{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0382651":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"4a5632b4-86cf-4bac-8002-908e1dafd73b","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":"2019-08-30","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1907-06-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0382651\/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":" .IlOV'\n1.-X& ]\n_--\u00bb*\nW\nJ UN 101907\nVOL. S\n-E-SO-I. B. 0., -HCk.DAY, JCN* 8   HM'7\nNO   40\nHARRY ORCHARD'S CONFESSION OF MURDERS\nTO RECEIVE\nUNION FEES\nOrder of Court Obtained\nby Metallic Roofing\nCompany\nhim for an Immense sum. The financial fruits of Mr. Croker's triumph were\nplaced at about {250,000. Lord Rosehery's Benzonlan, ridden by Danny Ma-\nher, was fourth.\nUnion h'led to Pay Company Dam.in\nAwardc-i Some Time Ago for lnt_r-\nference with Workmen\nToronto, June 5.\u2014The Metallic Roofing company has been appointed by order of the courts here as receiver of all\nfees paid Into the local union No. 30, ot\nthe Metallic .Roofing and Sheet Worker-, This step has been taken to satisfy a judgment of the court, rendered\nBorne time ago, giving the Rooting company $7.-111} damages, because the union\nInterfered with their workmen by i\nsystem of picketing during the strike\ntwo years ago.\nAMBITION Of HIS LIFt\nACHIEVED BY EX-TAMMANY BOSS,\nRICHARD CROKER\nHIS COI-T ORBY WINS THE DERBY,\nWITH JOHNNY RBI Pi.   UF\nLondon, June 5.\u2014Richard Croker today won ine lA-roy at __paooi ami\ngained ine an-omuii of Ms Ine, hm con\n\u25a0ur-jy, bred trom uii Aiuerieau dam, rid-\n\u25a0um uy jimnu. mutt, nuviug beaten all\nUie uriiisu cracks mm captureu tne\nbme riouou of int. wor.d'a tun oy iwo\nlengths.\niue enthusiasm of the Americans can\nbe easier imagined tbau u.dcnbed, and\n(j rotter, nis wuiie-ucarued lace beaming\nwKh happiness, was congratulated ou\nau sides.\nOrby s time was 2 minutes 44 seconds.\nTue betting was tu to . against Orby\nand Wooiwiuacr and U to a on Slieve\nl__.ll.OU.\nWooiwinder, ridden by Madden, the\nEugJisn jockey, was second and SUeve\nGuitlon, an irnyi nurse rumen by Higgs,\nalso au Euglisii Jouaey, was tnlrd. Oi'Dy\nwas bred in itemim out oi an American\ndam, and thus tne Derby has beeu won\nby an American owner, whose horse\nwas rlduen by an American jockey,\nwuose mount was out of an American\nmare.   Nine uorses started.\nOutalue or __.., croacr and his immediate entourage, orby had but lew\n.i-ienas, and ttie oeuiug indicated tnat\ntue spor.T-ig propu-ts estimated uis\ncuances as being slight. Mr. Croker\nand those wbo watched the colt train,\nhowever, were sanguine that uicy uem\na surprise ln store lor the Derby crowds.\nihOse wuo t>uw tue American Oo tne\nwork this morning liked the youngster\nso wen that tney thought it wise to\nhedge, aud his snow on parade and at\npost betore the race brought blm a\nnumber ot auherents. Notniug, bow-\never, could shake tbe position of Slieve\nliailkm, tne l ri_.ii horse, wnlen won tue\n2u,0U0 guineas stai.es ut .sew Market,\nMay ll, as la.orite with the erowua, aim\nhis ueuai ...... icguiued us inconceivable, i-ven uie snort odds on Sin. ve\nGaiiiou, i. i- o, iaiied to deier mc uei-\nto.s.iruui actively .supporting him.\nAt the start Korano llottomly took\nthe lead trom aimve Oailion, uei._oa.uu,\nOalvani aud Orby, with AH Black lu\u00bbt.\nAlter covering live tunungs ln ut..\n.order Slieve ualllou took up the run.\nulng. coming to the hill, Beuzoulan\nand Orby rusned upou the leuder, aud\njoundiug the historic Tutieuuuni cor-\njier Orby challenged the favorite. Johu-\nj\u00bby Relit, riding orby wltb admirable\nJudgmeni, gradually took tils mount to\n.the _rout and sinning olt a cnalleuge\n\u2022ou the part of Wool.-adder*lauded his\niiurse a clever winner uy two leugihs.\nj-iaii a length separated the second and\n.third horses. Orby met with a mixed\nreception on returning to the scale. The\nvast majority of the crowd had lost\niuouey, in many cases large Hums, The\n.hundreds of Americans present, how-\n.ever, gave the ex-Tammany chief and\nills horse an ovation. The Irish, wno\nwere present iu thousands, gave Oruy\n_iud his owner a memorable greeting,\n.and Mr. Croker, usually a most reserved\nman, was unable to hide his excitement\nAt winning the victory and he rushed\nout to lead his horse In. He had to run\ntue gauntlet ot sulvos of cheering and\n.shouts of \"Old Ireland forever!\" as he\nreturned to the unsuddllng enclosure,\n\u25a0leading the winner.\nAside from the enormous prestige tt\nwinning the blue ribbon of the turf,\nMr. Croker has made a fortune today,\nin tbe first place the stakes of 6,600\n.sovereigns, or 932,600, Is no inconsiderable sum; then he had tbe opportunity\nof making any number of beta at about\n10 to 1, and finally the value of Orby\nbaa Increased to such an extent that\nAir. Croker may, If be ao desired, Bell\nRUSSIA   AND  JAPAN\nPinal Drafts of Commercial treaty completed and Submitted\nSt. Petersburg, June .-Tlio final drarts\nof tlie Hu-_o-J_.piine.se commercial trtaty\nhave been completed and sent to Toklo\nfor  approval.\nTlie treaty, which Ike the Por smouth\nconvention, Ih dr^ftc-I In French and Bng-\nlinh, win remain In force fer five years,\naccording to (Uie Novoe Vreyma and is\nmore of a political than of an economical\ncharacter.\nThe protoco s covering the ncgottntlon-\nwlll be nviile public In tlie yellow book\nwhen the treaty 1_ signed. The ncgo.in-\nMona for another convention between Bus.\n-.'a and Japan are progressing slowly.\nSevern\" new obaUlcle-s havo arisen and It\ntroy be necessary for the Russian and\njapan commissions to go to Manohurta\nand to Tokio lu order to suttle the disputed ii-.s.Joii- on Uhe spot.\nCANADIAN MANUPCTUR.S\nVALUE OF PRODUCTS ARE ABOUT\nDOUBLED IN . IVE YBARS\nNELSON'S   CONTRIBUTION   SHOWS\nQUITE HEALTHY INCltEASE\n(Special tu The Daily Newa)\nOltiiwa, Julie 5.\u2014A bulletin Issued today by the census department r(,>ont.\ndominion manufactures, as shown by the\ngovernment's census of 191)1 and 1901}.\nDuring the live years the value of\nmanufactured yroducts have about\ndoubled, from 1181,1155,875 In mill to\n>il2,iiUI,s:if, In ltiiiii, an increase ol'\nIi-11,1111,Ml).\nThe Ugures for Britliih Columbia in\ntowns ol 1,500 'lunula, ion nml over for\ntne respective years are:\n1 .rule,!\u00ab:._; \u2666i,i)24.o?.i.\nKamloops, (5,800; $81,597.\nNanaimo, fUi.TK; (102,987.\nNelson, -11,005,840; |1,494,807.\nNew Westminster, (1,029,72a!; $1,105,-\n063.\nllevelstolce, (271,058; (778,002.\nRossland, (128,000; (68,500.\nVancouver,  $4,990,152;   $10,067,556.\nVictoria, (2,517,573; (2,339,270.\nTotal tor British Columbia, (19,447,-\n778; (38,013,516.\nThe principal manufacturing cities in\nrotation stand aa follows:\u2014M.muinl,\nToronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg, London,\nPeterboro, Quebec and Vancouver.\nNothing Is known here of the report\ncirculated from Montreal that Laurler\nintends returning a mouth sooner than\nwas expected. The report Is not credited.\nM_Y LOSE BIG INDUSTRY\nNEW ENGLAND PISH CO. WILL REMOVE TO BELLINGHA3.1\nNBW WESTMINSTER BOY SECURES\nRHODES SCHOLARSHIP\n(Special to The Dally News)\nVancouver, B. C, June 4. \u2014 Upon\nthe heels of the protest of the\nboard of trade against an extension ol\ntne bonding privileges to the New England Flsh cpmpauy, comes the announcement that an extension to the\nend of the year lias already been granted, At the same time,, also, it Is authoritatively stated that the company is\nconsidering moving the Industry to ilel-\n1 Ingham because of the incessant opposition of local parties. It Is stated that\na site Is already leased there and removal plans are now In progress. ThlB\nannouncement has aroused consternation, us the company forms one of the\nlargest Industries here. A movement Is\nnow on foot to Induce It to remain.\nT. T Larsen, of Toronto university,\nwhose home Is In New Westminster, has\nbeen chosen as the Rhodes scholar for\nthe year. The committee decided to\nrecommend professor Kerr, of Columbian college, but the nomination was\nturned down because he was beyond the\nage limit.\nTO MAKE) BI-TTEK RAILS\nNew York, June 5-Chnirmar. B. Hi Gray\nof the United States Steel cnrporntlon,\ntoday wild It was pro-bible that representative- of the leading railroads and\nsteel majtufflduring companies in this\ncountry soon would begin an exhaustive\nJoint elimination Into the nimtity of atcel\nrails now being furnished to the railroads.\n\"If It fs practicable to manufacture a better rat. thnn the one now in use our companies will make I',\" he mild.\nOI.LMt--.P-_. AGAINST J. P. MORGAN\nToledo, June 5\u2014A milt oppwing 'the confirmation of tho (Ml. of the Toledo railways and Terminal company, \u00abnd alleging\na consplrney to defraud by J. Ptcrponl\nMorgan and hta allies was filed in tlio\nUnited States circuit court h\u00abre today.\nWARDNER  FTRB\nWardner, June 3\u2014 Fire tonljht destroyed\ncompletely uhe Wardner hotel and Donahue'* store adjoining. Both buildings wen\nframe.  None of the contents were saved.\nSays He Lighted Fuse That Blew Up Bunker Hill Mine, Was Party\nto Blowing Up of Vindicator Mine and of Independence Station,\nThat He Killed Lyte Gregory and Plotted With Haywood and\nPettibone  Murder of  Governor   Peabody\u2014\"Was   Encouraged to Commit Outrages by Moyer, Haywood\nand   Pettibone  and   Paid by Them.\nIN WHICH HE IMPLICATES W. F. M. OFFICIALS\nBoise, Idaho, June 5.-\u2014Alfred Horsley,\nalias Harry Orchard, the actual assassin\nof former governor Steunenberg, went\non the stand today as u witness uguiusi\nWilliam D. Haywood and testified io u\nlong chain of brutal, revolting criin.s\ncommitted by himself, he said, at the\ninstigation of und lor tlie pay of the\nleaders of the Western Federation ot\nMiners. An undertaking by counsel for\nthe slate lhat Uicre would bc later proof\noffered in connection with this, to make\nhis testimony legitimate, opened >-he\nway like a floodgate Lo tbe whole dla-\nboiical story, and throughout the entire\nday Orchard went from the recital of\none crime io the recital of another, each\nsucceeding one seeming more diabolically horrible than the one preceding it.\nOrchard confessed that as a member\nof the mob which wrecked tihe Bunker\nHill and Sullivan mill, In the Coeur\nd'Alenes, he lighted one of the fuses\nthat carried fire to the giant powder explosion; confessed that he set the death\nnap iu the Vindicator mine at Cripple\nCreek which killed McCormlck and lore-\nmaii Heck; confessed thai because he\nhud not nccn paid for his llrst attempt\nat violence in the Vindicator mine he\nwas truach.ei._us to his associates in\nwarning tne managers of the Florence\nand Cripple Creek railway that there\nwas a plot to blow up their trains; confessed that he cruelly tired three\ncharges of buckshot inio the body ol\ndetective Lyte Gregory of Denver, killing 'hlra Instantly; cbnfessed that for\ndays he dogged governor Peabody of\nColorado about Denver for a chance 'o\nkul him; coutessed that he and Steve\nAdams set and discharged the mine under the station at Independence, which\nInstantly killed 14 men, and confessed\nthat in falling In an attempt to poison\nFred Bradley of San Francisco, he blew\nhim and his house up with a bomb of\ngelatine powder.\nHo haB more brutal crimes to tell of\nwhich will bring his bloody career\ndown to Caldwell, where, with a bomb,\nhe killed Steunenberg. This will come\ntomorrow, for he is to resume the stand\nwhen the court sits again. The story\ntoday was told before a rigid, anxious\ncrowd, which starlngiy watched every\nmovement and word of the witness, a\ncrowd that sickened aud grew weary\nof the fearful details long before James\nH. Hawley, pleading illness at 3 o'clock\nthis afternoon, obtained adjournment\nfor bhe day\nOrchard obtained control of himself\nalmost from the moment he took the\nstand, and if he suffered, he did not\nshow lt. His eyes were bloodshot and\nhis face mottled when he came into the\nroom to confront the man whose lire he\nJeopardizes. He was plainly nervousi\nHe quickly steadied himself, however,\nand was soon collected and talking in\nsoft, easy tones. His eyes met those of\nHaywood several times and they gazed\nfixedly at each other wiiihout flinching,\nOrchard's entry Into the court room,\nafter a dramatic pause, wns Inteuscly\ndramatic.\nSenator Borah, looking toward the\nbench, said in a quiet tone: \"It will\nbe a few moments before the next witness arrives.\"\nThe crowd knew Orchard was to come\nand watched the doors of the room. The\nprisoner-witness long confined In Uip\npenitentiary was to be produced, nay-\nwood's mother, Mrs. Carruthers, oi Salt\nLake City, and her daughter, sat beside\nthe prisoner and his wife, having arrived\nyesterday. The prisoner's daughters\nwere absent. Haywood hud a note book\nand at Intervals took notes of the proceedings. Horsley had spent the night\nand morning at the office of Mr. Hawley .and was brought to the court house\nIn a carriage with three armed guards.\nIn the clmmbcr- of the Judge he waa\nturned over to deputy sheriff Bearaer, who\nIk to be h!n _pec.il guard nt tho trial,\n\"Call Harry Orchard,\" cried the state's\nleading counsel, when the sheriff had sig-\nnailed tluit all waa ready. There were few\npreliminary queallon- an to Horsley'a\nt-irt .place und real ntnie nnd hJ_ ftrat daya\nln Idwlio, and tihen Mr. Hawley hfld him\nrelate hi. part in the destruction of the\nBunker Hill und Sullivan mill. He was\ntelling of the meeting Of the Burke, Ida.,\nunion of the Western Federation \u00bbf Miners, when the defense objppted on the\nground that the events occurred yeur.. before. Hajtwood waa a member of -.be o'-n-\ntral body of the Federatlnn and that ho\nWAS In no way connected with It.\nSenntor Borah contended that the sMe\nhad a right to sulimlt facts mbout the\nHunker Hill nnd SulllVAn, to provp why\nthe Federation became hofrttle to governor Steunenberg.\nJudge Wood ruled thai the general facta\nwere Admlatu.h1e but he Umlt.d the minor\ndetails of thle put ef tbe teetlmoivy.\nHont.'ey then told of the blowing up of\nthe property, in which he said W. K.\nl.RV-s. later president of the union of ihe\nFederall-ii at Cripple Creek, had ei.in-\nniatid of i*'n. mob. lie iia..att*il tin* seizure of the train, the theft of giant powder,\nthe at.aek on the mines, and in eoncUiilliiH\naald \"I IU one of the fuses inyse.!'.\" Hi r\u201e-\nley described the flight Into Montana und\ntlie various Journeys In the west unul he\nturned up ut Cripple Creek; where he went\nlo work In tilie mines ami rejoined the\nfcd-ral-bn. Rent-wed u'bjec 'ona by lhe defence were overruled by the court, on the\nsirenetli of the repeated promises hy the\nstate, thai it won d show the eoniiicilon\nof the defendant w.tli this event inter,\nThe witness then told of the plot io blow\nup the Vindicator mine. He cenfes. d t-iat\nafter the strike began ne. went into the\nmine \"high grading\" and there discovered\nu quantity of powder, lie reported ihiM\nto Davis and there, lie said, b.giin the\nplot to do violence lti the mine. He said\nthe flmt attempt was n failure because\nibe cage man dlsoovert-d him nnd his ac-\nConipllces,, but later a contrivance was\nsncee.ssfully fixed by which lhe discharge\nof a pistol sut off a bomb und ki red superintended! McCormlck und fireman\nBeck.. Five hundred dollnrs, lie -.aid. wnfl\nthe reward for the murder. Then came\nbhe journey to Denv.r. where the witness\nsaid he nn-t Moyer, Haywood nnd fetil-\nlionc and entered .heir employ as un assassin. He swore that Haywood pflld JOT\nfor blowing up the VlndlCiutor mine. Then\n(-line the milking of two bombs tliat were\nloaned into the coa> heap at the ^Indicator\nmine, but were -never heard from again,\nand then a confession \u25a0 ii.it lo.d of the suc-\ncewful attempt  at  the   \u25a0*. Ihd'-catdr mine.\nNext Horsley rented how he went to\nsouthern Colorado a_ a guard lo Moyer,\nnnd here the narrative which had been\nattacked by the defence at every avalHble\npoint, halted for reccM,\nWord Ohat Horsley was on the stand\nspread through the city and in the afternoon every available seat for the public\nwas taken.\nHorsley speat the noon recess under the\nguard at Haw-ley's office and after reee,.-.\n.vaa driven back to court to resume h]s\nstory. He recounted his journoy with\nMoyer and his return to Denver, where\nit waa suggested, he said, that fie kill\ngovernor Peabody of Colorado. He said\nhe chose Steve Adams to aid him and together they tracked the governor between\nthe capital and his home, seeking* to shoot\nhim down with shot guns. Haywood nnd\nPettlbone were ln the plot, he said, nnd\nfurnished money from time to time. The\nptot failed. Next came a plot to dynamite\nPealbody, Horsley said they 'hud made a\nbomb, but gave the plan up on the suggestion of Haywood, who feared they\nwould bo arrested.\n(Special  to The Dally News)\nBoise, Idaho, June 5.\u2014Harry Orchard,\nor Albert E. Horsley, as he gives his\nreal name, appeared in court today in\nthe Haywood trial and was questioned\ntwo hours In the morning und one and\na half hours in tbe afternoon. Before\nhe wus culled the state called some witnesses who identified certain hotel registers showing when Orchard uud Jack\nSlmpklns had visited Nam pa in the\nfall of 1905. Slmpklns' picture and\nhandwriting were introduced by C. H.\nWentz, of Wallace.' J. C. Connor, of\nSilver City, 'testified to Slmpklns stopping lu his hotel at that plnce In November of that year.\nA hush fell upon the court room when\nMr. Borah announced the main witness\nfor ihe state would be on hand In a\nfew minutes. All knew It was Orchard,\nwho .vas to appear, and all held their\nbreath. Presently Orchard came \u25a0 n\nthrough the judge's door. A six-fool\ndeputy sheriff preceded him and a penitentiary guard walked at Ills heels.\nThese took seats hack of liim'whej] ne\nhad mounted the witness stand.\nAfter he had taken the oath Orchard\nwas asked by Mr, Hawley where he resided.\nIt was several moments before Orchard could speak, and then ho stated, almost In a whisper, that he was held at\nthe penitentiary awaiting trial for the\nmurder of Frank Steunenberg.\n' That was the only hesitancy shown by\nOrchard during the day. He told his\nBtory quietly, with an air of confidence.\nor his antecedents he said:\u2014'i was\nbom in Northumberland, in Canada, in\n18fl. and am therefore 41 years old.\"\n\"Harry Orchard Is not my true name.\n1 have gone by that name for about 11\nyears. My true name Is Albert E. Horsley. . I came to the United States in\n1896. First to Spokane, where 1 remained a week. I went to Wallace,\nIdaho, In March or April, 1896. I flrst\nworked for Markel brothers driving a\nmilk wagon and remained there until\nabout Christmas, 1896. I then went Into\ntnt wood and ooal yard in Burke and\nwas engaged In that business until the\n9\nspring of 1898, on my own account for\ntwo years. In 1899 1 sold a half interest\nin the business to Mr. McAlplue, Finally I sold all of ray Interests In the wood\nbusiuess and went to work In the mines\nin March, 1889, I went to work at\nmucking and continued at it for a\nmonth. I became a member of the\nWestern Federation of Miners as soon\nas I went tu work in the mines.\"\nWhen Orchard was asked whether\nanything unusual occurred in the Coeur\nd'Alenes In 189!), Richardson, for the\ndefense, objected, saying: \"What occurred in 18SI9 can have nothing to do\nwith this defendant, who was not even\na member of the executive board of tlie\nWestern Federation of Miners until long\nafter these troubles.\"\nHawley said he Intended to connect\nthe Couer d'Alene troubles with the defendant.\n\"The court,\" said Judge Wood, \"can\nreadily see how this testimony may be\nmateria] aud will overrule lhe objection.\"\nAfter the objection had been overruled, Orchard told of the blowing up\no .the Bunker Hill mine, ou April 28,\n1S99.\nOrchard said:\u2014\"On the morning of\nApril 20, when I got through breakfast,\nIvWaa told there was a special meeting\nof the union and everybody was expected to be present. I went to the meeting.*\nMr. Richardson's objection was again\noverruled.\n\"The meeting was called to order,\"\ncontinued Orchard, \"by the secretary,\nwho said It had been decided that they\ngo to Wardner to blow up the mill at\nthe Sullivan ami Bunker Hill mines and\nto hang the superintendent,\"\nCourt took a recess at 11:30 until 1:30\np. m., with Orchard on the stand.\n\"Arrangements had been made to cut\nthe wires along the railroad and take\npossession of the train. At Uem we\nwere to be Joined by the Uem union and\ntogether we were to proceed to Wardner. While th. secretary was telling us\nwhat was planned by the central union,\nthe president of our local came in aud\nsaid he had not been Informed of the\nmeeting, When told the purpose he objected lo it and there was a discussion.\nThe motion to go tu Wardner was finally carried by a small majority. After\nthe vote nearly every man decided to\ngo. Paul Coiih.au and six other members of the union took charge of the\ntrain. We went to Gem and took 40\nboxes of giant powder. There were\nabout 1000 men ou the train, most of\nthem armed. At Wardner we were told\nby W. F. Davis to line up. The men\nwith long guns were told to take the\nfront ranks, followed by the men with\nsixshooters. We were told to Ure upon\nthe mill as we approached. This we did\naud the lire was returned by' the\nguards, It noon developed lhat there\nwere uo meu there and we took possession. Powder was placed about the\nmill and it was blown up. I lit one fuse.\n1 don't know who lit the others.\"\nOrchard said two men were killed.\nThe name of then governor Steunenberg\nhe said wus mentioned ut the meeting\nhe had described. Mr. Cochran said he\ndid not believe he would have any opposition from the governor; that ho\nhad always supported him and could\ncontrol him. \"He said to be careful\nabout interfering with the federal authorities,\" said Orchard. He went from\nBurke to Butte, and from that time until 11102 he worked at various points In\nMontana, Utah, Nevada, California and\nArizona. He went to Cripple Creek ill\n1902. He worked Iu the Vindicator mine\nat the time'of the strike, August 10,\n1903.\nQrchard said that at that time Moyer\nand Haywood were president and secretary respectively of tlie Western Federation of Miners. He was nol then acquainted with them. He said W. F. Davis, Charles Kennls and Sherman Parker were on the strike committee of the\nCripple Creek strike. Orchard said there\nwas trouble at the Vindicator shaft .1\nsuch a nature that the guide rail of th.\ncage would explode It. Orchard said\nhe talked with W. B. Easterly about\nthe matter and these two had tried somo\nexperiments with giant powder capB,\nwhich were highly satisfactory. Then,\nhe said, Parker offered him $500 to\nplace the bomb In the mine, which he\ndid. He thought lt had been placed on\nthe seventh level, but by mistake got it\non the sixth level. The contrivance did\nnot work until about a week later, at\nwhich time the mine superintendent,\nMcCormlck, and shift boss Beck were\nkilled. He said that Parker and Davis\nagreed to pay him some money the\nnext day, but ou the next day\/he sail,\nParker and Davis were arrested and\nOrchard did not see any of them for\nsome time later. Orchard later went\n.o Denver. Moyer gave him $20 and\nHaywood later asked him bow much he\nwanted when he got ready to go back\nto the Vindicator mine, and he told\nHaywood he wanted at least $300. He\nUd Haywood promised him that much\nfor blowing up the Vindicator mine, and\nthat be then returned to Cripple Creek\nunder Instructions from Haywood and\nMoyer to see what could be done toward\nblowing up some of the other mines.\nParker and Davis, Orchard said, told\nhim they were going to wreck a Florence and Cripple Creek train pear h\ncurve on the mountain where the tram\nwould plunge into a gulch several hundred feet below. Parker said something\nmust be done to scare and kill off the\n\"scabs,\" who were being taken to the\nmines and home again over this roal.\nOrchard said Davis told him that il\ntlie train was wrecked he thought some\nmoney would be forthcoming from Denver.\n\"I wanted money for what I had already done,\" continued Orchard. \"Parker told me that several of tho boys\nhad been doing little things and they\nall wanted money, but it was hard to\nget it because nothing big had beeu\npulled off. I decided to tell the rail\nroad people, because I wanted my\nmoney.\"\nAt tihe afternoon sessfun Orchard told of\nthe effort- to oh-hh. Itisitc- governor Peabody of Colorado.\nOrchard told of Moyer'a arrival al Du-\nrea. He aald he went back to Denver\nwhere he h-id a conference with Haywood\nand Petlttbone at the Federation'headquar-\nters. He told then of Moyor'd arrival.\nThoy wauled to know If there cou'd not\nbe some achenio worked up to nasneslnate\ngovernor Pelibody. Thoy gaid they could\nnol get any Justice In Lhe courts find decided they would take lhe Ifuw In thoir\nown hands,\n\"Who did the talking?\"\n\"Both Haywood aad Pettlbone.\" ans-\nwcrjfcl Orchard,\nThe witness wild: \"They told me where\nPeabody lived and told me to see tf I\ncould (jot acquainted with his ways, l\ndid ihat; I spent about a week watching\nbis movements ami ha_>itn. No one wns\nhelping me. I told Petlbono In his -tore\nla Denver, on 13th street, about six bocks\nfrom the Federation headquarters, ttvu 1\nwould need some berp. I told them, Haywood and Pottlbone, of the scheme I hud\nlo 'get' Peabody when ihe came home from\nhis off.ee and pawed a atone fence near\nhis residence. They told me Steve Adftma\nwould be the best man to .isais. me.\"\nOrchard and Adams continued on the\ngovernor's trail for about three weeks altogether. One night they saw a hack\nturn toward Pe&body's residence, and closed up on It with guns ready io sJioot him\nwhen he enme out ot the hack. Th.y were\nfoiled, three women got out of the hack.\nThey were afra'd to go back as the women had seen them.\nThey then decided to put a bon_b under\nIV;-body's sidewalk. Adams went to a\nsmall mining camp near B-tckfcot and\ngot 50 pounds of powder. This was in May,\n1904. Orchards said that the bomb Lo get\nPeabody waa constructed in Pettlbone'-\nStore and a place made rcdy for the\nbomb, but Haywood advised that no attempt to \"_ret\" Peabody In that munner\nbe made at that time, as the executive q(\nof Western Federation u-f Miners wns In\nsession.\nThe ease was dropped for th. time being\nand -hen he said felt-bone appn.ai.iied\nhim wiih a plan for kilting Lyte Gregory,\nwhom he (wut wns a detective In the employ of the mine owners' association,\nOrchard told how hlmBelf, PoiUbone ana\nAdams and several others wont to a saloon where Gregory and Jtcldrum wero\ndrinking. Just at darlf. \\h$ two caw.' from\nthe >viloon and Went Mlt0 \"\u25a0\"otiher. Orchard and (Vdaius followed them, but Pettlbone had left. They saw -hem through\na window playing cards. TJhey thought\nthey could aliool aim through the window,\nbut did not. When Gregory left the saloon, ihey followed him,\n\"As he went into an alley.\" Orchard aft\\d\ncalmly,   \"l   pulled up  the  gufl  OV-A \"hot\nhim three Limes.\"\n\u2022Did he die?\"\n\u25a0I killed blm dead\/' aald Orchard quietly. He then told at burying ihe gun and\ngoing hack to the federation headqunrtets\nwhere he said he was complimented by\nHaywood. Moyer and J. L. Slmpklns 8-\nhavlng done a \"good job.\" Orchard said\nbe was handyd J100 next day.\nAit the requeat of Haywood. HlmpKms\nand Moyer, Orchard wcni to Clippie Creek\nand participated in Uie flowing up of the\nIndependence station, whore f- or u were\nkilled. The powder was placed under a\nPlatform and the wire pulfed from a safe\nretreat, He gave the story in great detail,\n\"Who pulled the wire?\"\n\"Steve AiUms.\"\n\"What wns the effect of the expl ision?\"\n\"The depot was blown up and I:' or 14\nmen were killed,\" replied Orchard.\nThis was in 19W. Orchard, then wen.\nto Denver and got money from Haywood,\nHe and Neville went to Wyoming, but\nsubsequently returned to Denver and was\nsent to San Francisco to \"got\" Fred G.\nBrad ey, president of the Bunker Hill and\nSullivan Mining company.\nHo first put poison n the family milk.\nThen be prepared a bomb in his room\nacross the street from the Bradley home\nhe said he placed the bomb at the door\nand connected the string with the knob\nso that when the door waa opened the\ncork would be displaced nnd tihe explosion\nwould result.\n\"Then,\" aald Orchard, \"I got on a car\nand went dawn town.*'\nOrchard said Ihey know the results. Mr,\nBradley opened lhe door and  the explo-\nANOTHER\nDIVIDEND\nGranby'seventh Dividend\nBringing Total Paid\nup to $2,5.3,630\nShares N.w on Regular 8 Per Cert Divr\ndent) Basis, Plus Quarterly Dividend\nof 1 Per Cent, Making 12 p.c,\n(Special to The Dally News)\nPhoenix, June :>.\u2014.M yesterday's regular monthly meeting of the directors\nof the Granby Consolidated tylluing,\nSmelting ami Power company. Ltd., helrt\nat the New York office of the company,\na regular quarterly dividend of _ pet-\ncent and an extra dividend of 1 per\ncent was declared out of the net earn\nings of the company, payable June 29.\nTills io the seventh dividend of the\nGranby company and amounts, .like the\nlast .six declarations, to $405,000, making\na total of $_..-__._\u201e. in dividends thus declared by the company. The shares are now on a regular 8 per i-eui dividend paying basis,\nwith extra dividends recently of 1 per\ncent quarterly, which brings it to 12\nper cent per annum. Granby dividends.\nand the dates thereof\nbeen as follows: \u2014\nNo. 1\u2014December, 100;!\nNo. 'I\u2014January. IDilG .\nNo. 3\u2014May, lyoti \t\nNo. 4\u2014September, 19(10\nSo. 5\u2014December, 1-J0U\nNo. 6\u2014Marcli, 1907 ...\nNo. 7\u2014June, 1907  ....\nthe past, have\n5\n133,030\n405,000\n405,000\n405,000\n405,000\n40-,0_!>\n40_,0U.>\nTotal to dale\n..$_.5ti_,__l.\nRUN NORTJUND SOUTH\nSURVEY ROUTE TO CONNECT G.T.P.\nAND C.P.R.\nTHE -UIDUOUS TH_P OF SURVEYOR\nSAUNDERS\" PARTY\n. Edmdnton, June 5.\u2014Captain R. I.\nSaunders, surveyor, hus retumeij from a\nlive weeks' trip in the Rockies, Tho\ncaptain antl party of _J__ men left lu-\nnisfall  for lhe  Rocky   Mountain  liuuse,\ntaking provlslona ami ten pack horses.\nOnly four of Uie party have ua yet returned. They left the others at th*.\nRocky Mouiiiain hous,* In boat on riai-\nurtlay lo come down the river and\nshould have arrived in Edmonton on\nMonday, bul notbiug bas been heard of\nthem, and captain Saunders Is very\nanixous. The men are two days overdue iuuv, and mile- '.hey arrive withlf-\nUlUUtie\nj.o in _\ni da\nin Saunders will\nof th.\nRocky Mountain I\nlouse, where are tin*\nremains of au old\nHudson's bay post.\nis 200 tulles up the\nSaskatchewan.\nThe purpose of ca\nplain Saunders' trip\nwns to ascertain th\n\u25a0 feasibility of coi_-\nstrucilng a railway\nvunniug north ami\nsouth between the t\nIraiid Trunk Pacific\nand the main line o\ni the C.P.R.   \"1 au\nnow not a', liberty\nto say who is pro-\nJecting the road,\" _.\nid the capiaiu, ''but\n1 ihuik there is no\nquestion as to Hie\npvactlcability of con\nat meting it.\"\nThe proposed rail\nway will tm on the\neast side of   the   i\nuoiintains.  Captain\nSaunders' party ran\nshort of provisions\na week ago last Prl\nday uud were com-\npii].-l io go on shoi\n\u2022i rations,   pov two\ndays before reach!n\ng   here   they   had\nnothing io eat.   Th\n\u25a0 party found great\ndifficulty  iu getting\nthrough the _oun-\ntry.   Fallen uud bit\ni-ned limbers iu the\ndisti.lc; around Bra\n-t*au river was al-\nmost Impassible,   li\ntook eight day\u00bb to\nmake Rocky Mounta\nin house.\nVAS1C  STI.irK!-:.\n.   MtSStONAHlKS\nNew   York,  .line    .\n-Thi   American mfs-\n..l-imri.s arc  belfevod\n;.. 1- nmor* thoso\nmentioned   in   u   up\ncfnl   di -p itch   rron.\nHongkong to [.nnd.  i\n.-.. freeing from the.\nr-ikimi dint Hid  or  i\n\",'m   i.i   Hongkong.\nfor protection from n\ninba of Ohlnc-e.\nNeither the Meiiindl\ni\u00ab nor Presbyti plans\nhave   mission*   In   thi\ni    section  of China.\nMr,   Polkird,   who w\n.   reported to haver\nheen mere >.*\u25a0.)>  beat\nn and seriously In-\njured by the Chine.*,\nmissionary headqitar i\nIs uot known at tho\nBI9FORE   MININ'\n;   COMMISSION\nly\nInst\ncad of\nmonth!\ny poyi\nneat\nSlOl\ni,  1\nio said,\nblew\nout   Ih\nB fn\nmt of\nthe\nhoi\n180\nand  pv\nOefpltal\ned   Br.\nidle]\n.'   Into\nthe\nsin\n\u25a0el.\nOreh*.\nrd ml\nil  he\nwait\ned around\nBar\ni Pi\n\u25a0ancl. co\nfor a i\nnuple i\n}f w\n('elm, w\nalt-\nIng\nfo\nr rrtoVie\ny  from\nthe i\niftloi\n-.a of\nthe*\nWe\nst.\\\n'11   Fed.\nration\nof Ml\n'ieis.\nli\nlaid\nbe\nfllli\nilly  rec\nalved d\nbout 9\n160.\n-_-_-\u2014\n\u2014\nW.*!.. ,,M '\"\u25a0| l|ii I\nHffWffWfBW\n \u2014oxrn\n.\u2014\"\u2022\n._5___-_____-'\n_\u00ab___________-*_\u00ab__\nana natiuli\naataoa,\nB, -.* _i_._i_-0-.??l -tU*K tf   IftDT\nI Prospectors', Lumbermen's, Miners'\n|        and all Canipers' Supplies\nJ TENTS In all .lie. and weight,.\nBUBBERB Ud OIL SKIN CLOT-INS.\nI\u00ab OVERALLS  Ud   JUMPER-.\n%\u2022 UNDERWEAR at all price. .\nHUDSON'S BAY BLANKETS Ud CAN-\nOV ____!_\u2022 and  JUMPER..\nBOX, MITTS, etc., otc.\nGROCERIES  AND   PROVISIONS.\nHAT, FLOUR ud FEUD, w\nla all tow, Un\u00ab \u25a0\u00bb\u2022 ottxt Mcellut quality at yerr leaunable price-      \u00a3\n\u2014 s\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores S\nNELSON, B. C. |\n>\u2022\u2014\u2014\u2666\u2014\u00bb 9 9BB9BBBBBBBBBB9\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTO;\nCAPITAL. PAID UP  14,730,000  RUST K730.0O0\na B. WILK1B, PtMUe-L HON. ROBT. JAF FRAY, Vice-President.\nfriv'-^TMH,.-^-.\n\u2014U.\nBranohes in British Colu_____\nA1KOWHBAD, GOLDEN, NBLSON, RE VDLST-Kl,\nCRANBROOK, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDepositsreceivedaad 'ntereit allowed at highest current rate (rom date ot opening ot aeooant ant commanded Quarterly\nKelson Branch\n]. M. Lay, Manage\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\n\u25a0is-iltal .aid up, $10,000,000.\nHert S.,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  TORONTO.\n9. A WAI____, Prealdent ALEX. LAIRD, Qen'l. Manager.\nBBANCBBS .--O-QHO._ CANADA  AND IN\nIBE UN1IBD STATES AND BNOLAND\nAlienor*! Ban_l_f Bualaeaa tra Ma mad. Aooounta may bt opened aad caadaotae\nty mmll vita all t-iaohea et thla bank.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nDeposits of |1 and upwards received; Interest allowed at current rates and\npaid quarterly. The depositor ts subject to no delay whatever In the Withdrawal of the whole or any portion of the deposit.\nJ  L. BUCHAN, Manager,        NELSON BRANCH\nBANK of MONTREAL\n\u25a0BTABLISHBD 1117\nCAPITAL, ALL PAID UP.. .|H,4M,0OO   RUST  Ill.WI.OO.\nHBAD   OFFICE,   MONTR >*AL\nBt Ken. Lard Btrathcona and Mount Royal, Q. C. M. G.. Hon. Prealdeai\nHon. Sir George Drummond, K. C. M. Q\u201e President.\n;;\u2022\"\"_. S. Clouaton, Vice-President and Ueneral Manager.\nBRANCHES  IN   BRITISH  COLUMBIA\n\u00a3.-i_3trong, Enderby, Greenwood, Kelowna, Nelson, New Denver, Nicola, New\n**it-___er, Roasland, Summerland, Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria, Chllllwack.\nNelaon Branoh: L. B,  DeVeber, Mcniger\nWe Will Buy\nSUBJECT TO CONFIRMATION\n2000 Rambler Cariboo  f0.3r._\n3000 Alberta Coal (Free) 31 _\n5000 Sullivan 00\n500 Western Oil, com  1.75\nWe Will Sell\nSUBJECT TO CONFIRMATION\n100 B. C. Copper  J8.36\n60 Dominion Copper 5.85\n2000 International Coal 70\n400 Rocky Mtn. Oil   Bid\nB. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nMININO A INVESTMENT BROK'\u25a0\nPhone 110\nrHE DAILY NEWS\n. xti__*\u00bb- \u00abr \u2022*-!\u25a0-__ _Bv\u00ab7\n\u2022apt Monday, by\nr. j, dbasb\n_._K.HXlTION KATM\nL\\uly.  pat y\u00ab*r \u201e... *,*. _.\u2014.\u2014.\u2022!$.*>\nCvily.  par mvntk .,<-,\u00bb... ** -.  9\nM) _-,.o\u00ab-*_pti*_. v\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bbW.   i.  tutwvaoa\nvfi^M\nJUVENILE DELINQUENTS.\nThe address of F. C. Wade, K.C.,\nmade recimtly before Uie Children's Aid\nbu.iety of Vai._-.uver, tlealu forcibly\nwlib u atfbject that merit, greater and\nwlil. r uti-iitlou than It tiu._ heretofore\ni\u201ei.ei-..d In thla province.\nMr. Wade deals with facta that have\naiiue under his own observation In the\n_our\u201ee of his visits to the provincial reformatory and In his practice aB a law-\nj er. No one win. haa given any atten-\nrion ut ull to the important question of\nproper i n-ui;n> m of juvenile delinquent!\nwill demur for a moment ut the cot-dual.\".is drawn by Mr. Wade.\nBefore the close of tbe last session of\nparliament, the secretary of state, introduced in the senate a bill dealing\nwltb the subject, which it ls proposed\nto reintroduce next session and pass into\nlaw. The idea of giving it this -preliminary introduction was to permit of it_\nprovisions being discussed and passed\nupon by the public.\nWhilst there has been a lamentable\nlack of interest so far displayed ln this\nmatter in British Columbia, we believe\ntbat most people will welcome the proposed measure and do what they can to\nassist tn its effective enforcement.\nAs Mr. Wade points out, the proposed\nmeasure does not contemplate any experiment in legislation. What the hill\nprovides for ls already ln successful\noperation ln several states of the union\nand some of the big cities of Great\nBritain.\nHere In Nelson we have had some experience with juvenile delinquents. Vexatious as have been their offenses there\nIs no one ln the community who would\nhave approved of these youngsters being compelled to serve a term, short or\nlong, in the provincial jail. And yet\nsome measures must be taken to protect\n\u2022ociety against their depredations. The\nproposed juvenile delinquents measure\nwill provide the machinery and will, at\nFOR\nBALB\nJ. G. PROCTER.\nrr.\u00bbH\nBALE\n159 acres crown granted improved ranch, on Kootenay outlet; nice river\nfront.\n400 bearing trees; about seven acre 8 under cultivation and eight acres partially cleared. Log buildings and bay barn. Meadow cuts 20 tons timothy\nper year.\nPrice $4500,00\u2014on Terms\nT. G. PROCTER, Nelson, B. C.\nWest Arm Ranches for Sale\nWe have some of the finest locations on the We_t Arm of Kootenay\nI'll.., which we are selling at prices within the reach ot all, and cm terms\nthat afford an easy way of acquiring a flrat class ranch. We wll. sell you\na block of from 10 io 100 acres.\nCLAYTON & CLAYTON\nREAL ESTATE ,     FRUIT LANDS\nTYPEWRITERS\nAND GENERAL\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nFIRST, FOREMOST AND\nALL THE TIME\nWE ARE  STATIONERS\nAND\nOFFICE SUPPLIERS\nIt Is our special aim and effort to k\nall the various lines and articles require\nlookout for new things ol real merit, a\nour knowledge we lose no time ln add\nTYPEWRITERS. We are sole agen\nol value (taking price o[ other high-gr\nCARBON PAPER.  HlgheBt grade\nTYPEWRITER PAPER. In special\nvalue to be had anywhere.\nTYPEWRITER  RIBBONS.   All Stan\n910.00 a dozen.\nLETTER SCALES-SPRING, 8 OS.,\n(1.00, (5.50 and $9.00.\nAlso files at almost every desoriptl\nkets, etc., etc\neep our stock as complete as possible tn\nd in the office. We are always on the\nnd whenever such an article oome. to\ning It to our stock.\nta for the \"Empire\" Typewriter; $125.00\nade machines as a standard) for $60.00.\nmade, $3.75 a box.\nmanifolding paper we offer the blggc.t\ndard   high-grade   brands;   $1.00   each,\nV\n$1.50; 1 lb., $2.26.and up;  BALANCE,\nI\non, Inkstands, letter baskets, waste ba-\nW. G. THOMSON teWST1 taS2K\nthe same time, safeguard the youthful\noffenders from the contamination of the\ncommon jail.\nProvincial politicians may not recos-\nnlze the .net, hut a fact it nevertheless\nIs, lhat the destiny of the Dominion of\nCanada Ib not only the biggest thing\nin present-day British imperial politics,\nbut likely to become very nearly the\nlargest factor iu our own International\nrelations during future years, says the\nNew York Review of Reviews. \"Our\ntrade, diplomatic intercourse aud social\nund Bent-mental connections with our\nneighbor to the north have already an\nImportance which does not receive its\ndue consideration from American citizens generally. This Review has endeavored to set forth the importance of\nthese actualities and possibilities with\nour neighbor nation, Accordingly we\nhave secured from a number of representative Canadians some highly significant articles which appear in this\nnumber and to which we commend our\nreaders' special attention. Tbere are\nfew situations in the world today more\nfascinating or swiftly kaleidoscopic in\ntheir changes than the development\nof the Canadian west. John W. Dafoe,\neditor of the Manitoba Free Press, of\nWinnipeg, who writes our article,\n\"Western Canada: Us Resources and\nPossibilities,\" knows the situation perfectly. Whether there Is a menace or\na promise for the future of our grain\nfields and the products of our middle\nand far west In the proposed scheme for\na Hudson bay route to Europe, Review\nof Reviews readers will find Miss Laut's\narticle on that subject of help and in-\ntrest. Canadian-American trade Intercourse and the mineral resources of the\ndominion are other topics treated In\ncontributed articles this month.\"\nThe article on the mineral resources\nof Canada Is illustrated by a cut of\nNelBon, showing the smelter, and an\ninterior view of that institution.\nTit!. CANADIAN HORTICUUTUBIST\nTh_ June number of the Canadian Horticulturist Ib repl-t_ with ciir__ully prepared ar-lcles for fruit growers In all\nparte of Can\/ida. Among the topics din-\ncussed are: \"Thinning fruits on trees\";\n\"Orchard Tt;iag.\"; \"Ripe Strawberries\nand how to handle them\"; \"the Currant\nand'Currnnt Peats\"; and \"Improving and\norlglnntlng varieties of app;e_.\" Letters\nare publlsned an fruit topics from special\ncor respondent In the vaj-loi>\u00ab provinces.\nA strong feature of the Issue are fruit\ncrop predictions based on tha bloom this\nspring. Many other articles and Items' ot\ninterest to fruit growers are contained in\nUb columnB.\nThe aectlon for vegetable gardeners Is or\nMINARD'S LINIMENT CO., Ltd.,\nQents \u2014 [ have nstd your .MINARD'S\nLINIMENT In iny family and also In\nmy s.ab.es for year- nnd consider it tho\nbest   medleln-   obtainable.     Yours   truly,\nALFRED IlOCUAV,\nProprietor  Roxton   Pond  Hotel  and   Livery Stablos,\nmuch value. L contulns articles on\nTraru-pianilnK Tomatoes; Growing Cauliflowers; the culture of Ce..rj*; and the\ncultivating or majrkei gardens. Vege-\ntn->li! crop ri-poi'lH from regular correspon\ndents are putilislied.\nPor nmaicnr flower growers lhere la\nmuch pni-tlcvil Info:-ma tion. Including articles  entitled: Co or  schemes  for  formn?\nA KOOT. NAY\nFruit Rai\\cl]\nLocnted (it Dog creek, 18 miles west of\nRobson, situ-ited on n point of laud thai\njui. ont into the Arrow hikes giving a\nmaghltloent view looking up and down thr\nlake. Ii consists of 10 1-2 acres of ih-\nflnest fruit soil in the Kootenays, th>.\nground Ib level, 6 acreB cleared and fenced, the balance of clearing being very\nlight. There Is not an inch of wftste soli;\n50 fruit trees, five yenrs old, apples, cherries and peaches; 350 Mcintosh Red and\n50 Wealthy apple trees, three years old.\nA quantity of strawberrl-B, gooseberrl-B,\nraspberries, rhubarb and currants. Buildings, dwelNng 3 rooms with glass green\nhouse on south side; log barn 14x30, chicken house 12x18, glass front. This ranch\nwill  be a money maker from  the start.\nPrice 12000; terms one-third cash, balance ln one and two years.\nTOYE & CO.\nPRUIT LAND, REALE8TAT.\nBaker St. Nelson, B. C.\nHalcyon JEM Springs\nAn ideal place to speqd your holidays\nWe Will Sell       We Will Buy\n_o Spj__\u00abs M. Co t .10\nIM B. C. Copper    tM\n5 Can Con. S. and M 180.1-\n1000 B. C. Amal.-miiti-.  <\n1000 International  .( .60\n1000 B. and L. Coal  67\nMOO Sullivan  8\n1000 Alberta Coal  \u201e_\n1000 tumbler ,_\nMcDERMD & McHARD\\\nga.d.fi.; Gm.n.g filled efops at hofltei\nLawn and Garden hints for June: the\nMlxtiil Wowtr EJord.r; Mowing the Lawn;\nBedding I'liint-; .tone IVsts; the Culture\nnf GludlOll, and Hardy trees and shrubs.\nAn article of piirtlcular Interest to ladles\ncomprises recipes for cooking and preserving rhubarb nnd Btrawberrles.\nAmong the we.*, itnow writers who cou-\ntr'lbilte ur.le.los are E. D. Smith, M.P..\nWinona, Out.; W. T. Guioiin, cxp.rinieiUal\nfarm, Ottawa; 11. S. Picket, Ciiamp:iign,\n111.; Augustus Dupuls, director Quebec\nfrlut experimental station.; Rev. Father\nBurke, Alberton, P.E.I.; G. H. Gordon,\nVernon, B.C.; P. F. Reeves. Humber Bny,\nOut.; \\V. J. Wiltshire, Montreal; H. 11.\nGioff, Simcoe; Wm. Hunt, Ontorla agricultural college, Guefph, _ind Miss L, F.\nShuttleworth.   Toronto.\nSince the -subscription price of the Canadian Horticulturist was reduced last full\nfrom $1 to GO cents a year, Its circulation\nhas greatly Increased. Sample copies can\nbe secured by writing to the Canadian\nHortlcu-turl.t, Room 55, Manning Cluim-\nber_,  Toronto.\nSUTHKRLAND-FARRKLL\nArchdeacon Beer's Nelce Married to a\nWinnipeg Man\nOttawa, June 5\u2014The charming home of\nB, 11. Ma h-wman, at Itockllffe park was\nthe scene of a pretty house wedding today when Miss Hilda Blanche Farre 1,\ndaughter of the late W, Farrell. and a\n\u25a0iiece of Ven. Archdeftcon Beer of Koote\nnay, B.C., became the bride of Jnm._\nForsyth Sutherland of Winnipeg, son of\nMr, J: Sutherland of Ottawa. Lieu.. Sutherland of Winnipeg, a brother, was the\nbt-st man. Owing to a recent bereavement\nonly hnmecl-ttte relat-llvea attended the\nceremony. Rev. Canon Follard officiated.\nTlio bridal pnir left at noon for the coast.\nAfter the wedding tour they will return\nto Winnipeg to reside.\nDUTHRIB SUCCEEDS STORK\nCoal Company's office Staff Present J. B.\nTurncy  With  Purse\n(Speclnl  to  The Dally News)\nFernle, June 5\u2014The election to fill the\nvacancy In tlie city council' created by the\nresignation of alderman Fred Stork resulted In the election of Robert Duth.o hy a\nmajority of five over his opponent, R. B.\nC. Hammond, the vote polled being Hammond, so; Dtithle, 96,\nj. B. Turney. assistant purchasing agont\nfor the coal company, who ls leaving Tor\nColorado to he nitirrhd, waB the recipient\nof a purse of gold from his fellow employees, the presentation being made by\nQ. Q. S.' Llnd_cy, the genera, manager.\nIn the presence of the office staff, among\nwhom Mr. Turney ts very popular,\nCOLIC AND DIABRHOEA\nPains In the stomach, colic and dlnrrhoen\nire quickly relieved iiy the use of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea\nRemedy. For sale by all druggists and\ndealers.\n\u25a0r\\skfor Wmi-fi and *tki no *tt\\ir\nNOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the regular\nannual shareholders' meeting of the\nLucky Boy Mining and Development Co.\nLtd., of Erie, B.C., wiM be held at tlie\nCompany's office In Erie o nthe 27th dny\nof May. 1907, at the hour of 7 p.m. for the\npurpose of electing directors for the ensuing year and such Other business us\nmay oome before  the  meeting.\nS. L. MEYERS, President.\nMarch  37,   1007.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the Canadian Pacific Rairway Company, as le-tee\nof ihe British Columbia Southern railway,\nlias this day deposited In i'he D strict\nLand Registry office at Nelson, in the\nProvince of British Columbia a plan, profile and book of reference showing the\nproposed spur to the A. B. Watts sawml I.\n..it-lie on the Bhore of the west a\u00bbm ot\nKootenny lake and di.tant abmt _0 mile,\neast of Nelson, In the Province of British\nColumbia, nnd that 3D days after datt\nthe said Canadian Pacific railway Company Intends to apply to the Board oi\nRailway Commhwlonora for Canada To.\napproval of the said spur lu acconl.net\nwith the provisions of eSctlon 17.'. of the\nRailway Act, 1908.\nDated   at  Vancouver,   this   18th   day  ol\nApril, 1901.\nR. MARPOT.E,\nGeneral Executive Assi.-.tant.\nNOTICE [s hereby given that the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, as leasee\nof .he British Columbia Southern railway,\nhas this day deposited In th. District\nLand Registry office at Nelson, In tht\nProvince of British Columbia a plan, profile and book of reference showing the\nproposed spur lo the Canada Zinc Company's works, situate on the shore of the\nwest arm of Kootenny lake, near the City\nof Nelson. In lhe Province of British Columbia, and .hat 30 days after tbe date\nhereof the e-.lA Canadian Pacific Railway\nCompany Intends to apply to tbe Board\nof Railway Commissioner., for Canada -for\napproval uf the ..,.:._ ..pur, in u-.-idanct\nwith the provisions of Section 175, of th.\nRailway Act, 1903.\nDated  at   Vancouver,  this 18th  day ol\nApril, 1907.\nR. MARPOLE,\nGeneral Executive Assistant\nNOTICE is hereby given that three months\nafter  date  app icatlon  will be made  to\nlhe   Lieutenant-Governor   In   Council,   by\nthe  \"Yale-Kootenay  lee, Fruit, Fuel and\nPoultry Company, Limited\" to change the\nname of tho Company to  the  \"Kootenay\nIce  and   Puel  Company, Limited,\"\nDated this 10th day of April, A.D., 1907.\nARCHIE  MAINWARING-JOH'NHON,\nSolicitor  for   Ihe  Comr.ny,   Nelson,  B.C.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nThe  Exe.   Ell  and  Eye  Fmctlon  mineral\nClaims; situate In  the Slccan Division\nof West Kootenny District\u2014Lcoated *\u00bb\nRobinson creek.\nTAKE   NOTICE   lhat  I,  J.   Murray  Mc\nGregor,    Free   Miner's   Certificate   No.\nHlfilfi,   Intend,  sixty  days  from the datt\nhereof to apply to the Mining Recordci\nfor Certificates of Improvement! for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of tbe\nabove claims.\nAnd further lake notice, that action\nunder section 87, must be commenced before the issuance of such CertlflcatM ol\nImprovements.\nDated this tad day of April. 1107.\n9* it a*. NoGUtXlOft. *\n'^__iti.__. ?L-s_Sl!l)fa_-lt_l---^ -'-\u25a0-: - \u2022- -V\"'- -~^i\u00a3_ti\niiif';V,'\"f-tfii^i-iiViiiiiiV_\n\"^ _pi i\"''' \"7i i \u25a0 \"_iT': __\u25a0_\u25a0__-_\u2022\nCUT GLASS\nWe havu    just  received a consignment of Cut Glass.\nEverything up-to-date.     Prices low.   Give us a call.\n'Phone 33.,\nJ. J. WALKER\nJeweller and Optician, Baker St.\nBox 157\n 1 .  \u25a0=------=\nBelow ls given tihe results of anal ysls of GRIFFIN'S BLOOD AND BONB\nF_RTI_I__R as found by Prof. Fran. T. Sliutt, c.emlst for the dominion Experimental farm, Ottawa: .\nAnalysis of \"Blood and Bone\"\nMoisture   4,19\nTotal mineral matter, chiefly bone 37.60\nMineral matter, Insolube in acid, sand, etc 1.50\nNitrogen  5.11\nPhosphoric Acid, equivalent to 31.5 per cent bone 14.46\n\"On consulting the Fertilizer Bulle tin issued by the Inland Revenu Department, this fertilizer will be seen to compare quite favorably with others ot\na similar nature sold on the Gauadlan market.\n\"(Signed)  FRANK T. SHUTT, Chemist.\"\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN &CO.\nFront Sf. Nelson, B. C. 'Phone 129\nSTEEL RAILS       ORE SACKS\nWIRE ROPE\nALWAiS IN 8TOOK\nC. F.JACKSON & CO., Ltd.,Vancouver\nx Improved  Fruit  Lands\nR FOR SALE\nA The Yale-Kootenay lee. Fruit and Fu.l company have decided to'stll\nX th-Ir vn'uable fruit ranch, M rror lake,  Knslo. The  property Is one at\nV the finest on the lake, and has been surveyed Into 10 and 15 acre Iota,\nM each having lake  frontage,  and some  having  .-year  old treea  In  full\n'*\u00a3 hearing.   Full particulars at the company's office, Corner Baker and\n-ft) Waid Sta.  Nelion. B. -J.        \u201e^\n\u2022fo ..*>\u25a0;\u00bb; gKsggoggogggooggg^\nI LAUNCH   SUPPLIES      ]\nJ Spark Plugs, Spark Coils, Paranlte Cable, Edison Primary     a\n\"2 Batteries. Ever-Ready Dry Batteries.   Agent for the Montslnger     {\nj Auto Sparker.   Renewals always in stock for type Q and B.B.\nBatteries\nJ. H. Rl_.C_.OSE\nELECTRICAL, SUPPLIES NBLSON, B.C.\nkk_<)\u00ab<;k-<k..:0<}\u00bb_kk;\u00abcxxkks0-KhS\nW. G. GILLETT\nOONTRAOTOR AND BUILDER\n\u2022OLD AO-DNT POR 'IVB PORTO  RICO LUMBER 00., Ltd., tUdt\\% tarda\nRough and dresaed lumber, turned work and bracket!. Coast lath and\n\u25a0hlnglei, sa_ih and doom.  Cement, brick and  lime for aale.  Automatic\ngrinder.  Tard and Factory Vernon street, eaat of Baa\nP. O. Box a. Telepbon*, 171. N\u00ablwa, B. &\nTHE CURED MEATS\nwe handle are of the hest.   They are lean, thoroughly smoked and cured\nCanadian goods, put up in clean firm sacks, eaoh weighing about 100 lbs,\ni JUST THE THING POR THE HI LLS\nMedium Hams Heavy Hams, Wide Bacon and Dry Salt Bacon.   Pure lard,\nAll Sizes\nP. BURNS & CO,Limited\nNELSON,\ntim-mta\u2014tmiimvm\nKASLO,     ROSSLAND and   BOUNDARY.\na\u00bbmi tawmmmmmmmnAMmmwMtMMTaw\nROUGH   LUMBER  DRBSSBD\nDoom, Window*, Mouldings, Bhinglw, Turned Work and Bracket*.\n\u00bbta flat* *iook always on hand.  Mall orders promptly att*nd*d M.\nA. G LAMBERT & CO.\nLAWN\nMOWERS\nIf you requite a LAWN MOW-.R this\nseason we would like to sell you a\nWOODYATT\nMore of these sold in Canada than any other\nWood-Vallanoa Hardwwi Ot., Ltd.\n J\n?flD\n*___\u00a3_\nJUVilU Jil-JOUENTS\nAD-MS. ii? I. 0. WADE BBFORB\nCHI-MIEN'S  AID   SOCIETY\n(__jj_tlC'\u2122'^.\u2014T.-'*'i\"5!T_t^^ -SM MB-BaS\nlti* niiiif nM.fi MO-kOi \u00bb> 0... ftfUmftiuir- mmi \u00ab\u25a0 isu?\t\n*>^.-^.vi_**_--m-_*jg-*_^ ___t__ii_Xr_Tfm\niyn_f-_Tft._i i\u2014iriHTJB\"h\nENDOR313MBNT OP PROPOSED DOMINION LEGISLATION\nSome time ago The Dally News referred to the annual report of the Chll-\nttreu's Aid So-l%ty or Vancouver, commenting upon the excellent work done\nhy thai institution. At the annual\nnit-.tihg nn interesting address was\ngiven by P, C. Wade, K.C, on the subject .of juvenile delinquents' aud the\nneed tor reform in the treatment of\nthese youthful offenders. His remarks\nwure timely und will be read with interest by all those who have followed\nthe dominion government's scheme for\ntne establishment of special courts for\nHie treatment of juvenile delinquent.,\n'i he Dally News published In extenso, a\nmil- while buck, the text of the bill\nthnt Ib to be Introduced at the next se\u201e-\n-uori o_ parliament.\nF. C. Wade, K.C, said:\u2014As sir Chas.\nTupper has said, tbls subject Ib rather\nu large one. In Its discussion we are\naided by the extracts read by air Charl\u00abs\nas well ns his opening remarks and\nalso by the n-ticeablc change of opinion\nlu the world the last two or three years\nIn regard to juvenile crime. We are nn\nthe verge of such Improvements iu the\ntreatment of the child delinquent as\nwe have neve. Witnessed before. It has\nbeen said the 2i)th century la going to\nbe tho children's century, because it\nwill be the flrst century in which we\nhave thoroughly understood the child's\ncharacter. Up to the 'present time, If a\nchild dues wrong he Is seb_ed by an of-\nflcer, hurried nway to the police station nnd put Into a cell with all kind-.\not repulsive crlmluats, a heavy door Is\nlocked on him and there the little fol*\nlow ls left, perhaps to cry his eyes out\nmid In some cases all this suffering is\nbrought upon him by some tittle act\nof mischief, some little excess In animal spirits, some little mistake. He is\ntaken away from bis family. His parents are allowed to oome and see him\nunder serious safeguards. After he has\nspent a night In the cells among criminals of all classes, listening, perhaps,\nto the discussion of crimes of the most\nrepulsive nature, he ls ushered in be*\nfore the magistrate and required to\nstand up while the terrible charges of\nthe law are launched against him tn\ntiie shape of a charge or Indictment to\nwhich be Is required to plead.\nThe criminal code prescribes certain\npunishments which must inevitably fol\nlow (in hts being tried and found guilty.\nTh. n it. depends on the good disposition\nof tbe magistrate what may follow. In\nthe treatment of children most unngli.-\ntrates find themselves almost helpless,\nWe have some judges-ifbr Instance the\ncelebrated judge Lindsay, of Colorado,\nwhose name bas become almost a\nhousehold word\u2014who know how to\ntreat children; but these are not to be\nfound everywhere, As an ordinary\nthing there Is no guarantee that the\nchild will not come before a man entirely out of sympathy with child character, who sees on the one side the\ncrime only and on the other side th\"\npunishment prescribed by the criminal\ncode.\nWhat is the position ln this province?\nWe have in the reformatory some 34\nhoys: I have been over to se*\nthose boys. They are, wtth some possible exceptions, as good looking a lot of\nbuys us you wlil find anywhere in Vau-\ncouver, Of these 34 boys nearly all\nof them bave been committed for petty\nthefts. Some nine have been committed for being Incorrigible. What \"incorrigible\" Ib tn lact or at law Is pretty\nhard to tell. A magistrate sentences a\nboy for being Incorrigible because a\nfui her or mother, or perhaps stepmother, has heen unable to manage that\nboy nnd make a good boy of him\u2014that\nls the tale told In court. But what '*\nthe tale not told; It Is often that the\nfather Is a drunkard, or tbe mother a\ndrunkard, and far more at fault than\ntiie poor boy has been at any stage of\nhis career; In fact he may be more\nsinned against than sinning. But the\nonly person to suffer is the boy. In our\nreformatory we have today a hoy ot\n10 years old, sentenced to five years'\nimprisonment for being Incorrigible; au-\nother three years for being incorrigible; another nine, with indefinite sentence lor being incorrigible\u2014a nebulous condition which cannot well be defined. All the other boys In the reformat ;iry are there for petty thefts, with\nthe exception of one, who was given\nihe terrible sentence of five years for\nindecency at the age of U years. At\nthat age a boy Is scarcely capable .if\nunderstanding what Indecency ts or that\nil is very terrible, or should entail Imprisonment at all. What is the treatment ln tlie reformatory here? I am\ndiscussing not only the treatment at\nthe trials, but after they are tried. The\nsuperintendent of the reformatory fs\nas kind a man as one could wish; we\nhave nothing but the greatest approvil\ntu express in regard for Mr. Donaldson-\nit is the system we condemn, and the\nsystem as applied here Is more open to\ncondemnation than lt is elsewhere. Onlr\nrecently a magistrate sentenced two\nboys to tbe reformatory, i.j.lng tti.m\nCtiflt tbey would have a chance to learn\n8oo(1 trades and come out useful trades-\nin_n. able to make a living. 1 met the\nmagistrate afterwards and asked him\nwhat tr in ics ihey would be taught. He\nsiiid he supposed carpentry or some\nsimilar traae, I asked him if he had\never vtslt.d the reformatory, and lie ad-\n.iiil.ioil he never had. Tnen I told htm,\nto bin great surprise, that there never\nhud been a trado taught in the British\nCplusi-bia reformatory. IJor years we\nhuve been taking children from their\nsurroundings, away from their mothers\naud father., and homes, away from circumstances In wliich they may learn to\nwork, and, under tho pretence of teaching them to work, we have placed them\nin ti plnce where they aro debarred from\nlearning to work. That Is absolutely\nwrong, anil noi done In any other part\nof tho .cfvluH-d world that I am acquainted with. Not only are tbe boys\ni. t ipu-jnt any trade, but their ordinary\nschooling lasts but two hours a day.\nDuring lki_\u00bbB. ot tiu \\mi fc&*> kit-iH'' bw\\u* of rtouno. ~& a taatt*. ot\nfact they wero to Nome extent using Mm\ntogether. Take 25 or HO boys, and put\namong them half a dozen of vicious\ncharacter, nnd of impure minds, and\nsee the result\nThe aim of the Children's Aid society\nIs the protection of children. The object of this society Is to take children\naway from persons who are neglecting\nthem and cause them to be adopted by\nproper persons. A year ago I had the\npleasure of addressing your meeting,\nand I then said that the establishment\nof juvenile courts Is one of the steps to\nbe taken, and another step ls the closing up of the reformatory for good and\nall in the province of British Columbia,\nas they have closed it in the'province\nof Ontario. The reason for bringing\nup this question again tonight Is that,\ntne subject is now before parliament. I\nhave before me the draft of the bill.\nSir Charles Tupper has alteady outlined a good many of the features entirely covered by the bill, because the\nlegislation referred to in this book on\ncomparative legislation Is entirely along\nthe same lines aB the legislation now\nbeing introduced at Ottawa. The preamble of the act ts Interesting. It simply sets out all the theories on which\nthe modern treatment of children !s\nfounded. It says: \"Whereas it is inexpedient that youthful offenders should\nbe classed or dealt wtth as ordinary\ncriminals, the welfare of the community demanding that they should, on\nthe contrary, be guarded against association with crime and criminals, and\nshould be subjected to such wise care,\ntreatment and control as will tend to\noheck their evil tendencies and to\nstrengthen their better instincts.\" With\nthat introduction it is proposed to enact\nthis bill providing for delinquent courts\nthroughout the Dominion of Canada.\"\nThe first requirement in dealing with\nchild delinquents is to understand the\nchild. The second is to treat ulm with\nkindness rather than severity. A Judge\nof a Juvenile court should be equal to\nthe task. Judge Lindsay may be taken\nas a type of what a Judge ought to be.\nHis theory Is that when a boy does\nwrong it is the duty of the law not to\nfloor him with the mailed fist of the\nlaw, to try him and Jail him\u2014thrust\nhim into a reformatory or Jail und make\na criminal of him, and put the mark of\ntbe criminal on him for the rest of his\nlife, simply because he stepped aside\nfrom the path. Lindsay's Ideu Is the\nvery opposite. A boy should always be\ntreated aB mucn as passible as he would\nbe treated b ya good mother. When he\nmakes his flrst step from the path of\nright, instead of putting him in jail\nand making him consort with criminals, the proper thing is to discuss with\nthe boy the crime\u2014ar rather the delinquency\u2014which he has committed, to\n.how where wrong-doing |cads to suffering, and show him how* to do right\nand to put his feet back on the path,\nand give him a fresh start, without\nweakening hts will or sullying his character, which the administration of the\nlaw does today with such serious and\nfata! results to boys' characters. When\na boy goes to Lindsay's court, instead\nof being solemnly arraigned and asked\n'to plead to some of the grim formulas\nof the law, it is Lindsay's liabit tu put\nhis arm round the boy's shoulders and\nspeak encouragingly to him. ln tbat\nway he commands tbe confidence of all\nthe boys within his Jurisdiction or influence, with the result that where he\nlives juvenile delinquency has almost\ndisappeared, the boys swear by him and\nwilt combine and form associations to\nget other boys to do right. Tbls ia Lindsay's method. I simply hold him out\nas a type of Juvenil,; court judge before\nwhom the boy is taken .of his first offence,\nThis act was drafted by Mr. W. L.\nScott, president of the Children's Aid\nSociety of Ontario, and Is being press-al\nby Mr. J. J. Kelso, the superintendent\nunder the Children's Protective Act ol\nOntario.\nEvery provision Is framed on M.\ntheory that kindness rather than harshness ls tbe best reforming Influence.\nThe flrst provision is that the charge\nBhall not be In writing, so that nothing\nwill be on record. The next thing ls\nthat nothing shall be Ui-.n down in\nwriting with regard to the evidence. It\nalso provides\u2014to put It as much as possible on the basis of a domestic tribunal\u2014that no oath shall be taken 'n\nenquiring Into the delinquency the boy\nhas committed. If the boy ls to be detained for the purpose of enquiring Into\nhis case he must not bc placed in a jail\nor lockup. Similarly, after a child \u25a0_\ncommitted even, for trial or filially, he\nls not placed in a jail or lockup, but\nsimply put Into a bouse of detention\nprovided by the province. If no house\nof detention Ib In existence, li\u00ab Is put\nfor temporary detention in some house\nselected by the magistrate, or hv the\nsheriff ln his absence, or iu his absence\nby tbe mayor.\nIf a period of detention Is ordered an\neffort ls made to secure hint in the environment of his own home. If that\ncannot be accomplished, he is put Into\nsome other selected home, where he is\ndetained for the time being. If that\ncannot be done he is placed under the\nsupervision of a probation officer. If\nthat cannot be done he is put In charge\nof the Children's Aid society.\nAll this shows how germane this legislation ls to the duties we have the\nprivilege to perform as a Children's Aid\nsociety, and to what an extent our duties will be widened If the act comes\nIn force .\nI want to say on eword on the abolition of the reformatory and the conversion of that buhdlng Into the Children's Aid building when the time\ncomes. In 1905 the experiment was\ntried In Ontario. There were 108 children ln the Penetangulshene reformatory there then. Mr. Kelso, who ls In\nmuch the same position as Mr. South\nhere, asked the government to allow\nthese 108 children to leave tbe reformatory, the Children's Aid society agreeing to take care of them. After conferring with the government of the day\nIn Ottawa, the whole of the 108 children were pardoned and let out of tbe\nPenetangulshene reformatory. Up to\nthe time of their pardon they were coating a little over $500 a week, and they\nwere expending that $30,000 a year in\ntbe Idea that they were doing something\nfor the protection  of  society  in  the\nmachinery of tbo law to make children\ncriminals. The Has who were allowed\nout were apprenticed to farmers, mechanics and others, or sent bock to\ntheir own homes or other homes founi\nfor them to go to, the object being to\nchange their environment. What was\nthe result? According to Mr. Kelso's\nreport, of the 108 only 2 per cent of\nthose liberated turned out badly. The\nrest were soon earning $325 a week, instead of costing the province of Ontario $500 a week. We want the iioys\nwho are in our reformatory, where they\nure cut off from their parents, regarded\nas a disgrace to their families, and\nwhere they learn to regard themselves\nas prisoners and culprits\u2014we want th_m\nreleased on parole so that they may\nfeel the responsibility of citizenship and\nlead useful lives.\nI have nothing more to say except\nthat there is nothing new about this\nadvocacy of a children's court. They\nhave been in existence for 20 years In\nthe city of New York; they are also\nIn operation in Califoria. Connecticut,\nColorado, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois,\nIndiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Missouri, Minnesota,\nNew Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and the District of Columbia,\nSo I think, Mr. Chairman, ladles and\ngentlemen, that I am discussing nothing that may be considered very novel,\nbut ln fact something that has been\nwidely adopted and approved\u2014something I think we can heartily supprt.\nI will, therefore, ask you to support\nthis resolution :\n\"In the opinion of this society, the\ntime is ripe for the institution of Juvenile courts throughout the province ot\nBritish Columbia, and some such legislation as that outlined ln the bill en\ntitled 'An Act Respecting Juvenile De*\nlliiquents,' and which tho dominion parliament Is now considering Bhoufd ba\nadopted.\"\nThe resolution, having been read >>y\nthe chairman, was carried unanimously.\nKeep Minard'i Linjmant in the houee\nChoquette BroH. of the S.nr bakery have\nopened their lea creum parlor on Baker\natreet and -Mini limy bave the best qual-\nty.   Sample It.\nFV)K  DOMINION   DAY\nCelebration Executive Hold Long. Confer-\nence\u2014Progress Mnde Lnst Night\nWllllnm Irvine presided over a meeting\nof the Dominion day celebration executive\nIn   the  court   hoUBe .ast night.\nChairman McLean of the sport- commit*\ntee, made a report of the druft program\nfur July t and 2, so far aa the same could\nbe prepared. Oood progress hnd been made\n.aid Mr. McLean, except With the water\nnponts, when- there was some difference\not opinion, Mr. McLean submitted the\ndraft program already published. .Mr.\nDyer stared that an 11 would come from\nVernon to play the loi-nl cricketer.., If ar-\nrunxements could be mude,   He asked tor\nhe Use Of part Of the ground, each morning tram . to 1_ or t.i 1 If possible. The\nnominltit.e agreed to u grant for the cricketers and to arrange fur the grounds at\nflu- times asked  for. if posible.    It w*is\niiutua.'ly decided 16 give the cricketers the\nfirst afternoon from 3:-0 and the second\nmorning from 9 to 12,\nHarry Wright Is corresponding with regard to lncro.se and chief Deasy as to\nhose contests.   The drilling nnd log rolling\ncontests are st ll nnd- r consideration.\nThe Trail junior irt-oball learn want a\ngame with Ka-.u juniors and the local\nplayers, ho two morning games can be\neonnted on.\nThe pass system, which was greatly\nabused last. year, will he strictly cnrrlcd\nUOt this yenr.\nThe report of'the siwirts committee was\naccepted and Hie cominl te will report\nagain  atir on.\nTho finance .nmnillt. have $12-0 raised\nso far.   Over  __<\u00bb-  wll be needed for the\nprogmm.\nThe nut-30k for football Is not very satisfactory,  but  detail, are awaited.\nA long discussion ensued ever the various items of expenditure and a draft estimate was prepared, to be gone over..gum\nlater.\nThe spirts r nn.mltiee will meet again on\nFriday night In Q, P. Wei's' office and\n:._\u25a0* executive will hold another eeaslon\nupon the call1 of the chairman.\nWILSONS\nFLY\nPADS\nKIM them all.\nHodeadfllM\nlying about\nwhan used aa\ndirected.\n\u2014 SOLD \u00bbv \u2014\nMUCCISTS, GROCERS MD GENERAL STORES\n10c. per packet, or S packets for 2Se.\nwill laet a whole \u25a0oaton.\nImprove your  spirits\nwith York Soda, the highly-\ncharged, sparkling water with\nthe snappy, dry tang thut betters\nthe flavor of any liquor it dilutes.\nBottled at the Springs for surety\nof purity, and sold wherever gentlemen drink. Compare it with the\nimported   sodas   and  learn   that\nYork Soda\nis better\u2014yet costs no more.\n* \u201e\nThe Mineral Springs Llmited.ToiouW\nwith    0 #^OJ\nm\nBecause the Sunshine is fitted\na dust flue (see illustration.)\nWhen you rock down the     ,...\nashes (no back-breaking        ,  ; .'. fiT*\"*.-,'. across\nshaking with the faun-     \u2022:>. .  io   '\u25a0'\u25a0''\"\"     the fin-pot to\nshine) what dust -     _( '        the smoke-pipe,\narises is drawn     \u25a0pH'M-.'\u2022.'''      as shewn in illustra-\nfromtheash-    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a00$^^3:&':'    tion, where it immediately\npan up the    ;\u25a0-':,* \u25a0\u00a3[>. . \\.' ascends to the outer air.\ndust-flue,    \u25a0':\u25a0'\u2022 j:\/*f:'''' Only two things to remember\nthen   .;Xf\/\/Q:..     in connection with this operation :\u2014\nM>J-..-m}:   \"P\"1 hoth the dust and direct draft\ntS_i. .'''   dampers.\n*  :_=_r\"\nSunshine is just the cleanest, simplest, easiest managed, greatest labor\nsaving furnace that you can buy\nttjtf.      li your local denier does not\nhandle  the  \"Sunshine\" write\ndirect to us [or\nIs\nFree Booklet\nl_n_n,   T ronlo.   Mnntr_l,   Winnipeg,   Vanco\u2014.r.\nSt. J'thn,  Huiir.ltun, Calgary.\nWood-Valiace Hardware Co., Limited\nLOCAL   AGENT\nM ning iae-|.qery For Sale\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY  AT NELSON., *(gffl#.fi% .\nOne 12 h. p. double cylinder, friction drum hoist.\nOne _u li. |). double cylinder, friction drum hoist.\nOne Xo. _ Cameron sinking pump, capacity 50 gals, per minute.\nOne 16x18 Know lea ..inking pump, capacity 300 gals, per minute.\nAddress  Box  107U, Nelson, B. C.\nNELSON  IRON WORKS\nCorner of Hall ami Front Stn_t_\nB. A. ISAAC R. W HlflTOM\nEngineers and   Cor* ractors, Founders and Machinists\nRepairing and Jobbing executed with Despatch,   Sheet   Meial  Work,  Mining\ntnd Mill Macklnery.   Manufacturers of   Ore Cars, R.  R. Contractor-   Cars.\nNELSON. B. C.\nP. O. Box 1059\ntbe KILL MINING\nIND SMITH\nW-NUMed\nNELSON 8.0.\nPurchases\nlead, Oopper\nComp_._y Ordnri 'jy *.apt Lome Stewa r\n0 C. ft\". 2 Co., R. M. r\\.\nUntil further ord-jred the member, of\nNo. 2 Co., R.M.R. wtll meet for drill every\nFriday evening at S o'c'ook. It la nem*--\ntary that every member of tho compiiny\nattend thla drill If he wishes to qualify aa\na member of No. 2 Co. Rifle aasoctaUon.\nRecruit claaa every Wednesday evening\n\u2022it . o'clock.\nLORNE STEWART, Captain.\nNo. 2. Co., R.M.R\nI.\nPOR  \u00bbAt,E\nl\"o ncres, so ..cr-s cultivated and in . rop.\nflood water supply) good log c.bin., sheds\nand _tables! n team; Hever.il head uf rattle; a flock of ch ckena; some implement!,\nand tools; (_00- cash.\nGKO. G. McLARPN,\nBAKER STREET WEST\nCorporation of the City of Nelson\nNOTICE, li hereby given that ih. first\nannual Hitting of the Court of Revision fur\nthe purpose uf hearing complaints nRnlnat\nthe assessment for the yenr i.x'7, will be\nheld In the Council Chnmber. City Hull,\nNelaon, on Friday, the _sth day .. June,\n1W7 at 10 o'clock.\nW. E. WA8SON,  City Clerk.\nNelson, B.C., May 21st, 1907.\n^-VU_\u00ab-ni\u00ab.i\u00bbAUi_A-'i.ji-ilki-Ji..ri.vi,4k_4^,\nUh-i-TT Business\n,_     ,  ..   ... tnsti.urf, Ud.  I\nj  U0 Hastlnga at. WH Vanooitvar,\nrt-oo-tkeeplng, Qngg *rui f.tm.vu   \u25a0\nShort-Hurt. T-Htrvphjr v_< Bagi-\n\u25a0Eight Teacher. i\nForty-Five. Typewriters :\n.'\u2022vrvet by uuiu \u2022\n_t_\u00abi)\u00abet-i.].  i.*f.nff_ w\u00bbm tar \\\n1'.. *\u00bbK\u00bbrt \u2022\nfl. J. 8PROTT,   .\npumtti\nPrincipal\nATLANTIG STEAMSHIPS\nOF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RY.\nROYAL MAIL SERVICE\nFINEST AND FASTEST*---*-\n\u2022F\nEMPRESSES\n18.000   1   EMPRBSS  OF  imiTAIN   |   U._0\nH.P.   | EMPRESS   OP   IRELAND j Tons\nTO LIVE-POOI,\nBf.turd.iy- June 22 Laiw Manitoba\nFriday, June 2_ [.inpivxa of Britain\nBaturday, July fl  Ultte Champniln\nKihliiy, July ISth  Empress of Ireland\ntf You   Aro Or>tog to EUROPE Early\nAppltoitlon   for Berth  ia   Necesiary\nFor   further particulars write\nj, a. Carter, d.p.a.\nNelHon, D.C.\nPROFESSIONAt GAUDS\nMURPHY & FISHER\nOTTI-WA\n-JwrrisLftT*   \u2022Soiic-i-iri,  \u00ab-0.\n-*s_rl! .metitary,   Dopai-.-ueu.al  and  Fatm-\nonto. Agents, prar.-t-- batata Raltwaj\nCommission.\nCKA.II JiB MURPHY    HAKOJbD FIT___.!.\nA. L. flcCulloch\nHYDRAULIC   BNO-.NEBR\nPROVINCIAL LAND  SURVEYOR\nP.  O.   Bo.. 41\nOffice Phone B8H.    Residence  Phone,  1AR\nOfflee: Over McDermld & MeHardy.\nBaker S.reet. Nelson, B.C.\nE. STANLEY rilTTON\nAro I <*ct\nCORRESPONDKNOE   SOLICITED\nAddress: 70 HasilitBs St. W., Vancouver,\nB.C.   Phone 284\n_--__-__-_2\u00a3_:\n>... \u25a0 mi ,j\nS. S. FOWLER\nMIMING ENGINEER\n\u00ab.EL-.ON, B.O.\nH. C. BLACK\nB. C. LAND SURVEYOR\nOffice:  Mara  Block\nP. O. Box u, Nelson. B.C.\nW. J. H. HOLMES\n\u25a0 \\ A. ..N'Jl--.. if-ii a. _AM_* t.OKVJtn.31\nPROVINCIAL J-AJ.D   BUKVinoS\nLull  .-_,-.   -Sp.riOI'-fa  lu  Lit.  __-oi\u00bbiwrs-\n; tuii.r ...i_-.uiit_. l-Vi,  _:.,>\u25a0_._ MU>tirj> t-el-\n-'->_;_ tt Oa-uida, Klugt-ten, Out\nKASLO,  B. C.\nASSAYERS\n\u25a0Copper. Colli oi Bllver  (LOO\nAny  two  above, one   .n in pit.    l.W\nAny three above, one aample  2,00\nLead    _.__\nLead and Silver, one sample  2.IW\nLead, Silver, Gold, one sumple  2.60\nConlrola. 50 per cent extra; umpires, 100\nper cent extra.\nDiscount\u2014Twenty samples or over, j\u00bbr\nmonth,  ZE per cent.\nWrite for free SHmple env\u00ablopea to\nCLAUDE i & WY-TKE\nROSSI,   NO.   B.L.\n\"TRgDSRlC srci-SMENT--\nfm_ *_._._\u00bb!-&\nj   .MINION   KUl'l     PBOVIBOJ-    \u00bb\u25a0\u00ab-_<\nPMRVltTOR\n..._!t for obt-laln. C..w_   .lint.. \u25a0_!!#\n*u_ .rin. \u00bbte.\nRoom A., K.W.C. MleOX\nV o. Boi 1 N.li\u00ab. 3. e\n. . C. Or\u2014_   T. P. Btirfl.n    A. R . ttreen\nQreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion   and   British   Columbia   Un.\n8un_yorf\nP. O. BOX IM FROND'_U>\nOor. Vlotorla and Kootp.nar -!_\u2022\u00bb_\nk\u00bbi.\u00abon. a. 6.\nTENDERS WANTED\nThe Canadian Pacific railway company\ninvite tenders for ihe lease of the har\nr\u00bbn saloon deck of the steamer Okanagi n.\nOperating dal y except Sunday, betwo n\nOkanagan Landing nnd Pentlcton, B.U.,\nfor the sale of liquors ami clgara. ].'-\ncense Is carried In name of Canadian E'a-\nolflo railway company and is payable* by\nihom, and company furthermore at-rce. to\nfurnish meal.** anil berth free of ohnrge\n;o bar-tender In charge. All tenders, v.itm\nfull particulars to ba sent not la.er thaji\nJune 15. 1907 to offlo. of superintend. >n\u00bbt\nJ. C. Gore, B.C. lake, and river S6TV.ce,\nNelson, B.C,\nThe highest or any tender not nei.'oe-\nsarlly aeoepted. To be let on a yemrly\nlease renewable at option of Canadian\nPacific railway company.\nNelson,   H.L'..   Mfly  _0, 1907.\nJAS. R. fVSUIR\nExpert Piano Tuner nnd regulator. Hava\nyour Instrument thoroughly ttuied, regu-\nl.ted and polished. Finest work Bollcltt&d,\nkeenest criticism Invited, beat possible references. Leave orders at Standard Furniture Co., phone 86, or MasoruRlsch Ctl.'si\noffice, phone _4_.\nS50 Reward\nWill be paid for the recovery of tho-\naoily of Charlie . oo, who was drowned\nm the Sloawi River on May 29.\nKWONO WING CHONd.\nCHEAP  RATBS\nHalcyon Hot Springs\non and after June 1 -t\n$5 80  AND   -tfcTURN\nCANADIAN\nWXs&itK&tme.i'\nRAILWAY CO.\nSummer Excursin\nRates East\nFROM NELSON\n$52.50\nto Winnipeg,  Fort  Arthur. Et.  Pau\nDuluth, Sioux City\nSt _oui\u00ab (8000\nChicago $64.00\nToronto $78.50\nOttawa $8265\nMontreal $84 00\nSt John $9400\n\u25a0Halifax $10180\nBoston $86 50\n_Tsw   York $100 00\nON SALE J ONE 6th, 7th, 8th\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nOpposlto Queens' bob.I. Baker str*et.\nOentlemen's Suits repaired, cleaned and\npresBed. Qoods aalled for and promptly\ndellviu-ed.\nFirst-Class Rowy. Trip 90 Days limit\nCorresponding reductions trom all Koo.e-\nnay points. Tickets available tor inke\nroute Including meals and berths on lake\nflteumors, Through ratea quoted to any\nstation in tint\/trio, Quebec or Maritime\nprovince., on application,\nj. a. t_AU'-'___..      ul J. OOYLB,\nD.P.A.. Nelson.   Jl.O.P.A..  VancoiT*\nSynopsis of Canadian Homestead\nHegulations\nA.'-JT ft'.. .IfDie _-\u25a0..\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0 inl.ii _-*_\u25a0,<* wltkUs Um\ni_. I1..K7 holt ln BrltUb. (.t-iiiniM*, miay b%\ni._-i___ote__dod by Aay patoon wbo U che\ni-ii. Ueau uf a family, or any nAla \u2022\u00bb\u00ab\n-_ years ef *.$., te cue extent et oa.-qwi--\ner -e.uon of ifti teres, mors or 1cm.\ni_iUrj must t^e made personally at th*\n\u2022toe*, land offlco for tbs dlatrlot ta wkltk\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0e lend Is situate, \u201e\nThe honiBStoader tM reqnlrid t_. \\.mr*a-a\nthe condition-! .omiected therewith main\n' be of tbe following plans:\n'li At least six months' realdsao* un\nkcI cultivation of the land In taeh ~\u00bb*\nir  throe years.\n(8) If tho father {or mother, 11 the father\nin deceased),   ot  the  homosteador restd-sa\npon _ i-ni. Id the vicinity ._ th* laid\n-.ntered for, the r_.,u!r-taenia aa ta -\u00ab_.\u2022\nue..--1.! may be __.).._;_- by suoh paraam\n)-Hiding with tbe  father or mother.\n_*i It the --.ti-.r ana his penoaaaat raat-\nuence upon farming land owned by hla\n>n thu vicinity of bLs hsmeatead, tha _\u2022\u2022\nqulrementa aa to reuldence may be aaiot\nued oy residence upon th. pair] laud\ndls nontha' uot_e. in writing shauld ha\n,.ivea to tbe Conunifluiouer at Domlnlga\nj.uuds at Otuwa ut latontlen ta asaiv taw\ni>\u00ab.uut \"*v *~r\nCool lands may b\u00ab parciiMad at til ._.\nhere for -eft coal and Uo tor anthiSclSi\ny..t more than 830 acres can b\u00ab acquired\nh - une '\".dividual or oempany. Royattm\na.t th* mis of 10 cents per ton of _M\nt- uride ahull in* collected on tbe g\u00bbM ant-\nDeputy of the Mln tote- Of th* UttrtM\n.-. E.-l'-.-i.ta\/rlted publlcatloh *f this\n_6?rrH\u00bbeturni   \"ill a*t h* paid nr.\nAtlantic S\u201e S, Sailings\n...PR, ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS\nMONTREAL & QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL\nEmp. Ireland.June 14 L. Manitoba..June <M\nl_.np. Brltnln.June 2s l. Cha.nplaln.Jnly \u00ab\nALLAN LINE\nTunisian   .....Tune   14 Victorian ....June 21\nIonlnn  June 28 Virginian  July 5\nDOMINION   LINE\nOttawa   June 3 Dominion ....June IS\nATLANTIC   TRANSPORT   UND\nMesaba    June \u2014    Mlnnetonka.June 29\n-.Mt-RICAN   ' 'NW\nPhl-Adelj hla..June 22St. Paul  June 29\nt_T.r. BTA0 \u00bb rn~\nZ-eland   June 22 FlnLind   ....June   1.\nCITNARD   LINE\nCampania ....Jane l\"> Carmanla   ..June  -tn\nwwttw. BTAP  TjINJ\u00bb\nBn'tic     June    UCedrlc   June 20\nFRENCH LINB\nLa proven. ...Jim. U La Lorraine. .June 20\nHAMBURG-AMERICA^ LINE\nKnlserln Aug. Victoria  June 13\nAmerika  June 20\nPJIPT-H <_h.RMAN-l.t-ow\nKonlgln Lulse  June IS\nKonlg Albert  June 29\nIf you ..m going to Europe call or write\nua  for particular!\nAll uonuiiental raien an. sslllngi on ap*\n'iltcatlon. If you are contrmnlatln* taking\n-n ocean voyage drop us a lln* ant m\nwill be plen. ed t* furnish you with (all ts-\n.'ormation promptly.\nJ. S. CARTER.   V.. P. F. CUMMZNCM.\nTVP A   K_J#o\u00bb       o\u00abi   _u\u00bbt  WlnaJne*\nJAMESTOWN\nEXPOSITION\nReturn rates to tho following points will\nhe mnde account of the above.\nFROM\nNELSON\nTo St. Paul, Minneapolis*, Duluth, Sioux\nClty.Omaha, Kansas Ciiy, |63.\u00a3Oj St. Loul.,\n(On; Chicago, 104.\nOn . a e June 7, 8, and 9; July 3, 4, und\nG; August Ii, 9, und t_{ September, U, VI\nund 12.\nLIMIT 90 DAYS\nFor further imrtlcular- call on or address.\nW, A. ROSS, H, E. DOULQAS.\nA.G.P.A., Sftittle. C.P.A., City.\nH.\nE WADE\nMINES\nSAMPLING REPRESENTATIVE!\nBOX 716     NELSON, B, C.\n_*-_\n\u25a0__\u25a0\n Ul\n8s_B___g_\u00a7-gB_l\nWOMEN INJARUAMENT\nNINETEEN SITTING IN FINNISH NATIONAL   ASSEMBLY\nI  AIM   TO   REMOVE   PltlVOLITY   FROM\nPARLIAMENTARY   LIFE\nWhile the czar has been depriving Fln-\nlund of Its .indent rights one by one, and\nbringing lt more and more Into subjection\nTo the most autocratic government on\nearth, lie has at tho same time gran.ed\nIt such an extension of suffrage as even\nthe British par lament denies to the women who boat vainly nt the gates of\nWest minuter. By ihe universal suffrage\nukase of 1906, women were given not only\nthe hal:ot but the right to .. sent In the\nnutional assembly und at the present moment lfi oi' ihem are sitting in the Finnish\nnational <_ssem_i!y. Anil, Indeed, according to -tha . Anglo-Riiisdiau, ia , London\nmonthly, the women hnve fought the battle of their country's liberties side by skie\nwith the men. Dr. Kalkki Friberg, who\nwas the flrat woman delegate ln the Finland assembly, is reported aa describing\nthe porltital ac.lvity of. her countrywomen ,1n the  following terms;   '\n\"They raised most of the funds needed\nanu uacii for patriotic agitation; they\nspreud the pamphlets and circulars which\nhnd to tuke the plaee of a g.igged or entirely suppressed press; they bO.s-.ored up\nthe faltering courage of their wenlt kneed\nbrothers. This they did In constant danger\nof prison and Siberian exile and more than\none of them .\u2022\u25a0\u25a0id some sii.li price for daring to prove her devotion to the freedom\nof her couutry. During these sorrowful\nyears while the women were engrossed\nwith their work of .saving the count, y,\ntheir eyes were opened to the Importance\nof the suffrage nnd they joined hands with\nthe pioneers of the movement. And us\nthe (large majority of women *_i_lited\nthrough their own experience what a powerful weapon unlversi] suffrage Is iu the\nstruggle for freedom and country, so ihe\nmen learned the Importance of the women's contribution lo political life. They\nlearned how necessary It s for a small\nnation, the independence of whloh is continuously threatened, io set free and u.l-\nNze all Its forc.B.\"\nWhen the Irtdy members of pnrllnm.nl\nJoined the old parlies, the Old Finnish,\nthe socialist, the young Finnish, th.* Swedish and the social-democrat parties, they\nmade It their Ideal, says .Miss Friberg, to\nconsider rather the need;: uf their country\nat  large,  than   to. promote  the Importance\nor power of the special party to which\nihey attached themselves. And Indeed the\nfnult of many parliaments, both young\nand oM, seems to consist chiefly in the\nmult'pllcatlon of parties and their endless subdivision. Hiss Frlb. rg notes how\nbusiness is hindered, comp lea ted and even\nsometimes completely hlucked by the Intrigue, of .eltlsli party politicians who\nLive a laste of their own and wish to\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022 tify ii nt the expense of eveiything\nelse. Lord Palmers ton's Idea of parlla-\n....i-iary power Is easiry in be divlmd from\nIlia remark lhat he found It more exciting\nthan horse racing. \"Public life Is a cursed\nthing.\" declared lord Derby when he vt'is\nprime minister. It Is exactly to remove\nfrivolity from parliamentary life, to Introduce enthusiasm ami unselfishness Into\nit and so to eliminate those oharaoterl-Ucs\nwhich make it so frequently \"a cursed\nthing\"' that the women of Finland, as\nrepresented by .Miss FrHx-rg and her sifters, have so eagerry accepted the suffrage., of their fellow countrymen. As\nthis lady Is reported to hnve said:\n\"The women feel It Incumbent on them\nto strive to their best ability to restrain\nlhe haired and the lust for power which\ngenerally prevail within party lines. For,\nIf the women could not bring some wl.nlry\nnew contribution to political life\u2014whether\nthe Innermost spirit or the outer forms ot\nthis life be concerned\u2014but should ony\nrally auxiliary forces to strengi hen the\nexisting parties, then neither they nor\nmankind would benefit from their interposition. What Is most needed in porlli s\nIs not an Increase in the number, of voters\nmerely, but the Introduction of independent new forces, new standards, new-\nIdea Is.\"\nwgUt*m_*^*gUti0^m__tSSB\n\u25a0SP?-*\nmjmaiBt _________\\ jygggS-. ---^~i!l^^m___^^\ni\/ii '\u201e\\;fm .\"\u25a0\u00ab}:_\u2014.^  r--  \u25a0-\u2014^-\u2014       ~^      \u2014\u2022\u25a0-\"\u2022-1^_-______________*-___-__\nORO-BRS SHOULD ADVERTISE\nIn largo towns It's gutting to be quite\nthe rule for grocers to use considerable\nspaces on certain days, in order to advertise a lot of bargains, together with\nother goods not at speclnl prices. The\nIdea, says the American Grocer, ls that\nthose, who come for the bargains will\nalso buy the other goods upon which\nthe price is not cut, the average pur-\nPEN-ANGLE\nb \u2022 variety ol ityl_.\nbbric, .nd pica, fot\n..omen, niea and\nchild-- -oim-btted.\ntlcaler. Ue authorized\nto tepl.ee in\u2014indy .nd\nBl ear co- \u00bbny Pen-\nA.U&C garment bully\n\u25a0 maUral oc making.\nPen-Angle Underwear is form-knit\nso it can't help\nfitting your figure,\n\u2014it's made of\nlong - fibred wool\nso it won't shrink\n-and it's guaranteed besides. The\nwhole idea is to\nmake it so good\nyou can't afford\nnot te buy by the\ntrademark (in\nred). m\nUNDERWEAR\nchase levelling the waiter of profit\nnicely. Not all of the grocers who advertise have come to see the advantage\nof advertising every day. It ls quite possible to make every day a busy day\nwith grocers, weather permitting, or, at\nleast, to make what were the dull days\nless duil.\nIf your store is near enough to the\ncentre of the town to pull customers\nthereto from all directions, use the\nnewspapers, niere's no cheaper medium nor any better one -where you can\ntake advantage of most of a paper's circulation. Take as much space as you\ncan pay for, up to 3 per cent uf your\ngross receipts, and advertise in that\nspace consistently, every day or every\nfew dnys. changing the advertisement\nconstantly, keeping its news fresh, offering bargains of the right son, and\ncalling attention to your deliveries and\nspecial prices. Don't use a lot of gush\nor tommyrot in your space talk sense;\ntal kto the point, and though It be in\npoor English, it will draw. If iu bettor\nEnglish, st) much the better for ihu.l-\nness.\nA PERFECT TEA\nYou get the very   fJneat tea the woi*ld produdfts,\nthe gardens, in the sealed lead packets.\nfresh from\nEVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR\nThe average man cannot afford to em-\np.*oy a physician for every sllgh: ailment\nor injury that may occur In bla family,\nnor can he afford to peg cot them, as so\nslight an Injury ne the scratch of a' pin\nlias been known to aius. the loss of a\nlimb, Hence every man must from necessity be his own dm tor for this class\nof ailments. Success ofien depends upon\nprompt treatment, which can only be had\nwhen suitable medicines are kept at hand.\nChamberlain's Remedies have heen In the\nmnrket for many yenrs and enjoy a good\nreputation.\nChamberlain's Colic, Ohotera and Diarrhoea   Remedy  Tor  bowel  complaints.\nChamibeflnliis Cough Uemedy for coughs,\ncolds, croup and  whooping  cough.\nChamberlain's Pain lvilm, an antiseptic\nliniment for cuts, bruises, burns, sprains,\nswellings, lame back and rheumatic pains.\nChannberttUn's Stomach and Liver Tablets, for const Ip'-lion, biliousness and stomach troubles.\nChamberlain's Salve for disease*, of the\nikln.\nOne bottle of each of these five preparation-, costs but (1.2., For sale by all druggists  and   dealers.\nMinard'i Linimer). Lumb..man'sFriend\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP.O.  Box tf.   Telephone US\nAll -nil. and oil oolor. of Ladles' md\nOwl.' Clothln.\nC.LBANED ANr\u00bb DYED\n_lann.l., Blank-., Curtain., Illl-, Bta,\n_ tt-__.tr.\nOlOTH renovated to look Ilk. new.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nfour pttrouei solicited.\nPAUL N1POU. Prop\nSHOE ADVERTISING\nAddress Delivered at Convention in S'.\nPaul, Minn.\nAt the Northwestern Shoe and Leather convention, held recently In St. Paul.\n__, C. Bates gave an interesting address\non advertising,   Mr. Hales said:\nAdvertising pays: Vnu have heard\nthis thousands of times, li hus hern\nproven thousands of limes; and yet\nthere are thousands til merchants that\nare not advertising. A.nong the last\nthousands are many who have tried it\nand to their own satisfaction have\nproven that it does nut pay. But upon\ninvestigating such eases you will find\nthat they did nol do it the right way.\nTo treat the matter of advertising as\napplied to the retail shoe merchant, I\nshould say: first, have the kind of\nshoes your customers want at the price\nthey want to pay. This means more\nihan it sounds and is half the battle.\nThen advertise them; if you are located\nin the retail trade centre, in every issue of the local newspaper your prospective customers read ;if in the suburbs, through neat circulars distributed\nweekly. Think first over what you will\nhave printed. Tell all about the good\nthings in these shoes, but no more\u2014\ndon't exaggerate. Always give the\nprices\u2014this Is Important. Your readers Invariably lose all interest In the\nshoes advertised if the price is not mentioned. Then these shoes should be displayed in your windows, buck ot clean\nplate glass, with price tickets attached.\nKeep at it; don't forget that. Only\nthe other day a man said to me In Uie\nstore: \"I have noticed and occasionally\nrend your advertisements with the\nwreath at the bottom for the past four\nor five years. Once or twice before I\nhad practically made up my mind to buy\nsomething of you, but the store being\nlocated somewhat out of the beaten\npath, I never got to it. Your advertisement telling about these sample shoes\nlast night, just when I needed a pair of\nnew shoes, made me feel that it was I\nabout time for me to find out if you really give these splendid bargains that you\nso often speak about.\"'\nIf we had spent our money advertising for one, two, three or even four\nyears, we would not have sold that man\nany shoes, lt was by keeping at it, the\nfifth year, that we got him. Now it is\nup to us to keep him In tine wltb the\nrest of the small army lhat Is today-\npaying us a profit on advertising done\nduring the past 11 years.\nIf your store is located away from\nthe beaten paths of trade, away from\nthe high rent localities, or you are,\nthrough some other fortunate trend of\ncircumstances, a'ule to sell merchandise\nat a closer per cent of profit than your\ncompetitors, you have indeed a happy\nnucleus for an advertising campaign.\nOood, sound and by all means honeBt\nreasons why you can give good values\nare always a strong factor In making an\nadvertisement bring results. The people like to know why things are as\nthey are.\nYou may have good shoes; you may\nmark them at honest prices; you may\nkeep your store neat and clean; you\nmay have accommodating clerks; you\nmav desire to please your customers in\nevery way; but. tf you don't advertise\nthese facts, how are the people going to\nknow about them? To be successful\nyou must advertise. The chances are\nyou will not be a big winner from the\nstart\u2014It takes wme time\u2014and if you\ndon't get discouraged, and persist along\ntbe line suggested, always bearing the\nRoosevelt \"square deal\" idea in mind,\nyou will be a winner eventually.\nA Jeapot Test, will prove this assertion\nAT   ALL  GROCERS\nNELSON CAFE\nFirst Class Meals.   Furnished roome\nId connection.   Open day and nlgbt,\nFirst-Class Lunch\nrrom 12 noon\nto ._1. m.\nSPECIAL\n____r nut oa \u25a0 m i v.-\nBaker St.\nPhone 275\nA. AUDET, Prop.\n\u2014_-\u25a0_.___\u201e__\nGood Chances\nTo Go East\n\u2014 TO\u2014 *\" .       \\\nOMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS, 1,.\nST. JOE, A'ICHISON, Vl\nLEAVANWORTH. KANSAS CITY,\nSIOUX CITY, CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS.\nDATES:\u2014June 6 7, 8; July 3, 4, 5;\nAugust S, 9, 10;   September 11, 12, 13.\n\u25a0ROUND TRIP RATE:\u2014Slightly hig_Br\nthan half. Available Also In connection\nwith very cheap excursion Tares during\nthe summer east of Chicago and St.\nlouis to New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Jamestown Exposition aud Atlantic\nCoast.\n.Jberal stop-overs; long limits; greatest\ndiversity of routes offered by Burltog-\nttm's three gateways\u2014Denver, Billing.\n_nd St Paul.\nWrite or call; let me quote you\nthe Seat combination of speeial\nrates available, and help you\nplan your trip; there la education in traveling on Burlington trains.\nA.   B. JACKSON\nTrav.  Pass.  Agent.\n610 Riverside Avenue\nSpokane, Wash.\nClean, dry, fine Salt\u2014that itSpt\n_om the spoon, grain by grain\u2014\nWINDSOR SALT.\npresence of grave diplomatic questions\nnoth with Chlmi and with the United\n\u25a0Stated. The Cornier l_ accused of deliberately obstructing t_p advancement of\nJapanese Interests In Manchuria, The\n(input a tlon also called attention to fact.,\n.strongly Indicative of racial feeling In\n..:*n Franc Ik-, o agnlnBt Jnpan.se, The de-\n-putatlon dwelt upon the necessity of per-\n\u25a0-n.pto.try dealing with the question other-\n.vi_- frequent repetitions of the acts would\n\u25a0endanger the friendly relations of Japan\nuud America, Minister Hayashl'a r.ply\ntu the deputation \u25a0_?\u2022_ k*pt secret.\nJArANI.SE   tTNEABY\nLondon, June 5\u2014According to a despatch\nfrom Tokio to Kt-uter'a, foreign minister\nHayaahi, In replying to the deputation of\nprogressives, who called on lilm and ___.-_\nfor an explanation of the government's\nApparent Inaction and want of efficiency\n'.n the presence of grave diplomatic question*., both In China and the United State.,\nInformed his visitors that tho government\nwas taking every measure In regard to\nthe diplomatic problems in connection with\nthe US. and China. The. dispatch adds\ntnnt the Japanese authorities are apprehensive of the future relationship between\nJapan and the United States if the racial   prejudices evinced   at  San   Francisco\n.continue,\nWant\nHome Government to Deal1 Peremptorily w'th 'Frisco Outrages\nXPklo, June li\u2014A deputation from the\nprogressive party waited on foreign minister Hayfl-hl today aud asked for nn explanation of the government's npparent\ninaction nnd  want of confidence  In  the\nVISITING  JOmtNAUSTB\nWinnipeg, June 6\u2014Hamll.oii Fyfe and\nKennedy Jones, two prominent urltl-ii\nJournalists, are In the city. They are on\na. tour of Canada and will go through un\nfar as Vancouver.\nJones Is managing director of the Evening News and part proprietor of the Dally\nMa.l.\nFyfe Is editor of Harmsworth'a Dally\n\"Mirror und Is nn art and dmmatlc critic\nof some no-...\nBuy Burton Giiy\nFruit Lands\nAND GET THE BEST !_.  THE\nKOOTENAYS\nThis land is level and free from\n-tone, located along the shore of\nthe beautiful Arrow Lake and only\none mile from Burton City. I have\n1250 acres wliich I will sell .whole-\ngale or subdivide. It will pay you\nto see this before you buy.\nThe large C. P. R. steamers call\ntwice a day. Good neighbors-\nClose to fine orchards. The Arrow\nLakes are 350 feet lower than\nKootenay Lakes, wliich insures permanent success in growing fruit\nand in no part of the Kootenay _\nthere such opportunities for hunting large game. Only 14 miles\nfrom Burton City, on Goat mountain, is located one of the largest\nherds of mountain gont known to\nthe sportsmen of B. C, while oil\nthe opposite mountain doer can bo\nseen at any season of the year and\none of the streams running through\nBurton Valley is culled Trout,\nCreek on account of the quantity\n\u00abf fish caught there. Burton Valley ia the home for wild fruit* Wild\ncherries, wild crnh apples, raspberries and wild strawberries, aro fast\nbcinjj replaced by cultivated orchards.\nGet my prices on thin land now\nas they will advance soofi\nJ. E. A-NABIE\nNELSON, B, C.\nCOAL! WOOD!\nWe now have a stock\nof GALT COAL\nPhone 265\nYALE-KOOTENAY   ICE, fRllIT\nFUEL & POUT-Y  CO., LTD.\nOHIO.: N.B. Oor. Baker _ Ward Su\nLand\nHouses\nLots\nF.B LYS,\nReal Estate\nand\nGen. Agent\nWest BakerSt., Nelson, B. C*\nANew Consignment\nJuat arrived.  The very latest In\nEmbroidery and Silks, Rattan\nand Basket .fare\nDIRECT PROM THE ORIENT\nKwong Wing Chong\nFront St., corner Josephine\" St\nBWBBTBST\nOranges\nThe first shipment of llmea tin* juat\narrived. Try a Oln Rl-rkey nl lhe Ne M>n\nJiolel bar. _.-t\nIN   TOWN\nFOR SALE AT\nJoy's Gash Groeerj\nPAam U, oat tf JoMpbbw and Ward au\n(Toy will nMt you at the door.\nJOSEPH RYAN\niUMOB    -ND -RUT    fcANM,    IM\n,    OM, COAL UXD.\n*\".   \t\nELjj-IREOTORY\nIjtOENIX.\nltl.iT__ B-MiUKl-l,, x-IOHNIX, B. C.~\nt-\u00bb InuUhx __\u00abi of l>ou___. \u2022 latflni\nmlnln. camp, _l.rlo_; ont olwi, oon-\ntnuy looata-  ___ A. XolluMr, m-\nxirletor.\najaaaJS-B\n_W$im$i\nDAILY SSWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nIh \u00bb_.\u25a0_    11 tin _\u25a0__\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0____\u25a0_\u25a0  __\u00a7 MaHIu *___,  *___,_,_.   ___   __._  ~  r.'.lLl.\nHOTEL BRCKHKJ.YN, PHOENIX-TUI\nonly up to dote hotel ln Phoenix. New\nfrom cellar t* root. Best sample rooma\nIn th. Boundary. Bath rooms In connection. Bteam heuot. Opposite Great Norta-\n_m tl.spot.   Jaa. Manbnll, Proprietor.\nYMIR.\nV. ALI-GIUi- HOT_-0_, _M1R B. C.-HSULD-\nquatere for Mining and Commercial men,\nMoat comfortable hotol In the Dlatrlot.\n8a.ii.pl_ ro**m_  In oonnectton,\nOKORan. COLEMAN. Proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS.\nUOl-UL   PHOVINCiU.   <-_t-A..D   *Oci-__.\nTbe beadtiuartdra for tourtata.   Satisfaction guaranteed.    UmJi   ]_--_hb (late ef\nNolson) Proprietor.\nThe beat and cheapest umatm ot naofltaf tka people of Oa Kootanan   a __r.au\nadV_rtlaeme-_t ln theae oolumiw Mil brine big .results. *\"*\"\nRATES-One cent Par woM per Issue; all lneertlons far the prlc* of four if naid\nIn advance. v   '\nCLasalfled ads. will ba faqelvad tor I\nvloiis to publication.   Phone Hi.\nwtU a oNdook on the evenit* pre-\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Why pay fancy prices for\nKootenay fruit land when jrou can buy\nthe best land In the country at locator's\nprices. Ranches from 40 to WO acres. Will\nalso guide mountain climbers, landseekers\nand fishermen. Apply at or address Lindsay's boat houae, Nelson, B.C. 318\nFOR SALE-Six roomed  honHe and two\nlob.  on  Houston  and  Kootenay streets.\nElectric IIrIu und water; fruit trees.   Apply  on  the  jJi*enil_.H, 4i>t>\nHOTEL VALHALLA. NEWLY APPOINT-\ned. Best rooms in the city, t-atnpl<-\niikhiis in connection, Uot mid cold bathB,\ndining loom and liquors of tiie beat.\n'Hum meets all trains. Proprietor, Soren\nNelson,  formerly  ot   Nelson,   1LC.\nARROWr-LAD.\nTJnUU ONION __%}'_:]___. ARROWi_.__A_J-\nCpeclal attention given to commercla\nin .n and tourista. 'First clan sample\nrooms. Finest scenery ln British Columbia, overlooking upper Arrow Lake. W\nJ. kghtburne, ProprtBte..\nMADDEN HOUSE\nDAKRR STREBT, NHL80N, B.C.\nDo you need a camfortablo home? if so\ntry the Madden Houso. Well furnished\nrooms lighted wltb elcotrlclty; with baths;\nflrst class board. In the bar you will find\nall the best domestic and imported ll*uer>\naa* cigars.\nTHOMAS MADDEN. Prop.\nKOOTENAY BOTE\nfor Miners, Smelter-\n. men and Lumbermen\nAleotrlo    piano.\nEvery    convenience,\nttates tl  per day.\nMRS. MALLETTK,\nProprletreaa\nROYAL HOTEL\nTELEPHONEtt\nMR!  WH. ROHKUTt*. Proprietories\nn.r beat meals to*, can be provided la\nthis market, cooked under tbo supervision\nof the proprietories, whs Is a ttverlU\n\u25a0\u2022ut-rer.\nNlcs airy rsoms, newly furniahedj batb\ntor guests.\nThe best wtnes, liquors and olgars aas\nlie obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: U AND U.M PBR DAY\n<-0\u00bb. ttTANLEY AND SILICA BTRMTI\nCare  Pss_   0b.   Hear\n(.RAN.    -.NTRIL HOTFl\nOPPOSITE COURT HOUSE, NELSON\nThoroughly renovated and refurnished. Rooms 50 cents upwards. The din-\nnig room i. unexcelled In tha city.\nTel-phone 250\nA. ERICKSON\nPROPRIETOR\nNelson, B.C.\nLAKE VIEW HOTEL\nCan- Ball -.itl 7._!._ ItwU\n\u25a0fw. Mick. -._ Olty W_lrt   Wt m*\n\u2022.Iter > Ur -nu. I. M-wa.\n. o cn_n-\u00bb unnn\nGeorge Harrison\nBARTLETT   H0USF\n(Formerly  Clarke  House)\nThe best U per day  bou_e in Nelson.\nNonB but white help employed.  The best\nla the beat\n(4. W. BAETLETT -  Pr*p.\nOUTLET HOTEL, Proctor\nAn Ideal location for .isherraen and tourists; good sandy bench for bathing; all\nboats stop at the hat-*!, apecigl attention\nto  ladles  and children.\nO. A J. SNOW, Proprietors.\nW QUtEI-TS HOTEI\nBAKER STREET\nMItS   E. C. CLARKE, t'r \u2022iirletreii\nRATES 12 PER DA?\nLarge  and. comfortable   bedrooms,  and\nfirst class dining room.   Bample rooms for\ncominerclal  men.\nOLUB HOTEL\niTUItOBON   _  GRANT,  _rop!1.totl.\nThe Big Schooner of Beer\nor Half and Half\nlOe\nThe only glass of good Beer ln Nelson.\nHotel accommodations second tn nsno f\nBritish Columbia.   Rates ll per day.  *o*\nHal  ratta  ts   \u25a0noatklf  beaMm\nWarn Bteadlng Timber\nGra-nerwk, M\nFOR SALE-17-.oot Truecott laiinclt, 2 h.p.\n-iitfii.., 7 miles an hour; with boat-\nhouse; both new thla year, will sell at\ncoat price, $_7_, Reason for selling, leaving; country. Apply W. F. Dickson, box\n\u2022JOG. ft-4\nFOR SALE\u2014Three of Nelson's most beautiful   homes,   located  on   Carbonate  St.,\nbetween  Josephine and Ward.   Apply R.\nMcGregor, box .03, Nelson. 38-_6\nFOR   SALE\u2014A   boat,   cheap,   apply   box\n\u25a010-.\nFOR SALE\u2014-Canous; consignment Just received from Peterboro; also some second\nImiKl for sale at bargains. W. J. Astley,\nCity i.naili-ii... 36-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Cucumber and tomato plants.\nF. M. Black, Nelson. 35-tf\nFOR SALE-Thrce waterwheels, ob follows: No 2 Pelton water wheel, San SVan-\ncisco. (50; No. 3, (50 and No. 4 Tuthll.\nwnterwheels, Oaklnnd Iron Works, Oakland, Cal.    Apply Dally Newa. tf\nFOR SAL--\u2014Hotel In best location In Nelson; the best known hotel tn the Kootenays; fl and up; with a private residence\nattached and up to date; lot 120x60. Apply\nP.O.   Box 2-8. SS-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014Four Umber claims on north\nfork of Kettle river.   Appy Snyder and\nGreer,  Grand   Forks,  B.C. M-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014Gasoline launches, 16 ft,\nto :ir. ft.; also several gasoline [engines; rowbaats and canoes, the largest\nstock in the Kootenay. Satisfaction\nguaranteed. Apply at Lindsay'* boat-\nhouse. 21-26\nFOR SALE\u2014Eggs for hatching from'tha\nfollowing breeds that win and produce;\nwinners: White Minorca, White W^nn-.\ndotte, Burred Plymouth Rock and Buff!\nOrpingtons; 12.no a setting. Black Leff-\nhorns, Silver Spangled Hamburgs and\nSilver Laced Wyandotte*, 13.00 a netting;\nsatisfaction guaranteed. Apply R. M.\nRaid, Creston, & O. 21-26\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP-If you want ta\nbuy or sell anything go to tbe Old Curiosity Shop.   Always ln stock, a full llns ot\nCrockery, Furniture and Glassware.\nLOST\nt_)BT--A W-Colt revolver In Hume hotel\nbasement  {-Inder please return to Hump.\noftlce. 3M\nWH0LE8ALE HOUSES\nPRODUCT\nSTARKEY A Oo., WHOLESALE DB-L-\nen In Butter, Ems. Chew, Produo. Md\nFruit. Houaton Blook, Jowphlne Street,\nNelson. B.C,\nGROCERIES\nA.  MACDONALD  _ CO.\u2014WHOLESALE\nGrocer, and Provision Merchant..\u2014Ho.\nporters of Tea., Coffee., Sptce., DrM\nPrults. Staple and -_10f 0iw\u00abr_., To\nbaccos, ClRiirs, Bultej, _n>, Ch\u00abes\u00ab and\npacking Houie Product.. Office ud\nWarehouse, oorner of Front Md Hall\nStreet..   P.O. Boi IOC.   T\u00bb_p__\u201e. 18.\nCAMP  AND   MINERS'   FUKNISHlNOe\nti. MACDONALD A CO\u2014WllOIW\u00bbl\u00bb\nJobber. In Blankets, Underwear, Mltu,\nGloves, Book, Rubbers, Overall., Juiw\n-., Mackinaw, and Oilskin Clothing,\nCamp and Minor.' Sundries Offlco and\nWarehouse corner of Front and Hall\nStreou.   P.O. box IM. Telopkmo a.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nSHERBROOKE\nHOUSE\nNMLBON,   B. C.\nOne minute's walk from CP.lt. suuoa.\nCuisine unexcelled; U roams, well hsatsi |\nand ventilated.\nBOYER BROS.\nPROPRIETOR*\nTMK B.C. ASSAY ft CHKMICAL BUPPLY\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Import\u00bbre\nMul Dealers In Assayers' 8n\u00abpU\u00bbs. Hole\nagents in British Columbia for the celebrated Batteraw. Oruiolble, Bcorlflers and\nMuffit. and Wm. Alnsworth ft Co.'s fine\nJalances, Chemical and Physical Ap-\npartttua, C. P. Adds, aud Chemicals P'a-\n... um, Sodium and PoUsslum Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Uorux, Borax Olaas, \u25a0liver, Free\nLead and Litharge. i\nMINING AND MILLING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY ft BUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealer* In Engines, Band tnd Circular Sawmills', Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps snd Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.   Bpokane, Wssh.\nLIQUORS\nfl, FERGUSON ft CO., WHOLESALE\nand Co_r_nisalon Merchants\u2014Importers\nand Wholesale Dealers ln Wines, Liquors\nand Cigars. Kootenay agents for Pabst\nMilwaukee Beer. Agents (or the Bruns-\n\u25a0wlok-Baike-Collender -Co., Billiard and\nPool Tables and Supplies, Bur Fixtures,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, eto.\nPrices and specifications on application.\noffice and retail department, Vernon St.,\nNelaon, two doors east of postofflce.\nTelephone 280.   P.O. Box UM.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nBUTCHER CO.\nWho-aala tnd Retail Dultn Ib     '\nFRESH AND SALTED MKATS\nNothing but freih   kill   wholuomc\nmeats and supplies kept In stock.\nHall orders receirt careful att.nUoa\n1. 0, TR_V_S, __.NA._R.\n__^J1ELPJ^NTED\nHI-SON EMPLOYMENT^QBNSr-\n3. H. LOVE, Manager\n\\\\A_TBD-Tcuin_ers. polo cutter, \u00bb.w\nyers, awomp.\u2122. muckers, minora car\nPOnters, eagrcimi.n, planerrann, cook wc\nman cook, cookkec, rallrtna oonatruotim,\ntotjorcs. man all_ w!fe roi. , ,\nMncksmllb, brUgtman, dock hands.\ntbe Bt'r.Hth-\n  _-tr\nWANTfcu-shingle packer. AddreeTu7\"ir\"\nKreyscher, Nels\u201en, B.a, or -,,,      ,\nIn Nelson. __l{\nWANTED - A dining roo mglrl.   I,cl\u201e__\nnotel, Nakusp; wages !30 n month. _-tt\nWANTED-Hote]   porter\ncona.\nWANT-D-Apprentloe    to    tlie    drug\nbusiness,   w.   Rutherford,    Nelson,\nBC' 27-tf\nWorklngman's Employment Bureau\nWanted-Cooks, oookces, waitresses, charn-\nbermalds, glris (o. housework, swampers\n\u00ab\u00bb \"_' ,'.ve\"n\u2122' mI\" mo\". Me, posl\nHope.    \"\"\" b0\" m\"ke,'',\u25a0 \u00ab\"\u00ab\"\u2022\u00bb\u25a0>\u00bb\u00ab.\nPoeltlons wnnted by man and wlte ns\ncook and cookee, snwyers, setters and\nedgwinen. men for fruit ranches, womnn\nTOn\u00bb w..rk . rldays. \\y, Rirker, phone 283.\n\u2022^__I_---_--__-_^^\nWANTED-Prom  owners,   lmproved~a7;d\nunimproved   fruit   lands,   in   Jargc  and\nsmall blocks.   Address P.O. box 731. Winnipeg,   enclosing   tm    ,l_u_ptlon   |lna\n35-u\nterms.\nWA-TBD - Timber,   In  large  oV  s.uaTl\ntracts, send complete dcocrlptlona with\nprices, terms, and locations.;M, C. Know os\nOuluth, Minn.. U.S.A. \u202217-r'\nWANTED-Goneii-vl gardening work round*\ntown.   Apply D\u201e Dally News. 36.\n_ ANTED-Furnlshed  house  for summer,\ncentral locution; no children.   Apply M>-\nDcrmld and MeHardy. j.._\nWANT_D-Jl.n and women t. lura bar-\n\u2022w U0A0 In _gkt WMka; tools tm. an.\nduau. Mm ni to m wwu-r; help ,K\u201e\u2122\nposlOonsi .Mund over mm laat you for\nour gr\u00ab--__ In u.l. Oatalotu tne.\nIlolw aystam OoU*(M, Ml rro.t annus,\nBpokan., Wwh. mj\n^MISCELLANEOUS\nPIANO AND SINGING LESSONS gfv\"\nen by Mrs. Winter every Saturday.\nMra. Winter holds certificates from tho\nRoyal Academy for pianoforte playing\nand singing, certificates from Trinity\nCollege for theory of music, and scholarships from London Conservatoire of\nMusic for singing and piano playing.\nAddress Boi tn, Nelson, 24-26\nBOATS\nA OAR OP MULLIN'S STEEL BOATS\nhas arrived and can be viewed at Hurt's\nboathouse. Parties desiring an absofute-\nly dry, entirely safe, easily propelled row\nboat of elegant construction Hhould come\nat once as only a Um ted number of bonta\ncan be sold from this car. The 22 foot\nsteel launch with a speed of 16 miles per\nhour will repay inspection. Now Is the\ntime to order. The oar came through in\nIS days.\nA88AYER8\nS, W. WJDDOW80N, CHEMIBT ANi.\nAxsayer, Nelson, B.C.\u2014Gold, SUrcr, lead\nor Copper, It eaoh; Gold-Silver, H.H;\nmiver-Ltfdd, \u00bb.\u00bb; Zinc, 92; Qoid-Bllver,\nwltb Lead or Copper, 99.00. Samples ar.\nriving by express or nail will reoelra\nprompt attention. P.O. Drawer, UN;\nPIMM AIT.\nFOR RENT\nTO RRNT-A suite of three cheerful and\nsunny  rooms  on  Baker street,   suitable\nfor   offices  or   resldenoe.    Address   T.P.,\nDally News.\nPOR   BENT-Furnished   room   on   Josephine street, opposite Methodist church,\nApply C. O. Wade. \u201e5-_\nFOR RBNT-Six room cottage on Stanley\nstreet.   All modern.   Apply Phone MB..\n01- corner Stanley and Latimer. __-tf\nTO LET-Furnlahed house, for two or\nthree months. Two filttli^,. three bedrooms, usual office-, good garcten. Apply\nB. Applewhalte, box -06, or corner ur\nWard and Observatory, Nelson, B.C.    *m-_\nMcKAY & RAHAL\nt. O. A.\nBon* shMlna, Carriat. .Wark _M Haa\n\u2022rel\np.o. :\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nA baautiful trip up the Arrow lakes in\nCanadian, Pacific Magnificent Steamers\nGEO. H. PLAYLE\nShorthand Reporter\nArbitrations, examinations, commlflfll-hs,\nate.,  reported.    Member  National  Shorthand Reporters* association.\nBox W Nelson, B.C.\nJAMES   MALCOLM\nOtiwral llaoktntlt.\nSTUDDBAKEB   WAQONS   FOR   SA_K.\nHall St., Nelson, B.C.\nPhon. 'i_ P.O. Box IM\n _FU\n,_.Kfl ._,:.._.,_-._.y_fc.,.,.,.-'j,...     .\u201e,_\nWESS iM_M  IftfcWJ- jlta-lift S-,*^  THUB__\u00ab_T.i JtfSfi. &...MN.,\nggto\nINTERIOR DEPARTMENT\nREVISNUES   REACHED   HIGH   MAItK\nLAST Yl.AR\nGROWN    NEARLY    TWO    MILLIONS\nSINCE 1_96\n(Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, June 5\u2014It ls nlways interesting\nto observe what progress Is being made\nIn the land of one's adoption. Therefore,\nIt may be of interest to ponder over a\nfew figures supplied from the operations\nof the department of the Interior, so efficiently and honest y presided over by\nHon. Piank Oliver. Of nil the depa.tme.ntB\nthe Interior touches the life of the people\ncloser, probably than any other. Tills\nbranch of irovernment includes the public lands department, immigration, homesteads and kindred subjects.\nIf Immigrant arrive In greater numbers from year to y..ir, if homesteads In\nthe great Northwest ure being a,bsorljed\nin proportion to these arrivals, If thu\nrevenues from dominion lands be ever on\nthe Increase, there can be but one comment fitting to the subject, and that must\nbe that tlie department Is .ndmtnlstared\nby a competent head, and that Ihe country ia making great strides in national\ngrowth.\nIn 1885-90, .the last year the conservative\ngovernment ttv's In power, tht re were\ntaken up In Canada- 2(fi_ homesteads. This\nwas the result achieved by the conservative government as the fruits of Its so-\ncaMed Immigration propaganda. Oo'ng\nback Just five years In the history of the\ndominion from the present time, what are\nthe facts with respec-t to the inking m>\nof homestead-? The following official figures tell their own  story:\nHomestead entiles, IflOI-M, U.OVl; 19__-\n03., _a,:B3; ISftl-tM, 26,073; 1801-05, -0.-19; tiMi-\nOtl, +1.809; toi.il for the past five year.,\n1-HS17.\nThis is practical evidence of the working of the depnrtmen., Results such a.\nthese figures disclose must supply any\nargument that may be made touching this\nquestion.\nInseparably asso. lated with the question\nfo homesteads Is that of ihe arrival of Immigrants. In 189- there arrived In Canada 21,710 Immigrants. Ths was the heat\na conservative po.lcy accomplished. The\nnext five years, under a liberal government, nntv Immigration stimulated to a\nmnrked degree. Each year the arrivals\nIncreased unt'l 19:0-01 when they numbered\n.9,119. During the laat five years these\nfigures have been left far behind ns the\nfollowing will show;\nArrivals during 11*01-02. 07,379; 1902-m. !_.,\u2022\n8-4| 1908-04, __0,8_1; 1801-05, 148,208; 1B03-00,\n189,061.\nSince the Nbera's assumed control of\nAffairs immlvritiiun bus Increased ten\ntlni.s'per annum over what It wns in the\nlust yenr of conservative rule.\nThe revenue rrom this source In cash\nIn .1893 and ISO. wns $174,609.88. For the\npas', five years It has been as follows;\nLand revenue. 1901-08, *l.254,333,5.; 1602-0.,\nll.71C.E97.20; 1903-04. $2.478.106.SI; 1904-05, Jl.-\n3H.4S5.-Ki; 1905 06, 1,701,5-0.71; to'nl for the\n.five yenrs. $7,4-5,10...20.\nThe revenue has Increased from dominion lands alone from |I74,509 In l-SK, lo\nll.TOl.WO In   191W.\nThe total revenues from dominion lnnds\nfor ten years from 1886-1_87 to 1893*188.,\nwere $2,-4.1,835.95.\nTbe total revenue, from dominion lands\nfor ten years from 1893-97 to 19O5-0- were\n|i_,]39..41.78.\nThe total revenue of the Interior department In li-tf, under cons.rvu.lve rufe\nwas $2+1,4-1. Last year und r liberal rule\ntho total revenues of the department were\n$2,820,1-3. A growth so marvellous that tlie\nfltfures alone are sufficiently eloquent tu\nreflect the prosperous condl Jon of this\nbranch of the public service.\nThe Immense work entitled In the offices of this department may bo conjectured when It is known tba: In UM, the total number of letters received and sent\nnmoun.cd to 91,7-. for that year. Last\nyear, 190-, there were Bent and received at\nthe department no less thnn 937,269 letters.\nThe added wealth of the country during\nthe past five years, Is well exemplified \u25a0\u00ab\nthe growth of population of western towns\nand cities for that period. Examine tbe\nfollowing:\nTown 1901\nBrandon   6,283\nCalgnry    4,153\nEdmonton    2,620\nIndian  Hend        768\nMedicine Hat \t\nHoose   Jaw   \t\nI-jortage   In   Prairie\nPrince  A'bcrt\t\n' Raymond       ....\nRed  Drer \t\nReglna \t\nBask-itoon \t\n* Strathcona \t\n'Winnipeg 42,340   loiooo\nThese figures are only approximate to-\n1 day for some of these een-.ers of population are growing so rapidly that mnny\nthousands may be added In some cases\nto make the figures correct at the present time. A few settlers today means \u25a0\u2022>\nvillage In n few weeks nnd iu a Tew\nmonths a prosperous town has sprung\nInto ac.lve, aggressive life.\nUnder the new coal regu'ntlons an applicant for a lease Is limited to a certain\nacreage and he Is bound to sell coal ut a\nreaeonnbly low rate at tbe pit mouth to\ntbe settler and pay a small royal.y per\nton to the government, No perron will\n[lie a'lowed to hold coal areus In Idleness,\n.they must be worked or the lease Is sua-\ne.ptlble to he cancelled by the minister.\nThis Is In marked contrast to the methods\nemployed by the conservatives, which permitted wist areas to puss Into the hands\nof favored politic. 1\" Mends.\n__*_bS.\n1908\n10,5.0\n17,500\n11,00.1\n2,100\n3,-00\n6,500\n4 3,850 6,51)0\n. 2,193 5,000\n7 2,000\n. 861 2,000\n. 2.046 9,400\n0 3,1*00\n. 1.500       3.400\n...... 2,012\ncreation grtun.-. b_tw*_h the Nelson o?W.\nkot club and the R.M.R. tcaim. Stumps\nwill be pitched ut 3:30 and drawn at 7:10,\nthe game to be decided in one Inn'rps.\nThe opposing teams will be setae ted from\nthe following playorsiCrlbket, club, H. E.\nWade, etuiptalii, E. Mason', A. Treglllufl.\nR, Howe, A. Cheyne, A. Thonnis, R. Tanner, W. Seat'e, E, W. Wlddowaon, O. C.\nHodge, J. Wood-Taylor, N. Fraser, C.\nBourke,   R. Inglls nnd I. Ingils.\nR.M.R., A. H, Coppen, captain, D. J.\nEI\"\/ery, J. Teague, R. F-i_,u.on, W. ' I*'.\nMawdsley, E. J. Marks; E. Moir'fi, A. J.\nDill, A. Carrie, R. J. Steel, C. T. Partington, J. Warren, Capt. L. Stewart.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe first Sunday af.en.oon free concert\nIn the city park on the hike front will be\ngiven next Sunday afternoon by tho city\nband.\nD. Proudfoot, 0. Mors end, F. Squire\nand E. ID... leave this evening for Na-\nih'ilmo us delegates to the I.O.O.K, grand\nlodge meeting which will assemble next\nTuesday at the const town,\nE. C. Wragge hus been appointed honorary organizing o'fflcor for Nelson for\nibe Legion of Frontiersmen, A fu . de-\n-e.ipt'on of the dims of the legion bas appeared ut length In these column? on threo\nor four occasions In the. past. All details can be obtained on application to\nMr. Wragge.\nA farewell social will be hehl in the\nSalvation Army banvicks this evening In honor of captain a. S. Johnston,\nwho, with his wife und lieutenant Wright\nwill leave Nelson on the 12.l1 Instant for\nthe const. Light refresh me uts Will be\nserved nt tbe socVll unci (here will be nn\nInteresting program rendered.\nHouseholders will be somewhat relieved\nto learn that the police after an exhaustive enquiry, have succeeded in ge-tlhg\nto the bottom of the attempted burglary\nat a Silica street west residence last\nmonth. The \"buig'ar\" bus been Mealed\nnnd It hns been ascertained that nothing\nmore serious than an overdose of stimulant was responsible for the occurrence.\nAmple apology hus been mnde and the Incident lifts been closed.\nOne Nelson Induatrlal concern at leust,\n1. nipidry expanding Its business and experiencing n boom. The Nelson Iron\nWorks, B, A. Isaac and R. W, Hlnton,\nfit the coiner of Hull and From streets,\nhave inore than doubled their foundry\ncapacity lu the last 12 months, nnd have\nibeen rewarded by a greatly Increased\nvolume of business, The firm lias Jusl\ncompleted the adoption of a 10-drlll Ingersoil Duplex sN.-in compre-SQr fo use\nwith water power. The work was done\nfor the Ymlr Mitten. Ltd.. and lhe manages, Mr. Nichols has \\..:iteti a letter\ncomplin, nilng the X-:. n Ir. it works on\nthe excellent and .iill.liie.Uiiy Job accomplished. Another piece of contract work\nnoarly completed Is u double drum, double\ngeared Motion hoist tor the local marble\nworks. No: so long ago both those J\"bs\nwould have been done iu the oast. At the\npresent time tbe Nelson Iioii works I*\nbusy nlgbt and day. a double shift being\nnt work steadily and the firm find It difficult to keep up with the orders coming\nIn.\nSTUATHpONA-O, Monkhnuae and wife,\nMoyle; V. L. Schrelber, Toledo; W. Mulling, A. Milton, T. F. Hodglns, Montreal;\nA. Cnus-Tton, W. B. Hughes, W. Plcken,\nVancouver; F. AIL'_on, G. L'lwler, M,\nOalne, Victoria.\nQUEENS-., n. Wlntew, Winlaw; A.\n<;. Blalnt, c. Nelson, Cranbrook; W. J.\nThompson,  Calgfryj C  B. Unln, Alberta.\nNELSON\u2014W, C. Forrester, C E. Sutherland, Ymlr; J. O'Brien, Spokane.\nMADD0N\u2014W. Burrell, Blue Bad mine;\nF. Tlwiir, Kuslo; W. B. Smith, Cranbrook;\n13. Hayward, Bonn ngtoii; T. Cavun, ami\nwife. II. Reed, Koch siding; M. Luddlng-\nton. Moyle; T. F.  Adiims, Wallace.\nSHETtBROOKE-J. Kencvan, Spokane;\nMrs. R. Cann, Miss Conteau, J. LnbeII_,\nCtrmbrook; D. Rae. Ymlr.\nBA__TI.I_.TT\u2014W. Little, A. G. Canipbotl,\nLnrdOi M. F. Mllllcbamp, Fernle; D. Let-\ntltytou,   Medicine   Hat.\nINCREASE AT ST. EUGENE\nNEW WAGE SCALE WENT  INTO EFFECT Jl.2.-. 1\nSCALE RAISED TO EQUAL BOUNDARY\nSCHEDULE\n(Special to The pally News)\nMoyle, June 5\u2014A general raise lu wages\nhas been granted the employees of the\nSt. Eugene mine, one of the properties of\nthe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada. The new scale Is us fo low-.\nShaft-men, $4.GO; machine men rind Mm-\n-bermen, $-1; hammermen and Umber helpers, (3.75; cage lenders, f3.75; trackmen\nand motormen, J3..6; shovellers and cur-\nmen, 13,25, Mll:tnen', nitu-hiniats, ehfflne.rs,\noarper_.ers, blacksmiths, and ull outside\nmen receive \u25a0\"tn advance of il c.nla a day.\nAlthough the notices wore not posted\nround tlie wo.lt.. until yesterday evening,\nthe new schedule started on June 1, There\n . are the smartest models known to the Corset\nManufacturer's art-science\nand sense having achieved\na wonderful triumph.\nPrices range from $i.o_ to $_.oo.\nWill Improve Your Figure.\nOUT FLOWERS\nPot Plants, Funeral Designs- Garden\nF-iid Vegetable plants of all kinds, write\nxo Frac-h.   Rim.   Plnrist\"   \"nlnmbln,  B C\nIs general _a.t___.-hon 'ind good iew\\.k\nwith the men. However, tbe raise fllfl ho\ncome any too Soon as tbe men were .Hitting and going over to the Boundary,\nwhere an Increase In wages 1.1\u201e alrcudy\nbeen given.\n__^___^i__^_t^^\nTO RESORT TO I-.IV\nWashington, June fi \u2014 The Japanese\ntrouble in Snn Frni-_hco will be _ett.-d\nby recourse to the law. InformaWon hns\nbeen received here to tbe affect that the\nJapanese consul there Is contemplating bringing a suit ugnlnst the city for\ndamages Incurred by the owners of the\nJT-nrshshoe re.tauran. and the Fo sont bath\nhouse, from the at luck of the moli on\nMay 20 Inst. The action If brought tf.ll be\nunder the state law, and In the nam s or\ntihe. owners of the pJactfl wrecked.\nMORE OUTPRI3AKES FN CHINA\nHongkong, June 5\u2014A serious outbreak of\nrebellion Is reported to hnve occurred at\nWglohou, about 30 miles south of Pualiol.\nformerly the refuge of Ihe pirates In .be\ngulf of Tons Sing, A mob of robe's Is\nattacking the city and troops hnve boon\napplied for from Canton. The Using at\nLieu Chow is dying out owing lo lhe energetic notion  of the local  aulhorlt'es.\nDAILY Tli.YlN WRECK\nNashville, June \".-The Southern railway\ntrain leaving at 10:_o this morning, wns\nwrecked three miles beyond Lebanon, Nobody wns killed; 10 persons were Injured,\nsix serloiwly.\nA Vi'ter report snys there were 00 per ons\non the train and all but three were Injured.    The Injured wl I be brought hero.\nA meeting of the council of the board of\ntrade wll. he held 111 the coin, house ihis\nafternoon at ..90. There -nre many mutters of importance to come before the\nmeeting preparatory to the regufar monthly ni-Qtlng of the board next week, find a\nmil nt-ondnnce of all members of 'the\ncouncil Is requested this afternoon.\nDO NOT NEGLECT THE CHILDREN\nAt tihls season of the year the first un-\njfi natural  weakness  of  the  child's  bowels\nI, nhould   have   Immediate   a.lentlon.    The\nf best thing thnt can be s'ven la Obamber-\ntain's Colic, Cholera and niorrohea Rom-\n' edy followed by castor ol aa directed with\neach,bottle of the remedy.   For sfile by\nalt druggists and dealers,\nMiritnTi Unlniint -.<\u25a0_. by Physlolart\nFIRST  HATCH OF SEASON\nR. M. R. Will Try Conclua'ona WIUi the\nNelscn Cricket Club\nThe  firm c-ickcit  match  of the _m-.on\n-Will be played this afternoon on the re-\nIll MM- 11. Olegerich, A. T. Qarland.\nKnslo; CJ. A. Lamm.rs, F, H. Crumble,\nJ, S. Hnrluud, Spokane; W. A. Turner,\nNew Denver) J. F. Morrow, Vancouver;\nD. Brown und wife. Winnipeg; A. R, Mac-\nkenale, Cra'rthroolti W. H. Peard, Medicine\nHat; V. W. l_mmens, Trout Lake; O. McLeod, Toronto; A. G. Thomson and wile.\nSan Francisco.\n.\u2022.outknav-w. Bacon, Grant! Forks;\nH. Gwtlulerson, Jntfray; 3. Watson, Spo->\nknne; T. Da'born, Huilon.\nLAKE VIEW\u2014A. Murray, Regjun; T. J.\nMaloorn, Endetibyj F. H. Mills, A, Jordan, Roealnnd,\nf.R,VNI> CENTRAL - O. S. Varstone.\nRosebery; P, Stills-.blt, Alberta; J. Nelson, R. Sheedy, Spokane; E. O. Moore,\nwife and fninlly; F. Gibson, Vancouver;\nR. Waterwon, Honser.\nROYAI^-P. McL\u00bbnn, Montreal; F. W.\nAnderson, London) R. A. Howe, Walee,\nOLUB-W. It. Shnrp, Pincher Creek; A.\nTodd, Fernle; A.  Bel.eck, Greenwood.\nA GOOD BUY\nA five roomed house, bathroom, shed, etc., standing on two mtF. Robson street, close to street car line, Nine bearing fruit tress, small fruits;\nI860 cush will handle this; balance, 1 und 1! years.\nTO LET\u2014Furnished house, [louver St.\nKoot.na.y Land & Investment Co.\nALAN BLOCK, WARD STREET\nP.O.  Bnx   113\n!___(-_\nIt oannot be too clearly stated, for the statement Is beyond any\nquantisation nr contradiction, n.:_ never since the Muskoka Free\nHospital for Consumptives was op _ md in 1902, has a single applicant\nbeen refused admission, because of his or her poverty.\nMore, perhaps, than any other charity in Canada the\nMUSKOKA FREE HOSPITAL\nFOR CONSUMPTIVES\nis dependent upon the contributions of the Canadian public\nfor its maintenance.\nADMINISTRATION   BUILDING\u2014MUSKOKA  l-KEU HOSPITAL FOR CONSUMPTIVES\nPrivate philanthropy lias erected tlie buildings, providing\naccommodation to-day for 75 patients, and which the trustees\nare prepared to extend, if circumstances warrant it, to 100 beds.\nThese beds are for those in any part of Canada, without\nmeans, who are suffering from this terrible disease in the\nincipient stage.\nThere is no large endowment, as in some public institutions, the interest of which will go a long way to pay the\nrunning expenses.\nThe monthly bills, coverinf; cost of administration, salaries\nof medical men, nursing, clerical and domestic staff, besides the\nheavy expenditure for maintenance of each patient, are dependent for payment almost entirely on the contributions that come\nto the treasurer from kind friends throughout the Dominion.\nCould Not Pay\u2014H.s Young\nWife and Child.\nDr. G. F. Cam-brll, Grand\nVai.lkv, Ont.i\u2014I hava i. pntlenl,\n-6 years of Rge, wilh tubcrculo\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nHit. ctrcumstanco.. ars nol hugIi ttyu\nhe could pay, as lie lifts .1 voiiliff wife\nand child lo support. Cotild yon\nmake room for him at tlie Sanllnr-\nium? I think lie ii.lft.ht Iniprovn.\nLet me kno .v wlmt you would ati vise.\nDestitute.\nJ. Austin, Kinmount, Ont, .\u2014\nWe have a man, unmarried and\ndestitute, afflicted wilh lung trouble,\nwhom we wish '0 send to tlie Mu.s-\nkokn Free Hospital for Consumptive-. Please let me know what we\nhave to do to gain admission for\nlilm.\nWhere Will Your l-on.y Do More Good ?\nContributions may be sont to SIR WM. R. MEREDITH, Kt., Chief\nJustice, Osgoodo Hall, Toronto, or W. J. GAGE, Esq.,\n64 Front Street, W\u201e Toronto.\nApplications fop admission and any other Information from\nJ. S. ROBERTSON, Secretary National Sanitarium Association,\n(Saturday Night Building), 28 Adelaide Street W., Toronto, Canada.\nWhite Lawn Blous\nI00--ONLY--I00\nThis Is undoubtedly the best value in Lawn Blouses we'll ofler this season.. Tlie.v are all this season's goods. Made of good quality lawn, Borne trimmed with embroidery and some with cluster\ntucks and -pleats.   The (ormer price was J1.0O and $1.25.   Today's price V5o\nEXTRAORDINARY   WRAPPER VALUi\n:s\nJust eight dozen of these came a few days ago, and we fee I justified in claiming thoy are the b _t\nvalues In Print Wrappers ever offered here or at any other place else. Made of nice .tialily, soft\nEnglish print, pretty patterns, In medium light and dark shades; nicely made with flounced skirt\ntrimmed, with fancy braid.   Prices each, jl.50, J1.75 and ?2.00.\nA look through our stock will pay you well. You will Uud here just the article you aced and it\nthe pita you want 10 pay.\nMEAGHER\nAgents for Standard Patterns\nMadden Block, Baiter and Ward Sts.\ni)#\"f\u00abf-fff^-f\"f'f\u00bbf)\"f^\n\u00bb44'(l\u00bb\u00a9-i>*#'##\"ii.\"#\nGOOD PRI\n%&\nis essential to the success of every business\nhouse and if you would be supplied\nwith a   striking and   effective   line  of\nLetter Heads Business Cards\ntoy lopes Receipt Books\nCirculars Dodgers\nBOUND BOOKS OF ALL DESCBIPHO\nAccount For.ijs\nPrice Lists\niln \u2022 ino\n\u00a3l\u00ab.\n.it*\nHave thern printed by\nT[|e Dai\nN H **' rf\n..*.\ni   \\\n$\u2022$\u2022<$\n^B'^l&^qiig\nFOR SALE CHEAP\nBOILER\nOne liO-lnch diameter hy 10 ft. S ia.\nlong uudeiMred, return multi-tubular\nboiler, In fair condition. Eighty-two\n2 _-ln. tubes 21-3 x 21-6 In. steam\ndome. Boiler Is good for testing to\n150 lbs. per square inch and a working\npressure of 80 to sitl lbs. Mountings\nconsist of safety valve, stop valve, water gauges, try cocks, sludge cock and\ncheck vaive, set of lire bars and bearers.\nENGINE\nOne 9-in. diameter x 14-ln. stroke\nhigh pressure, variable cut-off expansion, valve engine, with governor. Ply\nwheel and belt pulley are not thoae\noriginally supplied with the engine, but\nare suitable for ordinary requirements.\nEngine has been used to drive electric\nlight at the smelter and Is in good condition.\nFEED HEATER\nOne vertical multi-tubular exbaust\nsteam heated feed-water heater, 4 ft.\nhigh, WA ln. diameter, with openings\nfor 3-inch exhaust pipes. Corrugated\ncopper tubes Inside through -which the\nfeed water passes. Stop valve, drain\ncock and safety valve.   Apply to\nTHE HAI,L MINING AND SMELTING\nCO., LTD., NELSON, B. 0.\n\"COMPANIES  AOT,  1S97\"\nNOTICIO Is liereby given thnt James\nUnimex, Merchant and Posjinasler\nI ISrie, B.C., tin. been upiminled 11,, 11\n! attorney of tlie Gordon Mining mul :.\\\n; Ing Company, Limited, in 11 aeo uf Josi\nt Harrison, whose appointment has bi\nI revoked.\nj    Dated the Twentieth d y of March, 1\nthousand  nine hundred  end .even.\nS.   Y.   WOOTTON,\nItcglstmr of Joinl Btotik Compan\nSecretary   Wanted\nApplications will be received up to\nnoon of June 12th for tlie position of\nSecretary-Manager of the \"Fruit nnd\nProduce Exchange of British Columbia,\nLtd.\"\nOnly those with drat-class references\nand commercial experience need apply.\nAddress W. J. BRANDRITH,\nLadner, B. C.\nTIMBER   NOTICE\nNOTICI- Is hereby given that 30 liu:.\nafter dnte I Intend to app'y to tlie Hon\nthe Chief Comml-slmiiT of Landa and\nWorks for a special license to cut an**\ncarry .away timber from the following de\nscribed lands In .V\u25a0. t Ko_t:n.iy dfstrlo :\nCommencing .oo chalna c. st of a p s-\nmarked \"northeast\" corner of rm -12 it 3.\"\nthence north 80 chains! thence ea-n S.\nchf-lnits thence Botttli so chain.: thenc\nweal 80 chain- to place or beginning to\nrj.nii..RN.\nS' llOPT,   Agent\n'\u25a0 i'.-\\\\   iiisi'iarL''\n...A V.\niV HIam   ttobertson\n' .i'.,   -nt-i npat mi\n* . planted one\n( :   -   Wesl   Loop\nb <f 'h. Canadian\n_ ,i   lo chains;\n-;  thence  east   in\nh kins to point \u00bbr\n\u25a0 talnlng 320 acres\n;RT80NTH0M8ON\n\u2022KICT,   DISTIUCT\n\u2022eler Edtnond Wll-\n. occupation. Judge\nto app-y  for per-\nUio   f-llowltift   lions ai ii post pi.int-\ntl q West 1 .oop ot\nIt-Ill ii of the Ctui-\n.   tlience   wesl   ivi\nBO chains!   Ihence\n\u25a0 rill So I'liulns tu\nnt, and  oontt-u_i|ng\n\"MOND U'll_aON.\nDated 3rd June, 1W.\n\u2014\n\u2014mat\u2014\n_______\n \u00bb\u25a0\u00bb D_J__\nnouKm. \u25a0.\u00bb.. THtJ_tw\u00ab-ir. \u201e osk a. leoi\nFOR QUICK SALB\nsoo acrea near Kootenay Landing, A\n..-.ii.*j.i road will be built through, the Und\nthis season. Clearing light, good water.\nTrice JS per flcre.\nH. E, Cfoasdaile & Co.\nDfflo. Mot \u00abMr CUL Mitt ot \u25a0-_\u25a0_...\nPb-MW        _\u2022_\u00bb\u00ab. \u00bb.\u00bb.       P.p. MB \u00ab\nGAIT CO\u00abL\nMined at lethbrldge, Alta. Unequalled\nfor steam and domestic uie. Car lote\n\u2022hipped to all railway and -steamboat\npoints.\n\u2022w. _?. Ti_n_-,_sr_Bt\nQ.neral Sales Agent Box 8-3. Nelson, B.C.\nStraw Hats\nNow ls n Rood time to Ret under\none of *ur straw hats. BU1T _.r wl\nla Sennit und Canton Bruld*. Soft\nBtrawt. In all shapes, price from\n\u25a0Wc. The straw hat sanaon will\nsoon be In full swing, so make\nyour serectloo  early.\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Furnishing: House\nPRIDE OF METALS\nNew York, June 5\u2014Silver 67 1-4; lead, W;\nelectrolytic copper.  23 SJ< 23 1-2. dull.\nLondon, June 5\u2014Lead, \u00a320; silver, 31.\nCOPPER STOCKS\n(Reported by McDermld & MeHardy)\nNew   York,   June   B\u2014The   following   arc\ntetany's opening quotatlona for the stook\nmentioned;\nAsked  Bid\nGranby    ISO     13.\nlinmlnlon Copper   __     &%\nB.  C.   Copp_r   8        Vk\nHaSOW'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nFrank Phillips leavea thla morning for\nDenver. Colorado, to attend Uie W. F. of\n.tl. convention which opens on June* ID in\nthat city.\nOn nnd after Sunday next all mall for\nthe eui-t will be sent out on the C.P.K.\ntrain leaving here at 7:16 p.m.. This step\nhas been c;tu_e-_ by the new midnight\nBffliedule over the G.N.K. which comes in\nforce next Sunday,\nBy u mutual understanding between th-a\nmayor and Harry W'rlu'ht properry equipped dressing rooirus with shower baulia,\netc.. will be erected under Uie grand atand\non the recreation grounds at once. The\nrooms will be used by contestants in Uie\nsports and li l_ epxeeted that they will\nbe ready by Dominion day.\nAfter 16 years residence here Al. Gray\nIs I-Civlng on Saturday night for Hazelton\nwhere he will sett _ down as a fruit grower. Mrs. Gray will remain In Spokano\nuntil her Imsl-and gets a home ready.\nMr. Gray says he regrets leaving Kootenay\nand onfy hope, to meet as good friends\nund   neighbors   as   he   has   whilst   living\nAccording to the Spokesman-Review See\nCarter will assume his new duties at Spoknne as agent tbere for the Spokflne-In-\nternatlonal and the C.P.R. on Monday next\nThe first through >rair_ from Spokane ond\n8t. Paul wiM start on June 17. Mr. Carter's new ticket office will be at Uie corner of Riverside ujxd Stevens street, In\n\"railroad row.\"\nToday at the no.n hour the great majority of the local retu-1 slor __ will close\nfor the rest of the day, tills being the\nfirst civic hn:f ho iday und-er mutual or-\nrang.m-.n_. entered into last, month. Tha\nhalf holiday will laat during June, July\nand Aug-i.t and shoppers nre particularly\nrequested to note and make their pur-\nchas.s tarly today.\nReferring to the new midnight \"touHst\nipoeinl\" over (Die S. F. and N. which goes\ni- . ror.p h re on Sunday next, the Itossland Miner says: \"There will be no change\nIn   the  time of the   train runiiinn ont of\nTHI 8T0HK OF QUALITY\nWe are headquarters for\nall kinds of small fruits, and\ngreen vegetables.\nToday We Have\nCantaloupes, each  30c\nCucumbers, each 20c\nRipe strawberries, per box 20c\nCherries, per lb 20c\nAsparagus, per lb 20c\nNOTICE\nWe will close our store at 12 o'clock\nnoon every Thursday during June, July\nand August.\nFINfc\nRobi Nl. Hood & Co.\nMOCK--- at r_r.VI8I.N-.\n\u2022 W.O.B-OOK mMUSOft.AA\n6 Building Lots in a\nFirst-Class Location\nfor sale.\nThese lots are well\nadapted for a site for\na good residence and\nare situated on the\ncorner of Josephine\nand Hoover Streets.\nPRICE $2000\nR&M.BIRD\nKELSON, B.0.\nJune Weddings\nWe are especially prepared this year\nin the line of Wedding Gifts at aU\nprices and of good quality. In our windows will he displayed many tempting\nsuggestions, and we will have pleasure\nin showing many others. We make the\nIdeal Wedding Ring, It fits perfectly,\nIs comfortable, and Is very nice In\nform. We also have many beautiful\nBrooches suitable for the occasion.\nI:   J.O.PATENAUDE\n_HTC._\u00bb.II\nWIWFUTOMW M-llli\nFHME tH\nOPTICIAN\nmmmMMB\nFOR BREAKFAST\nFOR DE8S-RT\nThe best white wheat, malted and\nflaked; cooked ready to eat. No trou-\ntie\u2014no hot Umb necessary, with . j\npackage of Nemo tn the house you\nhave a meal .always ready.\nYour grocer sells It\u2014aak him.\nTbe Bnekoiin-KerMilling Co., Ltd.\nSUMMER DRINKS\nCrosse and   Blaokwell'a tis-ort.d   fruit\nSyrujiH  ffio.\nCrime und Bfack.vel.B I_.nion Rqii-ish.a,..\nMorton's Rnttp. Vlnogar; pints  BOc.\"\nMorton's Hasp,   Vinegar,   quarts    76c.\nLime  Juice,   drape  Juice,   Apple   Juice.\nStore commence-: to close ut noon Th ursday ,noxt.   and   will   continue   every\nThursday through lhe months of June, Ju ly and August.\n***9i**9****** *****9*** **************9***********9\nGarden Hose 1\nThis worm weather will make your lawn look brown unless you keep X\n|t watered. There ls no restriction ai. tbls season of the year lu the use ot J\nwater, and we hare provided for this by having on hand a stock of the \u2666\nBEST GARDEN HOSE, SPRINKLERS OF ALL KINDS, Nozzles, and X\neverything necessary to make your lawn a pleasure to look at. f\nOrders by letter, wire, phone or verbally will receive prompt attention. J\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd.!\nNELSON BRANOH i\nXXJ-^-t- A * * O******.'99*^*' t* \u25a0teWT-fTTfT1?-'\u2666\u25a0?'?\"??*'?\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u2666\u2666\u25bc\nand Into Rossland on the Red Mountain\nrailway. Instead or running from her. to\nNorthport nnd return each day, the train\nwill ha run to Marcus and ..turn .act)\nday.\"\nThe city band will assist In eel ..rating,\nthe first civic half holiday by giving an\nopen air concert this evening on the Wuijd\nsireet stand, -ommen.lng ul S o'clock. The\nbandmen think that the stand might with\nprofit to af] concerned, be moved to the\nvacant lot (flat ol the Queen's hotel on\nBaker street. It I. understood tliat the\nmayor thinks well of the change nnd it\nwill probably take pine, before the next\nband concert.\nBefore gold commissioner Harry Wright\nyeflterdny the rival (.'..tint....--, to some SjOO\nacres of land in Flre ...I i.v itlstrict, who\nwere disputing I'he vnlili.y ot Hi. staking,\ngot together .'ind agieid on a compromise.\nTha agreement was put in v.rltir|B anmi\nwill be sent on to the department of lands\nand works at Victoria by Mr. Wright t\"or\nconfirmation. II. M. Macdonald sppoared\nfor Fauquier and Slii.l and II. 8. Lennie for HrydgC- and Met'and I ish, Tho\nagreement arrived ut is said to 1m; mutually satisfactory.\nB. M.  Band-land^, who is stopping ut\nthe Strathcona. said that he knew ihe late\nDave Maclean, whose sudden death at\nOttlpiry on Tuesday was unnouncud in\nthese columns yesterday. Mr. Sandilands\n_ays thut Mr. Maclean wat- the last person he said _Mpd-_>ye to before leaving\nCnfgary k\u00bb-_t Saturday and he was then\nin the bos: of health. The deceased came\nto Bandon in the early days, and mined\nthere. He left in 1_99 and went to East\nKootenay prospecting. Later he went to\nCalgnry and opened a real estate office\nwhich he carried on until his deaUh. He\nwas about __ years old and came from\nOntario. He was unmarried and leaves\nan elder brother In Colgaiy, Wendell\" Maclean, .a well to do druggist.\nLast week th. meal police deported a\ndepraved young woman only I\" years ot\nage. wlio came here from Spokane. It\nwas nald at tho time that the Spokane police had given Hit. girl a ticket for this\ncity and placed her on the cars. Further\nInformation dl8o'o_et, the real facts ot\nthe case. A friend In tills city, wont'ng to\nhelp In reforming the girl, then under arrest In Spokane, sent the police of that\ncity a sum of thoifry and asked that the\ngirl be released and sent here.   This was\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComrl t.  House ______*\nnnd Funeral Directors . . .\nAgents for Ma on 8c Risch Piano, Marshall Sanitary\nMattress, Globe-Wernicke Bookcase and Office\n1* urniture.    Now is the tin_|e you need\nREFRIGERATORS\nWe have five different sizes to select from\nAT ALL  PRICES\ndone, bul apparent.'y no one met the gdrl\non her arrVivl nnd she nt on. e made for\nthe restricted district, where the police\narrested her. She was placed In an hotel\nfor the nltfht, will) Instructions not to\nleave tlie preml-e... but slie went on the\nstreet looking for trouble ihe minute the\nofficer d.partid, and laier was lodged In\nbhe polloe eel..*.. She was sent back to\nSpokane the following day and is again\nunder arrest for vagrancy ln thai cl.y.\nThe girl Is c aimed to be an Incorrigible,\nbut It is a pity that those who sent for\nher from here, knowing her disposition,\ndid not meet her on her arrival.\nTom Long, Ross land's chief of police,\narrived laat night with W. Monk and It.\nGus. Allitnan. who wi 1 board here at the\ngovernment's exp*. nse for . onv time. Monk\nis an ex-American soldier, who saw service\nin the Philippines and who lias been sent\nto durance vl e for three months for hilling a Scotohnvin named Jamea Stewart\nover Lhe head with a hammer, Inflicting a\nnasty wound. Allman is an old offender.\nHe was sent to the penitentiary by the\nlate Judge Leamy for bhrea years for stripping vacant mines of theli machinery and\nthe like nnd a.though only released a\nshont time has started nga'n at his od\nwork. He will stay here for three months.\nChief Long say. he Is doing his best to\nadd to th*.- population of Nelson and In\nany Case he strongly approves of the '29,-\n000 club; he will this morning apply for\nmembership. No doubt secretary Ebbutt\nwll. accommodate the Rosslander.\nYMIR NEWS NOTES\n(Special to  The Dally News)\nYmlr, June 5\u2014 Born, to the .wife of O. J.\nHundley,  here ths mornli-g, a daugliter.\nWith the Inauguration here next Sunday\nof the \"tourist . pecl.i.' there is likely to\nbe a number of resignations of postmaster-, at Ymir, Salmo, Erie and Waneta.\nThose gentlemen do not relish having to\nn't up half the night wailing for the moll*\nand unless the government makes some\nprovision to pay exnra for the night service, ihey will probal .y have to get other\npostmasters.\nPalsy Clark. Jr., and his expert was on\nthe Dundee hit examining Uie Yukon\nFraction group, a few days ago.\nMUTINY AT ROYAL PALACE\nSt. Petersburg. June 5\u2014A mutiny broke\nout today among a squadron of Hu_\u00bbi_b\nof the guard stationed ut Tsar-tkoe-Selo.\nat whiicih place .ihe Imperial fami y had\njust arrived. The mutineers were promptly surrounded nnd disarmed by other\ntroops snd order was restored without\nbloodshed.\nFOR SALE--2 HACKS\nIn good condition.    One of them rubber-\ntired.    J. W.  LINEBAUG.H, oa.e at\nNELSON TRANSFER   CO.\nTHE BELL TRADING CO.]\nIt Pay. to Deal with Rutherford\nFOR\nDrugs and Medicines\nJust now the big demand Is for HeUl^JBMBBM\nbore, Paris Green and Dandelion Klller.|B___i\nMail orders filled promptly.\nThe\nPutman\nBoots\nFor\nEngineers\nHunters\nand\nProspectors\nPUTAIAN BOOTS go on like a\nglove, and fit ...*l over, Ail so Id\nleather and hand sewed welt.. We\nnre agents for this celebrated nn*\nand now have them In stock.\nTHE ROYAL\n\u00ab. ANDRE'* i (SO.\nExclusive Shoe Dealcn\nfresh Fruits\nBluck   Tartarian   Cherries.\nStrawberries.\nFresh Tomatoes.\nCucumberfl.\nBananas. J] *.\nGrape Fruit.\nOranges, Navels. \u00ab\n. Lemons.\nRoman  Beauty App\/.i.\nWln.'Kup Apples.\nS. H- SEANEY\nPhone 206    Baker St.\n:\nWm. Rutherford j\nNelson, B.C. DruggtatJ\nCheese\n'We hnve cheese for every nationality.\nItOQUDFO-T              CANADIAN CHEAM\nt_M__na__             MrLAltl.N'S\nSWISS                           SMALL  CANADA  CtlF.AM\n'Funoy ChoMe always carried in stock.\nG. A. BENEDICT\n\u25a0.-ortior Joup>i*T.fl tntt 8111c* Btr\u00abe_ft                                          Thont .\nDoes 18 per cent. Look Oood?\nA double house, 3 rooms each, close In; rent paying $10 per\nmonth each; best location; clo se ln; easiest terms, and no better Investment.   $1100; $150 cash;   balance ?_5 per month.\nWOLVERrON   & CO., BAKER ST\nPERSEVERANCE HAS ITS REWARD\nYou have been looking for something\nextra line in the smoking line. Our\nnew stock of\nPipes, Cigars, Tobaccc\nand Smoking Sundries\nwill fill your every requirement.\nTry an ARABELLA CIGAR and you\nwill have found cigar-satisfaction.\nGabiqet Cigar Store\n0 I. -I-TTHEW, Prop., Bs->r St.\nThe Sign, of tha Fish\nWe sell everything the Fisherman needs. Strict attention paid\nto mall orders.\nE. SUTCL1FFE, Raker St.\nTOBAOOONIBT\nTHE QUEEN CIGAR STORE\nJUST  RECEIVED\u2014A. consignment ol G. B.D , H.B. Band!\nP.'tison pipe\u00b0.   Call and inspect,   No trouble to show goods.fl\nBUSH antl MATTHEW, Props.\n3 fc_\nI Screen Doors and Windows\nAll Sizes and All Prices\nHOUSE CLEANING   REQUISITES   AT\nThe Red Uross Drug Store\nInsect powder, Roach KUIo.-, Bedbug\nKillers, Camphor, Moth Balls, Household\nAmmonlu, Furniture p<-n_]., Silver Pollst.,\nCarbolic Acid, Chloride of Linte, Bponge.,\nSoaps, etc.\nBaker 81 near Josephine, Kelson.\nWe want a bid for .6 LOTS IN THE\nHUME ADDITION. Part of these arc\nused for Chinese Gardens.\nNelson Hardware Company\n\u25a0        I_.PL-M._NTB AND  BEED   HOUBB.\nNILBON,  B.<\nJ| Warm weather is heie and with it the dreadful flies\nJ WHY NOT guard against them by using our patent\n3 Screen Doors and Windows.\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n.3 P.O. Box\nMen's Shoes for Street Weal\nWilli WelHd 80I.1 Tlitt Emure Comfort   I\nKEEP     08E F.ET GOMfORTAB E\nBy wearing a pair of Walk-Overe, Oak\nTan Slioes. They ure heavy but flexible, thus conforming to the shape of\nthe foot. They wear much better than\nordinary leather, because they are better tanned, .and every part of Walk-\nOver Shoes Is as good as Its sole .\nQuality, a step forward.   Cost, a step j\nbackward.  We are palnwaklng lu shoe\nfitting.\nm\nWASHABLE HOT- WEATHER\nCLOTHINO FOR THB\nLITTLE ONES\nBlouses from 50c to 12.60.\nliloune Suits from 75c up,        ! f\nRussian Suits from $1.00 up.\nWe also carry a range of duck pants\nfor men and boys.\nMen's long at $1.50; short from 75c\nto $1.00.   Hoys' short duck pants 06c.\nWe are prepared to furnish our customers wltb all kinds of hot-weather\ngoods at right prices.\n8600\nJ. A. GILKER1\nBaker St.. Nelson, B. C.\nncDermid & MeHardy * HJf^fCE\nHot Weather Qoods\nSTATIONERY DEPT.\nHAMMOCKS. ALL NBW  \"HODS,\n\u00ab_, 13.GO, $4 And 15.\nPANS, 15.., 2-c. and 86c,\nJ-ipanes. Paraanla nnd Lawn Ca-\nnupyd, Juki tlie thing for a lawn, ahade\nover your hammock.\nDRU<1 dept.\nONTARIO QIIAPB JUIOB, qunrt.,\n<_-.; pint-, Wo.\nHOOT BEER, 10c. paoknfe.\nFRUIT SALTS, lie., 2-., \u2014; <&>\u25a0\nand __\nCanada Drug \u00a3 Book Co., Limited\nDruggists, Stationers, Seedsmen\nCor. Ward and Baker Sta.\nII\nll\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_1907_06_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0382651","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"}]}}