cars\nStalled\nFOURTH OF JULY\nCASUALTY LIST\nHeavy   in   Pittsburg\u2014Score   of    Firea\nand Thirty-six Accidents\u2014\nOne  Dead.\n{By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPlTTSBUi'G, Jilly t>.\u2014Up tu midnight the casualty score of the Fourth\nuf July in Pittsburg loomed large; At\nthat hour 30 accidents had been reported and a scure of fires subdued,\nWith a loss of upward of $30,000. The\ncasualty list frames up something like\nthis:\nOne dead; one broken back, one eye\nlost and two badly injured, seven fingers missing, four amputations of\nhands, two Struck by bullets, two arms\namputated, three seriously burned by\npowder explosions and one in a critical\ncondition front an explosion of a firecracker that lure open the neck, Injuries of others consisted of burns.\nLEAVE TO APPEAL\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 5.\u2014Special  leave to\nappeal   the   Ne   Temere   ease   will   be\nasked of the privy council Monday.\nTHREE  DEAD  BODIES\nON RIGHT OF WAY\n(By Dally News Leastwl Wire,)\nEdmonton, Alta., July 5\u2014That\ntho bodies of three men who had\ndied either from exhaustion, hunger and exposure or from attacks\nfrom bears, had been found along\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific right of\nway between Tote Jaune Cache\nand Fitzhugh, is the story told this\nmorning by the men who discovered tho corpses.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBISMARCK, N.D., July 5\u2014Reports\nfrom New England and Scranton tell\nof a terrific cloudburst in the bad\nlands section. Three hundred feet of\ntrack on tbe main line of ihe Milwaukee road was washed out east of\nScranton and three quarters of a mile\nof tho New England branch Is gone\neast of New England. All the wires\nare down. Tho Little Missouri, Cannon Ball nnd other rivers are on the\nrampage and it is feared great damage has been dune and loss of life Is\nrumored. Crews of men were endeavoring to establish communication\nwiili that section, I\nConvent Is Struck.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, July 6.\u2014Nocturnal industry, business and transportation In\nthis city were all paralyzed tonight by\nan exceptionally heavy electric storm\nfollowing a week of excessive heat.\nThe effects of tiie storm were felt in\nthe city an hour before it broke here,\nfor at 0:20 p. m. lightning struck a\ntower of the Electrical Development\ncompany, which brings power from\nNiagara Falls, breaking two wires, and\nthey could not be repaired until 11\no'clock, Street cars were stalled, Industries were without power and many\nhotels, stores and residences left in\ndarkness. The, newspaper offices\nafter considerable delay, obtained\npower from private plants.\nFrom 7to 8 o'clock the storm centered over Toronto, a deluge of rain,\nbeing accompanied by vivid lightning\nand deafening thunder. A number of\nplaces were struck, including St. Joseph's convent on St. Albans street and\ntbe tower of the Muil and Empire\nbuilding, but no serious damage was\nreported, The meteorological offices\nreported that thunderstorms had been j\ngeneral today in Ontario. |\nKilled by Lightning.\n(By Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nANDOVER, N. B., July D.\u2014Charles\nMorris was killed by lightning at Cai\nIfornfa, about six miles from here, this\nafternoon during one of the worst\nstorms that lias been experienced in\nthis part of the country In years. A\nburn was also struck and caught fire,\nand with two other barns nearby was\nburned to tho ground with a large\nquantity of farm machinery, Rain fell\nIn torrents, doing great damage to\ncrops.\nSchooner Capsized.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHAKLOTTETOWN, P. E. T\u201e July\n5.\u2014Tho schooner Nellie M. Swan,\nwhile on her way from Murray harbor\nto New London harbor, capsized during a heavy storm last night. Captain\nBlukoley and Colin Bert, aged 22 and\na native of Seaview, P. E. I., were on\nboard. Blukoley got Into a dory which\nwas washed off tho dock. He rowed\nnine miles and reached land safely hut\nin an exhausted condition. Bert is\nmissing and is supposed to be drowned.\nA tug has left for the schooner, however, to see If Bert may be clinging to\nher. I'he accident occurred off the\nEast point, Blakeley belongs to Halifax.\n*--~L^   ;\"\u00a3rt\nAre Fighting For NtTCause,\nDeclares Visitor\nREFUGEES COME\nNORTH INTRANSP0RT\nWest Coast Rancher Sees\nLittle Hope of Cessation\nof Warfare\n-j\nSENDS AID FROM\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVancouver, B.C., July 5\u2014The\nprovincial government has given\n$5,000 to Regina sufferers. Vancouver has voted $1,000 and North\nVancouver has voted $250.\n\"The Mexican revolution Is not really\na revolution; it Is merely an aftermath\nof the Madero revolution. The rebels\nare not fighting for any cause, but are\nsimply taking advantage of the lack\nof stable government to loot; each man\nIs working for himself.\n\"And I do not see how it Is to end,\nfor now that these so-called rebels\nhave been riding around and shouting\nand looting for tho past 18 months\nthey are beginning to 'feel their oats'\nand the army, made up chiefly of convicts who enlist rather than go to Jail,\nis powerless.\"\nSo declares Edward Bamford, an\nEnglishman who has been ranching on\nIhe Slnaloa river, on tbe Mexican west\ncoast, and who came north with 350\nrefugees In the United States transport\nboat Buford, which was sent down\nfrom San Francisco to lake on board\nAmericans and others whose lives were\nbelieved to be in danger. He Is at the\nStrathcona.\nTravelling all the way down the\ncoast the transport stopped at every\nport and took off the foreigners who\nbad escaped from the rebels. Mr.\nBamford bad intended coming north,\nas during the aftermath of the revolution, be states, It has been absolutely\nimposslblo to make any progress with\nranching operations, nnd took the opportunity offered by the transport.\nLooted Ranch.\nNot long before he left a parly of\n360 rebels visited the hamlet in which\nIlls ranch is located and a. gang of\nIhem attacked bis place In search of\nhorses, money, guns and ammunition.\nMr. Bamford had hidden all his bent\nhorses and mules, leaving only two\n\"old plugs\" In the corral. These tiie\nrebels disdained and contented themselves with stealing all the rifles and\nrevolvers at the ranch. They asked\nfor money but was told that none was\nkept there.\nRailway communication fo Hie Slnaloa river was cut before he came\nnorth, Mr. Bamford said.\nMany nf tbe refugees nn Ihe United\nSlates transport were In a destitute\n\"ond it ion having [led before the rebels,\nleaving all their property behind them.\nSoma were In rags and bad to be supplied with clothing on the boat. Mft\nBamford paid a Irihute to the manner\nin which tho United Slates authorities\nlooked after the comfort .of the refugees, for whom everything possible\ndonp In Ihe wav of supply In it\nthorn wilb clothing and where npces-\nirv work on llielr arrival at American\nirts.\nLittle Hope of Settlement.\nJust because the present dlslurb-\niccs are nut really a revolution but\n\u25a0e merely the result of the government having lost Its grip on.tlie cuun-\ntry and consequently given the people\nan opportunity to fight and loot for\ntheir own individual advantages, Mr.\nBamford believes that it will take some\ntime for tlie country to overcome its\nttled condition. Tiie unrest has\nspread In all directions and business is\nt a standstill, he states. If tho\nbandit-rebels were fighting for a cause\nthere would be some iiope that when\nthey had wun or lost there would bo\nnn end to Hie disturbances, but as It is,\na man will join a marauding excursion,\nloot a horse and a rifle and possibly\nsome money, ride around fur a time,\nipend the money and then sell the\nhorse or whatever else lie has stolen,\nThen when tbe last cent is spent tie\nagain becomes a rebel and takes part\nin another looting expedition.\nOrozco, the so-called leader of the\n (Continued on Pago Five.)  .\nGrappling Hooks Cast\nOn Vitals Of Britain\n(By Dally News Loased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 5.\u2014A large and\nfashionable audience gathered at the\nimperial Institute today to hear Hon.\nGeorge E. Foster had to wait nearly\nan hour before the speaker appeared.\nHe explained his tardy appearance\nthrough 'the difference in London and\nOttawa lime. Tlie speech, which dealt\nwith imperial unity, was listened to\nWith closo attention, cheers greeting\nhis most pungent aphorisms, of which\nthere were many. Historical teachings\nand political tendencies, said Mr. Foster are all toward unity. Whether wo\nadopt a system of preferential trade\nor not we must agree that co-operation has taken place, and whether or\nnot recognized us such the overseas\ndominions have cast their grappling\nhooks of preferential trade oil the\nvitals of the United Kingdom and thus\ncompelled   a   greater   Inflow \u00b0of   trade\nand commerce.\n\"Wo are not,'' he went on, \"a sovereign power and do not wish to be-\ncomo such. There Is but one source\nof sovereignty and Canada at least Is\nnot the one to sunder the band which\nmakes the sovereignty common to us\nall. We are the complements each uf\nthe other. Before a decree of reciprocity is promulgated It must have\ntho consent of tho old country and\neach   of  tho states.\"\nPremier Pays Calls.\n(By Dally New-* Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July .\u2014Premier Borden\nand bis colleagues visited tho colonial\noffice, the admiralty and the war of-\nfico but the stay at each was but brief\nand In the nature of a formal call.\nThe premier .had nothing to Bay after\nlie returned to his hotel.\n-        '  '   -\u2022'\"-\u2022^TC\"-^\n PAGE TWO\nCfc Salty Jletos.\nSATURDAY ...., ...  JULY I\nVe have learned the clothing business by\nstudying the clothing business. A clothing\nman is just as much a \"professional\" man as\na lawyer or a doctor.\nWhen you get \"clothes sick\" come to us.\nThe medicine we will give you will be a well\nmade, well fitting, \"all wool,\" stylishly\nmodeled suit of clothes.\nWhen winter comes along our second treatment will be a handsome, comfortable overcoat.\nOur \"bill\" is always, reasonable.\nHall & Jessup\n506 Baker St.\nNELSON. B. C.\nWedding Invitations\nWedding Announcements\nWedding Cake Boxes\nWedding Cards\nThe work of The Daily News Job Department in these\nlines is better than that of many outside offices. We carry\na large supply of wedding stationery and all our work is\ncorrectly and artistically executed, and the fine points\nrequired by etiquette closely watched.\nAsk to see samples of our work and be assured that your\norder will  receive prompt and careful  attention.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nJob Department\nPhono 144.\nNelson, B. C.\nTwo and a Quarter Acres on Lakeside\nHill apple, pear and plum trees, partly bearing; abundant water sup-\nlily; well-built house containing 4 rooms, with veranda facing lake; properly all ftinced and frorftmg on gmerrfmemt road,   A snap at $121)0.\nClose to the City\nlt:ilf an acre of [r-ir-lcn ground; Jl-rpom bungalow, completely fur-\nnif-bid; molar launch (1H miles an hour), nearly new; boathouise\" at property and Nelson.    Everything included at $2500.\nWithin 5 Miles of City\ningalow;  i% acres; beautiful mounlali\n:  fruit   iri'es;   goofl sand beach.   A liar\nOne Mile from Nelson\n\u2022nred; lliO .0-year-old trees; abundant water; 2-Toorrf\nula; chicken boiifce, barn and stable; splendid view of\nalto.    I'rlc.n $27011,\nropertlea present unequalled opportunities, where yort\nfuture and ehJoy i lie henvcii-Hent oaone, tlie ppeghapl\n0,8 and perfume of dowers. Nature Intended and pro-;',\nuiulil live on tbe land. Got nut where Ibe air (jives you\nHi, where ybu nan enjoy perfect ponfle and contentment;\nel  rid of that  tired feeling and get tuned up to new life\nNeat B-room  bungalow;   i% acres;  beautiful mountain stream through]\nnnperty;   bearing   fruit   trees;   good sand beach,    A bargain at $2700.\nacree\n\u25a0lib v\n-mell uf\ni-'ldod th\ninpellto\nnext\nfruit\nnn g\nvlg*\nNcQuarrie & Robertson\nReal  Estate and  Insurance Agents.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\nNelson. B. C.\nPage for Wage-Workers\nBy R. P- Pettipiec*. A \u25a0'\n :>*\u25a0%\u25a0\u25a0\nNews, Views and Activities of T ose Who do tht World's Work\u2014Local,\nProvincial, Dominion and tnt rnatlona'l Evtnti Indicative of !ndus-\ntrial and Political Growth an   Development\nAnd so the steel trust Is going in bi\ngood, and will not work Its men more\nthan six days a week, and is going it.\n\u2022\"consider\" the reduction of the 12-\nnour day?    Quite philanthropic\nThe new Roosevelt party, dubbed the\nNational Progressive parly, wat\nlaunched to the tune of Uie twenty -\n.hird Psalm\u2014\"The Lord ia my shepherd.\" This Is going tbe limit in hypocrisy.\nBricklayers, lathers and plasterers of\nSaskatoon are making demands for\nmore pay. The brickies want an Increase from 07%c to 7Gc, lathers want\n0 cents instead of 5 cents per yard,\nand plasterers are after 7fi cents per\nhour instead of the 05 eents they are\nnow getting.\nOver 7,500 fur workers In 400 New\nYork shops walked out to enforce their\nlemands for recognition of the union,\nmore wages, shorter hours, regulation\nof   overtime,   holidays,   sanitation   and\nnriet observance of all factory laws,\nand abolition of piece work and. time\ncontracts. Nothing like getting every-\ntiling cleaned up while you're at It.\nSmallpox has broken out among the\nprisoners In San Diego, and is now\nhrentening the entire city.\nThe bakers have practically won\ntheir strike in Frisco, all the big shops\nnuvlng signed up with the union. The\nrest, small simps, are expected to do\nthe same In a few days.\nThe British house of commons has\nnow before it a bill extending the fran-\nch'se to 250,000 of the male population,\nbollshlng plural voting and ihe unl-\nerslty constituencies. It does not include uny women. i\nbrnnch of the International Typographical union, to include the members of the craft In Ladysmitn, Nanal-\nmo, Albernl, Cumberland and Duncens,\nall small towns un Vancouver island,\nias been started, the preliminary steps\nbeing taken un Sunday, .rune 23, ai\nNanaimu, The principal officers were\nSelected and they will hold office until the annual election takes place In\n*ix months' time.\nThe success uf the London (Eng\nland) daily labor paper has been si\ngreat that another is to be started in\nManchester on October 8 to be known\nis the Dally Citizen,\nThe recent convention of the International Garment Workers in Toronto\nwas tne greatest In their history. General President Kosenberg,, Secretary\nDysche and other old officers were reelected and a resolution endorsing tht\nprinciples or Socialism was adopted by\nin overwhelming majority.\nR. A. Stoney has been unanimously\nelected president of the New Westmln-\nter Trades and Labor council, former\nPresident Christie having withdrawn\nhis name in the former's favor,   B. D,\n\u25a0 rant was re-elected secretary and .1.\nB. Chockley as treasurer.\nThe ghastly total of murdered slaves\nbeing piled up by explosions on the\nC. N. R. is being increased almost\ndally. In every ease an obliging coroner's jury returns a verdict of \"accidental\" death,\nThe \"Winnipeg Trades and Labor\nCouncil has received startling Information as to tbe filthy condition ol\nthe city bakeries and the exploitation\nin which the men employed are subjected. They are investigating tht\nmatter. N\nIf the Amalgamated Building Workers' union becomes an accomplished\nfact all the unions engaged In the\nbuilding trades in England will be embraced in one organization. The principle of the orgnnizmilon is to be In-\nlustrlal,\nW. Abrahams, for 40 yearn conneoted\nprominently with the South Wales\nFederation of Miners und Liberal La-'\nniiLMtlttoih\naVar.tr WW*\/.\nTHE HOME PHYSICIAN\nDr. Morse's Indlai Rt\u00bbl Fills\nCure Most il Ihe bully's lib.\nPerhapi if the\nchildren, aad the\n\u2022\u2666grown-ops*' too,\nalwayi ate exactly\nthe right quantities\nof exactly the right\nthingi, st just the\nproper times, and\nIn every other way\nobeyed the rules ot\nhealth, there would\nbe no ilcl-ncss in the\nfamily, and no need\nof medicine.\nBut they never\nhave and probably\nnever will, ao in\nevery family there are lure to be more\nor ten frequent attacks of tick headache,\nbiliousness, indigestion, constipation, and\nkidney and liver troubles, and occasionally aome one is \"'sick in bed\".\nIt la worth a good deal to the mother,\nthen, to have on hand that perfectly aafc\nand reliable remedy for these ills \u2014\nDr. Morse's Indian Root fUk.\nThey invigorate those organ which\ncleanse the body of waste and impurities,\nregulating the bowels, stimulating the\nkidneys and opening the-pores of the skin.\nThus Dr. Mirje't Indtin Rnt PilU\ncure the common ailments and keep the\nfamily healthy. This they km -beta\ndoing for over half a -century n every\npart of the -world. .\n15c. at all dealers or from W. H.\nCoauiock Co., Ltd., Brockville, Ont.\nbtirirepreBGhtative in the house of commons, has resigned his post on aecoum\niff advancing years. He has been oi\nthe conservative type of labor official,\npinning his 'iaith 10 arbitration, conciliation, sliding scales, etc. His successor la reported to be or the samr\ntype.    He Is W. Brace, a Labor M. P.\nThe Perth Amboy strikers have won\ntheir fight.\nThe Issue of the Winnipeg Voice ol\nJune 21 completed the nineteenth oi\npubl.cation.\nTypos In the Peg are still negotiating (or a new scale. They now nave\na record membership, and are out foi\na  100 .per cent town.\nA. J., Killer, general organizer of\nIhe United Brewery Workmen ol\nAmerica, is in the city, fixing up a new\nscale with the brewers, with good prospects of,success.\nWinnipeg employers have been in the\nhabit of telling carpenters' committees\nto get organized before they talkec\nabout belter terms, being' under tin\nImpression that It was impossible for\nthem to be organized. Half a dozen\nbusiness agents have been on the\nhustle, and-now the men are prepurlnt\nlo meet the \u25a0employers on a bottei\nfooting than lias been the case 1n thi\npast. Whether the employers an\npleased Is another i-uestion.\nAil UxorIdg* (Eng.and) blacksmill,\nhas Just-completed his one hundred and\nfirst birthday, and celebrated the occa\nsion by shoeing a norse. He is nt,\nricher than the day he started.\nThe present -position of organized lu-\nbor in Los Angeles must be as gal\nand wormwood to tbe social seun.\nwhose ideals are typified by. an Oils\nNineteen months ago it was heruldet.\nas the one city where the trade union\nmovement had been stamped out, and\nwhere the employers hnd It all tneli\nown way as to hours and wages, it is\nnow one of the most strongly organized\ntowns In the states. The Increase In\nmembership of the different unions In\nthat time has been lfi0.5 per cent, in\nsp'te of Ihe fact that the blgtresl strlk<\never known In southern California, Including the brewery workers and tht-\nmetal -workers, was fought out.\nInternational Secretary -Trenswe'.\nFred W. Suitor reports that Proslden.\nJ. C. Wntters of the Trades and Lnboi\nCongress of Canada \\\\&& added two new\nbranches of the quarry workers, totaling 900 men, lo the Canndlan membership from the quarries of Nova Scotia\nThe Edmonton police are investlgat-\n.ng the actions of the licensed employment agencies, sojjie of which arc accused of overcharging in their fees,\nA deputation from the Associate^\nCitumbers of Commerce In Englaiu.\nwaited on Premier Asqulth and urgei.\nupon him the necessity of coping with\nthe labor unrest. The remedies lhe>\nproposed were making the trade unions\nfinancially responsib.e, pickets to weai\na special sign, compulsory arbitration\nand the Institution of a copartnership\nlabor department. The unrest they\nascribe to Socialist agitation over the\nIncreased cost of living and the \"Irresponsibility\" of trade unions. Tbe\npremier, in his reply, denied Hint thi\ncost of living had risen except very\nrecently.\nRalph Smith, labor fakir and capital\n1st bell-wether, having at last realized\nthat his day is over in British Columbia, has departed for fresh fields\nand pastures new, where his record ol\ndeceit and hypocrisy to the gullible\nworkers Who were blandished into voting for him is not widely known.\nWord comes that he is going to try his\npolitical wiles on the unsuspecting\nworkers of Saskatchewan, a correspondent having sent us a press clipping, advertising the unspeakable\nRalph as \"one of the mostspromlnent\nlabor men In Canada\" and as \"one ol\nthe most forceful speakers in the labor\ninterests.\" Ye gods! Two years In\nthe \"provincial parliament was all the\nminers ut Nanalmo cared to have of\nRalph, and be only secured his seat\nIn Ottawa wit a the aid of the Libera'\nilush fund, and owing to the fact thai\nthe Dominion constituency of Nanaimi\nembraces a large conservative farming\npopulation. Masquerading as a \"Labor\" representative, he has been one\nOf the most valuable and pl'-unt toob\nin the hands of the capitalist Interests\nof the province of British Columbia\nand the Dominion of Canada. Now,\ndiscredited und hated toy his dupes, his\nusefulness Is over as fur as the Interests that found him, a meal ticket In\nBritish Columbia are concerned. The\nIndustrial and farming proletariat o'.\nSaskatchewan will do wisely if they\ngive him to understand that they are\ntaking no wurnout discards from the\ncapitalist pack oT hot air artists ni\ntheir representatives.\nLook,\nGrandpa,\nThere's the Name.\nThat bum tare that little boys and girl, can eat all they want without injuring\ntheir health.   It it stamped on every genuine Maple Bud.\nIt wyt that they are nourishing as well as delicious\u2014that only pure chocolate,\npure milk and pure sugar have been used.    It says that the  peculiar, delicious\nflavor\u2014that rich creamy Maple Bud flavor\u2014is there.\nThe name \"Cowan\" has stood for years as a standard of purity in Cocoa and\nChocolate products.   It stands for a big spotless factory where skillful workmen\nand modem machine* are grinding and blending the choicest cocoa beans obtainable.\nMaple Bud* come only from the Cowan factory.   They are the purest form in\nwhich Milk Chocolate is produced.   The name \"Cowan\" identifies them.        bob\n'They're Not Maple Buds Unless They're\nCowan's\nMAPLE BUDS\njyame  and Design  Registered \t\n\"cowan\"*.\nis Name\nPOWERS HAVE\nUNDERSTANDING\nNot  Probabt\u00bb Thit 8ix Power Agreement Regarding Chinese Loan\nWill Bo Changed.\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YUKK, 'July \"5.\u2014-Fewlstent\nrumors have been 'Circulated in London concerning the proposed $300,000,-\n000 Chinese loan. The first was that\n\"England and America were about to\nWithdraw from the \u25a0alx powers' agreement and under a dual agreement enter Into negotiation's with China for,\nthe reconstruction of Its financial administration. The second was to the\neffect that the powers Were trying 1o\nforce the 1300,000,000 loan on China\nwhen only u }50;000 000 loan was wanted. Both rumors were' denied yesterday by a lending financier engaged lh\nthe negotiations ana who said the fact\nis  that England, which  Is responsible\nfor Ihe formation of the six powers\ngroup, has in view of recent develop-\nnents again taken the lead in mark-\nng the limits to which it is willing to\ngo Into financial dealings with China\n\\ detu'led statement of England's pa-\"',\n\u25a0\u25a0It Ion has been forwarded to the othei\nowers concerned and the re-jly of Ihe\nstate department at Washington is now\niwailed. The assertion that England\nind America were to combine to tlhfl\nexclusion nf oilier powers, ihis flnan-\nier said, needed no consideration as\na .possibility. England hus an alliance\nvlth Japan and an entente with Fratice\nmil Russia and it is not reasonable to\nlelieve she would forego these friend?\nhips to form a new alliance of the\n\u25a0hurueter suggpsied. Briefly, Ihe poll-\nton .Ib that China hits so repeatedly\nchanged her requirements ''\u00bb the mater of this loan that the powers have\now determined at an understanding\nof the limits to which they are willing\nto go.\nAs to the second rumor, the iiosltlnn\nIs that the powers have agreed to lend\nChina any amount not exceeding $300,-\n000,000. The agreement provided f\u00bbi\nthe first advance to be $100,000,01111.\nThe remaned was to be sunplied as\nneeded. The stipulation was ma tie\nhowever, that the nnVney be scientifically used in the establishment of a\npermanent government. The government at Peking, said the financier, Is\nmore than willing to accept these\nterms, bin the provinces tire afraid ol\ncontrol by the cenlral government hav-\nng the finances of the country in its\nhands nnd there is no man In tlie central government with the slrength and\ncourage to force the provinces to accept the reasonable demands of the\n\u2022powers. The consequence is that the\nChinese slaiesmen under the domination of the provinces renuest nn immediate advance of $fi0 000,000 Without\nguarantee or supervision. Naturally\nthe powers will not enter Into any deal\nof th's character and It follows that\nChina Is approaching daily nearer to\nthe recriidoseence of the recent rebel-\nt'on.\nMaking of An\nInland Empire\nFort Frjier, in the centre of 10\n:mllllon acres of fertile farm lands,\nis going to be the scene of development that will make the (whole\nworld wonder,\nSituate at the head of 1.000 miles\nof navigable waterways leading to\nthe sea. with a climate that is\nnearly Ideal and with natural resources of almost unbelievable\nrichness.\n\u25a0Fort Fraser Is going to be a city\nof thousands before you know  It.\nFrom the east nno from the west\nthe shining rails of steel are rapidly approaching Fort Fraser.\nThe completed railway will be\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific\u2014that magic organization of empire builders\nthat Is making western Canada.\n, The future hat not been discounted at Fort Fi-eeer either. Prices are\n\u25a0till remarkably Jow. From $200 up\nwill buy a lot. Terms ore within\nreaeh of all.\nThe arrival of the rallrond next\nyear will double prlceB at least.\nOet a lot now and \"profit by the\ncertainty of Fort \"FraBer's growth.\nE. Ross Mackenzie\n.' Townslto   Specialist\nPhone 199 815 Baker St.\nWhite Star Dominion,Canadian Service\nROYAL MAIL STEAMERS\n\u2122\"~ MONTREAL-    \u2014     QUEBEC     \u2014     LIVERPOOL\nLARGEST AND FINEST STEAMERS IN CANADA        ,\u00bb\nNEW S. S. LAURENTIC   15,000 T cms  such    New  S. S.   MEGANTIC\nSallx July 20.  Ann. 17. Sept,  14, Sulla Alls. 3, Alls. 31, Sept. 28 .\nONLY   FOUR DAYS  AT  SI3A.\nONE  CLASS  -H)   C1AHIN  SERVICE\nS. S. TEUTONIC S. S. CANADA\nM2 feet long;, 13,000 horse power. 10,000 tuns, 614 feet long.\nSails July 13, Aug. 10.  Sept. 7. Sntls July 37,  Aug. 24. Sept.  21.\nCompany's Orriee,  CIO Seeond Ave.,   Near Cherry   Street,   Seattle.\nNelson Agents:    W.   IO. Ketelnlni. Agent  a.   N.   Hullwny;  D.  Smeuton,   City\nTleket Agent, C. P. Hallway,\nThe Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nPABST BLUE RIBBON BEER\nM'EWAN'S PALE INDIA ALE\nHALCYON  MINERAL WATER\nP. O. Box 1099.\nA Sure Remedy for Keeping Cool\nthese days is to buy a National Ele\nstruetlble element.\n\u25a0trie Iron\u2014the  Iron  with  the Inde-\nPrice $5.00\nJ. H. RINGROSE\nI Stanley St.\nWhen a New Perfection\nComes in at the Door\nHeat and Dirt Fly Out\nat the Window.\nWhat would it mean to you to have\nheat and dirt banished from your kitchen\nthis summer\u2014to be'free from the Jjlaeing\nrange, free from ashes and soot?\nB^\u00bbarjcMiii\"ri 111 n\u2014\nOil Cook-stove\nWith ihe New Peifedion Oven, the New Perfection\nStove ii the mo\u00bbt complete cooking device on (lie maikeL\nIt b juit u quick end ri-mdy, too, for wsihing end ironing.\nThis Stove\nsaves Time\nIt saves Labor\nIt saves Fuel\n.lUayes\u2014YOU\nlvl-.l!rwii!,l.2\u00abnd3W1,-\nen, wilh long, enameled, lur-\ntiuoiicblue. thironeyi. Hand-\nKitnely finiihrd ihraugltout.\nihe 2- and 3-buiner tlovst\ncan le had with or wilhotit a\ncabinet top, which ia filled will)\ndrop sittHet, io we! mitt. etc.\nAlldeaWa carry the New\nPerfection Slove, Free Cntik-\nBoolt with every iter*. Cook-\nBook alio given to anror-e\n\u25a0ending 5 centa lo cover mail-\nTHE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY, Limited\n V-.J\nSATURDAY ...\nWill    fjj\n:;C|\u00bb Bailp J&rtws.\ntflK\nCAGE THREE\nLatest News of Sporting Events lot From the Wire]\nITENN1S GAME\nIS INTERRUPTED\nRoosevelt   Holds   Mysterious   Conference  With   Supporters\u2014Thinks\nDeserters   Will   Return\n(Ily Dnlly News Leaped Wire.)\nQYSTI2R KAY, N.Y., July &\u2014Sev-\nbru.1 of Col, Roosevelt's aides gathered\nJit Sagamore Hill tonight for a conference about which there was some\n\u25a0nystery. The colonel wan in the midst\nTjf a tennis game when an automobile\n\u25a0Whirled Up renin New York, Medl'l\n\u25a0Mct'ormick of tihtcago,' Senator Dixon\nJiif Montana, George W. Perkins and J.\nII.' Stoddard of New York climbed lo\nItltt! bouse. When he was asked In re-\nIgiird to the conference Ibe colonel was\nliiiiusually reticent. \"I'd rather not say\n[anything about it,\" he said.\n0. J. Hamlin of Buffalo, whom Col.\nlltoosevelt described as a leader of the\n\u25a0Roosevelt progressives In Buffalo, was\nJit'so here today. The former president\n&i-tl that his platform would be ready\n\u25a0in. a week or so. He had received iet-\nIters he said, from several men who\n\u25a0were prominent in his campaign for\n\u25a0the nomination at Chicago and were\n\u25a0reported to have left him since.   They\n\u25a0 told him, he said, that they were with\n\u25a0him despite reports to tho contrary,\nfile   Ihought   that others    who    have\n\"flopped\" bad acted prematurely and\n\u25a0that before long some of them would\n\u25a0want to cumo back again.\nCol. Roosevelt said that some contusion has been caused hy misintbr-\n\u25a0pi'ttation of tlie statement's of silp-\n\u25a0porters of his that they saw no need\n\u25a0of a new party. That did not mean,\n\u25a0he asserted, that they had fqrsakeij\n|him. \"In Kansas, for instance,\" lie\naid, \"they take the stand that Hie\nJ Roosevelt supporters arc the Republican organization and there is no rea-\nIson for abandoning h.   They will name\n\u25a0 Roosevelt electors on Hie regular Ro-.\nIpubllcan llcket.\"\n\"Do you mean that the Republican\n\u25a0 organizations of some states will co-\n|operafe w'tb tho new parly?\"\n\"I do not know,\" Col. Roosevelt\nJ replied. VBurh state will settle that\n(for Itself.\"\nI COMBATANTS ARRIVE\nFOR EDMONTON  BOUT\nfi \t\n<rtv Dnilv News Leased, Wire.*)\nI EDMONTON, Alta.', July 5\u2014Jlmtny\nltJotts of Minneapolis; who will meet\nl-KId Sealer of Spokane In a IB-round\nI Lout at Diamond Park here next\nI Tuesday   evening,   has   taken    posses-\nCATSPAW^\nRUBBER '\nHEELS\ntread softly -     I\nStep safely.\n| CATS PAW RUBBER SOLES\nEmbody the patented features\nof Cats Paw Heels.     ,so\nslon of his old training quarters and\nIs working out dally with several former sparring partners, Including Tom\nMcNaughton. He will weigh In nt 138\npounds at 3 o'clock the afternoon of\nthe mil!. He says he is as strong as a\nmountain Hon. .\nScaler, who Is In the best of condition, la working at the armories. He\nIs out to win the fight, which will put\nhim in line for a match with Joe Ray-\nley, the Canadian champion. Bayley\nannounced ut Hnssano on .Tunc 27 following his victory over Billy Allen,\nthat he is willing to meet Scaler in\nthis city some time next jnonth.\nDan Sals of Seattle, manager of \"Bat\nScott, who claims the lightweight\nchampionship of the northwest, is out\nwith a challenge to Joe Bayley, whom\nho asserts, he beat over the 20 round\nroute at Prince Rupert on March 21\nhut was only given a draw, Sals says\nIn a letter\n\"Scott has always stood ready and\nwilling to meet any man in bis class.\nThe Prince Rupert promoters offered\nBayley a return match with Scott at\nPrince Rupert on May 24; but Bayley\nrefused, saying he could not take a\nchance before the Allen fight. Now\nthat he is chitmpion'of Canada let him\nstep out and lake on the boy who\nmade him  go  the hardest.\nJOHNNY   KILBANE\nIS STILL UNBEATEN\n(fly Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCLiEVJSfjAND, Oilier, July '>.\u2014 iobnnv\nKllbani, featherweight champion, won\nover Tommy Deacon last night, their\nfight going the full 12 rounds. No\ndecision wan rendered by the referee.\nbut the spectators and newspaper ver-\nllrit in-corded the t'leveland Hd the\nvictory. Roth lads were fust on their\nfeet and Kllbane showed niiieh of the\n'\u2022gelling away\" for which he- is famous.\nDeacon was strong for nine rounds,\nbut In lho tenth Kllbane carried the\nfight steadily to the Kansas City boy\nand In lhc eleventh had him hanging\non the ropes. That was the most decisive round. Deacon recuperated to\na degree in Ibe hist round.\nTORONTO CHAMPION BEATEN\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCINCINNATI, July 5\u2014lay Holdcn\nL.f Cincinnati and Oustav Touchurd of\nNew York today qualified for the final\nrounds in the T:I-fc)u'tte Tei his tourney.\nThe feature of yesterday's play wa3\nthe stubborn battle given Touuhard.iri\nthe fifth round by Clifford Lnekhoni.\na young Cincinnati player. Touohard\nw.m lo-ced lo go tho full five nelsjo\n.el'eat his youthful opponent. In tbe\nMill round of tho ladles' Mingles, .Miss\nMay Stilton of Loa Angeles defeated\nMiss Helen Halt e-mail. Miss Mary\ni'i,v:ii of '-os Arigcles defeated Miss\nMoyoa of Toronto, Canadian champion.\nJUtY-6 -IN-PUGlLISTtO-A-NHAbS-\nISGO\u2014Tom Hnyers announced Ids retirement after his hunt with Koanaii,\nleaving the heavyweight chumplou-\nsnln belt open to competition. Ham\n1 hirst was the next to hold tbe bolt\nby defeating  I'aridock.\n1811\u2014Rudolph Unholz defeated Peter Jen-\n'sen in \u25a0JO rounds at Trinidad, Colo.\nIBil\u2014Young Loughrey outpointed Mti\nllenrv in 10 rounds in Mow York.\nNATIONAL\nSTANDING OF THE  CLUBS\nWon Lost ]\nNew York    55 13 .808\nChicago.  St) 21! .000\nPittsburg     -10 28 ,688\nCincinnati      3\u00ab 35 .507\nPhiladelphia   2!) 35 .453\nBrooklyn     27 41 .397\nSt. Louis    27 46, .309\nBoston     21 51 .281\nNEW YORK DEFEATS BOSTON\n(By Daily News Leased .Wire.)\nNEW YORK, July fi.--Muthcwson,\nwho was knocked out of the box by\nBrooklyn yesterday, came back strong\ntoday, defeating the Rrooklyns, 6-1,\nNew York drove Barber off the slab\nlu less than one inning. Kent, who relieved him, pitched n strong game.\nScore: * R,   H.   I\nBrooklyn     1     3\nNew York     G     0\nBatteries\u2014Barber, Kent and Miller\nMatliewson and Myers.\nLITTLE  TROUBLE  TO  PITTSBURG\n(By Daily News Leased wire.)\nPITTSBURG, July 5.\u2014Pittsburg had\nlittle trouble winning from Cincinnati\ntoday.    Score: R.  H.  E.\nCincinnati  4     8     7\nriltsburg     7    14     0\nBatteries\u2014'Humphries   and   McLean;\nO'Tpole and Simon.\nSTEADY   PITCHING   DOES   IT\n(By  Dally  News Leased  Wire.)\nST.    LOUIS,    July    5.\u2014Lavender's\nsteady   pitching;   together  with timely\nhitting by bis mates, gave Chicago this\nafternoon's game with St. Loufs, 4-0.\nScore: R.   u.  R\nChicago  4     7     0\nSt, Louis     0     5     1\nBatteries\u2014Lavender     and      Archer;\nHarmon and Brestiaban.\nVIRGINIA  RECRUIT PITCHES\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.*)\nBOSTON,, July 5.\u2014Rlxey, Philadelphia's elongated recruit pitcher from\nthe University nf Virginia, held Boston without a score today while bis\nteam mates were piling up to runs.\nOnly two Boston men reached seeond\nbase. Cravath's batting was a feature.\nPitcher Hub Perdue settled his differences wilh the local management today.   Score: R.  H. E.\nPhiladelphia 10   15     1\nBoston      0     7     1\nBatteries-Rlxey and Killlfcr; White\nand Ruridun.\nARTERY   BROKEN   IN .\u25a0  ,.     .\n,\u201e\u25a0   .,..,   .      LIGHTWEIGHT  BOUT\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n, PKi'itU   ill., July ii.-   fhiltp iiarri-\nfoi'. a Ch'eagn lightweight, who toiigi\n\u2022ids\nckii\nith iit\nclub,\nfight\nDm\n\u25a0eiidllion. He is said to have received\na heavy blow behind the ear shortly\nafter Ihe opening pf the eighth round\nand though lie sloot'l up under a fierce\nrain of blows, his seconds saw at the\nbeginning of the next round that he\nwas helpless and they threw up tit*\n-\u2022ponge. Harrison was carried to 'tl\nbath house near hy, thence toan hospital, where it was found that lie bail\nbroken nn artery.\nVANCOUVER RACES\n(By Dally  News  Leaser! Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., July li--Results\nnt  Mlnoru   park are\nFirst race, four furlongs\u2014'Vivian It,\nwon; Mercurlan, second; Phosphoruhi,\nthird;   time :45 1-5.\nSecond race, five furlongs\u2014Phil\nConnor, won; Alder Gulch, second;\nHigh Range, third; time liO'G.   .'\nThird race, six ' furlongs\u2014Oencntl\nMarchmont, won; King Elk, second;\nTwo Oaks, third; tlhie,' 1:1 84-5.\nFourth race, one and a half'miles\u2014;\nMaromara, won; Whldden, second;\nSale,   (bird;   time,  2:43  2-5.'\nFifth race, seven furlongs\u2014'6, Do-\nvalta, won; Special delivery, second;\nSin Fein, third; time! 1:33.'\nAMERICAN\nThe Gillette is the ONLY\nFor a\nClose SAave\nSTANDING OF THE CLUBS\nBoston       50 24 .075\nWashington     44 31 .5Sfi\nPhiladelphia   41 .20 .585\nChicago     41 30 .577\nCleveland      25 35 .500\nDetroit    \"... 3(i 38 .ISO\nSt.  Louis     10 49 ,.2S2\nNow York    ;  10 ,40 .282\nSPLIT  EVEN  AT PHILADELPHIA\n(By  Dally  News Leased  Wire.)\nPHILADELPHIA, July 5.\u2014Philadelphia and Boston split even in a\ndouble-header here today. 'Philadelphia won the first game, 3-ii, 15.\nCollins scoring the winning run on his\ndouble and Mcliinis' single. Jloston\nlanded the second contest. 5-3, through\nMorgan's wlldness in the last two Inr\nnings.   Scores:\nFirst game\u2014 R,   H.   E.\nBoston    ,2     4      1\nPhiladelphia     \".. 7     0      1\nBatteries\u2014O'Brien and \u25a0 Citrrlgan;\nCoombs, Hpuckk and' Fgan.\nSecond game\u2014 '     .] ,R. pH.   E.\nBoston      5    ,7     ,1\nPhiladelphia ...' 3,     8*     3\nBatteries\u2014Collins and Carrigan;\nPennoek and Morgan and Lapp,\nWORKS   IS   EASY   FOR  CHICAGO\n(By Daily NewS'.'Leasetl Wire,)\nCHICAGO; ' July'''5.\u2014Chicago bit\nWorks freely today and won from Detroit, 7-3. Harry Lord, third baseman\nfor Chicago, was overcome by heat and\nretired in tlie third In favor of Zeidcr,\nwhose suspension Manager Callahan\nlifted yesterday.    Score: R.   IT.   13.\nDetroit  3     8\nChicago     7    12      3\nBatteries\u2014Works and Slanagc;\nWalsh and Kuhn.\nPLAY  SIXTEEN   INNINGS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire:Y\nWASHINGTON, .luly 5.\u2014Washing\nton defeated New York today in a ill\nInning contest, 8-5. Johnson and War.\nhop hooked tip in a pitchers' battle\nafter Fisher and Ehgel had been pulled\nfrom the box, and pitched desperately\nuntil lhc final round. Then Warhop\nweakened and the winning run was\nhalted home by Morgan after two were\nout. Daniels had hard luck todny\nRotii Kngel and Johnson knocked him\ndown with swift inshools, but he remained In tho game to the end.\nScore: ...    . ...B.   IL   E.\nNew York  5     0      1\nWashington     0    14      5\nRetteries \u2014 Warhop, Fisher and\nSweeney;   Engel and Williams.\nsections of the country suffered over\ntho victories of Dorion, Flex, Falcada\nand Flying Feet. The 43 operators in\nthe ring ntso were mulcted In goodly\nsums by the success of ihe quartette\nand their losses were added to by Superstition and Lysandcr, both outstanding favorites. The racing in tlie\nmain was Interesting and productive\nof close finishes, In the third and tbe\nclosing day the windups were so close\nthat It required placing to determine\ntho results. The most spirited fight\ncame with the running of the third\nIn which youngsters engaged,. The\nearly running was dominated by Fatty\nGrub an oxlreme outsider with a ruling price of 200 to 1 against. He\nthreatened in the early stages to make\na runaway race hut when straightened\nfor the stretch run, Dorion made play\nfor the lead but In this was frustrated\nby Musgrave on Flabbergast which\nbore over and forced Dorion to carry\nhim for a part of tho way. Only in\ntho last 70 yards did Koerner manage\nto get Dorion uncovered from Flabbergast to secure command by a slight\nmargin and win out. Flabbergast beat\ntlie long shot in the last strides for\nsecond place. The mile and three-\nsixteenths handicap, tlie feature went\nto Superstition, running in his best\nform. He was given some sharp contending during tbe early stages by Col.\nHolloway hut the latter weakened in\nthe final drive and ultimately succumbed near the end for second place\nto Chester Kriim. The fifth race\nbrought together an ordinary band of\nnon-winners with the supposed good\nthing, Magnate, owned by Wood Clay\nabsorbing most attention. When it\ncame to the running, Flex held sway\nail the way and won handily.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSTANDING  OF THE  CLUBS\nWon\n.. 43\nRochester   ....\n[Baltimore    38 32 .540\nToronto     37 35 .511\nJersey City     *J7 3(i .507\nNewark     35 37 .487\nBuffalo      20 30 .-140\nProvidence     32 37 .135\nMontreal   '....29 41 .411\n(By  Dally  News  \/-.eased   Wire,)\nMontreal-Rochester game postponed;\nrain.\nAt Newark\u2014 R.   H,   E.\nBaltimore     0   15     1\nNewark     3     u      2\nBatteries \u2014 \"Walker, Bergon and\nSchmidt; Gaskiil, McGhinlty and Hig-\nglns.\nR\u00ab  H.   E.\nNo two men have beards and faces\njust alike\u2014and the same man wants\nsometimes a light, sometimes a close\nshave. The adjustable Gillette is the\nONLY Razor which meets these varied\nneeds.\nThe lower sketch shows the position\nof the blade when the handle of the\nGillette is screwed up tight, gripping the\nblade close against the guard. This gives\na light shave, and suits a soft beard or\na tender skin perfectly.\nIn the upper sketch the screw handle\nhas been loosened about a quarter turn. This, as you can see, allows the blade edge\nto spring away a little from the guard, and \"take hold\" more. In this position the\nwonderfully keen Gillette blade will shave the stiffest beard closer than the barber\ndare shave it.\nProbably an adjustment between these two will suit you best.   But whatever kind\nof shave you want, the adjustable Gillette will give it.\n....-*. -At your Druggist's, Hardware Dealer's or Jeweler's, buy\na Gillette\u2014you'll enjoy it. Standard Sets $5.00. Pocket\nEditions  $5.00 to $6.00.      Combination  Sets $6.50.\nGillette Safety Razor Co. of Canada, Limited\nOffice and Factory:\nTHE NEW GILLETTE BLDC,\nMONTREAL.\nNORTHWESTERN LEAGUE\nSTANDING OF THE CLUBS\nSnokuno .\nBeuttlo ..\nVancouvoi\nPortland\nVictoria .\nTacoma   .\nWon   Lost' Ret.\n... .42       35. .545\n...43        36 .511\n...  40        40 .500\n , 3D, . 3!l .500\n...  38 \u25a0      40 .1ST\n34\n4li\n(By Dally News Leased . Wire.)\n,.,.,  R. II, 13.\nVictoria    '  \"    !'     3\nSeattle     1 10    A\nBatteries\u2014 Camp Lehner.and Meek;\n'i'iicmiihon and Whaling.\nR. IT. E.\nVancouver  m 1   3    l\nPortland    ' 2 *ffi    1\nllaltuWcs\u2014Willis and Lewis; Blooni-\nfield and Harris.\nR. IT. 33.\nTacoma    * \u2022 3   9    1\nSpokane    ;'2    8     1\nBatteries\u2014'Crlgor   and    Crittenden;\nCudcau and Ostdlek.\nCENTRAL INTERNATIONAL\nB. H. Ifl.\nSuperior     4   4     3\nDnhith     1    4     3\nBatteries\u2014Ehondes   and   Anderson;\nJbhiisbn and Hargrove.\nWinnipeg-Grand Forks game called;\nrain.\nBAD   DAY  FOR  BOOKIES\n(By Dally News Leased Wi'ro.)\nFORT \u25a00RTI3, i ait., July 5\u2014The sue-'\nnessful consummation of several well\nplanned coups by astute horsemen nnd\ntheir connections ndded Interest to the\n(\u2022(icing today. If tho reports nre authentic commission house*) in various\nAt Buffalo\u2014\nroronto   \t\nI'Wiffalo \u25a0...-. .-:-j .-j..-.-.-. .:\u25a0.,'\u25a0.'' -3   \u25a0   6'*   4\nBatteries\u2014;Lush  and  Graham;   Ful-\nIcmvcider and Mitchell.\nAt Jersey City\u2014 R.   IL   IS.\nProvidence     5    10\nJersey City   4   11\nBatteries\u2014Lafitte,    Bailey,     Dygert\nand Schmidt; Doescher and W\ncrack ami field games, commence 10-\nday. Ah I have pointed out before,\n.hese contests, waici'i will make international athletic history, arc 10 be\nstaged in the Blljettforsaljnlng. That\ncame 11 lone is enough Io break the\n.i.-arl of an American or English glad-\n'alyr and leave him gasping for breath.\nliut that is not the worst. The conspiracy1 goes deeper. The swimming\nevents, which also begin today, or im\nor this evening, are to be pulled off In\njurgardsbruiinsvllken. Can the fish-\nmen of Uncle Sam or John Hull keep\nafloat in such a body of moisture; much\ness mike a record? It-seems unlikely.\nJut, cheer up! The worst is yet to\n:omol The bicycle race, to be held to-\nnorrow, will start at Llljehholmsvugen\nand on the very first spurt the riders\nwill   have  to\nMyhodabaeke\nthe\n\u25a0III\nAnd the finish will I\"\ninvaders whet\nivill happen\nSwedish spoeiaiora cry ont, \"Hurrah-\nllngskornasketsjvagen?\" It is too sad\n11 contemplate. We can only hope foi\nhe hest-Jnissvotsjungsken. The Swod-\nsh language listens like a linotype\nnan's cuss word.\nThe Swedish program commute*\npromised to havo as few events he\nlossiblo on Sundays, in deference tc\nlIic American and English athletes\nWho are not accustomed to the idea oi\ntho continental Sunday. So tomorrow\nthere will be only the 190-mile blcycli\n*acc around Lake Malar, the running\nhigh Jump, heats; the lO.Ooo-metn\nfat. final heat; the final heat of-tin\n300-metre flat, the Pentathlon, 11\nswimming contest or two, and n few\nminor events. That is absolutely all\nunless it should be decided at the last\nminute   to\nThe Swedish\nadd\nfew\nof  S:i\n('Will\nis suttlnly  very\n\u25a0ontinental,  in\ni,   swlmm\nwrestling\nWill  corn\nrldin-2-\nr,   tenements, com\nThe rowing ev\nJuly IS and 111\nin July 20 tn :\nid from\nmpet'itlon 1\nJuly 13 to\nbe decided\ni'acutfng ni\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\n(By Dally  News Leased  Wire.)\nMinneapolis   \t\nSt.   Paul   \t\nBatteries\u2014Pntterso\nKargor and   Marshal\nToledo    \t\nIndianapolis   \t\nBatteries\u2014Collomore   and\nRobertson and Clark.\nKansas  City    \t\nMilwaukee   \t\nBaileries\u2014Powell\nCutting and Sclnalk,\n1  10      1\n'wens;\nI    0     ]\n:'ariscb;\nLACROSSE PRACTICE\nTho lacrosse team will hold n practice Sunday morning al 10 o'clock, in\npreparation for their game with Rossland on the 16th. A full turnout is\nrequested by the management.\nAHAI   IS THIS A CONSPIRACY\nAGAINST ENGLISH SPEAKER\"\nAha! Have we discovered a deep\ndark conspiracy of the Swedes again**-'\nthe English-speaking athletes entered\nlh the Olympic Karnes? Indeed, ii\nlooks very much like It. While the\n\u25a0flumes were fiffieially opepi d a week\nago.   tlie  real   sno'rl   of  Ihe   oo-et.   Ii'm-\nOLYMPIC   GAMES   PROGRAM\n(By Dally Xews Leased Wire.)'\nSaturday, ' .luly 6\u2014Athletics: 100\nmetres flat, javelin (held in middle,\nbest hand), sno metres flat, running\nhigh jump. Fencing: Individual foils.\nGymnastics: Swimming, 100 metres'\nfree slyle, 1,500 metres free style,\nwater polo; high diving, plain.\nWrestling: Middleweight A, middleweight B.\nSunday, July 7\u2014Cycling: 3l'0 kilometres around Lake Malar. Athletics:\n100 metres hurdle, putting the weight\nfright and left hand), 100 metres flat,\npentathlon consisting of running broad\njump, throwing the javelin (held tn\nthe middle, best hand), 200 metres\nflat, throwing the discus (best hand),\n1 500 metres flat. S00 metres flat, 10,-\n000 metres flat. Gymnastics: Swimming, 200 metres breast, water polo.\ndisplay of Swedish swimming, 1,500\nmetres free style. Wrestling: T.i-.'lit-\nwelsht, heavyweight. Modern pentathlon, duel shooting at  -5 metres.\nROSS   RIFLE   USED\n(By Dallv  News  Lenswl  Wire.)\nLONDON, July r..\u2014At the Irish\nmeeting Maurice Blood,  usinir :i\n'le, scored the, highest in every L\ntition at every  range.\nNEW  BASEBALL  REGULATIONS\n(Ry  Dally News  Leased Wire.)\nCINCINNATI,    \"bio.    .luly    5,   Th(\nintinnnl     baseball     commission     an-\nlounccd the following:\nTn establish uniformity in nclii>n b*\nlubs  when  a   player,   released  by  1\niajer Vague club; refuses to report b\nnew contract with tlie club lo whlel\nreels that club to protect'both parties\nto t;;e deal from responsibility for his\nsalary, during his insubordination, by\npromptly .suspending him.\nPayment in part or in whole of the\nconsideration for the release of such\nplayer will not be enforced until he is\nreinstated and actti!tl|y|r enters the\nservice of the purchasing club.\nSHERIFF STOPS  FIGHT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBEN-TON HAitBOK, Mich, July C.~-\nThe Ed die-McGoorty-Knockout Brown\nfight yesterday was stopped by Sheriff\nJohnson, who arrested fighters and officials in liie last few seconds of the\ntenth round, charging them with breaking tho Michigan boxing law. i-'loyd\nKiusiionions says lie will carry the\n\u25a0ase to Ihe state supreme court. Il\nwas McGoorty's fight all tiie way, but\nlirown showed great gamenoss.\nSWEDES  PROTEST\nAGAINST   WINNIPEGGER\n(By Daily Xews Teased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, July 5\u2014A dispatch lo\nthe Star sporting extra tonight says\nthat Army Howard lias been protested by tho Swedes. No details arc\ngiven except the rather unsatisfactory\nexplanation that the protest is against\nbin reinstatement after he had been\ndismissed from the team and his entry\npresumably withdrawn. The committee are considering the protest.\nCOAST LEAGUE\n(By Dally News Leased \"Wire.)\nR. II.\nVernon    11 15\nSan Francisco    -l   s\nortlattfl  ..\nacramento\nTEN-HOUR  DAY\n$3.50 Recipe Free for\nWeak Men\nSend  Name and   Address Today\u2014You\nCan Have it Free and be Strong\nand  Vigorous\nI have in my possession a prescription\nfor nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened manhood, failing memory and lame\nback, la-ought on by excesses, unnatural\ndrains, or the follies of youth that has\ncured so many worn nr-1 nervous men\nright lu their own homes\u2014without any\nadditional help n,- medicine\u2014that I think\n\u25a0ry man who wishes to regain ids\nnly power and virility, qulekiy ami\netly, should have a copy. So i have\nileterinliied to send a ro\u00bbv of the prescription free of charge, ia a plain, or.\nrtlnary sealed envelope to any man who\nwin write mo for it.\nThis prescription comes from a physician who has made a special study of\nmen and T am convinced it is tlie surest-\nacting combination for the \"\u00abrp of deficient manhood and Vigor failure ever\nput together.\nT think T owe It.tb my fellow men lo\n\u25a0end them a copy In confidence so that\nany man anywhere who Is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop\ndrugging himself   with   harmful   patent\nicdieines,  secure  what 1  believe  Is  tho\ndclccst-actlng restorative, upbuilding!\nSPOT-T<H*i'HIN*0 remedy ever devised.\nand so care hlmseli at home ipiletly nnd\nqulekiy. Just ilrop me a Hue like this:\n\"Dr. A. B. Robinson, jfir.D Luck Building.\nDetroit. Mini., and T will S'-nd you a\ncopy of this splendid recipe la a plain\nordinary envelope free of charge, .\\ c*reat\niv doctors would charge (3.00 to S^.OO\nmerely writing nut a prescription llko\nthis\u2014plit  T seta!   It  enllrelv free.\t\nSATURDAY'S SPECIAL\nFREE HATS\nTo Every Purchaser of a\nSUIT or RAINCOAT\nBert Lorsch, Ltd.\nThe Man's Outfitters\nTremont Hotel Block Nail Orders Solicited\n rati\nPAGE FOUR\nCfil\"\u00bbatt-5 #eto&i\nSATURDAY ,',.*   JULY B\n-\nCije Ball? $M&\nPublished  at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept   Sunday,  by\nThe News Publishing Company\nLimited.\nW. 0. FOSTER, Editor and Manager.\nSATURDAY, JULY 6\nWINDERMERE   MAIL   SERVICE\nA matter which deserves attention\nat the harids ot the postofflce authorities is that of the mall service through\nthe Windermere Valley. It Is only\nfair to say that in summer thero Is\ncomparatively little ground for complaint. There are three mails a week\nfrom Golden by boat, In addition to\nwhich the owner of the stage line\nwhich operates through the valley last\nyear put an automobile on the service\nwhich proved a great assistance in\ntransporting the mall In addition the\ncompany .-Which Is developing the district around WHmer has several automobiles In service running to Golden.\nThese cars are always at the disposal\nof the postofflce department for mall\npurposes.\nIn winter, however, conditions are\nvery different There is then but ono\nmall a week each way from Golden\nand, from Cranbrook. TJic result Is\nthat the peoplo of tho valley arc to a\nvery large extent cut off from the\nworld during the winter months. The\nfact that thero is only one mall a week\neach from the north and south means\ngreater delay than a cursory consideration would indicate. For example,\na letter that may reach either the\nGolden or the Cranbrook poBtofflco\nIntended for Windermere an hour after\nthe mall has left for the north or the\nsouth, as tho case may bo, lies In that\noffice until tho following week. Letters arriving later remain In these\noffices a corresponding length of time.\nIt makes no difference how Important\na letter may be or how great may be\nthe^oss to tho sender or to the recipient^ tooth, as a result of the delay,\nit must necessarily await the dispatch\nof the weekly mall for tho Windermere\nvalley from that particular postofflce.\nThat such a condition of affairs Is\nnot conducive to tho rapid settlement\nof .the valley, no one will attempt to\ngainsay. On tho other hand It Is easy\nto see how It Is quite tlie reverse.\nThe Dally News believes that no official, of the postofflce department would\nattempt to argue that tho winter mall\nservice through the Windermere Volley .Is adequate to the district's requirements. The only possible excuse which\ncan be offered for Its continuance up\nto the present Is that of economy.\nThere is a point, however, at which\neconomy developes Into parsimony. In\nthe case of the Windermere winter\nmall service it has been reached. In\nsaying this The Dally News takes the\nground that the postofflce service* of\nthe country is Intended for tho public\nconvenience, of which everyone should\nget the greatest possible advantage.\nNo question of cost up to a reasonable amount should be allowed to interfere with efficiency.\nThe cost of another mail per week\neach way through the Windermere\nValley during the winter months would\nnot be great. To provide It would be\nan act of Justlee to the settlers of that\ndistrict. It Is to be hoped the government will take up the matter and that\nas a result some means will bo provided of giving the necessary additional mall service which the needs of\nthe district demand.\nA  NEW  BRITISH  POST\nAn Instance of what energy and enterprise will accomplish Is afforded hy\nthe recent completion of the Iminlng-\nhnm Deep. Water Dock at Grimsby,\nEngland. Grimsby, it may be known,\nhas arisen from the position of an\nobscure fishing village to that of the\npremier fishing port of the world.\nWith  the development of the fishing\nBEAVER BOARD\nWalls and Ceilings\nare put up easily and\nquickly in panels of all\nconvenient sizes. They\nKeep out heat and cold;\nDeaden sound;\nRetard fire;\nDo not crack;\nSave expense;\nResist Vibration;\nTake the place of lath,\nplaster and wall-paper\n, in every type of building\nnew or remodeled.\nSOLD BY\nA. G. Lambert Co. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C,\nIndustry Grimsby's importance as a\ngeneral shipping port has increased\nyear by year,\nSo steady and so satisfaclory has\nbeen this growth that the Great Central Railway, which conneclB Grimsby\nwith Manchester, decided \u00abotne seven\nor eight years ago to undortake the\nconstruction of a now system of docks\nof the most modern descrlptloa. Work\nwas commenced on these docks in 1906,\nand was recently completed.\nThe new port, it may he explained,\nis she miles from Grimsby proper and\nnine miles from Hull. Some idea of\ntbe Importance of the new docks may\nbe judged from tbe fact that its area\nof land occupied for terminal purposes\nis over 1,000 acres, that the length of\nthe dockage provided ia two and a half\nmiles and that 170 miles ot railway\nsiding have been laid to handle the\nanticipated traffic, while in connection\nis a graving dock 740 feet in length,\n56 feet In width and with a 23-foot\ndepth of water on the sill.\nThe new docks are provided with\nall the latest facilities for the economical and expeditious handling of\nfreight. The Idea throughout has been\nto malco a port which will bo national\nIn character and that It Is so regarded\nIs evidenced by the fact that their\nmajesties, King George and Queen\nMary, have consented to perform the\nopening ceremonies which have been\nset for Monday, duly 23.\nAs an example of constructive energy and business enterprise tho new\nImmingham docks .will bear comparison with any of the great works of a\nsimilar character undertaken In any\npart of the world In recent years,\nwhile at the same time their construction bears testimony to tho fact\nthat, despite any contentions .to the\ncontrary which may be advanced from\nany source, Great Britain has not yet\ntaken a back seat In commercial and\nindustrial activity nor lost any faith\nin her continued supremacy as the\ngreatest sea-carrying power of the\nworld,\ni (Is mc-tith and lets It say\nA report has been drawn up In favor\nof introducing electric light into tl'\"\nhouse of commons in the place of S\u00ab\nThis -is clearly part of a wide wlieme\nfor reducing the length of speeches.\u2014\nPunch.\nThe   Would-be   Fluker   (after   a   fitt'fo\nSuit and as Tils friends arrlra within\nearlngnltntance)\u2014Yes, caddie, not a bad\nput, ea?\u2014holing out from the edge ol\nthe green.\nThe Caddie\u2014Very Rood, sir; makes up\nfor them 10 In tho 'oiler, slr.-Tho Sketch.\nIt Is treating a man like a flog to cut\nhim off short In his narratlve.-Tho\nTatlor.\n\"Mother, I heard father say Inst night\nthat there wasn't another woman like\nyou In the whole world.\"\n\"Did be really, Ferdinand?\"\n\"Yes, and he said It was a Jolly good\nthing;   too.\"\u2014Melbourne  Weekly  Timet*.\nShe Was -Shy\u2014\"Weren't you shy when\nthe judge aBked you your age in court?\nSweet One\u2014\"Tea, I wan about 10 years\nsliy, my dear.\"\u2014Sydney Town and Country Journal.\nMaud\u2014\"Is It true that you and Jack\nhnve r-uarrelled?\"\nEva\u2014\"Yea. And the worst of It Is be\nwants me to return hls'rlng, and I've\nfoftgotten which of them is hi*.\"\u2014Sydney\nBulletin.\nI This Date in Historg.\nDr. Caspar Frlcdi-Ich Wolff, the founder of modern embryology, whoso scientific work laid tlio foundation for the\nresearches of Darwin, Haeckel and others\nand tho development of the theory of\nevolution, was born in Berlin IT!) years\nago today, ills \"Theorla, Generntlonis\"\nIs the pioneer classic of the evolutionists. In 1827 Dr. Baer, also a German,\nadded to the material that was available\nwhen Darwin begins bis revolutionary\nInquiries into the \"Descent of Man\" and\n\"Origin of Species.\" Dr, Ernest lliietkel\nof Jena, Germany, and others have carried on the great investigations until\ntoday evolution is almost universally\naccepted as an established fact, and no\nlonger merely a theory.\n77\u00bbe Weather\nI Have for Sale\nA Few Specially Selected\n- ORCHARD TRACT3--\nIn the Slocan Valley\nIn blocks of 10, 15, 20, 30 and 40 acres each. These blocks are Ideally\nlocated. Some of them have railway frontage and tho government wagon\nrbad runs through or near them. Close to railway stations, schools, etc,\nThe timber has been cut off these lands. Tho cost of clearing Is not excessive. Good deep soil. No rock, Tbe price per sere Is reasonable.\nGood terms.   Full particulars given on request.\nD. St. Denis\n505  Baker St.\nNtlson, B. C.\nP. O. Box 497.\nWANTED\u2014Contractor to clear 5 acres of land at Perry's Biding, Slocan Valley; no standing timber; no rock; level ground. Apply to D.\nSt. Denis.\nFor Your Sunday Dinner\nWe Offer\nSPRING LAMB\nPRIM E  BEEF\nCHOICE MUTTON\n41 Market Co.\nPhone 8,\nJOHN BURNS & SON Contactors\nand Builders\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nA new Canadian publication that in\nits in lal number presents many reasons for a prolonged and successful\nexistence, is tbe Montreal Financial\nTimes.\nTho Dally News is In receipt of the\nfirst issue of tbe Metropolitan Magazine In Us new form, that is the\nsize of Harper's1 \"Weekly, The Canadian Courier, Tbe Saturday Evening\nPost and some or the other most successful magazines of Ihe United States\nand Canada. The change unquestionably \u25a0 makes l*Ebr^lfti3 convenience* of\nthe reader, while tho matter contained in the Issue Is quite up to the pre-\nvtous standard of excellence of the\nMetropolitan.\nIt Is remarkable the unholy glee to\nwhich Canadian papers,* which supported reciprocity last year, are giving expression because of the defeat\nof Mr. Champ Clark in his fight for\nthe Democratic presidential nomination. Would it be that they still feel\nresentment against Mr. Clark because\nof his remarks during tho reciprocity\ndiscussion when speaking in favor of\ntho measure In the American congress,\nto lho effect that he hoped to see (be\nday when the Stars and Stripes would\nfloat from the Gulf of Mexico to the\nNorth pole.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nA Chance for Someone.\nIf some smooth gink would stake a\nsubdivision to Mars, wc feel .sure that\nhe could sell quite a bunch of lots on\neasy payments to many people In British Columbia.\u2014Greenwood Ledge.\nAlasl   Poor Champ,\nAs a presidential possibility .Speaker\nChamp Clark Is now a more adjunct.\n-Vancouver Province.\nAnything Would Be Better.\nA critic of American history attributes its dullness to the absence uf\nfeminine Influence In public affairs.\nNo future critic will be able to say\nthe same of British history. Whatever may be said of public affairs In\nEngland at the present time, any suggestion of dullness that is due to the\nnhsence of feminine influence is the\nlast criticism that can be made. Pre<\nmler Asqulth and his associates would\nwillingly dispense with a little of the\nfeminine influence even nt the cost of\nIncreased dullness.\u2014Calgary  Albertan.\nEnraptured and Scrambled Reporter.\nIf ever joy and love, mlrlh and music met and kissed each other It was\nsurely here. As the chimes of four\nstroked the hour, the soft, sweet strains\nof Mendelssohn's wedding march\nfloated through the air, and slowly the\nbridal party descended the stairs and\ntook their places. The bride, a picture\nof beauty, descended the stairway unattended. At the landing she was met\nby the groom and together they went\ntho improvised altar, over which\nsuspended n beaittlful marriage bell.\nDuring a part of the impressive service Miss Carr played softly MacDor-\nrcl's \"To a Wooed Lily.\"\u2014Hopklns-\nvllle (Ky.) New Bra,\nCold Storage\nFirst Trooper Imperial Yocmanry (dls-\noUBSlnc a new offleer)-** wears a bit,\ndon't 'e. sometimes?\nSecond Trooper\u2014-E's a masterpiece   o\n(Bv Dally News T,easert Wire.)\nTORONTO, July 5.\u2014Pressure is high\non the Atlantic and Pacific coasts mid\nlowest over the western provinces. Showers and thunderstorms have occurred in\nmany localities In all tho provinces.\nMbi. Max.\nNelson       &7        \u00ab\nVa ncoiiver       64 tiC\nCalgary      60        W\nMooso   Jaw       41 61\nRegina       W    .   W\nWinnipeg    C8       M\nPort Arthur      &t        7u\nLondon    m       no\nKingston   r>i       V)\nOttawa       BO* W\nMontreal    72        88\nQuebec       08     ' .H2\nSt,  John       51 (US\nHalifax       W *1\nSEPTUAGENARIAN  PIONEER\nMARRIED AT GREENWOOD\nfRv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOUBtiNWOOl), B.C., July 5.~James\nf'opcland was Ti years old yesterday and\nwas married this week to Mrs. tilsle\n\u25a0lleylnk. He Is a pioneer of British\nColumbia, having lived at Hill's Bar on\ntho Fraser river in 1868,\nMrs. David Whiteside of Victoria has\nannounced the cngngcmetit of her sister.\nMiss Kmlly Richmond, to Randolph\nStuart,  formerly of this city.\nB. Phlpps of Victoria Is --pending the\nsummer IniMldway''            \u25a0'--. \"im\nHorn, at Denoro, on July 1, to Mr. and\nMrs.  Axel  Guslufsoii, a son.\nJ. C. Dale nnd T. li. Cave nre operating a stage line 'between Curuii and\nthe .Summit.\nThe remains of E, G. Warren will be\nconveyed to the C.P.B. station tomorrow and from thence to Victoria, whore\nInterment will take place next Monday.\nHe will be given a Masonic funeral.\nBOYS' BIG CATCH\n(Special to The Dally News.l\nWILLOW POINT, B. C, July fl.\u2014\ntoaster Bobby Thompson, nged seven,\nWhile fishing today, caught a five-\nPound rainbow trout. His brother Bud,\nwho wus fishing with him, went to his\nisslstance, played and landed tbe fish\nin splendid style,\nTWO CLAIMANTS\nFOR CHILD'S BODY\nThirteen Victims of Railway Accident\nStill  Unidentified\u2014Confusion as\nto Several Bodies\n(By  Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nCORNING, N.V., July fi\u2014Of the 41\npersons killed in the rear end colll-\n*slon on the Lackawanna two miles\neast of this city curly yesterday, in\nremain unidentified up to tonight. Of\ntheso six are in locnl morgues and\nseven In Elmlra. In several Instances\nthere nre no clues upon which identification may be attempted and several bodies aro so badly mutilated that\nultimate discovery of their identity\nseems but a remote possibility. The\nunidentified dead comprise six women, fivo men, nn eight year old girl\nand  a   ten   year   old   boy.\nCoroner H. B. Smith settled a dispute today between two claimants of\nthe body of a five year old girl. The\nbody has been identified by William\nR. Laird of Buffalo as that of his\ndaughter Mabel and had been turned\nover to him. Today David Cochrane\nof New York a brother of Mrs. William Armstrong, who with her husband was killed, also -claimed tbe\nbody as that of his niece who accompanied her parents on tbe trip and\nwho is missing. Mystery surrounds\nthe fate of the little Armstrong girl\nus there is no other child of the age\nin nny of the morgues or hospitals. Dr.\nSmith gave Mr. Laird possession of\nthe body to be sent to New York and\nadvised Cochrane to go to that city for\nmore positive identification if It could\nbe obtained.\nIt developed tonight that Mrs. C.\nBrandes of New York who has hitherto been mentioned In dispatches as\namong tho dead, was not on the train.\nThis fact became known when Henry\nHente, a cousin of Brandes, arrived at\nthe morgue and Identified the latter\nbut stated that Brandes' wife and four\nchildren were at home and well In\nNew York.\nOn Honeymoon\nA few moments later the body of the\nyoung bride supposed to have been\nMrs. Brandes was identified as that of\nMrs. C. A, Mnsserve. As Ada Benson\nof Poquannock, Pa., she was married\non Wednesday at Plimpton, N.J., by\nRev. E. P. Hoooper, to C, A. Masserve,\na clerk in tho offices of the Chlcngo,\nMilwaukee & Bt. Paul railway.   They\nNelson Pinning Mill, Sash and Door Fnc tory\u2014Factory and Yards, 706-13 Vernon\nstreet. Doors, Sash, Mouldings In stock and to order. Coast Lath and Shingles.\nTurned Work and Brackets. Cement, Brick and Lime always In stock. Automatic Knife Grinder\u2014all kinds of grinding done. Store Fronts and Office Fittings, etc., a specialty. Estimates given on stone, brick and all kinds of work.\nMoving and raisin-- buildings and setting plate glass. Guaranteed against\ndamage.    P.   O.   Box.  1IH-,    Telephone 178.\nTake Them Away Prices\nOn China and Pictures\n\u25a0   ' Just to put a little ginger in summer business,\nCHINA  BARGAINS\u2014plates, tea stands, cups and Baucers, etc, at\n10c, 15c and up.\nPICTURE   BARGAINS\u2014Framed pictures marked down to 25c and\n50c each.\nLOOK   IN   OUR   WINDOW\nW. G. THOMSON\nPhone 34     Bookseller and Stationer     Nelson, B. C.\nWere on their Wedding trip, A similarity of initials appearing on a wedding ring led lo;her Identification as\nMrs, Brandes. While dying in the\nhospital Mr. Brandes spoke of his wife\nfrequently in his delirium and it came\nto be supposed that she was on the\ntrain.\nMiss Katherlne Jausse of 1241 East\nFortieth, street, Brooklyn, was Identified today as among the unknown\nInjured at the Cbrnlng hospital. She\nhas been unconscious since the wreck\nand her case is considered of the most\ndesperate.\nA blue eyed, brown haired hoy, 12\nyears old is among the unidentified injured at the Corning hospital and his\nenso has given much concern to the\nphysicians. No clue to his identity is\nto be had.\nEngineer Schroedcr of the express\ntrain Is reported tonight to bo In a\nserious mental condition and is under\ntlie constant care of physicians.\nBodies of wreck victims identified\ntonight besides the body of Mrs. Mas-\nserve were those of Mrs. Marie Duffy\nof Brooklyn, Olive Duffy, her daughter, and R P. Porrln of Yonkers, N.Y.\nSAPID TRANSIT BETWEEN\nOTTAWA AND KINGSTON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire,!\nMONTREAL,    July   5,\u2014The   establishment of a three-hour electric rapid\nranslt service between Ottawa and\nKingston, giving an outlet to the fer-\nile Rldeau valley and Uie rich farming\ndistrict of the Bldeau lakes, Is promised Willi ii two years by T. It, Ulougnar\nof London, England,\nEnglish capital Is being Interested in\ntlio project. Tlie promoters have already secured the co-operation of the\nloading  electric   transit   organizers   in\nh's country. The towns along the line\nare Perth, Lanark, Seelcy's Bay. Kingston Mills, Merrick vi lie and other\nflourishing centres, who arc keenly in-\nercsted and already town councils and\nboards of trade are considering means\njf co-operation tn the scheme.\nsummer merchandise Is very active\nund that the situation is much Improved by seasonable'weather. Satisfactory conditions continue at London,\nwholesalers recolvlng fair orders.\nRains throughout the far west and\nnorthwest have Improved crop conditions and while reports of damage\nhave been received from a few sections the situation ns a whole could\nscarcely be Improved upon.\nAt Winnipeg the movement of staple\ndry goods and groceries continues\nlargo being about 2R per cent In excess\nof last year and active distribution is\nalso noted in most lines. -Wholesale\nhouses at Saskatoon report a satisfactory volume of business with good\nprospects of an active fall and winter\ntrade. Crops arc well advanced in\nthe vicinity of Calgary and general\ntrade maintains a satisfactory increase over last year. Gross earnings\nof ail Canadian railways reporting to\ndato for the four weeks of June show\nan Increase of 18.1 per cent as compared with the earnings of the same\nroads for tho corresponding period n\nyear ago.\nCommercial failures In Canada this\nweek number 23 against 26 last week\nand 21 in tho same week last year.\nPURE DRUGS!\nIS OUR MOTTO!\nAll drug! used here in dispensing your doctor's prescription art abso- |\nlutdly purt. \u2022 . a,\nWe Never Substitute\nYou art safe when you leave your prescriptions hero    flJP'f\nMen Who Know the Drug Business\nAlways At Your Service\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81       Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 902\nAgents for the Rcmingtm Typewriter Mail Orders \u2022 Steditty\nWEAK, TIRED PEOPLE\nALL REPORTS\nARE SATISFACTORY\nRains   on    Prairies    Have    Improved\nCrop Conditions and Business\nis Brisk\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNKW YORK, July 6\u2014Dispatches to\nDun's Review from branch offices of\nR. G. Dun A Co. In tho leading trade\ncentres of the Dominion of Canada\nreport conditions in practically every\ndirection eminently satisfactory.\nAt Montreal summer wholesale business is assuming the o,uletor phase\nusual at this period, but the warmer\nweather has stimulated distribution of\nseasonable merchandise at retail. At\nQuebec local manufacturers are receiving a fair volume of orders and\nmerchants generally regard tho future\nwith much confidence.\nAt Toronto the trade movement continues very satisfactory. Accounts of\ntho crops are most encouraging and\nmerchants and manufacturers are very\nhopeful. Payments are good, prices of\nall staple lines firm and there are no\nsuplus stocks on tho shelves of merchants,\nHamilton reports that business in\nAro   Usually   the   Victims   of   Pale,\nWatery Blood\nAnaemia Is the medical term for\npoor or watery blood. It may arise\nfrom a variety of causes, such as lack\nof exercise, hard study, improperly\nventilated rooms or .workshops, imper.\nfeet assimilation of food, etc. The\nchief symptoms are extreme pallor of\nthe face, lips and gums, rapid breathing and palpitation of the heart after\nslight exertion; headaches, dl?,ziness,\nsometimes fainting spells and a tendency to hysterics, swelling of the\nfeet nnd limbs, a feeling of constant\ntiredness and a distaste for food. Dr.\nWilliams' Pink Pills are a certain cure\nfor anaemia, because they make new,\nrich blood, which stimulates and\nstrengthens every organ and every\npart of the body. The following is\none among thousands of cases of this\nserious trouble cured by the use of\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills. Miss Geor-\ngtna Raymond, St. Jerome, Que,, says:\n\"About a year ago my health began\ntd give out. I suffered from' headaches, heart palpitation, dizziness nnd\nappeared tp be threatened with a general breakdown. I wns at this time\nemployed in the family of a doctor,\nwho, seeing my condition, gave me\nmedicine. I took this faithfully for\nsome time, but with no benefit and I\ngrew much discouraged. Then a\nfriend advised me td try Dr. Williams'\nPink Pills, saying that she hud found\na cure through them In similar conditions. I took her advice, got a supply of the pills and took them regularly for some time. Gradually I became strong and In the course of a\nmonth or so I was again enjoying the\nbest of health and have not since had\nthe least return of the old symptoms.\nI can heartily recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to all weak girls.\"\nSold hy all'medicine dealers at 50\ncents a box or six boxes for $2.50 or\nsent by mail, post paid, hy Tho Dr.\nWilliams' Medicine Co.\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Coitamerce\n8IR   EDMUND   WALKER,  C.V.O.,\nLLD.,   D.C.L\u201e   President\nALEXANDER  LAIRD.    Qen, Mgr.\nCapital    .'115,000,000\nRett f12,60O,OOO\nTravellers* Cheque*\nIssued by. the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce are the most convenient\nform In which to carry money when\ntraveling. They are negotiable everywhere, self-Identifying, and the exact\namount payable In the principal foreign countries Is printed on the face\nof every cheque. The cheques are\nIssued in denominations of\n110, \u00ab20, |&0v $100 and $200\nany may be obtained on application\nat the bank.\nIn connection with Its Travelers'\nCheques The Canadian Bank of Commerce has Issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to Those\nabout to Travel,\" which will he sent\nfree to anyone applying for It.\nNelson  Branch, J. 8. munro, Mgr.\nPlumbing and Heating\nADVICE\nFor Nothing\nCall and see us before you build\nyour bathroom.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Ca.\nVictoria St., Near Opera House   ,\nTelephone 181\nDaily News Want Ads. Get Results.\nTHORPE:'.\n\u201e_ DRINKS\niFpH0nF^ST\nTicket Insurance\nWhen you take a trip buy an Insurance   ticket.\nAt 20c per Day\nInsuring against travel accidents;\n$5,000 for death; $2,500 for dismemberment; $25 per week during\ndisablement, or half these umounts\nfor any other accidents. ,\nTickets Issued for one or 60 days.\nP. J. GLEAZER fc CO.\nBox 316 N.lson, B.C.\nImperial Bank ot|\nCanada\nHEAD OFFICEi   TORONTO\nCapital Authorized   $10,000,0001\nCapital  Paid-up    6,000,000.1\nReserve Fund    6,000,000 I\nTotal Assets  72,000,000 |\nD. R. Wilkie, President\nHon. Robert J affray, Vice-Pre*.\nBranches In British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook. Pernio, I\n\u25a1olden,     Kamloops,     Michel,     New I\nMichel,  Nelson, Revelstoke, Vanoou-1\nver. Victoria and(*Wllmer. I\nA general banking business trant-1\nacted.\n8AVING8 DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at our- [\nrent rate from date of deposit\nNelson Branch,  J.H.D.Benson, .Mgr. I\nBank of Montreal\nE8TABLI8HED 1817\n'Capital all paid-up  $16,000,000\nRest     15,000,000\nHEAD OFFICEi   MONTREAL\nRt.    Hon.   Lord   Strathcona    and\nMount Royal, Q.C.ta.G., Hon. Pros.\nR. B. Angus, Esq.. President j\nSir    Edward   8,   Clouston,   .Bart,\nVies-President\nH. V. Meredith, Esq., Gen. Manager\nBranches in British Columbia\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chilllwack,\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood, Hos-\nmer, Kamloopw, Kelowna, Merrltt\nNeUon. New Denver, New Westminster, Nicola, Penticton, Port Albernl,\nPort Haney Prince Rupert, Princeton, Rossland, Bummerland, Vancouver, Vancouver (Main street), Vernon,\nVictoria, West Bummerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nFor Summer Homes!\nAs I am unable to sell my placel\nacross the lake In one piece, I am now!\noffering to sell lake frontages, wlthl\nbuilding restrictions, of 50 feet or 1001\nfeet or more to run back far enoughl\nto make one-half acre or one acre.I\nTerms, one-third down, balance In one!\nand two years; interest at 7 per cent.]\nThis offer is for 10 days only, as I ami\ngoing east to care for my mother. Thel\nwhole place Is for sale also, and will|\nbo until that date,\nN. Hoover\nIF YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO SELL ADVERTISE IT IN THE NEWS.\nGarbage Cans\nNow is the time you want to buy garbage cans and\nSAVE MONEY\nWe have Ihcm in different sizes,  made of good heavy\ngalvanized   iron  with  strong handles and tight covers.\nMade Up In Our Own\nTinshop\n8-gallon size, each ..,.....'.*'..\n18-gallon size, each\t\nDelivered to any part of the city..\n.VIS-\n.(1.76\ny\nNelson Hardware Co.\nSportsmen's Headquarters\nPHONE 21.\nNELSON, B. C,\n SATURDAY  JULY I\nf%tt Bail? -0e\\D-s.\nGj$o\nBell.Trading Co.\nMl\nHow\n,. Saturday hero again with its usual run\" of good things to offer.\nToday's\nSpecials\n25c.\n0\n.25c.\n-Nciv:Potatoes, tiesh from t\nSt. George Cream, .9 cans .\n,.\u00bb1\nCannot! C'orn,~2 cans \t\n.25c.\nTlickflftkl, Simec, 3 buttles.\n,25c.\nVanilla   and   Lemon   extract,\nBoss Hand Cleaner, 2 cans\n.25c.\nStaon Shoo Polish, tin\t\n.10c,\nStaoh Stove Paste, tin  ....\n,10c.\nCanned Salmon', large s'zfi.\n,16c.\n\u25a0',..   BELL BLEND TEA\nThe tea without an equ\n3; lbs, $100.\nI,\nTwo New  \u25a0*\"\nBiscuits\nProm Peek Troivn's famous factory.\nPat-n-Cakc,     dainty    shortbread\nsipinres,    short'mid   crisp.    Over\n\u25a0fe5.0fi'0,000   sold   In one   year.   20c.\npacket; 23c. tin.   \"\nr* \u00bb\n(Irtlden . Puff\u2014*Very light, unsweetened biscuits'- uf puff pastry\ncharacter. iJelicUnts with cheese\nor Jain. In air tight tins, contaln-\nUvS, brio pouudi 60c. each.\nSeasonable\nVegetables   !\nProm' Nelson's' market gardens:\nffoldcn Wax Hcans, 2 lbs 25c.\nRender *\/0UDg Turnips, bunch.. 5c.\nYoung Strawberry Beets, bell.. 5c.\nTender small'Carrots, 3 bchs.. .10c.\nCabbage,   crisp   and   hard,   this\nday's cutting, perhend ...\n.10c.\nGreen  Peas,  well    filled    pods,.\n4  lbs *. 25c.\nNew  Potatoes,  tlie   mealy   kind\nthat peel in boiling. C lbs 25c.\nLettuce,'crisp, tender beads.... 5c.\nRadishes,  2   bunches     5c.\nQrceii:.Onions,  2  bunches     5c.\nFruits\nThat are making Kootenay famous. If yail do not want them Calgary will lake all the growers can\nraise,\nlu-illf-fs Perries are fine in spite\nof lho rain, 2 baskots for 35c.\nBulger's Raspberries, bright and\nfirm and full weight, 20c. basket.\nPic'Cherr'os, two prices, 10c. and\n12I\/2C per basket.\nClous id lei-rles, fresh picked, 2\nbaskets 25c,\nTable .Cherries, bjl-ge Rings and\nRoyal   Anne's,  25c.   lb.\nWe hove u very attractive offer\non '.those  two  varieties  in box  lots.\nWe Nearly forgot\nto Mention\nThroe items to arrive by express\nCiintQlopoB, 20c. each.\nOuriin'bor.i,   foot nnd   crisp,   25c.\nHot bouse   Tomatoes,     firm     nnd\nripe, 25c. lb.\nlell^Trading\n0.\nThe Up-toDate\nGrocers\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo ,to the great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest but at the same time\nhave the benefit of tho best medicinal waters on the continent, unequalled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. Tho springs are easy\nof access to travellers and the hotel has been fitted up and is conducted with a view to the maximum of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates: $12 and $15 par weak or $2\nper day and upward*.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon ' Arrow Lakes\nHOTEL ARRIVALSOF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTablo d'HoU and a la Cart?\nHUME\u2014EJ, E. Greenwood, Proctor;\nDavid Johnson, Gateway; Uulln '.'. Uruwu\nP. L. Buckley, J. E. Iluupur, R. 1-1.\nBoddlngtoif, Miss Buddington, James\nIk-mlcisoii. J. IX Scott. J. l'\\ Sell.-*. Vancouver; Mrs. Me ti wiin, Ymlr; U. Lnntry,\n|.\\ .11. Wood, H'. Hi. Wulfo, H. .Saunders,\n.1. (B. Thomas', Spokane; W. Ii. Fowler,\nChicago- I). Mathcsun, AI us worth: .LA.\nCooper, Toronto; 10. I*. Carlliur.. tidniun-\ntOtli George G. Hue]I, Medicine lint; W.\nl-'uhrner, Jotm 1'oill'ivv, l.'runhruuk; L4.\n8, Webster, Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Bliaw,\nMontreal; Gertrude HalbrflOk, Cowley,\nAlta.; J. E. Taylor, w. V. Mawdsley,\nV. Wickes, M. !\u2022\". Shaw, city; W. Harris')!*, W. Webb, Ivo'taiiee; Mrs. Wood\nTaylor, West Point; Mr. and Mrs. L; P.\nMas..11, Winnipeg; J. A. Mitchell, city;\nIt.   tl.   Howie,    London;    W.   C.   Well--,\nCalgary,\nSTKATHOONA-.I. ]\u25a0:. Itaitlett, Mont,\nreal; J. T. Hubo, Mr. mid Mrs. C. W\nWilliams, Mr, and Mrs. Reginald Cooper\nA. Ciimi.hell. C. V. Wilson. Mr. and. Mrs\nR. W. Brown, Vancouver; Mrs. L. Ue\nMnrr, Miss D. Daniels, Winnipeg: .J. L,\nUetiilliiek, Kaslo; ti. K. Crawford, Poi'l-\nInnd: Wi'll'iinl Beaton, Tin: Needles; D.\nItiilUMl-l HpringUr, WllWaYJil'lC V. I Utiles.\nToronto; Mr. arid Mrs. A. Wilson.\nHa\u00bbltii1i-i,n: iMr. and Mrs. Pi M; Ji.^n-\nehunip, Minneapolis; G. C. ttodUOll,\ntitigland.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA. LAFOINTE, Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooms added, all el'ec-\ngantly furnished. Steam heat\nIn every room.\nQl'titiN'S\u2014D. V. Tiionins, llalfour; O.\nC. Timlin, Mvaiis Creek; Ceoi-ge lloen-\nliaeker, Kernle; <!. W. Heiiney, .title;\nMrs. Carrie Mellard, Mealtle; Mrs. 11. H.\no'Neall, Slocan; J. C. Curruiliers,\nMichel; .1. Simpson, Kaslo; A. Ci. Gallup\nli. J. Iinholt, C.   II. Sauteris, Spokane.\nMadden House\nThoa.  Maddon, Prop., Bakar  St.\nRatesi    $1.n0 to J'i.uo par day.\nMeal  Tickets,  (7.01) per weok.\nA   Comfortabl*  Homo\nMADDtiN\u2014Mrs. J.   Campbell,   Slocani\nC. L. Cummings, Princeton; Airs. .1. .1.\nIllckey, Cnl.'ago; Miws (inodlVlluw, I'alil-\niose, Alta.; .Mr. and Mrs. ti. I'ullanl,\nMontana; G. Woodcutter. Winnipeg; Al.\nJ. Hryne, I'oplar; W. ti. Glenn, Trout\nLake; ti. Tt. Vipond, N'akusp; S. C. Harlow, Seattle; John Watson, Mr. and Mrs.\nG.   II.   Itempel,  Lakeside,\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAmerican   and   European   plana\nH.  H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGK.VXD QI3NT.RAL-L.  Xndehnnii,   V\nII.  ShOl'rod,   W.   D.  iHarnhart,   SpokOU\n.Miss -Shinv. C. L. Jolmson. i'hocnix; <\nWnlkiT, Ymlr; A. C. Ituberti-uii, .Maivi\nJaek .Iohns1.11, John Hansen, ('. Yoiin\nUubi-n Harry, city; John Tr.ekson, Cie\nton; Rudolph .Moar, It. Moar, Wurdp\nItoliert yiiinaeen, Calgary; ti. Ilok, l\nKit-gman, Salmo; Douglas Hrowelt, ,\nMyers,   Joseph   LoppI;   llohson.\nA Horns for the World at $1X0 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nRenovated and refurnished through\nout. riest of wines, liquors and cigars served in the bar by Union\nliarlcndera.\nNAP.  MALLETTE, Prop.\nLAKtivIKW\u2014c. Lawrence, j, Haymor,\nCliuvne,. llerron. ti. 8. . Oteril, Three\nForks; .ii. Danielsim, .Mav L(ini|uy, Spokane;  Fred Campo, Allies Jackson, Crall-\nhl'iiok.\nSHIDtlBBOOKE\u2014Frank' Watson, Slocan\nCity; P. Tui-pin, Vancouver; H. Cole,\nWillow Hoint. tired Anderson. Trail; Jos.\nProvost, Crescent Valley; Thomas McNeil, Paulson; Wilfred M. Nelson, Mrs.\nNelson. .Miss Nelson, Slouan Junction;\nF. Wood, ti. Twlgg, J. Taylor, S. Anderson, tinirik Miller, II, Lniie. ti. McGratli\nF. W. Nolan, L. Polrois, Crescent Valley; John illll. Cranbrook.\nSandals\nAt the Big\nShoe Store\nSizes  from   3   baby's  size,   to   10\nmen's size.\nThe Royal Shoe Store\nR. ANDREW, Prop.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms, |1.00 a\nday and up.    Best 2Gc moal in\nNelson.    Best brands of liquors\nand cigars, served by union man\nN.   McLEOD,   Proprietor\nSILvtilt iKIXO-C II. Crahnm, G Klrhy\nDaniel Junes, K. ti. Meiirs, W. Claiigln,\ncity; O. W. EVons, Tom Davis, tSheen\nCreek;  Charles  Adams,   Paulson.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nStrictly Union House\nHeadquarters for miners, Smol-\ntflrmen,   loggers,   railroad   men.\nRates. $1,00 per day up\nNELSON   A  JOHNSON.   Props.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan,\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open -day and night\u2014BAR.\n\u25a0Merchant*? Lunch IZito 3.v<i\nPhone 97 P.O. Box 597\nN.BJjSON\u2014Ralph Larrlvor, Lumbyj It.\nA. JmKjiies. Mnokane; 10. K. Kmltli, J. .1.\nI'orliek, A. S. Chile, 11. I ledberK, Mar-\nens; tleorge Dixon, Thomas Dixon, T.\nPaikldge, eity; K. M. Cold, M. It. Benjamin, Mnrcus.\nTremont House\nBaker Street. Nelson\nRANSOME   &   CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 6O0 up.\nAmerican \\ plan,  $l.SJ5 and  $1.50\n'Meals,  85c\nALL WHITE  LABOR\nSpecial  Rates per Month\nTR10MONT\u2014Mr. and Mrs. F. Gallan,\nUesrli.T.v; William Stewart. Ymir; .1. O.\nArmstrong, Seattle; Tom Keainey Hlon-\ndel; .lolm Cannon, A Ins worth; Henry\nwiiimdr. .1. is, Moran, Bn'okaho; George\nWilson, Calgary.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors From Postoffloe.\nVernon   Street.\nRates 11.00 and $1.25 per day.\nEvery   convenience   given    to    the\ntraveling public.    Electric piano  and\nUldon bar  In  connection,  where  the\nbeat wines and liquors are kept\nMRS. MALLETT. Proprietress.\nKOOTI0NAV\u2014lOrek Erickson, T. E.\nAdlnia, Broml BIzzInto, M. McLean, U.\nA. Avery, Yank: .lames McUUllvrny,\nMrs. D. Sexton, Eumontoli; Mr. and Mrs.\nC. R. York, Moose Jaw; Ii, Leonard\nBanders, Lardo.\nRoyal Hotel\nStanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nUnder new management. Pleas-\nnnt location. Best family hotel In\nthe. city. Good home for steady\nboarders. Rates SI and $1.50 per\nday. Special rates by the week.\nCuslne unexcelled.\nJ. S.   BARRATT, Prop.\nlUOVAL-Mrs. 'I1. Synis and \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nGOING TO  ROSSLAND?\nStop at\nThe Western Hotel\nnear both depots; all white help.\nModern equipments.\nJ. D. ROBERTSON, Propriotor\nFishing\nBoating Bathing\nHotel Outlet\nProcter, B.C,\nG. &   L.  SNOW,  Proprietor!.\nThe tourist and fishing resort of\nthe Kootcnuys. Rates $2.00 and\n?2.50. Weekly rales on application.\nRow boats for hire.\nSome Startling Values for Friday and Saturday Shoppers\na J\nHere is anotherbdnch of bargains that should crowd the store on Friday and Saturday\u2014bargains in mil\nlinery, in blouses, in dresses that you can't hope to equal anywhere else.   The numbers are limited, so first\ncomers get the best choice.    If you are lucky you may be one of the five to get your purchase for nothing.\nMillinery Bargains Extraordinary\nTrlmmod Hats, worth up to $11, fcr $3.93\n28  Lojios1  Tr'mmed  Hats  that  noil  rosuhirly\nat S7.GU, 5S.5J nni] $11, while' lliuy last;'your\nchoice for\nPattern Hals, worth up to $88, for..\n20 Pattern Hals lu a.grrtat variety\n..$3.9:\n.$8.95\nshape;\nanil colors; rtutu'ur prices. $i8.r>0, $2L'.r,0 tt,\n$28;   any one for -.......'  $8.9!;\n$2.50 UNTRIMMED SHAPES FOR 95c\nThree dozen Unclaimed Shapes that aell regularly at $2.2r, and $2.90, while laey last. .95<\nBoys' Silk Lisle Socks 15c\n20 dozen Hoys' Silk Lisle Koch's; sizes ii lo 7'^;\nIn colors white, Ian nn 1 black; regular\" price\n25c; sale price  15c\n$5 Chambray Dresses Now\nSell for $2.50\nTwo   dozen   Chamlnay  Dresses,.' made   of  fine\nquality Scotch chambray;   some sii-.ped am -\nf'ome 'checked piltoriis;- regular  $3,75 to $!i\nSule prico  .\u201e'... .'.,,.*\u2022...- $2.50\n$7 Wash Coats for $3.45\n10 Lndlea' Wash Coal*j, made of w'njie and tun\nrc-pp;  full length ;iiid striclly tailuiid siyha,\ns.zes  24   lo  -12;   worth   up' to  $7.    .Sale\nprice '  $3.45\nYou Can Buy a Voile or\nMarquisette Dress Worth\n$9 for $6.50 Today\nOnly 10 left of these Lad'es' Dresses, made of\nfine co;ton voile and maruulselte; Elzes 21\n30 and 38, ulso 10 and 18. A nice range of\nstyles to choose from. They sell regularly\nat $!l.    Sale price $6.50\nBlouses Worth up to $2.75\nfor $1.25\nFour dczan Ladles' Blouses, made tailored\nstyle; some made of striped cambric wilh\nsoft collar and cuffs, some with laundered\ncollars; others made uf White vesting and\nlinen,; regular up to $2.75.   Sale price.. .$1.25\n$1.25 Blouses for 75c\nThree dozen Ladles' Blouses; some made of\nwhile muslin and some of tailored chambray;\nregular up lo $1.23,    Sale price 75c\nLadies' Cotton Vests 20c\nFive dozen Ladles' Cotton Vests, made of\nextra soft combed cotton, In short sleeve or\nsleeveless style.\n25c Vests reduced to  .20c\n35c Vests reduced to 25c\n50c Vests reduced to 40c\nLadies' Ribbed Cotton   1\nVests for 10c\n10 dozen Ladies' Ribbed Cotton Vests, In\neither short sleeve or sleeveless styles. Regu-1,\nlar 15c.    Sale price 10c\n25c Cotton Hose for 20c\n10 dOJsen Ladies' Fn.st Black Cotton Hose,\nHermsdorf dye; seamless feet and legs. A\ngood fitting and good wearing hose. Regular\n25c.    Sale price .,....', 20c\nLadies' Gauze Lisle Hose\nfor 25c    :,\n10 dozen of this line, made nf fine.;quality\ngauze lisle; colors tun, mode, black, .white and\nsky.    Regular 35e.    Sale price 25c\n75c Ladies' Combinations\nbr 50c\nfo\nLadies' Knit Combinations, made of fine\nEgyptian yarn, trimmed with crocheted lace.\nRegular 05e and 75c.    Sale price 50c\n$1 Ladies' Combinations\nfor 75c\nLadles' fine Lisle Combinations; extra fine\nquality; trimmed at tlie neck with fine !;ioe.\nRegular $1.    Sale price '. 7Bo\nMEAGHER & CO.\nMINERS CONCERT\nGREAT SUCCESS\nOno of  Most   Enjoyable Affairs   Ever\nHeld   in   Rossland\u2014Officers\nInstalled\n(Special to Tim Dully News.)\n.ROSSLAND, ,B.a, .Tuiy ^tV-rThea officers of the Rossland Miners' union,\nNo. 38, Western Federation of Miners,\nand the Ladles' Auxiliary, No. L wore\nduly installed by J. R. Kinney, ex-\npresident. After the ceremony a most\nenjoyable concert was given by local\ntalent..\nThe Union band opened with nn excellent selection of popular music under the leadership of K. Stephens.\nJ.' Anscn the . vice-president, also\nsEttgo manager for the evening, spoke\na few suitable and inspiring words on\nunionism and its objects, asking all to\nJoin in the endeavor to forward the\ncause. The concert then opened with\nx finely rendered solo by Mr. Rodda\nwho Is gifted with a magnificent voice,\nthoroughly cultivated and trained nnd\nhis rendering o( the solo \"Sing Me ti\nSleep\" cannot be too highly compli\nmen ted.\nMrs. Roberts, in a pleasing style\nsang, \"I Know Somebody That You\nKnow too.\"\nMr. Sherman's solo \"The Mighty\nDeop,\" received well merited applaude.\nAir. Sherman has a fine voice and\nknnws how to use it. Mrs. Murray,\npresident of the council, delivered n\nfew appropriate words, explaining Uie\nobject and work of the organization\n[ind Its origin and Inviting all,Women\nto Join tlie ranks of workers. Air.\nVivian's solo, \"Lilly,\" which he rendered In good stylo) wns justly applauded, recplving nh encore. Mrs.\nStout followed with a pleasing song\nEntitled \"When the Children Are\nAsleep.\" \"If Those Lips' Could Only\nSneak,\" by Mr. Waltho received well\nwon applause. Miss Amy Burnet, a\nyouthful artist, recited \"I Wonder\nWhy.\" Mr. Jones \"Tbe Lead of the\nPing,\" was sung hy him In most patriotic style. \"I Want to See the pear\nOld Home Again.\" rendered by Mr.\nCaldwell, brought his audience to the\nvergo of tears. A recitation wns most\nably rendered by Master Cyril Vurene\nentitled \"Charlie's Opinion of the New\nllnby.\" The Indian club swinging under the tuition of Mr. Webb was the\nnext on tho program. The performance by the five young artists showed\nthat ihey had received most efficient\ntraining both as lo time and muscular\nflexibility. The performers were\nMisses L. and A. Stanton (ind S. Moorish nnd Masters Tom Blythe nnd Fred\nBurnet.\nTho climax of the success of .the concert was reached when Mr. Rostock\ncame on tho platform, From the time\nof his appearance until he wns with\ngreat reluctance on the pnrt of the\nnudlenco allowed lo leave, he kept the\npeople In a perpelunl state of laughter,\n\u25a0She first recitation \"The Irish Fire\nBrigade','! with encores nf \"Under tlio\nOld Umbrella\" and \"Mary Had a Little\nLamb\" convulsed the audience. A solo\nby Mr. Sherman In his finest style\nwas entitled \"The Veteran.\"\nIce cream nnd cnlto was then served\nby the Union sisters. A dance then\nlirought one of tlie most enjoyable\nevenings spent in the Union hnll to a\nclose, but before c'nslng* n vote of\nthanks is due to Miss Trombnth for\ntho able way in which she pres'ded nt\nthe piano as accompanist for the performers, .\nTho chairman and committees ut tin\nunion and auxiliary wish to tender\ntheir thanks for the able assistance\ngiven them by all who look part in the\nsocial and all unite In the hope that\nIt Is only one of many more slmiln\ngatherings which may follow in th\nfuture.\nJ. D. Johnson left for the coast this\nmorning hy the Oreat Northern, be\ning accompanied by his wife and Miss\nLottie Johnson. Mr. Johnson Is u good\nrlilo'shnt and intendsi.iOn'ieDtiil'uaoipe\nof the competitions at the coast.\nW. Hughes, L. Forrest and E. R.\nStrand of Vancouver are at the Allan.\nThe dance at Miners' union hail In\naid of tho athletic grounds lust night\nwas a great success financially and\notherwise. One thing that made It Interesting for Ibe ladles was the scarcity of their sex. The music was supplied by Mile's City band and was of\nthe usual high order. W. J. Alford nf\ntho Kootenay hotel supplied tlie supper wh'eh was enjoyed and partaken\nof by a great many. The gold piece\nwas won by Miss Alice Powers for\nselling the greatest number of tickets.\nMiss Madge Keating wns second.\nMiss Honeyman from Vancouver is\nvisiting her uncle, Charles Dempster.\nHer parents lived here in Ihe early\ndays nnd many of the Rossland residences were designed by her father\nwho Is a well known Vancouver architect.\nBorn tn Mr. and Mrs. Munro Archibald, u son.\nThe Women's auxiliary of St. Onrge\nchurch met In the church parlors this\nafternoon to hold their usual monthly\nmeeting.\nThe new Presbyterinn halt was In\nuse for the first time yesterday when\nthe Ladles' Aid held a ten, the proceeds to go to the building fund. The\nnew hall Is a fine one nnd has a kitchen attached wilh all conveniences,\nThe hnll liself is fitted up with gymnasium and will be a source of great\npleasure to the young people.\nOwing to the epidemic of scarlet\nfever In tlie city all Bible classes and\nSunday schools will be closed for one\nmonth, the church services being held\nas usual.\nThe competition is now on for the\nsale of tickets to defray the expenses\nof the visiting lacrosse, baseball and\nfootball teams on the llltli nnd 17th\n[nst, during the Miners' union celebration here. The first prize in this competition is a very handsome gold bracelet watch, valued at $80; the second\nprize is tbe same but valued at $C0.\nThe competitors are Miss flesslo Oliren\nand Miss May Hunt.\nFor Sunday Dinner\nPRIME- ROAST BEEF\nSPRING  LAMB\nYOUNG  PIG  PORK\nROASTING CHICKEN\nFRESH RANCH EGGS\ni .,.\u201e, CHOICE   DAIRY  VEAL\nFRESH   MUTTON\nCHOICE YOUNG BROILERS\nYOUNG TURKEY\nCHOICE DAIRY BUTTER\nP. Burns & Co. Ltd.\nPhono  32\nNelson.\nresidents uf Mexico, and Mexicans who\nhave properly or businesses look upon\nit witii favor, providing that Intervention does nut mean annexation, said\nMi*. Bamford,\nAmong the foreigners Americans\npredominate, English taking second\nplace and Germans coming third. The\nGermans have obtained a great hold\nIn Mexico, lie said, having practically\nobtained cuntrol uf the harbors,  \u25a0\nWhen a stable government lias been\nre-established Mr. Bamford predicts\nthat there will be a great rush ot\nsettlers as the country holds splendid\nopportunities for agriculture. Citrus\nfruits, sugar, beans and all oilier plants\nwhich flourish In a semi-tropical ell-\nmate grow profusely on the west coast.\nwhero the soil is a beautiful silt. The\nclimate is good except during the four\nwet summer months. If planting and\nharvesting Is carried out rapidly three\ncrops a year, If two are irrigated, may\nhe grown in the Sinaloa river district,\nwhere Mr. Bamford and his partner\nown 6,000 acres, of which obout 300\nimproved. Railways are rapidly\ndeveloping the country, the Southern\nPacific now building a line which will\n* through the Sinaloa river district\nto Mexico city.\nMexicans Hate Work.\nUntil the white man commenced to\nopen up tho country on the west eoust\nthe natives practiced very priniitive\nagriculture.      Plowing     consisted     pf\nmaking a trench with an Iron-lipped\nwooden beam, tho seed being thrown\ninto tlio trench and covered over.        I\nLabor Is cheap, the Mexicans working for so cents gold per day.\n\"But the great difficulty Is to pert\nsuade them to work. It Is absolutely.\nImpossible tit Infuse any ambition In!\na Mexican native. Hi\" sole desire is to\nearn enough money to buy bc'nnd\ncigarettes and a liquor made from\ncactus, and when he has earned a few\ndollars he sits down and spends It\nNone of them want to work; Ihey?\nsimply work when the only nlternatlvl\nis starvation.\"\nWith Mexican lahor land, which Is\nheavily covered with underbrush and\nsmall trees, can be cleared at n cost of\nabout   $10   gold   or   $20   Mexican   pe?\nncre, said Mr. Bamford.\nSugar growing, he believes, will be a\ngreat industry In the Sinaloa river\ndistrict when the country becomes\nmore settled, much of the sugar now\nused In Mexico, being Imported from\nthe United States.       ,   ,    ,\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nTrmnvro, .inly r,.\u2014hi\u00bb. i.W'I.m*1,; Gen;\n\u25a0Flee.. Iltii.'.'.imi!..: Tornlls. UP-,; Can. hienl\n:\u00bb; Mackuv, .^VsM.-; tf:io Paulo, L'tO'-;\nTrethcwey. .M1: Hun. <\"on>-, :i\"2'li; IVnmniiy\nGS*!i.\nUnlisted\u2014Chambers  lDtyiiia-,   McKlnley,\n17(i;   Vipond.  3C.\nDaily Nswti Want Ads. net rnsults.\nMEXICAN REBELS\nSEEK LOOT ONLY\n(Continued from nage ono.)\nrebels, Mr. Bamford states, simply became a revolutionary because after\nsupporting .Madero he did nut receive\nas much money us he thought he was\nentitled to. \"That's the way with nil\nof them; they are Just fighting for\nthemselves,\"'said Mr. Bamford; \"And\nthere is nothing to bring- nn a crisis\nas in the ease of a real revolution.\"\nDiaz  Had People Bluffed.\nMadero is unnble to handle his own\npeople and his army is practically useless, said Mr. Bamford, who described\nex-President Diu-i as having had the\nMexican people bluffed to a standstill.\nIntervention by the United States la\nurgently desired by nearly all foreign\nHouse for Sale\nIt Is nol every day thai you get a chance lo pick up a bargain, e-pe-\ndally if Hie properly is In At ehapo, However, wc have :\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 met bin v hen\nthat should Interest you. This consists uf a larga house, sltunlcd op !','\nlots H'gh ntr-ct. palrvlew, only io minutes' walk from n'rjstof\u00abce. Tiv:\nhouse has f> large rooms and bathroom, open fireplace, hardwood flours\nstcne foundation, besides havl:\nvery nice lawn and flowc\nrdei\nPrice $2,100 -- Terms\nMawdsley, Shaw & Appleyard\nSI4 Ward Stieot.\nf^.tivm.^.,'\na\n\u25a0^uiiliWllI ' ywiHI*W'l\u00ablBW\n P      BASE SIX '\nC^aailpJ$mfa\ni U*^\nPATURDAV ..\n....JULYS\nRossland District Enters New Era as Fruit Growing Centf^\nRanching Industry Is\nMaking Great Strides\n\u25a0 Land in Rossland Neighborhood Eminently Fitted by Nature for\n\u2022 L Growing Fruit\u2014Ranching. Coming Into Prominence After\nSoil Had Remained Untouched for  Years\u2014Mining\n'. formerly Overshadowed Farming Possibilities\nI\n\"Rossland people have been' too busy\ntaking  frold   from      underground  to\nthink;jof. the gold that,Is on tbe sur-\n'. face   In fruft  farming,\"   was   the   remark of a Rossland fruit rancher the\n\u2022 other day when pointing .to the pos-\nJ slbllitles of the district,from a ranching standpoint.\nThe epigramattcnl remark sized .ip\nthe situation of a few years ago truly\nand tersely ,but recently there has\ncome a change and mure and more\npeople   are   devoting   themselves, an-\n, niinlly to growing fruit in that district\nnttracted by the superior qualities of\ntHb'climate and tho soli.\nWhile . nihiinir. still constitutes a\ngreat portion of HosBlahd's mainstay,\nit Is iinli't ii*n\u00bbssnti-ttf> t;,ii; to 'one of\nher optimistic citizens to find out that\nit is in the cenlre'oMl fruit belt, which\nIn tbe conservative terms of a. neutral\nperson, Is'.A steady-producer and sure\nInvestment.\n'\u25a0 'RoSslnrid people nre looking forward\nto   another period'! of   briskness   over\n. the   disc'-ycries   of   ore   In   Ihe   south\n. belt of mines, but a tar more aesir-\n, able revival wl.ll be, the coming into\nits own by fruit land,development.   As\n; yet    \u25a0the     surface    has    only      been\ni scratched nnd  many acres are avail-\n: ab'.e al-reasonable prices. Tbe soil is\nproductive    and    tho    climate Is    uc-\n! commoduting.   The market is there and\n: the prices are higher If anything than\nIn. any other part  of   this  section   of\nBritish Columbia.\n\" As yet the \"and around Rossland has\n; been llttlo utilized and there are still\n-Ijiiindreds of acres within a mile or two\n! of the city awaiting cultivation. Each\nyear tli mi sands bjVcrates of fruit are\ni imported from the United  States and\n: from other districts in British Columbia and \u2022 It Is tho opinion of\nranchers already In tbe field that there\nis'room for 10 times the supply in tin\n1 district around Rossland nlone. For\nthat reason and because of the freight\n' rates   for   fruit   from   outside   points,\n' the- prices that obtain in Rossland are\nhigher than elsewhere and make It\nmure profitable for a rancher there\nthan any place c'se.\nI Every one Is given\" to proclaiming\nthat tbe climate in Ids particular part\n.of the country Is the best to be found\nj The city uf Rossland Is 3,100 feet\n.above the sea level nnd Ihe ranches\njhelow the city are only slightly lower\n'lhan' this, This' height gives more\nteunshine during tbe needed period and\n\u25a0sUP. enough rainfall to till oil the re-\n* quircments during the spring.\nThe ranches aVe(.foj the-most part\nHititaJ.ed on th\u00ab sohttiside of the -mountains and are thus sheltered from nor-\ni ^therly   winds,   yet  bpon   to   Ibe   sun.\n\u25a0-'Thfefr situation . aiso insures\".'.ill em\nlots of moisture coming down 'th.e side\nof. the hill and making the whole'area\nfertile\". \u201e ,     -\n,T.here are many .ranches around\nRossland both large and''small as examples of the faith that men have\n. ^ac'efl upon (he good, qualities of, the\nland. But ihe gnnmd has orV'y' been\n.scratch**! in proportion\/th ithe,;.iT*>i\nthat, is available, for- fruit-growing.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022*\u25a0_\u201e\u2022 the, vnl'ey, of Trail eregfe^hoinw\nRossland thousands of acres .'.await\ntlie rancher, where nhundnht-wqter\n\"from streams l will make IhptK oporn-\n'tibhs  assured  of success.\nOn the north and west of .tbe mountains surrounding the city there are\nother tracts perhaps not so .desirable\nbut1 ready withal,'for the rancher,'or\nfor the farmer. \"Whi> the altitude\nmakes a different.class of rruit necessary, .ranches.'In- these loca-Mtles are\nby no'menns Jnfeaslble ,fts mor\u00b0 \u2022than\non'fl-prpves. Fruit may be grown or\nIhe land will grow a prolific crop of\nbuy .fpr-there Is no, .better, soil under\nthe sun for clover \"fir timothy than\n. that, above Rossland... _,.   -\nImmense .fruit orchards covering\nseveral s&tltloViH of '.fluid always compel the admlWftToji, of the public and\nthey are often the argument that tbe\npromoter' of ,a district puts up to attract, the* settler. These capita'*isti*:\nventures.HrifTinr'greatly in evidence\nItjftRbsslaiid.jJJjj-j'l no other reason than\ntlraV \/the \"\"aHMct1 has  never been  es-\n'* plplted.\\.b'uT'\"for the small rancher,\nth*. man wlio-hns only a little money.\nffetjfefiina Is,tliO Eldorado. '\n.Now,' Rossland although not brb-\nHng with business, Is a sturdy community with a constant payroll, where\n,. COO or MO men.working in the mines\nare gradually acquiring their own\nhome's and becoming a fixture in thi\ndistrict.    For the  most  part,  money\nIs heimz brought in nnd little taken\nout,    Rossland In other words is becoming richer every day.\nWith so many people having steady\nemployment, tt means that a home\nwith with a small plot of ground, inexpensive to buy will attract where\notherwise it would be passed by. This\nis just- where Rossland will benefit\nin tho future. There Is for an unlimited radius arpund the city, land\nsultab'e for cultivation in five acre\nfruit ranches or even loss, where, a\nhome may be built within striking\ndistance of the city. There, if ne\nso desires, a man may live, attend\nto his garden in the evenings in the\n.summer months and work in the mines\nor at whatever employment ho may\nhave throughout the winter -when\nthe   garden   does not need  him.\nIf he wills It, he can forsake his\nwork and from five acres make more\nthan a livelihood, as numerous men\naround Rossland will testify. He may\nwait until his trees grow to producing size before he leaves bis employment or be may find other lines to\ngrow which will bring him immediate\nreturn bnt he wi'l in most casec take\nfruit farming as a profession as soon\nas practicable.\nCapital .Is, of course, needed. Land\naround the city within two miles of\nit, will cost $75 to $150 an acre according to location and it will nut be\ncleared for this. Much land Is available for $7!i but for the man wilb\nmoney, choice pieces equal to any of\nthe far famed fruit valleys can be\nprocured. In order to clear his five'\nacres, the. man beginning a< smal!\nranch, may require lo lay out from\n$100 to {ISOiin acre, fin- much of It is\ncovered with trees or has the stumps\nin the gruund nfter the timber was\nremoved. Underbrush is often heavy\nbut ttiis is only anulher example uf\nthe fertility of the soil.\nAccording to location an Irrigation'\nsystem may need to be installed Fruit\ntrees must be bought and they will\nnut bear fruit for several , years according to variety, but when'they do,\nihei'e will be a constant reinlnii'sement\nfor the labor of the first years As\nregards the profits to be made of an\nacre of land, Uie figures to be gut\nfrom different ranchers vary according to methods of winking, but everyone without exception show a profit\nSome claim that app'es pay best,\nothers that cherries give most, returns.\nDown below the city, there Is a lilile\nranch of five acres owned by Arthur\nI cng that has been marketing goo 1\nshowing.* despite the fact ihat it is\nonly a hobby of hto during the evenings after his Work is done. About\nnine years ago It was started and hit\nby lilt It grew until now there are 200\nlre\u00bbr. planted altogether. There are\nliiO apple trees of different varieties\nand a wide assortment of cherries,\nprune.-, plum.0 and pears.\nOf the apples. Mr. Long his found\nj thi Rus'ian Transparent apple one\n! of the best for tills country for the\nmarket demands a big apple. This\napple takes five years to mature but\nrepays ltse'f nmp'y nfter that. Another brand tn he seen In his orchard\nis the Northern Spy which should be\n\"even years old before it gives fruit.\nThe seventh year. Mr. Long got no\nless than three boxes of apples off on?\ntree. The Wagner Is another amp**\nUnt .c'ven a large crop and yields nt\nthe end of five years. There is a me1-\nlow egg plum tree in the garden thai\nmade a profit c.f $\", tht; first, year it\nproduced fruit.\nAs 'regards profit only an estimate can be made of any fruit. Counting \")0 trees to an ncre it his been\ncalculated that an acre of N*n\u25a0\u2022thorn\nfipys will yield S212 ruling at S1.7fi a\nbox, a price readily obtained in Ross-\nWnd. Plum--, are pven more productive, for $7 has b'*en made from one,\n'roe, making -?3s*0 for an acre of them.\nJohn Horswel!. a fruit rancher in\nthe east side of Rossland had great\nsuccess with his gardens last year.\nMthougb he worked fur nine months\n\u25a0it of 12 in tbe niihes, be made a profit off his ranch of nearly five acres\nr.f $1,000. In nine years, the time he\nha\", been engaged in fruit growing,\nh? has brought bis land to n state of\nperfection and now there nre COO npple\ntrees nlone planted there. From one\ncherry tree 'ast.yenr he got $17.\nHe' has gone in for strawberries and\nraspberries   principally  and   this  year\nhe expects lo get 200 crates of strawberries and probably as many raspberries, He obtained 100 crates of\nraspberries last year. His land Is frrl-\nnited and lias a gentle slope towards\nhe Eputh. It is situated immediately\n3outh 'of the experimental ranch of\nMurdoch Henderson.\nGeorge Dennison has a 10-acre ranch,\nit which seven are under cultivation,\nidjaeent lo Mr. Howell, nnd here again\nwill be seen a model fruit orchard.\nThcre^are between 800 and 1,000 apple\nrees planted there, of the early, variety, that being the most marketable.\nThere ore also many cherry and plum\nrees scattered over the garden.\nOf raspberries Mr. \u2022 Dennison has\nl.GOO bushes planted, which yield a good\nprofit. He started the ranch 12 yeurs\nago and it is In a high state of cultivation. Tbe bouse is surrounded by\noushes and flowers and Is the scene oi\nmany picnics of Rossland people dur->\nng the summer. He grows man-,; flower plants and' finds a ready sale for\nthem In the city. Strawberries havo\nt.heen extensively cultivated, but a\nflue looking patch is to be seen. The\nsoil on bis ranch Is like that of Mr.\nUorsweirs\/mid Mr. Henderson, very\nprolific, being watered by lho seepage\ni'k,in the mountain, as well us artificially.\nMany other ranches are to be seen In\nbe east of the-city, for the gentle\nSlope there seems tu huvu ,itlruct.y]\nhose p oncers ln\"frult growing. There\ns much land left nnd it can he. bought\ncomparatively cheap, taking Into con-\nideraltun ' the distance frum market\nnd the drainage,\nThere is a. six-acre field on the\nranch of Murdoch Henderson, a mile\ntu Ihe east of Rossland, used ns a gov-\n\u25a0rnfneht experimental fruit farm. On\nit there are 35 different varieties uf\nfrail trees, apples, plums, pears, cher-\n\u25a0ios and, prunes being represented. As\nlenls a show' field, there is nothing\n.v.uitlng'to the success of this patch\nif garden. It has been brought to\nts present stale of perfection by Mr.\nHenderson under tlie direction of M,\n3. Middleton.\nIn 1909, while the lawsuit over the\nall smelter smoke was in progress,\nany fruit experts frum the United\nSlates and Canada visited the Rossland districts, being engaged by tbe\nomisel fur both sides. In looking over\nthe\" lii-nil several of them were uttracted\njy the good qualities of the soil and\nthe situation of one piece in particular\nin the-side. of t:ie valley.   Doubts were\npThii Four-acre Rossland Ranch Produ   cod $1,600 Worth of Fruit Last Year.\n'*r\u00a5,*8W,Wtf--'.'v.;''- \u25a0*;.\nThere are' ample drains on the experimental patch, although to the average person the land appears lo have\nsufficient.\/slope; to cany off all water\nby tlie surface.\"' Tn'ere are several tile\ndrains beneath'Hie surface, and they\ndo excellent service.\n\u2022,1a another two years Mr. Henderson\nWill: have a crop from his trees, for\nthree years is the time from planting\nthat they require before they bear\nfruit.\" In the meantime other patches\nwill bo planted and soon all will be\nproducing fruit in abundance.\nThese ranches are all to the east of\nRues-land on the north slope of the\nmountain, \/hting ^sheltered* from the\ncold' winds and'lHtle exposed from the\neast. What parts are not taken for\nranches, an\u00bb\\therc are many of them,\nare covered with .treeB or underbrush.\nWhen once they '.are cleared, however,\nthere Is no ^finer land, as the testimonies o*(, tliase' who are there will\nshow.\nThese are i all within touch of tbe\ncity, being only n mile from It, and\nmany of them, being actually Avlth'.n\nthe city limits; iW\/nter Is within reach\nand eleetfia Jlfcljt handy, and the .disunite to ..haiil. produce Is not worth\nconsideration.\"''   \u25a0\n' Successful  High Farming.\nC, A1. PfltefrB! ranch, north of Rossland, Is an example of one of the highest fruit .'tracts as regards elevation\nto he found. ' He has more than seven\nacres in fruit and CO in hay and potatoes.\/ Mr. \/Peters lias been on the\nground for. IB years anil in Hint time\niie lifts rea'ctieij;us much success as any\none hiay wish\".'\nTo the person who sees his ranch it\nis evident at first sight that fruit growing lo him has been successful,\ntine tree'turnlBhed^lft wortli two years\nago. .\nMr. Peters grows a lale variety of\nraspberry and, one that can be put on\nthe United States market long after\nthe\" fruit.there is-gone. He obtained\nfc'i.F-Qi.a, crate for* his raspberries Pi\nKoBsland last year, and even shipped\nthem to Spokane in the fall and got\nus high as $3.75 a crate fur them there.\nStrnwberr'es rench'ed $2.(>0 a crate on\nUie average last season,\nl( As regards hay, Mr. Peters contends\nthai the Rossland district is unequaled.\nThe average yield, of hay Is from two\nand a half lo tliree tons to the ncre,\nand the price frdm $20 to $30 a tun.\nFifly acres with this yield makes a\nhandsome return.   From a small patch:\nthe soutli belt, where, besides having\n,i small fruit ..ranch, he raises 11 head\njf cattle. He has been there since\n1899 and has 60 acres of his land\ncleared of timber, making It an excellent tract. At present he is us'ng tne\nmilk- frum his cows solely for making\"\nbutler, and one week recently he g)t\n,7 pounds of butter from the milk of\nlu cows. Three acres of his lani ure\nplanted with apple trees and ofier\n\u25a0.'runs, but they are young and have\n:<.oi all matured yet.       ,.\nStill another mduBtry among the\nmany that arc supported on the land\njuiruiiiidlng Rossland is the sawmill\nof Joseph DeBchsimps. on Stony creek,\nto the north of the city. The land In\n.hat neighborhood Is covered with\nevery kind. of. timber and of immense\njize; Up lo tbe present Mr. Deschamps'\nmill has been situated on the creek\nand lh that vicinity there! has been\n.alum off the land more than 11,000,000\nfeet of limber. Yet at least 50 cords\njf wuud to the acre- ure being left as\njeing unfit for sawing.'\nMill  Bouig  Moved.\nThe mill is being moved further up\n.he creek to unother spot where tho\ntimber id still pi its v-rgin state and\nseveral million feet more are now made\navailable. A tramway connects the\nold site with the loading yards a mile\naway, and lumbering roads diverge in\nall uirect.ons. At the new site houses\nhave already been erected for the men\nand the new mill will be In place In u\nfew days.\nIn tlie meantime the pinning mill Is\nbeing moved lo a new locality in Rossland and after, this all wood will do\nfinished there. Mr. Deschamps sup-\npi. es practically all the lumber for the\ncity, there being no other mill nearer\nthan Annable's mill, two miles from\nTrail.\nThe hind that has been cleared of\nthe heavy timber Mr. Deschamps is\nputting on the market for fruit grow-\n,ug, there being a complete section of\nit. IL is bisected by Stony creek and\nnumerous tributaries, and the soil Is\nfirst clays. No other ranches are 'n\n.hat locality, except that of C. A. Pe-\n.ers further up the slope, but it will\nno doubt be an excellent place to grow\nfruit.\nSLOCAN LAKE SHOW\nENLARGED THIS YEAR\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nNEW DENVER, R. C, July fi.\u2014The\nexecutive   committee    of   the    Slocan\nGeorge Dennison's 10-acre Ranch at Rossland   After   Twelve   Year's   Work.\nView of Ranching  District at  Ro'silan d,  with  Govornm\u00bbnt  Experimental Tract.\njxprepsed by local ranchers, but Mr,\nHenderson .had been attracted und a\nfew -days after bought 14 acres of\nii-gin forest and scrub on which '.o\nstart a fruit ranch.\nSince then   practically ull of It has\n\u25a0en.cleared of trees and rucks have\nucen removed, until today It is per-\nlect. Six acres under agreement are\nur government exper meiils. Thegov-\nirnmeiu supplies tbe trees, but Mr.\nHenderson does the work upon it. A\nvisit will show regular rows of fruit\nrees .planted one year ago und without exception they are growing sturd-\nly. At this season a growtu of a foul\nhud been made by a brunch pruned in\ndie early spring.\nAnother Held Is given over to clover,\nillhough fruit trees are planted be-\nween. One has here an example uf\nhe productivity ot tlie so\"' 80 oftsn\nproclaimed by fruit authorities. The\nclover is ut this seusun fully two feet\nnigh and so thick that it is bard to\nwalk through ft. Three tons to, the\ndcre Is a low estimate.\nIn .unother part of the 14 acres Is a\nfield sown with barley and timothy,\niiaving been grubbed of stumps unly\nth.s year. Ry next year this and un\nuilier part now being grubbed will tak\ntheir places In the fruit producing.\nIrrigation   Not   Needed.\nHut this development was not done\nfor nothing. H took both hard wmli,\nphys.cul and menial, and money,\nHenderson, bus a two-Inch pipe line\nfrom the clly's mains, a mile awny,\nand an inch pipe running into this\nfrom a spring In the side of thu hill,\nThe pipes, run along the top of his\nfields and every 40 feet there Is a valvo\ntu whicii a hoso may be screwed und\njeach line uf plants watered. An Irrigation system is nut nbsulutely neces-\nsaiy, but It Is a precaution against\niituiight. One cannot he loo.sure when\nso much Is ut stake, Up till the present Mr. Henderson bus not needed to\nwater bis f.eldB artificially once, the\nnatural moisture of the soil being suf-\nf.cient.    .\nThis' result is partly from the dry\nfarming methods used on his ranch*\nIn showing how moisture remains In\ntne'soil he dug Into the. apparently\nuiy earth and un inch or two below\nthe surface, to one's astonishment, was\nmoist,' if! not wet soil. It is ull dune,\nlie explained, by cultivating freely and\n'\u2022eei'hjg.-i?'.li'jb;t,(Hiiigptli Jiurfuee on the;\nland.\n\u25a0 V,%\u00bb,TrV\"- :;::t**?<?W<*-\\ \u25a0*\u25a0\u2022>. ?\u25a0\nlie gut more than iji tons of potatoes\nlast year,. j\n' Small Capital Needed. j\n'Tol-'the mail with ambition,\" said\nMr. Waters, \"there is no better pluce\nihun Rosslund fur fruit growing. He\nneeds'little capital. 1 believe he could\njturt with none at all, lor land could\nbe got on crop payments. By this\nmeans',fie could. If he cured \"to, work 'n\nbe mines six man ilia in the year, and\nthe rest of the tinVe live within easy\nd'stance of town. A living could easily\nbe made out uf five acres of land.\"\nEdward Webb has a smull orchard\nbelow, the' city, comprising one acre,\nwhich he has planted wilh fruit trees\nand brings in a tidy return each yeur.\nThere nre apples, cherries and many\ncrab upple trees. Of apples he finds\nRussian Transparent und Duchess the\nbest; ppyei's. He Is \"an employe of ono\nof the mines and puts in ha spare\ntime on his ranch.\nChurles Dole lias an orchard of five\n\u00bbr six acres near the soutli belt, whicii\niQ Is planting with apple trees In prep-\niiiitloa for making a good profit in x\n\/eur ur two, nnd close beside him fs\nbe farm of Thomas Peacock, where\n,omj excellent hay. may be seen.\nLand Being Cleared.\nRobert Hurry Is preparing to plant\nin orchard un part of his section of\nland there. There are gangs of men\nlow felling trees und cutting the lint-\njer Into eordwood and clenring the\n.and of slumps.\nMany men have taken to dairy farming in tlie vicinity, of Rossland with\nsuccess, and this Is only unother rt\nlie many profitable, uses to which the\nliihd \"may be put. A. Enderby has a\niurge ranch In the east of the city,\n\u25a0oltiprlsing a quarter section of land,\n.in whicii he raised nearly 50 head ot\n\u2022Oaule. The market for milk Is con-\nitunl nnd good prices are obtained in\nitosslund for the product. Resides ibis,\n\u25a0JUlter has a ready r\u00abile and a good re-\nurn from tt'may be obtained.\nJoseph - Mornn HaV a ranch of 140\n.teres.arid*40 cows Ipslde the city limits, nnd'Alex. Llnna farms 180 acres\n\u2022ut the pifrpose of raising his herd of\ncattle. , It is^eatltnaled that five acres\nwill grow IC tons .pf hay for feeding\ncuttle, the land Is so fertile. This will\nsj-pport'five cows, and these Will bring\n'In at least $15 a 'day,, at the presjtit\nprice of'mllk.-' :'\u2022  ' ! ' '   '\u2022'\n11. J.'Junes bus a ranch of sO'acres Ip\nLake Agricultural .nBsoclntfon met In\nthe New Denver waterworks office\nlust night lo receive Ibe reports of the\nprize list committees lu connection\nwilh tlie npprouching annuul show\nwhich will be held In September. The\npresident, H. S. Nelson, occupied the\nchair, those present being Mrs. Amos\nThompson. C. F. Nelson, H. C. Tomlin-\nson, W-. Eccles, J. C. Harris und E. H.\nQrubbe. The provincial government\nhas given special cash prizes this yet;-\nfor apple packing pupils who attended\nthe npple packing school held here lust\nfull\u2014$1B, $10 und $5. Reports were received from all the committees, who\nreported satisfactory progress. The\ndifferent classes will be greatly enlarged this year, especially ladles'\nwork, vegetables, poultry, etc., and the\nprospects for a good show ure of the\nbrightest.\nA. G. Larson of Vancouver, who has\nlately been appointed consulting en-\ng'neer for the Lucky Jim Zinc Mines,\nLtd.', has returned to Vancouver aftes\nan examination of the property.   ,\nJoe Tyler, representing the Spokano\n& Eastern Trust compuny of Spokane,\nspent a few days in town last week on\na business trip. When not at work Jon\nis Ihe champion luwn tennis phiyer of\nthe Pacific coast, having won the\nhonor last year at the annuul tournu-\nmonl   In Vnncouver, B. C.\nMcEwnn, a travelling entertainer,\ngave a very good show In the Bosun\nhall on Tuesday night to n fair sized\naudience.\nPEND D'OREILLE POWER\nWORKS  VISITED\n(Special Ir. The Dully News.)\nWANETA, July 5.\u2014The long spell of\nhot, dry weather bus been broken rain\nfalling heuvlly on Sunday and Monday, bringing with It a much cooler\ntemperature. The highest shude reading yet recorded nt Wnneta Is 102\ndegroes, but even this was much -less\noppressive than much ^ower records\nin town.     \"*-\nJ, Luton of the provincial forest\nbnnch, Victoria, ,hus been, visiting\nWnneta and surrounding districts.'.\nLast week the pleasing flight aiid\nsound of nn automobile wns to be seen\nand heard lh the'valley\u2014Lorho Campbell of Saltno, With'\u25a0ri'fHend, mbtorlng\nthrough t'6'Seven'Mil-*'power works.'\nW.-F\/'Teetsel-was-'here a few days\nago. We understand he will be at\nWaneta again today on.his way to the\nSalmon  river district,\nFred Joung came In from Fruit vale.\nHe was looking at land With a view to\na future purchase.\nDominion day celebrations were\nsomewhat Interfered with by tbe ruin.\nThe social gathering arranged at the\nFort Sheppurd hotel for the*evening\nwas postponed till Tuesday, when those\nmeeting there spent d most enjoyable\ntime.\nWORK FINISHED ON\nFLETCHER RANCH ROAD\n(Special to Tlie Dally News,*)\nMIRROR LAKE. B. C, July 5.\u2014The\nFletcher ranch road gang has finished\nIts work 'and moved to the Utlca mine,\nabove Kaslo, under tho superiiilend-\nency of Eston Leet.\nJohn Archer has finished his work\non the lake shore road fur this year\nund has dismissed his gang, most of\nwhom will join Mr. Leet's gang at the\nUtlca mine.\nMrs. Captain West of Nelson nr-\nrlved here yesterdny on a visit with\nMiss Ethel .Teklll.\nMrs. Hitchcock and family arrived\nhere from Winnipeg on Tuesday on a\nvisit with Mr. and Mrs. W. Read.\nA. Link's family has moved into the\nwhite house on the hill. Mr. Link recently purchased this property from\nK. K. Bjerkness.\nArthur Davis returned from Manor.\nSask., on Wednesday wilh another carload of horses and feed for the ranchers here.\nK. K. Bjerkness and Clarence Swnn-\nson returned from n vtalt lo Vancbuej\nver on Monday.\nMessrs. Link nnd Simmons have\ngone tn Lethbridge on a business trip.\nHenry .Teklll Is leaving today for\nVancouver hO'da^e n>Bl>eolal course'In,\nmilitary training provided by\"thdn.de-\npartmeht'of-'oducntion' for the 'BrlVlsll\nColumbia   school   I on ebon.\nMiss Florence Reld and her mo'her\nhave gone lo Vancouver, \"where Miss\nT'e'd will lake Ihe teachers* tralniiv,'\npn-ir-o In enlisMienles.\nM!ss   Helen   Oiegorleh   ofKnnlo  1ns\nliff\/h.' appointed leather of tho public\nschool here for tbe coming year.\nMANY  FROM  CRESTON\nTO  ATTEND  CELEBRATION\nrSneclal to The Dnllv News.) '\nCRESTON. B. C July B.\u2014Al leai*\n150 persons frum Creston expect lo\nattend tlie Orangemen's celebration at\nNelson on July 12. A special train of\nthree coaches bus been ohnrtered to\nnccommodqto the crowd. The excursion will leave Creston at 7 a. in. und\nreturning leave Nelson ut 7 p. m.\nStops will be made' at Wynndel. Sirdar and' Proctor for anyone wishing\nto make the trip. Muny tickets which\nnre not limited to the lodge members,\nhave nlrcndy been sold.\nROAD FOREMAN\nINJURED BY LOG\nSuccessor   of    Man    Recently    Killed\nMeets With Mishap\u2014Oddfellows.\nInstall  Officers\n(Special to The Dallv News.)\nKASLO,. B,.C, July G\u2014James Sp'ers\nwent'out lust night to tbe rescue of\nJoe Oasazza who is the foreman on\nthe south fork wagon road nnd successor to the late foreman, John McNeil, who was killed Iwo weeks ago\nby,\"n rock blast. Joe Casnzza was\nhurt by a fulling tree nnd one of bis\nribs is broken, his body bruised and\nhis eye hurt. He was in the way of a\nrol Ing log. He Is now nt the hospital\ndoing well.\nSunshine lodge No. '57, T.O.6.F. installed the following officers on Wednesday even'ng: N.C., S. A. Hunter;\nV.G., David P. Kune; J.P.O., Alfred\nMcQueen; secretary, Robert Hendricks;\" trensurer, John A. Riddel] :\nwarden, O. B. Drennan; conductor, J,\nLoftus; chuplaiii, James TuMiul; R.S.S.\nJohn, Strachan; L.S.S., C. D. Pilling;\nR.S.N.O,, W. ,E. Noble; L.S.N.O., H.\nW. Power; I.G., A. B. Fleener; O.O.,\nLesllo Suwyer; R.S.V.O.,v Allen W.\nAiideiHon;   L.8.V.G.,   C. F.   Sherwln. i\nAfter Ihe inauguration of the officers a feast wns sprend before the assembly who bud come to attend the\nlodge function and instrumenl-VI music\nwas discoursed. Short uddrcBSes were\nmade, bv the new officers und other\nforms of entertainment provided, W.\nE. Hpdder recited '\/The Helmet of\nNavarro\" in a style which would have\ndone credit to a professional. Mr.\nMcQueen read Robert Service's, lutm-\norows ballad of \"Hard.Luck Henry\"\nand the gathering d'd not brenk up\nuntil past midnight.\n' L. Buchnnnn of Vancouver Is hero\non a viBit.\nKaslo Is to have a wharf built by\nths Dominion government nt the end\nof Tfllrd street. ThQjjppt'opriatlon for\nthis work is $8,0i)O .and the work-'ls ioJ\nbe commenced shortly.j.t'\u00bbf ;\/ '\/',v <'*.\u25a0;\"'\nMlSBrCora P. Murcfilson has gone to\nVancouver where she will take upthe\nstudy of, stenography and Its subsidiary branches; Miss Vera Riddel],\nHelen Giegerlch and Miss Minnie Robertson haVe come: to enjoy the holidays; Miss Hazel Fleener will be here\nby' tlie 15th Inst and it Is understood\nthat she will give her Kuslo friends\nanother opportunity to hear her In\nconcert. Mrs. Fleener wi.l accompany\nher; Miss Lettle Power will also be\nhumo for the summer.\nTEDIOUS TRIAL\nDRAWS TO END\nCamorrist Trial   Has  Lasted   Eighteon\nMonths\u2014Hope lo rt.ault Vu, -\ndiet   Next  W..ek.\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nVlTE.OlO. limy, J uiy u.\u2014Tim tr'al\njl in- i-Uui.ri- .,u-i ijj tipprouotl iilg an\n\u2022ml. \"Veccirp-, ciiuil.'eT tor Enrico Ai-\naiio, the alleged lead'i' of ihe organ-\nLatlon, who was the lust of the law-\n,ers lo n tdress the conn, yesterday\nsaid thai lie would never have luken\nip ilia de once of Aifuno if he had\nnt been eonv.hec'i: ubMilululy that he\nvus Innocent. Friday and Saturday\n.vill lu d voted to the summing up I\nhe prw-liienl and it is e-epecjed that\nl ve.dlcl wi I ho readied en Kund'ay\nligli . Thus the ir.-.il will have lasted\nr,l days of iVh ch I'll! were laljfeu up\nby lh.- hai'angu s of the lawyers. Dur-\nng .be .rlul of Ihe case three of lho\niceused und 17 wlnes-ies have died.\nHi' minute's of lh-3 billing cover !).i:i'\nputfes, The clerk til ,:,c Court sen*, oil\nl.llll.'l t-legranu, l!27 by order of I In\n\u2022 es dent, btsi.le-j two volumes of let-\n,'0 Or-EN'STOREG IN     :\nNEW  BilUNSWICK\n(Ry Dully News Leased Wire.)\nF.*,i-;.JKilH\"niN. N. M., July 5.--Tho\nUnited Gra'n association of. Amei h a\nwill II Is uinoun.'ed, pinke application\ni nn en- v chile !\",.!\u2022 a charier to\nMis ness in N.r-w Brunswick. It Is pro-\nli sed If pe.m'ss'on can he secured, to\n\u25a0 io btisjiiesa u uis nrov'nce,,fo have\niia.:iiaurteis in SI. John und open\" i\n\u25a0'any us 200 sli res in the province.\n!h; association h:is Its tiead'iiianei'a\nn Ihe Un'tel Slolea at present.\nBEDFORD DAMAGED\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nHALIFAX .)uly.:*i.~Heulord. at (lie\nhead of Ihe harbor, eight miles from\nHalifax, was damaged by lire last\nn ft'lit. Five houses were burned. Loss.\niUO.OOO. Th- uld\u25a0\u25a0 S.ickvlllo. fort nlso\nuirned down.\nRESOLUTION\nWhereas, there Is now employed at the\nCinderella mine, near Tlueo forks, a\ni-Nilnese  unnk.   and\nWherras, through the loyalty of Its\nfriends and the fidelity of Us membership, this union bus hlthurlo lieen successful in maintaining a \u2022'White-'!'.O.\"\nin so fnr as Us local \u25a0 jurisdiction\ntends, and\nWhereas, every friendly overture' to\nsecure a cuutlnuncc of this state- of\naffairs has been unsuccessful in per-\nsuudlng the munngement of lihb property\nlu question to dismiss tlie Chinaman,\ntherefore be It \u2022,\nResolved, that this, Rtindon Union* No.\n81-of the Western Federation of Miners,\nvigorously eondemiui the employment of\nAsiatic help. In any capacity, and calls\nupon its friends nnd members\" to ';use\nevery lawful and honorable effort to\nsecure the banishment of the present\nOriental, and prevent- tiho future Introduction of a class of labor that can only\nresult In lowering our present standard\nof living,-and Injury to the moral,^social\nand civic tone of '.the- community, 'and\nIib  li   further\nResolved, that the sense of this resolution, -*\"' n, history of ihe reasons responsible for Its adoption, he circulated\n<is widely ns-pnssl]ilG amongst the mem*\nI'erslilp and friends e\"-\u00abri-nit|zed labor.\nIn this norllnn of the province of British\nPnjnmbia:\nRnndon. B.C., May 28. 1912. !HI-tfi\nSafety Deposit. Boxes for Rent.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated 1861'' '\u25a0;)'',\nCapital   Paid-up    % \u25a0 7,360,000\nReserve   arid   Undivided\n,. Rrofits V..........,.<$   8i67li(0e0\nTotal  Assets  ...........|110,000,000\nHEAD   OFFICE:   MONTREAL.\n180.Branches in  Canada and Newfoundland   I\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable, terms. Savings deparliniiiit\nat all branches. -JLffia\n'N.i*;jir.*iU.v-i''\nNath.rby. I\n?':\n..,\u25a0*\u2022_'_\n m>\nSATURDAY\n...... JULY \u2022\nwmm &&&\n\/    PACE SEVEN  \"4\nPROSPECTS GOOD\n' FOR APPLE CROP\nReport   of   Dominion   Government   on\nFruit Crop Conditions in Canada\u2014Intact Posts.\nThe  report   on   the   fruit, crop  of\nCanada Issued by the Dominion government and dated June ,1\u00ab contains\nthe. following Interesting Information:\nWeather Conditions.\nThe weather for the last month has\nbeen, on the whole, fairly favorable\nfor fruit. The season Is slightly late,,\nbut only relatively so. The southern\nparts of the province of Ontario, for\nInstance, have not the usual advance\nof front two to tori days over the rest\nOf-the province, but the later districts.\nappear to be almost as far; advanced;\nas those sections of the province that'\nare usually considered early. An observer coming from Essex county.\nWould find the season In Carleton\ncounty .(three degrees farther north),\nonly slightly later.\nThe amount of rain that fell during\nMay and the first two weeks in June\nis somewhat abnormal but, except for\nthe effect on pollination, no serious\nconsequences have come to the.fruit\ncrop as tho result of excessive moisture. There have been several reports\nof Injuries from frost in low lying\nfields, and' vegetables have undoubtedly suffered severely. In the commercial orchards and plantations no\nserious Injury Is anticipated as tho\nresult of the low temperature.\nApplet.\nThe prospects for an excellent apple crop are maintained. In eastern\nOntario and in parts of Quebec the\ntent caterpillar is doing, serious dam\nago. With this exception insect and\nfungous diseases are perhaps only\nnormal. Tho number of well-cared for\norchards is on the increase and the\nresult shows in the reports of better\ncrops. British Columbia had a vory\nlight crop last year and is looking\nwith confidence to a heavy crop this\nyear. Nova Scotia, though it hud an\nexceptionally heavy crop lost year,\nhas prospects of almost as good a crop\nfor the present season, though there\nare many contingencies that make the\ncrop still uncertain.\nFruit Districts.\nTo assist in estimating the marketable crop, the fruit districts of tho\nDominion are divided as follows;\nDistrict 1.\u2014Counties north of'Lake\nErie.\nDistrict No. 2.\u2014Counties on. Lake\nHuron and inland to York county.\nDistrict No. 3.\u2014Lnko Ontario coun-\n.tlcst,north of Sharbot lake, and Georgian bay.\nDistrict No. 4.\u2014Ottawa and St. Lawrence valleys to Lake St. Peter and\nsouthwestern Quebec,\nDistrict No. 5.\u2014New Brunswick with\nnortheastern Quebec.\nDistrict No. 6.\u2014Hants, Kings, Annapolis and Dlgby i counties, Nova\nScotia,\nDistrict No. 7.\u2014Nova Scotia not included jn.District 6.\nDistrict No. 8.\u2014Prince Edward Island.\nDistrict No. 9.\u2014Lower mainland and\nIslands, British Columbia.\nDistrict No. 10.\u2014Inland valleys, British Columbia.   '\"\u00ab\"\nDistricts 1, 0 and 10 ship the commercial crop of peaches and other tender fruits.\nDistricts 1, ?, 3, 6, 9 and 10 grow\nplums, pears and winter varieties of\napples for long distance markets and\nexport.\nDistrict 4 ships Alexander, Wealthy,\nPameuse and Mcintosh Red apples.\nDistricts G and 7 will not produce\n>ufflcfent winter fruit for home consumption.\nDistrict 1.\u2014The southwestern counties, Essex, Kent, Lambton and Elgin,\nwill have a medium crop. The San\nJose scale Is accountable for a serious\ndepreciation In the orchards of the\ngeneral former who makes no specialty of fruit. Such orchards are rapidly becoming things of the past.\nRhode Island Greenings\u2014a favorite\nvariety In this district\u2014appear to bo\nparticularly susceptible to the ravages\nof the scale. *-.     \".\nDistrict 2.\u2014A fair crop Is expected\nin this district, tho Spy being'somewhat lighter than other standard varieties. A number of large, well-kept\norchards, where spraying has been\ndone methodically, report a good crop\nof nearly all varieties.\nDistrict 3.\u2014There Is likely to be a\nserious \"drop\" In the orchards of this\ndistrict' Correspondents report that\nby jarring the. trees even at this date\nthere is a heavy shower of 'embryo\napples, which shows that the pollination was not ns perfect as could he\ndesired. In this connection it may be\nnoted that some correspondents drew\nattention to the fact' that. foul brood\nhad almost disseminated the. apiaries\nof the district. Wild bees are also reported scarce this season. Most of\ntho correspondents, however, refer to\nthe continuous damp and gloomy\nweather which, they claim, accounts\nfor absence of insects and, therefore,\nImperfect; pollination.\nDistrict 4.-\u2014The prospects aro good\nin this district. The effects of lust\nyear's dry weather are undoubtedly\nnoticeable In the weaker fruit buds of\nthis sprint;, but the bloom wns fairly\nabundant, though there are signs at\npresent of a defective setting; A few\ncorrespondents report some appearance of winter Injuries which were\nnot -noticeable last month. In addition to this, we must take Into account the defoliation of hundreds of\norchards by the tent caterpillar.\nDistricts 5 and 7.\u2014Medium crops\nare expected In these districts, but\nthe quantity of fruit will still full far\nbelow that of local demands, except\nIn the valley of the St. John river.\nDistrict 6.\u2014The present outlook Is\nfor another crop almost as large, If\nnot quite as large, as last year. No\nInsect pest of consequence is in evidence at this time. There arc, of\ncourse, sporadic cases of canker worm,\ntent caterpillar and tussock moth.\nThe brown tall moth Is reported In\nvarious neighborhoods, but no orchards are yet serious affected. Tho\ncrop Is not yet sufficiently advanced\nto, Bpeak at all confidently of final results. . The heavy bloom on the Grav-\nenstelns 1b a notable feature.\nDistrict 8.\u2014Prince Edward Island\nexpects slightly more than a medium\ncrop. Spraying is more general than\nusual, and it is a fair assumption that\nthe good prnspects at the present\ntime will be more likely to materialize in a crop for this reason. The\ntrees are  In excellent condition,\nDistricts 0 and 10.\u2014The reports\nfrom British Columbia are very optimistic. Weather conditions are, upon\nthe whole, fnvorable. While fungus\ndiseases may be expected, nothing unusual shows at the present time.\nPreparations are being made for tho\nlargest crop in the history of tho\nprovince.\nPeart.\nThe penr crop per tree is In good\ncondition. In eastern Canada many\ncorrespondents speak of the pear industry as practically a thing of the\npast on account of blight Even such\n.resistant varieties as .tba Kleffor, In\nsomo-cases, show serious losses from\nthis disease. It Is rather difficult to\nmake an estimate of the aggregate nf\nthe crop. While tht. condition of the\nfruit Is good, the acreage has undergone such a change that the effect\nupon the murket can hardly be fairly\nestimated. The conditions In British\nColumbia nre quite favorable for a\nlargo crop.\nPlums,\nThe plum crop is slightly above the\naverage. The Japanese varieties are\nvery Irregular, due, In all probability,\nto the effects of the weather. The\nbloom everywhere was good, but pollination In some orchards was defective, and almost a total failure Is the\nresult. On the other hand, many correspondents hnve full crops. European and American varieties are not\nso Irregular und promise well.\nPeaches.\nNo great change has taken place in\nthe conditions with reference to this\nfruit. The Niagara district has a good\nsetting of most vnrletlcs. Southwest-\ncrn   Ontario   will   have   q   very  short\nTOASTED\nrv>C0RN<n\n.FLAKES]\niMMlimnn\u00abinJ\ntOVBIW, CAHAIA.     '\n-\"Corn\nFed!\"\naS**h,**%\nSee the Kellogg \"Corn\nFed\" boy I    Isn't he a big,\nchubby fellow? Every morning he gets a big dish of the\n\" growing \"   food \u2014 Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes.   He thrives like\nyour children will thrive when\nyou feed them the nutritious\nsweet hearts  of the world's\nfinest corn.\nBuy a package today.\nIOC   m\nTOASTED \u00bb\u00abPI\u00abJ\nCORK FLAKES    J\ncrop, probably not enough to supply\ntfte hortfe market | 'Many \"case's of ^\nwinter killing, not apparent In the\nearly part of the seoson, are now\nshowing In both the Niagara district\nand western Ontario. The loss of\npeach trees in western Ontario will\nbe very serious and will probably discourage large plantations for many\nyears, except in limited areas. The\nBrltiBh Columbia crop per tree Is good,\nbut the aggregate quantity Is small.\nCherries.\nSweet cherries are showing some\nsigns of winter killing, and even where\nMm trees are vlgorohs, the set of fruit\nis short Sour cherries are an excellent crop everywhere.\n'. Grapes.\nThewinter killing of grapes is somewhat larger than wus expected, but\nnit sufficiently serious to make a\nmarked difference In the crop. In\nsound vines the growth Is healthy, but\nlate. A medium crop, however, Is expected.\nSmall Fruits;\nWeather conditions have been very\nfavorable for strawberries, but even\ngoad weather, conditions cannot make\nup for the poor stand of last year's\nplantings. Hence,\/in eustern Canada\nthere will be an excellent crop pei\nvine, but a very much reduced acreage; or if the actual acreage is not\nreduced the number uf plants per acre\nwill be reduced. Ab our percentage\nreports take no account of acreage\nthero will appear to be nearly a\nstandard crop, yet the markets wilt\nshow high prices. Ontario will be decidedly short, though the yields of all\nihe.successful plantings of last year\nwill be above the average and, if ex-\nreme drouth does not set in, a much\nlurger crop will be harvested than is\nanticipated, Canncrs who aro usually\nwell informed on crop conditions In\nihelr Immediate neighborhood arc, In\ntlmost every case, offering prices thul\nwould go to show that they expect u\nserious shortage In strawberries nnd\nraspberries. Black currants in commercial plantations will also he short.\nRed currants and gooseberries promise\nwell. Blackberries were\" severely Injured by the winter frosts, but with\ngood weather conditions may yield u\nfair crop, though not sufficient to meet\nthe probable demands.\nBritish Columbia has a normal acreage nnd a good crop of nil small fruits\nTomatoes.\nTomatoes were planted in excellent\ncondition,' and while the cold wenther\nhas undoubtedly returded their growth,\nhey nre now in splendid condition to\n\u25a0io into the warmer weather which may\nbe expected. There is a very largo increase in the acreage this year.\nInsects.\nThe most notable insect pest reported is undoubtedly the infestation of\nthe tent caterpillar in easern Canada.\nThe sections chiefly affected are the\ngrenter part of New Brunswick, southern Quebec and .'eastern Ontario. Many\ncorrespondents report thai never in\ntheir experience has there been so severe un Invasion. The Gutineau branch\nc.f the Cunndlan Pacific rulhvuy has\nbeen repeatedly stalled on account of\nthe worms being so numerous on the\nrulls. After having completely defoliated their favorite food trees, the\ncaterpillar continued feeding on other\n*inil less palatable varieties, so that\nnearly all broad-leaf forest trees ure\nsuffering.\nIt Is noticeable, however, that well-\ncared for orchards are not seriously Injured. Farmers who have been enre-\nful lo clean the fence rows on I he\n\"arm, leaving no wild plum or wild,\ncherry trees and who have systematica:^ sprayed their apple orchards witii\nParis green or other poisonous miv-\ntures, have suffered only occasionally\nIn cases where orchards were located\nnear forests the ordinary spraying diu\nnot prove effective. Several correspondents have reported success with\nbands about the trunks of .trees wilh\nmy of the usual sticky mixtures, such\nas tanglefoot, tnf, etc.. which prevent\nthe nearly muture migrating lurvue\nfrom ascend ng. Discrimination should\nbe used in applying these lo trees, as\ndirect application has proved harmful\nin  many  cases,\nSun Jose Scale,\u2014The San Jose scale\nin Ontario is rapidly assuming permanent conditions, In the commercia'\nfruit orchurds of the Niagara district\nt is not particularly dreaded. In the\nsouthwestern counties of Ontario, particularly Elgin, Kent, Essex and\nLambton, the older orchards' of the\nfarmers who do not spray nre rapidly\nd'sappearlng. Many correspondents report ihe orchards In their-neighborhood as being practically wiped out\nby this pest, The result will be a very\nmarked change in the growing of the\napples In these counties. The south\nwestern peninsula was formerly noted\nfor its splendid_orchards, which bore\nheavy crops, but received little or no\nattention. In favorable years enormous\ncrops were harvested and every year\nthere were some npples at least The\nprocess of eliminating th old orchards\nis now practically complete in Essex\ncounty, and it is likely that this county,\nonce famous for Its apples, will produce scarcely enough this year for\nhome consumption. Nevertheless, signs\nnre not wanting that a new generation\nwill pla.nl larger orchards and perhaps\nof more suitable varieties, Several\nvery large orchards were planted both\nthis year and last by experienced fruit\nmen, und no difficulty is antlclputed\nfrom the Sun Jose scale. The lime-\nsulphur mixture Is now a well established remedy. It Is with regret that\nwe have to note the appearance of the\nscale In Nova Scotln.\nCanker Worm.\u2014The canker worm\nappears to be sporadic In several parts\nof eastern Ontario and Quebec provinces, It Is not Improbable that next\nyear the inrestatlon will be serious if\nthe 1912 brood Is not carefully destroyed.\nJ tine Bug,\u2014Complaints of the ruv-\nnges of the June bug huve been Increasing In number in lho last two or\nthree years. In 1911 several fruit\ngrowers complained of injuries by the\nJune bug to the foliage of their trees.\nThis year a number of correspondents\nreport that they have already begun\nto make their appearance In large\nnumbers. More serious depredations\nmay be expected In the reports of next\nmonth.\nFungus Diseases.\u2014Canker Is 'undoubtedly the most serious trunk and\nlimb disease In the eaBtern apple orchards at the present time. There are\nso many different varieties of disease\ngoing under the name of canker and\nall showing somewhat similar effects\nupon the.limbs and. trunks of tree*',\nthat there Is need for careful study by\nprchardUtB of Injuries to the trunk and\n\"My GURNEY\nOXFORD\njumped right in\nand helped with\nmy housekeeping\"\nDear Edith,\nIn a general way I have wished you all Ihe\ngood things 1 know of, so now I am going to descend\nto the practical and give you some sound advice\nfrom the store I have accumulated since I started\nhousekeeping.\nHousekeeping naturally suggests the kitchen\nfirst\u2014its equipment and management, or in other\nwords, THE RANGE\nMy range, as you know, is a Gurney-Oxford. I\nnever enjoyed much of a reputation as a cook in my\nyounger days, so when I thought of being responsible\nfor three meals a day my heart sank. I imagined\nmyself battling all day with a sulky range, trying\nto coax it into a good humour, and covered with\nmortification because of late or spoiled meals. But\nmy dear, my Gurney-Oxford seemed to sympathize\nwith my inexperience.   From the day it came it\njumped right in and helped. It has become my\ngood right hand, and I go my way confident that\nmy Gurney-Oxford will not disappoint me.\nIt has the cleverest arrangement for regulating;\nthe drafts, well named the Gurney Economizer. One\nsmall lever put up or down does everything. The\nfire will stay in all day, hardly burning any coal at\nall\u2014then, presto! QIt is burning brightly, ready to\nbake or roast. An arrangement of flues keeps the\noven always properly heated, so that the biscuits\nor bread come out light and crisp and brown. Yes,\nEdith, as Bob says, I have developed into \" some\ncook,\" and I often tell him he must give at least half\nthe credit to our Gurney-Oxford.\nYou will understand my enthusiasm better after\nyou have had your Gurney-Oxford a month or so.\nSincerely Yours,\nMARY HOUSEWIFE.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B. C.\n(HI)\nlarge limbs. In general terms, the\ntreatment for allJjoankcr,6 Is as follows: Clean the dead and dying wood\nund bark back to the live tissue and\nsterilize the wound with a strong solution of copper, sulphate. When this\nIs dry paint the wound wilh pure linseed oil and white lead: a thin coat\nfor the first application and when\nthoroughly dry apply a second heavier\ncoat.\nForeign Frutt Prospects.\nThe prospects are-for a medium crop\nof apples In nearly all apple producing\nportions of the United States. The\nstates that come more particularly Into\ncompetition with Canada, that is, the\nNew England states, New York and\nMichigan, have good prospects; and\nwhile the crop can hardly be Baid to\ne assured, It Is.safe to say that with\nho extraordinary setback there will be\na large quantity of good early winter\nvarieties for export.\nThe fruit growers in Great Britain\ncomplain very seriously of dry weather and insect depredations, more especially in small fruits, Notwithstanding them\u2014and judging from tho market reports\u2014tho small fruit crop Is\nshowing up well. Apples ure doing\nexcellently and a medium to a large\ncrop Is expected in nearly all districts.\nSimilar reports come from Ireland,\nwith perhaps a more serious \"drop\"\nthan in many of the districts In England.\nCoopers- Stock.\nTho large firms are dealing in coopers' stock report the market for apple\nbarrel stock as firm. The American\ncoopers arc reporting all slack barrel\nstock as short. Disregarding these\nstatements that come from dealers in\ncoopernge stock, it is the experience of\nevery year that barrels are much deur-\nr at the opening of the apple packing\nseason than at this time of year.\nScarcely an applr season passeB without very serious losses occurring as\nthe result of want of barrels. It cannot be urged too strongly, therefore,\nupon co-operative societies and large\ngrowers that they lay in a stock of bar-\ns or barrel material  early in  the\nlished monthly, and will be sent free\nto any one desirous of obtaining a\ncopy, on application to the fruit division, Ottawa. Those who do not receive It regularly will confer a favor\nby notifying the fruit division. A.\nMcNeill, chief of fruit division.\nDirections for Sending Specimens.\nOrchardists are urged to examine\ntheir trees nnd plantations very closely\nfor insects and fungus pests Specimens of Insects, If dead, should be\nwrapped In paper or cotton nnd in\nclosed In a pasteboard box. If the specimen is particularly soft It should be\npacked in cotton saturated Jn alcohol.\nWhenever possible grubs, caterpillars,\n\"ind so forth, should be packed nlive in\na box, together with a supply of their\nfood; air-holes are not necessary. Particulars ns to where the insect was\nfound and the nature of the damage\nwhich It is doing, whether to leaves,\nbuds or stem, nre frequently of very\ngreat Importance. Send for information and Identification of specimens to\nDr. C. Gordon Hewitt, Dominion on\ntomologist, central experiments farm,\nOllnwa,    ,.\n3flhe fruit crop report *w.lll be pUb-\nTO DEVELOP OIL BEARING\nLAND  IN  RUSSIA\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 5;\u2014Tho Tunes announces that a number of Russian\nFrench and English leading interests\nhnve Just signed u contract for the acquisition of a large area of oil bearing\nland in the Uralsk district of Russia.\nIt Is proposed to form an English company with a capital of \"116,000,000, nnd\nto make u public issue of 1,740,000\nshnres in order to provide the working\ncapital,\nITALIAN   MINISTERS\nGO ON VACATION\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nROME, July 5.\u2014Signer Glolittl, the\npremier, left Rome on Wednesday for\nDronero, a secluded spot in ricdmont.\nMarchese di San Glulano, the foreign\nsecretary, with his chief of staff, has\nleft for Fiuggl, and Signor Pariza, ambassador to Germany, leaves today for\nRcgglo, in Emilia.\nAn animated discussion has been\nstnrled by Signor Panza's journey to\nRome following his interviews with Dr.\nvon Bethmunn-Hollweig and Hcrr von\nKlderlln-Wttechter. He has. however,\nmerely started on his vacation earlier\nthan usual, owing to the fact that his\nson, on the eve of school examinations, has been stricken down with\nfever. The absence from Rome of\nSignor Glolittl and Marchese di San\nOi'i'nnn nnd  of Slenrir    Panzfl    from\nBerlin proves that the international\nsituation Is not disquieting and also\nIndicates that no Immediate cessation\nof iho war is In sight.        ,\nCANADIAN PACIFIC HAS\nGOOD   STATEMENT\n(Dm Dally News Leased Wire,)\nMui> 1 U&.U, .i my ->.\u2014lirous earnings of the Canadian Pacific ru.lwuy\nfor the fiscal year which ended June\n30 will be shown in the annual report\nas a few dollars within f 122,-856,000,\ncompared with $10-1,167,000 in 1011, a\ngain of $18,68!),ooo. No definite figures on net earnings will be available\nfor some days, but it is possible lo\narrive at u close estimate with the of-\nf'ciul figures for 11 months and approximate figures for June. The net\nearnings last year were $36,600,830, and\nfor 11 months of the current year they\nwire $39,451,640, For May the net was\n$3,680,000, and assuming that June will\nshow $3 600,000. u conservative estimate, the total would be $43,051,000, a\ngain of $6 3b3,000.\nLuat year, In addition to the annual\nstatement, was added the sum of $1,-\n118..349 of the net earnings of steamships in excess of amount Included\nin monthly reports,\nIn 1911 net earnings were increased\nby $3,928,000 over 1910, and this year,\nthe Increase will be about $6,233,000\nover 1911, taking into account the\nsteamship figures added or $0,362,000,\nnot counting the steamship  tigures,\nGARMENT FACTORIES\nMOVE  FROM   MONTREAL\n(By Dally News Ucased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, July 5.\u2014The latest\nmove In the strike of the garment\nworkers is the removal of four manufacturing establishments out of the\nc'ty.   The establishments which tun*\"\nBeware\nof\nImitations\nSold\non the\nMerits\nof\nMinard's\nLiniment\nmoved are Wener. Brothers & Hart,\nwho have opened a sfi'op at Sorel; El-\nkin & Co., Crown Punts company, gone\nto Cornwall, und the Union Clothing\ncompany, lo St. Johns, Quebec.\nDr. de Van's Female Pills\nA reliable French regulator; never falls. These\npills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the\ngenerative portion of the female system. Refuse\nall cheap imitations. Dr. d\u00ab Yam'a are sold at\n15 a box, or three for 110. Mailed to any address.\nTh\u00ab Seobell Dray Co.. S(= Catharines. Ont*\nSOLD AT POOLE DRUG CO.,  LTD.\nHome Grown Fruit Trees\nCatalogue and Price List Now Ready\nOur Prices are Attractive, and\nQuality of Our Trees the Best\nSend us your name and address so that we can put you oh\nour mailing list\nApples , Plums Pears Peaches\nAll Guaranteed Home Grown Stock : \u25a0: Write for Catalogue and Prices.\nCellared Roots in earth, no danger of winter killing,   \"WE CAN HOLD YOUR TRADE\"\nOrnamental Trees and Shrubs, Roses, Climbers, Etc.\nThe Riverside Nurseries\nComprising 120 Acres\nEstablished 1900\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\n\u25a0MiWtaM^apwMWM*\n PAGE EIGHT\nCfje Battp jletofl.\nSATURDAY  JULY 6\nIt Pays to Read Our Ads\nBecause they alwuys contain something of Interest lo Investors, homesookers, home sellers, owners und sellers\nol property of\" aW descriptions;  also'of Interest to those who wish to buy. . tj\nWe Offer Today Some Very Desirable Properties\nHOUSES   FOR  SALE\nJ13G0 buys 5-room house In fair condition; ull conveniences; light und. wutcr; woodshed' chicken\nhouse and rim; lawn;, 2 fine lots; !) beuring fruit\ntrees; small fruits-very easy terras; bargain.\n$2850\u2014House 5 rooms and bath; cellar; light; hot nnd\ncold waler; woodshed; good condition; 2 good\nlots;1 good locality; one-third cash, balance arranged,\n$3700\u2014House 6 rooms; puntry; closets; hull; woodshed;\nchicken house; fine lot bearing fruit trees; lawn;\neverything good condlMon throughout; 5 fine\nlevel lots;   $1,000. cash, balance easy.\n$2800\u2014House 7 rooms; good cellar; light; water;\nwoodshed; lawn; house needs painting; excellent\norchard and small fruits; a great big snap;\n$1,500 down, balance easy terms.\nRANCHES   FOR   SALE\n$2200 for 7 acres;, 2 acres cleared, balance easy clearing; soil best loam; good roud to property; good\ncreek through property; close to Nelson; $H&0\ncash,  balance arranged.\n$5200 buys 22% acres on West Arm; ideal situation,\nwith excellent Water frontage; gently slopes to\nlake; lots of' water for domestic and irrigation\npurposes; 2% acres In fruit trees In good condition;   JJ.OOO cash,  balance 1,  2,  a years.\nS2000 buys 20 acres at Balfour, % mile from Kootenay\nlake; first class soil; unimproved; close to store,\nchurch, school, etc.; one-fourth cash, balance\nono and two years.\n$-1000 buys 20-acre fruit ranch, 0 miles from Nelson,\non West Arm; this Is a valuable properly; every\nacre good and clearing easy; good water supply;\n$1,500  cash,  balance one and  two years.\nCOME   IN   AND   TALK   IT   OVER   WITH   US.\nWc have a particularly well furnished house to rent;   $30;   Including wuler and telephone.\nWe have two or three safely deposit boxes not occupied.    Our rent is nominal and your papers are private and safe.   You hold the key.\t\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nFinancial  Agents.    Real  Estate,    F re,   Life and  Accident  Insurance.    Timber Lands.    Rents Collected.    Loans,\nSafety  Deposit  Boxes for Rent.\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Manager. H. E. DOUGLAS, Insurance and C.   A.   VAN   HEMERT,   Timber\nALEX. CHEYNE,  Secretary. Loan  Department. Department.\nP.   O.   Box   1042.     Phone 254. Cor. Baker and Joseph ne Streets.\nWhat's o'Clock?\nWc direct your attention ,to our window display of clocks of superior quality and workmanship;\nEvery movement Is' guaranteed lo\ngive  the   utmost  satisfaction.\nOur clocks will keep perfect time.\nEach clock Is tested in our workshop\nand must be satisfactory before being\nplaced In stock. Prices will be found\nextremely moderate'.\nWe specialize In watch and clock\nrepairing. Your repuirs are wanted\nby\nJ. B. English\nSuccessor to\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler  and   Optician\nt   Baker Street Nelson\nSPOKANE MARKETS\n(Sharp & Irvine.)\nBid Ask\nB.   C.   Copper    $ r,.5U $ ti.-'\nCaledonia    2\\) .1!\nCanadian Consolidated  .... RiM 7O.0\nGranby     51.00 1*0.0\nInternational   Coul    -10 .5\nLucky   Jim    mi       \u25a0-\n.Nugget    29 .;!\n\u25a0Rambler-Cariboo    07 .7\nUoyul   Oil .0\nSnowstorm   r>2 .ii\nStiiiidard       1.00 1.7\nBtewart       Lit 1:1\nSales-O-w Stewart at $1.14. luO ut Ji.\nSTOCKS   UNDER  PRESSURE\nfBy   Daily   News   Leased  Wire.)\nNEW YORK. July fi.-\"Stocks were under strong pressure almost from> tlie outset today and a considerable pari ot\nthe early week's rise was lost, The\nselling centered about tin- leaders wilb\nweakness most marked in Amalgamated\nCupper, United .States Steel and Union\nPacini;. Tiie market was dearlv without\nleadership In either direction, however,\nund the output represented nothing more\nthan   professional   trading.\nAnother gold .shipment to Parisi was\nannounced, making a total oE $8,000,000 to\nthat centre In little, more, than a week.\nThere is still some mystery surrounding these exports which are believed to\nhave their origin in tbe pressing needs\nor tbe foreigners. The Hank ol* kngland\nlost over $3,000,000 gold on the week and\nmaterially reduced tlie proportion of Its\nliabilities reserve, whicii fell to ll.;''Jper\ncent compared with 4\"\u00bb.\"B per cent this\nweek last year. Consols weakened to a\nnew low point ia Ixndon where general\nmarkets were dull and Irregular. Paris\nwas ilnll hut firmness prcViiilol ;it i\"\u25a0 j -\nllti  on  the  Prussian lofop  report.\n'Lowest prices v of Hie day were registered in the final hour, when rumors\naffecting the copper situation and steel\nuliridiiK- for the recent quarter were\ncirculated. Various specialties yielded\nWith the declines elsewhere producing ii\ngenerally weak elose.\nThe crop outlook continued meat encouraging and advices from all leading'\nrailroad centres indicated that traffic ol-\ntlclals were making preparations in\nmeet tbe larger harvests, this being gen-\nerally true of Kansas, Oklahoma and\nTexas.\n\"Bonds were Irregular with no pronounced change. Total sates, par value,\n$'',\u25a0'1)0,000. United States government bonds\nwere unchanged on wall-\nHEAT HAS DEPRESSING\nEFFECT ON  BROKERS\nfRv  flaily  News  Leased  Wire.)\niMONTBEA L,     .1 uiy     *>.-Stocks    were\nstrong    although    the    heat   bad   a   tie-\npressing effect on 'brokers and traders.\nThorp was considerable interest in Power\nbul trading was slow and after opening\nat 21B*\/j It eased off lo 21D. Richelieu\ntouched 118!4 hot the bulk of Ibe trading\nwas at US. C.P.R. was strong at SK7,\nCar at i&%. -Steel M%, Detroit WVj,\nLauren tide 1'iiK-. Ralls at U4',i and Twin\nCity at 108. Quebec Railway continued\nweak at 'GI*\u00a3, Power was most active\nin lho afternoon and was steady al\n\u25a0\"l.-.'\/i'd-l-VJi. Richelieu seemed spellbound\nat tiie US level and was Inter offered at\n117%. The rest of the list showed llttlo\nor no change. uV good many of the\ntransactions were in fractional lots. Cement was a strong feature at ^, Dctrult\n07 and dinners iii. Luurcnllde was 2\npoints down at 105%, Crown Reserve\nwas a strong feature at 340. Power\ndirectors met at noon and declared a\nquarterly dividend at 2V, per cent, payable August lf>, at the rate of 0 percent\nper annum, an increase of 1 per cent.\nThere was a feeling in some circles that\nlids would prove disappointing as la per\ncent was looked for by some, but tile\nmarket for the slock did not reflect tnls,\nbeing firm around 216%'uIU'i.\nCONSOLS MAKE LOW RECORD\nlock market \u25a0\nIS   touched   a\noney on real!*\n1W loans.   Th\n.he worst.    II.\nwere depress\n'ed   an -\n*o.)\ns easy\nharden.\nr.-Kuliir.\nV \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 i;i-b.\nI. roach-\nfrncUnii\nElectric Restorer for Men\nPhosnhonol restores every nerve in the body\n\u00b0F        I tn Its proper tension; restores\nvim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual\nweakness averted at once. Phoaphonol will\nmake you a new man. Price 18 a box, or two (or\n15. Mailed to any address. Tlie Scobell Drag\nCo., St. Catharines, Ont.\nSOLD AT POOLE  DRUG CO.. LTD.\nAmericans was irregular early and after\na slight hardening prices dropped on\nluck of support, closing easy.\nBUTTER STRONGER\nfRv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, July ii.\u2014Butter Is stronger and prices have advanced 14c under\nfairly good demand. The tone of tlie\nmarket (or cheese Is steady, K^s fair!.-\nactive. Cheese, finest western. l:iV\"'\u25a0''\u25a0.;\nfinest  east.-r_n.   IILVuL-'-k.     Itiilter.clmiy.vt\nV!^4s!','\/Ve-'t7'l!'l^.^;; Nil, i Wln.-k.'l.viilli!\nPork, heavy Canada short mess, barrels.\n:tVf(.45, pieces, 24%; Canada snort cut\nback, barrels, 450B3; pieces, 86Mr.\nWINNIPEG STOCKS\n(Bv   Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nListed\u2014 Hill Asked\nCanada   fire,   F.F    130      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nCity  &  l'rov    110      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nCom.  Loan & Trust        10S\nUmpire   Loan       108      11\"\nEmpire   Loan.   P.P    110     llo\n(irc'it   Wesl   Life           310\nG.  W.  Permanent    127      I30\nHome  Inv.  & Sav    13S\nS. A. Warrants      I'M\nCrown e.f.e     07%\nNorthern e.f.e    KB\nNorthern  Mortgage     120\nNorthern Trusts     lit!\nStandard  Trusts  .\nweak, and Chicago corn Went 2',V'i2Vi\\'\ndown and oats \\%Cw\\% down. The cash\ndemand continues fairly good for contract grades and little inquiry for lower\ngrades with sufficient offerings to meet\nthe demand. Oats and flax were more\nactive  with   weaker  prices.\nReceipts Were light today. To, cars belli sight for Inspection. Deliveries through\nthe clearing house today were: Wheal,\nnone; oats, M.ikhi bushels; feed oats, 7,0U(J\nbushels; flax.  none.\nLABOR MARKET\nOVERCROWDED\nWinnipeg Paint & Glass .\n110\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nLIGHTHOUSE  MEMORIAL\nTO  FAMOUS   EXPLORER\n(Ry Dally News Loased Wire.)\nCIKHVN POINT, N. V\u201e July C\u2014The\nmemorial lighthouse to commemorate\nIhe tercentenary of Chnmplain's discovery of tho hike which bears his\nname was unveiled at Crown Point today with impressive ceremonies, whicii\nwere preceded by the unveiling of tablets at Fort Frederick and Amherst.\nDistinguished guests were present in\neach case. The bust La France by the\nI'Ycnch sculpt or nodln. presented by\nthe French tjopubllo, was dedicated as\npart of lite structure on May 3 by a\ndelegation of eminent French savants\nsent here by the French government.\n(Special to The Dallv News.)\nBid      Asked\nNugget I   .32      X   .37\nKootenay    Gflld     2B\u00ab| .I'Wj\nlioinliiluil    Trust     12:,. im      1 *!.-,. 00\nB. C. Permanent Loan ..'25.00     il;:.00\nMETAL  MARKETS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMOW YORK. July \"\"..\"Silver. liUi.\nLONDON,   July   \u25a0l.-Wllvei',   *B^;     lead.\nBENEFICIAL   RAINS- CAUSE\nBREAK   IN   PRICES\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, July ii.-There was agen-\neral break In prices on the world a\nwheat market today due to the favor-\naide reports on crop conditions and the\nbencfielal rains on \"both sides of tlie\nCanadian border. Continental cables\nwere lower and Liverpool markets opened lifi'el'ic lower and closed ',Wh2c lower,\nwhile American markets were 'JiWI*.\nlower at opening and coiitlued -weak,\nparticularly on the distant months. Winnipeg market opened \"ike lower for July\nand **ic lower for October with a poor\ndemand, and In sympathy with other\nmarkets declined a further %c and le\nrespectively. A alight recover fractionally from t'ne lower points was made.\nTrade eontiued farily steady until within five minutes of the close when It\nbroke from WrfiVKV* for October. July\nclosed \"Bc down for the dnj\\ Minneapolis closed V<it%<: down on all months.\nChicago closed \\Wf0A^ down and very\n__\nj    A Safe, Sensible Investment\n] An Improved fruit farm comprlsln-r 03 acres of strictly choice fruit land\nand with one-half mile frontage on Kootena\" lake. Fifteen acres cleared\nand under, cultivation, H) acres of which are tn bearing orchard. One aero\nof, strawberries; one acre of small fruits; registered water right and water\nditched over farm. Could be sub-dlvlded Into smaller tracts to advantage,\nConsidering tlrtb location and the very fine quality uf-the-.land and Improvements (tlio orchard being In first class condition and of standard varieties)\nwe   consider   this   farm' one  of   tho best buys In tho district today.\nI     Price 110,000.    Terms urraged. .,*, \u25a0 \u25a0iti.jj\u00abj--wn-rti*r*-'\"i r   vtttSBBi\nDealers In High Class Fruit Lands.\nToye & Toye\nP. O,  Box 147, NELSON, B.C.\nUnskilled Labor Pouring into Regina\u2014\nRelief Funds Reach Large Sum\u2014\nCommittee Appointed\n'     (By Dally News Leased wire.)\nHKiilNA, Mask., July ii.\u2014The. labor\nmarket Is overstocked with unskilled\nlabor, which continues to pour in. Tne\nwork of permanent relief has boon practically placed in ihe hands of committees\nof civic authorities and business men.\nThey have been given power to expend\nmoney for tlio erection of homes on the\ncity property lu the west of tiie city.\nA committee of the mayor, J. A, Reed\nand City Commissioner Thornton will\nlake up the Whole question of obtaining\nloans, the investigation of the losses\nand tiie apportioning of permanent relief. The work of repairing Knox church\nhas begun and It is expected to be com-\nplcieii in six week. The total amount received at the treasurer's office toward\nthe relief fund tonight is SlW.'iSl. which\ndoes not Include such contributions as\nthose of the Dominion and provincial\ngovernments and contributions from\ncities which, although announced, have\nnot yet been received. To include these\nwould include the total subscriptions bv\nover $1011,000. Work has been commenced\nupon the civic program for the year nnd\nIf time permits, it will be curried out In\nTUGBOAT  OWNER   WAS\nNOT SHANGHAIED\n(My Pally Nows Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER; B.C., July 6\u2014Sam\nNichols, a well known tugboat owner,\ndisappeared about four months ago\none dark night on the waterfront. It\nwas believed at that time that Nlcb-\nolls had been mistaken for a common\nsailor and wns shanghaied aboard the\nGerman ship Marlechen, which was\ntowed to sea that night with a\nloud of lumber. Now comes word I'rom\nthe old country that the ship hud arrived but her master never beard of\nNlchol's. The hitter left a good deal\nof property and the administrator is\npuzzled to know what to do with It.\niOOSEVELT TO BID\nFOR  FARMERS' VOTE\nfRv Dally News Loosed Wire.)\nOYSTER BAY, N. Y\u201e July 4,\u2014A\ncampaign along, novel lines wa\nsketched In bare outline tonight b;\nColonel Theodore Roosevelt. As th,\nprogressive candidate of lho new Pro\n'tresslve party. Colonel Roosevelt Intends lo make an appeal largely to lib\nfarmer and wage workers on tht\nground that neither the Democrath\n\"or Ihe Republican party is attempting seriously in this campaign to ilea\nwilh the fundamental, economical ant\",\nsocial conditions which confront th;\ncountry.\nColonel Roosevelt said that SenntOl\nJr.s>ph M. Nixon of' Montana, win\nmanaged his campaign for the I'.epitb\nIlcan nomination, will in all probabiiir\nhe his campaign manager in ills figh\nfit the head of the new party. Th-\nformer president lnlends to breul\naway from the conventional lines o\nconducting a campaign. He hopes to\nlead what! he terms \"a people's gov'\neminent.\"\n\"This thins has got to be dene by\nthe paople- or It won't be done at all\nOf course, we need leaders, but it'doc\nnut muko ao much difference about the\n.eudors after'.all.\"\nFur   thdl Treason,   he   continued,   hi\nivufl  not. perWbert  at   the. fact    thai\ni me of the leader:-, in his recent cam-\npa'gn  hud  declined   lo  follow   him   in\nii* present fight.\nThe high cost of living is to como\n\u2022i ior special' attention. Tne tonne\npresident said he intended to deal with\nIt constantly on the ground that, while\nto some extent it is due to natural\neconomic causes, there are collateral\ncauses which' may be reached and\nremedied,'    \u00a3\nRAINS BENEFIT\nTO PRAIRIE CROPS\nAll of Prairie Provinces Receive Grateful Downfall\u2014Showers Came Just\nin Time\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.) <\nWINNIPEG, July 5.\u2014The tension so\nfar as present damage tu tlie crop Is\nconcerned has been broken by the rains\ntiiat started at an early iiotir this morning and have continued Intermittently\nthroughout Manitoba all day. Reports\nreceived by the Canadian Pacific railway officials show that practically every\npart of tlie three prairie provinces have\nbeen touched 'bv rain within the past\nweek. Up to last Saturday there was\nsome speculation as to the outcome If\nrain did not come almost at Once. It\nwas particularly fortunate for the flax\ncrop tiiat rain came as It | did, for that\ntender -plant bud begun to need it badty.\nIt looks today as If nothing can stop the\ncrop. The rain or today will also be\nmost  beneficial   to   summer   fallow   and\n10 pasture lands, as in the latter case\nthe native grasses  were suffering.\nNever Looked Better\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG\" July S.\u2014\"The west novel\nlooked better\/' said Andrew Kelly, president of tiie Western Canada Klour Mills,\nlids morning. \"I have just returned\nfrom a 4,1100-mile trip, and take it fi\ntne, we are going to have a big en\nthe biggest we ev.er bad. Of course,\nthere is some late grain, but It is good.\nThere Is nothing in tiie crop scare news.\n11 is all rot. 1 consider our prospects\nare excellent ami this Is not the first\ncrop 1 have sized up.\"\nIn Dakota Too\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n'MITCHELL, S.D., July 6.\u2014The national holiday in Ibis section opened and\nclosed with rain, .Starting early in the\nday, rain fell gently for an hour and\nthen suspended operations until late hi\nthe evening when tho moisture came\ndown heavily all over the stale, enough\nto put all grains In splendid condition\nfor the last stage of the harvest, The\nrainfall averaged from .S3 of an inch\nto two Indies In oilier places. It is\nfigured tfiat the crop situation Is on an\nSO per cent basis today. Corn Is stand1\nlug more than knee high and wheat,\nburlev and oats show strong and rich\ngrowth. The rain of last night has\nchanged the situation In all parts of the\nstate.   It extended west lo Caambei-lnla.\nLABOR CONGRESS SENDS\nCALL FOR VONVENTION\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 5\u2014The executive of\nthe Dominion Trades and Labor eon-\ngrcss lias sent out u call for the annual convention which will be held\nthis year at Gliolph, beginning Kept.\n0. Among matters to be taken up are\nImmigration laws, eight hour day bill,\nWorkmen's Compensation act, amendments Jn the Industrial Disputes nnd\nInvestigation    act,    proposed   amend!\nNA-DM-C0\nExtract ol\nWild Strawberry\nCompound\nis safe, reliable, and most\neffective in all cases .of\nDiarrlioca.Choleralnfaiitiiiu,\nSlimmer Complaint, and\nCholera Morbus.\nIn 25c. ami .-joe. bottles,\nat your Dnip-jrist's.\nNATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED.    211\nDEAR\nJIM-\n\"Had visitors to our camp this\nweek. They mado an awful hole in\nour supplies, Enclosed Is list iof\ngroceries wo need, When ordering\nsame be sure to specify tho kind of\nlea  we   want   and   take   no   other.\nOur visitors   Hko  it so  much   that\nIt's nearly all gone..\nLooking forward to seeing you\nthis week end. Don't forget those\nvital  words.    Hay to the grocer.    |\n'TETLEY'S\nTEAS\nPLEASE'\"\nFOR SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap. 160 acres In famoUB\nPend d'Oreille valley, near Waneta;\nclose to government . highway; large\nproportion ready for plow; free from\nroots and stones; excellent land; perfect\nclimate; ample water available; $\u00bb per\nacre for block, or would sell in 2\u00bb-aores\nplots. Terms. This Is a snap for rancher\nor investor.    P. O, Box 866,  Nelson.\n\u2022 SUMf.\nFOlt SALE\u2014First class residence, near\nlake and car, five lots all cultivated;\n10 trees in full bearing. Owner leaving\nNelson. Easy terms. Farvlew, Box 321,\nNelson.       - 44-tf.\nFOIl SALE\u2014Nearly 300 acres, near Nelson, suitable for mixed farming or nursery; 10 acres ready for plow. Easy tonus\n1 'roprlctor, P. O. Box 321, Nelson.     44-tf,\nFOB SA LIC\u2014Lumber, lath, shingles,\nsashes, doors. Orders -exceeding $~>\\) delivered free to any point on lake. Write\nus for quotations. Wattsburg Lumber\nCo.. Ltd., Proctor, B.C. Cl-tf.\nFOlt SA LE\u201410 ana 2o-acre tracts of\nchoice fruit land; 2,000 acres to choose\nfrom, all good title, with no encumbrance, direct from the locator. Some\nexcellent bench land, nice beaches, building .sites and good fishing, with three\nmiles uf main Kootenay lake frontage.\nCome early and .have first choice. Lindsay Launch & Boat company. Boom 8,\nGriffin Block, P, O. Box 34, Nelson,\nB.C. ti3-tf.\nFOB  SALE\u2014Two sewing  macliines,  one\nshoemaker  mnohlne,  Pully  Pipe No.   I,\nand one White machine.   Apply Falrvlew\nShoe Store, near Benson's store, **(i8-3\nFOlt SALE\u2014Eight roomed  hbuso,  In  Al\ncondition,   All conveniences. A bargain\nIs offered.    Apply 51S Victoria  street.\nFOB   SALE\u2014Chicken    ranch,   7V6   acres,\nacross the lake, I'\/jinlles from city. Apply  Box 708. (Nelson, B.C. **r,!)-0\nFOB  SALE\u2014At  a  bargain,   furniture of\na  four roomed house.    Apply U14 .Latimer street, or Box 861, Nelson. \u202270-(i\n\"TU-ii\nFOR SALE\u2014Creston rrult lands. Large\ntracts of choice wild land at $10, $15,\n(\u2022:ii and $50 per acre. Improved and seml-\nIniprovcd land at from ISO to $200 per\nacre.\nCRESTON   CLIMATE   IS , TUB  BEST.\nWrite the owner,\nR.   LAMONT.  Creston.   B.  O.\nments to the Dominion Election act,\nwhich would 'make election day a public holiday und to abolish the $200 deposit now exacted. The cull is Issued\nby P. M. Draper of this city, the secretary of the congress.\nTRADERS  AND   ROYAL\nBANKS  AMALGAMATED\nfBy Daily Nows Leased Who.)\nOTTAWA, July 5.\u2014Tho Canada Gazette contains formal nolico of the.\namalgamation of the Traders and\nRoyal bunks. By the Items of the\nagreement .the Royal bank agrees lo\nIssue lo the Traders bank or lis nominees 33,600 fully paid up shares of\ntbe pur value of $100 and amounting\nIn all to $3,300,000. The Royal bank\nalso assumes all the debts and liabilities of the Traders bank.\nTWO BATTLESHIPS\nWASHINGTON, July u\u2014By u vole\nof'll to 1:1 the senate adopted today\nan amendment to the naval appropriation bill providing for two new battleships,     \t\nAUCTION SALE\nNotice Is hereby given that on Monday,\nthe 8th day of July, A.H. 11)12, at the\nhour of 1 o'clock In the afternoon nt\nLnl-do, British Columbia, I shall sell\nby public auction t., tlio highest bidder\ntherefor a uunntily of saw logs, piling\nund railway ties, the properly of the\ngovernment of British Columbia.\nTerms  of  sale,  cash.\nDated at Nelson, 27th day of June. 1012.\nA..CAIBNEY,\nIB-!) Assistant Timber  Inspector.\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of tho Dominion, In\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta,\nthe Yukon territory, the North-wesl\nTerritories, and In a portion of the province of British Columbia, may be leased\nfur a term of twenty-one years at an\nannual rental of $1 per acre. Not more\nthan 2,aC,Q acres will be leased to one\napplicant.\nApplication for a lease must be made\nby tbe applicant In person to the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of the district in which\nthe rights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must be\ndescribed hy sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, nnd in unsurveyed territory the tract applied lor shall be staked\nout by the applicant himself.\nEach application must bc accompanied\nby a fee of $5 which will be refunded If\ntho rights applied for are not available,\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid on the merchantable outnut of the\nmlno at the rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mino shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns ac-\nc-uinttng for the full quantity of merchantable coal mined and pay the royalty\nthereon. If tbe coal mining rights are\nnot being operated, such returns should\nbe furnished at least once a year.\nThe lease will Include tbe coal mlnlnrj\nrights only, but the lessee mnv W permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may bo considered necessary for the working of t'ne mine at the\nrate of $10.00 nn ncre.\nFor full information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of tbe Department of the Interior, Ottawa, or to anj\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Lands\nW. W. COBT,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized publication of thi*\nadvertisement will not be paid for.\nSHERIFF'S SALE\nBy virtue of several Writs of Fieri\nFacias issued out of the Supreme Court\nof British Columbia, and to me directed\nagainst the goods and chattels of Mamie\nFarrell, Ocluvia Farrell, Charles C,\nFarrell and Timothy Farrell, 1 have\nseized nnd taken lu execution all the\nshares which tne said Mamie Farrell,\nOetuvla Farrell, Charles v.. Furrell and\nTimothy Farrell hnve In the capital\nstock of tlie Society Girl Mining Company, Limited. (N on- Persona I Liability),\nvilli registered office at Moyte, British\n'nhunblu, amounting approximately to\n27,371 shares, more or less. And 1 shall\nell Ihe said shares, ur a sufficient\nuinber thereof to satisfy, the said Writs\nf Fieri. Faolas and costs, ,ut public\nuctlon to the .highest bidder thereof, at\nny office In the Courthouse In the city\nof Nelson, British Columbia, on Friday,\nIhe 12th day of July, A.D. 1!\u00bbI2, at the\nMir of 12 o'clock noon.\nTerms of sole, rash.\nDited at Nelson, B.C., this 2nd day\nof July.- A.D.  1912.\nS.  P.  TUCK,\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON   EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager.\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nTHE     WORKINGMEN'S      EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nV.'ANTEI\"*\u2014Lumber pliers, $,1.60; Bwanip-\nera, $3; mine blacksmith; donkey engineer, third class; cooWee; machine\nnilners; waitresses, $J5, $-10, $36, $30; good\nhousework nhiccs, $35.\nW.  Parker,  312 Baker street,  Phono 283.\nFORT GEORGE LAND CO.\nReal Estate. Employment Office\nJACOB GREEN & CO.\nAuctioneers,   Appraisers,   Valuators.\nP. O. Box 233. Nelson, B. C.\nH, W. DAVIES\nImproved Farm Lands, Real Estate.\nGeneral    Insurance,    Rentals    Collected.\nP.O. Box 8U. Opp. City Hall, Nelson, B.C.\n\u2022as-ai\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014An opportunity for a live\nman, selling our guaranteed Yakima\nValley grown nursery stock. Exclusive\nterritory. Outfit free. Cosh weekly.\n\"Hustle,\" not experience required. Top-\npenish  Nursery  Co.,  Toppentgh,  Wash.\nWANTED-Clean    cotton    ragB.    Apply\nThe Dally News, 79-tf.\nWANTED-Marrled men to by five and\n10 acre fruit tracts.    Small cash payment,   balance In  work.    Apply Harris,\nHoneymoon   Place,   KaBlo. 97-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Growers of small fruits to\ncommunicate at once with the Koot-\nenay-Columbla Preserving Works, Nelson, B.C., Btatbig varieties grown and\napproximate quantities for sale      309-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Fruitgrowers, send your\nsmall fruits to the Nelson Jam Factory\nand help to maintain a borne industry\non strict!'* Canadian lines. Have your\nfruits mado into jam that Is a credit to\nthe Kootenays. Gut our prices. J. A.\nMcDonald, jLtf\nWANTED-Afen wauled for sawmill, yard\nand camps, $2.60 to $3 per day.    Apply\neither in  person or by letter to Adams\nRiVor  Lumber company,   Chase,  B,C,\n  51-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Experienced   teacher.    Duties\nbeginning  with   full  term.    Apply  Secretary Balfour school, Balfour, B.C.\n.  52-tf.\nWANTED\u2014First class journeymen printers and linotype operators. Minimum\nscale of twenty-four and thirty dollars\nrespectively for forty-eight\" hour week.\nApply James F. Morris & Co., corner\nGranville and Sniyilie streets, Vancouver,\nB.C. G5-6\nWANTED\u2014Girl   for general   housework,\nApply .Mrs. i\/lore.  Stanley street.   05-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Position     as     chambermaid.\nWl'ite  P.  O.   Box m.   Nelson. '67-tl\nWANTED\u2014Teacher, third or second .lass\ncertificate.    Sulary ?7il per  month.   Apply  Secretary   Elk   Prairie .School   Board,\nvia_Michel.   B.C.  tff-.n\nWANTED\u2014Clioepful,     capable     English\nwoman    desires    posit Inn    as    working\nhousekeeper  or \"help;  good cook.    Applv\nA, P. A., Kaslo, B.C. \u00bbU7-S\nWA:NTED\u2014At     once,     an     experienced\nbilker.     Apply   Choquetlc    Bros,    I Inker\nstreet.         liS-l T.\nWANTKIl-fiood    bustler,    good    proposition   to right man,   unlimited  territory\nto work In.    Enquire HOT Baker street, or\nP.  O.   Box 373.   Nelson.   B.C. >|!S-ii\nWANT El\nfine em\nApartmei\n.fni.i\nsssmaklng,   hand  work 01\n!ry,    Apply room 811  Ken\n\u2022(KM\nWANT I'll)\u2014Cnrpentcrs,    first    class   men\nwant    work.      Apply     Brotherhood    of\nCarpenters  and  .loiturs,   Box   LT.I,   Nelson.\n70-tf.\nWANTED\u2014A    position   as    stenographer\nby   experienced   young   lady.     Address\nM.  P., Rosebery Hotel,  Bosobery, B.C.\n\u2022(J9-(J\nPOULTRY AND  LIVE  STOCK\nFOIl   SALE\u2014Six   or   seven   good,   yoUlfg.\nsound   horses,    weighing   from   1800   U\nHMO each.    A. Q. Lambert & Co., Nelson.\n'\u2022OB   KALE-TWO   cub   bears.     Price  $110.\nApply   to   King  George   Hotel,   Kaslo,\ni.e. Gi-ia\nFOIl   HALE-Good    milch    cow.     Appb\n.lake Kpsiancle, Crescent Valley.    \u2022Gtl.-i\nFOR RENT\nFOR BENT-dverr apartment block.\nIdeal location, one block from centre\nof city. New; up-to-date; clean; comfortable; every room steam heated. Suites\nof two, 'three or four rooms to suit, furnished or unfurnished. Each suite has\nbath, toilet, kitchen cabinet nnd gas\nrange* Laundry and storeroom in basement, Most economical method of housekeeping known.   Prices reasonable.   3'i-tf.\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Comfortable      furnished\nhouse.   Apply 317 Robson street.      49-tf.\nFOR BENT\u2014Log house nt Four-Mile, $10\nper   .Month.    Cairns,   Willow   Point.\nEl-If.\nAUCTION  SALE OF TOWN   LOTS\nI have been Instructed by the department of lands, Victoria, to offer for\nsale by public auction at the provincial\npolice office, Rock Creek, B.C., at 10\na.m. on Saturday, July fith, all tho unsold lots lu above above-mentioned government   townsite  of  Rock   Creek.\nLots will be sold to any person making\nthe   highest   hid   above   tlie   upset   price.\nTerms of sale: \\\\ cash, balance In\nthree equal annual payments, with Interest at 0 per cent per annum.\nFor further Information  apply to\nD.  R.  TA1T,\n\u25a0M-M \"Rnek  Creek.  BC;   v\nLODGE NOTICES\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. IB, I.O.O.F.-\nMeets every Monday night In Odd*\nfellows' hall at 8 o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH LODGE\nNo. 10, I.O.O.F., meets first and third\nTuesdays in Oddfellows* hall at S o'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. 7, LO.\nO.F., meets second and fourth Thais-\ndays In  Oddfellows'  hall at 8 o'clock,\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7 imeets every\nsecond Tuesday In Oddfellows' Halt at\n8 o'clock.\nHOT^L^mEGTOHY\nshe^bro^oke^hoteI]?\nNelson, B. C.\nOne   minute's walk  from  C.P.R.   station.     Cuisine   unexcelled;   well   Uaated\nand  ventilated.   . v*\nLAVIC-NB  ft  DUNK.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B, C.\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cePar to roof. Bout sample\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath room la\nconnection. Steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAR\nJunction. All modem. Excellent accommodation for tourists and drummew.\nBoundary train leaves hero at 9.10 a.m.\nRossland-Nelson train stops for breakfast and dinner.\nW. H. Gage, Proprietor.\nST. FBAiNCIS HOTEL. VANCOUVER,\nB.C.\u2014Directly opposite the new C.P.R.\nmillion dollar depot\u2014The Royal Alex.\nof Vancouver, Catering to family,\ntourist and commercial trade. Surprising accommodations. A refined\nhouse of unusual excellence. It's central position gives Its patrons tlie advantage of nearness to shops, churches\nand theatres. Personal management.\nFree bus. Tariff. $2;D0 and $'f D.\nMaekny, proprietor.\nBusiness Directory\na^sayerT^\neT^wT^lddowsoX^s^ay^r^a^\nChemist, Box A1108, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges: Gold, silver, copper or lead,\ntl each; gold-silver, ji.50; silver-lead,\n,$1.60..' Other metals on application.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN &. CO.-P.O. Box 326.\nV. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTION-\neer.\u2014Auction rooms and warehouse\nWard street, next opera house. Box\n474.   Phone 18. 2\u00bb-tf.\nCARPENTERS  AND   BUILDERS\nROBB ft THOMPSON, BUILDERS AND\ncontractors, Victoria street, next opera\nhouse. P. O. Box 490. Special attention given jobbing and repair work.\nEstimates given. W-tf.\nCOLLECTIONS\nCON O. JOHNSON, COLLECTIONS OF\nall kinds. Returns promptly made.\nBox 252.    Phone 11393. *4ti-2ll\nWHOLESALE PRODUCE\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produc\"\nind Fruit. Houston Block, Josephine\nstreet,  Nelson, B.  C.\nNKLHOX'S QUEEN No. 241, S. O. E.-\nMeeeti 1st nnd 3rd Mondav, K. of p\nhail.    W.   R.  Campion,   Secretary.\nA. S, H.OBSWILL & CO,\u2014WHOLESALE\nImporters and Manufacturers' Agents.\nProduce, Fruits, Flour and Feed. P. O,\nBox i>4,  Nelson, B.C., Phone 121.     (I4-tf.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.. WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision' Merchants, Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices,'Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries,\nTobaccos. Cigars Buttor, Eggs, Cheese\nand Packing House Produco. Office\nand warehouse corner of Front and\nHall streets, p. o. Box 1095. Telephones 28 and f\nPAINTING   AND   PAPER   HANGING\nA. E. BENNETT, PAINTER AND\nDecorator\u2014 Wall papers and paper\nhanging a specialty. Estimates given.\nA.t work promptly executed, 614 Stan-\nlev street. Phone 311, P. O. Box 937.\nNelson.\nWILLIAM. FOWLES (LATE FOWLES\n& Player)\u2014Paper hanger and decorator,\nCorner Stanley and Silica streets. A\ngood selection of wallpapers In stock.\nOrders promptly attended to. All work\npersonally supervised. Phone 52, P. O.\nBox 160   Nelson. 291-tf.\nHOUSE  CLEANING\nNELSON VACUUM CLEANING CO.-\nFor window cleaning, carpet cleaning,\nchimney cleaning. Estimates given on\nall bouseclcunlng. Agents for F. O.\nMerg's awnings. Measurements taken\nand samples submitted. Phone 19,\nOffice Stanley Btreet. 40-tf.\nELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES\n. H. BINGROSE. BOS STANLEY STV\nInstallation of electrical machine.\"-,\ntelephone plants,  house wiring.    Repair\nwork,     Supplies  carried.     Phone    \t\nP.  O.  Box IfiJi.\nT-'-tf,\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil   Engineers.    Dominion   and   B.   C.\nLand   Surveyors.\nSurveys   of   Lands,   Mines,   Townsltes,\nTimber   Limits,   Etc.\nNelson,  fiifl Ward street-   A.   H.   Greet\nMgr.    Victoria,  lit Pcmhcrton  Bldg.;  F.\nC. Green.   Ft. George, Hammond street;\nF.  P. Burden,\nA. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice phono BSD; residence phone B71\nOffice'  Over McDcrmid & McIIardy\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. G.\nCOLIN J. CAMPBELL\nNew  Denver, B.C.\nBusiness solicited.\nAssayer\nJOHN COOPER. FROM ENGLAND,\nwould be glad if visitors lo the city\nwould use his office for correspondence,\netc. ;ill Baker street. Agent Mutual\nLife of Canada, Fire, Accident.      C2-20\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that the board\nof vulnu.li.trs to consider claims for work\nactually performed and materials supplied in connection with the construction\nof tbe Midway & Vernon railway will\nfurther consider all such claims as havo\nbeen  duly  filed  nnd  verified.\nAny claims which havo not already\nbeen so filed and verified by statutory\ndeclaration or otherwise, should he filed\nwith  the   undersigned   without delay.\nThe board will consider all claims for\nactual physical work performed and\ngoods and materials supplied In conneu-;\ntlon with tho surveying, locating or obtaining of right of way betweon Rock\nCreek and Vernon.\nIt.   F. GREEN,\nSecretary for the Board.\nAddress .Box SVi, \u25a0 Victor,!**,. B.C.      51-2JJ-*^\nExtra-Municipal Wholesale Liquor\nLicense\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that on the ISlli\nday of July next application will bj\nmado to ihe Superintendent of Provinj\nslnl Police for tbe grunt of an Extra)\nMunicipal Wholesale License for the saio\nof liquor In nnd imon the premises knowl\nns the 'Nelson Brewery, situated nt Neb-\nRon,   B.C.\nDated  this 18th\u25a0\u25a0 day of June,  19t2i   . \u25a0,\nWILLIAM. GOSNEL,\nManager for Nelson Brewing Company.\n65-23\n SATURDAY    JULV \u00ab\nCfie Baity Jjetog.\nm\nPAGE NINE\nSTAR GROCERY\nDirectly   opposite the   Dominion\nExpress Office\nStore of Quality\nSole Agents for Ridgeway'a\nFa-\nmous Teas\nAgents    for    '\nEgg-O\"    Baking\nPowder.\nSole     Agente\nfor    Beech\nNut\nBacon.\nfresh, Local Grown\nOrder enrly to nvold disappointment.   From lf\u00bb cents each.\nLocal-Grown\nCabbage\nGreen Peas\nCarrots\nSpecial Today\nNew\n6 lbs. 25c\nJust arrived   from   C'annjohurk*,\nN.Y.\nBeech-Nut\nPimento Cheese\nA tUdighlfiil luxury.    In glass at\n2~> cents.\nQuality Goods Always\nSTAR GROCERY\n.= NELSON =\nDaily News want ads 1 cent a word.\nSUMMER\nEXCURSIONS\nReturn Fares trim Kootenay Points\nj_: m\t\nWtatilliae    '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ? 00.00\nSt. Paul       60.00\nChicago       72.r,0\nToronto    .'.   ti't.uO\nMontreal     10S.OC,\nHalifax  127.20\nNew York   108.r.O\nBoston     110.00\nCorrespondingly    low    fares    tu\nIjiiany other imliils. y~ ^.\n\" \"Dates of Sale\"\"\"\"\nJuly 2, 3, 6, 7, 11, 12, 1ft, 1C, 20, 22.\n23, 211, 21), 30, 31; August 1, 2, 3, 0,\n7, 12 lli lfi, 22, 23, 2D, 30, 31;\nSeptember 4, 5, (i, 7, 8, 11, 12, 20. ,\nGood to return until October 31st.\nLiberal Stopover Privileges\nFurther particulars nnd tickets'\nmay be obtained from any Canadian\nPacific ticket agent or write\nJ. V. MURPHY\nActing  District  Pass. Agt.,  Nelson.\nGRADER ARRIVES\nAT EDGEWOOD\nContracts Let for Clearing\u2014Many Enquiries  for   Town   Lots\u2014\nNew  Laundry.\n^ (Special to Tho Dally News.)\nEDGEWGOD, B. C\u201e July 5.\u2014A new\ngrading machine for Fire valley and\ndistrict arrived on the 1st Inst., a Dominion day gift. from the provincial\ngovernment much appreciated by all\nhere, L. C. Morrison, government road\nforeman, has several miles of rouil\ncompletely In readiness for the work\nof the grader. Tbe machine bus been\nset up and is now in readiness and\nwilt be put to work ns *oon as the\nsoil has dried out sufficiently to permit of efficient work, The new grader\nwill fill a long-felt' wnnt In the locality nnd do more nnd better work on\na given expenditure.\nThe lake has fallen very rapidly\nduring the lust few days as a result of\nthe cooler weather. The big boat\nhouse belonging to T. W. Ford of Edge-\nwood landed hnrd during Ihe night nnd\nsome difficulty wns experienced in\ngetting it nfloat. There is talk among\nlocal boatmen of getting piles driven\nto which to tie up.\nMessrs. Clay brothers, recent settlers\non the Edgewood estate, hnve placed\nn contract with Mike Macintosh for\nthe clearing of five acres of their\nranch. This will be put in shape nnd\nplowed before winter nnd nil left in\nreadiness to set out to fruit next\nspring. Jpnath'ari &. Wagoner nre the\ntwo varieties of apples being most\nlargely planted nt Edgewood, the\nranchers recognizing the importance\nof uniformity of produce,\nGne of the very best Indications\nactivity in Edgewood and throughout\nFire valley is the number of ehqiilriei\nbeing received for town lots. The re\nsources of the district nnd tlie futiin\nof the town nre now being recognized\non the outside and constant enquiry\nIs being made with a view to starting\nup In different lines of business here.\nThe townsite company has disposed of\nseveral lota recently and local Indus\ntries will soon bc established to cuter\nto the stendily growing demand.\nGeorge Woodward, who recently secured three lots for the erection of a\nlaundry, has had a force of men busy\nthe lust few days clearing nnd stumping. The land Is now ready for building, active work on which will be commenced immediately and rushed to\ncompletion. Part of the materia,! lfi\nnow on the ground,\nInstructions have been received this\nweek by T, W. Ford, resident agent of\nthe Edgewood estate, from Dr. Basil\nChurch, for tbe development of his\nnewly acquired property hero. Mr.\nFord has directions to lay out wliul\nwork can be thoroughly carried out\nbefore next planting time so ns to allow of the setting of a few acres to\norchard. It is understood to be Dr,\nChurch's intention to come out to\nRdgewod next spring nnd In the meantime he will In nil probability hnve n\nhouse erected In readiness to move\nInto, Dr. Church also intends to develop and build on his town lols.\nFred Mnssey, who recently took a\ncontract for Ibe slumping of four ncres\nfor Rev. P. 8. Grove, recently arrived\nfrom India, Is making good' progress\nwith his work. The recent wet weather has intereferod with clearing operations, but these will go ahead faster\nand easier now ns the ground is thoroughly wet. R. ,T. Hughes, who also\nhad a slushing contract for Mr, Grove.\nwill have his work completed in a few\ndays,\nA large contingent left Sunday for\nNelson to take in the Dominion day\ncelebration there. Local excursionist**\nreturned on Wednesday and Thursday\nmorning and reported an enjoyable\nvisit and outing In spite of the elements.\nThe morning boat also carried away\nseveral local sports, including A. S\nJohnson. Alfred Williams, Mrs. Wil-\nI'ams nnd family nnd Mrs, Masters, to\nNakusp. A. S. Johnstone with his racing thoroughbred \"Buster\" took firsi\nprize In the ehlef horse racing evenl\nand Alf Williams ran n good second\nin the one r.-ile race.\nLocally, the day wits quietly passed\nby those renin In ing. the decorated\nflag poles being ibe only Indications of\nred-letter day.\nMrs. Masters returned on Wednesday after vislline her daughters at\nBurton City nnd Nakusp.\nfi\nNOT HRP\nMYKIDNEYS\n\"Frult-a-lives\" Cured Me\nHe's a\nWise Man\nwho regulates bis diet\u2014changes\nfood .until he finds that which keeps\nhim comfortable and in prime\nhealth.\nFor when we use the kind of food\nfitted to our Individual needs wc\nkeep well.\nAfter a few days' use of\nGrape-Nuts\nPOOD\nyou will discover\n\"There's a Reason\"\n\u2014and a profound one\nIt wilt make its mission well understood by the increase in nervous power and the indescribable,\n\"all over\" feeling of comfort which\ncomes with well digested food and\nbounding health.\nCanadian Postum Cereal Co., Lid.\nWindsor, Ontario, Canada\nCHESTERvaT,K, Ont., Jan. 25th, 1911\n\"For over twenty years, I have been\ntroubled with Kidney Disease and the\ndoctors told tne they could do me no\ngood. They said my case was incurable\nnnd I would suffer all my life. I\ndoctored with different -medical men\nand tiied many advertised remedies,\nbut there was none that suited iiiy case.\nNearlyayearago,Itried\"Fruit-n-tives\".\nI have been using them nearly all the\nlime since, and am glad to say that I am\ncured. I'have no trouble now with my\nKidneys and I give \"I''ruit-a-tives\"the\ncredit of doing what tlie doctors said\nwas, impossible. I am seventy-six\nyears old and am in first class health,\"\nGEO. W. BARKLEY.\n\u25a0t;oc a box, 6 for J2.50, trial size 25c.\n'.{'all dealers or sent on receipt of price\nt,y Fruil-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nGood Fishing\nat Proctor\n\u2022 Our bouts the best on the hike..\nWe direct you to the best fishing\npoints. Rates 25 eonts per hour\nfor rowbonts; large launches ?2 per\nhour; smaller ones ?r> per day.\nBalfcur Hotel Boat House\nMr. and Mrs. De Guns are visiting\nfriends In Nakusp this week.\nAirs. Jordan ami family returned on\nWednesday nfter u visit to Nakusp tt\ntnke In ihe ceelbratlcrn.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Kerr left on July :i\nfor Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. It, Hughes nnd Mrs.\nlien Nash and sou were Nelson visitors\nduring the celebration.\nEvory Housekeeper is Interested\nIn knowing bow to make good bread.\nOne of the secrets is using good yeast.\nWhite Swan Yeast Cukes \u20145e. package of six cukes. Sample sent on request. White Swan Spices & Cereals, Limited, Toronto,  1 mt.\nCHURCH  SERVICES TOMORROW\nAll chnnges for church service announcements must be handed In or\nphoned to Tin: Daily Xews uirico before\nG o'clock 011 Friday. If not received by\nlids time the notices will be omitted\nfrom Snturd-iy's  Issue,\nANGLICAN\u2014St. Saviour's, corner of\nWard and Silica streets. Fifth Sunday\nai'tor Trinity, s a.m., Holy Communion*.\nII   11.m.,    Matins;   7.30   p.m.\",   Kvcnsolig\n!;.\u25a0<\u25a0!,,t\nRi\n11. an\n. S. Logic,\nul 7,38 p.m.\n,1,] building,\nrla    streets.\nPKKSl'YTKUIAN\u2014rtc\npilstor.     Services   11   11.m.\nServices will bo held In t\n.tuner    Kooteliny   ami    V\nevening at S o'clock.\nROMAN CATHOLIC\u2014 Corner Ward and\nMill, Low maBS, S a.m.: High Mans, 10.110\na.m.; evening .service, 7.!i0 p.m. Rev. J.\nAUlioff.\nMKTIIitPIST-rtev. A. 15. Smith, ptis-\n\u25a0n~. Services on Sumlav at II a.m. ami\n7.'!(i p.m., conducted by the pastor,\narornlnu subject. \"Vacation Days\"*, evening subject,   \"The  Faot   and   Pt\nthe\nteto\nMil\nwill preach at Tagl\nTho Sunday school sessions nave ecu\nwithdrawn until further notice. All\npeople welcome to Hie nhove services.\nBAPTIST\u2014Public service nt 11 a.m. and\n7.30 p.m. Pastor. Rov. Charles W, King:\nresidence, 594 Hoover street, corner. .Tnsri-\nMilne   street:   telephone   WHO;   P. O. box\nSALVATION ARMY-Victoria street.\nMorning service, U a.m.; Sunday school,\n1,80 p.m.; praise service, 3 -, in.; evening\nservice, 7,80, Capt, II. Jackson, eom-\nmiidlng of fleer.\nCHRISTIAN SCTENCR-KnlKhts (.f\nvthlns hull. Eiu.de block. Sunday morn-\nig service nt ii-'Sfl.   Evenl-       -\u2022\u25a0'\t\nAberdeen\n- from 2\n:ASHIER SPECULATED; IS\nNOW   UNDER  ARHE3\ni(By Daily News Leaped Wlre.1\nOH1CAGO, July ii.\u2014Howard 13. Ilar-\niei'i  28 years old,  formerly cashier n.\nihe citizens' bank of Akron, ind., Whs\niiTesied here yesterday on an Indictment charging- him with having em-\n.nnsiled $\u25a0*.* ftOu uf tho lunds uf tne Institution in tflll.   The bank wns found\n\u25a0d by A. I1. ILirier, father ot thoypunj.\nman. Hurler wns taken buck to Indiana by Sheriff Sheets of Pulton\njoliuty, who -erved the md.ciment o.\n,ilm. 'lite young- man Is said tn liavi\nspeculated In grain, After Hie ban\n.\u25a0 osed iis doors Hurler prepared ti\n,'.vc himself up. The directors of Uu\n.Miik pa'd all  the depositors and tin\n.me  Was   not  presented   lo  Ihe  grain;\niu:y until last June, in February\nII.liter enne lo Chicago, inCurming lb.\nherlH of his whereabouts. He wn.\nwilling in go hack and \"face Hi\nmusic,\" he said, when :m was arrested\nCARON  NOMINATED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, -luly fi:\u2014Tin- lion. J. II. T.\nCnron, former minister of agriculture\nwho sat for L'lslet In the hint parlla\ninnt, but was defeated in the election*\nby Octave Morin, bus been nominated\nus the government candidate In Matf-\n:.ii*n Inlands. The opposition candidate. Is Mr. Aisenuult,\nAgain! Saturday Bargains\nMen's Suit\nValues to\n$17.50 for\n$12.45\nHere U a \u00a3\"<>i\u00bbl lh!nn III:\nover;.:\nman who wants- < Jntitlir;\nshoVb\n;get in oh.    \"in- i-ujiuisr n\nills If\nii7.5i) tor \t\nS12.C\nAt ordinary prices yon\ncannoi\nfnd  belter   values in  111\ne'ty\nWis buy   from  ijip Iariro\n1   ami\nbest concerns in ill\" count\ny. ami\nthose who hnve hue n II\nnlscin'f\nDay    mil.   im matter at\nwhaj\npr'ee, know full will tint\nt B-nvt\nthem 100 cents value loi\nevery'\nilollir Ihey  Invested la i\n\u2022    v\"\"\no'udiiis every Worthy un<\nIk, in-\nrlesir-\nable pattern \u2022 and weave,\nihut   :t\nman would want.    Your\not this sjiSsr.il .1 coUa'clloi\n$12.-15\nWomen's      ^Women's\nSuits    Kfis^   Coats\nWomen's Ku'ts, mado\nor fine quality serges,\nwhipcords, panamas nnd\nfancy m'xi d weaves; In\nc very wanted shade In-\nelndinK the popular\ngreys and tan:-: cverv\nsuti is tailored to per-\nfection and possesses\nthe    correct      linos    of\nWomen's Ceils, made\nfrom fine-juil.ty ser\u00a3es,\nWildcards, pan -imafi.\nlight weighl Iweeds,\nele.,    with    square    or\nrovers; some trlmnidd\nwilh reversible cloths\nothers   with   striped   or.\nfashion. Foduced  prices\nfollow:\nItestilar values to\nSliL'.r.i); special clearing\nPi-ce    $14.95\nTtogular values to\n$27.r>0; special clonrlhg\nprtce    $1805\nRi\nvain\npla\n\"Ik,     fastenin\nIII!1\ntons.     Reduced    prices\nfollow:\nnoBUlar vain s to\n$l8.ii0; special clearing\nprice   \u00a512.43\n$30.00;   special  cleaflns\nprice    $18.75\nNew Bordered\nVoiles and\nFoulards to\nSell Saturday\nat 40c Yd.\nNow Bordered Voiles, one of\nthe season's favorites for waist.\"\n.\u25a0mil drsssts; corhes in email spot\nrffeets of old rose, grey an-'.\nli'neK wilh fancy border; !!!>\nInelies wide. Eesiiiar EtOc; for\nyard     '0=\n\u00bbI recr.'zotl   f ar's\u2014Another\nvery handsome mal.i-Ial for\nwai.sls, ilrcKSca, ele.; comes 80\n'nches wide In TOT so.it effeolf\nwith fancy bordrag pllniles are\ncidct h'.ui and groy. r:e;,ulai\n:oc;   for,  yard    o0r.\nH Vacation Necessity\nIn  anticipation nf thn  i sual dimand at thin S'3ar,-in of tho year for trunks and au:tca--5s wc  have bocn busy iininn up our Ltock.    It will\nhe good  newc fo tlio holir'ay-mnkcr to le.irn that wo are overstocked  in  travelling  requisite-;,  and  havo  decided  to  pries  them  on  n   bas's\n{[that will  make no appreciable addition to vacation expenses.    Fo.iowintj are a few lines:\n\u00bbJ    HEAVY    CANVAS    COVERED   STEAMEH   TRUNK,   32   inches\n1 lomj; two laathsr straps arc und; brass trimmings. A vary strong\ntrunk   and  excellent vaiuc  ^L$G00.    Special  pric.; $5.\"5\n2 PAINTED CANVAS COVERED   STEAMER   TRUNK    38   in-jlico\nSlon-r;   braes   plated  trimminGc; two straps around; good cl.-isnj nnd\nMiinccG;   Ev.cclcior  lock;   reg. lor valuo $3.00.    Special  price.. ..$7.0]\nS PAINTED DUCK COVERED TRUNK, with braes p!al:d trim-\nminns and Excelsior lock; two heavy straps ri round, with full covered  tray;   32  inches long;   i opular valuo $11.    Special  prico. .$9.65\nSUIT CASE, mad'; of ini':cr;cd Japanaso ninlting; leather hound\nand leather ;erncrs; vtry neat and light. Th's casn is made extra\ndcop;  14  inches  long.    Rcge ar value $-1.25.    Special price $3.70\nSUIT CASE of imitation rllinator, real leather, with leather corners; neat checked cott-in I ning; press r.traps in body; nizo \u00a3\u25a0!\ninches.    Regular $3.50.    Gp;. inI prico   $5.70\nSUIT CAGE cf genu'no le; ther; doublo lock; iron frame; chirt\nfold in i^over; figured cloth I ning. R'jgu'ar Value $2.50. Special\nat     $7.45\n-iL^\nLook Out for Our\nBig July Clearance Sale\nCommencing next Monday, when we will offer unheard of bargains in all\nDry Goods, Millinery, Ladies' Ready-to-Wear, Gents' Furnishings, House\nFurnishings, and Boots and Shoes.\nThe Hudson's Bay Company\nINCORPORATED 1670\nINCORPORATED 1670\nNELSON NEWS OF IBE BAY\nM, K. MoQnarrla Is expected tn rc-\nnni I'njui a Visit tn the cousl tomorrow\n.'vening,\nPhlliaa Turpln ot OaKscltnan, (int., is\n.in n visit tn Ida sister, Mrs, il. rjormmd,\nStanley street.\nMrs.  E.  Watt   nnd  Mrs] -Alliin arc  tlio\nindies In chars ' iln' Cliarlty orirantwi-\ntlon tor tin- moiilh ot July.\nThe Fllrtlne Prlneaia\" Is Included In\nHie Helectlonu heinf! played hy tho Uem\ntheatre orclieatru   Uus evoiilng.\nTho Preahytcrinii Sunday school picnic\nin I'nictur, whifii \u00bb'\u00bb9 to have boen-'netd\n;t   Wcdnt'sdav,    '.as   lieen   liideniiit.lv\npostponed,    it   will   iiossilily   lake  Plact>\nnine day In Au-iii>t.\nClierrius which are said to he Kiime ot\nthe finest ever Bl'iiWll In ICflOlOnay are\nliehiK piieked liy .lames .lolmstotie Inr\ndisplay as part nf ihe iBrltlsh Colimibln\nexhibit at thu   Winnipeg fair.\nAfter a vacation spent hi various parts\nif Canada, w. \". Miller, sitporlntendo\nif   tlie   Nolai \"   '       '\"\nUna returnei\nis no plapo lh tin\nIon  of  ihe ,\nmvlctlon tiiat tlioro\n,, , \u201e,,. ,,, ,,,.   ...imlnlon with Kr.'au>L-\ntmssll.lllties than Knnteiiny. Thai tliei ,>\nwill he ureal ilevelopmonta Within tho\nnexi two or Hire.- years is Mr. Miller's\nopinion,\nChonUettB Bros,  requlro an experienced\nUakor at once. OS-tr.\nAsk\ncompany's k>\nwrite   for   Uie   Hudson's    Itnv\ntrice list. lui-tr.\n1;I. O. Windsor, ITelnUman piano tuner.\nLeave orders al rm.uda Drug ,fe Hooli\n\u00b0 e. \"53-1S\nA danee will I\n\u201en Saturday in\ncunts each,    Dai\nleld ut Fotiidiiln \"Park\n.!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     0.    Tickets,   fiO\n\u25a0j., 8.80 p.m. until  12.\nGS-1\nJust 11 dolls   as   a   ISO   anniversary\npeclul ui \u25a0> o'clock luduy ut the Variety\nStore,    tee cream   served  free to custo- ' eel   Is   covered   with   a\nniers  spending  line   or nvcr. ',a-l    The   next   service   to   ltd\n\"\"  'lilli   ded'iea'lii.l\/'senli\nlllo relief fund,  and  i\nKing George Cafe, Hull street, serves\ntlm boat \u00a35 cent dinner In Nelson. Neat,\nclean place to dine. Short orders a\nspecialty.   Harry C. Holmes, proprietor.\nakin;\ned  mil\nIII\n.Mr.   and   Jliss   Husk   en-\nTHE REALTY PULSE\nA garden party and band enncert will I on ihe occasion or the tennis tountii-\nlie Held nt the -home of Messrs Gibson meat between Kokauce and Willow\nand Mi-Kay, X'l Vernon stfivi. tills even- i Point. Tlie Raines were as follows:\nIng. There will be an admission fee \u201ef , Udles doubles, Mrs. M\/cCIure John and\nHi   cento.     Dainty   refreshments   will   lie Ujm   HnllPtt   ol    Kokmiee   won   agn list\ntl!!li^a'v\"w,'ll\"l\u2122rhi 'wlillo.' '\" ' \"   \u2122 I eaeli\"other l\u00bbtwcon\"T.  P.\" vrSSi'iirancli\nHARROP NOTES\nfSpeolal to The Daily News.1\n1-TA.nilOP, B.C., July T,.-.\\ meeting ot\nthe All Saints branch of ihe Woman's\nAuxiliary was held at ihe residence of\nMrs. .1. D, Ker. The ladles are all very\n'busy milking a variety of pretty and\nuseful articles t\u00bbv their raney sale at\nthe garden fete on July 31 In Mr. Husk's\ngr.mmb-. It Is hoped that all who ean\ndo so will attend (his foto. The ladies\nof both St. Michaels and All Saints\n'branches nro working hard to Insuro it\nnumerous,' including tennis, sports,\nshooting gnllery, fortune telltiu; and a\ncouple of shorl plays, aad Iherc will also\nlie  refreshment and  Ice  cream  slulls.\nTht' dedication i\u00bbr tiie new eliurch hero\ntook place on l-'i'ldav ul'lcttio,ai al 2M\no'clock, It Is of wood, painted oiilslile\nIn grey and green but the Inside is un-\npnlntCd and Is to he oiled. The color\nsehenie of the si I tar frontal, I K markers, etct is red und goia, und the ehun-\nr.  i:. \\v\nplckilii; strawberries ami other small\nfruits for their jam faclorv in Nelson.\nThe strawberry crop lias not been troo.i\ntills year, llic hcrrles liclim small owin^\nto Ihe dry weather this sununcf. The\nranchers have also lind bad luck with\ntheir    cherries,   nllhoindi    there   was   a\nIt's Warm Mow\n-But\nConsider a  Moment\nIf your Ctirnnco hoods overhauling\nor you think of installing a new hetil-\nIng system, don't delay until cold\nweather is upon you,   Now is lho Umb |\nto act. We will promjitly and effh-4-\netitly solve your hoalitng problems nnd\nguarantee a warm and comfortable\nliomo next winter,\nfi. K. STRACHAN\nAgent   for   Gurney-Oxford   Stoves\nand   Furnaces\nblossoms,  the fruit da\nance, with the result that ihe boat tipped over, throwing Mrs. liourko and\n[Sheen into the water. Luckily il was\nnot at all deep and  they  were'none the\nSTOCKS\nWE  WILL   BUY\n200 Slnniliiiil  tl.l'.O\n1000 Lucky Jim  21\n2000 Royal Cnlllorles  nriVr\nWE WILL SELL\nmo 11. c. Connor  ma\nloo-SOO SUimlard   1.7S\n500 Kootenny QoW  * .37\nmo lirliish Pacific Cool  05\nE. B.  McDermid ife\nStreet, Nelson B. C.\n PAGE TEN\nC!ie BaWp'Jttto&<\n8ATURDAV ..vr  JULY \u2022    l|\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n*R. J. Busli of FrulU-ale Is viHlllng th.\nJohn   Watson,   rancher  of  Lakeside.   Is\nsiuying at the AiadUen.\nProvincial Constable Simpson of Km\nreached   tbe  city  last  night.\nD. V. Thomas of Halfour is among\nthose registered at  the yutens.\nJohn Godfrey of Cruiihrook is a visitor\nIn tbe city, being registered at the Hume,\n. During their visit to Nelson the British\nbusiness men will stay at the Btl'alh-\ncona.\nMrs. J. J. IHokey of Erie returned\nlast night from Chicago; being registered at ihe  Madden,\nFred A. Starltey expects to go up to\nHariop this afternoon and will return\ntomorrow  evening.\nMiss Alexander Gallon, late of this city,\nwas married on June 211 to C. Westaway\nat Kamloops, B.C., by Qtev. c. Ladner.\nW. E. Glenn of Trout Lake was 111 the\nCity on his w.iv .to the old country, being registered last night at the Madden\nhouse,\n, R. T. Miles, representing Tuckets,\nLimited, of Hamilton, Out., and one of\n,the most popular elj-ar travellers In the\nprovince,  Is In the city this  week.\nJohn L. Retallack of Kaslo reached\nthe city lost night and Is a guest ul the\nStrathcona. Me will aid in the welcome\nto the British business men tomorrow\nand Monday.\nW. Q. Thomson will be ordained\nelder and Inducted at the morning service tomorrow In St. Paul's Presbyterian\nchurch when tin: Sm-raiucui of the Lord's\nSupper  will be observed.\nStorke Steveson appeared before Police\nMagistrate Irvine In the city police court\nyeclerday nioi'nlng charged with creating\na disturbance on Tuesday and was discharged with a warning.\nNelson Tioyal Orange lndge No, lGfti\nwill hold Its annual divine .service In the\nBaptist church tomorrow. All brethren\nand visiting brethren' are renuesled to,\nbe at the  K.  of P.  hnll .at ti.4.1 o'clock.\nThe    annual    garden    parly    of    Kt.\nUnequalled for Dener.il Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelson, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nPicnic Ham\nCooked nnd sliced just as you\nlike it.\nMaggi Soups\nare   taking   well   nnd   giving   good\nsatisfaction.    They  tiro\nMoney Savers\nOnly 5 centa for three plates of\nsoup, nnd they are\nTime Saves\nas   well   as   they   take only a   few\nminutes to prepare.\"\nWe have also a fine line of hot\nweather foodstuffs. Ask about\nthem.\n.. Fine..\nDairy Butter\n3 lbs. for $1.00\nC.A.Benedict\nGrocer\n^GEM\nThis  Theatre  is   Disinfocted  Daily,\nSelection,  \"Tho   Flirting   PrinceoB,\"\nby Orchestra.\nEdison  Feature:\nFor the Commonwealth.\u2014Produced In co-operation with national\ncommittee on prison labor,\nA Mardl Mix-up.\nPathe's Weekly.\n10c.    ADMISSION    10c.\nFor Rent\nA six roomed house on the\ncorner of Stanley street and\nMines Road, containing three\nbedrooms, dining room, parlor,\nkitchen, bathroom, pantry nnd\natone basement. This house has\nJust been renovated throughout\nand Is in first class condition,\n,925 per month.\nA three roomed \"\"cottage, No.\n1008 Hall atrcet, (10 per month.\nSeveral furnished houses for\nthe summer nt $3B and *40 per\nmonth.\nH. & N. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nyju\nThe\nBeautiful\nScenery\nsurrounding our city can be brought\ndown to you with a pair of our\nspecial value Prism Binoculars and\nField Glasses.\nPrices $6.75, $11.80,\n$18 to $28.25\nThese are special values,\nGet Ready for the Preserving Season\nEconomy   Jars  now  in  stock\n\"Plntsfper dozen \"\nQuarts,   per  dozen   ..\nHalf gallons, per dpzi\nTops,   per  dozen   \t\nRubber   Rings,   Tar\ndozen   for  2fiC.\nMason .Sealers\n.ti.co \"Tpintsrper*dozen  ........',!.'..$1.00\n. 1.75      Quails,   per dozen  1.26\n. 2.25     Half gallons,   per dozen     1.50\n.    .25 Order   your   preserving   cherries\nnd,   2     now.    Some nice Richmond's in today.\nj. a. irving & co.izr*rsup\u2122^%\nSaviour's Woman's auxiliary will be held\nun Tuesday uftenioim and evening next\nat the residence uf Mrs. Frank I'letclit-r.\nThere will he a sale uf aprons in connection.\n.T. J, Trough ton, an artist. Is exhibiting a painting of his own of a muuii-\n'light scene nn the ocean, In \\V. O.\nThoniHijii's liookHtore window, lb- Is on-\ngngfil In painting a picture of Cottonwood fall: '    -\"   '  ' \"\u25a0'\nday\nNVIsi\nlb-\nnth, al-\nThe\nC. A. Drake Co.\nPhone 101    ' Nelson. B.C.\n911  Stanley Street\n'For Men Only\nYes, the nern Junior Safely\nRazor Is \"for men only\" nnd we\nrecommend this wonderful little\ninstrument to be the finest\nshaving implement that can bo\nbought for so low a price,\nA Clem Jf.,Razor complete wilh\nseven Damaskeen blades, all\nmetal handle, and plush lined,\nleatherette     box.      Rutherford's\nPriM'        $1.00\nGillette Razors   .$5.00\nAutostrop  Razius     5.00\nHokerV Nor-thf-ru Ughts... 1.50\nBoker's   King   Cutter     2.00\nAutomatic    Stropping1   Machine*]     1.25\nSee these razors in  our windows.\nRutherford's\nDrug Store\nSee Kerr apartment Tor rent, ad on In-\nddo page, 3ll-tf.\nHlg bargain trays as n 25c anniversary\nspecial today  at 2 oYlock at the Variety\nStore, TO-'\nThe great somi-annual pro-inventory sale at the Hudson's Bay stores,\nfor which so many havo been waiting,\nwill open nixL Monday and continue\nfor two weeks.. Tiie careful buyer will\nsave big money by delaying purchasing\nuntil then, when extraordinary reduc\ntions, ranging team 10 to 50 per cent\nwill be made on all lines in general dry\ngoods, gents' furnishings, ladies' ready\nto wear mi'lincry, house furnishings\nand boots and shoes,\nNELSON BED FROM\nBEAUTY'S GARDEN\nCity    Never    Looked    More    Beautiful\nThan at Present\u2014Sweet Perfumed\nHewers Flourish\nNever before has Nelson presented\nsuch ti truly beautiful aspect us now.\nand this is largely due lo her hundreds of flower gardens In which the\nroses so strongly feature. Then too\nthere hardly remains a street thai is\nnot boulevarded and shaded Willi\nmaple trees. - Even Ihe mountains\nwhich so short a time ago wore burned\nand bare, now gird in the city with a\nperfect wealth of verdure. The color\neffects are exquisite.\nNelson has often been compared to\nan oasis In a desert, and called a bed\nfrom Bfiauty'R1 garden. Few would\n\u2022mw fl'spiite her riehl to such seerrij\nIngly flattering similes.\nAmong tin- gardens which claim\nspecial prominence are those of tho\nprovincial Jail, English church, Catho\nlic church, Kootenay Lake General\nhospital and Harold Selous.\nTlie jail .garden itself Is a bower\nof beauty, and the English church\nwith its rambling pink ruses and nicely\nkept lawn and hedge, presents a pic-\nlure that would delight the eye of the\nmost critical artist. Tho grounds of\nIhe Kootenny Lake General hospital\nare attractive and refreshing nnd\nwould do credit to any public building\nin tho interior or British Columbia,\nMr. Selous* garden holds a restful\ncharm all Its own. Tlie latticed arches\novergrown with honeysuckle and rows\nof neatly kept flower beds are most\npeturesque, and in the evening tin-\nsweet fragrance from the flowers is\nwafled   for   bluclCB.\nHardly a home In Ne'son Is void of\na rose garden and the finest quality\nand varieties have been chosen and\nil is generally anticipated that by next\nwason Ihe long anticipated rose carnival wbl come off.\nDr. Martel's Female Pills\nNineteen Years the Standard\nPrescribed and recommenaeil for women's\nailments, a scientifically prepared remedy\nut proven worth. The result from their\nuse is quick and permanent. For Bale\nat all drug stores.\nEstablished 1898\nThe Sign of tho Fish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House\nEverything   for the   Fisherman\nE. Sutcliffe\n411 Baker Street Nelion, B.C.\nARCHIE BISHOP\nWINNER OF CUP\nGreat   Record   at   Lethbridge   Shoot\u2014\nChampion  of Alberta and Eastern  British Columbia\nfSpuria 1 tn The Pally News..\nLETHBRIDGE, Alia., July fi\u2014Archie\nBishop won li'gh amateur average\nshut here today, wilh OG out of 100,\nand also won the championship of(,Al-\nhorta and eastern British Columbia,\nand accompany Ing cup. He was also\nhigh on nil targets over professionals,\nwinning high average medals using\nWinchester shells.\nROWING CLUB TO\nPRESENT PRIZES\nFlannel  Dance to bo Held Next Wed'\nnesday  N<ght and Trophies to\nbe Awarded\nThe prizes won at the (Rowing clui\nregatta on Tuesday and Wednesday o\nthis week \"'ill lie |iivscii!ed at a dance\nthe first of the season to be held by Ui<\nclub In the Nelson Boat & Lmim'li cam\npuiiy's dance ball on file water lion\nnext Wednesday night. Tills was de\nelded at a meeting of the exeiutlvo o\nthe Howing club hi the Y.M.C.A. last\nnig! it.\nTlie dance will be a \"flannel\" or \"shirt\nWttlSt\" affair, for which the elub haa\nbecome well known after the schedule\nof similar functions hint year. This, the\nfirst of the season, is expected to be a\ncomplete success judging' 'iy tlie on-\nthtmliiHin with which it is being taken up,\nA eominlttee uf ladles was appointed\nlast night to look after the refreshments.\nIt will be composed of Mrs. Tannins Uen-\nnett, Mrs. E. K. BeoBton, Mrs, DesBrl-\nsay, Mm, William Irvine. Airs, t'euige\nJohnstone and (M^s. Ball, Tlie actual\ndane,. committee will l\u00bb; 13, Robinson, C,\nHeeslou and Harry Bennett. The dance\nis to he a public one and not eonrined\nto club members.\nAt Ihe supper table,  tile prises  won   111\n\"Wo can help you to\nKeep Your Lawn Green\nGarden   Hose Lawn   Sprinklers\nLawn  Mowers Grass  Clippers.\nAlso everything  for  the garden.\nTrowels Rakes Watering Cans\nSpades Hoes Etc, Eto.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\n-  Wholesale and Retail.\nTORONTO HAMILTON\nNelaon B. C.\nWINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturing      Jeweler,     Watchmaker and Optician.\nOveralls, Shirts\nand Shoes\n\"Chtapeit In th. City\"\nThe Ark\nNew and Second Hand Furniture\nPhone L395 606 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.\nDally News Want'Ads, get results.\nStarland Theatre\nMeyer.' Starland Orchestra\nTanhauser Feature,\nIN THE CHORUS\nANNA HARRIS IN THE CHICAGO\nSWIMMING   MARATHON\nAUNTIE  AND  THE  COWBOYS\nComedy.\nReliance  Drama.\nTHE   8TRAIGHT   ROAD\nADMISSION  10 CENTS\nIF  YOU'VE  ANYTHING  TO   BUYOR SELL, TRY A NEWS WANT AD.\ncI^mofoaS\nJust a little better than any other\nRolled Oats made. Packages of 1 1-2\nlbs. and 4 lbs. each. Ask'your grocer.\nThe Brackman Ker Milling Co., Limited!\nWaters & Pascoe\nBuilders and\nContractors\nAre taking down the old Congregational church, Nelson, B.C. and\nhave for sale cheap a quantity of\nsashes, doors, etc., etc., suitable (or\na hall, church or similar building.\nSee them at once at their office\nor on the site.\nP.O. Box 836 Phone 164.\nBe Particular About Baby's Food\nESPECIALLY   IN   HOT   WEATHER\nIt la always necessary to be particular about the freshness of Baby Food, hut it is absolutely necessary to\nIn; particularly  careful during  the liot weather.\nBADY FOODS OF ALL KINDS -Allenbury's No. 1, 2 and 3, Horliok's Malted Milk in all sizes, Nestles Milk\nFood,  Mellin's   Food,  Benger's   Food,   Robinson's   Patent   Barley,   Eskay's, Fairchild's.    In fact all the foods.\nNew goods arriving dally, which insures you of fresh goods. Everything to make the baby comfortable.\nFeeders of nil kinds, soothers of all kinds, nipples, teething powders, teething necklaces, teething rings.\nTALCUM POWDERS OF ALL KINDS\u2014We recommend and guarantee the Kexall Talcum Powders, knowing them lo be absolutely pure, delicately  perfumed nnd delightfully  refreshing.   See window display.\nThe Poole Drug Co., Ltd.\nWe never sleep.\nTHE  REXALL STORE\nNelson's Leading Druggists.\nAlways at your service.\nI am sole agent In Nelion for\nthe famous\nBlue Bell Crean Separator\nOlivtr and John Dear* Farm Implements,  Studsbakar \u2022 Wagons\nand Carriagsa\nTheae     lines     an ;*  celebrated\nthroughout America and no better\nmakes are on the market.\nJAMES  MALCOLM\nPhone 221 P.O. Box 163\nCor. Vernon and Jostphlns Its.\nFor Rent\nWe offer to rent the whole or\npart of our 50x80 foot concrete\nbasement of our new building, located on. trackage and elevator\nservice Included If desired, or we\nwill rent space for storage purposes on second flood. Building Is\nnew and well built and Insurance\nrate Is low.\nTaylor Mitt & Elevator\nCompany, Ltd*\nPhone 238.   Foot of Stanley 8t.\nthe various events In the regrctta wll\ni\u00bb? presented by William Irvine, preslden}\ni,r the elub. und Mrs. Irvine. T\u00bbe danei\nwill commence at ii.30 o'clock.\nCANADA  REPRESENTED\nAT HEALTH CONGRESS\n(By  Dally  News' Leased Wire.)\nWashington; July b,\u2014panada i\u00bb\nnow to have a prominent part In tho\n1'Dl'li Ihtiii'iWtinniil 'congress oh'liygielle\nnnd demography, which meets In\nWashington September 23-28. The\nofficers of. tho congress have just received word from ihimcs Whfte, secretary of tbe commission on conservation aL Ottawa, of whicii Hon. Clifford\nSifton is chairman, stating that the\ncommission would.,,he represented at\nthe congress.\nIn the same mall notification was\nreceived from .1. 'D;- Page, medical superintendent of tlio Quebec immigration hospital, connected Willi the Canadian department of the Interior, that\nDr. Em|le Nndcuu of Quebec would be\none of the representatives'of tlie department.\nTwenty-five foreign countries are to\nbo represented at the hig health\ngathering ami delegates from every\nstale in the Union have been named.\nThere nre lo be about 5,000 delegates\nto the congress, making it the largest\ngathering of Its kind ever held.\nThe American railroads have just\ngranted special rates from all points\nfor the occasion. A fare and a liulf\nfor the round trip has been named as\nIhe rate.\nBANK   CLEARINGS\nFIGHTING FOR\nSASKATCHEWAN\n(Tl*\/ Tin!\nTORONTO.\nfor five days\nNews  Leaned Wire.)\nJuly    5.-iUank    clearings\nmi    1.1,0   \u2022\u2022\u25a0 .>\u25a0\n1911    :\n? 48,042,1*46\n.....   23,934,168,\n\u25a0L,ti*,;i,!'.\"i5\n    4,m,m\n      1.628.USG\n      1.B22.2W\nm,m\n        W'B'H\n527,3G9\n.....     1,197,861\n..\u2022$172,7W,:iS5  |W3-716,S27\nDaily News Want Ada. aet results.\nCampaign  Most Vigorous Ever Waged\n\u2014Affidavit and  Arresting Stage\nHas Arrived.\nVl'.v'Oiillv News Leased wlre.V'\nREGINA, July 5.\u2014The polftlcal campaign which somewhat abated owing\nto the disaster which befell Regina has\nbeen resumed with almost as much\nbitterness as ever. The newspapers\nhave returned,to Ihe onslaught with\nrenewed energy. In Regina Itself the\nwork of rebuilding is more importnnl\nthan politics and there Is little interest outside of the organization, but\nthroughout the province the campaign\nis Ihe most vigorous ever waged In\nSaskatchewan. The affidavit and* arresting stage has now been reached.\n,T. .Toxon, a Winnipeg detective, and\nWilliam Shields, a homestead Inspector, have been arrested by the\nliberals under section 228 of the election net nnd are In Jail In Regina\nwhile It is understood that counter\nWin rents have been Issued by the Conservatives. An application was made\nbefore Judge Johnstone today to admit Shields to ball. H. V. Blgelow,\nwho appeared on his behalf, said he\nhad been refused even the privilege of\nseeing the prisoner and described the\nmethods such ns would be used by\nTurkey. As the attorney general's department was not represented, the\ncase was poslponetl until tomorrow\nmorning. Both sides are importing\nspeakers from Alberta and Manitoba,\nHon. Frank Oliver, Hon. A. G. Mao.kay,\nHon, Duncan Marshall and Hon. C, W.\nCross nre here In the interests of the\nLiberals. J. A. Ewing of Edmonton,\nBernler, M.P.P., and other Manitoba speakers nre stumping on behalf\nof the Liberals. The fight is becoming a federal battle for the possession\nof Saskatchewan.\nLiberals Claim Seat\nSASKATOON, Sask,, July 5\u2014A dispatch from Humboldt staled that the\nLiberals are claiming the >seat of\nVonda by acclamation, There are\nthroe candidates In tho field but all\naro apparently supporting the Scott\ngovernment. At a meeting held lnsl\nnight In Vonda hy Hon. A. Turgeon all\nthree candidates were on the platform\nwith the attorney general. Mr. Wright\nnnd Mr, Larew who ure In the field\nwith the present member, A. P. Totzke,\nboth appealed to the electors for support for themselves and the Scott administration.\nKOOTENAY FRUIT LAND\nArrow Lakes B. C.\nSituated at Ttohson, Ihe centre of a well sell led and thriving fruit\ngruwlng district   On government road) close to lake shore .\n17 ACK1SS\u2014Five acres planted with fruit trees. Dwelling\u2014Spring\nwater piped inlo house,   Stables, etc.   Price $4,r.0O,   Terms.\n13 A.CRES\u2014Five acres In clover. Two hundred and fifty fruit trees.\nSix-roomed house.   Price ?2,7B0. Terms:   $l,7fi0 cash, balance on mortgage\n15 ACHES\u2014About 30 feet above lake. Slight slope up from the water.\nPractically all cleared, ready for planting. No finer piece pf land. Price\nHBOQ.    Terms: 10 per cent cash, 10 per cent yearly:   Interest 7 per cent.\n10 Vi ACRMS\u2014Particularly desirable lot, Easy clearing. Close tot neigh\nburs. Price $1,750. Terms: 10 per cent cash, 10 per cent yearly; Interest\n7 per cent.\n800 ACRES\u2014Twenty-five miles from Robson. Good bench fruit\nland. Spocial price Jlfi.00 per acre. Terms: one third cash, balance six\nand 12 months; interest 7 per cent.\nIf Interested write for fuller description of these properties,\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C.\nKeep Cool\nCome and rest In our cool and\ncomfortable parlor and If It Is your\nwlBh we can serve you with our\nown make \"Ice cream and soda.\nHave you ever tried them?\nChoquette Bros.\nThe   Pure   Ice   Cream   Makers.\nSHIP OVER HALF MILLION\nP9,IJNpS\u201e0(t:,rPLI,8T,ERCOPPER\n(Special to The Dully News.t .. .\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., July 8\u2014Tho\nblister copper sh'pments from the\nGranby for the week were 520,000\npounds, making tt total for the year\nto date of 11^330,000 pounds.\nTO BUILD NEW\nMILL AT HEWITT\nPlant Destroyed  by  Fire Will  Be  Replaced\u2014Water    Concentration\nProved  Success.\nDirectly -the plans have been com:\npleted tenders will be called for the\nconstruction of a new mill at the\nHewitt mine at Silverton to replace\nthat recently destroyed by fire. M. Si\nDavys, president of the company operating this mine, made this announcement at the Strathcona yesterday.\nThat water concentration, which was\nproved successful by lengthy expert\nmenls last summer and winter, will be\nthe method employed nt the mill is\ncertain, but Mr. Davys Is not prepared\nto make any statement as to the ca'\npaclty of the plant or other detail-\nuntil the plans have been completed.\nHe will leave within the next few\ndays for Silverton and will probably\nrent a residence there or at New Den>\nver for the summer.\nIf You Don't Like)\nStale Goods and\nGroceries\nDeal where the trade Is. so brisk\nthat fresh supplies are received every\nday. If there Is one business where\nquick selling methods and a constantly\nreplenished stock* are necessary, It is\ntho grocery business. Some of the\nnlco things today are:\nJumbo  Bottled Olives,  85c.\nOlives stuffed with celery or Pimento,  35c. per bottle\t\nNew Cabbage, Oroen Peas, Beets\nnew Potatoes, 6 lbs. for 25c.\nBananas, 40c per dozen.\nFine Blng Cherries, 25c. per lb.\nBaptists' Radishes, Be, per lb.\nJoy will meet you at the door.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nPhone 19\nP.O. Drawtr 097\nTHREE  KILLED  IN\nSTREET RAILWAY ACCIDENT\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTULSA,   Okla.,  Julx 5\u2014 Three,persons were killed and 17 were wounded (\nwhen an interurban car crashed Into\na \"dead\" gasoline car, a quarter of a \u25a0\nmile east of Sand Springs park last\nnight.   The car was bringing 300 pic-\nilckers from the Fourth of July cele-\nhratlun lo this city,    The air brakes \u25a0\nfailed when the motormaq, tried to stop\nus  ear.    The  dead:     Carter. Baxter, '\nTulsa;   Miss  Mary  Kubly,   Tulsa;   an\nunidentified boy scout.\nDaily News Want Ads, flit roiuUs.\nRetiring from Business\nFOR SALE\nNolon Steam Laundry, Including real citato and building!.\nWell equipped and doing good\nbusiness. For particular, write\nor call\n ..PAUL  HIPQU^Prop.\nP.O. Box 48        t       Nelaon, B.C\nVacation Wear\nGoing to the seashore, the moun tains or the woods,  air,  for a little\nbreathing spell?\nIf so, take good outing   clothes  wilh you and   \u25a0    |\nget all the comfort to be had.\nTwo-piece Suits from such cool fabrics  as  serges, homespuns,  etc., etc,\n112.50, $15.00, $16.50 to $20.00\nOuting Trousei-B with belt loops,\nwith or without cuffs; flannel, serge,\nduck, etc., etc, ^  .UiafiLJ\nSoft Shirts with soft collars, .A*\"-\"'\nletic Underwear, Gauze Hosiery, Belts,\nBathing Suits, etc\nFor correct clothes\u2014better clothes and for exclusive an* classy toggery\u2014the sort you'll like\u2014wo take off our hat to no one. _\nEMORY &MMMI\nClothres, Hats ana Toggery\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1912_07_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0384672","@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":"1912-07-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1912-07-06 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\/1.0384672"}