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B. C. WEDNESDAY_MORNING. JUNE 18. 1913\nNO. 94\nGAY CROWD FILLS\nBERLIN STREETSJFOR RAILWAY CARS\nClimax   of Celebration  ofl\nKaiser's Jubilee\nSTATE BANQUET\nIN PILLAR HALL\nUpholder of Peace and Up-\nbuilderof Empire's\nMight\ntod wirii.-)\n\u25a0mporor   Wll*\n<TJv  Dally  Newu\nItKIlLIN,   .Ilino   17,   \t\nMain's silver Julilloe, which lins filial\nthe*.  Berlin  \u2022\u25a0.t.reeti*  with  tho greatest,\nenseal crowds of cell'nanis '>vcr hooi\nIn the capital, ranched ltn climax loday with visits from the allied sovereigns nnd close:! with a gain dinner\nthla evening\",  followed by a ptctur-\neBipU' I ore] tli.; lit procession of .students. The empress, although somewhat, taxed by tlie continuous festlv-\nilie*i beginning with Princess Victoria\nLouise's marriage, was nevertheless\npresent. Tho King of Saxony pro-\npuKod a toast to tlio emperor, who responded with grateful aoknowledg-\nmont of tho loyal aid that has always\nboon (-r.-inled him by his brother boy**\ner-'igns,\nTorchlight processions stated af.\n(J:4& o'clock and occupied an hour und\na ifiiiirlor in passing, Tlio students.\nmounted, In vehicles and afoot, wearing lho vnri-colored caps and ribands\nnnd tlio picturesque insignia of their\ncorps, puraded past the eastlo. on tlio\nbalcony of which wore seated the emperor and empress nnd otlior sovereign**. Tlio cheering wits unending\nnnd lho emperor bowed smilingly and\nsaluted continuously, The visit in.-,\nsovereigns started Tor tlieir homes tonight.\n\"The day of tlio people,\" yesterday,\nIn Ihe celebration of the completion\nof 26 years' reign bj* Emperor William, wan pucceeded today by tho dny\nof the allied novereigiiH of tlio federated stales or tho empire,.and Included\nttie mnyorn nf tiio thc-a oily i_g)if\nHen\u2014Hamburg, 1'renien ami Lltbrecfe\n\u2014wiio presented their congratulations\nto their colleagues at tlie castle.\nMost, of the rulers arrived in llerlin\nlast niglit or thin morning and gave\ntho sons of the emperor a busy flos-\nslon in receiving them nt the various\nstations, They gathered at noon in\ntbe pillar ball of tbe castle and then\nwero present at n state banquet presided over by tho emperor. Tile pillar tball is not In thnt -part pf ith.*\ncastle ordinarily nee3 for slate functions* It Is situated in the portion\ndevoted to pi'ivato apartments of the\nImperial family and was chosen to en-\nnblo the Empress Auguste Victoria,\nwho Is Indisposed, to participate with\nthe emperor, in the reception of the\nGorman rulers.\nTho prince regent, of Ravnrln, acting as spoltepmnii, said the emperor,\nas director of tho foreign policy of\ntlio empire, bad shown himself to be\nnn upholder of peace am] at the same\ntime ail uplmilder of the empire's\nmight; which was tho safest guarantee\nof honorable peace,\nHo praised hiin as the creator of\nGerman progress. Tbe prince regent\nthen spoke of Die economic progress\nnyulo during the 25 years' reign of\ntiter emperor ami praised bis majesty\ntho patron of every moral, noble\nand beautiful ImpnlBO In the empire.\nThe emperor was then presented\nhy the prince regent with a table cen-\ntrepleeo in the shape of a ship in\nmassive silver as an emblem of the\nunity of German rulers. The emperor\nin reply thanked' his colleagues for\ntheir steady support during his reign.\nHe emphasized among other elements\nof progress the uttoutlon devoted to\nsport and Hie cultivation of Uie Ideal\nof a sound mind in a sound body.\nPlan to Safeguard Lives of\nTrainmen '\u25a0\nFirst Impressions of the Summer Cottage Are Sometimes Unfavorable\nWESTERN FREIGHT\nRATES TODAY\nCase to Be Continued Until\nEvidence Is Concluded\nRAINBOW IN DOCK\nBEING DISMANTLED\nATill  Be Laid    Up   at    Esquimau in\nCharge of Skeleton Crew-\nGuns Removed. \/\nfBy Pally News' Leased Wire,)\nVICTORIA, 11. C\u201e June 17.\u2014The\nWarship Itninbow is in drydock for\nscraping prior ot: belay laid up. Within;; the next week the cruiser will\nhave ceused to be \u00bbn active unit of the\nCanadian navy, as it is the Intention\nof tho government to place her In\ncharge of n skeleton crew and lay her\nup at I'sipiiiualt for an indefinite period. At. tiie present time tlie majority of tbo worship's complement\nure malting plans to return to Bug-\nland and by July 1 a largo number of\nthem will have left tlie ship to entrain for the old country.\nA -number or the guns have been\nI removed from their positions aboard\nthe cruiser. Four 1--pounders and\nnil tho Maxiftifl have boen ::iK*ilpped\nand Ibe lieo-Vier piece;-, of rrmament\nnro being prepared for ijhlp-. -mt.\n|HOT WEATHER AND DRrlHT\nSUNSHINE  IN   LONDON\nLONDON, June 17.--KolL.wing the\nKflnest dny in two yearn, the weather\nagain brilliant yesler-flr*** witli HI\nhour** of sunshine. In lhe shud-v lhe\ntemperature was SI, and there wcre\npe cases of heat stroke, I\n(By Dnlly News rinsed Wire.)\nOTTAWA, -luiii- 17.\u2014A tentative order suggested by Chairman Drayion\nof the railway commission us to 11m\nstandardisation of ihe height ol\nfreight cars to 13 feet _ Inches on lines\nundor U10 Jurisdiction <\u00abf the railway\n(jommlflsion raised s6mo objections oil\ntlie ground uf discrimination ibis afternoon. ,\nThe proposal to limit the height\n<\u00bbf car.* has for iln object tbe safeguarding -if the lives of trainmen, who\narc compelled at limes to walk along\nthe roofs of cars. The question was\ndiscussed at length. The chairman\nfinally suggested that an order Hhmild\nhe made that no freight ear un any\nline under the jurisdiction of llio\ncommission should be higher lhan 1.1\nfed (j laches. He also suggested thai\n'the 'restriction should apply to ear-*\nloaded Willi freight originating in any\npoint In Canndn and destined for any\npoint In the United States or vice\nversa.\nVice-President Dalrymplo of the\nGrand Trunk objected to the arrangement 011 the ground that It would prevent the sending back of cars of\nlarger nfis_ which bad conic from tlio\nUnited States unless they were sent\nhack empty. Tho commission declared (hat such cars should not be admitted at all. However, he thought\nHint part of the order might he omitted.\nJames 10. Walsh, traffic expert for\ntiie Canadian  manufacturers,  pointed\n\"-\u2022'\u25a0:; :','..; .'\u2022 \u2014 '\u2022ur.-' Hint the proven-\nLli'ii of Canadian manufacturers and\nshippers from using1 the largo cars\nWhile United Stales shippers were allowed to bring them would work a\nserious discrimination against the\nCanadian shipper, as the minimum\ncharge was based on the length and\nnot tlie height of the cars. The United States shippers who were'allowed\nto use the high cars would pay a\nlower rate lhan the Canadian shipper who was to bo restricted. In\nother words, thp minimum ear load\nrates are bused on the length of cars\nand not on Hie cubical capacity, bu\nthat the fliini total paid by the Canadian shipper per car load would be\nlarger thitn that paid by the user of\nthe high car. Tho American shipper\nshipping to Canada would huve tho\nadvantage over the Canadian shipper\nto similar points,\nMr. Walsh suggested that the minimum should be based on cubical cdpa-v\ncity. Tlie board will consider the\nmatter and an order will be given\nlater.\nThere was some more discussion of\nUie matter of reciprocal demurrage,\n.Mr Walls appearing for the Dominion\nMillers association and lhe Ontario\nass oris ted boards of trade to ask for\nthe adoption of automatic penalties oa\nthe railways.\nMr. Marshall, on behalf! of the Toronto board of trade, presented a\ndraft suggestion for a reciprocal demurrage- system by Which\" the shipper\nwho claimed a penalty ngalnst a railway would have to file the claim with\na statement of fact and affidavits\nthat the deby had caused him injury.\nLast Stage.\nOn Wednesday morning the railway\nboard will take up what may prove\nto be the last stage of the railway\nrates case involving the question of\nalleged discrimination against the\nwest. The Dominion, provincial and\nrailway counsel, who will take part In\nthi! case have arrived at the capita)*\nsome of Ihem haying been here for the\npast 4wo days.in connection with the\nreciprocal \u2022 nnd average demurrasi\ncases which have bqen under con\nsideratlon since Monday, It Is understood, to be the desire of Chairman\nDrayton lo wind up the tnkiug of evt\ndenes and argument of counsel, and if\nthat is accomplished It; would not be\nsurprising If the hearing runs along\nmjd.il about the middle of next week.\nThere may, of course, be developments\nin connection with the taking of evidence which will necessitate another\nadjournment until later, but lt in the\ngeneral desire of all those connected\nWith the case to wind It up at the\nsitting which opens tomorrow if possible\nPARCELS  POST  BY\nFIRST OF JANUARY\n(By Dally News Incased Wire,)\nOttawa, June 17.-\u2014The post\noffice department is proceeding\nwith tbo parcels post schema with\ntho idea of having it in force by\nJanuary 1. A conference will\nshortly bo arranged with the railroad companies, and the rate*\nwill largely he based upon the\noutcome of thie. It Is Intenoeo\nalso to appoint two supervisors\nfor the system without delay and\ngenerally to facilitate the details\nof the system with a view to ito\noperation as soon at possible.\nTO\nTOM   I'dlM ION ID\nDEATH BY 001\nImpassioned Speech in Central Criminal Court.\nSherbrooke Woman Receives\nExplosive by Mail\nSet Wage Scale for\nBuilding Trade Workers\nwas\nThe arbitration board whieh\nappointed in connection with tin\nsettlement of tbo recent labor trouble\niu Nelson to strike an equal Wage\nfor common laborers, cement mixers\nand bricklayers' and stone mnsons'\nhelpers on the basis of the number of\nhours worked by the men during last\nyear's building season and this year\nrate of wages last evening came to\nthe end of its deliberations and 1\nthe  common  wage  of these classes of\nlabor at 391,'. cents per hour.\nI'nder thp new scale cement mixers\nand bricklayers' and stone* mtisone'\nhelpers will be paid $3.18 for eight\nhours, instead of $.1.50 for eight hours\nand common laborers Will bu pah\n}8,5fi*ii for nine hops, instead of. $3.2.\nfor nine hours.\nThe filial report of the board\nas f-j-llowf*:\n\"This arbitration board met In the\noffice of Toye & Toye, and unanimously agreed that, according to figures submitted to us, thc laborers\nwages he 39 Vi eents per hour, and we\nwould recommend thnt this rate of\nwage be paid by the contractor** to\nDecember 31, 1014. commencing on\nJuly 1, 1013.\n\"J. FRED HUME,\n\"JOHN   TOYE\n\"I, A, AUSTIN.\n\"JcTUiNK   PHILLIPS,\n\"ALEX.   CAKRI1-.\"\nIt  Is expected,  undor the resolution\npassed in March last by tlu* city council   Hint   the   city   will   pay   the  same\nrate as the contractors.\nIn opening Its last evening's session\nthe board called upon John Hums, Jr.,\nwon\nand T. ti. Waters, representing the\ncontractors, for a statement of their\nside of the ctue, and John Notman,\nrepresenting the trndes council, for a\nstatement of Hie men's side of the\ncase In order that some decision might\nhe arrived at between the employees\nand (lie employers upon which the\nboard might work.\nAfter bearing the parties tlie board\ndecided to proceed with its work on\nthe basis of the figures which bad already been submitted lo It. i\nAfter much    deliberation  the bonrd I\narrived at tlie conclusion that 39%\ncents per hour should be lhe common\nwage, and It was moved by Frun_.|\nPhillips, and secqnded by Alexander\nCarrie that the finding be at that\nfigure. The motion passed unanimously, and the foregoing report was\ndrawn up to be submitted to the Employers and Merchants association\nand the trades and labor council for\nacceptance.\nHARD LABOR FOR\nCONVICTED WOMEN\nDISESTABLISHMENT   BILL\nGIVEN SECOND READING\nLondon, Juno 17.\u2014Ths Wslsh\ndisestablishment bill passed its\nsecond reading in tho common,,\nthis evening by a vote of 367-278.\nThe bill was passed by the house\nof commons last February, but\nsubssquently was rejected by th*\nhouse of lords, its fate being identical with that of the home rule\nbill.\nArctic Expedition Sets\nSail from Victoria\n(By Dallv Naws Loosed Wire.)\nVICTORIA, li, C, June 17.\u2014The\nKarluk With ths StefnnsBnn expedition aboard, got away late this afternoon. At 10:30 o'clock this morning the Karluk turned within balling\ndistance of the naval yard wharf,\nwhere his honor the lieutenant-governor and Sir Richard McBrlde boarded the vessel ror tlie purpose of wishing Godspeed to the members comprising the expedition,\nThe Karluk cruised in the harbor\nMils morning adjusting: compasses,\nand at 3 p.m. cleared for lhe north,\nThe pilot who had the honor of taking the Karluk out was Capt. Joseph\nKaslo Citizens Take\nWhole of Bond Issue\nProof of the public spirit of the\npeople of Kaslo Is given by the fact\nthat the whole of the recent school\nbond issue of \u00a517,500, which could not\nbo floated in the east on account of\nthe condition of the money market,\nhas been taken up by the people of\nthat place. The Issue has, in fact,\nstated a resident of KaBlo, who was\nin Nelson last night, been over-subscribed.\nIssued to meet a portion of Uie expenditure on a new {40,000 school\nbuilding, to wbich the provincial government Is contributing a large part\nof the cost, the bonds foiled to find I\na market in the usual channels and\nfor some weeks it was feared that the\nconstruction of the building would\nhave to be left over until another\nyear.\nIt was under these circumstances\nthat the citizens of Kasto came to the\nrescue and subscribed the full amount,\ntaking tbe bonds off the hands of the\ncity, with the result that the contract\nwas let and the work is now being\nproceeded with.\nThe bonds, which hear interest at\n0 per cent per annum, are each of $500\ndenomination, and were sold at |475\neach, which is equivalent to 95 per\ncent.\nOoose, nn old Newfoundlander, who\nwill see the exploration parly as far\nas Gross channel.\nThere was an Interesting conversation aboard the Karluk yesterday\nafternoon, when a deputation of civic\ndignitaries, composed of Mayor Alor-\nley and a number of nldenneu, presented four Canadian flags to the\ncaptain of the vessel, air. Stefansson\nwas charged with the safekeeping of\nthe flags, which will be planted on\nnny land that comes within the British Empire, as the result of discovery made by the expedition.\nA ship never sailed from Victoria\nthat carried a more varied cargo. In\naddition to the heterogeneous heap of\nnutritious foods and miscellaneous\nequipment necessary for an expedition\nof this' character, there is stowed upon the deck of the ship huge piles m\noverflow supplies, In tha words of\nCapt. Bartlett, tliere is every conceivable thing from n pin to un anchor,\nIncluding 300 tons of supplies thnt\nhave been hustled aboard the Karluk\nwithin the past few days.\nIn addition to the 150 tons of coal\nstored away below decks, the vessel\nearly this morning completed taking\naboard an additional HO tons of fuel\non deck, which will be consumed during the passage of the ship from Victoria to Nome.\nSir Richard McBride presented the\nexplorer with a piece of plate in commemoration of the departure of thc\nexpedition.\nCapt. Bartlett sold today that it\nwas not only possible, but altogether\nprobable, that the expedition would\nreturn to civilization via Melville\nSound, Lancaster Sound and Baffin\nBay.\n.EX-EMFRE-SS\nEUGENIE .\nEX .QUEEN AMEX1A\n\u2022*F PORTUGAL,.\n\"*..'\u201e*.*'   .*\u2022\u25a0\n\u25a0***?*\u2022\u25a0\u25a0', _$\u25a0\u20ac\u2022,\n__< 'fe^iT -.\nE^X. QOEErTiMAR] A-5'OPHIA\nThree Ex-Quc.ni Who Mat Last Weok in Psris.\u2014Their presence in the French  capital  was a  coincidence,\nfriendi brought them together at a society  gathering that was quite unique.\nJury Recommends Mercy-\nTreason Against Almighty,\nSays Judge\n(By  Dally N-ws  leased  Wire.)\nliOHDOft, .lune 17.\u2014An impassion\ned Speech in defence or the outrages\ncommitted by militant suffragette\nwas delivered today In the Central\ncriminal court by .Miss Annie Kenney,\nwho was on trial for conspiracy, Her\naddress served to enliven the pro>\nceedlngs and her concluding words\ncreated a great impression.\n\"If I have got lo die to get the\nvote,\" she said, \"I will die willingly,\nwhatever'the verdict of the Jury toduy,\"\nThe entrance of lhe accused\u2014Miss\nHarriet Kerr, Miss Agnes Lake, Miss\nRachel Uarrett, Mrs. Beatrice Sanders,\nMiss Annie Kenney, Miss Laura Lennox and Edward Clayton, chemical adviser to the suffragettes, found tbe\ncourt crowded. Women formed the\nmajority of the audience, among them\nbeing Mrs. Winston Spencer Churchill,\nwife of the first lord of the admiralty,\nand Miss Violet Asquith, daughter of\nthe premier,\nThe Jury handed In a recommendation for mercy in the cases of Miss\nLake, Miss Lennox and Miss Barrett\nJustice Phlilimore pnssed sentence\nun the militant suffragettes as follows:\nMiss Kenney, 18 months; Mrs,\nSaunders, 16 months; iMiss Kerr, 12\nmonths; Miss Barrett, nine months;\nMiss Lake and Miss Lennox, six\nmonths euch; Mr. Clayton, 'Z\\ months,\nThe prisoners were committed to the\nthird division, wliich entails hard\nlabor.\nEach defendant was Ordered to pay\none-seventh of the cost of the prosecution, and was bound over to keep\nthe peace for a year after the period\nof Imprisonment. With lhe exception\nof Mrs. Saunders, all the women\nloudly proclaimed their Intention of\ngoing on a \"hunger strike.\"\nTreason Against Almighty.\nPrior to passing sentence the Judge\nsaid that doubtless the prisoners sincerely believed that by tlielr lawless\nconduct they were forwarding a good\ncause. \"Some of you must be religious,\" he continued. \"If you are not\natheists you must believe in a moral\ngovernor of tlie universe. I commend\nto yuu thc statement of a modern\nwriter\u2014a woman, I believe\u2014who\neh a racteri7.es thc belief that the end\nJustifies the means as 'treason against\nthe Almighty.'\"\nWhatever the motives of tbo prisoners had been, Judge I'billimore said, |\nhe must treat them as prisoners who\nhad done a very serious Injury to\npublic peace, and who must be restrained from doing further mischief\nand made to some extent an example\nto others. After passing sentence he\nOne nf the counsel hns suggested that the time for leniency hns passed, and I do not think you will meet\nwith quite the same treatment as have\nthe others. I am bound to say that if\nthc home secretary consults me, as be\noften consults a Judge, I shall take\nupon myself thc responsibility of saying to him that the ringleaders-among\nyou, at any rate, should not be let out\nof prison under any circumstances.\"\n\"Then wo shall die together,\" exclaimed Miss Kenney.\nThe -Judge\u2014If you, in the word of\nour great poet, violate tbe great canon\nthe Everlasting has fixed ngalnst self-\nslaughter, you will have to reconcile\nsuch action with your conscience.\"\n\u25a0Miss Kenney\u2014I am quite prepared\nto do that.\nMiss Barrett, excitedly\u2014We shall\nall hunger strike.\nMrs. Saunders\u2014Mr. McKenna will\nnot keep me In prison against my will.\nMiss Kenney\u2014They have got to lei\nme out or kill me, I think your summing up was most biased and unfair.\nYnu ought t0 be ashamed of yourself.\nwith a salary of \u00a36,000 a year for\nhounding women.\nA large crowd gathered outside the\nOld Bailey to witness the departure of\nthe women for thc prison, but there\nwas no demonstration.\nMutiny Suppressed.\n(By Dnily Newa Leued Wire.)\nLONDON. June 17.\u2014An attempt by\nthe Women's Freedom league to hold\na meeting in Downing street was\nsuppressed by the police. Two of tbc\nwomen. Mrs. Mary Anne Hyde and\nMiss  Bunting, were arrested.\nAnother Suffragette Released,\nLONDON, June 17.\u2014Lillian Lenlon.\nthe stiil'ra'gette who was arrested at\nDoneaster June i* and was awaiting\ntrial at tlie Leeds assizes on a charge\nof being Implicated in lhe Kew garden\noutrage, was liberated from prison today. She had been on a hunger strike\nsince her arrest.\nBLUE FLAME WHEN\nPACKAGE IS OPENED\nMystery as to  Sender of\nPackage-Postman Sends\nFire Alarm\nAl-\nWaa\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, June 17.\u2014Mrs.\nphonse BllOdeau of Hherbrooke\nblown to pieces today on opening \u201e\nsmall packet she bad received through\nthe mall. What it contained, who sent\nit or what the explanation of the\ntragedy cannot lie told. The police\nare making inquiries. Mrs. Bilodeau's\nsister-in-law, Miss Hllodeau, who\nwas with ber when she opened the\npacket, and who Is now In the St.\nVincent de Paul hospital with her\nface and hnnds badly burned, sayH\nthat when her sister-in-law began to\nopen the packet a blue flame was\nemitted, and that this wns Immediately followed by a deafening explosion.\nMrs. Bllodeau was killed on the spot,\npart of her body being absolutely\nshattered. Tbe police are investfgnt-\nIitff.\nCoroner Rnehand swore in a Jury\ntonight and took the testimony of a\nfew witnesses. Th,.. first witness was\nAlpbonse Hllodeau, husband of the\ndead woman. Hc was not present\nwhen the accident occurred, and could\ngive little evidence of importance. He\nstaled that he had nn reason to suspect any person.\nOmer Qaumont, a postman who delivered the faieful box, was next questioned. He said that tho box was\naddressed to Mr. Itllodeau and not to\nMrs. Hllodeau. He handed her, tho\nbox, wliich was about six Inches lonff\nby two high and two wide. He then\nleft, and when about 100 feet away he\nbeard tlie explosion, He rang a fire\nalarm, and upon the arrival of the\nfiremen, accompanied them back to\nthe house where they found the woman dead. As far as lie knew the\nbox was stamped with Canadian\nstamps. Dr. J. A. C. Ethler and Dr.\n.1. o. Ledoux, who made tlie post-mortem examination, and Gustav Richard,\na chemist, gAye evidence. After bearing these witnesses the inquest was\nadjourned until Thursday evening,\nwhen it is hoped Miss Bllodeau will\nhave sufficiently recovered to give her\nevidence. She told Dr. Noel this\nevening that Mrs. Hilodeuu was sitting\ndown when she opened the parcel, and\nimmediately after the explosion fell\nover  dead,\nMINISTER OF MINES\nWILL VISIT-WEST\nfBv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOttawa, June 17.\u2014Hon. Louie\nCoderre, secretary of itate, who\nIs now also minister of mines, that\nbranch having been recently\ntransferred to this portfolio, haa\ndecided to make a most extensive\nwestern trip, going as far as Dawson City, this iummer, Mr. Coderre will travel west with the\ndelegates of the International\nGeological congress, which meeta\nin Toronto 'in August. He will\nvisit all the important western\nmining centres and in that way\nwill be able to make a personal\nstudy of the needs of the depart.\nment and to becom-* acquainted\nwith the mining resources of the\ncountry.\nENGLISH   COLLIERY   FLOODED\nEIGHT  MEN  DROWNED\n(By Dally News I .wised Wire.)\nROTHBRHAM, Eng., June 17.\u2014\nEight men were drowned and many\nhad narrow escapes when Brown's\ncolliery near here was flooded today.\nIn extending a tunnel workmen accidentally tapped a water vein nnd a\ntorrent rushed in, filling the shaft.\nFIRE LOSS  HEAVY\nTORONTO, Juno 17.\u2014The damage done\nto the Wickett Crnls tannery by fire\nlast nfght Is estimated at *_\u00bb,00D, with\ninsurance of $\u00a3!6,(W0.\nThe Art of\nDressing\nThere la nothing that bolsters\nup Belt-respect ami creates self-\nconfidence like tlie feeling or be*\ning well-dressed. Certain of correct personal appearance, most\nmen will approach any person or\nsituation with ussiimncu. Conscious of an ill-cut coat or a\ngaping collar, they will often\nquail before the obaervant Blare\nof a street urchin.\nTo dress well nnd ohtnln this\nfeeling or confidence is an art.\nTo accomplish It on a limited income requires unceasing vigilance. Carefulness In expenditure\nobtains Infinitely better results\nthan recklessness. \"Look before\nyou buy\" should he the motto of\nevery thrifty man and woman.\nThe kind of looking that helps\nthe most In the shortest time Is\nthe careful reading of advertisements In the -better class newspapers. Tliey will answer for you\nthese   vital  questions:\nWhat?\nWhere?\nWhen? |\nHow much?\n PAGE  TWO\nModern Office Supplies and Appliances\nCARTON PAPER AND TYPEWRITER RIBBONS\u2014 Remington bands in\nall . olors. guaranteed in any and ovary way to give satisfaction.\nRibbons 75c each; Carton  Paper,  per box  (100)    $3.00\nTYPEWRITER PAPER\u2014Boxed, 500 sheets to the ream; all weights, per\nream    90c   to   $4.00\nSECOND SHEETS\u2014Manilla, 14 Ib. stock, per ream   Me\nEDISON     MIMEOGRAPHS\u2014Rotary  machine, $35.00.   Rotary  Self-Inking\nMachine    $52.50\nDUPLIGRAPH\u2014Penman   &  Sprang's   gelatine  device    $9.00\nDEED EOXES\u2014Shell steel, oval shape, 14x4<\/2x2>\/2 inches; good lock $1.00\nCASH   BOXES\u2014All  sizes    50c  to $9.00\nVERTICAL CARD TRAYS\u20143x5 inch, complete with cards and index 80c;\n4x6   inch,   complete  with   cards   and  index, $1.25; 4x6 inch, covered\ncabinet,   two   drawers     $3.25\nJACKDAW LEDGER\u2014Loose leaf 8x11 inch, corduroy and leather binding, steel lock, flat opening, with leather taped  index   $7.50\nSheets in all ruling to fit above, per 100  $1.25\nBLANK BOOKS\u2014Special rulings in day, cash and journals, from one to\neight columns.    Synoptics, twelve to  twenty-four columns.\nWIRE TRAYS\u201414x9 inches, 35c; Waste Basket, tin bottom   60c\nFILES,   INKS,  MUCILAGE,   BINDING  CASES,  &c\u201e   _:.\nTHE  MOST COMPLETE STOCK  IN  INTERIOR  OF   B.C.\nWEDN\nAV   JUNE 18.\nFREIGHT SHED AT\nSUNSHINE BAY\nProctor      Conservative      Association\nAnxious for More Wharves\u2014\nCreeki Cleared Out.\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Dru( Store      P.O. Box 502\nAgents lor the Remington Typewriter Mail Orders i Specialty\nHOY\/ CAN YOU\nJFE SO EASILY.?\nwtirn5nui\u00bbsiiAKEST steamers^duiada\nSAILING   EVERY   TUESDAY   FROM\nMONTREAL. QUEBEC, LIVERPOOL,\nNEW S.S.  LAURENTIC    \u2014     15,000 TONS    \u2014     NEW S.S,  MEGANTIC\nFirst Class, $92.50.   Second  Class, $53.75.    Third Class, $32.50,\nTWIN-SCREW  STEAMERS.\nS.S. TEUTONIC\u2014582  FT. LONG. S.S. CANADA\u2014514 FT. LONG.\nONLY  ONE CLASS CABIN   (II.), $50.00\nAND THIRD CLASS, $31.25 AND  UP   CARRIED.\nFor sailings and  Illustrate*] hookleta apply Company's office, 619 Second Ave.\nBeattle, three 'lours from Cherry street, or\nW. E.  KETCHUM,  Agent U.  N. Rv.,\nc, n. HAnrtiMAx, d.t.a.\n).  SMEATON, Agent, C. P.  Hy\nC.P. Ily.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nPROCTOR, B. C, June 17.\u2014A meeting of the Proctor and District Con\nservatlve association waa held in <Ji* 1 -\nIuii's hall on Saturday at 7:80 p.m.\ntho president, J. D. Kerr, in the chair.\nA lengthy correspondence waB read\nbetween A. A. Uallard, secretary of\nthe association, and R, F. Oreen, .M.I'.,\nwith regard to the wharves required\nfn the district and the erection of\nfreight ehedB upon them. Mr. Green\nslated that ho did not expect io receive a sufficient grant when the supplementary estimates were made for\ntiie building of any more wharveg iu\nthe district this session, but thut. be\nthought there would be sufficient\nfunds to erect a freight shed on tlio\nSunshine hay wharf. Mo also s;*H\n(hat J. P. Forde, the government engineer, was going to Ottawa shortly\nio dlacuBs with him the whole question of wharves in the Kootenay district, and asked tbe association to\nbring their proposals to his notice\nagain hefore the next aesslon of parliament and he would then do his heat\nto parry out their wishes. Resolved)\nthat the secretary write to Mr. Green\naud ask hlin to get tlie freight sited\nbuilt on SiiiiMliiin- hay wharf ub uoou\nas possible.\nA letter was also read from Mr.\nOreen enclosing copy of a letter lie\nhad sent to F. C. MotTatt, secretary of\nthe Nelson Conservative association,\nwith regard to the lighting of six or\nseven buoys on the west arm as aids\nto navigation.\nResolved, that ithls association petition the provincial government to\nhave all the creeks In tbe district\nproperly cleared out before the winter, especially RedCIsh, the Narrows,\nProcter und Mill creeks.\nR. 8. Francis fa acting as secretary\nIn the absence of A. A. Ballard, who\nIh at Creel lodge.\nA meeting of the directors of the\nProctor and District Farmers' institute will be held on Monday, June 23,\nfor the appointment of delegates to\nattend the agricultural commission to\nlie held at the Kootenny Lake hotel on\nFriday, .Tune _7, Instead of June 24, as\noriginally arranged.\nIn consequence of the very high\nwater In the west arm Capt. Orr of\nthe Canadian Pacific railway tag Hosmer was on Saturday able to have\nhis house towed from its original position near the Canadian Pacific railway slip up to the 'two lots which he\nlias purchased on the east side of the\nDominion wharf. The work was undertaken and successfully carried out\niy Capt. Fred Cogle with ins tug, the\nOndot.\nAlec McKay shot &, black bear nt\nhe back of his ranch on Friday morn-\nIng. It weighed 140 lbs, and was in\nbad condition.\nAnother large load of turf sods for\nthe grounds of the Kootenay Lake\nhotel has been causing trouble. It\nbroke away from the south Bide of\ntbe river, where lt had been loaded,\nnnd proceeded down stream*, and was\neventually rescued by the Canadian\nPacific railway tug Quick after a considerable amount of trouble.\nIt is understood that there will be\na dance at the Canadian Pacific railway hotel on Friday, June 27, particulars of which will be announced\nlater.\nMr. and MrB. Alford went down to\nKootenay Landing on Sunday in the\nProctor Motor Boat company's launch\nMileen to meet their two Bona, who\nare going to spend their holidays here.\nThey are at the Lower Canada school.\nMontreal, and 'the elder son distinguished himself in the school athletic\nsports by winning the four-mile crosscountry run. He also secured eight\nseconds, a good performance for\nboy of 17.\nMr. and Mrs. W. A, Sinter, who were\nmarried on Monday, Juno 11, returned\nfrom their honeymoon, which they\nhave been spending In the Sloean lake\ndistrict, on Saturday, and hnve gone\nInto Mr. Edmondson's house ou tiie\nwaterfront at Balfour.\nCapt. and Mrs. Manley of Balfour,\nwho went to England last summer for\nthe Tormer to undergo a serious operation, Intend to sail from the old country again on Friday on tbe Victorian.\nTheir party consists of themselves,\nthree children, lady cousin and a pupil.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry T, Cherry, with\nMr. and Mrs. McMurray, who have\nlieen staying with them Tor somo\ntime, started for Vancouver on Monday and expect to be away till next\nSunday.\nMiss Verna Appleton, who is a nurse\nIn the hospital at Cranbrook. Is spending a holiday with her brother, O. P.\nAppleton, of Sunshine bay.\nand see how things were getting on.\nlie left again on Sunday by the Kuskanook for Nelson, en route to the\nArrow lakes.\nTbe bear with two cutis which was\nprowling around the road camp was\nHbot the other -day by one of the Molly\nGibson teamsters. Another bear has\nbeen killed on Mr. Busk's point by an\nIndian.\nThe recent rainstorms have considerably swelled the strawberres and\nwith a few daya of hot sun they will\nbe ready for picking.\nCRESCENT VALLEY N0TE8\n(fSo-Bclal to Th* nail* Nows.)\nCUESCIONT   VALUOY. B.  C, June\n-Tho Crescent Vulley band Is glv.\nins a concert and dance on June 20.\nThe local ball team mixed with\nsomo of the mill crow on Saturday\nivenlng, the game resulting In a tie\nifter 11 inning**. Tin- feature of the\ngame was a home run by William\n.tones.\nThe water Is faBt receding.\nWilliam McCandllsh made the first\ncatch Friday night, getting nine\nbeauties.\nJudging from the number of teams\non the streets this country is fast 'getting settled and from the amount of\nlumber they are buying they have\ncome to stay.\nHALCYON NOTES.\n(Special to the Dailv News.)\nHALCYON, 13. C, .lune 17.\u2014The\nsteamer n-mniiigion fa leaving on the\nup trip nn Sunday tore away one of\nthe two clusters of piles on the landing Bide of the wharf. Thc water\nbeing Within five feet or tile top nf\nthe piles, the braces under the deck\nbeam caught on them, and in backing\noff tiie cluster was torn out. No other\ndamage was done.\nA number of excursionists came\ndown on the nessiand on Sunday ami\nreturned on the Bnuningt-ui.\nA. M. limes, Field; A. C. James,\nRevelstoke, and Joseph Chew, Vancouver, arrived  on Sunday,\nCOLUMBIA THIRTY FEET\nABOVE LOW WATER MARK\n(\u25a0Special to tin? Dally News.)\nROBSON, K. C\u201e June 17.\u2014Not In\nthe history of the oldest Inhabitant\nbus the Columbia river risen to such\na height as it lias dune tbis spring.\nBach day for several days past It has\nrisen anywhere from fi to 10 inche\nuntil now It is over 30 feet above\nlow-watflr mark. All along the banks\nit has continued to make serious\ncroachtnents, taking down stream\neverything of a loose nature and ct\npelllng the owners nf bouts to pul\nforth every effort to secure their\nrafts. The government wagon road\nat Rockwork, two miles west of thc\ntnwiisltc, Is inundated to a considerable depth, and the family of Mr. and\nMrs, H, G. Slater ^ have been compelled to temporarily vacate their\nImuse because of the water having '\nrisen into it. The staircase leading\ndown from the site of the old railroad\nstation on the townsite is entirely\nsubmerged, and the water is now\nthreatening the roadway at this point.\n.\\n the principal means, aside from the\nnight paSsenger boat, of crossing the\nriver is by the use of row boats, traffic by this means has become doubly\ndangerous because of the grent\namount of drift wood floating down,\nond because, also, of thc speed of the\ncurrent, Enormous trees, including\nihe roots ami branches, arc constantly\ngoing down stream, showing that the\nhigh water is taking with it much that\nwould not otherwise be moved in this\nway. It is (Stated lhat the water is\nhigher now than at any time Blnce\nthe big flood of 18M.\nT. J. Norman, M.D., of Edmonton,\nwho is spending a short time in Roh-\nson, examined the pupils of thc school\nhere during the week and vaccinated\nseveral.\nMrs. S. S. Stover of Medicine Hat,\nAlta., and Mrs. J, H. 1-lsey and two\nchildren, Allen and Margaret, of Ad-\nanac, Sask., arrived from the prairie\non Friday evening, and are the guests\nof their sister,   Mrs. James  Fowler.\nAllan Ro'sfl and his mother of Nelson are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Linton\nLundy.\nW. T. Wlckham was a Nelson\nvisitor on Thursday last,   '\nHE SAID\u2014\"This salt is nice and dry. Yesterday the salt wo to\ndamp that we couldn't get it out of the shakers. Did you (put it in\nthe oven and dry it f\"\nSHE SAID\u2014\"No. This is \"REGAL\", made from WINDSOR\nSALT. Our grocer told me about it. He said it would stay dry and\nfree running at all seasons of the year.\"\nHE SAID\u2014\"He is right. This certainly is a damp day and this new\nnit is perfectly dry.\"\nSHE SAID\u2014\"And this REGAL SALT comes in nice, clean wood-\nfibre cartons, coated with paraffin. That protects the salt from dust,\ndirt, moisture and odors\u2014which affect salt put up in bags. I certainly\ndo like Windsor Regal Salt\u2014and I like our grocer for telling\nme about it\"\nWINDSOR \"REGAL\" SALT\nALWAYS DRY-ALWAYS FREE RUNNING\n. also present Mr. and Mrs. J, li.\nand Mr, and Mrs. Louis Borggard.\nhappy couple drove tn J-assmore\nentrained  i'or    Nelson  after    the\nWalter Beckett's bridge \"went\ndawn\" a few days ago with the exceptionally high water in the Sloean.\nA large congregation turned out on\nSunday to hear the Rev. .1, R. Kennedy at the hall, ito less than 411 being\npresent, Mrs, Kennedy being with him.\nThe  Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs,\nR. F.\ned.\nlowo of Koch Hiding was b:\nit  was the first ceremony\nd   to bo  held   here.\nAPPLES SOLD\nIN AUSTRALIA\nin  tho system  of a    human    being.\nTlie growers are working hnrd, going\nthrough iheir orchards dally, oiillln:*;\nont the diseased portions, but oven\nwitli the best of care and attention\nthe loss Is going to lie heavy.\nPeaches, apricots and prunes promise to bo a good crop, but tbe cherry\ncrop will be very light.\n,    will\nytfney,\nCOOKS AND HOUSE\nMAIDS HAVE AN\nover-rcady friend, who never\ngrows weary and Is always at\nhand to keep them In a good\nposition.\nIN THE WANT ADS\nIN THE DAILY NEWS,\nDaily News Want Ads Get Results\nTHIRTEEN  MILE NOTES\n(Special to the Dally  Ka**?iO\nTHIRTEEN MILE, June 17.\u2014P. G.\nEbbut,  from Winnipeg,  who   has   a\nranch here, came up to have a look\nGUTELIUS   STATION   NOW\nKNOWN AS PASSMORE\n(.Special to Tlio Dally Newa)\nSLOCAN,   PARK,    Juno   17.\u2014The\nCnnadiaii Pacific railway station heretofore known as Gutellus has been re-\niKimed Passmore,\nA pretty wedding took place In the\nnark on Wednesday last, the contracting parties being Miss Amy Bell,\nsecond daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B,\nBell, late of RoHsendnle, Manitoba,\nand Harold P. Andrews. \"Rev. A. M.\nWilkie, the Presbyterian minister of\nXelson, tied tho knot, and R. Woods\nof Fruitvale was the \"best mnn.\" Miss\nEthel Jnmieson of 'Passmore was\nbridesmaid. The bride wore a wreath\nof orange blossom and an embroidered\nveil. Her gown wns a creation o\nwhite tucked satin, trimmed with all\nover lace and pearl embroidery. Tliere\nA Beautiful Summer Home Site\nAbsolutely Private\nSecluded and Unique Situation.   About two acres of land  with   perfect smooth,  sandy  beach  all   round.   Just\ntho ideal thing for summer enjoyment.   Good  water supply   piped  on.      Neat   house.      Immediate  possession.\nA Gift at $1,200\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nNELSON, B. C.\nTRAIL\nSub-Irrigat*d ,\nFruit Land\nTwo miles from city limits; 16-acre\nblocks. v\u00bb\n$12.50 to $50\nper acre.\nEasy terms,\nsix blocks sold.    Make Inquiries today.\nMcQUARRIE &\nROBERTSON\nTRAIL, B. C.\nOkanogan   Selling   Agency   Gets   Good\nPrice     for     Apples\u2014Fire     Blight\nDamages  Trees,\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nPENTICTON, It. C, Juno 17.\u2014If the\nresults already attained nre any indication of what may bo reasonably\nexpected during the rest of the season, then lhe outlook for the Okanagan growers; whose fruit is being\nsold through the United Okanagan\nGrowers,   the   central     selling  agency.\nrecently formed, is decidedly favorable. Although this new organiitatlojl\nhas hardly got down tn business yet,\nR. Robertson, the manager, stated in\nan Interview here, thnt ho had already contracted for 30,000 boxes (50\ncars) of Jonathan apples for shipment\nto Australia at the price of $1.60 a box\nf.o.b. valley points. The price will\nnet the grower about $1.2ii n box after\npaying all boxing and commission\ncharges. It seems to be lho general\nbelief here that Mr. Robertson has\nmade a very good sale, lie |s being\npaid n salary nf $6,001) until March 1\nnext. But if he continues to make as\ngood contracts as this one the growers will likely he satisfied.\nA rather serious attack of fire blight\nIs giving the orebardlsts a Rood deal\nof concern. R Foley Bennett stated\nthat ho hnd already been obliged to\ncut off all the fruit bearing branches\non 235 Jonathan apple trees that\nwould easily have averaged two boxes\nper tree. On the basts of the contract mentioned above this is a very\nheavy loss. So far it appenrs to be\nconfined to tbe Jonathans and Spil-\njtenberg. In orchards where these\nvarieties are growing side by side\nDelicious and \"Winter Hanana the latter are not touched. Stone fruits nre\nnot affected.\nIt seems to be very hard to get nt\nthe cause of tlie blight, although the\nmajority admit that wet weather, such\nas has prevailed in the valley lately,\nseems to assist In the spread of the\ndisease. It first appears on the tender\nshoots and on the leaves. The latter\nwither and a black scabby spot ap-!\npears on the shoot. Gradually the\npoison works Into the tree, and if It\nreaches the main trunk of the tree,\nit Is useless to try and save the tree.\nIn the speed with which It develops\nand goes from the limbs to thc heart\nof the tree one well known grower\ncompared it to blood poison working\nGRAND FORKS CADETS\nTO CAMP AT C0A3T\n(Special to Thc Dally News.)\nGRAND PORKS, June 17,\u2014Some 31\nmembers  of  tho Grand   Forks  schbdl\ncadet  corps,   under    lhc direction    of\nIheir  principal,     fl. A.   G\nspend   six  days   In    cam|\nVancouver Island.   Tlio li\nschool trustees presented\nwith two bugles recently. Tho or- \\\nganlzatlon Is divided Into sections,\none being under the. command of\nSergt. V. MoCalium and Corporals 11.\nMclnnea and A. Muhro, with W.\nHolmes; bugler, the atrial* section\nbeing commanded hy Sorgt G. 1*0-\nmaster and Corporals o. Ilay, 13. Al-\nwood.   bugler.  R.   Hull,\nRev. Charles W. King, the new minister of thc Baptist church, Grand\nForks, arrived here from Nelson the\nlatter  end  of   last   week.    On   Sum\nho conducted services,\nL. ll. Fowler <>f Grand Forks an\nSaturday last sold four acres inside\nthe G'.ty limits for 18,000. Tho pur- I\nchaser was Mr. Hates of Minnesota,\nwho will build a modern residence ou\nhis newly acquired property. '\nMiss Ethel (Cook, accompanied by\nher brother Ralph, left nn Monday for\nSpokane, where they will witness the\nPow Wow. Miss Cook will then continue her journey to Newfoundland,\nwhere she will visit relatives.\nGateway Lodge No. -IS I.O.O.F. will\nbold their annual plenlc at Christina\nlake on Dominion day. {Special trains\nwill be run from Grand Forks and intermediate points.\nThe  Grand   Forks   city council wdll\npetition  the Dominion and   provlnWat j\ngovernments for the laying of cement\nsidewalks     around     their     respective\nbuilding** in the cltv.\nw?\nThe rare flavor\nand the sustaining\nqualities of Kellogg's Corn\nFlakes have made it the\nfavorite cereal of j\nthe  people  of j\nNorth America.,\nLook for this\nsignature on the\npackage.\ntf$U_rgi\nI TOASTED\n>C0RN\nTLAKES\n(BATTLE CRLEK\nI TOASTER CORN FLUKE C*X\nLONDON, CANADA.'\nCORN FLAKES\n ^\n'v.! i\nWIDMMMV ........ JUNC 1*\nci* -wi? bum.\nMMTHMC    \"\nA\/eu;s o\/ Sport\nCOUNCIL SUPPORTS\nBIG RIFLE MEET\nDecides to Donate Shield for Contest\nat Interior Shoot Next August-\nAid. Austin Opposes.\nNelson cttj* council, at Its meeting\non Monday night, decided to present a\nshield for competition at thc Interior\nof British Columbia 'title association\nmeet tlere next August, when marksmen will bo present, it is expected,\nfrom many points in East and West\nKootenay and Boundary and from thc\neoast. Sixty visitors or competitors\nwill be In Nelson ln connection with\nthe shoot. It Is claimed.\nIn a letter from tbc executive of\nthe association lt was stated that Trail\ncity bad made a grant for two years\nand that It was desired that the Nelson city council should offer a Nelson\ncity shield. -'i\nAid. JumcB Johnstone thought that\ntbo council should g'.ve something toward the shoot and Aid. W. M. Cunllffe remarked that from a business\npoint of view the meet was worth\nsomething to Nelson und should be\nsupported.\nAid. I. A. Austin contended that\ntho meet had to bo held here on account of tlie $20,000 rifle range, and\nBald that he would rather see the\nmoney spent in tho city, where It\nwould do the peoplo some good.\nMayor Keefe retorted that the council would bo spending the money In\nthe city If the grant were made nnd\nspoke of the vahto of the meet from\nan advertising point of view, apart\nfrom the fnct that a large amount of\nmoney would be left in Nelson by the \\\nriflemen and others wbo enmo here In\nconnection with the shoot.\nOn motion of Aid. Johnstone, seconded by Aid, Edward Kerr. Jt wns\nagreed to donate a shield, not to exceed $50 In cost. Aid. Austin voted\nagainst the resolution,\nSpeaking as president of ihe association, Alex. Carrie thanked tbo\ncouncil for its action and said that it\nhad been felt that the meet should\nreceive recognition from the city. A\ncorporation cup had been presented\nby the city some years ago, but it had\nbeen won outright and not replaced.\nHo pointed out thut tbo association\nwaB not a military organization; it was\npurely civilian, be said.\nD. St. Denis, secretary of the Nelson association, who wns nlso present,\nmentioned thut the cities of Vancouver, Victoria, New Westminster and\nNanaimo all made donations toward\nthe British Columbia meet, which was\nheld annually at Vancouver. The Interior association had decM_d to bring\nthe matter before tho Nelson city\ncouncil more with the idea of getting\nthnt body to place itself on record ns\nnpyrovlii-j of the shoot thnn anything\nelse. The ri-inn-tytt^WCT-Av-TfTrtot\n.Important. Trail had given $100 for\ntwo years, but this year the city council of that place had felt that It should\nnot continue to1 make the donation\nunless other cities in the district got\nInto line and gave recognition to tbe\nmeet. He was sure that the association would very much appreciate the\naction of tbe Nelson council.\nRIV0LI WINNER\nOF ASCOT STAKES\nGold Vase Won by Shogun\u2014Twenty \u25a0\ntwo HorseS start for Ascot\nStakes.\nfBy Dally News \/<**\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u2022*.  Wlr*0\nLONDON, June 17.\u2014The Ascot\nBtakeB, 119*500 event of the royal meet\nhere, was won by Lord Carnarvon's\nIlivoll, L. Urassey's Cntmlnt second\nand S. T. Martin's Junior third.\nTwenty-two horses ran, Including one\nfrom tlie King's stables,\nE. Hulton'o Shogun won the gold\nvase trophy, carry in-? $2,000 cash.\nPersse's St, Menlad was second and\nRothschild's Day third.\nFollowing are the results of the\nprincipal races nt Ascot today:\nThe Prince of Wales stakes, \u00a32,178,\nfor threo-year-olds, one mile and five\nfurlongs\u2014Won by W. Raphael's Lou-\nvols, by Islnglass-St, Louvaln, who\nstarted an odds-on favorite nt 9 to 4-\n0. Carroll's Manzanita, 10 to 1, second,\nnnd E. Hulton's Flippant, 9 to 2, third.\nCantilever, 10 to 1, was last, there being but four starters.\nTho Coventry singes, \u00a31,775, for\ntwo-year-olds, five furlongs, was won\nby another odds-on favorite, this being D. McCalmont's Tetrarch, who\nstarted nt 109 to 30. Courageous. 100\nto lo, was second, and Saint Cyr, 20\nto 1, third,\nThe Ascot BtakeB, a handicap of\n\u00a31,500, two miles, was won by Lord\nCarnarvon's four-year-old Hlvoll. by\nRobert, le Uluble-MarHacea wbo started at 100 lo 7. L. BrSiBsey'B Catmint,\n100 to 0. was second and T. Martin's\nJunior, 100 to 8, third.\nThe gold vase, \u00a31,000, two miles,\nwas won by E. Hulton's Shogun by\nStmtol-Kendal Belle, on whom backers wore again successful, the colt\nstarting at 13 to 8 on. A, P. Basset's\nSt. Merladoc, R to 1, second, and Leopold de Rothschild's Day Comet, 2 to\n1, third.\nI    NATIONAL\n8. H. EMERY\nA  prominent  member of ths touring\nAustralian   Cricket   team.   Last   year\nin England he bowled 30 wickets for\n404 runs in six successive innings.\nRossland, but failed to cross the plate\nhs many times as they should. Reese\nwas relieved by Austeed in the sixth\nand Stevens of Rossland gave way to\nFor loath in the seventh.\nScore hy Innings:\n123450789 10\nRosBland  ....3 10300100 6\u20141*\nTrail  010402010 1\u20149\nAMERICAN\nSTANDING  OF CLUBS.\nWon\nPhiladelphia  u\nCleveland   36\nWashington  Ill)\nChicago   311\nBoston  27\nDetroit    24\nSt. Louis 22\nXew York 13\nLost\n12\n20\n25\n27\n211\n35\n30\n30\nSTANDING  OF CLUBS.\nWon\nPhiladelphia   32\nNew Vork  30\nChicago   30\nBrooklyn   20\nIloston    23\nPlttaburg    24\nSt. Louis  23\nCincinnati  10\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nSHUT OUT BY CUBS\nLost\nP.O.\n1(1\n.068\n10\n.012\n25\n.045\n24\n1.620\n27\n.400\n20\n.452\n32\n.418\n35\n.351\nKOKANEE AND PROCTOR\nPLAY SCORELESS DRAW\n'Special to The Dally News.*)\nI'ROCTOR, R. C, Juno 17.\u2014Th*\nfootball match on Saturday between\nthe Outlet Sports club nnd Kokanee,\nwhich took ploco at C. W. Busk's, waB\na very keen and exciting one, neither\naitlo being able to penetrate the other's defence. The result, therefore,\nwas a Bcoreless draw. The visitors\narrived ralnuB two of 'their team as\nselected, and tho position in the field\nhad In consequence to he altered, F.\nCollingo coins into thn forward line,\nwhile C. W. Bourke dime, into the side\nns goalkeeper, a position he filled\nmost worthily. Thoy played ono man\nshort In tho forward line all through,\nt>. Falrbnlrn was the best of Uie visiting forwards, B, Major also performing creditably, whilst Percy Humes nt\nhalf and A. Wnlton at back did a tremendous lot of good work. C. W.\nBourke in troal wns good and saved\nsome splendid shots.\nCANADIAN  BOWLERS ARE\nAGAIN   DEFEATED\n- 'Rv Daily News 'Lmrp-'-) Wire.)\nLONDON, Juno 17.\u2014The Canndlnn\nbowline team suffered thPlr third\ndefeat today, loslnir to tbe Middlesex\nbowlers at Wood Green. The Middlesex howlers made a brilliant display,\nwinning 113-70.\nAfter luncheon a number of presentations were made, including a pair of\nprize bowls to Mc Janet, a sterling silver spoon to Mrs. T. Rennle, five\n\"jacks\" to the five Canndlnn skins nnd\na cony*of Mansnn's Complete Bowler\nt*i O. O. Knowles.\nAutomobiles\nFor Hire\n'&% all hours, day or night. Carry passengers tb and from boats and trains.\nDealers for the \"White Motor Trucks\ntn_ Touring Cars.\nSend for Catalogue and Literature.\nNelson Auto Garage\n|e08 Vernon Street Tel. 1-16\nmy  Dnlly  Npwd   Lenoort  Wire **\n.CHICAGO, June 17.\u2014Chicago made\nit. two _tni.i*ht from Philadelphia today by shutting out the league leaders,\nI-n. The locals bunched their hits off\nBrennan nnd when he lost control in\nthe third Inning he was replaced hy\nMoore, who held the locals hitlOHB.\nSmith, although hit hard, was given\nexcellent support. All the errors of\nthe visitors proved costly.     R.  H.  E.\nPhiladelphia   0     7     II\nChicago    4     fi     fi\nBatteries\u2014Moore, Brennan and Klllifer, Dooin: Smith nn.t Bresnahan.\nTWO PITCHERS  KNOCKED\nOUT BY GIANT BATTERS\n*nv Dnllv Vfuvn L-to-ie-l Tiro -\nCINCINNATI, June 17.\u2014New York\nbatted two Cincinnati pitchers out in\ntbo first three innings of today's game\nnnd won from the locals, 6-2. Packard started the game, but was relieved\nin the third. Ames, however, wns\ngiven such a warm reception that he\nwas succeeded by Barter. Tesreau\npitched effectively, but was wild, glv**\nlug six bases on balls during the time\nhe was on the mound. Fromme and\nBarter, who finished the game, pitched good ball, the former allowing only\ntwo hits and the latter four. R.  H.  E.\nNew York   fi   14     3\nCincinnati    2     4     1\nBatteries\u2014Tesreau, Fromme and\nMeyers; Packard, Ames, Harter and\nClarke.\nDODGERS MAKE IT TWO\nSTRAIGHT ON 8T. LOUI8\n'By Dallv New* Len\u00abM wirp.1*\nST. LOTUS. Juno 17\u2014Brooklyn\nmado It two straight from St. Louis\ntoday, hitting Perrltt hard enough to\nscore eight runs, while the locals gathered but three. Brooklyn scored it*.\nruns on hunched hits and St. Louis\ntallied In the seventh on five hits, one\na double by Mowrey. McLean singled\ntwice and doubled once In three attempts, while Smith tripled, doubled\nand singled ln four times at bat.\nR. H. E.\nBrooklyn    8   13     2\nst. Loute 3     9     3\nBatteries\u2014Ylngllng and Milter;\nPerrltt, Roberts, Marbet and McLean.\nDEFEATED FIVE TIMES\nBY ONE RUN MARGIN\nfBv Dnllv Now* Leased WirM\nPITTSBURG. June 17.\u2014Martin\nO'Toolo pitched one of the best games\nof bis career this afternoon, but lost\nto Boston, 1-0. Carey's muff of Connelly's fly fn the seventh Inning lost\nhim the game. Perdue was master\nof tbe PlttBburgs at all \"stages, holding them to four scattered hits. It\nmade the fifth stral-fht defeat for\nPittsburg, all by one run margins.\nR.  H.  E.\nBoston     1     3     1\nPittsburg   0     4     1\nBatteries\u2014Perdue and Rariden;\nO'Toole and Coleman.\nTEN-INNING GAME GOES\nTO  ROSSLAND JUNIORS\nTRAIL. ,B. C June 17.\u2014Rossland\nand Trail juniors played a very close\nand exciting 10-lnnlng game of base-\nbatl at the local grounds on Sunday\nafternoon.' Rossland made a grand\nrnlly in the tenth Inning and, with the\nhelp of the errors made by Trail,\nscored bIx runB to tlielr credit, thus\nbeating Trail.by the score'of 14 runs\nto nine.  Trail obtained mote bits than\nTIGERS AND RED SOX\nSPLIT EVEN GAME6\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nBOSTON, June 17.\u2014The Tigers\nmade it an even split for the day by\ntaking the afternoon game, 4-3. With\n-Mnseley, the Youngstown, Ohio, recruit pitching, Boston took the morning game, 7-1. Detroit tied tbe score\nIn the fifth Inning of the afternoon.\nThe winning run was forced In by\nBedlent, when Stanage was passed\nwltt^the bases full and no one out.\nLeonard, who replaced Bedlent, struck\nout two men and Tevitt filed to\nSpoaker. Both collided with Nuna-\nmaker at the plate while trying to\nscore In the third and Injured his leg\nso badly that he was forced to retire.\nI'lrst'game: . R.  H.  E.\nDetroit    4     6,    _\nBoston    7   10     2\nBatteries- -Zamloch, I louse, Clauss\nand McKee; Mosele*,* and Carrlgan.\nSecond game: R.  H.  E.\nDetroit   4   10     0\nBoston    : 3     8     2\nBntteries\u2014Dauss and Stanage; Bedlent, Leonard and Nunamaker.\nBROWNS GET TWENTY\nBASES OFF TWELVE HITS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNBW YORK. June 17.\u2014St. Louis bit\nfour New York pitchers for 12 hits,\naggregating 20 bases, nnd defeated the\nlocals ln the first game of the serleB\ntoday, 7-4, Batimgartnor, who started to pitch for St. Louis, also was bit\nhard, but Hamilton checked the locals. Williams made three singles and\na triple In five times at bat and was\ndeprived of a sacrifice fly in the sixth\nInning, when Pratt was called out for\nleaving third before tho ball was\ncaught. Stovall hit a triple, a double\nand a slnglo nnd drew a pass in five\ntimes up. K.  H.  E.\nSt. Louis   7   13     2\nNew York   4    10      2 j\nHatteries\u2014Bniiingnrtncr and Ag- |\nnew; Keating, Fisher, Caldwell, War-\nhop and Sweeney.\nWHITE SOX SCORED ON\nONLY CHANCE PLAY\n(By Daily News Leased Wlr**.)\nPHILADELPHIA, June 17.\u2014Bodie's\nhome run Into the left field bleachers\nsaved Chicago from a shutout by Philadelphia today In the first game of\nthe series. The score was 7-1. In\nthe second Inning Baker knocked the\nball over tho right field fence for a\nhome run. Scott pitohed good, ball,\nbut was taken out In the seventh to\nmake- room for a pinch hitter. Lang,\nwiio pitched the eighth Inning, was\ntouched up for five hits. Houck was\nvery steady and outside of Bodie's\ndrive the White Sox had no chance\nto score. R.  H.  E.\nChicago   , 1     3     1\nPhiladelphia   7   13    0\nBatteries\u2014Scott, Lange and Schalk;\nHouck and Lapp.\nSENATORS MAKE BATTING\nRALLY IN SIXTH INNING\n\u25a0 (By Dally Nflwn Len*u>d Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, June 17.\u2014A batting\nrally In tbe sixth inning by Washington won the first game of the serfes\nfrom Cleveland, fi-3. Hughes replaced\nMullen ln the fourth nnd the locals\ngave him great support, the feature\nof the day being a triple play by Gan-\ndll and McBrlde. R. H. E.\nCleveland  3     9     1\nWashington  G     9     H\nBatteries\u2014Mitchell     and    O'Neill;\nMullen, Hughes nud Henry.\nNELSON PLAYS\nROSSLAND TODAY\nFootball    Teams    in    West   Kootenay\nLeague Will Clash H.r. This Afternoon\u2014Lacrosi. Gamo, Too.\nThose who enjoy the Wednesday afternoon half-holiday win probablj\nfind the greatest Interest this afternoon centred around the recreatloi.\ngrounds, where a doublehcader oi lacrosse and football will be pulled off\nThe football game will be between the\nRossland and Nelson elevens, and will\nbe preceded by a lacrosse fixture between two strong and evenly matched\nlocal teams.\nIt was at first the inteatlon of those\nin charge of the arrangements te\nstage Rossland teams in both encounters, hut Rossland found it imposslbk\nto get a lacrosse team together foi\ntho occasion, and In order not to disappoint the fane altogether a local lacrosse game was arranged. The bal:\nwill be faced off at 2 o'clock.\nA strong football team has beei.\nSelected to represent Nelson, and little\ndoubt Is felt In football circles bu\nthat Nelson will annex Us first\ntrict league victory. The kick-off for\nthe football same will take place at\n4 o'clock.\nTickets for tho Karnes can be obtained from any of the- players.\nThe' local football team will lino ur\nas follows:\nWilliamson;* Jones and Bates; Bealby, Bartholomew and Read; Smeaton.\na. Brown.Morey, 0. Brett and Wilkinson. Reserves\u2014Francis, Cose and Ze-\nlasney.\nThe lacrosse teams are as follows:\nThistles\u2014Goal, Pitts; point, J. Ferguson; cover point, Richardson; firs;\ndefence, Bead; second defence, Me-\nLaciilan; third defence, Steel; centre,\nII. Ferguson; third home, McMillan;\nsecond home, W. Ferguson; first\nhome, Cummins; outside home, Saunders;   inside home, Matthew.\nShamrocks\u2014Goal, Brown; point,\nWilliamson; cover point, Curran; first\ndefence, Orlzzellc; second defence,\nTnit; third defence, Lacy; centre,\nTurner; third home, Pearee; second\nhome, Manhart; first home, Roe; outside home, Mercer; Inside home, J.\nGrant or H. Bishop.\nNORTHWESTERN.\nSTANDING OF CLUBS,\nWon\nSeattle  39\nVancouver  37\nPortland  30\nVictoria  29\nTacoma  29\nSpokane  22\nAt Victoria.\u2014Score:\nVancouver \t\nVictoria  ,\n.Batteries\u2014McCreery and Konnick;\nFitzgerald and Shea.\nAt Portland.\u2014Score:\nSpokane \t\nPortland \t\nBatteries\u2014Cad reau   at\nHynea and Murray.\nAt Tacoma.\u2014Score: R.  H. E.\nSeattle    3   11     0\nTacoma     4   11     0\nBatteries\u2014Fullerton and Cadman;\nKaufman and W. Harris.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE,\nSTANDING  OF CLUBS.\nWon\nBuffalo   32\nRochester   32\nProvldenco 28\nNewark  25 ,\nBaltimore  24\nJersey City  23\nMontreal    23\nToronto   22\nLost\n22\n24\n26\n24\n31\n30\n30\n32 \u25a0\nP.C.\n.502\n.571\n.518\n.510\n.430\n.433\n.438\n.407\nAt Providence.\u2014Score:      R.   H.  E.\nMontreal     li    13     1\nProvidence    7   11     2\nBatteries\u2014Mason, Smith and Marsden; Relslgl and J. Onslow.\nAt Baltimore.\u2014First game:\nR.  H. E.\nRochester   7   lfi     1\nBaltimore    5   13     1\nBatteries\u2014Quinn and Williams;\nRush nnd Egan.\nSecond game: R.   H.  E.\nRochester    fi     9     2\nBaltimore    3     fi     2\nButteries\u2014Hughes and Jacklitsch;\nMcTigue, Morressetti, Danforth and\nBergen, Egnn,\nAt Newark.\u2014Score; R. H. B.\nToronto   1     6     4\nNewark  5     6     0\nBatteries \u2014Brant    and    Qraham\nAtcheson and Smith.\nwere cancelled on account of a mucUb\ntrack.\nBOUNDARY BALL TEAMS\nWILL MEET TODAY\n(Special to the Dailv News,)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C\u201e June 17.\u2014\nTho Grand Forks baseball team will\nplay an exhibition game with Phoenix\n*6n Wednesday, Juno IS. Tlie localB\nsuffered a setback ou thoir baseball\naspirations by the severe defeat at\nthe bunds of Republic, but hnve\nstrengthened up their team since, and\nhave hopes of retrieving some of their\nlost laurels on the diamond on thiB\noccasion.\nCOAST LEAGUE.\nAt San Francisco   (10\nScore:\nPortland \t\nSan Francisco  3\nInnings).\nR.  H.\n2     9\nAt Jersey Clty.-\nBnffulo   \t\n'Jersey City\nBatteries-*\nnnd Blair.\n-Score:\n-Frill and Gowdy;  Davis\nNORTHERN  LEAGUE.\nWinnipeg\nWinona   ..\nGrand Forks   9\nVirginia  l\nSuperior-St. Paul.\u2014-Nd game;  rnlr\nDuluth-Mlnnenpolls.\u2014Rain.\nWESTERN CANADA LEAGUE\nDUNDEE VICTOR  AFTER\nTWENTY FAST ROUNDS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLOS ANGELES, Cal., Jaae 17\u2014Aftor 20 rounds of fast fighting, without\na tame round, Johnny Dundee of New\nYork was awarded a well-earned decision over Jack White of Chicago,\nat the Vernon arena tonight. White's\nShowing was a distinct surprise, at\nthough two to one money, with the\nNew Yorker on the long end, went\nbogging before the Initial gong. Tbo\nChicago featherweight more than held\nhis own In the first half of the fight\nand at the tenth round it would huve\nbeen a good draw. After that, however, he weakened, although in flashes\nhe punished Dundee with body\npunches. The Italian's dazzling speed,\nhowever, was too much for the Chicago lad. Jumping about bis antagonist, darting in and out, he dazed\nWhite with straight lefts to the face,\nalternating with an occasional right\nslam to the jaw. The end of the fight\nfound Dundee just as fast and strong\nas ever, while Whfte was wilting fast.\nRegina\nCalgary\nR.   H.\n.  0      8\n. 1      6\nAt Sacramento,\u2014Score:   R. H. E.\nOakland   2     5     0\nSacramento  5    9     0\nAt Lob Angeles.-\u2014Score:   R.  H.  E.\nVenice   \u25a0 7   15     2\nLos Angeles  6   15    2\nAt Medicine Hat.\u2014Score: R.  H.\nMoose   Jaw      0     2\nMedicine Httt  \\ 6     7\nAt Edmonton.\u2014Score:       \"ft  H.\nSaskatoon    \u25a0... fi     6\nEdmonton     7   11\nREGINA RACES CANCELLED.\n(By Dftll\" Mews Leased Wire.) I \u25a0 --*\t\nREGINA,  June    17.\u2014Today's   races I defeat of\nAVIATOR COMPLETES ONE\nTHOU8AND  MILE  TRIP\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST, PETRRSRURG, June 17.\u2014A 1,000-\nmile trip by aeroplane, from Paris to St.\nPetersburg wns completed at ll.fiG\no'clock this morning by the French\naviator, Marcel G. Brlndejoiic des Aloii-\nllnals, who covered tbo lust 300-mile\nlap of his journey la three und half\nhours In the face of a strong wind. The\naviator will return to Paris by aeroplane via Holslngfors, Stockholm and\nCopenhagen.\nCIRCULAR  TOURS\nVIA\n'j$-W\u00a58*m\\\\mWtt\nAND CONNECTING LINES\nTHROUGH      SPOKANE.      PORTLAND,      SEATTLE,      VANCOUVER,\nVICTORIA   AND  RETURN  TO   NELSON,  B.  C.\nVERY LOW RATES.\nFINAL   RETURN   LIMIT  OCT.  31\u00bbt.\nFor particulars write\nJ. V. MURPHY,\nDistrict Passenger\nAgent,\nNELSON,  I\nolive Lodge. Bwana Tumbo; the top-\nheavy favoriti. pinked up fl nail while\nWarming up for the Connaught cup\nrace, the feature of the afternoon, and\nwas scratched. Carlton O. in tlie\nfourth race closed at 7 to 20, but Sherwood at 5 to l won easily. Russell\nMcOlll nt 13 to 5 won the sixth rare.\nIn which Clem Beachy, the favorite,\nwas an nlso ran. In the seventh Golden Treasure, a 5 to 1 shot, rothpe_\nhome In Cront of Effendl nnd Mycenae.\nMEXICAN   LOANS  BARRED\nFROM   GERMAN   BOURSE\nBERLIN, .Tune 17.\u2014Tbe Is\npropositi Moxican National railway's\nand Mexican government loans wero\nburred from th**) Germun market today by the Prussian minister of commerce, Relnhoid Sydow, He notified the banks Interested In the international syndicate '.n charge of the\nloans that they could not be listed on\nthe bourse. Th's action wns taken as\na sequel to a request of the Germun\ngovernment to the German banks to\ndesist from further foreign flotations\nin view of the monetary pressure.\nIt Is understood that the Gorman\nunderwriters of the loans will en-\ndeavor to place their quotations\n-broad.\nONLY TWO FAVORITES\nWIN AT OTTAWA\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, .lune 17.\u2014Only two favorites, John Reanlon In the first race\nand Right Easy In tlie second, rewarded their backers at Connaught\npark loday. The third race saw the\nCogs by   Colin Campbell's\nF\u201ei   T-i.on_-**\u25a0**\u2022   ^C  ^eSt T\u00b0Wn on  t-*ie Gran****\nOti   r idSCl   Trunk in British CnliimWn\nThe general contour of lhe Interior make It possible for only one big\ntown and Hint location is I'ort Fraser, formerly tho old Hudson's Bay\ntradfng centre. *\nThe Nechuco Vullev, surrounding Port Fraser is thf largest and best farming nnd stock raising district In British Columbia. People arc going into this\ndistrict by the hundreds,\nMoney can he made at Fort Fraser easier thnn anywhere else in thc\nnorthwest.\nLots  ran   be   bought  there  today  for   ns   low   ns   Hi)\nmonth.   EngiUre of\nand. Slo   per\nDominion Stock and Bond Corporation, Ltd.\nWINCH   BUILDING VANCOUVER,   B.   C.\n MM *0U\u00bb\n\u20actie -fcaftj &m.\nWEDNESDAY   JUNE It.     \u00bb\nCte Bailp Jimw,\n\u25a0t Nolson  Every  Morning\nCxMpt Sunday, by\nTho Now* Publishing Company,\nLimits.\nW. a POSTER. Editor and M.r*.B,\nLEQAL  AND  OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nEffective an  and  Aftor Jan.  1,  1913.\n*tisin9 (includes municipal\nand    government    notices) \u2014 \u00abc\n.     Mr   line   for   the   first Insertion.\nand sight cents per Une for all\nsubsequent   insertions.\nIn certain eases, however, for the\nconvenience   of   the   public,   thu\n.   rates have been set, as follows:\u2014\nApplications   far   Liquor   Liceneee:\u2014\nOnce per  week  for four  weeks,\nIS;  dally for month, $S0.\nApplication!  for  Transfer  of   Liquor\nLieansaa:\u2014Once    per    week    for\nfour     weeks,     |7.60;     daily    for\nmonth, |4S.\nLand    Purehas*    Notices:\u2014once   per\nweek for \u00ab0 days, |7.\nLand Ltaaa Notices:\u2014 Once per week\nfor 60 days, |7.\nCertificate   of Improvement  Notices:\n\u2014Once   per   week   for   60   days,\n112.50.\nDelinquent   Co-ownership   Notices:\u2014\nOnce per week for 90 days, $2!i.\nDuplicate Certificate of Title Notice*:\n\u2014Four   insertions,   $8;   eight insertions, $14.\nWator     Application     Notices:\u2014Four\ninsertions   up   to   100   words,   |6;\nover 100 words  in proportion.\nWhere  any  of  the  above   applications contain more than one application  or notice,  each    application    or\nnotice will be charged for as a separate advertisement. -\nCanadian climate has never proved\nhealthy for financial bears. This\ncountry la enormously wealthy and\ncannot be held back. There may be\nshort pauses In tbe movement of expansion. Monetary conditions abroad\nmay make themselves felt locally as\nat present . But before long the\nforces that make for material progress\nthroughout the Dominion will again\nbe straining at the leash.\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 18.\nTHE   PAVING   OF   THE   STREETS.\nIt Is a matter of regret that the city\ncouncil should have abandoned tho\nIdea of paving Baker street and portions of Ward, Front and Josephine\nstreets leading to the city wharf. The\n\u2022Vork, of course, Ib of a character\nwhich should not be gone Into hurriedly, but at the same time It would\nbe unfortunate that all consideration\nor the proposition should bo dropped\nfor the year.\nWhatever may be Said concerning\ngoing ahead with the work at once It\nmust bo apparent to all that th\u00a9 permanent improvement of the city's\n-hlef thoroughfares cannot be long delayed. The work must be undertaken\nnext year, if not this.\nThis being bo, why should not the\ncouncil, at least, go ahead securing\nInformation and put through the\nnecessary bylaw In order that In any\ncase work may not be delayed beyond\nnext spring.\nAs to whether or not the work\nshould be done at the expense of the\ncity generally or on tbe local Improvement plan there may be two\nopinions, but the tatter would appear\ntbe fairer proposition of the two.\nBaker street property owners would\nprobably be quite willing to pay one-\nhalf of the cost of the work, were a\npetition to the council presented to\nthem asking that the paving be proceeded with on that basis.\nThe council's objection to proceed\ntog with the work Is the fact that the\ncity haB on hand about 140,000 worth\nof debentures for which a market can-\nnot be secured. Surely that amount\nof debentures can be disposed of In\nNelson and the way cleared for the\nIssue of the additional debentures\nnecessary to pay the cost of the proposed paving work. It would be good\nbusiness on the part of Nelson people\nto buy up tbe debentures which are\nat present on hand. The people, of\nKaslo recently took up an Issue of\n$17,500 of school debentures In order\nthat the construction of a new school\nmight be proceeded with. Surely,\ntherefore, lt should be possible to dispose of |4O,00l) worth of debentures in\nNelson bo that the very necessary\nwork of paving the city's principal\nstreets might be proceeded with,\nGLOOMY BROKERS.\nAt the present -moment stock\nbrokers are not the men to whom to\ngo for unbiased opinion on the financial outlook, saya the Toronto News.\nThey had a Blow year In 1912 and\nthey are running well Into another\nyear of poor business. Commissions\nare few and far between, the members of the Idle exchanges have naturally become centres of little circles\nof gloom In the community. But the\ntime Is coming by and by when even\nthey will be able to take heart.\nStocks are getting down towards a\nlevel, that always attracts hargal-i\nhunters, and money may be easier at\nthe banks after the autumn crop-\nmoving period.   In the long run the\nEDITORIAL NOTE.\nThe Rose Show. Have you bought\nyour tickets yet?\nMiss Annie Kennedy in the London\npolice court yesterday said she would\ndie, if necessary*, in order to get a\nvote. What good would a vote be to\nher in the next world.\nA London banker has submitted a\nscheme to Sir Richard McBride the\neffect of which would be to enable\nBritish Columbia municipalities to secure at all times what money they\nmight require for legitimate business\npurposes. Too bad it Ib not in effect\nnow or Nelson could thereby secure\nthe money necessary for paving Baker\nstreet.\nThere will be widespread regret\nthroughout British Columbia at the\ndeath of Mr. John A. Lee, former\nMayor of New Westminster, which occurred suddenly lust evening. Mr.\nLee was well known to most people\nInterested in municipal affairs In the\nprovince through his connection with\nthe Union of British Columbia Municipalities, while in the field or large\npolitic* he was also well known, being president of the British Columbia\nConservative Association, a position\nto wliich he was elected at the convention at Revelstoke last year.\nAmericans were Irritated by tin* Insistence of England timt Blie had _ unii\nto search all their VfSJsel**, except lh\u00abne\not Uie navy, for British dmierter-; uud\nno doubt some politicians thouglit It an\nexcellent opportunity, when the motherland waa almost ut death's grip with\ntrance, to attempt the i lUH'iust ot Canada- Misled perhaps by the noisy sirtie-\nBles of the Canadians tor political\nliberty, the war-party In the I'niu-d\nStates expected a welcome for InvadtnK\narmies. Instead, the liandfuls of pi-uplt-\nln the threaten** I pruvincea (counted by\nmere thousands uguirm Uu-ir anluj-uii-\nislB' millions' lorRot tlieir quarrels, and,\ninspired by Crock und otiier gallant\nleaders, turned valiantly upon th. common enemy, it Is hut fair to say, however, that the war was .*-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 utipui'iilur\nIn New England that the people of\nBoston hung their fUiij8 half mu.-i 1'U.h\nin token of mourning.\nROYAL\nCOMMUNICATION\nWhat the Press Is Sagii\nJ\nThe White Light.\nThe white light that heats on a\ncabinet minister Is revealing speculations that give rays of hope to opponents ot home rule, land taxation,\nand old-age pensions.\u2014Toronto Globe.\nThe Question of the Poet Laureate.\nIt Is reported that King George Ib\nnot inclined to appoint a successor to\nthe late poet laureate. Perhaps it\nwould be beBt to allow the office to\nlapse. It brings no honor either to\nliterature or to the wearer of the official laurel.\"\u2014-Hamilton, Ont., Herald,\nHourly Bulletins.\nThanks to the wonderful improvements in printing presses, and the\nrapidity with which one edition of a\nnewspaper can follow another, the\npublic Is now able to keep (Informed\nas to whether Mrs. Pankhurst Is In\nJail or out of it at any given moment.\n\u2014Toronto Mall and Empire,\nCold Storage     j\nDr. Morse's\nIndian Root Pills\nart not a new and untried remedy\u2014\nour grandfathers used them. Half a\ncentury ago, before Confederation,\nthey were on sale in nearly every drug\n\u2022r general store in the Canada of that\nday. nnd Were tbe recognized cure in\nthousands of homes for Constipation,\nIndigestion, Biliousness, Rheumatism\nand Kidney and Liver Troubles. Today they are just st effective, just at\ntmmAt as ever, and nothing better\nfcaaytt been devised to tt\nCurt Common Ilia\nBix\u2014\"Joe saya ht; gives umpluyment\nto a large numbisr of men.\"\nDlx\u2014\"So he dees\u2014other people's hill\ncol lectors. \"\u2014Boston  Transcript,\n\"What's the trouble now?\"\n'Dispute between out- parlor maid and\nour cook as to which is the headllner\nof the  household.\".\u2014Washington  Herald.\nWhy don't you join lu cleaning up our\nfair city?\"\n\"What's thp us? The suburbanites will\ntrack mud right Into town again.\"\u2014Baltimore American.\nMr. O-ramercy\u2014\"You can't Judge a man\nby what he was before you marrk-d\nhim.\"\nMrs, Park\u2014\"Indeed you ean'tl My\nhusband used to spend the cveniugx\nwith me.\"\u2014Judge.\n\"Has your son gained any special honor in college?\"\n\"Oh, yen, Indeed,\" replied the proud\nrather, whose education iiad included\nLatin, \"he was graduated with Bummer\nCome Lordy.\" If that doean't bring it,\nnothing  ever  will.\u2014Buffalo   Express.\nFirst Commuter-*-\"It's a perfect little\ngem. lt has been the ambition of my\nlife to buy a nice little place In the country.\"\n.Second Commuter\u2014\"Well, I once felt\nthat way myself. At present it's the\nambition of my life to nel! a nice little\nplace in the country,\"\u2014Puck.\nThe Weather\n(By Daily News L*_aed wire.)\nTORONTO, June 17.\u2014-Some showorB\nhave occurred today in Manitoba, but\nelsewhere in Canada tho weather has\nbeen fine and cooler conditions have\nset In over Ontario.\nMln.    Max\nNelson         42 77\nVictoria        48 70\nVancouver        44 08\nKamloops         10 74\nEdmonton        40 66\nBattleford        5. 72\nCalgary         44 70\nMoose  Jaw        ii'i 81\nQu'Appelie    .'    46 74\nRegina         r>2 72\nWin nip**:**        40 66\nPort Arthur      46 58\nSouthampton        52 72\nLondon         r.4 64\nKingston         50 67\nOttawa        65 66\nMontreal        58 64\nQuebec        52 60\nSt. John        48 68\nHalifax        52 68\nThia Day in\nCanadian History\nToday Is the one hundredth and flrat\nanniversary of the declaration of war\nhy the United States against Great\nBrltnln, which forced thp young (and\nthen separate) provices of British North\nAmerica to fight for three yearn for\ntheir very existence. The conflict tva**\nthe result of Napoleon'-? wars, aim ot\nthe consequent Interference with the\ntrade even of neutral nations.    But tho\nCONDITIONS AT QUEEN MINE.\nTo the Editor or The Daily News:\nSir,\u2014Allow nu* through your\ncolumns to present the side of the\nmen working at the Queen mine, lu\nface of the fuel that a strike is Maid\nto be In force there, The men now\nworking at thc Queen mine an\ngood union men uh there arc In\ncountry, and among them are most of\nthe men Who went out when the\nstrike at the mine was called on\nFebraary 22 last. Tlie reason for\nthiB Ih that thc men claim that they\nwent out solely upon the representation of W. B, Mclsuac, secretary of\nVmlr Miners' union and under B misapprehension. Since then tho strike\nhas been continued by Mr. Mclsoaos,\nand those working on the property arc\nlisted by lilm ns being on the unfair\nlist. The whole roots in tho case have\nheen placed before the international\nOfficers of the Western I'odemUon of\nMiners, a reply from whom Is awaited.\nI would like these facts placed before the public for their information,\nind witli a view to having the position at the Queen mine understood.\nW. B, De WITT.\nForeman Queen Mine Mill.\nNelson, B, C, June 17.\nWILL DIE PRESBYTERIAN.\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir,\u2014The Presbyterian congress anu\ngeneral ussemhly has finished Its business, and will close tonight. The\ncongress was most Inspiring and uplifting! It had a great spirit peculiar\nlo Presbyterians.\nTho business of the assembly\ned through calmly until tt carnal I\nchurch union question, This, called\nTor many debates, from both nntl\nunionist1- and unionists, and the debates were of a very heated charaetc'\n\u2014at times tho house was lu a complete hubbub. The unionists bad It all\ntheir own way, because its luck would\nhave It, Ihey wero in the majority, su\nthe antl-uuionists had no chance\nwhatever in holding up a defence,\nConsequently tliey met In St. Andrews\nInstitute to organize a antl-unlonlst\nwar, From the position the union\nnow is in, it wll] have to pass It in\nfavor or throw it out fur all eternity.\nIt is beyond mndiric_l->h, but not beyond putting it aside. It looks an if\nwe are going to continue tlie old Kirk\nIn spite of opposition. However, we\nwill stand for the old ItirkV'Canndu is\na free country, and It Is more ready\nand plenty of room for a continuance\nthan  the Scottish soil.\nHowever, 1 was born a Presbyterian,\nand 1 will die a Presbyterian.\n13. A. GRANT.\nToronto, Que., June  3.\n*\u2022>( ,' (CM   O   A\\ \\\\\\ M\nMining\nChemical\nc_a\nMechanic*!\nElectrical\nApp_j OiCfr.iitiy\nMineralogy sod Geology\nKINGSTON ONTARIO\nf_\\)Jl * _,.SjJy___\\>>3_IJ}_>ti)ll\u25a0'\u00ab\n|EN\nQIN\nEER\nIING\nVICTORIA UNABLE\nTO RAISE MONEY\nUnderwriters    Cannot   Sell   Bonds    in\nEngland\u2014Less  Than  Twenty   Percent Disposed Of,\n(By Dailv N_w\u00bb LeaiMl Wlra.>\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e June 17.\u2014intimation that the Dominion Securities\ncompany, Victoria, as finance agents,\nla unable to procure the money for\nthe $-,350,000 city bonds underwritten\nseveral weeks ngo is contained\nletter to the city council. The\nwcre underwritten at a price netting\nthe city slightly over 92. It was a\nforegone conclusion that the city\nwould be a long time in getting its\nmoney, because less than 20 per cent\nof the Issue was disposed of in London. Part of this was forwarded to\ntho city treasurer and a further sum.\nrepresenting    a later sale,  also  came\nUHMEUT\n, FOB II\n-orns.Bunloiis'-iiUou-lInm'hc*,\nTired, Arlilng, Swollen Feet,  II\nallays pain and tube* out loir pern\nund inflammation promptly, U-'uIloi\ni' nil s<xjtlilnff-'.iti*e>> u ImiIkt cln-tilii-\nthni of Urn lilixi'llliruuj-lilhap'ii-t.iip\n\u25a0\u25a0I~llDlinrit.iln* In l>llllilili-(ll--W,hi'-illlil\n11 .sue and elliiiiiialin* tho eld. Al*-i\n-Mil, T-ibijiap-irt, Ind., writes Nov. 15,\nl:').'): \"No di ml't yuu rum** in ber my nt*\n11 OK twit but 1 U's of yim r J. tlt-KIHKI !t\u00bb. JK-,\nti>r a bunion on my fimt. My font li\nwell.\" AUo valuable f of any swolUM\nor painful nfilliMltni. (ioltrv, KnlargtHl'iluii-li-.\nVari-MM* Vain*, Milk _*\u00bb. Btnlns, Hpruiim,\nlli'itln Cut**, Itnil.ii'ji. I,in'.-nitloiift. .'fi-l.-e fl.U\nindij.wjiunii-JniifBlMKordfilvcred. S-wfc 4-Fr_-\nMured only by W. F. Youm. P.D.P.\n.,   445 Lyman'* Bulldi-iK, Montreal,P.O.\nal-o riimtsin\"! U  Mnisiii l- \u25a0*\u25a0 \u25a0 A   Wviiur I*.,., nTnnltWf)\ntli .^illi-inU\" .,-M',.11 \u25a0];,-:\u25a0, \u25a0,\u25a0.\u25a0:('.,. Hi, nlU'munlCttlipi]\nalonR but the built of the money the\nononis found t hem selves    unable   tu\nim !.\u25a0*,..\nLaw Suit Against City,\n(By Dnlly New* leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e Juno 17.-\nArlBinp out of the Boolcp lak\u201e wator\nworks scheme, the contract for which\nwas 'awnrdfd io the \\Vo8tholm_ Lumber company by the city of Victoria\non December Ti, 1011, a law suit bn\u00ab\nbeen begun In the supremo court 1;\nVancouver, in which sensations\ncharges fl.ro miido. The milt in enter\ned on behalf or the lumber compun;\nUBitlnst tile elly of Viftorlit, Kn wnte\n(\u2022-imm'*-*'oii. Its mayor, cbnshlflhg\nengineer ahd other offfeJalB. Recently, tho lumber company threw Up the\nJob, and tlie city is now trying to\nfinish it. Tho plaintiff alleges Hint\ntlie defendant!) ' mnde miHt'eprescnlu-\nUniiH aud  defamed  the company   In\nand nut of newspapers with the object of forcing tlie conintctors to\nabandon the work, while ut the sitine\ntime endeavoring to kjfbtfcenl the true\nfacts which were that the corporation\nof Victoria was I'immelally omhafass-\nei. Cotfnsal Por tho city or Victoria\nloday uhsuccess fully uiiempti'd to\nhuve various sections of the BtatBtnetii\nof claim i*tricUen out on the ground\nthnt the allegations were Scandalous,\nunnecessary and embarrassing,\nTO  FOSTER TRADE\nWITH   FAR   EAST\n(Ry Dally News Leased Wlro.>\nOTTAWA. .lune 17\u2014 Ulchard Qrigg,\n'ommtssloner of commerce, who has\nlieen in China and Japan for the Inst\nnds two months, will meet Hon. Qeorge\nl*i. Poster there and conduct final\nnegotiations looking to trade development between those countries anil\nCanada. Lasl yenr Cannda exported\nMST.frn worth of goods to Japan and\n(414,000 t0 China. The imports rea-\npectlvely were S-.:'f>0,000 and $611,000.\nAs a result of tho negotiations, it is\nhoped to evnn up the balance of trade.\n\"ELKS\"\nSlfi_l\nNELSONDLODGE\nWill be prepared to Institute on 1\u00bb-\n-mlnloa Day, July 1st. The first 6u\nnames for the Charter will he sent to\nthe Gram) Lodge at Vancouver tbis\n-week, to be recorded on the (.'barter,\nao as to be In readiness for the Institution on above date. Applications\nfor membership are being received\nfrom the surrounding towns liy every\nmall. Those wishing to take advantage of the very low fee of $-*\u25a0 should\nact Immediately, as at the close the\nprice will he raised to cither $&0 or\n$75, which will be governed by a vole\nof the Lodge at the time of the Institution. The Elks' Lodge Is considered\nono of the most popular Fraternal\nOrders in the world today, and anyone desiring to become an Klk should\nnot overlook this opportunity.\nTHE ELKS\nAre purely a fraternnl Order, and not\norganized for gain. Insurance or profit; tliey do, however, voluntarily aid\nmost fully wherever the needs and\nvircumstances of Iheir members or\nihelr families require. It stands preeminent among Organizations where\nthe Ix>dge and Club privileges arc\nJoined; it Is neither seetnnlan nor political, building solely upon Its social\nmerit., nnd as such is justly recognized as most fully meeting the wants\nof the Twentieth Century business\nman, the professlomil man, and the artisan, Tlie fact that it is Dominion\nwide in its Bcope, affording to its\nmembers the fullest extension of ho-\nclul courtesies wherever Elks' clubs\nexist. Is one of tiie reasons why It hus\nbecome the leading Order of its kind\non tbe North American continent today.\nOBJECTS OF THE ORDER\nIt seeks to inculcate the principles\nof Charity. Justice, Brotherly Love\nand Fidelity; to promote the welfare\nand enhance we happiness of Ua\nmembers; io quicken the spirit of men\ntoward a pure and noble citizenship;\nlo cultivate good-fellowship, it seeks\n\u25a0is a Fraternal Organization to become\nns potent in tbe realm of Flkdom\nthroughout the Dominion of Canada\nns the orgauizalion of like name is in\ntho nation south of our border.\nMEMBERSHIP\nAny whito male person who bnB\nbeen a resident of tho Dominion of\nCanada for at least six months Immc\ndiutely preceding the dnte of his ap\nplication; of sound mind and body, of\ngood reputation, a believer in a Supreme Being, an adherent of lawful\ngovernment, and who shall havo at-\nininod llio age of twenty-one years,\nmuy become a member of tills Order.\nINVITATION\nWe Invlle all good and worthy men\nwho are qualified for membership, and\nwho seek the benefits of u high-class\nFraternal and Social Organization, to\nfill out thiB npphentton at once and\nhand it to the Organizer in your city,\nor to any member of the Order.\nApplication** received nt the office\nof T. A. Starkey, or evening)} at the\nHume Hotel,\nO,   E, BLINN,\nDeputy Grand Organizer.\nSmall's Tailoring Satisfies\nNo firm in town can show you \u00bb good a line of fashionable fabrics\n\u2014no firm in or out of town puts more conscientious work into a suit-\nno firm out of town csn pretend to fit you as well at long range as ws\nen who are right on the spot, Ws consider evory peculiarity of shape,\nline and size, snd build your suit accordingly.\nDave Small & Co.\nPHONE Mt.\nMERCHANT TAILORS.      ANNABLE BLOCK.\nThis Beautiful\nQuartered Oak\nROCKER\nDuring our\nClearance\nSale only...\n$6.75\nStandard Furniture Co,\nComplete House Furnishers\nMiss Dorothy Toye, Opora House, Monday. June 23.\nNONE OF THIS\nDRUDGERY;\nWASHDAY,\nir vou USE THC\nI.X.L VACUUM WASHER\n(\u2022met. S3.B0\nWUMt Amhiag (Md Enirthin-- from a H_M-BU'ik\u00abl\n\u00abnd C-WMlb tn tbe F'mm Lim niihtml [n,Urf\n[Cw\u00bb\u00abl*ltitt1l.i2.00 |\nWttltt t M Tti if CMMi h 3 HlntB Puftctlf\nNm On!\/ Wm__ \u25a0\u00ab RiBKt ud Bbtn\nSSNT UHSM * MOMV'SAOK QUASANTSI\nNslson Daily News      coupon\nCet out *ad nail cNpnn and Mar mum and addrm\n\u2022tHts f 1.30 to DM-dittoa Utilitlfi Hami-*lurini Co.. Ltd.,\nm\\ Mini Strew, Winnipeg, Man., ud ra will rc-cH**\nOaj I.X.L VACUUM WASHER. All tbirgn pnpak)\nimam m Canada m taaditfoa that mr mm* it u bt\nKtodfd It lb* Waabtr data not da all that it claimed.\nThe Canadian Bank\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C. V. O.,\nLL. D., D. C. U President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Mgr.\nCspltsl    915,000,000\nRsst  112,500,000\nPlace your Sccurltfe* Titit-i,\nDeeds, Mortgages, Insurance Pol-\nLclei, Wills and other voluubles 1-\nono of our Safety Depimit Boxes\n'where they will be secure from.\nloss by flro or otherwise. Rentals\n'according to sis* of box.\nNelson Branch, J. 8. Munro, Mgr,\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817  \u25a0\nCapital authorized $26,000,000\nCapital  all  paid-up 116,000,000\nRett    $16,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt    Hon.    Lord    Stratheons    snd\nMount Royal, G.C.M.G., Hon. Pros*\nR. B. Angus, Esq.. President\nH. V. Meredith. Esq*\nVioe-President and  Gen.  Managsr.\nBranches  in   British   Columbia\nArtnBtrnns, Atlialiner, CMUIWMB*\nCloverrtale, Enderby, Greenwood, Hosmer, Kamluopfl, Kelowna, Merrltt\nNelson, New Denver. New Wentmln-\nator, Nicola, Ponlicton, Tort Alberni,\nPort Hniiey. Prince Rupert, frinc**\nton, Rowland, fntmmerland, Vancouver, Vancouver (Main street), VSHMts,\nVictoria,   West Summerland,\nNelaon Branch, L. B. DeVeber. Mgr.\nJohn Burns & Sons Cene.3 SB\"\nNELSON PLANINQ MILLS, SASH AN1 DOOR FACTORY.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B. C.\nEvsry Dssci Option of Building Material Kept in Stock.   Estimates Given\non  Stone, Brick, Concrete and  Frame  Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\n\u25a0OX 134. PHONE 17S.\nGoing to Build?\nle it a wood  shad,  a chicken houae, an alteration or addition to ths\nhouse;   perhaps it is a  new house.\nEverything  you'll *   nt from  roof to floor  in  rough  or finished\nlumber we osn supply you with.\nWell seasoned pine, fir and cedar.   Cut in our own mills,\nSlowly dried by nature in our yards.\nOur experts will advise you free.   No obii-jation,\nWrite,   phone  or  call.\nForest Mills of B. C. Ltd.\nLats DOMINION  SAWMILLS  & LUMBER, LTD.\nPHONE  16. P, O.  BOX 1068\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., Limited\nIN 8TOCK IN NELSON\nBOILERS.\n1\u201460 inches x 16 ft. H. R. T.\n1\u201440 H.P. Locomotive.\n1\u201430 inches x 6 ft. Vertical,\n2\u201436 Inches x 8 ft. Verticil.\n2\u201442 inches x 8 ft. Vortic.il.\nHOISTS.\n1\u20148 x 10 Friction Drum.\n1\u20147 x 10 Friction Drum.\n2\u20146 x   8 Friction Drum.\nENGINES.\n2\u20149 x 12 Horizontal.\nPUMPS. ,\n2\u20143 X 2 X 3 Snow Duplex.\n1\u2014No. 2 Cameron Feed.\n1\u2014No. 7 Cameron Sinker.\n1\u20146 1-8x3x8 Moore Sinker.\n2\u20145 x 5 Goulds hand.\nBLOWERS, BUCKETS, SUPPLIES\nTHE NELSON IRONWORKS, LIMITED.\nI\nPabst Blue Ribbon Beer\nMAGI WATER\nAQENT\u2014\nThe Nelson Wine and Spirit Co.\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B. C.\nWANTED\nLOW  ORAM]   COl't'lOll  AND  IRON   SULPHIDE  OR   I,\"W   GRADE\nIRON  I'YIUTUS  CARRYING   GOLD;   UOI3Y   Nl'X'E.SMARY.\nCONSULT ME FOR OOOD INVESTMENTS IN MINING STOCKS.\nSUMMER COTTAGES   FOR   RENT,   ALSO   SUMMER KESIOENTIAL\nSITES I'OR SALE ON KOOTENAY LAKK.\nLIKE, ACCIDENT, LIABILITY, FIDELITY, FIRE INSURANCE,\nCONTRACTORS BONDS, &C\nFRED A. STARKEY\nll'PERIAL BANK BLOCK.\nP.O. BOX 552.\nDaily News Want Ads gst results.\nChildrens' Waggons\nWE   HAVE   OPENED   UP   A   LARGE   8HIPMENT   OF   CHILDREN'S\nWAGGONS\u2014ALL    SIZES\u2014ALL     PRICES\u2014FROM\n$1.00 to $8.50 Each\nFFOM   THE   CHILD'S   TOY   WAOGON   TO THE HEAVY DELIVERY\nWITH WOOD WHEELS.\nBest Prices in the City\nNelson Hardware Co.\nPhone* 21 Nelson, & C~\n .!\nWEDNNDAV ,\n'\u00bbVN5\u00ab.\nCfr Ball? J*leto_.r\n|W&\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nSalted Wafers\nDainty and crisp. Brought in direct from the factory and JUBt\nopened out.\n35c Tin\nCream Soda\nBiscuits\nIn small cartons\u2014one pound each,\nput up for small families or travelers.\nISc Carton\nFresh Berries\nToday\nLocal  Barries   Start  Wednesday.\nToday is Curlew Butter Day.\nFleishman's\nYeast\nin another specialty wc have added\nto our big slock. We believe thla\naddition will he a boon to housekeepers. Always ready for hot\nrolls for breakfast and can ho used\nin a Inin11it'll ways.\nFree Full-Sized\nSample\nami directions for use. Phone 56\nand we slutll bc glad to send one to\nyour address.\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\nfo ti tht graft! Haleyoa _M\nSprings, whore you can \u2014curt not\nonly real, but at tho earns tlmo\nhava the benefit of tba beat medicinal waters oa the continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred aliments. The springs ara eaay\nof access to traveller* and tha hotel\nbaa been fitted up and la eon-\nducted with a view to tba maximum of comfort and eonvanlene*\nfor guests.\nRaton   |12 and til par wee*. or H\nper dav an. upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. \u25a0OYD, Propristor.\nH.leywi Arm, Ukw\nBOTH, ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nGrape Fruit\nspecial:\nFancy i'loiidas; 2 for    25c\nTea\nOur customers aro telling thoir\nfriends about the quality of our\nteas. Wo savo you money\u2014no\nmatter what price*\u2014250, 35c, 50c\nand 60c lb.   But we emphasize on\nKootenay Indian\nBlend\n50c, or :: lbs. for ..\n5-W. \"In\t\n....*1.35\n....$2.25\nExtra\nFine California\nOnions\nRell\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nPhone 56\nThe Up-to-Date Grocers\ni\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014BAR\n|  Merohante' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhona 17 P. O. Box 597\nN_liKON--J.   Mat* I he iv.\",   <!.   Clltatli    A\n|Ki-|i*l:r,<iTi, C.  J.  Orr,  W.  C. .Sumner,  U,\n\u25a0Joldfinllll.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVornon Street\nHeadquarters ror minora, Smel-\ntermen,  loggers,  railroad men.\nRataa, $1.00  par day up\nNELSON dv JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYlCEJ-deorBfl   Kinnar,\n\u25a0 r-ml   buy;  M.  Manners, tiulmo;\n[iiiinsii, sloean.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doora from Postoffice\nVernon Street\nRatal 11.00 and $1._5 per day.\nEvery convenience given to the\ntraveling public. Electric piano and\nunl'*n bar In connection, where the\nbeat of wlnea and liquors are kepL\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\n] KOOTENAV-.Iohn    Cnvunaugh,    Tas-\ns.  Narukl,   T.  Kalno, Crescent\njviilley; J. Docker, S. ['onaulck, C\n\u25a0iii-guln, Argenla; S. Uosslu, Spokane;\n\u25a0 -.l. smith,   i>.   L'-ritK, ,1.  Lueich,    Sheep\n>eok; 1>. Lnzutz, M. Matlvitch; Hedley;\nBidrlch,   V.   SUlrich,   M.   Lupont,   M.\nI'uinovlch,   D.   Friend,   Vancouver.\nThe Hume\nTabl\u00bb d'Hote and a la Carte\nIIIIMK-Mis.   J.   Floury,   l>.   l\u00bb.   Dodd,\nC. s. Wheeler, Alnaworihi w. n, Johnson,   Creston;   C.   A.   Cock,   Craiibronk;\nO. B. (iritvi*. Edinburgh* \\v. U. Poolo,\nll.     D.     HttltHlllJIll,      Hi-Ill**!     Jl'l'lll.'.-S,      S_IO-\nk&nai w. P. 'J'i ii in i *y, j. Duncan; Vancouver; 0. M. Katun, Grand l'\"urks; J,\nIt. Terry, Victoria) N. Nlpkow, Fruitvale; J. Krikeii, Efpoftano; A, R, Jley*\nland, iCaslo; a. k. Attree, Queens Bay;\nGeorge ,\\. Ohren, 0. o. yeoman, Vancouver; Gerald Colo, San Francisco; Mr.\nand Mrs, li. O. Andrews, Calgary; *\u25a0,\nli. Ifigtelle, Rochester.\nPRACTICALLY\nGIVEN UHO DIE\n\"Fruit-a-tfves\" Cored\nKidneys and Bladder\nWilliamstown, Ont., Julv 27th. 1910\n\"I have murli pleasure in testifying\nto tlie almost marvellous benefit X have\nderived trom talcing \"Pruit-a-tives\". I\nwas a lifelong sufferer from Chronic\nConstipation, and tlie only medicine I\never secured to do mc any renl good was\n\"Pruit-a-tives\". This medicine cured\nme when everything else failed. Also,\nlast spring, I had a severe attack of\nBladder Trouble coupled with Kidney\nTrouble, ami \" I'ruit-a-tives \u2022* cured\nthese complaints for me, when the\nphysicians attending me had practically\ngiven me up,\nI ant now over eighty years of age and\nI can strongly recommend \"Fruit-a-\ntives\" for Chronic Constipation and\nllladder and Kidney Troubles\"\nJAMES DINGWALL.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" is the only medicine\nin the world made of fruit juices\u2014and\nis the greatest, kidney, bladder and liver\nmedicine ever put on the market.\n500 a box, 6 for $2.__o trial size, t_\\c.\nAt dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of\nprice by Pruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nP. B. WHITING, Proprietor.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014AnoU-deacon BcoftlDr.\nJames Calvert, \\V. Ei SSwh-ky, K. 0.\nZwicky,     A,     Carney,     Kaslo;     Ifl.     P.\nPloweillng,   Cranhrook;   ifl.   T>.   Ireland,\n.lames Thompson, .1. M. HnlJetl. William\nBrown. Jt. R, Brown, 9, II. I'hair, city;\nll. o. Pearco Mr. ami Mrs. O. A.\nCarlson, Spokanoi nr. reunion, o. m\nHliore. Vancouver; T. fl, Norman, Kelso\nNnrmun, Edmonton, W. A. Lang, Vernon;   ROV,   A.   Ifl.   Smith,   Hiamlni,;   G,   I..\nReovestorio. Rossland; It. J. Knight,\nToronto; Mrs. Miller, Mirror,Lake;  11.\nII. filllls, Kniltvale; rteiirgu ifl. I-'itrlsli,\nW. 1). Altlemm, SI1..11 Creek; H. A.\nKnJly, O. Villi.*!**. Siimmi'i-laiiil; Ifl. A.\n.St. 0. Slhythe, Trail*. T. it. Fenwlck,\nRussians'; Mr, und .Mrs. Long, Revel-\nntoke.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.  LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooms added, all elegantly furnished. Steam heat\nIn every room.\nQiTifli_NS-A.  C,   Houghton,  Crawford\nBay;    Miss  \\v*.   ;,.   MeOodgald,    Miss\nMary A. Oliver, Miss pOra MflClever,\nNow Dim Ver; C. Cro.vston, Castlegar]\nW.   S.   ilulclilngs,   Wallace;   A.   Mears,\nFruitvale; -T. w. Bell, C. K, Castle, J.\nItalieliloi', Castlegar; Frank Maouuhiy,\nMrs. A. C Maeaulay, (Tlinrlottctown,\nB.BJ.I.; Grant Davis and wife. David\nDona Idson; Edgewood; James M unson,\nTrail;   A.   Blake,   Arrowhead.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European plana\nH, H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGRAND CiBNTRAL-John J. Auder-\nfioti, u. 11. Anderson, Sheep creek; <i.\nKing, Kernle; s. Brldcott, Taghum; R.\nVivian, Vancouver; K. Mclnnis. silver-\nton; i). Murray, Boston; <>\u2022 Sanboro(\nUu Angoles; it. Skadsoin, Mrs. Peter\nCampbell, Salmo; Thomas Boattle, Spokane: J. Black, Calgary;   Mrs.   c.   a.\nMarshall, Toronto; A. W. Cross, Michel;\nA. McNeil, Revelstoke; F. Phillips,\nRock Ranch; W. Watson,  Lytton,\nMadden House\n\u25a0. C. CKARKB\nCor. Baker and Ward BU., Nelson.\nMADDEN\u2014J. a. Kellaugh, Castlefcar;\nJ. W. Gallup, Proctor; Q, R. Isnioii,\nIdaho; Mrs. Cainphell, A. Madden, Sloean City; Joseph Cullon, Greenwood;\nArthur Pratt, Thrums; A. C. Parker,\nNew Orleans; P. W. George, Ij. A.\nWaters, .Marcus.\n1 Oallv Nitwit Wwin Attn, get rwmiHtw.\nHotel Outlet\nI!\nproctor.\n|i  Fishing, Boating, Bathing,\nTourist   and* Commercial    rates\nI Weekly and monthly.\n1     G. A F. SNOW, Proprietors.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelaon\nRANSOME * CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nBuropean plan, 60c up\nAmerican plan, $1.26 and 11.II\nMeals, 86c\nSpecial Ratee per Month\nTREMONT\u2014B. E. Taylor, Colllner,\nWash.; W. Wood, elty; D. .Monroe, Alnsworth- H. Hennlnger, Spokane; James\nW. Pox, Ifl. W. McQuaite, Rossland: J.\nTrainer, Milwaukee; H. Q. Larson,\nRevelstoke.\nDaily News ''Want\" Ada. Oct Rtsulta,\nPRINCE TAKES PART\nIN   MEMORABLE   MARCH\n(By Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 17.\u2014\"Cadet Edward,\" with his uniform thickly powdered with dust, entered Mltchel farm\nCiimp Aldershot, yesterday afternoon\nwith the first company of tlie Oxford\nsection of the officers training corps,\nafter a memorable march of 20 miles.\nIn tho delightfully unconventionul life\nhe is leading with tbe corps, tbe\nPrince of Wales becomes plain \"Cadet\nEdward\" and Is learning tho \"soldier's\nhiiBi nees\" w<lth a vengeance. The\nmarch from Mortimer, 20 mites distant, under a broiling sun, with dusty\nroads throwing back the heat, would\nhavo been a worthy enough feat for 0\nbody of highly truined regulars. It\nwas a triumph of endurance.\nPRAIRIE  CROPS  GREATLY\nBENEFITTED  BY  RAINS\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\nWinnipeg, June 17.\u2014Despatches\nfrom tho principal grain growing\ndistricts of Manitoba and other\nsections of the west today state\nthat splendid rains have fallen\nand have greatly benefitted tho\ncrops. In the extreme southern\npart of the province precipitation\nhas been light, but the grain is\nwithstanding the dry weather re*\nmarkably welt.\nMAKE PROGRESS\nON PAYNE TUNNEL\nSixteen Hundred Feet of Long Work-\ninge   Driven\u2014Pros ids nt   Pearee to\nMake Inspection.\nSixteen hundred feet or the 3.400 ft.\ntunnel which Is being driven at the\nPayne* mine in thu Sloenn district to\ntap the ore at depth have been completed, announced W. R Zwicky, consulting engineer for the mine, who\nwas at the Btrathcona last night with\nII. J. Pearee, the Spokane capitalist,\nwho is president of tht- company\nwhich was organized to operate the\nproperty. They will leave for thc\nSloean this morning.\nTwenty men are employed at the\nmine which paid fl,42(Mi-j<j in dividends prior to 1902.\nLEAVE TO INSPECT\nGOLDEN FAWN GROUP\nCharles E. Bennett and Thomas\nGallon of Victoria and W. H. Burnham\nof Nelson, owners of the Golden Fawn\ngroup at Sheep creek, left on the\nGrent Northern yesterday morning to\npay a week's visit to the property.\nLIQUOR WAREHOUSE BURNED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. JOHN, N. _., June 17\u2014The\nwholesale liquor warehouse of R. Sullivan Co., Dock street, was gutted by'\nfire tonight. Thc loss on the stock\ncannot lie estimated tonight. It Is insured for $63,000. The building is\ndamaged to the extent of about $10,-\n000,   Tlie fire raged for several hours.\nNaDru Co Laxatives\nare especially good for\nchildren because they are\npleasant to tnke, gentle in\naction, do not irritate the\nbowel9 nor develop a need\nfor continual or increased\ndoses. 25c. a box, at your\nDruggist's.\nNational Drug and Chtmleal Co.\nof Canada, LimiUd.      177\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Btreet\nUnder new management\nWell   furnished   rooma,   11.00   a\nday  and  up.    Best  26c  meal  la\nNelaon.  Best brands of llquora and\ncigars, served by union men*\nN.  McLEOD,  Proprietor\nSILVI-.lt   KINU\u2014I.   Sopko,     R   Brok-\nilngn, -.'ity: K, f\\ Ourrle, I'. Thompson,\nk. Wilson, T. Bpencolj Creston; George\nPatterson, Kaslo; A. B. Alurruy, Grand\nKorks.\nA Home for the World at $1.00 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vornon Streett.\nRenovated and refurnished throughout. Best of wines, liquors and\ncigars served in tho bar by Union\nBartondcrs.\nSHBRBROOKE\u2014J. Carlson, S. Lis-\nsak, M. steplck, P. Uiizhk, H. Wlnco*\nVlch, Prank; A. Clark, J. W. Barrett,\nPhiK'iiix; .1. McKay and wife, Nelson;\nn. 0, Wolf,-, Cagtlogah ^___\nLeland Hotel\nNAKUSP, B.C.\nWhy not spend your vacation at\nNakusp? Ad ideal place to spend a\nweek. Rowboats and motor boats\nfor hhe. Best of fishing In one of\nthe nicest lakes in the province. For\ngood weather and fine fishing Nakusp\nleads.\nThe    Leland    Hotel    solicits    your\nSatronag*     It offers the beat to  be\nad at a tr-uderate price.   Rates 12.00\nper day.  Family rates on application.\nT. H. BOHART, Proprietor.\nHotel Westholme\nVICTORIA. B.C.\n\"Home of the Kootenay Boys.1*\nFree Bus\u2014Ratee $1.00 per Day and up.\nF. F. TROTTER, Manager.\nSOUTH YALE COPPER\nCOMPANY ELECTS OFFICERS\n(Special to the Dallv News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C. .June 17.\u2014At\ntlie annual general meeting of the\nSouth Yale Copper company, held in\nGrand Forks, the following officers\nwere elected:\nPresident, R. A. Drown, Grand\nForks,\nVice-president, G. W, Avcrill, Grand\nForks.\nSecretary, J. A, McCallum, Grand\nForkB.\nThe executive comprises the foregoing officers and Frederick Keffer\nmining engineer of the Hrltish Colum-\n1 Copper company, Greenwood, and\nOscar Lachmund, general manager of\nthe British Columbia Copper company,\nGreenwood.\nWOULD NOT REVOKE\nCONSTITUTION\nK a iier   Destroyed   Political   Instruc*\ntions of Ancestor\u2014Like Pow<\ndar Cask in House.\nfBy Daily Nows Leased Wire..\nRERUN, June 17.\u2014A remarkable\nstory showing Emperor William's attitude toward a constitutional monarchy waa related during the celebration of the 25tii anniversary of his\nreign by tbe faculty and students of\nBerlin university. Prof. Otto Hlntze,\nprofessor of constitutional and administrative history, declared that thc\nemperor himself had told him yesterday evening how he had first disregarded and then destroyed the standing appeal made by Frederick William IV. of Prussia to his successors\nto abolish the Prussian constitution.\nThe emperor said the first document\nhe found in his desk after his acces-\nsion was an envelop containing the\npolitical testament of Frederick William IV., which was to be delivered to\n\u00abach of hie successors on his accession. It urged and implored in the\nstrongest terms the revocation of the\nPrussian constitution before the taking of the coronation oath by the new\nmonarch.\nFrederick William IV., who had\ngranted the constitution to Prussia\nduring the stormy days of the middle\nof the 19th century, always regretted\nthiB act, but did not find either the\nopportunity or the courage to revoke\nIt. Emperor William, like hla father\nand grandfather, had no inclination\nto follow the advice of Frederick William IV., but he went further and de-\nstroyed the document from fear of\nthe Influence it might have on some\nyoung and inexperienced successor.\nThe emperor said; \"I felt as If I had\na powder cask in the house nnd it\nworried me so that I finally burned\ntho testament.\"\nBLISTER COPPER SHIPMENTS\nNEARLY TEN MILLION POUNDS\n{Special to The Daily News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. 0.. June 17.\u2014\nThe Granby smelter, Grand Forks,\nduring the first seven days of June\nshipped 202,000 pounds of blister copper bringing the total from January 1 to June 7, 1013, up to 0,484,C97\npounds of blister copper.\nCONSOLIDATED EMPLOYS\nLARGE FORCE AT KING\nSixty-five men are now employed at\ntbe Silver King mine, near Nelson,\nby the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company.\nMINE RESCUE STATION\nESTABLISHED  AT  FERNIE\nOfficial notice of the cHtabl lull ment\nof n mine rescue station ut Fernie la\ngiven In tlie current issue of thc\nBritish Columbia Gazette.\nTRIED TO SPANK SON\nBURNED FIFTEEN HOU8E8\n(By Dally Ncwi Leased Wire.)\nMonticello, N. Y., June 17.-\u2014Mn.\nB. Wolfe of Ferndale, Sullivan\ncounty, near here, tried to spank\nher young son late tonight and In\ndoing so upset an oil atove. In\nthe fire that followed 12 business\nhouses and three dwellings were\ndestroyed. The loss la estimated\nat $75,000. The flames were\ncheeked with dynamite.\nFARMER   RUN  OVER\n(By DalUr News Leased Wlre.1\nRI'XJINA, .lune 17.\u2014Thomas Hobbs\na young man aged 22 years, was run\nover oa his farm in the Tellock district north of here and died In less\nthan an hour from internal injuries.\nHo was taking a load of oats In bags\nfrom the granary and the hag on\nwhich ho was silting slipped, causing\nhim to fall down between the horses\nand tlio wagon, boUi wheels passing\novor his body.\nPARIS AUTOMOBILE BANDIT\nCAPTURED IN  MONTREAL\n(Bv Dnlly News Leased Wlre.>\nMONTREAL, Juno I7.-A prisoner, arrested by the Montreal pollen on suspicion of having stolen J4.000 worth of\nJewelry, which he was offering for sale\non the streets, has lieon Identified by\nthe New York police as Armani! Faitehot,\nn member or tho Paris gang of autom'o-\nbiio bandits. He Is wanted In France\nfor several crimes anil proceedings are\nnow going mi looking to his extradition.\nHAS MADE TRIAL TRIPS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON,     .Inn-'      17.-The      steamer\nAcadln,   8wan   Hunt,   company,   for  the\nCanadian government  hydrogranhicsurvey,  has liii-i  her trial trips today.\nNOW'S THE TIME TO CATCH *EM.\nFly-trap approved by tho health officers of twenty big cities of United\nStates and Canada. It stands from\ntwo to three foot high, and oan be\nmade by anybody with a couple of\nyards ef wire netting and a couple af\nbarrel   tops, t\nThe Prettiest of the New\nWaist Styles Are Here\nWe are anxious for you to see these\nnew waists, because we believe that\nthey will meet with your heartiest approval the moment you see them.\nEvery new waist-fashion is included, and every waist-fashion Included\nis New! The styles are particularly\nbecoming and give evidence of careful and conscientious thought on tbe\npart of their makers.\nPerfect workmanship characterizes\nthese waists and greatly enhance their\nelegance of appearance and smoothness of fit. Yet, ln spite or their irreproachable finality, they are quite\naffordable.\nPrices from $1.00 up\nTht8 Store Closes at 1 o'Clock Todag\nMEAGHER & CO.\nThe Store for Style - Baker Street\nWOMEN MURDERS DOCTOR\nTHEN  COMMITS  SUICIDE\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nSAVANNAH, Ga., June 17.\u2014Dr. Guy\nO. lirinkley, a physician of this city,\nwas shot to death in bin office here\nlate yesterday evening by Mrs. Eugene H. Whiisnaut, a widow, who, after\nfiring six shots at the physician, sent\na seventh bullet through her temple,\nfalling dead across the body of her\nvictim. No cause has been assigned\nfor the tragedy. It Is said that when\nthe woman reached the doctor's office\nMrs. WhiBnant went with the doctor\ninto his private office, another woman\nremaining in the outer office. A few\nminutes later the firing began and\nDr. Brinkley rushed out, followed by\nMrs. WhiBnant, who was steadily firing. Mrs. WhiBnant is said to huve\npursued the doctor to the porch and\nthen back into the office, continuing\nto fire on lilm. Her sixth shot entered his heart, killing him instantly.\nThe woman then shot herself through\nthe head.\nof lho city council today, and the\nstatement wan officially mado that\nwork on the first unit to cost $750,000\nwould be started this year.\nCONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION TO\nMEET AT SLOCAN JUNCTION\n(Rneclal \"\u2022 TBe Dallv News.)\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C., June 17.\u2014A\nspecial general meeting of tlie Kmiteimy\nRiver Conservative association iv|IL,J>d\nheld at the public hall, Slooan Junction,\non Saturday next at 7::\u00bb p.m. Many\nIssues of live Interest to tlie locality will\nbo -Hhciihsi'iI and a representative gathering is assured. Neighboring associations will bn represented. All Interested\nIn the nlins of tho association are Invited to attend.\nfl. Howe, of P. BuriiH, Limited,\nvisited Sloean City on Sunday, making\ntho trip from Crescent Valley on horseback. Ho stayed at South Sloean on his\nreturn, visiting the pool to see tlie high\nwater, which Is a magnificent wight.\nRev. J. It. Kennedy condueteil services at Taghum, Bonnlngton and Sloenn Park on Sundny last, walking !!\u25a0\nmiles to fulfil his engagements. There\nwns a splendid turnout at sloean Park,\ntbo new hall being almost full, nearly 50\npeople attending.\nJAPAN  RATIFIES TREATIES.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTOKIO, Juno 18.\u2014Japan lias ratified\ntho new commercial treaties with Austria and Italy providing for the right\nof subjocts of those countries to \u00abwn\nreal property in Japan. This right.\nhowever, Is conditional upon Austria\nand Italy granting Japan a similar\nright. As the law passed in llio diet\nauthorizing foreigners to own real\nostatfi in Japan is not yet in force,\nthis clause for the prosont Is without\neffect.\nCYCLONE  DESTROYS\nINDIAN  HEAD  BARNS\n(Bv Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nIndian Head, Sask., June 17.\u2014A\nviolent windstorm last night destroyed the new experimental farm\nbams new under construction.\nThe contract price was $33,000,\nand the damage is likely to\namount to $4,000 or $5,000. The\nspire of the English church was\nalso demolished. Work of reconstruction  will  start  tomorrow.\nFORMER MAYOR OF\nNEW WESTMINSTER  DEAD\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e June 17.\u2014\nStricken with heart failure, John A\nLee, former mayor of New Westminster, died suddenly in his automobile\ntonight when driving along River road\nnear that city. He was born at Mount\nForest, Ont., fn 18fi8, and occupied the\nmayoralty chair of the Royal City in\nthe years 1910, 1011 and 11)12.\nCONTRACTORS   RESPONSIBLE\nFOR COLLAPSE OF BUILDING\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Juno 17.\u2014That\nthe responsibility for the collapse of\nthc building that killed Harry Anderson last week rested with the firm of\ncontractors, Messra. Wlneman & Co.\nwas the verdict of tho coroner's jury\nthis evening. The jury nlso considers\nthat there was want of proper supervision in the construction of the\nstructure.\nTHREE MILLION D0LLAR8\nFOR  VANCOUVER  QAS  PLANT\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, U. C, June 17.\u2014\nThree million dollars Is the proposed\nexpenditure by the British Columbia\nElectric Railway company on a gas\nplant to be erected close to the city.\nThe matter came before a committee\nBOSWELL  NOTES\n(Special to The Dal)** News.)\nBOSWELL, B. C, Juno 17.\u2014On\nThursday last the Rev. A. B. Lano\nspent the day in Boswell, calling upon\nhis numerous friends and remaining\nover night as the guest of Mrs. A. R.\nWilson. Mr. Lane conducted divine\nservice in Boswell for some time prior\nto his leaving to take up his studies\nat Vancouver. Since ills ordination\non Trinity Sunday he has been engaged in the outlying districts of\nCranbrook.\nAt Tain ranch Mr. and Mrs. fi. II.\nHartley are entorlalning Mrs. Harvey,\nMrs. Spcnce and Mrs. J, Smith, all of\nCranbrook. Mr. and Mrs. Hartley were\nresidents of Cranbrook for some years\nprior to coming to Hoswell.\nW. L. Helpher. C. Wilson, W. Wilson, L. Wilson and T. Wilson spent\nthe week-end camping over at Midge\ncreek, but owing to tlie rough weather\nsport was very poor,\nCharles J. Archer of Nelaon spent\nSunday in Boswell visiting friends und\ninspecting one or two ranches, which\nnre at present on the, market, on be''\nhalf of Messrs. McQuarries & Robertson. Mr. Archer was very favorably impressed with Hoswell and\nholies to make another visit later in\nthe year.\nThe strawberry crop In Boswell\npromises to be very heavy this sei\nson and ranchers are busy preparing\nfor picking tho fruit. A large consignment of berry crates was delivered by the lake steamer Kuskanool-\non Sunday morning.\nDaily News\nJob Department\nBookbinding\nRuling\nPrinting\nOf All Kinds\nEverything You Need\nin These Lines\nPrices and Samples on\nApplication to\nDaily News Job Dept.\nNelson, B. C.\nNINE HUNDRED TELEPHONE\nOPERATORS OUT ON STRIKE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nST. LOUIS, June 17.\u2014fiirl telephone operators in tbe employ of the\nSouthwestern Telephone company\n(Bell) struck here shortly after 10\no'clock this morning. Aliout, 900 girls\nwere employed. Officials of the com-\npany said that leas than 50 per cent\nof the girls quit work, but union officials say the strike affected all the\nBell exchanges in the city. The Kin-\nloch lines are not affected.\nIS WILLING TO SELL\nTORONTO STREET  RAILWAY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, June 17.\u2014Sir William\nMackenzie today gave Mayor Hocken\nn written statement In which he offered to sell to tlie city of Toronto\nthe Toronto street railway ami tlie\nToronto electric ll?ht company for\nslightly over 120,000,000, The state-\nmeal, which will lie submitted to the\ncity council at tomorrow's special\nmeeling, clears up many points which\nwere of an uncertain character in\nconnection     with    the    proposed   sale\nSir William states definitely that he\nWill sell to the city every Inch ot\nstreet railway within the limits of the\nmunicipal ty for approximately $2lS\n.\"iOO.OOO, including the franchise and\nall other assets of the Toronto street\nrailway and the radlals in the city\nlimits.\nDR.   LIVINGSTONE'S   MOUSTACHE\nPr. Livingstone, whom everybody\nlias beep talking about lately, showed\nhis intrepidity In many ways. Close\non SO years ago the question of mous-\ntuchej clergymen was discussed in\n\"Notea ana Queries.\" It was then\npointed out that although no contemporary clerics, except Jesuit missionaries, ventured to wear n moustache,\nmany great divines of tho past\u2014such\nas Jeremy Taylor, Robert South and\ntleorge Herbert\u2014used to do so. This\nevoked a letter from a correspondent\nstating that \"tlie latest instance of a\nclergyman wearing a moustache is the\nItev. Dr. Livingstone, who appeared\nWith that manly appendage at our\nmerchants' meeting the ot'her day at\nthe Mansion bouse. May I remark that,\nin so doing, the intrepid doctor, by\nbraving the prejudices of hla countrymen, evinced, I think, a courage Inferior only to that which he must have\nho often exhibited among the savage\ninhabitants of Central Africa.\"\nThe Right Place for a Water Pan\nWrite for the Sunshine booklet,\nor get our local agent to explain the many advantages of\nthis  furnace  over  any  other.\nmake   certain   of   a\nfurnace is just\nover the feed door\nand this is\nwhere it is\nplaced in the\n\"Sunshine.\"\nIt has a lip\nfront and is\nthe right\nheight for easy filling without removal.\nIts position and\ncapacity of the pan\nhealthy   humid   heat.\nMcCIao*\nSunshine Furnace\nLondon    Toronto    Montreal    Winnipeg   Vancouver   St. John, N.B.\nHamilton   Calgary    Saskatoon    Edmonton 335\n nt i-\nPAGI MX\nCHr Ball? iUtotJ\nWCONMDAV .\nJUNC 1* \"\"\"i\nA Rooming House Bargain\n$300 Only Buys the Furniture of 12 Rooms\nRent, $25 per Month\nJOHN   E.  TAYLOR,\nGeneral   Manager.\nALEX.   CHEYNE,\nSee.-Treas.\nCity and Farm Lands, Ltd.\nHEAD OFFICE: NELSON, B. C.\nBranches at  Vancouver,  Lethbridge, Moose Jaw\nSuccessors to\nWESTERN   CANADA  INVESTMENT CO.\nREAL  ESTATE\nFINANCIAL  AGENTS\nLOANS\nSAFETY   DEPOSIT   BOXES\nFOR  RENT.\nNEWS OF THE MARKETS\nI\nPRODUCE\n\"1\nGET FOUR DOLLARS\nFOR LOCAL BERRIES\nFresh    Strawberries   Arrive   Daily\u2014\nShipment ef Limes Expected Soon\n\u2014Local Vegetables Soon.\nLocal strawberries are on tho market\nnow and are coming In frosh dally.\nFour dollars per crate, f.o.b, point of\nshipment, is being paid liy local mer-\nchunta for the berries and they are retailing at -ou  per  banket.\nA shipment of fresh  limes ban been\nreceived In the city as well as new\n-potatoes  from  California  anil  California\nonions.\nBeets, carrots and turnips aro off the\nmnrket  but  tlu-  local  varieties are soon\nexpected now.\njfl.'oduy's 'juotatloiif* are:\nM FOODSTUFFS.\nCake of tbe Woods, per bag ..\nRo'-ai   Household   \t\nKing's  Quality  \t\nPurity   Flour   \t\nRobin   Hood\t\nGold Drop Flour \t\nMother's Favorite \t\nBis Loaf Flour\t\nDAIRY PRODUCTS.\nButter, creamery, pur ll*\n1.85\n1.00\n1.00\n1.30\n1.85\n1.76\n1.75\n:s\/m .so\nButter, dairy, per lb.  ,\nCurlew   butter   \t\nButter,  fiviili,  Hnzehvood  \t\nCheese, Canadian, per lb\t\nCheese, Stilton,  per lb\t\nCheese,  Swiss, per lb\t\nEggs,  new laid,  per don\t\nEggs, eastern  \t\nVEGETABLES.\nLettuce, per lb\t\nDry onions, tt Iba.  for \t\nBermuda onions \t\nCabbage,   new    California,    11\nPotatoes    \t\nRadishes, 4 bunches for  \t\n\u25a0 Spinach, 3 for \t\nAustralian onions, 3 lbs.  for .\nAsparagus   \t\nRhubarb, 8 for \t\n\u2022 Oarmiflower,   from   \t\nGreen  oniens.  per  bunch  \t\nCucumbers,   each   \t\nCalifornia onions,  4 lbs\t\nXew   potatoes,  4  lbs.   ...'.\t\nFRUITS.\nApples,   p\"r   box   \t\nOranges, Valencia \t\nBananas,  per  doz\t\nLemons,   ner   flnzen   \t\nWonev. Comb, per lb\t\nHoney, 1-lb.   Jars   \t\n\u25a0Pfncnppb-H.    each    \t\nLoral  strawberric\nCalifornia cherrlei\nMEAT.\nReef, -wholesale \t\nPn*\"ki  whftlPFnlfl  \t\n,    Mutton,   wholesale\t\nVeal,    wliob'sale\t\nFresh killed beef, retail .\nPork, retail   \t\nMutton,   retoll    \t\nVflfll,   retail    \t\nWftiriH.   rplnll   \t\nRnenn.   rftnll   \t\nT.nrd.  retail   \t\n\u25a0\"\u25a0M-lfons.   \"'.all   \t\n^rilionifofl.   rftnll     1R*r*  ,91*\nbox\n.is*-? .??.\n,1W7> -?S\n.tS'T' _\u2022.'\n,\u00ab-**. ,?s\nnf tin- day found prices of many representative stocks well above yesterday's\nfinal figures, although bi-low the highest\n'imitations of the session. Ui-adlng was\nia especially good demand, displaying\nmust  strength  of  the  leaders.\nThe Harriman lines were helped by\nreports that a. dissolution plan  had been\nworked out tu  the satisfaction  of all\nparlies at interest. Inteiborough, preferred, whieh has developed murket\nstrength recently, ruse nearly 4 points\nto the accompaniment of gossip concerning prospects of a dividend payment.\nOno reason ascribed for lhe Increasing\ndullness of the market was the disposition of traders iu bold off uhUi President Wilson's message rcgurdlng currency    legislation   is   read   and   definite\nword reclved regarding the attitude of the\ncourls toward tile latest plan for segregation  of  Ibe  Harriman  rouds.\nThe following New York stuck market\nquotations are supplied by Osier, Hammond & Xaniou, Winnipeg!\nOpen   Close\nAmalgamated   Copper   ,\nAmerican   Car   Foundry\nAmerican  Locomotive\nilting\nAmerican   Sugar    \t\nAnaconda\t\nAtehlson   \t\nItnltimore   ,V    Ohio    \t\nUrooklyn   Rapid   Transit   ...\nCanadian  Pacific  \t\nChesapeake  &   Ohio   \t\nChicago  &  Alton   \t\nChicago,  M.  &  St.   Paul  ...\ncidcugo .. Northwestern ...\nConsolidated Gas\t\nDelaware   Sc   Hudson   \t\nBrio   \t\nKrle,   lst   pfd\t\nErie,  and  pfd\t\nGeneral Electric  \t\nGreat  Northern  pftl\t\nit  Northern   Ore\t\nIllinois   Central   \t\nlull r I Kin i    \t\nKansas  City Southern  \t\nLehigh    Valley    \t\nLouisville   *   Nashville   \t\nJI. St. P. & B. 8. M. (Soo)  .\nlourl,  Kansas & T\t\nMissouri   I'aeifk-   \t\nXew   York   Central   \t\nNorthern   I'aeiflc   \t\nPennsylvania   \t\nHeading    \t\nSouthern Pacific \t\nSouthern   Hallway   \t\nTenn.   Copper   \t\nTettlS   I'aeiflc   \t\nCity.\n66(4 Oa-ji\n\u25a0IH3 A'iVt\n\u25a0r.t\\'_ \u25a0...'\/\u25a0\n. 01% B\u00ab\u00a3\n.    .. 107\n. 8sj4 m\n.    95% 05'..\n.   0B# i-'\/i\n.  85& si\n. -15% 31794\n.   .\u00bbi,_ 50$\n. 103\n8*%\nlO-'i,\n!-T',_\n120\nir-j-U\nm\\\n;m_\naw\nIM'\/is\nHIV*\nm\nluff\n15%\n. ii.',; 1-18%\n. ISO 130\nlatji i_i\n.   2M4 mk\n.   28% 20|S\n.   DO Htt\n. Kir,'\/, 107%\n. 1009s 110',H\n. 160 ir.T*-i,\n.'  D3% 04%\n.   21 '\/\u25a0 ay\nBelling price uf l'l! and ill iu lhe morning. Cement was unchanged with a selling prico of 27'\/,. Among the few* Issues\nto close at decllncn were I'liizlllnu, It,\nlower at NX; Scotia, which broke lu new\nluw ground, reacted -.'\u25a0, and Bridge,\nwhich broke 1? io 110, equalling its low\nfor ihe year. Porto Jtlco BOM In brokun\ntuts at r>j and was offered at 60 at tli_\nclone, 4 puluts b' luw Its quotation iur\nthe year. JIank shares showed nu important changes. In the unlisted market a rise uf l'.i points in Tramway and\nPower was the feature. The high for\nthe day wus touched In tlie afternoon\nand lhe cluslug quotation at 84ft ashed,\n;i!'.*H hid showed a large proportion of\ntlie day's advance retained.\nTotal business 4,-74 shares, -,700 mines,\n\u25a0f-S.h'w bonds.\nLONDON MARKET DEPRESSED\n(Ry Dally News Lease' Wlre.l\nLONDON, June 17.-Thc slock market\nwas depressed today. The setback In\nNew York and the marketing of some\nof tins recent settlement wreckage start-\nid an easy tendency, which was accentuated later by continental selling and\ndearer discount. The elusing was irregular nnd near the lowest Wltll vagno\nrumors circulating of more (rouble both\nhere aud In I'arls. Consuls lost .1-111.\nAmerican Becudiies fluctuated during\ntbe forenoon. Tiiu rates decision unset\nthe market and tbe undertone was weak\nuntil late In the session when New York\nbuying caused a slight recovery and a\nsteadier closing. Money whs easier but\ndiscount rates were advanced 1 1-UQlft,\nMETALS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nNEW  YORK, .lune  !7.-_ilver, 6!)%.\nLONDON,   June   17.\u2014Silver,   T,._;   lead,\n\u00a320 7s lid.\nNEW  YORK  METAL  MARKETS\n(By Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nNKW YORK, June 17.\u2014Copper-Weak.\nStandard spot io August, limit electrolytic, 14.87005; h'ke, 15'ila.lSlj casting.\n14.75. London, weak. Spol, \u00a3_4 17s Cd;\nfutures,   ._t5.\nTin-Weak. Spot to August, ,t):.',__\n44.73. London, weak. Spot, \u00a32011 10s;\nfutures,  \u00a3m 17s lid.\nKp.Jter-Wcak, K.ffi.   London, .-JJ 12s (Id.\nIron\u2014Quiet and unchanged. Cleveland\nwarrants In London, iiiis 4'^d.\nPacific\nu. S.  Rubber\nU.   S.   Sled   ...\nS.   Steel,   pf\nUtah   Copper   .\nWfib'ish    \t\nSPOKANE   MARKETS.\n(Reported by St. Donia i\nLawrence.)\nBid      .\\aked\n2,0(1      . 3.50\n.30\n60.00\n60.00\n63,00\nTurkoy. ner lb.\n(TJeepp, per lb. ,\nDuoha. per lb.\n!_.*7) ,K\nO-nr-uinted   B.C.   Cane.   KW-lb.\nMONTREAL   PROVISION   MARKET\nMONTREAL, .-une il\u2014There wns an\nIncreased demand fnr butler frnm western buyers nnd sales uf some round\nlots of finest rrpa'iery were mado at\nUfiWc.   The f1ettinp<1 for eheose from over\nthe cable is quiet. Lggs. Iicllve and\nffrtn.\nCheese, flm-i tern-terns, )3\u00ae12Kc; finest\n\u2022ap-terns, |l*4*iH1*JSc.\nBut for, eh ol \u2022*\u2022*\u25a0* \"I crenmerv, 24W@2t\u00bbl4c'\nsee-.ndf,  MVUff&Wo.\nV.<rPH_   fresh,   l-Jln.\nT-orV heavy Canadn short mess, barrels, 35*NEc; pieces. Wtett: Canada short\neut  back,  barrels.   'ri*ii\"c;  pieces,  2fic.\nSTOCKS\nWINNIPEG STOCKS\n(By Dally  Newa  Leased  Wlre.l\nBid   Asked\nCanada Fire,  P.P    166\nCity & Prov.  Loan        110\nEmpire  Loan    11314   UB\nG.   W.   Life           310\nO. W. Permanent, ex-dlv. .... 130\nHome Investment, ex-dlv. ... 135\nNor. Canada Mort., ex-div.  ..   IBO      110\nNor.  Crown Bank      R5       W\nNor,  Mortgage,  ex-illv    102      102V-*\nNor.  Trust,  ex-dlv    120\nOccidental   Fire           105\nStandard Trust,  ex-dlv       172\nUnion  Hank      130%   ...\nWlnnliieir P.  & G       1m\nS.   A.   Warrants        1200\nSales;    15    Inion   Bank,   HWtt;   15   \u00abor.\nCrown, S7; l S.  A.  Warrant,  1126,\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Bv Ually  News   Leased  Wire)\nTORONTO.  June  17.-Brazlllan,  8S-J6.\nl>rt Rose,   240*i232.\nHolllnger,   l5.T5fil6.00.\nStandard,   21 lift2.514.\nConlagas,  725.\nCrown  Reserve,  3T\u00bb3*_'-_54.\nBread,  1BV_\u00bb19%.\nMackay,  pfd., 66.\nToronto Railway, 138.\nUnlisted:    Plenaurum,  lOOfiKH,\nMcKlnley,  170.\nPearl Lake- 3\u00a3-&.\nNEW YORK MARKET\nVACCILLATING AND DULL\nfBy Dallv  New\u00ab  L--ased  Wlre.1\nNEW   YORK,   June   17.\u2014An   uncertain\ncourse was  followed today by the stock\nmarket,  which was dul! to.the point  of\nstagnation most of the tune.   The clofte\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Special  to  the  Dally   News.\nBid\nNugget    J   .20\nKootenay   Gold   \t\nlinmluiiiu  Trust    i0:i,0fl\nb. c. Permanent  Loan ...135.00\nAsked\n|   .80\n.161-8\n113.00\nADVANCE MONEY\nTO MUNICIPALITIES\nLondon Brokers Want Government to\nBack Atl Applications for Municipal  Loans.\n(Rv Dnllv News Leased Wlre.l\nVANCOUVER, B. ('.., June 17.\u2014J.\nScrlmgour, member nf a London brokerage firm \"f thai name, which bandies\nHank or Montreal and Canadian Northern railway business In England, has\njust made a proposal la Sir Richard Me-\nllride Involving a sweeping change In\nthe system whereby municipalities\nthroughout British Columbia shall raise\n\u2022\u00bb\"'iev. He fjUggeetfl that legislation be\neduced next session to appoint a pro-\n....\u25a0Inl bonrd of control to advise with\nmunicipalities when the la Iter wish to\nIssue deb ont urea to borrow money for\nImprovements. The government, on the\nrecommendation of this hoard, is to\nguarantee the jbomls, which Mr. Scrim-\n(tour's firm will agree to dispose nf tn\nLondon, nr ran-ing advances to municipalities at all times that money Is\nneeded.\nNERVOUS AND EXCITED\nIR MONTREAL SENTIMENT\nfBv TinHv V-inrfj Tiaea- Wlre.l\nMONTREAL, .lune 17,-Stock market\nsentiment locally continues to reflect\nuncertainty and is nervous nnd excited.\nMovement:; of the first two weeks of\nJune have been succeeded this week by\nnarrow fluctuations, with no definite\ntrend, while business has been on n\nvery small scale. Attention Is still centred on Xew York and opinion as to the\nlocal outlook shifts with tlie rise and\nfall of prices In (bat market. Thc local\nlist opened with a slightly lower range\nof quotations today as a result of lower\ncables for C.P.R. In n few stocks further small declines were shown ln the\nfirst hour and then the market began\nto recover when C.P.R, and other stocks\nin the New York list began to move upward. Tbe movement was narrow, the\nwidest range of fluctuations for the day\nbeing 2'i points In C.P.R. and Tk points\nIn Power. Net changes resulting from\nthe movement were largely In the direction of Rains, but only In a few cases\ndid these changes exceed small fractions. C.P.R. opened 1\u00ab down at 216*4,\nrallied to as high as 218& and closed\n.at Hi-fis', with a gain of % on the day.\nPower was off % to 211 nt tbe opening.\ndeclined to 2001,. ami then recovered to\n212, selling at its best price in the final\ntrading and showing a gain of U point\nus the day's change. Richelieu closed\n\u25a04 up at 208*11; Toronto rails at 137M* and\nTextile at ROW showed like gains. Detroit Knitted \\i_ to ffp\/i: Iron was unhanged at 45. . Ottawa Power closed\nstrong  at 179 bid  as compared with  a\nGRAIN\nDOWN TREND DUE TO\nREPORTS OF RAIN\n(Bv Dally  News  Lorisod  Wire.)\nWIN'N'll'Ki;.   .lune   17.\u2014Wheat   was   on\nIhe  down   trend,    tine    tn    rains  In   the\nStates  and  Canadian   wheat  areas.    December was traded  in for the first time\nat  ItiV'''.'-.',_?.    Closlnu   prices   wen*  IVi\nI'\/L-c  lower.    Minneapolis   opened  MJlVic\nlower.    Closing prices were l*liff;2c lower.\nTho   cash   demand   was   quiet   fnr   all\ngrades   of  wheat   except   Nos.   2  and   :|\nnorthern,   which   were   In   fair   demand\nIth  few offerings;  exports  bids   were\nnt of line.   Cash prices closed lii'-fiVjc\nlower for  contract  grades.\nOats   and   flax   were   Weaker   in   sym-\nA   NEW   SUIT   FOR   MISS   DOLLY.\nDoll's * Norfolk Dress. This design\nis cut on simple lines and will he easy\nto make. It will please the little doll\nmother to have dolly's dress made in\nsuch up-to-date style. Gingham, gal-\nnlea, linen, cashmere, velvet or taftota\nmay be used. The pattern is cut in\nslsiea: For dolls, 18, 20, 22 and 2*1\nnehes in height. It requires one yard\nof 30-inch material for tho IS inch\nsize.\n\"TIED TO BUSINESS?\"\nAre you \"lied down\" by an uncongenial employment'' Perhaps you never\nheard of the little boy who asked his\nheard the story of the little boy who\niskoil his father the following questions;\n\"Say, dad, Bomeono snys that there's\nu tide In the affairs of men which leads\ntn fortune. What kind of a tide la that?\"\nAnd the father answered grimly, \"Tied\ndown to business.\" Perhaps this Is the\ntide in your affairs and you don't feel\nthat you aro getting anywhere?\nThere's one way to stem that kind of\na \"tide\" Break away from tiie uld rut\nor doing things and use tlie best method\nnud the simplest to get in touch with\nmoro congenial employment nnd wider\nopportunities.\nYou may do this through thc Want\ncolumns.\nTlie Wants offer the one certain way\nof stemming the tide that leads to misfortune.\nThe Dnllv News Wants mean opportunity.\nDaily News want adi 1 cent a ward.\nEach pattern can ho obtained by\nsending 10 cents to the office of thia\npaper, ln some cases tile Illustration\ncontain, two patterns, each number\nrepresenting a different pattern. In\nsuch cases 20c should he enclosed.\nPattern No. 9423. ,\nPattern Department\nDaily Newti\nEnclosed find 10 cents for which\nsend the above pattern to\nName\t\nNo   Btreet\t\nTown    V\t\nMeasurement\u2014Waist    Buat....\nAge (It child's or mlsa' pattern)..\nThese patterns are supplied direct from the makers, requiring\ntwo week, from receipt of order\nat the Dally News Office.\nWoman's Sphere\nIs the Whole Vast Range\nof tbe Buiness World\nand tha Realm af\niba Household\nA1\nLMOST every line of\nhuman activity is open\nto the trained, intelligent woman or miss who has\nImd sufficient experience to fit\nher for a skilled task or the\nresponsibilities in business\nlife, or the duties of home employment. The apprentice as\nwell will find chances a-plenty\nfor acquiring knowledge of\nsome particular line of work\nthat is especially to her liking\nand may speedily rise to a\nbetter position and increased\nearning power.\nThere's a quick and inexpensive way in carrying a\nmessage to women in every\nwalk of life\u2014a way to summon\nworkers to office, factory, mill\nor home. Send for them\nthrough the Want Columns.\nHundreds of women read the\nHelp Wanted Female Classified Advertisements\nevery day. Bright,\nskilled women who\nare capable of performing every task\nin business or home\nwork\u2014all may be\nsummoned through\nthe Want Columns.\n0\nH\u00abLF WANTIO.\nNILtON   IMPLOYMENT   AQCNCY\nF. A. N-mmM, Mi\npathy with wheat, daill oat-** closed _..\nlower to '\/ie higher and cash flax closed\n'.i'uli' lower.   .\nHecelptu continue heavy, .Monday's lll-\nspecttonjl numbering 7\"- cars and In\nsight  -Were i\u00bbK> ears.\nWinnipeg, wheat, close-July, 03c; October,  9_'4c;  December, 9\\%c.\nMinneiipiili**, wheat, close\u2014July, 9H&e;\nSeptember Oift_c\nChicago, wheit. close\u2014.Inly, tllV-c*- September, Jl-Jij   December,  fll%C.\nWlnnipe-,', lints, close-July, 35Tf*e; October, K'ic, \u25a0\nFor Sale\n8-room\u00abl house, Cellar St.\u2014Most\nsuilablo tor rooming house; cIobo\nlo Baker. Arranged ln two flats,\nwith senani.te bath ad toilet on\neach floor. Very cheap tor quick\nBale. Pally rented an* returns\ngood Interest on investment.\nPrice $2,400\nOno third cash fth_ tarmB for\nbalance.\nApply to A. Booth, O^ncr, Hume\nHotel.\nLABOR COMMISSION\nSittings of tho Provincial Labor Cam-\nmission will ho held as follows:\nCranbrook\u2014Tuesday, June 10th, 10 am.\nKlmberley, Wednesday, June 11th,\n2 p.m.\nFernle\u2014Thursday, June 12th, S p.m.\nMlchel-Snturday, June 14th, 11 a.m.\nCreston-Monday, June 16th, 8 p.m.\nKaslo\u2014wednesday, June 18th, 2 p.m.\nNelson-Thursday, June 19th, 4 p.m.\nQueen Mine-Friday, June 20th, 1 p.in.\nSalmo\u2014Friday,  June 20th, 4 p.m.\nSllvertoti-Tm-a.lay, June 24th, 10:30 *i.tn.\nNaluiap\u2014 Wednesday,  June 26th,  2 p.tm.\nThe Commission Is empowered to inquire Into nil matters affecting the conditions of labor ln British Columbia. All\npersons interested are Invited to att-md\nand give evidence.\n' H. O. PARSONS,\ni Chairman.\nF. R. McNamara,\nSecretary. fl-w\nFOR SALE,\nFOR SA (.15\u2014Choice fruit laud. 121 acrea\nIn fertile Pend d\" Oreille valley. Cloar\nto route of new railway. Would Bell part.\nVery easy clearing. Soap. Apply P. O.\nbtM \u00abB. Nel\u00ab-*7 263-tf\nFOR SALE\u20143ft-foot steamboat, \"with engine and boiler complete, cheap.   For\nparticulars    apply    to    Forest   Mills  of\n13. C, Limited,  Box IOCS, Nelson, B.C.\nS-tf.\nFOR SALK\u2014Rewtaurant, doing best\nbUBlns**** In town. Forty tn CO at each\nmeal, W steady hoarders. Will sell pari\ncash, hdl'nce as rent. Reason for falling 111 i.-'plU'. Address Restaurant.\nBull  River,  B.v.'. **_-2G\nFOR SALE\u2014Floating palace. Steamer\nInternational, 1U0 ft. over all, furnished\nand with electric light plant. All machinery, except holler. Intact. Apply G.\n11.  Matthew, Cabinet Cigar store.     48-tf.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Helntaman   piano,   reasonable for cash; nlso banjo.   Apply Mux\n244, city. '4U-12\nFOR  SALE\u2014Collapsible   baby   carriage.\nApply corner Cedur and Silica;        *-l-6\nFOR BALE\u2014One good boathouso nnd\nnumber of motor boat bulls, different\nsizes, with or without engines. Also one\nBOCond hand motor bont. Write or call\nat Minim Qlllett's boutliouse, east of\nShingle mill,  Nelaon,  B.C. \u2022KWJ\nFoil SAM''\u2014Peterborough double-sculling boat, bunt shed, complete accessories, good condition. Cost vm. Bargain\njin cnsii or f60 by instalments, inspect\nat  Acuuij-'M  ranch,  I'roctor. \"KM2\nfor   BALE\u2014Shoemaker-''   outfit, \"including  Singer sewing  machine,   lasts\nnnd other tools.   Good condition.    Apply\nThe Ark. 63-6\nFOIt SALB-Baby's EHgllSh ton  wicker\nmail cart, leather lined, wltb hood.   In\nRood  condition.    Price J10,  cost  $:\u00bb.    911\nCarbonate atrcet or Box 4S2, Nelson.\nFOR SALE\u201420-ft  motor canoe,  2 horse\npower  engine,   built   last  yenr,   moderate.   Applv Box 256, Dally News.       *54-C\nPOULTRY AND LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Five teams heavy horses,\nweighing from 2800 to 3200 pounds per\nteam. Will sell double or single. Can\nbe seen any time. Apply to A. E. Johnston Logging company, Valllcan, B.C.\n________ 82-20\nFOR SALE\u2014Baby chicks, Leghorns, etc.\nPrice    list    on    application.      Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort. Ml-24\nFOR SALE\u2014Alredalo puppies. Price 116,\n\u25a0Apply George Aviv, Perrys. B.C. \u00bb47-12\nFOR SALE\u2014One fresh, half Jersey cow,\nfive years old; four gallons milk dally.\nBest family cow. Price 186. Apply Mrs.\nB. Mclnerlck. Sloean Junction. *60-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Pekin duck eggs,.  11.50 per\nsetting.       I'.     Cameron,     care     Bell\nTrading company. \u20225J-0\nFOR SALE\u2014Laying  hens,   from  $1  up.\nAlso few pens good stock.   Box 1007.\n\u202253-0\nFOR  SALE\u2014Leaving   country,   will   sell\nmy White Leghorn   bens at 7<ic each.\nW. J. Collins, Thrums. \u202264-fl\nFOR SALE\u2014Six young brood sows and\none boar, Blrkshlres; also yearling\nHolsteln hull and three heifers. Pair\nToulouse geese. William BugglnB, Willow Point. *54-0\nCITY OF NEL80N\nNotice Is hereby given that the annual\nsitting of the Court of Revision of the\ncity of Nelson, to hear all complaints\nagainst the assessment for the year 19111\nas made by the assessor, will be held In\nthe council chamber, city ball, on Saturday, the 6th day of July, at 10 o'clock\na.m..\nW. E. WASSON,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson. B.C., June 8th. IMS. 43-2A\nfor    RENT\u2014furnished    suite,    with\ndishes, cooking  utensils and all  linen\nlupplled.   Kerr Apartment block.     *Ja-tf.\nFOR RE NT- Furnished  room, 411  Silica.\n\u202241-12\nOaily Newt \"Want\" Ada. Get Results\n\u25a0BLP PROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nPHONB mt BOX \u00ab4fL\nTHE     WORKlNGMAN't     EMPLOYMENT AGENCY.\t\nWANTKIt\u2014Circular sawyer; edgermnn;\nwoman couk. hotel, fSO; Railway builders, fare advunced; women and girls,\nhousework; suwyers; teamsters; sawmill laborers; woman cook, summer resort; womun cook, without encumbrance-,\nfor mine, 2u to 30 people, no better place.\n\\V.  Parker, 313 Baker street.  Phone Z\u00ab3.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nIf EX W.WTI'J >\u2014.Salary and expenses pr\ncommission. Alu.-i be active, ambitious, energetic. Splendid opportunity.\nFormer expetilence not necessary. Write\nfur particulars, Kl Creo Cigar Company\nLondon. Ont. **-*\u2022\n25-2(1\nWANTI'I)\u2014QirJ    for   general    housework\nand  to look after one child  (girl afced\ni'l-i-    Htnte  wages  and references.    Airs.\nF.  W.  McLainc, Oreeliwood, B.C.     47-tf.\nWANTKD\u2014By   marrlod   couple,   position\nas   cook and   helper,   camp   preferred.\nApply Uox 75,  Dally News. \u202249-fl\nWANT KB\u2014Purchaser for, or iigent to\nsell timber holdings and mills, running\nnow. Will sell at what I consider half\nprice, $00,000. Thorough Investigation\nInvited; 10 per cent paid purchaser or\nagent closing deal Inside GU days. Ad-\n.i.  Box 4D2, Rossland, B.C. *49-0\nWANT13D-airl   for  general   housework\nApply 42t Carbonate street. MS-U\nWANT Kl)\u2014To    purchase    good    second\nhand  furniture.    Will pny highest -cash\nprice.    P. O.  Hox 1154. Nelson. \u20224U-G\nlOU'-ORl) BOAT COMPANY, LlMiTl-ll).\nBout Builders and Livery, Boat supplies, oars, paddles, hatteries, spark\nplug**, ele. Agents Scrlpps, Hazard. Detroit (iniy, Ixuian stationary motors,\nWisconsin detachable H*. horse power\nrowboat motors. Write for Catalogue.\nPhone 148 any hour day or night for\nlaunch trip. \u00ab ovao\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED AD RATES\n, Ond OMit a word per insertion, four\n. eenta a word par week, fifteen cents i\nword per meftth when Mih aoeem-\npanisg the Order. OtherwitM en* cent\nper word per insertion straight. No\naccounts opened for Want Ads. Mini-\nmum ehero-i 28 ppnto.\nHOTEL DIRECTORY j\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelson, B. C.\nOne minute's  walk  from C.P.R.   station.    Cuisine   unexcelled;   well   heated (\nand ventilated.        >\nLAVIONE & PUNK.\nBusiness Directory\nA8BAYER8\n3.   W.  WIDDOWBON.   A88AYER  AND I\nChemllt      Hox   A1108,    Nelson,    B.   C.\nCharges:    Gold, (diver, copper or lead* .\n11   each;   gold-silver,   tl.GO;   silver-lead,\n11.50.   Other metals on application.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATBRltAN A CO.-P.O, 1\nNBMON AUCTION. MART-W . CUT-\nLKR, licensed auctioneer. Auction aa*\n\u25a0alee rooms.  6Q\u00bb Ward street, VhatoliL\nWANTED\u2014Girls    at    Nelson   Jain   and\nCanning factory. 60-tf.\nWANTED\u2014To    contract     hauling    aud\n-skidding   tips.     Can   use   four   tear\nf.   C,   Sclicriiu rhurii,  Erlckson,  B.C.\nWANTED-Half   acre   land,   lake  front,\nage.   E. A., Daily News. 'GO-fl\nWANTED\u2014General   servant.      Must   bu\nguod   clean   cook   and*neat worker.\nWagee M<* per month.    Write P, O. Box\n1053,  Nelson,  B.C. 52-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Buyfir for established artis<\ntie   business.     Good   income,   fttto   will\nhandle.    Apply  liox UUl,  Dally News.\n\u202252-0\nWANTED\u2014Good   general   servant.     Apply m Silica or Box 1106. -6_-C\nWANTED\u2014Experienced dairy  band.  Ap-\nply Pioneer dairy. *.13-0\nWANTED\u2014General       servant,       elderly\nlady preferred, 312 Robson street.     \u2022B8-0\nWANTED-Fller, sawyer, millwright-\nforeman, third class engineer, grader\njifiil mill and yard laborers for left hand\nrotary sawmill wilh band resaw, to\nstart not later than July 1. Apply at\njnce, slating experience, references and\nwages expected, to Spar wood Lumber\nCompany, Limited, .Spurwood Postoffice.\n 63-13\nFOR RENT\nfob  RENT\u2014Furnislied   flat   for light\nhousekeeping. Apply _I2 Vernon street,\n\u2022SO-G\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished four room cot-\nta\u00abe on lake fronl, seven acres land,\ngood water, plenty wootl, near school,\npostofflce, store and C.P.R. hotel, Balfour. Apply Tom Helse, Balfour, B.C.\n\u202251-6\nFOR  RENT\u2014Five-room  brick  flat.    All\nmodern.    Apply   to   William   Hancock,\nNelson Brick Works. \"iiM\nFOR  BENT\u2014Six roomed  house, close In,\n$26 month,  J.  W. Gallagher,  102 linker.\n62-tf.\nFOU RENT\u2014Summer home, good house,\nIdeal locution, only VA miles from city;\nwuter frontage,  boat bouse, $100 for sen-\nson.    Apply   Box  \\m,  Nelson. 63-tf.\nFOR   RENT\u2014Bedroom    at    Youiip   Woman's club.    Phone 307. *o3-li\nFOR RENT\u2014Suite clean,  well  furnished\nhousekeeping rooms, 507 Silica street.\n\u202253-G\nFOR RENT\u2014Flvo roomed cottage, part-\nfurnished; four roomed cottage, partly\nfurnishedi also two rooms for light\nhousekeeping. Apply COO Victoria street.\nPhone L114.  *53-0\nWANTED \u2014 Position      by      blacksmith.\nHeavy forging a specialty,  would shoe\nhorses   where   actually   necessary.     Apply Box &*>3. Bally Newr **,:,-'\u25a0\nwanted-To  buy   a   small improved\nfruit much on west arm Kootenny\nlake, 2 Or 3 acres, with cosy home and\nbuildings. Send plat, full particulars\nand pbolograph. If pusslble, tu Box \u25a0!-\u25a0\">.\nDnlly News, \\ *G4-0\nWANTED\u2014Position   by   _nd   class   B.C.\nengineer,   wide   experience   In erecting\nand    operating,     first    class    mechanic\nguaranteed,    Box 853. Dally News.     '.Vl-l\nDEPARTMENT OF WORKS\nNotice to Contractors,\n\"Creston School.\"   *\nSealed tenders, superscribed \"Tender\nfor Crescton School Extension,\" will bo\nreceived by tho honorable the minister\nof public work. Up to noon on Monday,\ntbe 30th day of -Tune, 1013, for the erection and completion of n two-room extension to the school-house at Creston,\nIn the Ymlr electoral  district.\nThe work to be started immediately\non acceptance of tender and finished and\nhanded over ready for occupation on or\nbefore August 25th, 1913.\nPlans, specifications, contract, and\nforms of tender may be seen on nnd\nafter the 10th dav of June, 11)13. at the\noffice of Mr. \"W. F. Teetzel, government\nagent, Nelson: Mr. J. Crompton, secretary to the school bonrd, Creston; and\nthe depnrlment of public works, Victoria.\nIntending tenderers can, for the sum\nof ten dollnrs ($10), obtain one copy of\nthe plans and specifications by applying\nto the undersigned. This sum will be\nrefunded when the plans are returned\nIn Rood order.\nEach proposal must be accompanied\nby hn accepted brink cheque or certificate of deposit on a chartered bank of\nCannda, made payable to the Honorable\ntbe Minister of Public Works, for a sum\nequal to 10 per cent of tender, whloh\nshall be forfeited if the party tendering\ndecline to enter Into contract when called upon to do so,' or if he fall to complete the work contracted for. The\ncheques or certificates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to\nthem upon tho execution of tho contract.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on thc forms supplied, signed\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer, and enclosed In the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nJ.   E.   GRIFFITH,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\n.Victoria, B.C., June 10th, 1913. 02-5\nGROCERIES\nA. \"MACDONALD ft CO., WHOLfflUIdi\nGrocers end Provision Uerchanti. U_\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Spicee, D*rfe\u00ab\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Grooeriet\nTobaccos. Cigars, Batter. Eggs, Cfteto*\nend Packing Houss Pr-tfuee. OBHt\nand warehouse corner of Vront tarn\nHall streets. P. O. Boi IM.\nphones 28 and St.\nWHOLESALE PRODUCE\nA 8. HORSWILL A CO-WUOLB-ALdl\nImporters and Manufacturers' Agents.\nProduce, Fruits, Flour and Feed. P. \"J.\nBos 64. Nelson. B.C.   Phone UL    *H-*X\nELECTRICAL   8UPPLIE8\njTh7rINOR08eT\u00bb^ I\nBlack. Installation of electrical ma-l\nchlnery, telephone plants, house wiring. 1\nRt ialr work. Supplies carried. Phone I\nA2T7.    P.  O. Boa 165. ______\nWINDOWS,   CARPET   AND   CHIMNEY!\ncleaning.   House cleaning our specialty,!\nAwnings,   new  and  repairs.     Vacuum!\nCleaning Company, Phone 438, Box 106.1\n177-tf.f\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS|\nGREEN  BROS., BURDEN A CO.\nCivil   Engineers.    Dominion   and   B.   3,1\nLand Surveyors.\nNelson, Bid Ward Street: A. H. Green,!\nMgr. Victoria, 114 Pemberton BIdg.; F.I\nC. Oreen . Ft. George, Hammond Street;\/\nF. P. Burden.\nA.  L.   MoCULLOCH\nHydraulic   Entjineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\np. o. Box 41.\nOffice phone, L86; residence phone, R7i|\nOffice,   Suite 6,   McCulloch   Bide\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nT.  M.  RIXEN,   AUDITOR   AND    \\C-1\ncountant.    Room 16. K.W.C.,   Sloes.      L\nIK-tf J\nH.     PERRT     LEAKE,    CONSULTING!\nEngineer,  Nelson, B.C. 300-tf.f\nCHAS. MOORE, C.E.\nProvincial    Land    Surveyor,    Archi-I\ntect.     Lnnd   subdivision,   tinther   anoV\nmine  surveying.    Plans  and  speciflcn-1\ntlons.   Alan block, Nelson, B.C.     fil-tf|\nSYNOPSIS  OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS;\nCoal mining rights of tbe Dominion, 1*\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta\nthe Yukon Territory, tbe North-wee\nTerritories, and ln a portion of tho pro\nvlnce of British Columbia, may be lease'\nfor a term of twenty-one years at ai\nannual rental of fl per acre. Not mor*\nthan 2,560 acres will be leased to om\napplicant.\nApplication for a lease must be madi\nby tho applicant In person to tho Agen\nor Sub-Agent of thn district of whlct\nthe rights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the laud must bi\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-dlvl\nslons of sections, and In unsurveyed ter\nrltory the tract applied for shall bi\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied\nby a fee of i5, which will be refunded lithe rights applied for are not available!\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall b*\npaid on the merchantable output of th*S\nmine at the rate of five cents per tonl\nTbe person operating the mine shalS\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns acT\ncounting for the, full quantity of mar\nchantable coal mined and pay the royalt;\nthereon. If the coal mining rights ar\nnot being operated, such returns shouh\nbe furnished at least once a year.\nThe lease will Include the coal minim\nrights only, but the lessee may be per\nmitted to purchase whatever avallabi\nsurface rights may be considered necel\nssry for the working of the mine at thi\nrate of $10.00 an acre.\nFor full Information application shoul\nbo made to the Secretary of the Depart\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to an\nAgent or Bug-Agent of Dominion Landr\nDeputy Minister of the Interior. I\nN.B.\u2014unauthorised publication of t *\n\u2022tdvartlsam-Ml-i*   will   nnt  bo   twirl   tor\nLQDGEJ4(DTig\nKOOTENAY LODGl No. 16, I.O.O.F.-J\nMeets every Monday night in Uad\nfellows' hall at S o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH L01\/_^\nNo. 16, I.O.O.F., meets first and tftiH\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall, 7:30 o'clock]\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. 7. L<\nO.F., meets second and fourth TSun\ndays In Oddfellows' hall at 8 o'clocl\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7 meet! OT\u00ab\nsecond Tuesday in Oddfellowe' ball 1\n8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET 'j\nday nights  in  K.   of P.   bal],\nbuilding.\nLOlOJL\nNELSON Lodge No. \u00ab\nmeets 2nd and 4th Thun\nday at 8 p.m. in Eai\nhail.\nF.O.E.\nNelson Aerie No. SI met\ntnd and 4th Wednesday! j\nBagle Hall.\nCourt Royal   Nelaon .,\nKM ^meete   on Ind and i\nft* Us Is Mondays each munm ,\nl\u2122*Wi\"* K.P. balk at iw I*M\ncourt meets first and third wedneeda-\n1\/1 A n    Court Kootenay Belle mi\n1. II \u25a0      Ind   and   4th   Frldaya\nVeVelo   Kt  p4  llwil  jj^ ^\nCLAN JOHNSTONE 21* meets in I.oJ\nft ball fiwt ud third Fridays. I P.f\n WEDNE8DAV   JUNE 11.\nC&e 9a(l_ JUtef.\nPhone 10\nThe Star Grocery Co.\nStore of Quality\nNew Potatoes\n4 lbs. 25c\nSpinach, 3 lbs 25c\nLettuce, ib 15c\nRadishes, 2 for  5c\nOnions, bunch   5c\nRhubarb, 8 lbs 25c\nNew Cabbage, Ib.  Sc\nLocal\nStrawberries\nPer Box 20c\nCalifornia\nCherries\n30c\nStar Grocery Co*\nPhone 10\nExpert\nGasoline\nEngine\nRepairs\nAshton & Smedley\nP. O. Boi 608 Phone 149\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nEstablished 1876.\nHEAD OFFICEt TORONTO, ONT.\nCapital  (paid  up) $6,770,000.00\nReserve fund ,  6,770,000.00\nD. R. Wilkit, Prti. and Gwi'l. Mgr.\nHon. Robert Jaffray, Vice-Pree.\n8AVING8 DEPARTMENT.\nAn account cun be opened with Jl\nor more. Interest Is allowed at current rateH from date of opening the\naccount and added to the principal\ntwice a year.\nTravellers' cheques and draftfl sold,\nnegotiable In all parts of the world.\nBank money orders Issued, payablo\nthroughout Cannda, the United States\nand Great Brltuln at tlie following\nrates: 15 and under, 3 cents; over (5\nto $10, 6 cents: over fin to (30, 10 cents;\noyer $30 to SfiO. 15 cents.\nOut of town customer's enn transact\ntheir hanking  business  by mail   and\nare given every attention.\nNalaon Branch, J. H. D. Benton, Mgr.\nPractical Plumbing\nIn all its branches, and including nil\nmanner ol repairs, Is undertaken hy\n[lis o' the understanding that we gitve\n'.perfect satisfaction or make no charge.\nhAVe put in new plumbing of all kinds\n'.anywhere tm desired, use only the best\n.materials,   employ   only   competent\n\u00bb[workmen and ask only tbe most reasonable prices. A trial order will result In our being your plumbers.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON\n(\nSUMNER\nEXCURSIONS\nReturn Rates from\nKootenay Points\nto\nWinnipeg    $60.00\n81. Paul     60.00\nChicago       72.60\nToronto  \u2022\u2022\u2022   92.00\nMontreal    106.00\nHalifax    129.35\nNew York   108.60\nBoston     110.00\nCorrespondingly low fares to\nmany other Eastern Points.\nOn sale dally May 28 to Sept. 30,\n1913. Final return limit Oct. 31,\n1913.\nLiberal stop-over privileges.\nTickets and all information may\nbe obtained from any C. P. R. agent\nor write\nJ. V. MURPHY,\nDistrict   Passenger  Agent,   Nelson,\nB. C.\nMH\nif You Expect\nTo Go\nAsk for ratefl by tho Donaldson\nLine, It will surprise you how little- tho trip w iij cost. Large new\nBteamers, up-to-diit0 service, Sailings from Montreal every Saturday.\nMake your reservations now. For\ninformation ask or write\nD.  SMEATON, Q. T. A., C. P. R.\nW. E. KETCHUM, CF. ft P.A., Q.N.R\nO,   N.   HARRIMAN,   D.T.A.,   C.P.R.\nH.   B.   LIDMAN,   General  Agent,\nPhono ME312, _M Main St., Winnipeg.\nFRECKLES\nNow Is the Time to Get Rid of These\nUgly Spots,\nThere's no longer .tho slightest need\nof feeling ashamed of your freckles,\nas the prescription othine\u2014double\nstrength\u2014is guaranteed to remove\ntheso homely spots.\nSimply get un oun_o of othine\u2014\ndouble strength\u2014from Poole Drug\ncompany and apply a little of lt night\nand morning and you should soon see\nthat even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter\nones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more Lhan an ounco Is needed to completely clear thc skin and\ngain a beautiful clear complexion.\nHe sure to ask for tho duublc strength\nothine, as Ihls is sold under guarantee\nof money hack if it fails to remove\nfreckles.\nVegetables, Plants,\nFlowers\nOf nil kinds. Autumn Giant Cauliflower. Strong plants. 75c per\n100; \"G.00 per 1,000.\nTOMATOES\nKarliiinntt, 11.00 pel' 100; \"7.00\n1,000.\nBRUSSELS SPROUTS\nBOo per 100; 58.60 per 1,000.\nLATE CABBAGE\n60c 100.\nAll kinds of bedding plants. G\ndozen assorted, postpaid $1.00.\nWatermelons, MuskmeloiiB, Cnn-\ntnloupes, Plants 60c dozen. Cu.su\nwltll order,\nW. G. KENNEDY\nNurseries, Willow Point.\nNORTH NELSON, B. C.\nNow is a chance in your life to buy\nacreage for your sweetheart and wife\nIn North Nelson. The 104 acres left,\nwhich have 700 feet lnke frontage, including about 3 ncres of bearing orchard. Prico for this lot (No. 13).\n$8,000, with 11,000 down, $1,000 in six\nmonths, balance in one and two years\n(1 and 2), nt 5 per cent. The balance\nof .the lake frontage consists of l!i\nncres or rabre. Each has a 100-foot\nfrontage on lake. Prices of these\nacreages nre from Three Hundred to\nTen Hundred Dollars each, in payments of One Hundred and Fifty down,\nbalance one and two years (1 and 2).\nat 5 per cent interest, and surveying\nby purchaser.\nN. HOOVER\nCITY TO BUILD\nNEW SIDEWALK\nPetitions for  Improvements Are  Received\u2014Open Tenders for Rock\nWork on Victoria Street.\nOn tlie recommendation uf tlie board\nof work* the elty council on Monday\nnight decided that a uiduwalk should\nhe built on the -\u25a0\u25a0ist side uf Josephine\nstreet between floorer and Latimer\nstreets and that Uelbrui-k street, between Stunley uud Kootenay,  should  hu\nunproved.\nTo the fire, wuter und light committee\nwaa referred a it-quest fur Btreet llght'\njit the upper end of Stanley street to\nthe city limit*- und the board of work*\nwus u-*ked to Investigate the need for\na tjidewulk on Stanley street from JJul-\nbruck south.\nTenders were opened for carrying out\ntlie a&) cubic yards of rock work on Victoria street neur the old fire Hull which\nIt is proposed to improve. Included In\nthe work is the construction uf a reluming wall. Julin Burns \u2022_ Son otfered\nto do the work for flfilit; D, i'uiuii'ulst\nfor Jl.hW, and August Collin fur Jl.i'JU.\ni in' tenders wen* referred tu the buurd\nof works for report.\nTo the hourd was ulsu referred a\n'\u25a0ri|in-.\u00abt for u cement sidewalk on the\n\u25a0Mintage tax plan on the east side of\nStanley street for half a bluek fruin tlie\nlatm to Observatory street.\na. g. fibaw appeared before the council with reference to the condition of\nIds luts adjoining thu lane at the tire\nliall and contenuod that the city engineer had promised the city would ml\nthem when ll graded the luhe. Tiie\nengineer stated that he had hot given\nsuch uu undertaking and the council\ndecided that It could not take uiiy adiun\nin thu mutter. Aid. Austin, ciiairniun\nof the bourd of worm, hud already suii-\nmltted u report on the question at tne\nprevluua meeting, Hi whlcn it waa pointed out that the eity could not be culled\non to Improve private property.\nThero was some difference of opinion\nregarding tiie uetlon tu he tuKcu on a\nrequest by John Burns & Sou tor tin;\nreturn ot that firm's check tor KM to\ncover work to he completed and repairs\nio he made ut tlie new fire hull anu to accept in its place a check for $11. which\nwua suld to cover thu cost of the work\nwhich has yet to be done. Aid. Uunlllfe\nthoughL that a cneck lor *-.*' should\nbe pul up in pluce of that lor frtrtJ, su\nthat  the  city   would   be   fully   protected\nand Aid. Perrler favored retaining tho\n\u2022Si-xi check. Aid. Austin contended that\nthe contractor had become subject tu\nthe penalty clause,   because the building\nwus nut completed lfi the specified time,\nMayor Keefe replied that the clause\nhud become Ineffective on account of\nthe strike and because changes had been\nmade In the building. Aid. Austin suld\nthat thu strike had not occurred until\nafter tho time had expired. He voted\nagainst a resolution by Aid. Cunllffe and\nAid. Johnstone authorizing the return of\nthe tHW check if tho contractors put up\na check fur (200.\nJ. W. Sinclair's offer of ?70 for lot 9,\nblock 2, Addition A, wus referred to the\nfinance committee for consideration and\nreport,\nCEMETERY CARETAKER\nWANTS 8ALARY   INCREASED\nJ. K. Smith, caretaker at the cemetery, wants his salary of 575 per month\nwith residence and light and water, increased, and in a lotter to the city council states that he has been In that position for four years and that the work\nla becoming more heavy. The park:*\ncommittee has the matter under con-,\nsideratlon.     n\nNELSON NEWS OF TBE DAY\nAssizes  will  he  held  at Greenwood   on\nJune 'ii.\nof    Kaslo   Is   at   the.\nI THORPE'S\nDRINKS\nSummer Residence\nFor Sale\nLalto frontage, 1__ miles from\ntown. This,is a pretty little one-\nstory house in A1 shape, having\ntwo bedroom's, large living room,\nkitchen, etc.\nPine, large veranda, with a beautiful view of the lake, being situated\non n half an acre, planted with\nyoung fruit treea of various varieties. Eighty feet lake frontage. A\ngood boathouse B\u00b0es with the property. A snap at 11,750; (500 cash,\nbalance easy terms. \u2022\nC. W. Appleyard\n13 K. W. C. Bloek,\nwill  hold  county  court\nW. B. Poole arrived from Spokane\nInst nlglit and  Is at the  Hume.\nWork on the grading of Nelson avenue,\nFalrvlew, Is rapidly nearlng completion.\nA. W. W. Lift nf Needles has been\nappointed a Justice of the peace.\nH, L. Rothwell of Nakusp lias been\ngazetted a notary public fur this province.\nw. H. Johnson or Crostbh reachcr Net**\nson hist night and Is a guest at tiie\nHume.\nArchdeacon Hcer of Kaslo reached\nNelson yesterday and registered at the\n.Strathcona.\nThere will be a garden party next\nTuesday at the residence of Mrs. Heaii,\nin aid of Ut. Paul's church.\nGeorge K. Farlsh, manager Of thc\nMother Lode mine at Sheep Creek,\nreached Nelson lost night and will spend\ntoday In Nelson.\nSchools in this province will ho cloned\non June 27 instead of June 30, according\nto a notice which appears In lho current\nIssue  uf   the   Itrltish   Culumbla   Gazette.\nThe street railway receipts for the\nweek ending Juno 7 amounted to $1!7\u00ab.70,\nns against $246.90 during tho corresponding week last year, nn Increase of JIU.4H.\ngor tlie month between May 7 and June\nYour Hair Needs\nParisian Sage\nUse It as a Dressing\u2014Banish\nDandruff \u2014Stop Falling\nHair and Scalp Itch.\nPARISIAN Sage, the delightful and\ninvigorating hair tonic, is a true hair\nnotirisher. It penetrates Into tho scalp,\ngets to the roots of the hair, kills the\ndandruff germs, and supplies the hair\nwith just tho kind of nourishment It\nneeds to make it grow abundantly.\nSince Its introduction Into Canada\nPARISIAN Sage has had an Immense\nsale, and here are  the  reasons:\nIl does not contain poisonous sugar\nt)t lead, nitrate of silver or sulphur or\nany Injurious Ingredient.\nIt cures dandruff In two weeks, by\nkilling the dandruff germ.\nIt stops falling hair.\nIt promptly stops Itching of the\nscalp.\nIt makes the hair soft, glossy and\nluxuriant.\nI* gives life and beauty to the hair.\nIt Is not sticky or greasy.\nIt Is the daintiest perfumed hair\ntonic ntade.\nIt is thd best, the most pleasant\nand  invigorating hair dressing mad*;.\nMnde only in Canada by the R. T.\nBooth Co., Ltd., Fort Brie, Ont. The\nprice is only B0 cents at drug stores\nnnd counters where toilet goods are\nscld.\nThe Poole Urug Company, Ivtd.,\nguarantees it. '\nII\nSALADA*\nFresh from the\nChoicest\nGardens of\nCeylon.\nSold In sealed lead\npackets to preserve Its\ngoodness.\nBlaok, Mixed and Green.\n008\n7 of thin yeur tliere was an Increase In\nthe receipts of JHi.90 over the toireu-\npundiug mouth last year.\nFurther arrangements for tlie first\nauniiul Nelson rose festival, which Is\nto he held on July fl, will be dl.-cnt-siil\nat the weekly meeting of the Nelson\nimprovement, assodntloii which will be\nheld in the board of trade rooms at S\no clock this evening.\nThe provincial royal commission on\nlabor will hold a sitting In Nelson at t\no'clock tomorrow at the supreme court\nroom of the court hpuie. The commission\nwill meet at the Queen mine on l'rjduy\nafternoon at 1 o'clock and at Salmo at\n4 o'clock. A second Nelson session will\nbe held at lo o'clock on .Monday murnlng.\nFirst shipment of limes.    Call at the\nNelaon bar and get a gin rloky,      01-lf.\nDressmaking and millinery.   Moderate\ncharges, \u00ab\u00bb Annable block. n't-tl\nSay!    Our new  Phono  number is 4.'S.\nVacuum  Cleaning  company,   Uo_  MS,\nay-tf.\nGETTING IN TOUCH\nThe answer to  the  question*-how 'a\nget  in   touch   wilh  people  who  want  to\nrent suites, or rooms or apartments tarnished or unfurnished is found in lhe\nWants.\nThe Want Ad la the most efficient, Inexpensive und satisfactory way that '\u00ab\nprovided today.\n\u25a0liy a well written, concise Want Ad\nyou will attract the attention of the\ndally readers, you will become known to\nthe strangers, who could nut otherwise\nfind you out, and you will be delighted\nwith the results of Want Ad advertising.\nDesirable tenants ara ulways found\nthrough tlie Want Ads. Muny prudent\nand prosperous landlords and agcnls\nhave learned or the resullfulness ol The\nDally News Want columns.\nAT THE  THEATRE8.\nAnother large crowd greeted last\nnight's offering by the Frank Itieh company at the opera house. \"Variety\nIsle\" Ih a bright sparkling hill and was\nthoroughly enjoyed from start to finish.\nBurton mid Jones, ns Dutch com. illuns,\nkept the audience In roars of laughter\nthroughout the entire performance and\nthe musical numbers were rendered In a\ntasteful and pleasing manner. The costumes and scenery were extremely pretty\nnnd the entire play wns refined and\nartistic. The popular song, \"Tlie Turkey Trot,\" caught the fancy of the audience and several local skits were introduced lu a very amusing manner.\nTonight's play, \"The Rollicking Girl.\"\nIs an especially good bill, full of good\nclean fun and music.\nAn amusing Incident Is related in connection with Miss Dorothy Toyo's appearance before the Infanta Bulalle of\nSpain, Die mint nf the present king. Her\nblglitii-ss, upon being asked what would\nbe pleasing to her in the way of entertainment announc.il that she would be\nglad to bear the Amerlcnn artiste who\nbud sung for her sister, the Infanta\nIsabel!*1, some time previously, one wiio\nBang tenor und BOpran&i called Dorothy\nToyo. Upon thc ii[>]>uintcil day Mil's\nToye repaired to tho mansion, met the\nhostess, who escorted her to the music\nroom, and explained where the Infanta\nnml her ladles in waiting were to be\nseated, evidently reeling that a presentation io royalty was not to be though!\nor. However, her highness, upon Miss\nToye's entrance suggested thut Madame\nh. bring Miss Toy. to her at once, nnd\ngreeted her With \"Oh, I know nil that\nyou are going to do and just how you\ndo It, nml my sister snys you are simply\nwonderful. Won't you sing me one of\nthe tenor ones right now?\" And\nthrough the Whole afternoon her whole\nattitude was just that of a warmhearted friend, and It has been until\nthis dnv.   Through the Infanta Eulalte,\nMiss Toye Is to sing for the King of\nSpain and Queen Victoria upon Iier return to l3urope, A date Imd been sei\nlast full When tho King's sister, the\nPrincess Imperial, died suddenly, thus\nplunging the  Court  Into mourning.\nCANADIAN TRADE\nLARGEST YET KNOWN\nTotals    Over    One    Billion    Dollars-\nEnormous  Increase of Duties\u2014England   Best   Export   Market.\nfBv Dallv News T>flfled Wire.)\nOTTAWA. June 17.\u2014The first official detailed figures nn Imports and\nexports of the best year's trade In\nthe Dominion's history have been just\ncompiled by the trade nnd commerce\ndepartment. The aggregate trade for\ntlie past fiscal year, as has already\nbeen announced, crossed the billion\ndollars mark for ihe first time, totalling $1,068,660*226, on Increase o\n*20r,fli;o,3fl3 over 1312; $309,565,836\nover 1911 nnd $391,518,036 over 1910,\nThe year's imports totalled $675,428,-\n108, representing an increase of $128,-\n046,586 over 1912; $213,530,14-1 over\n1911 nnd $299,644,508 over 1910. fix-\nports amounted to $898,2^2,067, which\nwas $77,914,807 over tho figures for\n1912; $96,085,692 over those for 1911\nand $91,878,528 over 1910.\nThe enormous increase In thi\namount of duties collected is the most\nstriking feature of tho statement. In\nthe last fiscal year the customs receipts amounted to $115,039,160, or\n!27,490,624 more thnn for tho preceding year. In the last four years the\nduties on imports had almost doubled.\nIn lillO il was S61.010.4S7; In 1911, ?73,-\n297.544; ia 1012, $87,548,530. The lamest individual source of Canada's Itn-\nporls is the United States, from which\nCanadians bought $276,330,434 worth\nnf dutlnblo and $184,826,421 worth of\nfree goods. Tho United Kingdom\nstands next with 5107,979,589 worth of\ndutiable and $30,679,840 of free commodities. Belgium is third and Germany fourth among exporters to Canada.\nCanada's best export market Is, of\ncourse, the United Kingdom, to\nwhich this country sent $170,161,903\nworth of home produce, as compared\nwith $139,725,053 Io the United Stales.\nBelgium ranks third and little Newfoundland fourth among Cnnada's\ncustomers.\nPLAN ANOTHER\nPAVING PETITION\nProperty Owners Propose to Make Another Effort to Persuade City\nCouncil to Pass Bylaw.\nThat another effort will he made hy\nproperty owners on the main street to\ninduce the city council to pass .i hylaw\nthis summer for the paving of the business -treets of the city was stated\nyesterday hy several of those Interested\nIn the matter.\nM. I'.. McQuarrie is proposing to got\nout a second petition asking the council\nto curry out the work. The local improvement plan, with city paying 50 per\ncent of tiie cost, and the property\nowners ES per cent, seems to he most\ngenerally favored.\nDISINFECT HACKS\nAT.OLD FIRE\" HALL\nChanges Are  Made   to   Building   for\nThis Purpose by City Public\nHealth Authorities.\nIn order timt vehicles ln which persona suffering from contagious diseases are carried may be disinfected\neffectively the city Iiub made changes\nat the old fire hall so that the building can be used for that purpose.\nRepresentations of the need for such\na place havo been made to the city\ncouncil on several occasions, as there\nwa_ no place in Nelson where vehicles could be thoroughly disinfected,\nand the board of health therefore decided to ubo the old fire hull now\nthut the department has moved into\nthe new building.\nRossland News\nROSSLAND, U.C, June 17.-0. Latterly entertained ut dinner on rititurUuy\nevening iii honor ol tt. lletlliey, wbo Win\njoin     tne    i.imts   ot   the   Ueiicuiets    on\niietitiesuay.    loose   picseiu  were,   U.\ncriiicKsnank, W. Jl. lluuney, l_ a.\nCampbell, r. Peters, H, Uhuuu,IS.Lavy,\n-. .*\u2022\u00bb. LnuidocK, ii. u. Oliver, j. .-*.\niJescliatups and Al. I\". Purcell. After\ndinner ttiey iiujouriieu to tiiu cmb where\na number ot mv. irletilieys other friends\nhad prepared a musical program, une\nof the most pleasing events oi I Iiu evening was Wneii Atuyur UeSOliaillpfl, on\n-'dial!' of those present, preseiiuu Mi.\nUeiiney with a hauusome pearl tie pin,\nuna aiso maue u. lew lemurst*. I,. A.\nCumpbell, M.P.P,, iil'o inuue u few remarks. Alter spunling a Jolly evening\nUie party broke up witn all good Wishes\nio Mr. Jleuney,\nTne lue m part merit, waa called oul\nubout :::\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022> o'clock Hi if utlel'I.oon to u\nsmall Chimney bluzc In the buteliei* Shop\nor A.  Enderby,\nMr. und Mrs. J. MeLeod have returned\nfrom  a few weeks'  visit lo the coast.\nair. and Mrs. it. If, Slewari ot 'i rail\nmotored Into town on Tuesday.\nTne remains of tlie month old baby ol\nMr, und Mrs. Coulter wen- taken to\nXelson loday and Will be burled lu tlio\nlamily plot there,\nMiss  M.   1.   McKie   hit.   Hns   morning\nfor   .-ijUM.llie.\nCol.   Egan,  who  underwent  a uorlous\noperation   oa   Sunday,   is   \u25a0'llli   critically\nThe marriage teak place on Monday\nmorning, June IB, at 1:'M o'clock ut tne\ntiacred Heart church, of Miss I'l-suelne:-\ni 'onmir and AimerlUB Bourdon, ITatner\nMelntyre performing the ceremony.\nAlter the ceremony the party relumed\nto the bride's home, where an elaborate\nwedding breakfast was awaiting them.\nThe young couple remained In lown and\na dance was given in the evening at ihe\nhome of ihe bride, where about ;>> guests\ndanced until the small hours of the\nmorning.\nThe marriage of Miss Cecelia M.\nMurray and Carl Oscar Nyman was\nsolemnized at ilia home of P. Dolman\nin the presence of a large number of\nrelatives and I'rl Is on Saturday evening, Hev. .1. J. Nixon of the Methodist\nehureh officiating. Miss Molly Jackaon\nattended the brldo nnd John BerK supported the groom. Mr. and Mrs, Nyman\nwill reside In Rossland.\nGOVERNMENT LECTURERS\nSPEAK AT ROCK CREEK\nROCK CREEK, B. C. June 17.\u2014At a\nmeeting of the Rock Creek Farmers'\nInstitute on Friday Professor Ashby\nof Pullman, Wash., and J. It. Terry,\nprovincial poultry instructor, gave interesting lectures on veterinary remedies nnd poultry. Professor Ashby\nin the afternoon told the members tlie\nnecessity of using efficient disinfectants and keeping the living and sleep-\nIng quarters clean. Most of the ordinary diseases were caused liy wronjj\nfeeding. He gave all who required\nthem several valuable recipes for colic,\nparasites, etc. Mr. Terry In the evening gave some good advice to poul-\ntrymen. To give snow instead of\nwater in frosty weather and milk to\nnewly hatched chicks, also not to\ntouch eggs after the eighteenth day,\nwere some of tiie hints which were\nappreciated by the ranchers present.\nMiss Henderson of Birmingham\nEngland, and S. Booth of London ate\nnow residing at Kettle Valley.\nTho government road gang has\nbuilt a bridge over the gulch on the\nNicholson creek road. The old trail\nto Copper camp on thin road is also\nopened up, which will allow the settlers nnd others to make a shorter cut\nto Greenwood.\nTho ladles of Rock Creek and district gave n successful dance at Hanson's hall on Friday, which was well\nattended by the bachelors in the vicinity. A picnic supper was provided\nby the ladles and several friends supplied tho music during tho evening.\nTORONTO  MURDERER\nASKS  NEW TRIAL\nOTTAWA, .Tune 17.\u2014Efforts ore\nbeing put forth on behalf of Charles\nGibson, the Toronto murderer, under\nsentence of death next month. What\nIs sought is a new trial, but this can\nbe granted only upon an application\nfor clemency. There have been but\ntwo precedents for granting hy the\nminister of Justice new trials in murder cases. Tlie ease will be argued\nhere at the end of tlie week.\nDOMINION   MEDICAL COUNCIL\nHOLDING  FIRST SESSION\nOTTAWA, .lune 17.\u2014Presided over\nby T. Q. Reddick of Montreal, the Dominion Medical council began sessions\nhere todny to perfect tbe organization\nwhich was arranged for at a meeting\nInst October. The council hns beon\nformed as _ result of legislation passed by the federal parliament and adhered to by the different legislatures.\nHeretofore there were provincial\ncouncils, each prescribing conditions\nand examinations regarding the practice of medicine in their jurisdiction.\nI\nPAoe seven\nG>37\ni\nMattings and Rugs\nFor Bedrooms. Malls, Living Rooms, Etc.\nAt [Reduced Prices\nThe New Kolorfast    <\" A\nMatting   Tosellforyd \u2022Oil\nThi> is a new Fabric, special ly suitable for Badroomi, Hall., _tc.\nIt ie guaranteed to be absolutely fait color under any and all circumstances, and to outwear any foreign or domestic matting madt. Colors unaffected by sun or water. Comes 36 inches wide, and is reversible. Shades aro Blue, Green, T an and Wood shades. Regular 60c\nyard.\nSPECIAL-WEDNESDAY  AND  THURSDAY ONLY 60c YARD.\nJapanese Squares\nPriced Low\nMade of finest quality grass,\nsewn togethor with neat, conventional patterns in Maize, Blue,\nGreen, Crimson, etc., in these sizes:\n9-0 x 9-0\u2014To clear at $2.35\n9-0 x 12-0\u2014-To clear at   $2.95\nJapanese Rugs\nSize 3-Dx 6-0\u2014To clear at 35c\nHall and Verandah\nRugs at Sale\nPrices\nThey are mado of heavy Chinese\ngrass of finest quality and decorated with neat check and strip* pat*\nterns in colors of Tan, Navy, Green\nand Red of Maize grounds. They\nare washable, healthy, eaay to\nsweep and wear splendidly \u2014 in\nthese sizes:\n4-0 x 9*0\u2014To clear at $1.95\n3-0 x 6-V-To clear at  95c\nUnion Wool Squares\nPriced for Quick Clearance\nThese ars the he&t weiring Carpet Squares ever sold at this low\nprice. They come in nice floral and conventional designs in colors of\nBlue, Green, Crimson, Brown and Tan.    In these sizes:\nSize 9-0 x 7-6\u2014To clear at    $4.95\nSize 9-0 x 9-0\u2014To clear at    $5.95\nSize 9*0 x 10-6\u2014To clear at    $6.95\nHudson's Bay Company\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nTiiu how fioimcil establish cd a uniform registration, und practitioners\nwho pass it will he allowed to practice anywhere in Canada. The personnel was .appointed jointly by the\ngovernment, the provincial councils\nand the medical college. Officers\nwere elected nnd organization came\ninto effect hist fait, and the .sessions\nnow in progress are for the purposo of\npassing by-laws, rules and regulations\nto govern the organization,\nA number or otlicr matters of con\ncern to llio profession will be con*\nBidored. Thero wus a fairly large atjj\ntendance of members.\nSIHK GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTERS\nVANCOUVER,  n.C, .Tune   17.-At thi\nNew  ttV.stnilrisit'i- iihhIzl's  toduy  Dudtlha.\nNiui-ii was found guilty of manBlaughtel\nof Belap Singh on Jan. 18 last. Tbe twJ\nmen were in a shack when a. row com!\nmencQd and In the course of the scuffiet\ntiie prisoner slashed the other men witff\n11 knife and thn injuries resulted in his\ndeath.   The original charge was gnurfleil\nDown Goes Cost of Living\nThis  Is  the  Day of Sales.    It's Catching\nJoy's Semi-Annual Stock-Taking\ntakes place on the 1st of July, and    now is   your   opportunity to get\nsome good Groceries at low prices.    It will pay you to fill your pantry.   Nelson folk are good buyers;   Here's an opportunity to get good\nGROCERIES AT LOW PRICES:\nMCCORMICK'S   SODAS\u2014Each     30o\nK.  O.  SARDINES\u20142  for   2_\nPILOT  BRAND  HERRINGS AND TOMATO SAUCE\u20142 for  35c\nCHIVERS'  BLACKBERRY AND APPLE JAM\u2014Per tin   7So\nNOEL'S GREENGAGE JAM\u2014Per tin   750\nTETLEY'S  60c  TEA,  for    _0\nH.P.  PICKLES\u2014Per  bottle    40c\nLEARD'S   CHICKEN\u2014Per  tin    400\nALYMER   CHICKEN\u2014Per   tin     400\nPINEAPPLE-2   for    ......._o\nPINEAPPLE\u20142  for    35o\nBREAKFAST CEREAL (wilh  Ladies' Stocking free)\u2014Per pkg.  ..35o\n3 LBS. GOOD TEA  (with 2-Cup Teapot free)    S1.O0\nPOTATOES\u2014Per 100 Ib. sack   50c\nWHITE SWAN SOAP\u20146 bars  _c\nG. DUST N.S. WASHING POWDER\u2014Per package   25o\nBULK   COCOANUT\u2014Per  Ib _o\nJELLY  POWDERS\u20143 for   25o\n1 Qt   Bottl, CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S SALAD OIL  880\nGHIRRADELLI'S  CHOCOLATE\u2014Per tin   20e\nCANNED   PEARS\u2014Per  tin    20c\nWASHING  AMMONIA\u2014Per  bottle    25c\nRAISINS-3   Packages 25o\nTOMATOES\u20143  Cans  for    50c\nPUMPKIN\u20142  tins  for    ,T\u00bbo\nCROSSE & BLACKWELL'S RASPBERRY JAM\u20141 Ib pots  20c\nCHIVER'S  DAMSON  JAM\u2014Per tin    76c\nPURE   MAPLE  SYRUP\u2014Per qt 7T_c\nCROSSE  &  BLACKWELL'S  PICKLES\u2014Per bottl,   35o\nTOILET SOAP\u20147 bars for   25c\nRIPE TOMATOES\u2014Per Ib 25c\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCor. Josephine and Mill Streets\nONE BLOCK NORTH OF CAR LINE.\nJOY WILL MEET YOU AT THE DOOR.\n PAGE  EIGHT\nCDe _Batl? $rtM.\nIELSOR NEWS OF TK DAY\n8. GIU'S will have uu ihe Great Northern thi-* morning for Colfax, Wasli.\nRev. li. and Aln*. Giant expect to\nleave Toronto on Sunday  tor Ymir.\nHenry gvuhnda returned on Monday\nevening from Toronto, where be lias\nbeen   attending   the   Toronto   university.\nJohn T. lliaclt, chief provincial con-\n\u25a0table, will upend today lu the Trout\nLake district on license lnni\u00bbeelion business.\nA. Blake returned l\u00ab\"t night from\nArrowhead, where he lias spent the past\nm_ months, und reKisteied at tiie\nQueens.\nThere has been B fab if about S in.\nIn tin- water of tii.* main lake at Kaslo.\nThe    i'i.'ii    wau-r   mark   tills   year   was\na ft c in- at Kaslo.\nWater In lhe west arm fell VA In. to\n18 ft. U**i in. ab.iv.- low water murk >es-\nn-rdiiV, aceoi-ililiK to the BUIlKe ut lhe\nKelson  Boat AL- Lanucli compnny.\n* Antonio Boss! will leave on the Great\nNorthern tills mornln** for New \"era,\nWhence he will sail on June 'X by the\nsteamer  France  for Milan,  Italy.\nJ. Weir will leave on the Crow boat\ntomorrow morniiiK for New \u25a0 '\"''*\u25a0\nWhence he will sail on the steamer\nMauretania on an extended visit to the\nllrltish  Isles.\ni V.. V. tfartln, prtnclpal of the Nelson\nnubile Mhool,  requests that  PftranlB WllO\ne-tiM.t to semi children to the school\nfor tlio first time on tiie opening or the\npew term In tlie fall notify lilm within\nthe next  week.\n* The garden  party  to he  given  \"\"der\nthe auspices of the Altar Guild of SI.\ngavlour's Church, on June .1. will he\nheld on the vacant lot heloni*ln(j to\nWlllium Douche, loaned for tin* occasion,\nat the ..oilier of Mill and Stanley Btreats.\nBishop de Pender of New Westminster\nond clergy from many points in the interior   reached   Nelson   lai\nthe  quarterly   meeting   of\ncommlllee   of  the  synoil   o\nof  Kootenny  which   wijl  I*.\nThe   exe-lltlV.-    llllM    Charge\nhnd  other  jnattgra  In   Mu*\nnight   fo\nof   flna\nUnequalled for General Use.\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent.\nNeleon, B, C.\ni Can ehlppp-l to all railway points.\nOntario Strained\nHOMEY\nBottle - 35c\nC. A. Benedict\nJosephine 8c.\nStandard Furniture\n=Company=\nC J. CARLSON, Undertskor\nUndertaken Embalm-in\n\u2022nd Funeral Directors\nThe finest ami moi-it up to date\nundertaking parlors uml chapel In\ninterior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children.\nDay   Phone Eft\nNight Phones -52 and lM\nTen\nGood\nLots\nWe havo for snlo 10 lots and a\nthroe-roomed house, situated on\nAlines Road.\nThe house contains kitchen, bedroom, bat'-irocm aad collar, and lias\ncity water and electric light.\nFivo of the lots are planted with\nvegetables; also 40 two-year-old\nfruit trees and SO small fruits-. One\nlott* is fenced for chickens.\nWood shed and chicken house.\nTho lota ai'e all fenced.\nPrice $2,300\nH. & M. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE\nTWO  HOUSES\u2014Close in, will  net 12 per ce;-.t;  good  investment.\nLOTS   IN   FAIRVIEW\u2014Splendid   sites;   lovel and  cleared.   Only  $350.00.\nBAKER   STREET-\u2014 Business   property;   returns  good   interest;   will     increase considerably  in  value.\nThe Allen-Smith Company\nREAL   ESTATE.       INSURANCE.       LOANS.       AUDITING.\nIMPERIAL   BANK   BLOCK,  JOSEPHINE   STREET.\nENSIGN\nCAMERAS\nEnsignette No. 1\nThe Vcet   Pocket   Picture Maker.\nYou can carry this Utile camera\nIn your vest pocket and never realize it is there, until you want. it.\nThe dainty little l'ix.'.i dims give\ncrisp, clean-cut contact [trlnta or\nsplendid poat cards,\nWhy worry about a bigger\ncamera?\nPrice Complete $7.00\nRutherford Drug Co.\nLIMITED, \u25a0\nExclusive Agents\nWard St. Nelson, B.C.\n,<-*rrs,\nIS.*;\nmora\nA Child\nIr nn onlfntia lo\nsome people, bill\nnot t-i us. We\nJknow childish\nIWaya so (well\nfhroueh.\nTAKING\nCHILDREN'S\nPHOTOGRAPHS\nWe Rot Iholr\nconfidence and\ntlwi.'ti why p:pi\nlures wo take of\nchildren nn; j-o\ntrue   to  life.\nBRING YOUR\nBABY HERE\nnnd have us\n\u25a0maki- a photograph of It\nGetting baby's\npicture doesn't\nbar you out. \\\\V\nwill    ba   Rind    to\n(take\ntin*\nyours    a\nsame time.\nCampbell's Art Gallery\n715   BAKER  ST. PHONE  46.\n(Next   Daor   to   Kootenay   Steam\nLaundry).\nhi ot Itev. and Mrs, IPred\nlu spite or thf delays due lo drlftnood\non iln* main lulu- VV. I-.. \/wk-Ky came\ndown from Kiihlo to Nolson in bin\ntiiiiiu-li yosterday I n 3 Inn iru nnd i'mI\nminutes', witch le. eight minutes better\nI line ihun IiIh |ji.*vIous record ot 8 hours\nand 3 minutes. The distance is about 45\nmiles.\nln reply to a telegram from Uu* Nelson board of trade InvititiR |l1111 to visit\nKootenny, llmi. Hubert Rogerr* has tele-\ntfruiilied tlie heeielliry, stiitlnif lli.it ho\nwill certainly visit Nelson moi llio Grows\nSYst duHng his forthcoming tour of tin*-\nwest In August, uml Unit lie is looking\nforward iu meeting; tin- members of iiu*\nNYlm-n   board of  Hade.\nHoys who on  Monday night enjoyed\nfree glimpses  of  tiie  Kliow   iiL   tile  opera\nhouso from ibe roof uf that bulldlngare\nto be Btimmoned to appear in tbc pollen\ncotirt on charges or breaking the Curfew\nbylaw. Tills action l\u00ab being taken us\nthero is danger that the children who\ntoiiow tbis practice may r*'ii orr tin*\nbuilding and seriously injur.* themselves.\nJohn Fraser, tflio lias been visiting\nIds nephew, Kolttit [rj-aser, at Kootenay\nHav, iri! last night for St. Paul, Minn.,\n\u25a0otite for New York, whenn- he will\nfor bis home In l-'iilulairgb, Keotlaml.\nId in tho district Mr. Kroner bueftnio\ndv stnit'lc I bv ils possibilltii-s ami\ne Is a (iiiHslbilltv  Hint In* mny make\ntiu*r visit to ibis country at un early\ndate.\nriic Canadian Lock & Novelty company in whieh a large amount of stoeic\nwas placed in Kaslo and elsewhere in\nKootenay hy .1. w. Potter and W. V.\nMiller,    lias   Beciirdd    lhe    i.-ii.-ni    i ml.is\nor iii\u00ab* I'ercival lock for Australia,\nlasers. Power ami Miller will leave\nhortlv for Australia to e_tUblUll a plant\nrn* tb.* manufacture of the locks in thai\noiintry. Thp company's plain at the\noast is practically ready for operation\nmi wilt shortly be placing Canadian\nnade  locks ou  un-  murki-l.\nNELSON DELIGHTS\nSCOTCH VISITOR\nSpends Day In City by Accident and Is\nPleased That   He   Did  So\u2014Ideal\nFrom Residential Viewpoint.\nNolson is ono of tho most tlelighlFul\nt^ GEM\nSELECTIONS ORCHESTRA\nSclig Comedy Drama\nThe Story of\nLaoinia\nA comedy-dratna of modern college\ngirls. An excellent feature front\ntin; pen of Marjorie Benton Cooke.\nVit-graph Scenic aad Comedy\n\"VIEWS OF IRELAND\"\nGive a number of scenic gems thnt\nBUrpftBB description.\n\"MR.   FDRD'S   TEMPER\"\nHo'a awfully touchy.\nEssanay Comedy\n\"THE DISCOVERY\"\nExcruciatingly funny.\nEdison F***ature\n\"THE  ORPHAN\"\nADMIS310N   15o.    CHILDREN   10c\nComing Monday. June 28rd, Sellg\nFeature in Uo parts\n\"THE   COWBOY   MILLIONAIRE\"\nA western masterpiece.\nQueen Studio\nEstablished 1899.\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framing\nALLAN   LEAN, Manager.\nP. O. Box 812. Phone 180.\nNelson, B. C.\nLawn  Mowers\nIF YOU WANT THE MOST SATISFACTORY LAWN  MOWER\nMADE IN CANADA BUY A\n\"WOODYATT  HIGH  WHEEL\nWE CARRY THIS MAKE IN 14,  16  AND  18  INCH.\nWE CAN ALSO SUPPLY THE \"GREAT AMERICAN\" BALL-BEARING\n\u2014THE BEST AMERICAN  MACHINE\u201417 INCHES.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail. Nelaon B. C\nHAMILTON TORONTO VANCOUVER WINNIPEG\nNelson Opera House\nTONIGHT\nFrank Rich Company\nIn\n\"The Rollicking Girl\"\nPrices:    75c, ROc nnd 25c.\nPlan at City Drug Store.\nFriday night\u2014 Chorus Girls' Contest,\nOne Night Only\nMONDAY,  JUNE  23RD\nTlio Sensation of Throe Continents.\nMiss Dorothy Toye\nTho Girl with  Two Grand  Opera\nVoices\u2014Soprano and Tenor.\nN. Y. Mnll: The most remarkable voice on the flinging stage today.\nI^e Matin, Paris: Miss Toye is\nCaruso and Patti in one person.\nPrices: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, Gallery 75c.\nScat sale at City Drug Store Saturday morning. Mail orders to (!.\nHorstead, Box 31)2.\nMany n very li'ippy anniversary\nfails In June.\nDo you ever gel some memento\nror yeur bettor half on your wedding anniversary?\nThink It Over\nand let the belt':- pnrt or yourself\nprevail, and purchase a romem-\nbranco for your better half, jmd\nIt will bring mutual happiness,\nWe Can Kelp You\nNay We?\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturer   of   Artistic   Rings,\nWatchmaker and Optician.\nStarlandTheatre\nDYER'S STARLAND ORCHESTRA\nRex Feature\nThe Actress\nIt scintillates  witli  style of emotionalism  that   will   infa'uate and\nenthrall you.\nImp. Comedies\n\"8AVED  BY  PARCEL  POST\"\n\"LEO'S LOVE LETTER\"\nAn immense burlesque enacted by\n00 all-star cast.\nRex Comedy\n\"BECKY \u25a03ECKY\"\nA real treat, in which Helen Gardner,  the famuuH   photo-play   act-\nresB, is featured.\nImp.   Drama\n\"THE   BEARER   OF   BURDENS\"\nAn emotional Ring Baggot offering\nof rare merit,\nADULTS 15c.\nCHILDREN 10c.\nWEDNESDAY   JUNE  18.\nPOULTRY\nSPECIALS\nGrit an_ Shell Boxes, Drinking\nFoui'tH, Wiro Nests, Chick Founts,\nLime Neat Kgffs, Disinfectant Nest\nEyas, Paper Carion3, etc.\nThe Brackman - Ker\nMilling Co.. Limited\nHosiery, Vests\nand Corsets\n\"Cheapest In the City.\"\nThe Ark\nNew arid Second  Hand   Furniture\nPhona   L395 806   Vernon  St\nNelson,  B. C.\nUpper Duncan Launch Service\nThe    launch     BKSSlI'    will    make\nweokly trips, II owner to TTcaly'ja Landing arid return, eneh Thursday,\nSIMPSON BROS.\nMACHELA TONIC\nmmmmmmmummmmmmmmmmummmmmmmmmm ip \u2014_-_\u25a0_-____.\nTho recent and highly endorsed discovery of a Celebrated Scalp Specialist for the Cleansing of the Scalp\nand ths promotion of a luxuriant growth of hair. Removes dandruff, cures itching scalp and prevents the\nfalling of the hair,\nEach  package contains a  bottlo of liquid  Machela   and   a   packet   of   Machela   Dry   Shampoo\nPowder.      Complete Treatment.      Follow the directions closely.\nPrice\n$1.00\nALWAV8  AT  YOUR  SERVICE\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nTHE   REXALL   STORE.\nWE NEVE!. SLEEP\nSpoUi from a residential point of view\nIn Canada, in thu opinion of William\n0. Rankin of Seotkmd, who spout yesterday lit the city. He cam\u00a9 to British. Columblii lo viBlt friends hi\nQueens nay ami il was only by accident that ho spent tbe day in this\nelty, an lie had intended to leave on\nMonday night for the coaBt. Boat\nconnections on the main lake, however, proventod Mr, Rankin from making llic trip dlrdct to tho coast.\nRut I jini (leliifTited that I was compelled to speiu'i today in your eliarni-\nlug elty.\" lie declared at tbe flume\nyesterday. \"Mr. C. F. McHardy haa\nImen good enough to take me to Rome\nor iho more pteturowjue spots in Nelson nn-1 words ean hardly express my\nappreciation of the beauty of your\nFteonory, the charming residences with\ntheir pretty flower -gardens and the\nattractive manner in which tlie city is-\nlaid out.\n\"I ran imngino n no moro delightful\nPliot hi wln'cli to spend the summer\naad hope that I shall be able to return here at some future date.\"\nDaily N\u00abwr. \"Want\" Ada. Gat Results\nBack to Business\nI have just returned from the east,\nafter taking\nA Post-Graduate Course ia Optics\nund am better prepared 'than ever before to correct all kinds of defective\nvision.   Consultation invited.\nR. L. DOUGLASS\nGraduate Optician.\nRoom 18 K. W. C. Block.\nCity Residences for Sale\nROBSON:\nLAROjg  HANDSOME HOUSE ON 5 LOTS.\nHall,  Opln   Fireplace,  every   Modern Convonience,  magnificent Garden,  Fruit Trees in Variety.\n$4,500.00.   Terms,\nVICTORIA:\nSPLENDID   RESIDENCE\u20145   ROOMS,\nin  Splendid  Condition,  Garden.   $3,000.00.   Terms.\n(Might bo Leased, Furnished, to a Good Tenant).\nMILL: x\nEXCELLENT   HOUSE\u20146   ROOMS.\nOpen Fireplace, Good Garden and Lawn.\n$3,003.00.   Terms.\nFairview Properties\nSEVERAL VERY ATTRACTIVE LOTS\u2014CLEARED, CULTIVATED AND PLANTED\u2014FOR SALE. WOULD MAKE EXCELLENT   BUILDING   SITES.   ALSO,   A   FEW  VERY  FINE\nRESIDENCES  FOR SALE AND  IMMEDIATE  ENTRY.\nENQUIRIES  FOR  BUSINESS  AND  RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES   ARE   RESPECTFULLY   SOLICITED.\nChas. F. McHardy\nBAKER STREET, NELSON, B.C,\nFIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT,\nEMPLOYERS LIABILITY INSURANCE.\nWANT TO EXHIBIT\nAT ROSE FESTIVAL\nProfetJaional Florists Write From Outside Cquiiing as to nates for\nSpac? for Such Displays.\nOutside florists aro takin-; nn interest in the flrat annual Nelson rose\nfestival which will be Mil on Julv\nfi, and have written to W. N. Scott,\nsecretary, asking regarding the rates\nfor snare for professional exhibits, it\nis believed that several such displays\nwould mil greatly to Hie atlractive-\nliesfl of the show.\nPosters advertising the festival-have\nbeen printed and will he sent broadcast to postorfii'CB and other places In\ntlifs district Jn order to attract visitors* from the outside for the event.\nBUILDING OFFERS\nGOOD PUBUCTY\nR. L,  Douglass   Considers   Winnipeg\nIndustrial   Fureau   Exccllent  Opportunity for Advertising,\nOne nf \\ho. most valuable mediums\nof publicity la the west Is the Industrial building in Winnipeg where are\ndisplayed exhibits from mnny points\nin Canada, declared R. L. Douglass,\nwho lias relumed from an extended\nvisit to points in tho pniii'lcs and the\neast.\nLargo crowds nf people visit the\nbuilding daily, said Mr, Douglass, nnd\nInspect the displays of western pro-\nducg whlnh are on view.\nThe Nelson hoard of trade, through\nlho publicity bureau, has already taken up the question of making an ex-\nhlliit at the building.\nWhile In Winnipeg Mr. Douglass\nparsed the optical examination, to attend which waB the chief purpose of\nhis trip.\nSELECT SITE FOR\nFERRY APPROACH\nGovernment Officials and Members of\nCity Council Pay Visit to Connaught Park.\nTho site for the approach to tho\nferry which is to be operated by the\nprovincial government between Nelson and the west arm was selected\nyesterday afternoon by Mayor Keefe.\nW. P. Teetzel. government agent: (1.\nC Mackay. city engineer; W. n. Wescott, government engineer, and Aid.\nEdward Kerr,\nIt la at the easterly end of Con-\nnnuRht park, at the Falrvlew end of\nthe street, car lino, *\nTho ferry, for which the mncHlnerj\nIins arrived ami'for wlile.ti the barge\nhas been built, is rapidly neattlng completion at fhe launch building yards\nof George W. Hale.\nLOW BIRTH  RATE\nDRIVING FRANCE TO RUIN\n*n.v r\u00bbni!v N\"\"-i\u00ab Tr.-,*-.*'* Tp\"r**i\nPARIS. -Tunc .17.~-T!ie vital statistics for 1012 re-port 760)050 births\nthroughout France, ns compared with\n742.164 for the year 1!)11. Dr. Jacques\nnnrilllon. the expert, says that, lho\nImprovement Is mole apparent than\nrcil nnd thnt the two years 11)11 and\nIf You're\nWell\nDressed\nIn one of our clean-cut, well-bred,\nprogressive Suits, you're a herald of\nprosperity; you're worth more to your\nbusiness than you are if poorly or\ncarelessly clad. You'll feel your wortn\nIf you're dressed In our worthy Clothing.\nWe've the making of much prosperity here in this men's Good-Clothes\nShop; we'll be glad to help you to\nyour share.\nThere's No Sting\nTo Our Prices!\nSuits nt\n$16.50, $18.00, $20.00\nto $35.00\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\nBuilding Time Is Here\nSEE US  FOR PRICES\non all kinds of\nBUILDING   MATERIAL\nSpecial attention to out of town\nwork and orders.\nWaters & Pascoe\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS,\nOffice snd Factory:\nFRONT STREET\nHouse Heating\nThink nf it now and you can have\nIt \"fxt winter.\nBeu> Hi.) ^\nB. C. numbing & Heating Co.\nfor pric'iH.\nOPERA   HOUSE   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 485 Phone 181\nDINNERWARE\nWo oro makipg a prico on din-\nnerware that Is actually holier\nthan you could think or making\nTor yoniHcll' and wo Imyn it iii\nseveral gru*le_ ol China? alao BGtul-\nporcelaln. The docor&Uons aro so\ndainty Clint yon could put :my kind\nof  food ou it, nnd  It will luate\ngood.\nCHINA HALL\nA.  W.   MUNRO,  Prop.\nPhone  L-i-;l 321   Bilker SI.\nP.  O.  Box SE3\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited\nSupply complete equipment for\nA\u00absuy Offlcns and Laboratories, Chemical and r*hynlcal apparatus for\nBoh-iolH nnd College*\n567 Hornby Street. Vancouver, B. C.\nAssay lialanee.\nAgentf. In B. C. tor the \u2022'KEM.TriR*'\n11)12 li'ive established the worst_ roe.\nold in ninny years, '.'clearly ttomon-\nBtratlng Urn P9?alBt_ncy of tho evil\nwhich in driving I-'raii'o to ruin.\"\nTho detailed sc.ii.-tic-* ror r.H_ are\nas follows:\nMarriages, .111..'-!);- blrlha. 750,050*\ndeaths. (i!i_,7in.\nUr. Ucrtillon conclude:* his siate-\nment bv Baying; \"Thin Is the true\ncause of the threo years' military service, which is the merest palliative.\nSoon four years will bo necessary,\nthen five, or iicI'IhIu\"\t\nSchool Children's'\nEyes Supply\nTheir Intellect\nDofcutlvo eye*i alimt. tlio.ininil\nCun you expect fair progi*\u2122 in\nscliool or BUCceBfe lu business K\nbo liimilicfi'ipoa;\nExumilmtion of children foi\nBliiesfls Is a spoclnl fenluro ol\nour optical department,\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and Optician\nBaker St. Nelnon. B.C\nStocks\nSubject to prior  sale   we  wilf\nsell\u2014\n5,000   Shares   Kootenay\nIce & Fuel at . .$ .15\n100- 500   Standard   Silver-\n200 B. C. Copper 2.75\n1,000-2,000   Rambler-Cariboo.Offer\nANY OF THE ABOVE OUGHT\nTO PROVE ATTRACTIVE BUYS\nAT THESE PRICES.\nSt. Denis $\nLaWi-ehee\"\nMsCullMll \u2022ull-Unf.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1913_06_18","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0385237","@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":"1913-06-18 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1913-06-18 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\/1.0385237"}