{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0381663":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"645b8780-9072-43ee-9fb8-82a738caf57e","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2019-07-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1905-06-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0381663\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" THE DAILY NEWS\ni l>,.,,vl\u201e, I..1   l.llimi'V ~* ^^*\"^\"\n\u25a0!&-\nA-tlVij\nPrqvlndlal Library\nJIM 201805\nt\n;rORlA,0\nVOL. 4\nNBLSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1905\nNEW LINE\nBLOCKED\n\u00bb\nDriven by the Committee\nFrom Pillar to\nPost\nW. A. Galllher and Duncan Ross Make ,\nGallant Stand for the V. V. & E. K'y\nBut Are Narrowly Defeated\nend of the stretch. The laws governing the erection of traps says tliat the\ntraps must he 2000 feet apart.-\nWheu Messrs. Todd & Co. built their\nfirst trap they put it up on the very\nsoutherly 'boundary of the north site,\nbut when they came to erect their other\ntrails they reversed their tactics and\ncommenced to build on the northerly\nboundary of the south traps, thus practically shutting out Mr. James Anderson's chance for erecting a trap and\nstill comply with the 2000 feet act. Mr.\nAndenson took exception to their way of\ndoing business and had the government\norder the work, slopped, but Messrs.\nTodd & Co. refused to cease work until\nan injunction was placed on them, and\nthe trouble will now go before the\ncourts.\n(Special to Tho Dully News)\nOttawa, June 15.\u2014The V. V. & E\nrailway bill, which is for the building\nof the railway from the Boundary district of British Columbia, to Vancouver,\nwns up In committee loday. When the\nhill was up last it was held over until\nthe sub-committee had reported upon it.\nMr. Fitzpatrlfclc, tlie minister of justice,\nasked that the report of the sub-committee he held over until he had looked into\nIt.    This waa done.\nIt might be said that the hill is to\nremove any doubts as to the legality of\nlhe charter. In today's committee Mr.\nEmmerson read the report of the subcommittee, which was in favor ol passing the bill.\nMr. Bergeron said that this was not\nthe report of tho sub-committee but that\nthe sub-committee was to refer the hill\nto the department of justice. He wanted the report, of that department.\nMr. Galllher then read the correspondence which had been held with the department of justice upon the bill. This\ndeclared that any doubt whicli may exist as to the legality of the charter\nshould be cleared up, as was done with\nregard to the Nicola, Similkameen &\nKamloops road, both points being exactly similar.\nThe report of the sub-committee under these circumstances waa as follows:\n\" That, they have carefully examined the\nclauses referred to them and recommend that the hill be passed.\"\nMr. Barker agreed with Mr. Bergeron.\nMr. Galllher pointed out that Mr. Barker, a member of the sub-committee,\nagreed with all the mi.ahens of .lit* subcommittee that If the opinion of the\nminister or deputy minister of Justice\nWi.s satisfactory the chairman would report to the full committee, The chairman had done so.\nMr. Northrup said tbe report was\nnot signed.\nMr. Galllher: \"I have the telegram of\nMr, McDonald that the chairman had\ncarried out the views of the committee\nand had so reported.\"\nMr. Monk moved that the clause be\nreferred hack to the sub-committee.\nMr. Tisdale supported this as did Mr.\nFoster. The latter wanted tbe report\nof the minister of justice. He asked if\nMr. Galllher had seen the minister of\njustice.\nMr, Galllher: \"I saw tbe minister of\njustice.\"\nMr. Foster then wanted to get the\nviews of the minister of justice.\nMr. Fitzpatrick said that so far as he\nwas concerned he had no view to express upon it. He was never asked that\nthe department of justice be consulted\nbefore the legislation wus introduced and\nho would stand hy the report of his officers. He was not satisfied that the\nclause restored to the company tha\nrights in its provincial charter lhat had\nlapsed.\nMr. Foster took exception to the opinion they obtained before the committee met.\nDuncan Ross wanted to make a statement: the clause as placed in the bill\nwas submitted to the department Of justice by senator Templeman and the\nclause aa it now stood wns passed upon\nby th'e department. He strongly, objected to being driven from post to pillar and from committee to committee,\nwllh the sole view of blocking the legislation asked for.\nThe committee divided on the motion\nof Mr. Monk lo refer the clause back to\nthe suh-commlttee. This was carried\nby a vote of 53 for to 61 against.\nHALL AND OPERA HOUSE.\nMiners of Phoenix to Put Up a Handsome Structure\nfSnecliil to Tho Dally News]\nPhoenix, June 15.\u2014This week Archie\nBerry, secretary of the Phoenix Miners'\nunion. No. 8, returned from lhe ann.ua!\nconvention of the Western Federation\nof Miners held at Salt Lake City. Since\nbis return to Phoenix the mutter of a\nlocation for the new halt and opera\nhouse to'he built by the union lias been\nactively taken up. Two or three sites\nhave been proposed and are now being\nconsidered for the new structure, and\na decision will he made within the next\nfow days. Any one of them are much\nmore centrally located than the old\nhall, which is at the extreme lower end\nof the city.\nAs soon as the Question of site is decided upon, the building committee will\nlose no time In getting work underway\non the new building, which Is expected\nto cost about ?S0OO. It will have an\nopera house, a lodge room and living\nrooms for the secretary, and will be\nrushed to as early a completion as possible.\nPREPARED\nT0TREAT\nJapanese Government Not\nWilling to Negotiate\nFrivolously\nNO. 49\nSelection of Washington Regarded as\nFirst Victory for Japan in the Impending Protocols\nTGO GOOD TO BE TRUE\nEXTRAORDINARY   EUROPEAN   EXPECTATIONS OF JAPAN'S TERMS\nUNION LABEL BILL.\nTurned Down by Senate Committee hy\nNine to Five.\n(Special to The Daily News)\nOttawa, June Iii.\u2014The union label\nbill was in the senate committee today,\nJ. G. O'Doiioughue, counsel for the\nTrades and Labor congress, was heard\nfor the bill and Stewart, assistant secretary of the Canadian Manufacturers'\nAssociation, against. The first clause\ni\\yas rejected by nine to five and as the\ncommittee rose without reporting the\nbill it is not likely to come'up again.\nIt Is said that, the budget may lie delivered on Thursday next.\nARE SHARP PRACTITIONERS\nMessrs. Todd & Co., of   Victoria, Have\nTrouble Over Fish Trap Sites\n[Special to The Dally News]\nNew    Westminster,   June    15.\u2014The\nfirst legal fight ovor trap slteB is now\non tho tapis, between Messrs. Todd &\nCo., of Victoria, and John Anderson &\nCo., of New Westminster.   Twenty miles\nof a stretch along tho shore of Vancouver island has been allotted by the\nprovincial government to trap sites and\non this shore line Meters Todd & Co.\nhavo erected four traps, one    at   the\nnortherly and three at the southerly\nSPIRIT   OF BUSHIDO   WILL MEET\nALL DEMANDS WHATSOEVER\nVienna. June 15.\u2014The opinion prevailing here is that peace negotiations\nbetween Russia and Japan will eventually prove successful. This is based\nprimarily on the belief that Japan will\nmeet Russian more than half way,\nmaking unexpectedly reasonable demands.\" Certain Intimations have been\nreceived here that Japan's terms are\nsubstantially as follows:\nFirst\u2014The recognition of tho Japanese protectorate over Korea.\nSecond\u2014The return of Manchuria to\nChina.\nThird\u2014International control of the\nEastern Chinese railroad.\nFourth\u2014Regarding Port Arthur\u2014The\nstrategical value of this fortress haa\nbeen over estimated and it is said that\nthe ultimate disposal will not give rise\nto any controversy. -\nFifth\u2014It is not thought that Japan\nwill demand tbe demolition of the fortifications at Vladivostok.\nSixth\u2014The surrender of the island of\nSakhallen will not be demanded by Japan, principally because Japan has not\nyet carried the war into Russian territory.\nSeventh\u2014An understanding regarding\nan indemnity is not impossible because\nIt is declared that Japan will content\nherself with demanding the cost of tho\nwar.\ni'lie Japanese minister here, in an Interview, said that if Russia honestly desires peace she could have it.\nRUSSIAN LESE MAJESTY.\nPeoplo Actually Demand a Rendering of\nPublic Accounts.\nSt. Petersburg. June 15.\u2014Tbe Nash-\nassien demands a business like accounting of the money subscribed lo rebuild\nthe Russian fleet, saying: \"Enough of\nconcealed abuses, great names are uo\nlonger guarantees.\"\nMURDER WAS PREMEDITATED.\nPremier Delyannls of Greece Died in\nPovery.\nAthens. June 16.\u2014The late premier,\nM. Delyannls, whose assassination by a\nprofessional gambler occured Monday,\ndied in absolute poverty. The chamber\nwill vote a pension to the mother of his\nfamily. One of the proprietors of tho\ngambling house wilh which the murderer was connected, was arrested today.\nHo gave the police the names of the\ninstigators of the premier's murder.\nHONORED MR. JAFFRAY.\nToronto, June 15.\u2014The completion of\na quarter of a century on the board of\ndirectors of The Globe, during the last\nseventeen years of which he has been\npresident, was tlte occasion of a banquet\nIn honor of Mr. Robert Jaffray. The\nevent took place at McGonkey's and Mr.\nJaffray's fellow-directors, the staff and\nemployes of the paper and a lew outside\nfriends joined with enthusiasm In the\nmovement to do honor to one whoso\nlong and active conectton with the paper Is matched only by the uncommon\nerieen In which his character and personality are held.\nAn address, together with a handsome\nsterling silver service, was presented to\nMr. Jaffray at the conclusion of the\nbanquet.\nCHESS   TOURNAMENT\nOstond,   Belgium,   Juno 15 \u2014 The  third\nround  in  the International chess  masters\ntournament was played today,    Leonhard\nleads by half a point _j\nWashington, June IB.\u2014Official announcement ts made that Washington\nhas heen selected for the locution of the\npeace conference. The announcement\ncomes iff the form of au official statement, issued by secretary Loob by direction of the president. The statement\nfollows:\n\"When the two governments were unable to agree upon either Chefoo or\nParis, tho president suggested The\nHague, but both governments have now\nrequested that Washington be chosen\nas the place of meeting and tbe\npresident has accordingly been formally\nnotified by bo h governments that Washington will be selected.\"\nU \\s not expected that the selection of\nWashington will interefer materially\nwith the summer plans of tlie president. While no definite arrangements\nhave yet been made, it is regarded as\nquite likely tbat be will return to Washington from Oyster Bay, to receive the\nplenipotentiaries of the two governments, when they assemble for the conference. Officials of the Washington\ngovernment will have little to do witli\ntlie negotiations between the representatives of the two powers'. Tbe United\nStates will provide a place for their\nmeeting and furnish them with such material as may be necessary for their\ncomfort and convenience hut the deliberations will be quite uninfluenced by this\ngovernment.\nCount Cassini, tlio Russian ambassador, called at tbe White House about 'A\no'clock loday and remained witb the\npresident for nearly half uu hour. As\nho left the White Hoiue he said he\ncould add nothing at this time to tbe\nannouncement authorized by the president. The question of the selection of\nthe plenipotentiaries, he added, hud\nuot been determined and he indicated\nthat it probably would be several weeks\nbeforo the preliminary negotiations were\ncompleted.\nTbe powerful Influence of France was\nexerted to assist Russia in sending the\nnegotiations to some European capital,\npreferably The Hague, and if not there,\nGeneva. For several days it lias been\nknown that tbe three places under consideration were Washington, The Hague\nand Geneva. Japan preferred Washington and Russia preferred The Hague.\nUpon learning of Japan's unwillingness\nto go to Europe, Russia acquiesced and\njoined Japan lu Uie request that Washington be selected.\nMr. Takahira, Japanese minister, called at the White House late this evening and entered into a conference with\nthe president. Sir Mortimer Durand,\nthe British ambassador, culled at the\nWhite House at 10 o'clock tonight by\nappointment, and joined the president\nand Mr. Takahira in the conference.\nSt. Petersburg, June 15.\u2014The secretary of the Jupanese legation at Paris\nis quoted in an interview sent by the\ncorrespondent at the French capital of\none of the local afternoon papers as expressing confidence that the meeting of\nthe plenipotentiaries of Russia and Japan will lead tu peace, \"aud Russia,\"'\nho said, \"does uot know the exact nature of our terms, she knows the main\noutiues and If-she bas now decided on\na meeting of plenipotentiaries, Russia\nmust be prepared to treat for peace.\nOtherwise the acceptance of president\nRoosevelt's good ofrtces would be a direct affront.\"\nParis, June 15.\u2014The choice of Washington for the meeting of the peace\nplenipotentiaries gives satisfaction here\nas it is considered the appropriate result\nof the president's initiative.\nDiplomatists are inclined to take the\nview that the selection is Japan's first\nvictory in the negotiations in progress.\ntlon of the navy, especially in the construction of ships, the announcement of\nhis resignation came like a bolt from\nout of the blue.\nThe Instant disposition was to regard\nthe retirement of grand duke Alexis\nand admiral Avellan as a concession to\npublic opinion following the crowning\ntragedy of the victory at Tsushima.\nThe names of vice admiral Birelieff,\nwho is returning from Vladivostok, and\nof vice admiral Chouknln, commander of\nthe Black Sea fleet, are mentioned among\nthose likely to succeed admiral Avellan.\nTho emperor accepted the resignation\nof grand duke Alexis In tho following rescript:\n'\u25a0His majesty, my father, fully esteeming your experience iu naval service and your personal and moral qualities, accepted you in 1881 as his immediate collaJborator in the work of renovating and strengthening our fleet.\nSince then, for twenty-four years, your\nImperial highness has devoted your\nlabors to bhe development of our naval\narmed forces and to the strengthening\nof tho personnel of the fleet in proportion lo the resources it was possible to\nafford you.\n\"Now, yielding to your repeated requests, I have consented to relieve you\nof the administration of the fleet and\nmarine department. In accepting the\nresignation of your imperial highness, I\ndirect you to take the rank of grand\nadmiral as an appreciation of my gratitude for all your work.\n\"1 remain, as ever, your constant well\nwisher, with every expression of my\nlove. NICHOLAS,\"\nCIVIL WAR\nDEVELOPS\nUnited Mine Workers of\nAmerica vs. Western\nFederation\nso that they .an be sure of all the necessary capacity and help in the case of un\nover stock; or If the fish commence to run\nearly they could have the benefit of the\nJuly schools, Instead of sitting under a\nstrike while the llsh are going by.\nTho fishermen wanted 16 cents for July\nand 10 cents fur August, but they consider\nthemselves lucky to get 12 1-2 cents for\nJuly and 10 cents for August.\nTrouble in Nanaimo-Western Fuel Co. i\nExclusively Recognizing One of the\nRival Labor Organizations\nGERMANY TURNED DOWN\nEVEN AUSTRIA AND ITALY WILL NOT\nATTEND FEZ CONFERENCE\nKAISER NOW STANDS ALONE AMONG\nALL  THE  GREAT   POWERS\nTangier, June 15\u2014Austria und Italy hnve\nnot!(led the Moroccan 'government tliat\nthey are prepared to accept tho sultan's\nInvitation to an International conference\non Morocco, provided the Invitation is accepted by tlio power Immediately affected.\nBerlin, June 15\u2014The provisional acceptance of the Invitation of the sultan of Morocco to be present at an International conference, an Invitation whicli hns already\nbeeu refused by Grout Britain und the\nUnited States nnd not accepted by Fnince,\nby tho othor two members of the Drel-\nhuud, Austria uud Itnty, is regarded In\ndisfavor in high diplomatic) circles here.\nIt was thought that the allied Interests of\nthese powers with Germany would ha.el d\nto an unqualified acceptance. As tlie matter now stands there eun be no international conference on the subject of Morocco between the great powers, inasmuch os of\ntheso only Germany has .signified its willingness  to be present.\nSHEA GRAVELY GHARGED\nACCEPTED $8000 TO SETTLE STRIKE\nLAST SUMMER.\nASTOUNDING   ACCUSATIONS   MADE\nBY JOHN C.   DRISCOLL.\nChicago, June IB.\u2014The greatest labor\nscandal Chicago haa ever known, according to state attorney Healey, is to\nfollow the disclosures mado today before\na grand jury by John C. Drlscoll, formerly secretary of the Associated Building Trades council and of the Coul Team\nOwners' association.\nDrlscoll revealed the history of the\ndealings between tho employers and the\nunion labor leaders, particularly that\nbranoh of laibor represented by the Chicago Ttftmstens' Union. It was learned\ntonight that one of the statements made\niby Drlscoll tu the jury was that president Shea of the Teamsters' union, accepted ?SU0U iii. the time of the .stock\nyards strike hist summer,\nCZAR'S UNCLE RESIGNS\nGRAND DUKE ALEXIS NO LONGER\nCOMMANDS NAVY\nTHOUGHT TO BE BECAUSE OF\nDEFEAT AT TSUSHIMA.\nTHE\nSt. Petersburg, June lb'.\u2014The sensational announcement was made shortly\nbefore midnight that grand duke Alexis,\nthe high admiral, who is an uncle of the\neinperor, and admiral Avellan, head of\nthe Russian admiralty department, have\nresigned. This announcement was followed a lew minutes later hy an Imperial rescript relieving the grand duke of\nthe supreme direction of the navy, which\nhe has held since the days of emperor's father, Alexander III, when Russia\nresolved to enter the lists of first class\nsea powers.\nAlthough from time to time since the\nwar began there have heen rumors that\nthe grand duke would retire on account\nof the savage criticism, not to use harsh-\nerwords, directed against his admlnlstra-\nNEW GENERAL MANAGER\nThonijis Fysse Retires From the Mgr-\n\u25a0 chant's Bank of Canada.\nMontreal\/ Jan. jVj^TUfjmas Fysse,\ngeneral manager of*\" tire '. merchant's\nBank of Canada, has severed his connection with that institution, retiring\nwith a gratuity of $50,000, and an allowance of $0000 per year. The hank's directors today appointed E. F. Hebden,\nInspector and superintendent of agencies, acting general manager.\nSTARVED PRISONERS.\nToronto, June 15.\u2014Thirteen prisoners of the jail here refused to work\nyesterday, \/fssorting that the food was\nnot good enough fo keep them in Ut\ncondition.\nWILL NOT MOBILIZE.\nChristianla, June 15.\u2014Tlie minister\nof defence authorizes the statement that\nall rumors of the mobilization of the\nNorwegian army and licet are devoid of\nfoundation.\nM0NA6T1R DISPUTE\nConstantinople, June 15\u2014Tho Turco-Soc-\nvla dispute, ln regard to tho violation Of\ntho Servian consulate .at Monastlr, has\nbeen settled by the dismissal of the chief\nof police.\nNORWEGIAN MANNERS\nChrlsttanln, June 16\u2014Flags are flying today from all tho public ami many other\nbuildings In Chrjstlnnla, In honor of the\nwedding at Windsor of Prince Gustuvus\nAdolphus, as prlnco of Sweden,\nSUICIDE IN JAIL.\nEverett, June 15\u2014-Geo. Baushets, who\nwas brought from Boise, Idaho, to serve\na thirty day sentence for petty larceny,\nthis aftemon drank strychnine in jail,\naud died soon after.\n(Special to The Dally News)\n- Victoria, June 15,\u2014 Tiie trouble at\nNanaimo daily shows more signs of development into a civil war between bhe\nWestern Federation of Miners and the\nUnited Mine Workers of America, the\nformer of whom met this afternon to\nconsider an invited proposal from the\nWestern Fuel couipuny. This La in effect lhat the company will act as an\nagent of employees iu securing suitable\nferrying facilities at an approximate\ncost of $4,50 monthly, or fourteen cents\ndaily for each of Lhe employees working\non May '.1, and in the event ot any\nchange In the act restoring conditions\nin ettect prior to June 1, will assume\niui] expense for the ferriage service.\nThe Western Federation lakes a ballot\non this question on the 17th aud tbey\nwill piouubly accept. The executive\nboard of the Federation will superintend\nthe election ami invite all underground\nemployees lu No. 1 shaft to vote. The\nUnited Mine Workers of America to-\nnighL decided to take no part iu lhe vote\nunless participating in us supervision,\nIt Is understood thai HawUiorntlnvaite's\nproposal io the government is that a rebate ot \"id per cent be granted the Western Fuel Cu. from tne royalty on tonnage in order to equalize conditions, but\nthe government could not agree thus to\ndiscriminate in tavur of a particular\ncompany,\nMr. Hawthornthwalte stated tliis afternoon mat he had received communications from premier McBride In regard to his suggestion thai a commission\nue appointed to dent wltb the matter ol\nseining the coal mine trouble here.\"\nMr. McBride pointed out that such a\ncommission would be obliged lo sit at\nFernie and other points to ascertain\nwhether the Western Fuel'Co. has been\nplaced nt any real disadvantage by tbe\nact or not. Mr. Hawthornthwalte\npointed out that the miners here have\nbeeu locked out Of Nu. 1 mine for the\npast twelve day. ou the ground thai\nthe company is placed at a distinct disadvantage by the act.\nThe premier in reply staled tliat no\nrepresentation of ihe.se facts bas been\nmade to the government, und suggests\nthat Mr, Hawthornthwalte should discuss the matter fully with the government, and ascertain If it is possible to\nmake some settlement that will not be\ninjurious to either tlie company or the\nmen.\nManager Stockett states that at no time\nIn the last year of the old company Iwd\nregime, nol* sine., the present couipuny hud\ntaken hold In 1908, hud the average earnings of tlie underground men been us high\nus during the lust three months, Maroh,\nApril and May.    Tile average earnings PW\nshift aud for contract miners In No. l\nmlno were us follows: During the wholu\nyear of 1903, $8,61; llrst live months of\n1001, $3.(Bi March, 1905, $3.73; April, 1906,\n$9.70; May, 1905. $3.78.\nDan Livingstone of the western Federation of .Miners, wus asked; '\"What position\ndoes tho Western Federation take with\nregard to the present trouble?\"\n\"You may say,\" he replied, \"that we are\nnegotiating with the company for a settlement. Tlio company bus decided that they\nwill use Protection shaft for tnklng the\nmen up und down,Irrespective of whether\nthe eight-hour law remains as It Is or\nnot. It Is bettor for both sides that it j\nshould ho so, for the men, because they\nwill have tt longer time ut the face, und\nfor tho comtviuy because they will get\nmore coal and have No. l shaft clear for\nhoisting coul during the whole eight hours\nnnd If at any future time the eight hour\nkiw fs modified In accordance with the proposal of tho company, the men will be carried to and from Protection shaft free of\ncharge.\"\n\"Do you propose to negotiate a settlement without consulting the United Mine\nWorkers,\" was asked Air. Livingstone.\n\"We don't recognize tho United Mine\nWorkers as a body ut all,\" replied Mr,\nLivingston^ \"As for the men outside tho\nFederation, they will bo given a voice In\ntho settlement. Bveryperaon who works\nunderground und Is affected by the deal\nwill bo given a chance to vote and we will\nconsider ourselves bound by a voto of the\nmen.\"\nNEW YORK & OTTAWA RAILWAY\nAlbany, June IB\u2014The New York & Ottawa railway company wus authorized by\nthe seat committeo to Issue a first mortgage\nfor .2,500,000, of Which about .1,500,000 is to\npay for the proposed purchase of the former New York and Oltawa railroad charter\nwhich was sold under foreclosure proceedings, und the remainder la to be put into\nbetterments. The road operutes a steam\nroad through tho Adlrondacks, from Tupper lake to the St. Lawrence river,\nDENY THB CHARGE\nMerchants' Trust Company Clearing Their\nSkirts\nNow York, June 15\u2014The charge, lhat the\ndirectors of the suspended Merc hunts'\nTrust company \"made loans outside tho\nboard of directors,\" by state bank examiner Kilburne, ts denied In answer to the\nsuit  tiled by counsel   for  the defendants.\nThe answer declares that the board of\ndirectors adopted resolutions to close the\ndoors of the institution before Mr. Kilburne took uny action and points to this\nact us  an evidence of tlieir good faith.\nA meeting of the board of directors wus\nheld   today.\nGET TRAIN\nROBBERS\nMission Junction Holdup\nTraced\u2014Securities\nRecovered\nStartling Story Told at Bellin_ham by One\nof the Daring Gang Who Robbed the\nExpress Company of $864,000\nSUBURBAN IS BELDAME'S\nFINE  RACE   WON   BY  AUGUST   BELMONT'S FILLY\nFAVORITE   DELHI   BEATEN   EASILY\nON LAST STRETCH\nNew York, June 15\u2014Beldame wus crown d\nqueen of the American turf when -she won\nthe twenty-second surbuiban handicap this\nafternoon fit Sheepsliead Buy. Slie Was\ntho second mare to capture tlie clusp.\nTho Ground, tour old daughter of Ootogon\nand Belladonna, wearing the scarlet Jacket\nuf August Belmont also lowered the colors\nof James R, Keene'e Delhi, almost without\nbeing extended, until near the end of the\nmile nnd a quarter journey. Delhi was the\npublic favorite at two und a half to one,\nbut tlio winner was heavily played around\nthree to one. The favorite shot away in\nfront ut the start and Beldame dogg.d his\nsieps like a shadow throughout the hrst\nmile. Then he lagged uud the Belmont\ncolors Hushed to the front. Delhi's mate\nwad quickly settled and he fell back in\ntlie ruck.\nUecuu.su of his tine ruce, the Brooklyn\nhandicap, Delhi wus the fuvorlte of ut\nleast halt the crowd. Thousands of thousands of dollars were sent into the betting\narena, und tlie Ben Brush coll was quickly\nbucked from three to two and a hall'.\nWlillo the finish was not such a one\nas hus often stopped tho heartbeats ol\nthe multitude ou Suburban day, it wus a\ncleanly run race from start to finish. Beldame proved that she still hus the wonderful stamina shown last year, when she\nwon 12 out of 14 starts und was acclaimed\nby thousands us \"the queen of American\nThoroughbreds,\"\n- Belllngham, Juue 15. \u2014The Evening\nHerald tonight says: The ?;.U_,0O0 worth\nof securities stolen from the sale of tho\nDominion Express company, iu tho robbery of the O. P, H. Iran con tinea tol\nexpress, near Mission Junction la_.L\nSeptemloer, have been recovered.\nThe recovery waa etl'ected through\nthe agency of the cellmate of Bill Miner\nthe man who is supposed to liave been\nthe leader of the tram robbers, during\ntho time Miner served lu San CJueulen\nprison, California. The man who carried out the transaction claims lo have\nthe assurance of the Canadian Paclllc\nand the Dominion Express Co.,\nMiner will be exempted from\ntlon. A few weeks after the\noccurred, Miners'\nthat\npro_>ecu-\nrofb'bery\nformer cellmate  was\nBHdVS BAH, FIXED\nVancouver, Juno 15\u2014R. W, Hill of the\nUnion Lean &. Investment company, was\ncharged In the police court with having\nembezzled the funds of the company to\nthe extent of $-1000. Joseph Martin, K.C.\nappeared for the defence and J. Edward\nBird, assisted by George MeCroBsan, for\na private prosecution, A plaa of not guilty\nwus entered uud trial by Jury wns taken\nby the defence, after which the preliminary\nhearing wus set for Monday next and the\nbull fixed at \u00a55_W in two sureties.\nDISLIKES DISAGREEMENT\nCHIEF LACOSTE OP QUEBEC SCORES\nA JURY.\nDECLARES EVIDENCE IN MAIL ROBBERY CASK TO BE CONCLUSIVE\nFISHERS AND CANNERS AG-REE\nFirst   Yeur ou Re\n\u2022md   With\nSight\nno Strike lu\nNew Westminster, June 15\u2014Tliere will be\nno tlshermens' strike on the Fraser river\nthis year. Although the papers have not\nbeen signed for llsh nates between the\ncunneryinen und the fishermen\" nt 12 1-2\ncents for July and 10 cents for August,\nthe matter Is finally settled and the fishermen, both white and Japanese, hnve\nAgreed to accept this offer. This la the\nflrst yenr of a big run since canneries\nhave been In operation on the river thnt\nthoro bus been no strike, nnd the reason\nthla yeur for tho cnnnerynien making such\nn good offer, wns that thoy had prepared\nfor a big year and hnd arranged their markets accordingly. Their plants havo been\nincreased iu size and their help hired ahead\nMontreal, June 15.\u2014In the court of\nthe king's bench this afternoon, the\njury iu the case ol\" Richard Davis,\ncharged with taking money from letters while in the employ of the Montreal postofflce, reported they were not\nable to agree.\nChief Justice Laooste, in reviewing the\nevidence, which was most conclusive,\npractically said so.\nWhen the jury reported a disagreement the chief justice said with considerable warmth:\n\"If you could not agree upon a verdict immediately In this case, there is\nno use sending you hack to again consider it, you are discharged.\"\nThere are three olher charges against\nDavis.\nemployed by Lhe C. P, R, to recover tho\nsecurities. He came to Belltngham,\nand under tho name of Brown, has been\nconducting tlie negotiations for the return of the securities since lhat date.\nWhile passing as Hi own, it Is known In\nthis city that his real name is Jake\nTerry, uud that he served one term iu\nprison for counterfeiting and another\nfor smuggling.\nWhile under a ten year sentence in\nSan Quenten prison he became acquainted with Miner. After the two were released they left California, came to\nthis section and were associated tor\nsome time, bin tinaily drifted apart.\nYesterday Terry stated thut his mission\nhad been accomplished aud that the se-\neurltlea were in his possession. He\nstated further that Miner would never\nhe arrested on the charge of the train\nholdup, and that his work in the case\nwould be concluded when the other men\nconnected with the case were arrested\nand extradited. He declares the other\nmen ure known aud Lhat Information of\ntheir present location ts iu the hands\nof the Canadian authorities.\nSome peace officers, perhaps, tempted hy the reward offered for the arrest\nof the robbers, are inclined to believe\nthat Terry himself was one of the men\nwho assisted in the holdup and thai he\nhas played the C. P. R. and Dominion\nExpress Co. bolh ways, receiving a\nshare of the booty secured from the looting of Die express and now a reward for\nthe return of the securities.\nGENERAL PRESBYTERIAN   SYNOD.\nAssembly\nDissolved on Concluding its\nLabors.\nKingston, June 15.\u2014The Presbyterian\ngeneral assembly concluded Its business\nlasl night, and was dissolved by the\nmoderator to meet next June in London,\nThe closing business consisted of a report on church life and work, which\npointed cut thut church influence In\ntown., and cities seemed to he waning;\nthe passing of a resolution In favor of\nthe suppression of the opium traffic iu\nChina; tho passing of loyal addresses of\nre solution-, of sympathy with the united\nfree church of Scotland, and a resolution regarding the 400th anniversary of\nJohn Knox.\nCANADA'S  FIRST  KAIL.\nBOOKMAKERS GIVE TROUBLE\nNew York, June 15\u2014The bookmakers who\nnre members of the Metropolitan turf exchange, declined today to accept wflgera on\ntho first ruce. This action wus taken by\nlhe members nf ihe Metropolitan turf association, whloll is the bookmakers' organisation, because non-numbers of the as-\nBOOlatlon have hnd tho privileges nt the\nrace tracks for several weeks past.\nIt Is reported that unless the trouble w,is\nspeedily settled tho members of he Metropolitan turf association would not accept\nwngers on the Suburban Handicap.\nCAN'T STOP JAPS\nLondon, June 15.\u2014The Japanese correspondent of the Dally Telegraph at\nMojl, Japan, says; The rainy season\nhas started in Manchuria, and the mud\nin the roads is knee deep, but this will\nnot interefer with military operations,\nglad tidings of which may be expected\nIn a few days,\nDominion Iron & Steel Co. Start Filling\nTheir Big Order.\nSydney, N. S., June 15.\u2014Its first rail\nwas turned out by tlie Dominion Iron __.\nSteel Co. at the rail mill yesterday,\nThe turning oul of the rail was watched\nby J. P. Sandberg, English rail expert,\nIn the Interests of the Grand Trunk Pacific, for whom the first order of 25.000\ntons will be filled.\nWhen the rail was in process of passing from one roughing table io another\nan employe named Wliyte was caught\niu the pushers nml had his legs badly\nmangled.\nBOUNDARY TELEPHONE LINE\nNow  Being  Built   Into  Phoenix  by   B,  C.\nTelephone Company\n.Roeclnl tn The Dnlly Newsl\nPhoenix, June 15\u2014Joe TroinbU-y of Phoenix, has been awarded the contract for\nsupplying about 1200 cedar poles for lhe\nnew line being built by the B. C, Telephony\ncompnny through the Boundary country,\nfrom tho boundary line near Cascade,  to\nGreenwood,  via  Phoenix.   Mr,  Trombley\nhas a crew of eight men gelling out tho\nsticks, whleh he has already begun delivering to the company.\na. c. Hodeo or Nelson, disirict superintendent of the company, stutes that he\ntvis a gang of 15 men already employed\non the new work, which hus now reached\na point between Cascade and Grand Forks.\nThe new line Is being constructed In the\nmost modern and permanent manner, and\nwill take tlie place of the line Jjuilt into\nthe Boundary, to connect with the American lino at that point, some seven or eight\nyears ago. At that time this telephone\nline waa tho only wire communication lu'id\nby residents of tho Boundary with tho outside world, lt being before the days of\nrailway construction In this section.\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JUNE  16,  1905\nDelicious\nCreamery\nButter\nOur own Brand.   Shipments every three\ndays direct from the Creamery.\nPrices Right\n1 lb Bricks\n14 lb Boxes\n33 lb Boxes\nSee that each brick is marked:   \"Put up expressly\nfor the Hudson's Bay Company, Nelson.\"\nHudson's Bay U.\nImperial Bank of Cauada\nHead Office:   Toronto,\nCAPITAL   PAID-UP J3.OO0.O00  REST\n 13.000,00.\nT. R. MERRITT, President.     D. R. WILKIE, Vice-President and Gen. Man.\nBranches in Provinces of Ontario, CJifebec,   Manitoba,   British   Columbia,\nNorthwest Territories. __        ___________\nSavings Department\nDeposits received and interest allowed at current rates from dato ol open-\nla. account aud credited half-yearly.\nREVELSTOKE\nA. E. Phlpps, Manager.\nARROWHEAD \u00ab\nE. K. Boultbee, Manager.\nCRAN13I100K\nJ. F. M. Pinkham, Manager.\nNBLSON:   J. M. Lay, Managw.\nTROUT LAKE\nT. B. Baker, Manager.\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nPaid-up Capital, $8,700,000        Reserve Fund, $3,500,000\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB. E. WALKER, General Manager        ALEX. LAIRD, Asst. Oenl Man_g_>\nBANK MONEY ORDERS\nISSUED AT THE FOLLOWING RATES r\n%$ and under    3 cent*\nOver $5 and not exceeding $10    6 cents\n\"   $10      M * $30   JO cent*\n\"   $30      \" \" $50   15 cents\nThese Orders are Payable nt Par nt nny office in Canada or a Chartered Baafa\n(Yukon excepted), und at the principal banking points ill the United State*.\nREGOTIAUI.IE AT i FIXED RATR AT\nTill. CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, ENG.\nTht.y form an excellent method of remitting small sums olituautf\nwith safety and at small cost.\nCLARETS AND SAUTERNES\nH. JOHNSTON & SONS,\nBORDEAUX,\nFor nearly two centuries have been standard\nWines in every part of tbe world,\nI__W, YOUNG & CO. .Montreal.   Agents for Canada and Newfoundland.    ''\u25a0'\u25a0\nThere is no Argument     I\nbait so convincing: as tho evidence of your eyes.\nThat is why\nI want you to see\nMy stock of High Clasa Clothing for men\nand Boys to be sold at cost,\n250 Suits Must Go At Once\nYou owo it to yourself nnd pockclbook\nto inspect my prices.\nJ. A. Gilker\nEngine\nPACKING\nOur Stock or Engine Packing: is large\nand we carry all standard makes such as\nGarlock Spiral, Garlock Square   Flax,  Sun   Spiral,\nRedstone Pneumatic\nWe also have a compete   assortment of\nRainbow, Redstone, Asbestos, British Navy, in all si.es\nln Sheet Packing \u2122\nWood-Vallance Hardware Go., Limitd\nNELSON\nWholesale tn\\i ({stall\n16, 1904. W. H. R. Clement of Grand\nForka, was appointed arbitrator in ttie\nmatter by Mr. justice Morrison, and his\naward Is that the plaintiff receive $10 a\nweek during Ihe period of his disability.\nPlaintiff was represented by W. A.\nMacdonald, K. 0., and the defendant\ncompany by D. \"Whiteside.\nCANADIAN-MEXICAN   LINE\nNew Subsidized Service Will Start on July\n20th Next\nMexico City, June 15\u2014The new Canadian-Mexican steamship line will begin\noperations on July 20th next,\" when the\nflrst steamer subsidized by the Canadian\nand Mexican governments, will Sail from\nMontreal for Mexican ports, touching at\nHavana.\nNEW ENGLISH SUBMARINE\nNew York, Juno 15-Tho Herald prints\nthe following London despatch from lis\nEuropean correspondent: \"The shipbuilding yards of Forrest and company at\nIvanhoe on the river Colpc, under grant\nsecrecy, bas Just completed a new type\nof submarine bont, which carries two torpedo tubes. 9 fl!\nIt will have a crew oC three men and\nIs so smnll tbat It can be easly picked\nfrom the water and placed aboard the\ndeck of a battleship, or It can be placed\non a railroad truck and carried from one\nport to another. The solo motive power\nIs electricity, which gives a speed of eight\nmiles an hour.\nWc also have in\nFountain Pens\nTho   Quaker   for   $1.50,   a   good   rellablo\npen at low cost.\nThe Conklln, self-filling, $3 to $3.50.\nTlio Waterman,   Parker, Swan,   Pclllcnn\nand other makes,\nW. G. THOMSON, Bookseller and Stationer\nnecrs might base their expectations of\nthe How of water according to the diameter tbey made the bore. Kitty per cent\nabove the most .sanguine expectations\nwill be the product of the tunnel, and\nthere is added* to hydraulic engineering\nstatistics, data which was only available after Lhe expenditure of ?:il)O,00O\u2014\nthe approximate cost of the tunnel.\nMi*. Buntzen, the manager of the\nPower company, who is largely responsible for the success of the tunnel undertaking, is entitled to much credit for\nthe completion of the big work. Vancouver and Now Westminster are now\nassured of a plentiful supply of power\nfor manufacturing purposes aa well as\nfor the operation of their street ears.\nThe Colonist speaking of the flattering remarks showered on Mr. Buntzeu\nat the banquet last week, declares that\nho has fully deserved every good thing\nthat was said of him, and adds: \"The\ncompany ho represents has, under his\nmanagement, made a complete success\nof Its undertakings and has earned dividends upon ils investments, He has\npursued a wi.se financial policy and lias\ngained the goodwill of the community in\nit all, which is the best testimonial to\nhis achievements. His friends regret\nthat lils residence henceforth will be in\nLondon, England, as managing director,\nbut his interest In and control of the\nlarge undertakings Will continue, and\nwllh, we trust, Increased benefit to this\npart of tho province, tts well as to the\nshareholders of the company.\"\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished1 at Nelson every morning\nExcept Monday,  by\nP. J. DEANE\nSHOULD END OPPOSITION.\n\u25a0During the recent bye-election campaigns in London arid North Oxford, lho\nconservatives frankly declared that tho\nautonomy bill was the issue before the\nelectors. The tory papers, particularly\nin Toronto, made the issue quite clear\nand all over the dominion the conservatives shouted, \"Walt for the returns\nfrom London and North Oxford.\" The\nVictoria Colbniat of Tuesday last said\neditorially: \"Whatever the result may\nbe in IiOndon or North Oxford, there\ncan be no doubt that the educational\nclauses of the autonomy bills constitute\nthe issue. Practically nothing else has\n\u2022been talked of during the campaign, except tlie Importance to London of electing a cabinet minister to represent It.\"\nNow that the agony is ove.r and over\nto the entire satisfaction of the liberal\nparty, perhaps tho opposition will now\nfollow the advice given them hy the\nMontreal Gazette, as published in a Bpeclal despatch to The Daily News yesterday, and abandon further obstruction of\nIhe autonomy measure, Possibly next\nDominion dny will now be the birthday\nof the two new provinces.\nVANCOUVER POWER PLANT\nThe formal opening at the close of last\nweek by ills honor sir Henri .Inly, of\nthe great power tunnel wliich now connects tho waters of laltea Coqultlam and\nBeautiful just northwest of Vancouver,\nIs an Incident worthy of more than passing note. Tills matter was Ignored In\nthe Associated Press despatches, but\nthe Vancouver papers all contain long\narticles on the completion and formal\nopening of this great engineering work.\nThe B.C. Electric Railway company and\ntlio Vancouver Power company commenced tlio work of boring through\nmount Harmon to connect the two lakes\non January 9th, 1903, and completed\nthe operations satisfactorily on April 27\nlast. The length of the tunnel is 2.12\nmiles, its size, nine feet square, and its\npower capacity 80,000 h.p.\nTho cost of construction was $18,000\nper lineal foot.\nWhen the engineers planned the dimensions of the tunnel thoy built upon\nsuch data as was available? and thai was\npractically nothing, for tlie reason that\nit was all theoretical\u2014never lu the history of the world's engineering had\nthere been bored a water power tunnel\nof such length. There was therefore no\npractical Information on which the engl-\nELUTORIAL  NOTES.\nThe special despatch from the coast\npublished In another column of this\nissue, relating to the probable settlement of the difficulty at Nanaimo, is\nwelcome news. As both the Company\nand iho employes seem anxious to arrive\nat a settlement, an adjustment is likely\nio follow.\nThe Initial number of the Evening\nHerald, published at Fort William, Ontario, by MeCuish and McPherson, and\nedited by It. G. McCnlsh, Is to hand.\nThe Herald is an eight page, six column publication, well got up, newsy\nand evidently starts with mod advertising patronage. The paper will boom\nPort William and tho neighboring district, Uio great natural advantageous of\nWhich should be more generally known.\nAs to politics, lhe editor says in his Inaugural article; \"To a very large degree the advancement of the west and\nof Canadian interests generally is. wo\nbelieve, due lo the wisdom, enterprise\nand energy of lhe present liberal administration at Ottawa and to the leadership of sir Wilfrid Laurier. The Herald, while bound to no party and in no\nway Influenced hy any clique or faction,\nwill bo a supporter of the principles of\nliberalism, so long as the policy of that\nparty Is for the general good of the\ndominion,\"\nFrom Slocan Junction east to Procter,\nand beyond Proctor on tho shores of\nKooienay lake there Is now cleared\nand under cultivation a great amount of\nland. Thousands of fruit trees of all\nkinds have been planted on those lands\nand small fruits aud market garden produce have not been overlooked. Tho\nowners of these properties naturally look\nto this city as ihelr commercial centre,\nand ihey are good customers of our\nlocal merchants. So far the fruit movement is only in ils flrst stages but it is\ngrowing rapidly und every local effort\nthat can be made to help on this industry in every possible way should be encouraged, The flower show and celebration on Dominion day and the exhibition in September should be utilized to\nbring the ranchers together for the\nmutual exchange of experiences and for\nLho advancement of their business. Nothing should bo too good for our neauby\nneighbors when thoy come here, they\nshould own tho city, temporarily at least\nand learn to regard Nelson not only as\ntheir neighbor but as tlieir best l'rieud.\nA NATIONALIST M. P,\nDublin, June 16\u2014John Muldoon, a nationalist lawyer of Dublin, was elected without\nopposition yesterday to represent the south-\nern division at Donegal county in the\nhouse ot commons.\nINTERESTED IN YMIR MINES\nChicago    Capitalists    Aro    Examining\nJubilee Mountain Claims.\n[Special to The Dally News]\nYmir, June 15.-\u2014Miss Taylor, who for\ntho past six months has filled the position of matron for the Ymir general\nhospital, has tendered the trustees her\nresignation und will return to Seattle\nwhere sho will resume her private practice.\nMessrs, F. W. Bryan, H. L. Marshall,\nE. Wright, A. E. lledstrom, F. Pouter,\nand P. H! Politer, of Chicago, are vi-sit-\nIng Lhe Ney York Central group of\nclaims on Jubilee mountain. The gentlemen are in charge of Ed Peters of\nymir, who Is manager for tho interests\nof Lho above gentlemen In the claims\ndescribed. The group aro prospects of\ngreat encouragement and much work\nhas been done upon thorn. They adjoin\nPrice and Burgess' lona group\nThe Nelson & Fori Sheppard Railway\ncompany haa given to the Ymir General hospital llvo lots upon which tho\nMfcpital building stands, the deed being delivered yesterday to the trustees.\nPUBLIC CEREMONY IN FERNIE\nLaying of Corner Stone of Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Co.'s Now Offices.\n(Special to Tho Dally News)\nPernio, June lo\u2014The program in connection witli the laying of the corner\nstone of thu Crow's Nest Pass Coal\ncompany's new buildings has been somewhat modified but it is now finally arranged thai, tlie proceedings will be\nopened with brayer by tljo Rev. E.\nBartlett, rector of Christ's church. The\nCanadian ensign will then be raised on\nlho new Hag pole, tho hand playing \"The\nMaple Leaf Forever.\"* Then the stono\nwill be formally laid hy \" G. G. S.\nLindsey, and a paper descriptive of the\nevent, together with some coins, will be\ndeposited iu a receptacle in the stone\nprepared for that purpose. The ceremony will then closo in prayer by father\nCotola, and the Rev. Mr .Dunn of the\nPresbyterian church. The function\npromises lo he attended by about all the\npopulation of Ferule.\nMADDEN VS. GRANBY MINES\nSuit For Damages is Settled By Arbitration In Favor of Plaintiff.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGrand Forks, .luno Iii.\u2014 A case for\ndamages which has excited much local\ninterest has just boon decided In favor\nof the plaintiff. This is the notion that\nwas brought, by 3. Madden, a nephew\nof President. Madden of the Providence\nmine, against the Granby company, for\ndamage, for injuries inflicted by a travelling crane striking him while upon th\u00a9\npremises of tho smelter on November\nJUST WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD DO\nMr. J. T. Barber of Irwinville, Oa,.,, always keeps a bottle of Chamberlain's\nColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at\nhand ready for Instant use. Attacks of\ncolic, cholera morbus and dinrrohea come\non so suddenly that there Is no tlmo to\nhunt a doctor or go to tbe store for medicine. Mr. Barber Bays: \"I have tried\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy which Is one of the best\nmedicines I ever saw. I keep a bottle of\nIt in my room as I have bads everal attacks of colic ami it has proved to be the\nbest medicine I ever used.\" -Sold by all\ndi-iutgists find dealers.\nCHARGED WITH MURDER.\nBelleville, Out., June 14\u2014Adam Lloyd,\na farmer of the township of Huugerford,\nis at present lodged ou the county jail\nhere on suspicion of having murdred\nhis wife on January 23rd. A post mortem was held, and coroner Yeoman's,\nof Belleville, held an inquest, As a result, Lloyd was arrested nnd placed in\nBelleville jail. Tho preliminary investigation will lake place on June 17. It\nIs the belief of the authorities that the\nWoman was clubbed into insensibility,\nand lhat tho burning took place subsequently. The supposition or theory advanced by the authorities is that after\nthe old lady had been struck on the\nhead her clothing was saturated with\ncoal oil and set ou lire.\nIn slore for thope who hnve never tried\nClark's Lunch Tongues. Tbey are delicately seasoned, good to use.\nIt will pay you to keep Chamberlain's\nColic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in\nyour house. It only costs a quarter. Bold\n\u00bb\u2014 <.U dTWKtristfl and dealers.\nMonkey Brand iSoap removes all stains,\nniBt,   dirt  or  tarnish \u2014 but won't wash\n(\u25a0Jollies, ao\n\u2022 WIRES \"WERE DOWN\nOwing to the fact that the wires were\ndown all yesterday until tb0 evening,\nMessrs. I. C. Major and company wero\nunable to obtain their dally stoek and\ngrain reports from New York and Chicago,\nIMPORTED A BOA.\nBoise, Idaho, June 14.\u2014Ben Walker,\nwhile moving a hunch of bananas from\ncold storage today was attacked by a\nyoung reptile which uncoiled and\nsprang at him. It proved to he a young\nboa constrictor, four feej seven inches\nlong. The bananas wore from Cosla\nRica. \t\nANOTHER   WONDER   OF SCIENCE.\nIllolui-.j    Iiiin   Proved   Unit   Dimdriifl  la\nCiumi'il li> ii Germ.\nScience is donlg wonders those days In\nmedicine as well as In mechanics. Slnco\nAdam lived, the human nice lias been\ntroubled with dalulrnlY, for which no hair\npreparation baa heretofore proved a sue-\nce:-~ful cure until Newbro's Herpicide waa\nput on the market. It Is a scientific preparation that kills lhe genu that makes\ndandruff or scurf by digging lnlo tho\nscalp to get at the root of thn hair, where\nit saps the vitality; causing itching scalp,\nfalling hair, and finally baldness. Without dandruff hair must grow luxuriantly.\nIt Is tbo only destroyer of dandruff.\nSold by leading druggists. Rend 10c,\nin stamps, for sample to Tho Herptclde Co., Detroit, Mich.\nCANADA DRUG A BOOK COMPANY\nBpeclal  Agents.\nH. D. ASHCROFT\nA. E. MARKS\nBLACKSMITHS\nAshcroft and Marks, experienced blacksmiths, wheelwrights, and expert horseshoes, are doing business on Hall streot,\nin tho premises previously occupied by\nGrant McLean. First class work in every\nMurLUiul*r guaranteed.\nJ. I. ANNABLE\nNELSON, B. C.\nfrUit and\nFarm\nLands\nTor Sale\nIn Crawford Bay\nDistrict\nEight 10-a_re lots of choice\nFruit land along' the Crawford\n'hay wagon road, every foot of\nwhich Is good. Will sell these\nblocks on monthly payments of\n*20.0..  _____!.\nOn Kootenay\nRiver\n100 acrea Improved laad, 20\nacres plowed, 10 acres ln clover hay, 5 acrea ln oats, 1000\nfruit trees, some small frulta,\none mile of fencing, small\nhouse and stable, team, harness,\nwagon, sleighs, and farm implements, poultry, etc., on the\nKootenay river, railway runs\nthrough the property. Price,\n(5,600, easy termB,\nOn Kootenay\nLake\nThree choice 8-acre lota suitable for fruit culture, across\nthe lake from Nelaon, water\nfront full width of each lot.\nPrice,  .176, {550, and JG25.\nMrs. Ernst's summer residence and fruit ranch at Powder Point, five miles east of\nNoIhoti on Kootenay lake. This\nproperly contains 13 acres has\n2 residences, stables, and poultry buildings; good board fencing; about 3 acres filled up for\na park or pleasure grounds and\nand a good sand beach for\nbathing.    Price   .2,000.\nSpecial\nLarge hotel in Nelson ln\nrunning order, (4,000 cash,\nbalance on time.\nGood hotel at Sirdar, B. 0.,\nall complete. Price' 11,800..\n900 acres of unimproved land\nat from (6.00 to (20.00 per acre\nDon't Buy\ntill you\nSee Me\nJ. E. ANNABIE\nNELSON, B. C.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCB\nBTAKKE* & CO., WHOLESALE DBlAlr-\nere In Butter, Egga, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine Street,\nNelson. B.C.\nGROCERIES\nA.   MACDONALD   &   CO.-WHOLEBALB\nGrocers and Provision Merchants.\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, To-\nbacooe, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese an*\nPocking Houae Products. Offlce anil\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Halt\nBtrw-ia.   P.O. Box 1W5.   Telephone jjj\nCAMP    AND   MINERS'    FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD A CO.-WHOLESA1 _H\nJobbers In Blankets, Underwear, Mltta,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinaw* and Oilskin Clothing.\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.     P.O. Box 1095.   Telephone 28,\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAT A CHEMICAL SUPPLI\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Importer*\nand Dealers lu Assayers' Supplies. Sole\nagents In British Columbia for the celebrated Battersea Crucibles, Soorlflers anfl\nMuffles and Wm. Ainsworth & Co.'s flnt\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids and Chemicals, Pla*\nUnum, Sodium and Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Silver Fret\nLead  and Litharge.       \t\nMINING   AND   MILL   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCO.\u2014Dealer.- In Engines, Band und Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and HolBts. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.    Spokane,  Wash.\t\nASSAYERS\nE. W, WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND AS-\nsaycr, Nelson, B. O,\u2014Gold, Bllver or lead,\n$1 eaoh; Copper, $1.50; Gold-Silver, $1.60;\nZinc, $2.50; Go lil-S liver- Copper, $3.50.\nHumpies arriving by mall or express wilt\nreceive prompt attention. P-O. drawer\n1108;   Phone AC7.\nCLEANING  AND  PRESSING\nGENTLEMEN'S suits repaired, cleaned,\nand pressed. Goods called for and delivered. Agent for Crown Tailoring company,\nsuits from %lb up. A. J. Drlscoll, opposite\nQueen's Hotel.\nSOCIETY CARDS\nABERDEEN HIVE, No. 1J, L O. T. ___.-\nMeets 2nd and 4th Wednesday, 7:B0 p.m.\nof each month In K. of P. Hall, Vernon\nStreet, next to post office. Visiting members cordially Invited.\nMARY MATTHEW, L.C.\nMINNIE RITCHIE, Record Kwptf\nFOR SALE^\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP- If you want to\nbuy or sell anything go to the Old Curiosity Shop. Always In stoek a full line ot\nCrockery,   Furniture and Glassware,\nFOR SALE\u201410 head of fresh milch cows,\nwith bottles, tins, etc., 1 horse, 1 wagon,\n1 team burses, 1 root cutter, l sleigh, 1\nsaddle, etc. Apply A. M, Craig, P.O. box\natifl, Trout Lake, B. C.\nWHY go to your neighbors to do your\nsewing when you can rent a llrst class\nmachine with all modern attachments from\ntlio Singer Sewing Machlnl Co. for fl par\nmonth. Oil, 15 cents per bottle; needles,\n'lb cents per dozen. Singer Sewing Machine\nCo., Baker street\nIMPROVED ranch for sale, closo to town,\nno reasonable offer refused. S. M. Brydges.\nFOR SALE\u2014A complete electric lighting\nplant, cheap, 500 lo 2000 light capacity,\nmust be sold to make room for larger\nunits. For further information apply to\nTbe Lethbrldge Electric Company, Ltd.,\nLethbrldge, Alberta.\nFOR SALE\u201470 acres ot land of excellent\nquality, situated on Slocan river, 5 miles\nfrom Slocan junction. Price $100, half cash.\nF. C. Green, corner Victoria and Kootenay streets.\nFOR SALE-Vllla or camping lots, fronting   on   lake,   opposite   Tramway   Park,\nreasonable  terms, Apply to C. D. Jarvls,\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE-One of the nicest homes in\nRossland. Seven roomed house, fully furnished, ln best residential part, all modern\nconveniences, 3 lots full of fruit trees ln\nbearing, lawn and garden tools. Bargain\nfor quick sale, $300 cash and $20 per month,\nwould exchange for good fruit lands.\nC. E. Miller.\nFOR SALE-Flvo roomed house, 3 lots in\nFerguson, B. C, electric light, water,\netc., stable, woodshed, well rented prlca\n$1200. $200 cash, balance easy monthly payments.    C.   E.  Miller.\nFOR SALE\u2014220 acres choicest fruit land\nout of doors, facing Okanagan lake, will\nbe sold ln 70 acre blocks, $25 per acre, easy\nterms, no stone or scrub, and GOOD acres\nexcellent range land can be taken up at\nrear.   C. E. Miller.\nFOR SALE-Half Interest in the Sandon\nDiiiry, situated half mile from town, best\nlocation in tho country, no opposition,\neverything ln first class order, a good bargain to the first comer. For particulars\napply to P.O. box 171, Sandon, B.C.\nFOR SALE-Gasollne launch, 16 feet long,\n2 1-2 horse power engine and boat house.\nApply box 184, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE-One 14 foot row boat,  new,\n$40.    One 16 foot launch, new, $250.   Ono\nfiat bottomed fishing boat, $26.   Apply W.\nG. Adams, box 508, Nelson.\nWANTED\nvt^ipon Etnnloymont Agency.\nWANTED\u2014Woman Cook, Waitress.\nNURSE\u2014Maternity nurse open for engagements;   do  not  mind  light   housework.\nCommunicate   Mrs.   J.   F,   Delan.y,   New\nDenver, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Summer boarders; gentlemen\nrequiring change of air wilt find comfortable quarters across the loke. Excellent\ntable; 15 minutes from boathouse, Apply\nMrs. Adnms, box 508, Nelson.\nSITUATION wnnted by experienced waitress.   Apply B.H., box 578, Nelson, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014A   girl   for   light   housework.\nApply G., Dally News,\nWANTED\u2014A responsible  person to toko\nposition of working housekeeper, apply\nMrs. W. G. Thomson, corner Stanley and\nObservatory streets.\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JUNE  16, 1905\n251\n.\n4LS-ti\u00a3u\u00bb&Mt\n?W7l\/\nftMe\/nsi\/d c#z<rt-\/v -ftCe, cuJu f -ofy \/no -\/tLutu wn^&fT\/f\n0*\n&\/uu<te'f Jmr tu ____%*, &u>ast C^&_ \/<iaA tfri&vnJ faft\/u\nr.j iff       .  .    \/} \/.\/\/       \/\/>    j?   ' a a fi.\ntlMy<Cr\n'\u25a0cwisce'\n(ymJty on*\/ veAJ *&tu\nid*   ._ \"7\"\nWe have built and installed many complete light and power plants which\ngive entire satisfaction.\nReference and estimates of cost furn Isbed on request.\nNelson office, Houston Building.\nWorks,    Montreal;\nVERTICAL TUBULAR\niZ5V_\/lL,.E_rVO POR BRITISH COLUMBIA INSPECTION.\nRECHILAR SIZES 5 to GO H. P.\nWrite lor liulletiii 103.\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., L.\nimited\nROSSLAND AND VANCOUVER\n't'UMUMIMIHIIIHHin\nPorto Rico Lumber Go., Ltd.\nManotactarers of and Wholesale Dealer. In\nSOIIDIT AND DREBSED LUMbER, _HINC_.EB AND MOUUMNQS, BAND-\nBAWN ANU TUJUWO WORK. AN UP-TO-DATB DRY KIIJI IM COM-\nKBCTION.\nMILLS AT YMIR\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS\nMANUFACTURERS OP THE CRAWFORD AERIAL, TRAMWAY.\nRepairing and Jobbing a Specialty\nShcetmetal work, castings, builders material and mining and mill in:icliiner..\nPHONE 204\nOfllce and Works Foot of Park Street.\nB. O. TRAVIS\nMANAC1ER\nNELSON, R. C.\nThe HILL MINING\nANO SMELTINC\nNELSON, B.C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nW. G. GILLETT\n\u00a3_ CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n\"SOLE AGENT FOR THE PORTO RICO LUMBER CO.. Ltd., Retail Yards\n\u2022Rough and dressed lumber, turned work and brackets, Const lath\n-and shingles, sash and doore.   Cement, brick and lime For sale. Auto- \"*\u2022\nmatic grinder.   Yard and Factory Vernon street, ea_t of Hall.\nP. 0. Box :\nTelephone, 178\nNolson, B. C.\nP. BURNS is CO.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.\n__t__J_.T ___C_____iOI3:A.3SrTS\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B. C.\nBrunei) Msrket\u00ab In Rowland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Bandon, Turn.  Porto,\nNew Denver and Slocan Cltj.\nOrders bj Mali to *nj Branch will hare Prompt and Careful  Attention.\nROUGH   LUMBER  DRESSED\n0a....   Window!,  MouMingi, Bhlnflei, Turned Wort and Bracken.\n\u25a0 at\u2014yl.t. aat up-to-date itock always on band. IMU _r__ri prom\u00bbtl. _t_nM U\nA. G. LAMBERT A CO,\nMAIL'S EMPIRE-LESSONS\nONE    RESULT   OF    JAPAN'S\nWITH RUSSIA.\nWAR\nAN  IMPERIAL  RESPONSIBILITY\nCREATED.\nTim 16th of lho series of \"Empire\nLessons,\" published by Urn London Daily\nMail is entitled \"Britain ami the Russian Debacle.\" The article i.s as follows:\n\u25a0Not sinco Drake and tho Tudor navy\nsaved Britain from the terrors of the\nInquisition and the domination of Phillip ll. of Spain, has the world witnessed\nsuch a triumph at sea ns that which admiral Togo has gained over the Russian\nIleet hi the Tsushima straits. For completeness and decisiveness, even the\ngreat victories of Nelson pule before this\nbloody annihilation, the effects of which\nshould give imperial statesmen food for\nlong and serious thought.\nWe Britons have many lessons to\nlearn both from tho general course of\nthe war and from this, whicli must surely be its climax, we may turn to a consideration of the influences which the\nRussian debacle is likely to liave upon\nthe British empire. But before we do\nso it will be as well to briefly recapitulate the momentous events of last weekend.\nAdmiral Togo, whose main fleet had\nheen lying at Masampho, put to sea\nWith liis combined squadrons on Saturday morning so soon as he was informed that the Russian Ileet wus approaching tlio straits of Korea. The same day\nthe Japanese squadron engaged the enemy to the southeast of Tsushima island, and defeated them, sinking at\nleast four ships and inflicting heavy\ndamage on others. The damage to the\nJapanese ships was insignificant. On\nSaturday after sunset the Japanese destroyer and torpedo-boat flotillas, aided\nit is said, by submarines, delivered an\nattack, the precise results of wliich have\nnot transpired. On Sunday admiral Togo's combined squadrons near Liancourt\nan island about 250 miles from Tsushi-'\nma on the course towards Vladivostok,\ncame up with and attacked a group of\nlive Russian ships of wliich one escaped,\nbut the olher four were captured. Several minor engagements took place between scattered group of ships, resulting always in favor of tlie Jupanese,\nthe sum total of the lighting being that\nRussia in the far east has been wiped\noff the face of ihe sea.\nTlie Russian fleet on Friday numbered\n2U men of'war of various categories,\nbesides destroyers and auxiliary vessels.\nOf the twenty, twelve liave been sunk\nand four taken. Only of four small\nprotected cruisers have the Japanese as\nyet not reported either tlie sinking or\ncapture. This is an overwhelming victory and crowns lhe many evidences that\nhave, during the last twelve months,\nbeeu adduced to prove that Russia is\npowerless to carry out that policy which\nshe undertook in 1903. On land the Russian armies have sustained an uninterrupted series of defeats, and all tbe\navallaible indications go to show that\nhy no exertion whicli Russia can make\ncan a victory in Manchuria be rendered possible. That Rojestvensky might\nhe able to cut the Japanese communications with Korea was the czar's last\nhope, but Rojestvensky has failed, aud\nhis tlcet has been defeated and destroyed. The only course left open to Russia is to ask for terms of peace, and\nthat as quickly as possible, for we may\nbe sure that with every day's delay Japan's terms will rise.\nBut whether Russia acknowledges hor\ndefeat at once or decides, as some of\nher representatives have threatened, to\ncarry on the war more or leas indefl-\nntlely, one thing at least is certain. Slie\nhas been checkmated in her ambition\nto extern! her Asiatic possessions on the\neast and to Russiani.se the northern\nstretch of the continent from the Ural\nmountains to port Arthur. Japan's\nterms of peace, whenever they are\nsought, will without doubt include the\nWithdrawal of Russia from Korea, and\nvery probably from Manchuria as well,\nwhile if the useless struggle is continued much longer she may even require\nthe contraction of the tentacles of the\noctupus to tlie western side of lake\nBaikal.\nRussia's desire for an ice-free port as\nau outlet, for the produce of her vast\nAsiatic territory\u2014and incidentally, for\nv, h:L_e nml arsenal for a far eastern\nllect\u2014-will ihus be effectually thwarted;\ntilt It will not subside because of that.\nOu the cost Russia camo into contact\nand conflict with a nation spare ot words\nbut sharp and sure of action, a nation\nthai spoke with Its heart and went not\nback upon Us word,\nTo Russian diplomacy a people of that\ncharacter was unknown, anil the same\ngamo of bluff was played that had so\noften before proved successful against\nmore \"civilized\" und more effeminate\nnations. Japan, . ignorant of western\nmethods that clothe ignominious surrenders in the guise of \"diplomatic concessions,\" know only that she had spoken as her heart prompted and ns her\nnational necessities dictated; and so\nthere was war, aud Russia has been\nturned back from the east,\nRussia has learned another lesson.\nOno that she already knows is that the\nsole aim of the British 'government is\nto preserve peace. By hor daring experiments of the last fifteen months she\nknows that tho only penalty exacted\nfor tho killing.of British subjects on\n_L_ANI^\nTAKE NOTICE-Slxty days after date\nI Intend to apply to the Hon. the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria for permission to purchase the following described laud, beglning at a post\nnear the north bank of the Kootenay river,\nWest Kootenay District, marked W. Clayton's southeast corner, tlience west 40\nchalna, thence north 40 chains, thence eaat\nforty chains, thence south 40 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing one\nhundred and sixty acres more or less.\nW.   CLAYTON.\nThrums Siding, May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land in\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed\nabout half a mllo north of tne 3rd mile\nboard suuth of Castlegar and marked\nJ.A.C. S.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\nthenco north 40 chains, thence east to Columbia and Western railway, thence south\nalong said railway to place of commencement.\nMay   24th,   1905.\nJ. A.  CRYDERMAN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 1C0 acres of land In\nWest Kootenay Dlstrlot, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a poflt placed on\nUie west side of the Columbia and Western railway, about 200 feet Bouth of the\nfourth mllo post south of Castlegar and\nmarked J.H.R.O. N.E, corner, thence weat\n40 chalm., thence south 40 chains, thenco\neast to the Columbia and Western railway,\nthenco north along said railway to place\nof  beginning.\nMuy   24th,   1005.\nJ. H.  R. CHRISTIE.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to tlio Clilef\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 100 acres of land in\nWest Kootenay District, and described oa\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of the Columbia and Western\nrailway, about 200 feet floulh of the third\nmile board south of Castlegar. antl marked\nP.W. N.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\ntheuse south 40 chains, thence east to\nsaid railway, thence north along Bald\nrailway  to place  of beginning.\nMay   24th,   191)5.\nPETER WARREN,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 100 acres of land in\nWest Kootenay District, and described aa\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of the Columbia anil Western railway, about 200 fcot south of the\nthird mile board soulh of Castlegar and\nmarked H.FA. S.E. corner, tlience west\n40 chains, thonce north 40 chains, thenoe\neast to the Columbia and Western railway,\nthence south along tho said railway to\nplace of beginning.\nMay   24th,   11)05.\nII. F. ANNABLE.\nthe high seas is the payment of a few\nthousand pounds as blood-money; she\nknows that her illegally-commissioned\nsnips may capture British merchantmen\nand carry them under the Russian flag\nunder ihe nose of a British commander-\nin-chief iu the Mediterranean, and that\nthe only result will be an exchange of\nnotes betweeu Loudon aud St, Petersburg.\n.She has built railways the construction of which our statesmen bad previously declared would be an act of war,\naud not lo be tolerated. Similarly she\nhas extended her boundaries. What\nnow is more natural than lhat Russia,\nturned back from the east, should bring\nher energies and bluff to bear towards\nthe south, towards Persia, Afghanistan,\nand India? That, it seems to us, is ono\nof lhe logical outcomes of the defeat of\nRussia by Japan, and to meet the position thereby created it is devoutly to be\nhoped thai ihe British government will\nnot mako speeches, or wire despatches,\nbut act. Battleships and batteries of\nartillery are the best diplomats, anil the\nstrengthening of the defences of India\nshould bo a first call upon the army,\ntho government and the empire,\nIf our military forces seem likely to\nrequire extension, or at least redistribution as a rosull of this war, the position\nat sea Is no lass insistent in its demands.\nThe first result of the annihilation of\nRojestvensky's squadron is to leave Japan, Britain apart, undisputed master\nof the Pacific. That is a position that\nwill not be tolerated by either France,\nGermany or the United States. Wllh\nRussia both France and Germany are ou\nvery Intimate terms of friendship, but\nthe same cannot be said of their relations with Japan. They are friendly, of\ncourse, but it is the friendship of statesmanship, not of the heart.\nPrance has alwaya been suspicious of\nJapanese design on Indo-China, and\nwill certainly not rest until something\nhas been done to replace the lost ships\nof her ally, to whicli, in the event of an\nattack ou her colonial possessions she\ncould have looked for help. So she will\nstrengthen her Ileet In the Pacific, and\nas sho can spare none from home for\nthat purpose she must build new ones.\nSo must Germany. So must the United\nStates. Aug Great Britain canont. stand\nby and watch unmoved the Increase of\nher rivals' ileots, so \\ye, too, shall bo\ndrawn into the vortex.\nWe have made no mention of the expansion of Ihe Japanese navy which may\nbo expected to follow the war. Will\nCanada, will Australia be indifferent to\nthat?\nBoth on land and sea, the victory of\nJapan seems only likely to throw fresh\nburdens upon the British people, burdens which, supported by the people of\ntho United Kingdom practically unaided, are already weighing heavily upon\ntho Titan's back. To support those burdens unflinchingly is an imperial necessity; It should, therefore, be nn Imperial\nresponsibility.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, si'.ualed In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing ut a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner C. Halr-\nslne, running west 80 clialns, thence nortli\n60 chains, thence east 80 chains, thenco\nsouth 80 chains, to point of commuiieeineM\nC. HAIRS:j.E.\n'1'.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 11)06.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after deite 1 Intend to apply to tne\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tlie following described\nlands, altuatcd In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a p03t\nplanted and murked N.E. corner M. Provost, running south 80 chains, tlience west\n80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence\neaat 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nIf. PROVOST.\n%\\  PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given tliat _0 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lunds nnd Works fur a\nBpeclal license to cut and cany away timber from tho following describe.! lands,\nBltuate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted about seven miles from the mouth and\nmarked Paul Martin S.E. coiner, running\nwest SO chains, thenee north 80 chains,\ntlience east 80 chains, thenco south .9\nchains, to point ut commencement,\n.'AIJL MARTIN.\nIP. PROVOST Agent\nLocated May 27th, 190..\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 29 days\nafter .date I intend to a.pply to lhe Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tho following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing ut a post planted one mile west of Oro and marked Cullex\nBray N.W. corner, running east 80 chains,\nthonce south 80 chains, tlience west SO\nchains, tlience north 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\n.allex bray.\nIP. PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 29th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 80 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nBltuate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing ut a post planted on the soutli line of Oro, marked Zoll-\nque Le Blanc S.E. corner, running south\n80 chains, thenco west SO chalna, thence\nnorth 80 chains, ihence east 80 chains, to\npoint of commencement,\nSOTIQUE LE BLANC.\nIT, PROVOST Agent.\nLocated Mny 28th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty days\nafter data I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut uud carry away limber from tbo following described land in\nthe Slocun district: Commencing at a post\nmarked T. Mulvey's northwest corner post\nund planted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about three miles from Slocan City,\nthence southeast SO chains, thence south\n\u202210 chains, thence west 80 chains, thence\nnorth to point of commencement,\nT. MULVEV.\nLocated,  May 2-lth,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that tlilrly days\nafter date I intend to npply to tlio Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tho following described land In\nthe Slocan district: Commencing at a post\nmarked J. W. Crow's southeast corner\npost, planted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about five miles from Slocan City,\nthenco west 80 chains, thence north 40\nchains, thence east SO chains, thenee to\npoint of commencement.\n\u25a0I. W.  CROW.\nT. MULVEY, Agont.\nLocated,   May Mth,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given lhat thirty days\nafter date I Intend to apply lo Uie Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works foi* a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tho following described land in\nAlio Slocun district: Commencing at u post\nmarked D. J. Graham's .southeast corner\npost, und planted on tho north sldo of\nRobson creek, about four miles from Slocan\nCity, thenco west SO chains, thenco north\n40 chains, thence east 80 ohalns, thence\nsouth 10 chains to the place of \u25a0 onimence-\nm\u00abn_.\nO,  3.  GRAHAM.\nl\\ MULVEV, Agent.\nLocated, May Mth, 1905.\nTO CINCH JAPAN\nRumor That President Roosevelt Is Abutting Attempt \u2022*\nWashington, Juno 15\u2014Pressure Is being\nbrought to bear upon Japan to Induce her\nto tlx tho sum of tho Indemnity for lho\npending war at a low figure for cash,\nThis pressure Is being exerted especially\nby    European    governments.\nRoosevelt, lt is Intimated, has also advised\ntho Japanese government to be modi-rule\nin demanding a cash Indemnity. An indemnity of a billion dollars would not only\nseriously embarrass the St, Petersburg\ngovernment, but would probably disturb\nthe finatues of ihe entire western world,\nc__ts. '\".r_   ***n\u00bbw *\u00bb wurhhheji\nDEMAND A ZEMSKY-ZABOR\nRussian People Dissatisfied With Present\nGovernment\nSt. Petersburg, June 15\u2014Liberal newspapers am taking the decision of the government to make peace as fl surrender,\nand nre following up their advantage by\nredoubling their demands for a repr. sci~\ntrttlvc assembly, arguing that bureaucracy\nbas proved Incompetent In war, and it will\nbe equally Incapable In concluding peace,\nTbo Russ, the loader of constitutionalist\n\u2022papers, declares the government, without\nthe peoples' support is Incompetent to continue thu war and will be compelled to accept any terms. Only a national ass m-\nbly, lt clulms can now save the situation\nbecauso only with the sanction of the people can exorbitant conditions be successfully resisted. Ail the decent classes or\nsociety are unanimously of tho opinion\nthat llio present regime is done for, \"Wo\nmust begin tho history of a new Russll\u2014\na Russia of the people,\" says lhe paper.\nEven the reactionary Svlet, carried off its\nfeet by the tide, joins In the chorus asking\nfor tho ssomsky-zabor. The Svlet, however,\ndoes not nsk for tho zemsky-zabor in order lu make peace, bul In order to support\ntho people in continuing the war.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to make application lu the Honorable lhe Chief Commissioner of Lauds and Works for one Bpeclal license to cut and curry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, situated on the east side of the Little Slocan\nLake, In the West Kootenay District,\ncommencing at a post planted on the\neast hank uf the uforesuid lake, about 120\nchains from the head, running north SO\nchains , thunce east 80 chains, thence\nsoutli SO chains, thence west SO chains,\nto point of commencement.\nGEORGE   SOUSEY.\nSlocan, B. C, May 24, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays alter date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Loads and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocun, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Clair\nMabee, running south 80 clialns, Uience\nwest SO chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east SO chains, to point of commencement.\nCLAIR MABEE.\nF.  PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 2-llh,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated hi the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted nnd marked S.E. corner A. D.\nHurdle, running west 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80 chains,\nthenco south 80 chains, to point ot commencement.\n___. D. HARDIE.\nF.   PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that SO days\nafter dale I Intend to apply to tho Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for Q\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, Weat Kooienay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted one mile east of Oro and marked W.\nLeduc S,E. corner, running west 80 chalna.\nthonce north 80 chains, thence east SO\ndials, thence south 80 chains to point of\ncom mencement,\nW. LEDUC.\nF. PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 28th,  1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndaya after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands mid Works\nfor a special license to cut and curry\naway timber from tlie following described\nlands, situated in tho Littlo Slocun, West\nKootenay District, commencing ut a post\nplanted und marked N.E. corner E. R.\nMabee, running south 100 chains, thence\nwest .0 chains, thence north 100 chains,\nthence east 10 chai.it to point of commencement,\n1_.   it    MABEE.\nF.  PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th,  1W6.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays alter date l intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor u special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and murked N.E. corner Ell Provost, running south SO chulns, thence west\n80 chains, tlience north 80 chains, thenco\neast SO chains, to point of commencement.\nELI   PROVOST\nF.  PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to lho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut und carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenny District, commencing at a post\nplnnted and marked N.E. corner Fred\nCooper, rulining south 80 chains, thence\nwest SO chains, tlience north 80 chains,\ntlience east SO chains, to point of commencement,\nFRED COOrER.\nF,   PROVOST,   Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1006,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays afler date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a speclul license to cut and carry\naway Umber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenny District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner William\nCurrle, running west 40 chains, thonce\nnorth 100 chains, thence east 40 clialns,\nthence south 1U0 chains, to point of commencement.\nWILLIAM   CURRIB,\nF.  PROVOST,   Agent.\nItOfxetl  May 24th,  1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays ufter date I Intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut nnd curry\naway timber from lhe following described\nlands, situated If, the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.W, corner Joseph\nSaulter, running north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, thenct south 80 chains.\nthenco west 80 chalna, to point of commencement\nJOSEPH  SAULTER.\nF.   PROVOST,   Agent.\nLocated,   Mny   24th,   1906.\nLAME SHOULDER\nThere aro threo common ailments for\nwhich Chumberluln's Balm Is especially\nvaluable. If promptly applied It will save\nyou tlmo, money and suffering when\ntroubled with n.ny one of those nllmenls.\nPresident J For Kile by all druggists and dealers,\nNOTICE is hereby given that 30 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post plant'\ned about ono mllo east of the first falls\nou Lemon creek, and marked Alexander\nMartin N.E. oorner, running south 80\nchains, tlience west 80 chains, thonce north\n80 chains,  thence cnsl 80 chains, to point\nof commencement.\nLocated May 27th, 1006,\nALEXANDER MARTIN.\n1<\\  PROVOST Agent.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a Bpeclal license lo cut and carry\naway timber from tlie following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocun, West\nKootenay District, commencing al a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Raul Provost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chalna, thenco nortli 80 chains, thence\ncant 80 chains, to point of commencement\nRAUL PROVOST.\n:F.   PROVOST, Agent\nLoeattu May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given lhat thirty\ndays after date I Intend to make application to the Honorable the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom the .following described lands, situated on tho east side of the Little Slocan\nLake, In tho West Kootenay District,\ncommencing at a post planted on the\neast bunk of the aforesaid lake, about 120\nchains from the head, running south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains, thence north\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains, to place\nof   commencement.\nJAMES   M.   FARRELL.\nSlocan, B. O., May 24, 1005.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after dato 1 Intend to make application to lhe Honorable lhe Chief Commissioner of Lands und Works for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom t'ne following described lands, situated on tlie east side of the Little Slocan\nLuke, lu the West Kootenay District\ncommencing ut a stake plnnted 90 chains\nfrom the foot of Little Slocun Lake, running north 80 chain.., thence east 80 chalna,\nthence south SO chains, thence west 80\nchains,   to  placo of commencement.\nJ.   M.   RAE.\nSlocun, B. C, Mny 24. 1905.\nNOTICE Is heroby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfur u special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated iu the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and murked, N.E. corner Josepii\nLalonde, running south 80 chulns, thence\nwest SO chulns, thence north SO chains,\nthence east 80 chulns to the point of commencement.\nJOSEPH   LALONDE\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated  May  24th 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays aftor date 1 Intend to apply to lhe\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Worjri\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tiie following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing ut a post\nplanted and murked N. E. corner Frank\nFrench, running soulh 80 chains, thence\nwest SO chulns, thence nortli SO chains,\nthence cost SO chains, to point of com*\nmencement.\nFRANK   FRENCH.\nF.   PROVOST,   Agent.\nLocated May 21th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date 1 intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands und Works\nfor a speclul license to cut and carry\naway timber from thy following described\nlands, siluated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Cftarlea\nProvost, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thenee nortli SO chains,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nCHARLES   PROVOST\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent\nLocated May 2_th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut und carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, Situated In tho Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Narclse\nLegrod, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, tlience north 80 chains,\nthence east SO chains, to the point of\ncommencement.\nNARCISE LEGROD\nF.  PROVOST, Agent.\nLocuted   May  24th,   1906,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlauds, situated in the Little Slocun, West\nKootenay District, commencing ut a post\nplanted and marked S.W. corner H, A.\nMcMillan, running north 80 chains, thenco\neast SO chains, thence south SO clialns,\nthence west 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nH. A. McMILLAN.\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to tho\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special llcenso to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocun, West\nKootenay District commencing ut a post\nplanted and marked N.W. corner Percy\nMlllman, running east SO chulns, thence\nsouth SO chulns, thence west 80 chains,\nthence north SO chains, to point of commencement.\nPERCY MILLMAN\nF.   PROVOST,   Agent\nLocated  May 24th. 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 daya\nafter dato I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial llcenso to cut and carry awuy timber from the following described lands,\nsltuato on Lemon creek, Weat lCuotonny,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted two miles east of Oro nnd marked\nPeter Leduc N.E. corner, running south\n80 chains, thence west 80 ohalns, thenco\nnorth 80 chains, thenco east 80 chains to\npoint of commencement.\nPETER LEDUC.\nF. PROVOST Agent\nLocated May tSU, IK*.\nNOTICE is hereby given thut tlilrty\ndays after dato I Intend to apply to tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\nawuy timber from tbo following described\nlands, situated In tbo Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner JoBeph\nMartin, running south 80 cliains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\ntlience east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nJOSEPH MARTIN.\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May Mth,  1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date 1 Intend to apply to tbo\nChief Commissioner of Lands und Works\nfor a special license to cut and curry\nawuy timber from the following described\nlunds, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing nt a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Peter\nLablnnc, runlng south 80 chains, thence\nWBet 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to point of commencement\nPETER LABLANC.\nF.  PROVOBT,   Agent\nLocated May Mth, INC. J\n THE DAILY  NEWS, NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JUNE] 16, 190S\n&i)44\u00ab4(!4-i)'<i\u00ab#'i)<I)4'i)-44i)4-#4)444)-4#44^\nESTABLISHED 1878\nINCORPORATED 1897\nHENDERSON\nDIRECTORIES\nPUBLISHERS OF GAZETTEERS\nAND BUSINESS DIRECTORIES\nManitoba and Northwest Gazetteer and Directory\nBritish Columbia Gazetteer and Directory\nCITY DIRECTORIES\nWinnipeg, Victoria. Vancouver\nHenderson Publishing Co.\nLimited Liability,\nVancouver, B. C.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nManaging Director.\nHenderson Directories,\nLimited,\nWinnipeg, Man.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nPresident.\nJAMES SELBY HENDERSON.\nManager and Secy-Treas.\nMembers of Association of American Directory Publishers.\na-\n\u00a7<-\n^*\nw\n^t-\nm\nm\n#\u2022\n\u00a7\u00ab\u2022\n\u00a7.\n#\u2022\nJ-\n*\u00a7.\nw\nrn-\n%\u25a0\n%*\nLACROSSE IN OLD STYLE\nDRY GOODS MEN DEFEAT GROCERS\nIN  CLOSE  GAME\nMANY    BRILLIANT    PLAYS-BASEBLL\nNEXT THURSDAY\nPfr%f^<f>^^\nByi.upsls of Kegulutlutia for Disposal of\nMineral on Dominion Lands In Manitoba, ibe Northwest Territories and tno\nYukon Territory.\nConl -Coul lands may tie purenased at t!9\nper acre for soft eu.l and t'19 for anthracite.\nNut more than a. acres can he acquired\nby one individual or company. Royalty\nat the rate of ten cents per ton of 2000\npounds i^iall be collected on tbe gross output.\nQuartz-Persons of eighteen years and\nover and joint .stock companies holding free\nminer's COfttflcatea may obtain entry for\na utiutug l<v.*_.uou.\nA free tuUer'a certificate Is granted for\nOne or mure vears, not exceeding tlve, upon payment hi advance ut ilM per annum\nfor an Individual, and frum ib\" to tun* per\nannum tor a company, according to sapl-\ntol,\nA free miner, having discovered mineral\nIn place, may locate a claim 1600x1500 feet\nby marking out the same wllh two legal\npontij. bearuiR location notices, one at each\nend on the line of the lode or vein.\nThe claim shall li\u00ab- recorded within fifteen days If located within ten miles of\na mining recorder's offlce, one additional\nday allowed for every additional ten miles\nor fraction. The fee for recording a claim\nIs ib.\nAt least 1100 must be expended on tho\nclulm each year or paid tu the mining re~\ncorder in lieu thereof. When $500 has oeen\nexpended or paid, the locator may, upon\nhaving a survey made, and upon complying with other requirements, purchase the\nland at $1.00 iter acre.\nPermission may b\u00ab granted hv thn Minister of the Interior to locate claims containing iron und mica, also copper tn tho Yukon territory, of an area not exceeding 16?\nacres.\nThe   patent  for a mining  location shall\nJrovlde for tlie payment of a Royalty wJ\n1-2 per cent of the sales of the product*\nof the locatlun.\nPlacer Mining- Manitoba and the N\/W.T,\nexcepting the Yukon PetTltory\u2014Placer mining claims generally aro 100 feet square-\nentry fee, $5; renewable yearly. On th(\nNorth Saskatchewan River claims art-\neither bar or bench, the former being 1U*i\nfeet long and extending between high and\nlow water mark. The latter Includes bar\ndiggings, but extends back to the base of\nthe hill nr bank, but not exceeding 1000\nfeet. Where steam power Is used claims\n200 feet wldi. may be obtained.\nDredging In the rivers of Manitoba and\nthe N.W.T., excepting the Yukon Territory\u2014A free miner may obtain only two\nleases   of   five  miles  each   for  a   term   of\ntwenty years renewable in the discretion of\nthe Minister of the interior.\nThe lepseo's right Is confined to the submerged beds or bars oB the river below low\nwater mark, and subject to the rights of\nall persons who have, or may receive-\nentries for bar diggings or bench claims\nexcept on the Saafutcnewftit River where\nthe lessee may dredge to high water mark\non   each   alternate leasehold.\nTho '\"*(\u2022\u00bb'* shall have a. dredgft In operation within one season from the dato of th*\nlease for each five miles, hut where a person or company has obtained moro thun,\none lease one dredge for \u00ab__\u25a0..\u2022__ fifteen mile*\nor fraction Is sufficient. Rental 110 per\nannum for each mile nf river leased.\nRovaltv at the rate of two ond a half per\ncent collected on the output aftor it ox-\nceedH  flu.O'X..\nDredging In the Yukon Territory\u2014fit*\nleases ot five miles each may he granted!\nto a free miner for a term of twenty years,,\nalso ritiewdhle.\nTim lesneo's right Is confined to the submerged bed or barn In the river below low-\nWater mark, that boundary to be fixed bv\nUs position on the first day of August In\nthe year of the date of the lease.\nThe lessee shall have one dredge In operation within two years from the date of the\nlease, and one dredge for each five miles'\n\u25a0within six vesrs from euch date. Rental\ntlOO per mile for the first year and 110 per\nmile for each subsequent year. Royalty*\nBanif   ns   plncer mining.\nPiacer Mining In the Yukon Territory\u2014.\nCreik, gulch, river and hill claims shalr,\nHot exceed 260 feet ln length, measured or.\nthe base line or general direction of the\noreek or gulch, the width being from 1000\nto 2000 feet. All other placer claims shall\nhe L'.'ill  feet square.\nClaims are marked by two legal posts,\none at each end. bearing notices. Entry\nmust be obtained within ten flays, If the\nclaim Is within ten miles of a Mining Recorder's  office. One  extra  day   Is  allowed  foi\neach additional ten miles or fraction.\nThe person ur company staking a claim\nmust hold a free miner's certificate.\nTho discoverer of rj new mine is entitled\ntn a Claim 1000 feet In length, and If the\nparty consists of two, IBM feet altogether.\non the output of which no royalty shall\nhe charged, the rest of the party ordinary\nclaims  otily.\nEntry fee JIO. Royalty at the rate of two\nand ti half per cent on the value of tin*\ngold shipped from the Yukon Territory\nto he paid to the Comptroller.\nNo tree miner shall receive a grant of\nmore than one mining claim on each separato river, creek or gulch, but tbo samo\nminer may hold any number of claims by\npurchase, and free miners may work their\nclaims in partnership bv niing notice and\npaving fee of fl. A claim may be abandoned and another obtained on the same\noreek, gulch or river, hy giving notice and\npaving  a   fee,\nWork must bo done on a claim each\nyear to tbe  value of at  least  .200.\nA certificate thut work hus been done\nmust be obtained <\u00bbitrh vpp*-. if not, tbe\nclaim shall be depmed to be abandoned, and\nopen to occupation and entry by a free\nminer.\nThe boundaries of a claim may be defined absolutely by having a survey made\nami publishing notices ln the Yukon Official\nGazette. , -     , ,\n.'. troleum\u2014All imuppniprlati'd Dominion\nHands in Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and within the Yukon Territory are\nopen to prospecting for petroleum, and the\nMinister may reserve for an Individual or\ncompany having machinery on the land\nto ho prospected, nn area of lono acres ror\nsuch net'lnd a.-i he may decide, the lenpth\nof which shall not exceed three times the\nbreadth. Should the prospector discover oil\nln paving quantities, and satisfactorily establish such discovery, an area not exceeding wo sores, Including the oil wen, will\nbe sold ki tbe prospector al the rate of\nJI an acre, and the remainder of the tract\nreserved, namely 1280 acres, will be Bold\nnt the rate of $.1 per acre, subject te\nroyalty ut such rate as may be specified\n.y order In Council. ^  c()Ry\nDeputy of the Minister of the Interior\nDen*    Interior    June  80.  IW     \t\nKOOTENAY RAILWAY ft NAVIGATION\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED\nKislo and Sloean Rullway Company\nInternational    Navigation    and    Trading\nCompany.\nSpokane Falls & Northern Bailwaj\nTIMB CARD\nof   IoMlI    train*   and   Bleiimorl   tffC-tlM\nMftreh 7th, IBM\nKASLOHANDON\nD\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb . ,_3>m\n..\u25a0to \u201e m   l.v Kitn.loti Ar llt:25 a.m.\n.Ji\" ,,'in l.v....Whitewater Ar 9:40 a.m.\n1-ffB.m. Ar KMl\u00b0 Lv. 8:00 a.m.\n... u.m. A   KA8L0.NE___N\nDull. \"a\"*'\nEx. Hunan. \"\u00bb\u2022 Bunds..\nfi'00 a.m. Lv KaHlo Ar. 9:15 a.m.\n7-;_ a.in   l.v AliiHW.irlh..,.Ar\\   Eilfj It m.\nlOlflO a.m. Ar Neleon l.v 1:45 u.m.\ncalling  at  all   wav   landings on nl_\u00abial.\nNBLHON-SANDON\n5*46 n.m. l.v Nelson Ar 10:00 a.m.\nlo'-_i n.m. Ar Sandon l.v. i::io n.m.\nTamil, h   dally   freight   and   .ttaseiiKer\nservlco  between  Nelson and Sandon.\nFor further Information and full partlci-\nlara call on nr addreu\nROBERT IRVING,\nM_r. K. R. and N. Co, _.t_\nKaalo, B. C.\nm. m. ML'EikUUBT. local _\u00ab\u2022\u00bb!,\nPortland m& Return\n$23.75\nAccount\nLewis and Clark\nExposition\nFor particulars call on\nG. K. TACKABURY.\nNelson, B. 0. General Agent\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nC. P. R. ATLANTIC B. S. LINE\n(Prom Montreal)\nL. Manltoba,,June 11*.  Champlain..Ju. 16\n(To   London   Direct)\nMt.   Temple..June  20 Montiroso    ..Juno   24\nALLAN  LINB\n(From Montreal)\nBavarian   ...June  MVlCtorlan   ....June   9\nDOMINION LINB\n(From Montreal)\nDominion    ..June   10 Ottawa    June  17\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE\nMinneapolis..June   10 Minnehaha..June   17\nAMERICAN LINE\nSt,  Louis ....June 17 New York....June 10\nRED STAR LINE\nVaderland ....Jnno 17 Finland   June 10\nCUNARD LINB\nUmbrla  June 10 Ca ron la   ....June   IH\nLueanla  June 17\nWHITE  STAR  LINE\nMajestic   ...June   14Oceania   June   7\n3,'iltlu    June   20 Ccdrlc     June   16\nFRENCH   LINE\nLa Savoie...,June  16La TouralnCJune 8\nHAMBURG AMERICAN\nMoltke   June lSBIeuoher   ....Juno  8\n(Mediterranean Service)\nPrlnz Oscar June 21\nPrlnz Adalbert  June 'Si\nNORTH QHJRMAN LLOYD\nKaiser Wlllielm  It   june m\nClruHK_r Kurfuerst  Juno 'JO\n[Mediterranean Service)\nKotng Albert  June W\nKontgln   LuIho    June 'S4\nAll continental rates and sailings on application. It you arc contemplating taking\nan ocean voyage drop ua a line and we\nwill be pleased to furnish you with full In-\nformation promptly.\n1. R. CARTER, *VV   p F. fTUMMTNf.\nB_r.A_, Ntlitft,     Qen. Aft., Wlanijuf\nThe business men's lacrosse match yesterday afternoon surpassed even the expectations of the promoters. Tlie playing\nwaa hard and steady and at times brilliant. The rapid travel of tlto ball, the\nvariegated costumes and lhe fierce though\ngood natured body checking, made a spec-\ntaele long to bu remembered by the spectators. For other reasons, It will be re-\nmembered.by some of tho players for several days at least. No one had the moral\ncourage to send for a cab at the end of\nthe game, but a few block's walk up the\nhill must have seemed like weary miles.\nThe grocers' and butchers' team was\nmade up of Fred Bosquet, Fred Starkey,\nJ. A. Irving, W. L. Spry, T. S. McPherson,\nR. league, C, F. Partington, W. 3. Toye,\nFowler, Mcintosh, C. Benedict, R. G. Joy,\nC. 1-1. Longhurst and Alex. Pool, captain.\nThe dry goods men were: 3. H, 'Wallace.\nC. S. McLaughlin, J. E. Annable, W. Foth-\nerin-fhatn, J. Drewe, A. J. Kerr, Dr. Hall,\nJ. R. Hunter, l_. E. Ferguson, C. F. McHardy, R Caldwell, J, W. Holmes, and\nA. J. Dill, captain,\nTho grocers outnumbered their opponents by one bnt tho dry goods men made\nup the defect by superior mobility. Tlie formation was orthodox only during tbe face-\noffs. After lite ball was la play the grocer*..\nplayed two goal keepers nnd 12 centres,\ntheir opponents playing one goal and VS\nInside homes,\nW. E. Davison acted as referee, and It Is\nto his credit that not a single decision\nwas disputed, even when understood. Bert\nDavison and R. Bell acted as fleld-captdlns.\nJ. A. Gilker and E. Vlgnoux Were goal\n\u25a0judges and time keepers. The grand stand\nwas crowded and the grassy terrace on the\nnorth side of the field was also well filled.\nTowards the end of the game P. E. Wilson and Fred Burnett joined the grocers,\ntlie former relieving Fred Starkey and the\nlatter lending his weight to tho losing side\non general principles. Each scored a goal\nbut by a legal technicality the city solicitor's   score counted  for  tho enemy.\nThero were only two casualties, Dr. Hall\nIntercepting a pass with his right eye and\nFred Bosquet saving bis goal with his Jaw.\nNeither was seriously hurt and both stayed\nin the game.\nThe first face off was called punctually\nat 3:30. After somo fierce checking at\ncentre field Bert Walley secured the ball.\nLong practfee on curling rinks had made\nhis eye wonderfully accurate. He made a\nzig-zag: course towards Fred Bosquet's\nnet Fred Starkey, who was playing outside borne, made a gallant attempt to g<:t\nbehind the net, and In so doing collided\nwith tho goat keeper thereby allowing\nWalley to score an cosy goal.\nFor the next llvo minutes tho dry goods\nmen and their allies kept the grocers'\ngoal constantly In danger, but the steady\nand resourceful playing of J. A. Irving\ndefeated all attempts. Then the grocers\nrallied and mado a concerted charge which\nwas the most inspiring sight of the day.\nThe rush was irresistible and Charlie\nLonghurst scored for the grocers, making\nthl score one all.\nA feeling of complacency then stole over\nthe challengers, which proved disasirous.\nFrom tlio face off Walley secured the ball\non a short pass, made a serpentine dash\nand aghln put his team In the led. A little\nlater a brilliant combination allowed C. F.\n\"TTirnii mini11\nC-A-X-TCJlilR\nR. D. Evans, discoverer of the famous Cancer Cure, requests anyone\nBuffering with cancer to write him.\nTwo days\" treatment will cure any\ncancer, external of Internal. No\ncharge until cured.\nR. D.   EVANS,   Brandon, Man.\nST. ANDREW'S COLLEGE\nTORONTO\nA   RESIDENTIAL   AND   DAY   SCHOOL\nFOR   BOYS\nUpper and lower Behool. Boys prepared\nfor Matriculation and Royal Military College. Separato junior-residence. Handsome\nnew buildings, opened In September; thoroughly modern; attractive in appearance;\nil acres of playtleld. Situated In North\nRosedale, Toronto's healthiest district.\nChurch street enr line.\nAutumn   term  commences  Sept.  11, 1905.\nWrite for culendar.\nREV.   D.   BRUCE   MACDONALD,   M.   A.\nPrincipal\nCANADIAN\nPACIFl\nRAILWAY\nSummer\nExcursions\nEast\nNelson, Rossland, Trail,\n90 Day Limit\nMilwaukee, Wis., $62.20\nNiagara Falls   -  76.25\nToronto    -     -  76,25\nOn Sale June 16,17\n\u2022Indianapolis  a...    07.85\n\u2022Ashbury Park  W.'.,     85.36-\n\u2022Baltinjo.a       81.25\n\u2022Portlnml, Maine      (12.70\n\u2022Buffalo ._     70.25\n\u2022Selling diiti'H io be announced later.\nCorresponding rates from all Kootenay iHJinls.\nFor further particulars call on local\nagents or write,\n..  H. CARTER, E. I. COYLH,\nD-P. A. A, O.  P.  Agt.\nNelson, B. C. Vancouver, B. C. I\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nHas complete facilities\nfor the execution of high\nclass book, job, and newspaper printing.\n*\nMagazines, catalogues\nand commercial work.\nRuling of every description a specialty.\nBook Binding\nWE CAN RULE, PRINT AND BIND\nANT KIND OF\nkHOTEL REGISTERS\nBLANK BOOKS\nCITY ASSESSMENT\nAND TAX ROLLS\nWE CAN BIND IN REGULATION\nSTYLE\nLAW^JOURNALS\nAND REPORTSI\nWE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF\nPUTTING UP IN NEAT, STEONG\nAND INEXPENSIVE COVERS\nMUSIC\nMAGAZINES\nTRADE JOURNALS\nPAPERS AND\nBOOKS\nWe Guarantee First-Class Work\nIn Every Department\nPHONB\n144\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNBLSON\nB.O.\nMcHardy to distinguish himself, and tlio\nllrst quarter ended with the score 3 to 1.\nA long rest was taken during whloh the\ngrocers perfected plana for greater efforts.\nA system of pairs was adopted by mutual\nconsent to allow a player from each side\nto retire at any time. The ball visited\nevery part of tho field und many brilliant\nplays were made. At last after a five\nminute melee, W. Fotherlngliam scoivd\nagain for the dry goods men. The story\nof tho third quarter was similar, \\V. Foth-\nerlngham again tallying.\nTho fast work of Dill, Ferguson, Annable,\nWalley, Kerr and Drewe was disheartening to the losers, while their own forwards\nwero dismayed by the tremendous body\ncheeking of Dr. Hall, who was everywhere\nat once and never tired.\nIn spile of their 111 fortunes .the grocery\nmen scornfully rejected a proposal to end\ntho game then. P. 13. Wilson took Star-\nkey's placo at point, cover point and goal.\nHis checking wus very effective, though\nnot according to precedent established,\nFred Uurnelt thought ho also could stand\nthe pace for a quarter of an hour and\njoined Joy and Benedict on the grocers'\nattacking column. Tho finish was fast ,*ind\nfurious,\nW. L. Spry, whose green jersey was in\nevidence at all times, made a splendid run\nand an accurate shot, scoring the grocers' Becond goal. The next goal was an\naccident. Charlie MoLaohlan who hnd\nbeen working hard all the time, got the\nball within a foot of the grocers' net.\nP. E. Wilson, whose stick was not long\nenough for effective work kicked at the\nball and sent It neatly through his own\ngoal. Then Fred Burnett thought that\nsomehlng was due from him. He got the\nball at centre field and charged straight\nat the enemy's net.   No one cared to risk\nu body check, and he gently dropped the\nball In goal.\nTime was called with a score Of 8-8,\nCheers and tigers were given without st nt\nand the great game was over.\nTho match showed a lot of dormant lacrosse talent. J. Drewe and A, J. Kerr excelled iu sprinting but proved poor conductors of leather. J. K. Annable's Imperturbable coolness and readiness were\nof great vvilue lo his team, B. E. Ferguson's fast covering and aenrate passing\nkept the home well supplied, For the vanquished all did well, Partington was fast\n\u25a0and reliable. Spny Watt (indefatigable.\nJoy's shooting wus fierce; it needs only a\nllttie   practice   to   become   formidable.\nA baseball game between tho same teams\nhus been arninged for next Thursday. A\nside attraction will be a foot ruce between\nJ. Drewe und Dr. Hall, ,\nSTOCKS AND GRAIN\nChicago grain\u2014Liverpool 1-4 lower. Our\nmarket opened strong1, July whoat at\nSO 5-8; Sept 82 1-2, good buying throughout\nthe entire session caused the market to\nclose at the high point; July at 87 1-2; Sept\n83 1-2, showing a gain of 1 full cent from\nyesterday's close. July corn opened 62 B-i\nclosed 53 3-8; Sept. opened 51 3-8, closed\nBI 7-8 \u00ae 52. Oats strong, July opened 30 8-8\nclosed 30 7-8; Sept. 23 3-4. July park, $12.6-,\nclosed .12.IJ0; Sftpt, $12.82, closed $12.92.\nNew York Blocks wero quiet. Copper\nopened 79 1-2, closed 79 1-8; sugar, 131 1-8,\nclosed 134 1-2; U.S.S. 27 5-8, closed 27 1-2,\npreferred, 94, closed 94 3-8; Peo. Gas, 1011-2\nclosed same; B.R.T., 64 1-4, closed 64;\nMet. 122 7-8, closed 122 1-2; St. Paul, 174 1-2,\nclosed 174; R.I., 27 3-8, closed 27 1-4; U.P.,\n123, closed 122 8-4; Mo. Pac, 98 1-2; Atch.,\n81 7-8, closed 81 5-8| Erie, 40 R-8;; So. Pnc,\n62   1-2,   closed   12   1-8;   C.P.R.,   161,   dosed\n150 7-8; Penna, 135 1-8, closed 135; B. and O.,\n\u00ab _ . ' ?\u00b0m m W' Re\u00bbd'nir. 88, closed\n\u00ab 3-4;sales to noon, 81,400; money 2 1-4  _\nReported by I. c. Major and company,\nNelson, June 15,\nSPRAINED   ANKLE,   STIFF   NECK,\nLAMB SHOULDER\nThere are three common allements for\nwhich Chamberlain's Balm is especially\nvaluable. If promptly applied lt will save\nyou time, money and suffering when\ntroubled with any one of these ailments.\nFor sale by all druggists and dealers.\nT. SPROAT\nBUILDERS AND CONTKACTOR*\n8bop at rear of Trlbunt ot__>\nnuov. _   >-\nNOTICE\nTo Whom It May Concern\u2014My wire,\nEdith It. Vroom, having left my bed and\nboard on the 12th e' Licember, 1_U4, 1\nwill no longer be responsible for any debts\nIncurred by ber,\nJOHN   P. VROOM.\nDated at Waneta, B.C., this 24th day ot\nH__v, IM\nULVBR KINO HIKB\nwill pay tbe highest cash price for a  klnda\nof eeoond hand goods,   will  buy   >r  sell\nanything from an anchor to a need? . Fur-\nnlturo,   Stoves   Carpets, tCnnklng   ' tenslli\nbought In household quantities.   Ai\u00abo cast\noff clothing.   Call and see    me or writ*.\naddr-w Mlw King Mlk* Box W, Vail\n\u25a0MM _____ ________  a\n^^^-^ \u00abv\u00ab___^__|   __ft-_p. \u25a0__-+-._.-     \u2022\n THE DAILY  NEWS, NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, AVM  16, 1905\n358\nMMNHKHMHMHi 9 4Ht-*M*HMHHHHMMHI\nS.-#\nSThe Finest Diamond Exhibit\nIs seen as a special attraction right here at our palatial jewelry store.\nSWe have never previously been as well prepared to interest the lover\nand admirer of choice jeweled designs.\nIn Rings aud Pendants we're particularly proud of our vast cof-\nIection and inviting prices. A cordial welcome ie extended to visitors and sightseers, whether on a purchasing mission or on one of mere\nInspection.\nEWERT BROS.\nJRWELERS AND\nENGRAVERS\nROSSLAND   if If       *~-   i I    TRAIL\n__*_____ * ______*^____l_t_^___\nBARGAINS\nThree Improved Ranches\nRanch\u201440 Acres\nSituated at 9-Mile point, 5 acres cleared,\n4-roomed house and outbuildings, 40 0-year\nold trees, one acre small fruits, good,\nheavy loam, price\n$850 Cash\nFlre and Accident Insurance\nReal IQstateand Mines a specialty.\non   West Arm   ut  reasonable   prices   una\nterms.\nFOR RENT\u2014Six-roomed house, modern\nconveniences, two blocks from corner lla-\nker mid Ward streets, It lots, garden witn\nfruit trees, $_._. per month.\nT. G. Procter\nFernie Foundry and Machine Worlds\nepalrlng and Job Work a Specialty.\nBEAN BROS\nRepairing and Job Work a Specialty.   Brass Castings Made to Order.\nBOX 237\n* FERNIE B- C.\nANOTHER JUNE WEDDING\nPRINCE OF SWEDEN AND PRINCESS\nMAUOAltET OF CONNAUGHT\nCEREMONY    CELEBRATED    IN ST.\nGEORGE'S OHAPEL, WINDSOR.\nWindsor, June 15\u2014Windsor the scene\nof so many historic events, is In holiday\nattire today [or tlie wedding of princess\nMargaret of Connaught to prince Gns-\ntnvus Adolphus of Sweden.\nAll arrangements were made under\nthe personal direction of the king. St.\nGeorge's chapel was a blaze ot uniforms\nand decoration. The ladles were, of\ncourse, in full court dress with their\ncoronets or Liaras, wearing many jewels.\nShortly after the assemblage was sealed the brldgegrooin made his appearance, accompanied by prince William\naud princess EugennTof Sweden, with\ngentlemen In attendance. The bridegroom wns followed by the royal parly,\nincluding the king and queen, princess\nVictoria, tlie crown princess ot Sweden,\nthe ductless of Connaught, the prince of\nWales, tlie landgrave of Hesse, lhe\ngrand duke and duchess of Baden, the\nkliedlve of Egypt .princess Patrica of\nCpnnagught and her sister, the princess\nVictoria of Batlenburg, princess Mary\nof Wales and princess Beatrice of Saxe-\nCoburg.\nThe archbishop of Canterbury assisted by the bishop of Oxford were the celebrants of lhe simple service of the\nchurch of England.\nAfler the ceremony the members of\nthe royal families returned to the castle\nwhere luncheon wus served.\nPrincess Margaret left the castle with\nher father, the duke of Connaught, who\n-wore a Held marshal's uniform, shortly\nafler tho noon hour. The princess looked charming in iter bridal dress, and\nvery pretty. Her gown was a cloud uf\npure Irish while lace, over white satin,\nBtiuwu with garlands of orange blossoms and niyrlles. The corsage was cut\nlow aud she wore the regulation court\ntrain.\nThe four bridesmaids were princess\nMary ut Wales, princess Patrica of Con-\nuauglii, princess Beatrice of Saxe-Co-\nliurg and llotlia and princess Eugenia\nof Batlenburg. Tbo costumes of the\nbridesmaids were of pale blue crepe-de-\nehiue, .inserted and lloimced with lace\nand finished with lace berthes and blue\ncrepe-de-chine sashes.\nAlthough officially lhe marriage was\nnot a stale function, it was un event lu\nthe royal family which deeply engaged\ntho symplhics of the king aud iftieen,\nnnd many picturesque features were introduced. The bridegruoni wore military uniform as did aUu his father,\ncrown prince Gustavo, and Ills brother\nprlnco Eugene, who  were his suppor-\n1 The procession of the king and Queen,\nwliich passed up the nave to the choir\nat a quarter past 12, was Heralded by\nthe strains of the national anthem. His\nmajesty was in the uniform of a held\nmarshal and wore the Order ot the barter Queen Alexandra was in tulle covered wilh mauve lace. With their majesties were the prince and princess of\nWales princess Victoria, and othci\nmembers ot the royal family, and a number of foreign guests. The stately line\nslowly traversed the central isle, members ot the household with wan s\nwalking slowly backwards and pre ed tog\ntheir majesties until the east end ot the\nthoir was reached.\nThe brides procession entered a few\nmluutos Inter.   A more cliarnilng gioit\nthan that formed by ihe bride and bet\nattendants   it would   bo impossible  to\n\"\"fbls'c'vening the wedding guests were\n_\u201e lerlalned at an elaborate state, 1annuel In St. George's hall, Windsor\n.asllo. Preceding tho function the\n[guests were permitted to Inspect he\nmany wedding presents received by the\n,_ri_o The gifts formed an amazing uls-\nBlay of jewels, especially rubles, prm-\ness Margaret's favorite gem. Prom\ner parents the bride received a diamond tiara and a sable coat, from king\nIdward and queen Alexandra a magnln-\nI Knt tiara of rubles and diamonds, and\nfrom the prince and princess of Wales,\na beautiful necklace of   diamonds and\nrubies.\nPrince Gustavus Adolphtis nnd his\n'bride will travel in state lo the Swedish\ncapital. Prom Copenhagen to Helsing-\nborg tbey will bo escorted by the Swedish coast squadron. Before entering\nthe capital they will spend some time at\nlhe royal residence of Soilero, near Hel-\nSingborg, They will make their Until\njourney to tho capital on the royal yacht\nDrot, with an escort of a division of\ntorpedo iboats.\nPrincess Margaret Victoria of Connaught, the bride ol' today, is the eldest daughter of prince Arthur, bettor\nknown us the duke of Connaught. She\nwas born January 15. JSS2, und has beeu\nraised as a simple English girl. Slie is\nsaid to be very unaffected and girlish\nin her manner. Her full title is princess Margaret Victoria Augusta Charlotte Norah of Connaught,\nPrince Gustavus Adolph'us is the eldest son of the crown .prince Gustavo of\nSweden, antl is therefore heir to the\nthrone. The .oiing prince's full name is\nOscar Frederick William Olaf Gustavus\nAdolphus, duke of Schonen. His mother,\nformerly princess Victoria of Baden, is\na daughter ol' lite reigning grand duke\nof Baden and of Louise of Prussia.\nPrlnco Gustaviis Adolphus was born In\nNovember, JS__, and is consequently the\njunior of his bride by a fow months.\nTALKS  TO RETAILERS.\nAdvertising Copy Should Show Individuality.\nEvory retailor should strive, tlirough\ntho copy ho puts in his advertisement\nand tne genoral appearance of the au\nitself, to uiake his newspaper advertising individual.\nif you ure note to hit upon au Individual style\u2014nol a treuny style\u2014your .advertising will have au additional value,\nll wul cicarly separate you in the mlnas\nof tne people trom your competitors, li\nwill make your ads more readable and\nmore easily remembered.\n'llio great actors, great preachers,\ngreal lawyers, groat statesmen anu\ngreat morchants ut every country nro\n_reui because of their individuality.\nll is well worili your time io think\nlong uud seriously auotil your newspaper advertising until you develop an\nindividual style\u2014aud then push things.\nTho constant uso of u certain size ami\nface ut type is one loriu ol advertising\nindividuality. ,       ,\nIndividuality is achieved by others by\na clever catch line winch is always UMU\niu evory advertisement.\nIf your style of individuality is- pleas-\ni\u201eE io tho majority of the public it\nW.U have the effect of making people\ntuiuk uuuieufateiy of your slore whenever they have uccasion to buy goods,\nmien ns you sell.\n'Ibe use ol worn-out phrases is one\not the most common faults ut retail ud-\nvutl,e,s. une can hardly over look\nthrough a newspaper published iu a\nsmall city without Hading one or mme\nadvertisements containing in iMSpW*\"\nsuch phrases as \"Bosi ou Earth, ine\nBest Goods,\" \"Largest uud Most Complete Stock,\" \"Cheapest Because Best.\n-Look at Us,' etc. Such phrases have\nbeen used since the year one. ihey\nhave been used so l<*fB-^ usually\nwithout tbo justification that tiutn\nwould give\u2014thai Uiey have become common, worn-out. and utterly without\nmeaning to themlndot the reader tne\nmerchants who still use them do so because thoy do not stop to th to 1. In la I,\nlho greatest fault uf the ratal Ur is tha\nbo docs not give enough time and\nthought to the preparation of his news\npaper copy. If he would slop to consider lhat his newspaper announcement is really a short talk oletter to\nlho readers of the paper, Inviting hem\ninto his storo or telling them what he\nhas in His storo, ho would Hnd plenty of\nexpressions of his own with wliich o\nhead his advertisement, and be would\nalways get up bolter advertisements.\nin preparing copy fur a newspaper\nadvertisement one should remember not\nto crowd tbe space so full us to make\nit necessary to use smnll type Ho\nshould uso enough space to keep lt from\nlooking crowded. A crowded advertisement usually repels people, and by Its\nappearance keeps them from reading it.\nWhen they come to it on the page they\naro confronted by what seems a task,\nsomething on which they have to expend unusual energy in order to digest\nit, and they naturally pass on to something easier unless they happen to be\nvitally interested in the subject of which\nit treats.\nOn the other hand, the advertisement\nthat contains a good measure of white\nspace and has good readable type attracts readers because It has the appearance of being easy to grasp.\nNearly all of us work along the lines\nof least resistance.\nPlain border lines are usually considered the best on the assumption that\nthe border's attractiveness should end\nwhen it has drawn the eye to the space'\nit encloses; there aro some borders that\nhurt the eye, antl some that are so\nstrong that they detract from the\nstrength of the type.\nThere is only one way in which to be\nsure of liaving a well balanced, attractive, easily read advertisement; that\nway is to take time beforehand to study\nit out, and then to send your copy to\nthe newspaper early.\nWe study the wants of our advertisers\nand do everything in our power to make\nyour advertisement satisfactory. Our\nallotment of positions is generous because our reading matter Is distributed*\nthrough the paper.\nSend us good copy and you can count\nou tho best results if you mnke The\nDally Nows your medium.\nSEEKS TVASFISTATE\nTfiUB.     CAMPBELL    OP    NEW     YORK.\nWANTS  SLICE   OP   QUEBEC\nSIR WILFRID LAURIER HAS ALSO A\nCOLLATERAL   CLAIM\nNew York, June IB\u2014Seeking to establish\nher claim to a $J,W)0.0_0 estate escheated\nfor three generations by tho British government In 1109, whloh includes a strip ut hind\na mile and a halt long uud half a uil.e\nwide, through the heart of the city ot\nQuebec, and also eight acres of the famous\nPlains of Abnahum, Mis. Caroline Lambert Campbell, wife of M, Campbell, assistant superintendent of the Rrcoklj n\nschools, 1ms engaged counsel to push her\ncase iu tho dominion und British courts,\nsays the Herald.\nRecently she received from Hon. Alfred\nLyttleton, the colonial secrettiry, a reply\nto a letter she hud uddrtsso.I to the king,\nstating that lord Knollys, the king's pr.\u00ab\nvuto secretary advises him tlmt bis majesty could take no other action than to\nsuggest tlmt Airs. Campbell luke her claim\nto the courts. _t\nIn 1SS7 tiie privy council refused a joint\napplication from represenlntlves of the\nRoman Catholic church, the Anglican\nchurch and lho citizens of Quebec usk.ny\nlhat Jj'ao.OOO held by the British government and collected as rentals upon ti.L\nproperty, should be divided equally belwceu\nthe two churches of Quebec. The Br.t.sli\ngovernment decided that tlie heir woiud m\ntime appear and that tbe proporty aud lis\nusufruct, from tho time the decreu of escheat terminated in 1806, belonged to lho\n\u25a0heirs of Lewis Joseph Lambert. Lambert gave largely of his vast fortune to\ntho French in the French-Indian war.\nWhen thu English oonquered Quebec he\nwas deprived of his estates and of those\nof his wife, tho demoiselle Uent_vievc ue\nVUloiol, who Inherited 1H39 acres of Qubec\ncity from her father.\n\"Where liave you been for 49 years, Mrs.\nCampbell,\" said sir Wiifrid L:iur,er when\nMrs. Campbell visited him two years ago.\n\u25a0*1 know every member of your family and\ntlieir history, and you ure lhe only missing\nmember.\"\nSir Wilfrid, through bis wife lias a collateral chum to the estate. The energetic\neiforts of Mrs. Campbell, the only child of\ntho late Leandor Campbell of Kingston,\nN.i.., sot far havo resulted only in the\nfinding of many documents wnicli her\nMontreal ami Quebec lawyers told her\neither did not exist or had been lost.\nNEWS NOTES FROM THE PASS\nHappenings   in   and  Around   the   City   or\nFernle\nISpecIal to The Dully News)\nFernie, Juno 15\u2014Tho rlghl reverend the\nbishop of New Westminster and Kootenay\nIs a guest in the city.\nD. C, Corbin left yesterday for Yabk,\nlhe point where lhe new line Is to branch\noff to Spokune from tbe East Kootenay\ncountry.\nMichel has a large tonnage of coke which\nis being shipped to Lelhbrldge und Montana points.\nTho erection of tlie new tipple Is still\ndelayed tlirough lhe non-arrival of the\nexpected steel.\nCOLEMAN MINES CLOSE\n(Special to Thu Dally News)\nFernie, June 15\u2014It Is reported on excellent authority from Coleman Hint the coke\novens and tbo mines which supplies tlum\naro both closed down. The reason, given\nIs that a contract has been signed, between the Crow's Nest Pass Coal company\nand the Granby Mines by whioh the farmer will supply all the coke that is needed\nin the smelter for tlio next two years.\nGATEWAY   CITY   POINTERS\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGrand Forks, Juno lb\u2014Thomas Powers\nhas been elected delegate to the Vancouver\nconvention of tbe Oddfellows to be held in\na few days by tlie local lodge.\nGeorgo Collins, who has held a responsible position wltb the Granby smelter for\nthe past three years, has accepted a position with the J. P. Graves electric car\nsystem In Spokane.\nMrs. Charles Packard and family left\nyesterday on a visit to Seattle.\nTho meeting of the lire department which\nwas enlled for tonight has been postponed\nfor a week. There Is trouble as to which\npoliceman Bhall bo retained to run tho\npolico and lire departments, thu mayor\nsupporting one, Sheads, while the firemen\ndeclare they will work under none other\nthan polico ofllcer Savage.\nWINNIPEG   BANK  CLEARINGS\nWinnipeg,   June   15~Bank   clearings   for\nthe   week  ending   today  are  $(i,41S,lJl4.    In\n1904   they   wero   .5,123,712,   and   In   1903 |4,-\n&i7,IlX!.\nJames Band, proprietor of the Grove\nhotel, Fairvlew, lias hnd that fnvorite\nsummer resort nicely iltted up. It is conveniently located within half a block of the\nstreet oar line and good meals nnd the best\nof liquors and cigars mako It a popular\nhouse of call. Drop In any time when\npaaalng and sample some of those choleo\nthirst auenchers always on tap.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThere was a large crowd on the atreets\nlast evening listening to the strains of tbe\ncity band at the regular weekly open ar\nconcert.\nThe convention of the provincial Licensed Victuallers' association ln 1936 wlil be\nheld In Nelson, not In Revelstoke aa reported previously.\nThere was no cricket match yesterday\nafternoon, the ground being occupied by\nthe lacrosse players. A match Is being arranged for the next weekly half holiday.\nBaker street in tho middle of yesterday\nafternoon looked as deserted as on ;i Sunday. Most of the business men were playing or rooting In the lacroBso grounds.\nYesterday's half holiday was even better observed than on the previous Thursday, two of the stores whicli then remained\nopen, closed on this, tho second occasion.\nThere were several people fishing yesterday but as it Is nearly the top of high\nwater, only one fish that could he heard of\nwas caught and tho catcher declared that\nIt must have been crazy.\nThe following wero elected ollicers of\nthe Nelson Carpenters' union at the semiannual election. They will hold olilce from\nJuly 1 to the end of tbe year: President,\nJ.\"'Colling; vice-president, W. F. Lemon;\neeorotai\/y, J_f. Ki)lb|-; treasurer, it. s.\nLeard; conductor, Scott Thompson; warden, Rod McDonald; trustees, J. Colling,\nHector McKenzle, G. Daggett; delegates to\nTrades und Labor Council, W. P. Lemon,\nG.  Williams and R. S. Leard.\nSuit was formally entered yesterday by\nA. M. Johnson, solicitor for S, E. Cl ulter,\nagainst tlio city of Nelson, to recover $75.\ntho amount of bis wages for tlie month of\nMay, during which he claims he was\nwrongfully prevented from .performing his\nduties. The summons was served upon\nW. E. Wasson, acting city clerk. The city\nIs ordered to unswer to the summons by\nappearance In the county court on July\n5th. S. S. Taylor, K.C, stated yesterday\nthat he lias been instructed by the mayor\nto act In connection with lhe cly Bol.eltor\nIn defending the action.\nTRIBUTE TO SLOCUM DEAD\nNew York, Juno 15\u2014Tears were shed in\nan assemblage of several thousand people\nwhen survivors of the General Slooum\nslu'imbout disaster, relatives of tho victims and their friends gathered loday iu\nLutheran cemetery, Middle Village, L.I., to\nobserve the first anniversary of tho great\ndisaster, and to witness the unveiling of\na mounment in memory of the unidentified dead. There wore many pr.s'nt,\nwhoso solo comfort is tho belief that Ihelr\nloved ojies are among the IH till Id entitled\ndead, tliat rest ln tbe plot where lhe monument has been erected.\nThe monument Is of granite, with a large\nbronze plate, on which is a plciuie In U'lS\nrelief of tlie binning steamer, On the\nright side is a statue, representing memory\nand on tho left one depicting Gr.ol, Whllo\nut the top of the mounment are two figures\nrepresenting respectively Faith and Iluje.\nAll of the figures are life size, and the entire monument Is 20 feel in helpght__and\n8 1-2 feet broud at the base. The monument cost $10,000 and was erected by public   subscription.\nCUBAN DIARRHOEA\nU. S. soldiers who served In Cuba during\nlite Spanish war know what this disease\nIs, and that ordinary remedies have llltie\nmore effect than so much water. Cuban\ndiarrhoea Is nlmost as severe and dauger-\nouh as a mild attack of cholera, There Is\none remedy, however, that can always be\ndepended on as will bo seen by the following certificate from Mrs. Minnie Jacobs\nof Houston, Texas: \"I hereby certify that\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and D.urr-\nhoea Remedy cured my husband of a severe attack of Cuban diarrhoea, which he\nbrought homo from Cuba. Wo had several doctors but tbey did him no good.\nOne bottle of this remedy cured him as our\nneighbors will testify. I thank God for so\nvaluable a medicine.\" For sale by all\n\u2022iruulsta and dealers.\nARCTIC CURB FOR CONSUMPTION\nHalifax, June 16-In order lo make a practical test of the theory advanced by prominent Arctic explorers and others that a\nsojourn tn tho Arctic regions will cure consumption, the steamer Havana leaves this\n[port today for a health cruise along the\ncoast of Greenland, The ^tramer Is lu\ncharge of physicians and other., selected\nby a number of prominent Washlngtonlulis\nwho aio backing the project, and 11 cair.es\n.is passengers a number of tuberculosis\npatients. !|tf I'\nThe plan Is to visit certain sterile anil\ndustless areas which lie under perpetual\nsummer sunshine within tho Arctic circle,   for   tho   euro   of early   cases  of   the\nMEN WANTED\nRock men (hand work), Sawyer.*, Axemen, laborers. Apply at olilce of the West\nKootouay Power and Light Company,\nRossland, B. C.\nfruit Lands\nThe Boundary district Is destined to be\none of the largest mineral districts ln\nAmerica. The market for fruit Is Inexhaustible. The climate is Ideal and plenty\nof water Is obtainable.\nI have a l.u*ge list of available lands for\nsalo\nIn Greenwood District\nsuitable   for   fruit   growing   and   general\nranching.   Write   for   parllculars.\nImproved farms with bearing orchtrds\nfor sale at reasonable figures.\n,  frederic W. Mclaine,\nAffent for C.P.R. Lands, Greenwood, B.C.\nNo. L 148\nN|en's Chrome Kip Bal\nPlain toe, leather lined, bellows\ntongue, double sole and slip. This\nIs a broad toe last, made to stand\nhart], heavy wear; tho upper will\nalways retain Its soft, velvety feeling aud Is as waterproof as leather\ncan be made.\nWHOLESALE  BV\nJ. Leckie Co., Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\ndisease. It Is* contended that the continuous day of tho Arctic summer, with\nIts healthful and bracing features, far\nsurpasses any conditions in any other jart\nof tlie world fair the cure of pulmonary\ndiseases. Tho Havana will cruise along\nthe shore of Baffin's Land and' central\nGreenland, anchoring in various shelter.-d\nfiords for the diversion and benefit of tho\npatients. The return Is scheduled for the\nlutter part of September.\nEASTERN EXCURSION RATES\nThe Canadian Pacific railway announce\nexcursion rate, lo St. P.iul and Duluth,\nIb'l.bO; Chicago, JEM; Winnipeg, $19 10; Fort\nWilliam, Jul.10. on sale June 14, IB, 16. 17.\nTickets .are first-Class and nre good for 90\ndays. On same days reduced rates will be\ngiven to all points In eastern Canada via\nC. P. R. through Port Arthur, all rail or\nlake and rail. For full particulars apply\nlocal agents, or write J. S. Carter, D.P.A.,\nNelson.\nTOUR OF INSPECTION\nWinnipeg, June 15\u2014li. S. Jenkins, general superintendent of C.P.R. telegraphs,\nreturned yesterday from a tour of Inspection covering thfi Soutls, Arcol, Pleasant\nIIllls and main lines as fur as Reg.no,\nOxford Cafe\nNEXT    DOOR   TO    OFFICE    SALOON,\nWard Street\nMerchants Dinner from 12 noon to 2:30\np.m., 25 cents,\nShort order meals at ull hours, Open day\nand night.\nFrank Lin Lun\nManager and Cook\nTHE MAN WHO\nSMOKES\nour special Mixture smokes a pure ant\nfragrant tobacco, as choke a thing ai\never tempted you.\nTHURMAN\nTOBACCONIST\nFrederic S. Clements\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nSURVEYOR\nAgent for obtuinlng Crown Grants, mine\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom IC, K.W.C. Block\n\u25a0\u00bb \u00ab u__ i N.iso*. a r\nFRANK C. GREEN\nCIVIl, ENGINEER\nDominion and Provincial Land Hurreysr\nP. O. Hex 146,    Phone 261B\nA. R. HEYLAND\nPROVINCIAL LAND BURVUYOK\nPOPLAR AND KABLO\nPLUMBING\nWe ere prepared to do al! klnda \u2022\nplumbing, steam and gam fitting, on th-\nshortest notice. Estimates given. EI. K\nStrachan   A   Co.,   Baker   Btreet.   M*lana\nDRESSMAKING\nLADIES cutting ;ind fitting for home dresH-\nmukers, neatly and promptly dune, Next\ndoor to rink, Stanley street.\nFOR RENT\nROOMS and ofTlces K.W.C. block for rent,\nS. M. Brydges.\nTEAS\nJUST RECEIVED.\nFresh and Fragrant\nNEW CROP\nBlack or Green\nAS ALWAYS\nTHE BEST\nPrices moderate hy tha pound or -drift\n(ual package.\nKootenay Coffee Go.\nPhone 177.   P. O. Box 111\nFURNISHED   Rooms   suitable   for   light\nhouse   kpeninic,   Macdonald  block,   over\nTlio Daily Nows office.\nTHE\nO.K. BAKERY:\nla here to stay, and If you have   \u2022\nnot given us a trial ring up \u2022\nPhone 165\nn   be   no   r\nIs stamped\nO.K.\nThere   can   be   no   mistake,   as\nevery lonf Is stamped\nCrawford & Hay\nStanley   Street.\nFOR SALE\n.10 foot lot and building, south side of\nBnker street, rented constantly, easy\nterms,   priee on application.\nIn Hume Addition, four roomed houso\nand lot,  $C00 on  monthly payment  plan.\n1 acre ranch one mile from Nelson, 80\nfruit trees, 150 small fruit, furnished cabin,\n(360.\nIn Hume Addition, corner lot, fruit trees\nand small fruits, with 4 room cottage,\nabout $700, good terms.\nChatibourn & McLaren\nK.W.O. BLOCK\nRanches For Sale\n6i 8, \"0 und ,.\"i acre ranches elo.^e tu Lhe\nA choice 'JO acres on the Wesl Arm or\nKooienay lake, _t.ljo.it 11 mllea from ulty,\nanly (850.\n1.15 acres, well watered, with go.id house\n20x2. feet, and 7 acrea cleared, price $3160,\nHouses Por Sale\n7-roomcd house, centrally located, 2 lots,\na bargain, J_..00, terms,\n6-roomed house on Stanley street and 2\nlots, all modern conveniences, j;!00O, terms.\nR.J. Steel\n198 Acres Ranch\nLand\nAt a Bargain\nWe have ;i bargain on\n198 Acres of unimproved\nRanch Land six miles from\nNelson, can drive all the\nway. No boats or trains\nto wait for.\n1 ti r $8,00\nSharp & Irvine\nBROKERS\nCAMPION & CARTER\nCommission and Real Estate Agents,\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nWe havo several choice blocks of fruit\nland on Koutenay river and lake, ln lots\nfrom 10 to 120 acres, improved and unimproved, prices reasonable. Some good bargains.\nNelson Steam laundry\nP. O. Box -U.   Telephone IM.\nAll kinds and all colon of Ladle*\" a_u\nQents' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels. Blankets, Curtains, Bilks, BU\n4 specialty.\nGloves renovated to look like ae-t>.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nTsur patronage solicited.\nPAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nLAKEVIEW\nHOTEL\nCorner Hall and Vemsn Streets\nTwo blocks from City Wharf.   Tbe I\nAsIIar a day house in Nelson.\n\u2022IO   OH.NESII   EMPltOYWa\nAugust Thomas\nPROPRIETOR.\nSunnyside Hotel\nNELSON. B. C.\nRATES |1 PER DAT\nThe Sunnyside has nicely furnished hM-\nrooms, lighted with electricity and th*\ntabic Is the best In Nelaon for the price.\nThe hotel Is on Baker street, one block\ntrom the C.P.R. and Q.N.R. union d\u00abp*t\n\u2022**  \u2022\u2022uot* \u2022(*!__  on  rii\u00bb   tir\u00bb.til\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\nTREMONT   HOUSE\n\u25a0UKOPKAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\n_n_AJU\u00a7 So.    ROOMS FROM -e TO tl.M\nM____NJB ft TREOILLUS,  PropriMar.\nRaknr BtreftL Nalaon\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nNELBON, B. C.\n1. O. CLARKE, Proprietor\nU__t_d by Electricity.   Heated by Hot __>\nRATES $2.00 PER DAY\nFirst cla_a   Dining  Room.     Large  aat\nComfortable Bedrooma.   bample Rooma (a*\nCommercial   Men.\nBARTLETT   HOUSE\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe best $1.00 per day house In Nsliok.\nNons hut white help employed.   The bai\nto the best\n(J. W. BARTLETT -  Prop.\ncrahd mi am fiqm\nOpposite Courthouse and new PoatoA-a*.\nBest _Sc meal in town. European and\nAmerican plan. Only white labor employ\n->*.    First oIusn bar.\nMcLeod Hotel\nCORNER\nITIUrr  AND   SECOND   AVXNtm\nYMIR.  B. C.\nCentrally located rebuilt anl refurnlsnw\nthroughout. All modern lioim>vem*n__L\nBample Rooms In connection. The ools\ntrat class hotel In Ymlr.\nRATES FROM U.M UP\nviWl.Av   tjfUr.rtO   PrnrvM-x*.\nGRAND HOTEL\nCor. Howard and Main Sts..\nSPOKANE\nBritish Columbia People\nWill find a home In Spokane at the\nGrand Hotel. Recently remodelled and\nrefurnished.\nUnder the management of E. E.\nPhair. late of Hotel Phair, Nelaon. B. C.\nAll British Columbia papers on file.\nEuropean plan. Rates 75 centa to $2.00\nper day.   Pree lius meets all trains.\nROYAL HOTEL\nMR8.   WILLIAM  ROBBETi,\nProprietrMii.\nTha beat tn__i_ that can b\u00ab provido-i _>\nthla market, cooked under the auperfls-\nlon of the proprtetrem, who It & famous\ncaterer.\nNice airy rooms, newly furrrisbe-l; bats\ntor guests.\nThe beat of wines, liquor* an-1 cigars ou\nb\u00ab obtained at the t>ar.\nTERMS:    |l AND |1.6I 4 DAT.\nCorner  of   Stanley    nnd    tiihct    streets.\nstreet  ear*  (MM  the   door\nMadden House _\u00a3_\u00a3_, *\u00a3g\nDo 70s need a comfortable hornet If M\ntry the Madden House. Well furnlshei\nrooms lighted by electricity; flrat clsss\nbeard. In the bar you will find all th*\nbest dome*tic and Imported liquors __4\nclears.\nTHOMAB   MAnniDN    Pro\u00bbrietor\nBulK Oysters\nof the best quality\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co\nFOR SALE\n$20,00000\nwill buy a half Intercut In one of the oldest and bost established businesses in Spokane, guaranteed salary $3000 yearly, A\nstrict Investigation invited. Terms, Ad-\ndress'H, BOLSTER __ Co., Spokane, Wash,\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE\nTn 10 acre blocks, In 20 acre blocks;1\nseveral Improved ranches.\nJ, B. ANNABLE, Nelson, B. 0,\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JDJfE 16, 1905\nOFFICES AND\nLIVING ROOI.S\n^i1,:10 Nelson Ileofric Tranjway Co.\nClements Block, Cor. Baker and Josephine\nStreets\nTO HEHT\nNEW YORK STOCKS AND BONDS\nCHICAGO QRAIN AND PROVISIONS\nI. C MAJOR & CO.\nTlj; ONLY COMMISSION HOUSE IN KOOTENAY\nGUS. It. THBiniNO, Correspondent\nOfflce with Sharp and Irvine.\t\nCOAL\nAND WOOD OE' ALL\nKINDS\nTerm. Spot \u20ac\u00ab\u2022_\nW. P. Tlerney\nTelephone 266\nBaker Street, Nelaon\nNEW\nTOILET\nSOAPS\nJust received a shipment\ncontaining a splendid assortment of perfumed and\nunscented soaps.\nWe have full range,, at\nclose prices. This week\nwe will offer Clever's unscented at $1.00 per doz.\nas a special.\nT. S. McPherson\nPHONE NO. 10.\nStore closed Thursday afternoon.\nFOR SALE\nAn eight-roomed house\nand two lots on Victoria\nstreet, close to the Presbyterian church. The lots\nare fenced and well cultivated. The house has all\nmodern improvements.\nFor price and terms apply at our office.\nFOR RENT\nMrs. Robertson's cottage on the north side of\nthe lake.\nUMXJ\u00ab^KX!<KXKX:XXXX5\u00abK>0\u00ab>e\u00abKK_<55\nInteresting\nA New Lot of Goods at New Prices\nTo Intending\nPurchasers\nthings useful and beautiful and most appropriate for gifts. Remember\nwe make a specialty of Wedding Present-. Call and see our new\nstock.\n| PATENAUOE BROS. |\nMANUFACTURING JEWELLERS, WATCHMAKERS, OPTICIANS      *M\nPhone tw \u00a35\niKKKK5\u00ab\u00bb0<KXJ\u00ab:5O\u00abJ^fl\u00abS\u00abKK>0<500OS\nA Pure Wtjeat Gereal\nie the Ideal Summer Breakfast Pood\u2014nothing better than our\n\"B&K\" Wheat Flakes\nJust the pure grain\u2014no chemical flavoring. In 2 Ib. packages und 60 lb. boxes.\nAt all Grocei'H,\n(LIMITED)\nManufacturers of High Grade Cereals.\n_fllH!H\u00ab!!!!!!!in!!!!l!!!!!!!!!Itlin!!1!fmni!!fn!!nHtl!!l!l!!!l1!n^\n120tl] Century Clothing June Saiej\nH.&M.Biidl\n-> sr\nHM\u00abWSOFl(!fcUAY\nThere will be n practice of the ball team\nthis evening at  tin.  usual  hour.\nOscar V, While and Airs. White, arrived\nfrom Bfindon last evening on their wuy\niu Spokane,\nD. Whiteside, fcorrlster of Grand Forks.\narrived In the olty last evening and la a\nguest al  the  Strntlicona.\nS. F. Tolmie. dominion wU-nmiry inspector for the province, returned to tlie\ncity last evening und Is at tlio llunio.\nThe rogular monthly meeting of the board\nof school trustees Will be held this evening\nIn the principal's room at iho public school.\nR. J. Steel, real estate ngent. reports\nhaving flbmpleted the sale of another ranch\nalong the, Granite wagon road to C, J.\nVeal.\nDavid Little, formerly well known In\nNelsoh, was married in Calgary last week\nto Miss Crandell, daughter of a prominent\nmerchant,\nInspector D. Wilson returned lnst evening from Greenwood, Where he has he d\nnn entrance examination. Nine candidates\nwrote, representing four schools. Entrance.\nexaminations begin next Monday ln NelBon,\nRossland -.nd, Grand Forks, . , _[J)\nCharle Waterman auctioned off the retail dry goods Htock of J. F. Weir yesterday and after a spirited bidding ihe stoek\nwas sold to Robert Weir at 99 cents on the\ndollar.   Tht purchaser will auction ofl the\nThere will be no band concert next\nThursday evening; the band has been\nengnyed for that date to play at a Methodist church social. On Sunday nrter-\nnoon the hand win play at tho tramway\npark   as   usual,   weather   permitting.\nTho birthday party given In Fraternity\nhall last evening by the Indies of the\nMaccabees was a great success. It was\nlargely attended and the guests were well\nentertained. A goodly sum was realized\nthrough tlie silk bags sent out by the\nladles.\nHot Weather Comforts\nA list which if carefully studied and acted on\nwill help you through the hot days:\nWater Coolers $4.GO to J5.50 oath\nSparklet Syphons   7;\">e each\nSparklets 50c a dozen\nIce Cream Freezers .roil) $2.25 each\nHammoolis $1.50 to $7.50\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Limited\nWHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL\n| Finest Creamery Butter\n14 lb Boxes\nBUY NOW\nIt Is understood that a judicial county\nwill be created by the lieutenant governor\nin council, in Hast Kootenay, on July 1st,\nor soon rifter. Then the dominion government will probably make an appropriation\nfor the salary of a county court judge.\nWhen this Is done an appointment will he\nIn order aud P. E. Wilson of Nelson, may\nreceive the offer. In tlie meantime announcements of un appointment are rathei\npremature.\nAn alarm ot lire called out the brigade\nlost night at. 11:25. The response was\nprompt and quick time was made to the\ncorner of Baker and Kails street, from\nwhich the I'llarm c;ime. There was no lire\nand the author of the snmmona was not to\nlie found. Tho firemen would ho pleased\nIf humorists who like to play practical\nJokes, would send In alarms earlier in the\nevening so that more of the public may\nseo  the performance.\nWilliam Green, the star of the Medicine\nHat lacrosse team, wan drowned last Saturday afternoon. He was driving over tt\nbridge on the South Saskatchewan river\nwhen his horse nnd carriage wont tlirough.\nHe bad his child with him, whom he succeeded tn saving hy trowing to the snore.\nIlls body has nol been recovered. Deceased\nwas a member of the linn of Green Bros,\nof Medicine Hat. He was well known to\nmany of tho older lacrosse players ot\nNolson, ... i\nHUME\u2014P. J. Dermody, Greenwood; J.\nM. Roe, Siooan; M. Rae, Bellinghamj P,\n3. Gallagher, Rosobeiyj P. L. Grrenojugh,\nPortland; O. V. White and wife, Sandon;\nG. C. Aitchlson, II. B. Morley. W. A. Allan,\nVancouver; C. V. Jones, Revelstoke; S. F,\nTolmie, Victoria; J Balfour, Lennoxvllle.\nA meeting of the general committee of\nthe Dominion Day celebration will be held\n\u25a0In thn city hall this evening at 8:15. Replies have been  received from  the various\n\u25a0spitruing organ!ftattlona Hint have been\ncommunicated with, nnd the final draft of\nhe program will he d term nod. Th.' 11-\nnanoe committee will present a supplementary report showing a sum slightly in excess of the last estimate.\nMINING  RECORDS\nAt the mining recorder's uIUco on Thursday tho following locations were recorded;\nTho Victor on the north side of LaFranoo\noreek, by Henry iR-ofoherU; tho Wpilla\nWalla, on LaFrance creek hy T. P. Moran; tho Colorado Boy nnd llio Fir, botli\non Jubilee mountain by Frank Ducharme,\nand the First of June, on Wild Horse creek\nby George Bouchard.\nCertificates of work were issued to F.\nSeaman, an agent for A. M. Johnson, on\nthe Jumbo and Nellie.\nQUJ3BEC   BANK  JtfJDBGBR\nHochelaga Hank Io Absorb all French\nCanadian Institutions\nMontreal, Juno 15\u2014 Another banking merger Is on the cards, The banks concerned\noro the Hochelaga, Provlnclele, National,\nSt, Hyactnthe and St. Johns, In tan all\nthe banks of this province, whose directing\nInfluences nre French Canadian. The\ncapitalization of the new hank, which will\nbe known a.s the HoohelflBfl bank of Canada, will be $10;000,000, which will place it\nin the front rank among Canadian banks.\nThe objr-r-t of the merger Is to do away\nwith competition among the banks and\nplace the institution In a position to handle\nlarge financial interests. \t\nHammocks\nVerandah\nChairs and\nLawn\nSettees\nHammocks from $2.00 up\nVerandah Chairs $2.50 up\nLawn Settees       $3.00 up\nThe gentlemen il) our show\nwindow will show our customers\ntlirough this department and\ntreat them right.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nAgents\nMASON ft RISCH PIANOS\nComplete House Furnishers and Undertakers\nSTRA.THCONA-J, M. Young, Toronto;\nT. H. Shnrpe, Agasslz; c. s. Watson, Peel;\nD. Whiteside, Grand Forks; I). Wilson.\nH, L. Johnston, Greenwood; Mrs. Thurston, Itevclstoke.\nGRAND CENTRAL ~ J. R. Downey,\nMoyie; N. McCalllvery, Beaver; II. C. Hal-\nllday, Lethbrldge; w. Patterson, Bonnlng-\nton; H. D. McBwan, Greenwood; M. D. McLeod, Rossland; T. A. Steele, PhoonlXj U.\n.Morgan,   W.   Matthews,   Ferguson.\nLAKKVIEW\u2014J. Leete-nd, A. Hawker,\nSloean; M. Cohn, Calgary; J. Gallagher,\nJaffray.\nTREMONT - S3. McKenna. Moyie; I.\nPrudhomme, Spokane; R. Ibsen, s. Smith,\n\u25a0Greenwood; S. Hunter, M, McLeod, Kaslo;\nJ. McLeod, Coleman.\nQUHENS-Mrs. A. MoKayne and chlld-\nxen, Vernon.\nBARTLETT\u2014W. J. Blewett, Camborne;\n\"W. H. Moore, Chapleau; A. Villenfiuve,\nVmlr; J. Jackson, Bute; c. Harrison Reliance mine.\n^ADDEN\u2014H. O. Russell, Spokane; L.\n\u2022Oxley,   Nnknsp;   R,   C.  Davis,  Chilllwack.\nItOYAL-H. \\V. Gartoll. Montreal; Mrs.\n'.'. Ilyndmnn, Cnlgary; Miss IC Macdonald,\nWalla Walla.\nNever before were we bet- \u00a32\nter prepared to .show you \u00a33\nthe very best In high grade \u00a33\nClothing. You'd better see \u00ab2\nif we haven't just the BUitCS\nyon want. Warranted to re- jjg\ntain their shape or money <\u2022\u2014\u00bb\nbade. 2\nMens' Fine Suits  jjjg\n $15,  $18,  $20, $22._.0 \"3\nWe are right In line with 2\nthe best values possible.        \u00a33\nMens' 2-piecc Suits 3\nSuitable   for   hot   weather. \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0.\nPrices at ?5, $7, $10, $12 and ^m\n\u00a715. z*\nBoys'Clothing    3\nSpecial values for tliis ^\nmonth, the kind that wear 3\nwell. Vnlues $1, $2, $3, $1, \u00a39\n$i> and $C. They are tlie best Z\u00bb\npossible Cor tlie money. Spe- :\u00a35\neial salo of Men's Straw __3\nHals.   Tlie lowest in prices. ^3\n'Undergarments for men. 23\nComfortable, seasonable,       -mj\nBatbriggaq Underwear, -__f\ngood value, per suit $1. **j\nFiner quality stripe Tin- j3\nderwear, suit $1.60; Merino ^j\nUnderwear, Suit $2; lino ^J\nquality   light   weight   wool, z%\n$2.50. g\nE Little Boys' Buster Brown Suits 3\nES in the new Plain Brown, Blue and    Fancy    Mixtures;    Knickerbocker 2*3\n\u2022>\u00a3 pants and White Linen Collars. Suits tbat should sell for $5 and $tJ; 2 1-2 \u2022\u00a3\u2022\n\u00a3\u00a3 years tu 7, Ihis week special for $4,   Boy's Blouse Waist Suits, Percale *^j\n\u00a3 Cloth and Linen for $1 and $1.25. i -^J\nE Shoe Department t      3\nS\u00a3 Is overflowing wltb good bargains ln Men's, Boy's and Ladies' and \u00a33\n\u00a3\u00a3 OHrl's Shoes. Just received large range Canvas Shoes, while and tan. \u00a35\n\u00bbZ Prlcea tbe lowest.   The store where your dollars bring their value.       23\nI  BROWN & CO.  1\nhiuiuuuuuuuuuu uuuuuu w uuu uuiuuuuiuuuiiuuu^\nWe have Juat received direct from the\nfactories, some extra fancy Canadian\nCreamery Butter In 14 lb., 23 lb. 56 lb. and\nprints.\nPrice la right and they wont last long.\n|       Bell Trading Company\nFruits and Vegetables\nQooaeberrlea per box \t\nLocal   Strawberries,  i>er box\nRoyal   Anno   Cherries   lb\nNavel Oranges per dozen \t\nCocoa nuts each  .\u25bc..\n...10c.  ] New Spuds, G lbs. for\t\n...15c.  | Dry Onions, C lbs for \t\n,..m.A Cabtwge, per lb \t\n...00c. | Local lettuce pe'r Ih \t\n...20o. I Green Onions, 8 bunches for .\n Do.\n 30 c.\n 6o.\nTOYE & BENEDICT\nJosephine St. GROCERS Phone No. 7\nASK FOR\nAND\nBE SURE\nYOU GET\nASVS3\nBACON\nLARD\nNOTHING NICER\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN & CO.\nLIMITED.\nWhite Shirt Waists\nSpecial prices, Friday antl Saturday,\nten per cent off all lines.\nShirt Waist Suits\nSpecial Friday and Saturday ten per\ncent off al! lines.\nParasols\nTen per cent off parasols,\nIT PAYS TO DEAL WITH RUTHERFORD\nWhat Are\nLoofahs ?\nThey are belter than sponges for the\nhath and are put to many other uses, as\nclothes brushes, shoe brushes, dishcloths, etc.\nNote the price 3 for 25c.\nSee our window full.\nStore closes It I p. m.\nWm. Rutherford\nDRUQOIST\nNelson, B.C.\nValencia\nOranges\nTn arrive Monday,\n12th June, car Fancy\nValencia ORANGES,\nsweet, juicy and long\nkeepers; an orange that will stand shipping.\nSend in your orders, they will have our careful\nattention. j  A# McDonald*\nWholesale Fruits\nKerr & Co.\nStore closes Thursday nt noon\u2014Half\nHoliday.\nA Snap   *g\u00a3o\nLot 3, Block 30, adjoining Congregational Church on Stanley St.\nAssessed Value    -    -   -   -   $700\nMcDermid & McHardy\nWe aro still looking after the Interest ot\nboya  by  offering\nSpecial Values\nin suits and knockers, blouses, hats nnd\nshoes.\nNice Navy Blue Sorgo Knfcker from\n  35c to iiOc\nNlco Navy Blue Sailor   Blouse Suits\nfrom  $i to $2\nNice Print and White Duck Blouses\ntrom  50eto7Gc\nBenutlful White Duck   Sailor   Suits\ntot  $1.25\nFine White Duck Knickers for  GGc\nNlco shoes for summer from ....$1 to $1.60\nHats from   ...,2Go to 7Gc\nWe nro still giving 25 per cent off special\nsuits to clear. Yon enn savo money by\ntaking advantage of those prices.\nJ. H. WALLACE\nICN'I OUTFITTER\nWIRE\nWe have in stock a full assortment of all-lines of Wire\n\/~if^'OP) C goods, including waste paper\nbaskets, wire dish covers, pie\nholders, fly killers.   All the latest novelties at\nLowest Prices\nAlways Pleased to Show Goods\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBAKER ST,\nSPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS    NELSON, B. O.\nWhen You Want\nSTYLISH, FIRST-CLASS SHOES\nGo to Gallagher's\n'^___fl~:'.V.3SfJ.Sk.     We havo them In all Styles and Sizes.\nJ. W. GALLAGHER\nBox No. J.8\nBAKER ST.\nTelephone IM\nBEST\nBust Is a word much ahusod in modern advertising, but lt Is tho correct\nword to express tho quality ot chemicals\nIn uso In dispensing ot prescriptions.\nThe BEST of Drugs, with accuracy and\nmoderate prices, makes our dispensing department perfect. Prescriptions sent by mail\nreceive prompt and careful attention.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd.\n\u2022\u2666' \u25a0   \u25a0 \u00bb\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1905_06_16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0381663","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}