VOL. 14 wSs GREENWOOD, B. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8. 1909. (F No. 5 NEW FALL MILLINERY All new ideas in Ready to-Wear Trimmed and Pattern Hats Everything you want in Millinery at tempting: prices BARCLAY & CO. DRY GOODS BOOTS & SHOES MILLINERY ^ (c, Greenwood's Big Furniture Store WE ARE OFFERING CARPET Sa��ARES At prices from 33.50 to $50. LINOLEUMS Printed and Inlaid. Laid without extra charge. The kind that gives satisfaction. Agents for Edison Phonographs and Records. Agents for Bell Pianos and Organs. Everything in the Furniture Line. T. M. Gulley & Co. HOUSE FURNISHERS - - Phone 27 =SV (r m. I Mail Orders We prepay postage on the following: Brushes, Combs, Sponges, Rubber Goods, Plasters, Pills, Prescriptions (except in liquid form), Sheet Music and Optical Goods. Dry and Liquid Drugs aud Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Toilet Goods and Musical Goods are sent cheapest way at customers' expense. Try Us With a Mail Order. RESOURCES OF GREENWOOD Gold, Silver, Copper and Coal Mines.��� Fruit Farms, Cattle Ranches, Logging Camps, Railways, Stages, Good Roads, Live and Energetic Business Men. *. (Continued from last week.) The Arlington hotel, on Copper street, is conducted by Chas. A. Dempsey, who took it over from the previous management May 26, 1906. Mr. Dempsey is quite an old timer here, and the Arlington is a favorite resort of Boundary pioneers. M. H. Roy is the proprietor of the National hotel, on. Copper street. The National has a fair number of well furnished bedrooms and comfortable accommodations for travelers. The Kootenay hotel has just changed hands. It has been run for many years by Thos. Walsh, the famous British Columbian, who came from Phoenix Park. The Kootenay is situated just opposite the Greenwood Liquor Co's. store, on the main street, and is noted for the true Irish welcome given to all comers. Mr. Walsh has sold out to Angus McDonald, the former proprietor of the Greenwood hotel, and will move to Bridesville, where he has a hotel already doing a good business. The Greenwood hotel is operated by Luige Penna, who recently bought out Angus McDonald, and is the headquarters for those of Caesar's nationality. The Ladysmith hotel is located on Goltl street, and is one of the oldest hotels in town. The proprietor is Ola Lofstad, who is also manager of the Argo Mining company, operating the South end tunnel. The real, name of the hotel is the Royal, but it has been known as the Ladysmith so long that the name has stuck. This is the principal headquarters of those working at the smelter, being the nearest hotel and boarding house to that big employer of labor. I THOMAS DRUG & MUSIC CO, I THE STORE OF QUALITY. ^ I ^ The work we do de- p< nds on the FOOD WE EAT Our prime beef roasts and tender, juicy steaks will give you the strength of an ox. W. W- CralK. The new Greenwood firm of W. W. Craig, who has been in the grocery and general mercantile business at Boundary Falls for the past seven years, are ready to do business in their temporary quarters in the Miller block, and expect to move to the Hyde brick block, now in the course of erection, by December 1st. Mr. Craig is well known in Greenwood, and with his assistant, D. S. Hardy, may be expected to do a big share of the grocery and general merchandise business of this town. The business will be a strictly cash one, and in consequence prices will be in accordance. Look out for the new firm's advertisement which will shortly appear in the columns of this paper. The Palace Livery stable, on Cop per street, and adjoining the Arlington hotel, is the one and only establishment of its kind in town. F. C. Buckless, the proprietor, has bought out all competitors, one by one, and now is the livery king of Greenwood. He has an excellent stock of turnouts of all kinds, single and double drivers, four-horse teams, saddle horses that even a poor rider can handle, everything that an up-to-date livery business can be expected to own. The Palace Livery stable makes a specialty of draying and can move anything moveable. William Fleming, express man,, has been in Greenwood for the past ten years, and attends to express, draying and transfer business of all kinds. His team and himself can be located at all times on the main street, and an immediate call may be left for him at L. L. Matthew's cigar store and will be promptly attended to. Sydney Oliver is the ice man. When you want to make ice cream, or cool a few small bottles call up phone No. B-51. Mr. Oliver also has a draying and transfer business and will attend to express and parcel delivery. Leave word for him at the Windsor hotel, when you need ice, or your trunk moved. OIL FIELDS OF MADAGASCAR Tlie Mart- I E. T. Wickwire, real estate and land agent, broker, life and fire insurance agent, has an office, the smallest business block in Greenwood, on Copper street, which is wedged between the Miller block and Elson, the Tailor's store, and which is known as the Mart. Mr. Wickwire has been in Greenwood for eleven years and has built up a splendid business. He has business blocks, houses and cabins for rent, mines and stocks for sale, and will insure your life, your house, your furniture, and everything that you have. F. W. McLaine is the local Canadian Pacific Railway land agent, and the busiest man in town. In 1901, Mr. McLaine moved to Greenwood from Midway, and opened an office in his present location on Copper street, with his brother-in-law, Arthur English. Since then he has assumed control of the C. P. R. business in this section of the Boundary. Mr. McLaine also does a big business in real estate, mines and insurance. He is manager of the local Auditorium, president of the Greenwood Dramatic club, secretary of the Board of Trade, and officially connected with all that is energetic and for the good of Greenwood. This article continued next week. Tbe island of Madagascar formerly the property of Great Britain, is now under French rule. It is situated off the east coast of South Africa and is one of the largest islands in the world. Tbe capital is Antananarivo, and it was lrom this point that J. A. Coryell started out on a thrilling expedition with Mr. Taylor, a distance of 190 kilometers, across country, to locate"tVe'-oil^valley known to exist near Ankavenda, near the west coast of the island. ^"A-tter ;6ve months of most inter- esting prospect' work In the wonderful oil fields, Mr. Coryell returned to the capital to record his claims, hut found that he had omitted to follow the French mining regulations, and had to make another arduous nip over the mountains to the oil valley. This time he raced a French engineer, who was after the same ground, and won out, securing 13 concessions, or nearly ISO square miles of rich oil area. The Taylor-Coryell Madagascar Petroleum Syndicate was formed, and later the Hertz Co,, who are building the immense power plant at Victoria Falls to supply power for the Rand mines, many miles distant, took over the oil concessions, under the title of the Ankavenda Oil Co. This is now controlled by the Rothchilds and Rockefeller, the oil magnate, and is being developed by experienced American drillers with American Star drills. This is the only colony of France where petroleum is found in paying quantities. It is 190 miles from the capital and 50 miles from the west coast, and is easily approachable by light draft steamers up the Manimboo river. The great value of these concessions lies in the fact that the French navy is a large consumer of petroleum and no other French colony is capable of a similar production. An analysis of the oil gave 52 per cent illuminating oil, 30 per cent lubricating oil, 3 percent petroleum residue and 15 per cent carbon non-distillate. The oil fields have been explored 500 miles long, north and south, and from 30 to 60 miles wide, on the west of the Bungalava mountains. TEN YEARS AGO FOR THE SISTERS* HOSPITAL We have in our midst; a most excellent public institution, tho Greenwood Hospital, tno-t ably conducted by the Si>fcers of the Spend HtMrt. Wi'h n view of assisting the m:u;-igi'tn<-nt <>f this establishment, r.nr! also with a view of affording an opportunity to the general public in contribute, in a *m.ili w-n-. in thr upkeep of the Sisters' Hospital, it has been ��YckU--.1 to make next Friday, Oct-oher 15th. IIus;;iUl Tajr Day. A cuttiini-.tee of ladies, whom Father Bedard h*reuy cordially iiivifes to assist him. and :o meet hi his h"i!*c on Monday next :it 3:30. -vill distribute Tags to as many luli-v as will give their ai'l. O i Tag Uiy it BOY SCOUTS INVADE FRAME The approaching invasion of N'innnndv by the Pvir,'1ish 'boy scoii:s" ofT.rH .i ^r-.Mt <>j>,ior'uiity in Kri'-.M'ii ori'i'"-'. *<> ��� ���<iint out to the tnuon the physical ��r:d moral ���;'ij>'r- rjLv ol' Hi���-��� iv 'u !�����-'��� ytiih. >.'h'i v. i h ii;: I' i>r no i: ."'.vU-<i��i* ot French, iind i;i ih ��� run] irity of install.i-s wiih entir;1 iyuorance of the comnrv, a-^re"; *o be found on ;i r.cri.iin da"* .it �� certain ken lit y with srwr.il thousands of his comp-itrii.ts. E:ich division as it discmbaiks will receive, a-, 'he only inrlK.at- iosi of its in Avm.iiiis, t i'o or three bits of information, wh-ch, contact with ti,e j if skillful eiioii��!i. i. cm }-:ri*i* together i"'o y. majj suifyes- intf sources of supplies, the i>r -per ietiyih of each day's in:u.:ii and self���don t forget the d/ite���Oc- the final poi-ir. ..f tober lSif', ev��*rv mm and boy the old divisions, will be asked to buy and wear a tag���rcosling 25 cents���;ind all wearers of Tags are invited to attend a free concert at the Eagles' hall, on the same evening, wbich will be given hy local talent under the able management of the Kev.Veruon Venables. Have your quarters ready. It is a really worthy cause. COAST NEWS TRADE DEFLECTED i P. BURNS & CO. Copper Street, Greenwood, B. C. L.. ��� Fred Anderson formerly with the Electric Light Co., of Greenwood, now located four miles south of MolBon, is doing a big business in cream, clearing $70 per month shipping lo the Hazel- wood and other creamerie.s at Spokane. And this trade should go by the V��� V. & E- to the coast. The daily trains from Molson and vicinity carry cream to Spokane, 25 to 30 big cans daily. IS 21 YEARS OLD THE AUDITORIUM The Vancouver World celebrated its twenty-first birthday October 2 with a magnificent edition. Here's a health to you, brother World, may you see many more anniversaries. Greenwood has an Auditorium with a seating capacity of 500. It is heated by a hot air furnace and lighted by electricity. There is a large balcony capable of seating 150. The stage is commodious and well lighted, There are desirable dressing rooms below the stage, and with the usual comforts. Two large exits exist. F. W. McLaine is the manager, and will welcome any good musical company here, as will we all. Greenwood is a good show town and a good company can be sure of a full house. FATAL AGCIDENT The tallest man may really be beneath contempt. Lots ot idle people would rather find fault than find -work. A terrible explosion took place last Tuesday in the mile-long tunnel of the Extension mines near Ladysmith, whereby 60 miners were entombed. To date more than half have been rescued, but it is feared that there will be a considerable loss of life. (From Boundary Creek Times of Oct. 7 1899.) Fred Munn is opening a large hotel in Eholt. Cascade was almost wiped out by fire last week. Guess Bros., assayers have moved into their new brick block. Mr. Lukov, of Trail, is opening a gent's furnishing store in the new Guess block. W, S* Fletcher has commenced the erection of his three story block on Copper street. R. Greiger, manager of th�� B. C> Liquor Co.. has just received a car load of Pabst. Wallace and Miller have opened up their store iu their own brick block on Copper street. Next Thursday the Phoenix News will make its appearance with J. VV. Grier as publisher. Duncan Currie, of Greenwood and Miss Ruth Raspberry, of Lyttoii, were married at Kamloops this week. The Iron Top adjoining the Buckhorn mine in Deadwood camp is being developed on a large scale by E. A. Bielenberg. Thos. Bradshaw, who grubstaked Billy Purpose, is now the owner of a big copper showing near the Nickleplate mine and has been offered $100,000, 10 per cent down. A church and two other building were blown down by the wind at Prince Rupert last week. A group of silver-lead claims on nine mile mountain near Hazelton have been bonded recently for $50,000. The Merchants Bank of Hamilton have purchased a corner site in New Westminister and will open a branch there. The Kelley Douglas Co. have purchased an additional 42 feet frontage on the north side of Cordova street, Vancouver. Vancouver building permits for September last reached the grand total of almost $800,000, as against $324,505 last year. The Alberta Pacific elevator Co., will erect 4 elevators in Vancouver in the near future, with a capacity of one million bushels apiece. The G. T. P. Railway is engaged in running survey lines and making soundings for a wharf to be built on the inner harbor at Victoria. Miss Iona Fuller and Edward Langor were married last week on the roof of the uncompleted 14 story skyscraper in Vancouver. It is to be hoped they will live up to their high ideas of marriage. "SOOP HER UP." After this has been effected, (he hoys will tie r.aken to Paris, where yala holidays have been arranged for them. Prizo-s will be offered on the return h'uii..: of those who have made the best progress in '.he Fwiicit i.ir.isuage, while '"scouting GENERAL NOTES Peary states be will go into retirement. Thank goodness. A monument to the memory of David Oppenheimer will l>e erected iu front of the Vancouver court house. King Edward will open the new Royal Edward Institute for the prevention and cure of tuberculosis in Montreal by pressing an electric button at Buckingham Palace. While Wilbur Wright was aviating round the statue of Liberty, New York, last week, his brother. Orville Wright, reached the unprecedented height of 1.600 feet near Potsdam, October 2. He also made a flight with the German crown prince as companion. An expedition of 15 or 20 men will leave Bisbee, Arizona, tbi3 month to prospect the hills of Tiburon island, in the Gulf of California. TheSeri Indians annihilated theGrendell expedition, who attempted to do a few years ago what the Bisbee expedition will now attempt. LADIES' COMMITTEE The annual general meeting of the Greenwood Curling club will be held at the court house on Monday evening, October 11, at 8 p m. All curlers are cordially invited to attend. Father Bedard e.\'e;ui s a cordial invitation to all ladies who are interested in the coming Hospital Tag Day. to attend * general committee meeting at his house at 3:30 on Monday afternoon. All are invited who wish to help this good work along. There will be a Harvest Festival on Sunday next at St. lude'a church, at 11 a. m. atul 7;30 p. m. Festal services and Harvest hymns. Flowers and fruit so decorate the chancel will bo welcome. There are over half a million blind people in China. Even a girl has no use ior the other side of a mirror. The Strongest Guarantee Ever put on a Wood Stove is behind Cole's Air Tight!! ���������iaaaiMBai aBssasssssssa ���������������iHBN^Hrai These are the reasons we took on this stove and the reasons we recommend it to you: 1. It Is STunranteed tn remain airtight us long as used. Tliis is positive assurance of permanent satisfaction, for a non-air tight wood stove is as useless as a watch without a main spring. 2. It is a perfect radiator of heal, c^'intf off all the heat produced by tin; fire. Tho heal itoiu burning a single newspaper can ho felt across a room. 3. It holds fire over right with light wood, cobs or trnsh. The fire is rtev.r out���and by simply putting in a little fresh fuel in the morning, you can heat up a room ilrom zero to fc9 degrees in five minutes' time. 4. It sells at a reasonable price���S3up���and every size stove is covered by the guaranty. 5. It burns wood and auy kind of lighter fuel. cobs, rubbish, etc. 6. lis features arc nil patented and have been widely Imitated but never duplicated. This :vould-be theft of the desirable points is so strong a testimonial in favor of Cole's Original Air Tight Wood Stove as to have been a deciding point in our hs;r purchase. 7. Made by one of the greatest stove concerns on earth, one whose guaranty is as good as this government's. Remember Price���S3 up Each Stove Guaranteed We have the exclusive agency for Cole's! Air Tiijht Wood Stoves. You cannot buy them anywhere else. FOR SALE BY THE HUNTER-KENDR1GK CO., Ml THE BOUNDARY CREEK TIMES 0=** (?=*�� <P* *=�� c=*< <?=*< CP* Cr* Cr* <P* CP" Cr* ESTABLISHED 1817. Capital, all paid up, $14,400,000. Rest $12,000,000. UNDIVIDED PROFITS $217,628.56 Hon. President : Lonr> Stkathcona ani> Mount Hovjl, G. C. M. O. President: Sik Ruohok A, Dhommond.K.C. M. G. Vice-President and General Manager : Sik R. S. Clottston. Bart Rrancb.es in London, Enj*. j AXJ^cttZL. \ New York, Chicago. Buy aud skII Sterlititf ICxckange ami Cable Transfers ; <iraut Commercial an Traveller*,' Credit*, available in anv partjof the world. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT Interest allowed at current rates Greenwood Branch. W. F. PROCTOR, Manager. *=��' ..Bank of Montreal.. ?iU.��M;��,tt3Jj���^^ THE BANK OF 73 Years In Business. Capital and Reserve Over $7,000,000. beautiful sight can be seen than the leaves before they fall. It is for us to profit by the lesson that Autumn teaches, and while we prepare for our own winter enjoy the Autumn to the full, maturing our earlier plans, scattering leaves of our Spring and Summer's work to form the soil of a new year's endeavor. GREENWOOD CEMETERY week, made a memorable speech advocating the adoption of the principle of proportional representation in elections. Harry Whitney has returned from his hunting expedition iu the Arctic, and declares he believes both Dr. Cook and Peary discovered the north pole. A Reserve Fund is as necessary for a family as for a company. The best Reserve Fund for a family is a snug sum of money in a strong Bank. Be^in your Savings Account now in the Bank of British North America. Deposits of Si.oo and upwards received and Interest compounded at highest current rates. Greenwood Eranclv<vH. F. STOW, Manager. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. /. H. HALLETT Barkistkk, Solicitor, NOTAKV I'TIIl.IC. Calile Address: ���* Hallkti." | Bedford M'Ncill's Comos -j Moreiii)! A- Nepal's I Leii>er"s Greenwood. B. C. JOHN D. SPENCE. Uakkistkk and Solicitok, Kemle'l Hlock. Greenwood, B. C C. AE. SHAW. Dominion and 1'kovinciai. i.am) sukvhyor, Greenwood, B. C. V. <>. i;.i. :7. l'hiiiie X*. FRIEOOLPH WERNER. Gk.WiUATK <)1'' KaK> STADT, S\V., (. ONSKkVATOKV, Will be [������aching ��� i.mo and Violin in (ireen- wonil every Monday and Tuesday. WILLIAM FLEMING. TRANSFER DRAYING Furniiure Moving a Specialty. Leave orders at Matthews' Cigar Store. =:*^ir��i'- BOUNDARY VALLEY LODGE " '/v.:. Mo. 38,1.0. O. F. Mffih t-v.-ry I utrsdny Kvenin^! at ��0*1 iu tlie I. U. <>��� i Hall. A conli.il invl iMiloii lb ei- tende.l tt, nil sojourning hrellieru. ALlititT LOGAN. FRED 11. HOLMES, :;. t;. v. ��,. t'. LDWAKU BROWN, Kec. Sec. V.t)9 Boundary Creek Times Issued Cocrv frldav tiUH'ii.'Kll'Tl'iNS IN ADVANCE. kkw V ha* 2 UO Su Months . 1 2'. To Vovkii.n ConNTKiKS. - 2 50 what should be that part, and our duty as dwellers in the Greenwood Riding in obtaining that measure of recognition and attention which is our due, and which we insist on and must have in the future. To send a man to Victoria is our privilege. To send a man who can and will do us some material jfoo.l. and command the just appreciation of nur deserts, is imperative. To send a man : who is above anv pettv party politics and who is wholly "out for his riding and its benefit, first and foremost," is our boundcn duty Lo ourselves and our great resources. To send a member to the Provincial house who has not the very necessary qualities of a good citizen, a belinver in the Boundary, a good fellow and a booster for Greenwood district and its needs would be a suicidal mistake, and as we all want to see our district lead in everything as it lf*ads in some things, we must siuk our individual 3'earn- ings, and shoulder to shoulder, send a man with the unanimous good will of those he represents, armed with the natural force of character to get our w;mts sup plied���armed with au individuality that will command ie9p��c from both sides of the house, and a man whom we cau be proud to say represents our electoral district and who is proud of being a resident of the district he represents. Some three rniles from where we spend our davs in office, store or bank, just three short miles from the main street ot this busy town, is a small, still settlement on holy ground, which most of us have a very personal interest in, where someone we knew well and cared lor, someone we were used to sec every day, someone we associated with, is laid to rest. Thev are reeling after their labors, and we are, one and all, heading their way. Just take a walk out to the cemetery and look round. Would we buy a piece of land and build a.home and then leave it as treeless and barren, as uncared for as we leave the last home of those we lovingly laid there? Small trees are wanted, shrubs and flowers, and it is surely meet that the living should do this for their dead. Before snow covers the ground let us organize, riot according to our denominations, but all together as a townspeople, to plant some trees, shrubs and flowers, and make our Greenwood cemetery more like our homes, for it is home for so many already, and will be for so many more. Captain B^rnier has accomplished his mission in the far north. Word was received by wireless from him Oct. 1 for the first time since Tuly 1908. Wilbur Wright made a mug nificient flight last week at the Hudson Fulton celebrations in New York, making a complete circle of the Slant:.' of Liberty in the harbor. Pearv arrived in New York in time to take part in the Pdgo;ml procession. Hut even this advertisement wont make up for his miserable tactics in the north pole controversy. ceive disposal of Spanish strong- holds^in northern Africa in case of war, for her support of Spain in her recent embroglio with Mo re ceo. Johnny's mother gave him two five cent pieces, one for candy, the other for Sunday school collection, and as he was walking along with his sister, tossing the the coins into the air, suddenly one fell and disappeared through a cellar grating. "Sis!" he shouted. "Oh, there goes the Lord's nickel!" A Clean Man OUTLINES OF CURRENT EVENTS Princeton has transmitted a Board of Trade resolution to the Minister of Agriculture, asking that the Experimental. station and farm for the dry belt be placed in or near Princeton. It is well to have on hand a remedy, simple, effective and easily applied, for mosquito bites, insect stings, sores, bruises, sunburn, and injuries to the skin, and forty other ailments not always dangerous, but which can be cured by outward application. Such :t. remedy is Davis' Menthol I iulve(ThcD.&L.),which comes i:i tins for 25 cts. at druggists. Outside cleanliness is less than half the battle. A man te-.ny scrub himself a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good litnlih means cleanliness not only outside, but -nsidc. It means a clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, 9 clean liver, unJ nc.v; e!.-:2it, heidthy tissues. The man who is ilean in this way wis1.. :0;ik it and net it. He will work with energy and think cU:nn, clear, hr.n'fliy thoughts. i k- wil: never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean srom- ik.i.s, iik>:>d ciisL-i.ses are found where there -8 unclean blcud. Cjiisum.v.ion and bronchitis mean unclean lungs. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery prevents these diseases. It makes a man's insides clean and !>e:-.��Jhy. It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure, clear, biioorfg.and clean, healthy flesh. It re^ores tone to the nervous system, and cures nervous exhaustion and p-os;rts*<on. k rciitnins no alcohol or habit-forming drills. f.oivi'jps^.'.'.n Ui the most unclean unclennliness. Iir. i't^-r ���c.'> -i. ���������:. i':. T'.-?y riover flripe. Easy to take as cr,:.dy. jrce's Pleastmt pet it is reported that England and Spain have entered into a secret alliance. England to re- Earl Grey laid the cornerstone of the new parliament buildings of Alberta on October 1. AUTUMN FWDAV. OCTOIIKK s, W>'>. POLITICAL PHENOMENA The political sky today is overcast. Clouds are appearing on the far horizon���clouds of every shape and hue. The air is charged with peculiar phenomena, all interesting, some astonishing, and something is going to drop. Either a storm, with rain in deluging quantities, and a meteoric display of eloquent oratory will be <atr lot, or the warm ���winds and warmer sunshine of tranquil ealm after the suspicious clouds have passed and we welcome a return of the clear, blue political sky, the sun shining in its lone glory, and our Boundary country well represented at Victoria by one man instead of the many possibles and probables that are looming up over the horizon with each day's dawn. It is too early to state anything definite as to the part the Boundary in general and Greenwood Riding in particular, will lake in the future government policies at Victoria, but it is not too early to make a few suggestions as to No season of the year presents such a weallh of color as the Fall. Nature, our kindly mother, paints our hills, our valleys, our streams, our highways in the spring, with no sparing hand. The restful green, after the winter's frosty white, is a most welcome sitrht to us all. Summer.with itsmaturing warmth perfects the spring's fair growth, covers the earth with bud aud blossom, ripens our fruit and the products of our fields and gardens, adds roses to the palest cheek and warms us through and through. But Autumn, with its first sharp morning frosts, prepares us for the severer cold of winter and changes the green of spring and the maturer hues of summer to glorious gold and amber with spots of ruddy orange and every shade of bio.vn and silver grey. Spring is the year's green childhood, Summer its middle- age, Autumn its ripest harvest- time, and Winter the time of restful calm and slow decline. This year the valley and surrounding hills of Greenwood are especially lovely, and no more Eastern capitalists have recently acquired 10,000 acres of coal lands on the Peace river. Sir Charles P. Lucas, assistant under Secretary of State for Great Britain, is touring through Canada. Last Saturday Spain held a general national rejoicing to celebrate the capture of Mount Gur- ugo, the Moorish stronghold. Last week the Vernon Jubilee Hospital, the most modernly equipped hospital in the interior, was formally opened by Price Ellison, M. P. P. Earl Grey, while in Nelson last Long ago the Scotch learned this. The sturdy old Scotchman must be ami'scd at the recent "discoveries" that oatmeal is the best food in the world. Our scientific men have been making experiments which prove that Canadians eat too much fat and grease and not enough cereals. The Scotchmen say: "Look at our nation as proof. The sturdiest nation on earth.'' Still we have one good point to make. We make better oat- nieal than the Scotch. They buy Quaker Oats and consider it the leader of all oatmeals to be had anywhere. If you are convenient to the store you'll probably buy the regular size package. For those who live in the country the large size family package is more satisfactory. The large package contains a piece of handsome china for the table. Follow the example of the Scotch; eat a Quaker Oats breakfast every day. Canada may well be proud of the Quaker Oats Company's mills at Peterborough. It H. Whiting, F.R.H.S. Kettle River Fruit Company, Rock Creek, undertakes the planting- and pruning of large and small orchards. Expert advice on all branches of horticultural work, glass structures, etc., etc. Terms reasonable. JUST OUT Cct our new catalogue. Artisticall)r printed, shows the shoes in natural colors. Learn all about superior shoes���the Lee Id e shoes��� made in Vancouver. It describes each of them in detail, shows how well they are made, and tells you the retail prices and where you can get them. Send a postal for it today. Snynopsis ol Canadian XciM'est HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS. These are the numbers that entitle you to a 109 piece china dinner set: 43994 37221 5667? 61114 6401)1 51448 69423 58276 56297 66723 If you have not drawn one yet, you certainly will soon. Kach month from the duplicates of the coupons placed in the sacks of Royal Standard Flour leaving our mills, we draw ten numbers. When you secure one of these, you are entitled to a dinner set free of charge. You probably know many of the winners. Watch this paper e:ich ' month for your turn. I Royai Standard Flour is'. the best and purest flour on | the market in Western Canada today. It is a superior flour���not merely different, but superior. MANUFACTURED BY rluipi I.IMITKD VANCOUVER, B C ANY available Cominion Lands within the Railway Belt in British Columbia, may be liomesteaded by any person who is the sole head of a. family, or any male over 18 years of age, to the extent of one-quarter section of 160 acres, more or less. Entry must be made personally at the lnca . land office for the disriel in which the land is 'situate. Kntry by proxy may, however, he made on certain conditions by the father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister, of an intending homesteader. The homesteader is required to preform the conditions connected there with under one of tlis following plans; 1) A.I least six mouths'' residence upon and cultivation of the laud itt each year for three jears. i'2; If the father for mother, if the father is deceased), of the homesteader resides upon a farm in the vicinity of the land entered for, the re quirements as to residence may be satisfied by such person residing with the father or mother. (3) If thp settler has his permanent residence pou farming land owned by him in the vicin ity of his homestead, the requirements as to res ideuce may be satisfied by residence upon the said land. Six months' notice in writi.tg should hegiven tn the Commissioner of Dominion Lands at Ot tawa of intention to apply for patent. Coal.���Coal mining rights may be leased fora period of twenty-one years at au annual rental /if $1. per acre. Not more than 2,SW> acres Bhall be leased to one individual or company. A roy- aliiy at the r.ite of live cents per ton shall be ollectcd on the merchantable coal mined. W. W. COKY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior K. H.���Unauthorized publication ol this advertisement will nnl be tiaid for. Pacific Hotel Grieg & Morkison, Prop. The Pacific is the Headquarters for Commercial and Mining Men Is steam heated, electric lighted; the rooms are larjre and cosy. Thn Hest Cuisine between Wiimipi'ir and the Coast. se Ii Electric current supplied for Power, Lighting, Heating and Ventilating. Power furnished for Hoisting and air-compressing plants, with an absolute guarantee of continuous power service for operating. Get Our Rates. We Can Save You Money * ���$��� ��*��� ** 4* 4�� 4�� * 4- 4* ��$��� ��f* * J* ��� 4*4�� * 4v�� *!- * 4* ��?��� ��� ���$��� ���*��� * AT THE CHURCHES Presbyterian���Services will be con ducted morning and evening, 11 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. Rev..M. D. McKee, Pastor. Me;thodist���Rev. Ralph W. Hibbard B.A., will conduct sctvises as usual at Methodist Church morning and evening Services every Sunday, morning and Sunday School at 3. Tenders for Freighting of Supclles for the Yukon Telegraph Line. SEALED TENDERS addressed to the mi. "li'isigued aud endorsed "Tender for Packing Supplies," will be received until 5:00 j p. m., on Thursday, November 25, 1TO9, for the packing of material and supplies for points along the Yukon Telegraph line between yucsuelle aud Atlin, in the course of the seas-! ons of riio. l'Jii nn<\ a')12. Forms of tender aud specification may be obtained and form of contract seen on application to Mr. J. T. Phelau,Superintendent of Government Telegraphs, Vancouver, II. C, Mr. Wm. Henderson, District Superintendent Government Telegrsplis. Victoria, IS. C. and from the Government Telegraph Agents at Asiicroft, IS. C, Quesnelle, B. C, Uazelton, B. C, and Telegraph Creek, B.C. Persons tendering arc notified that tenders will not be considered unless made on the printed forms supplied, and signed with their actual signatures with, their occupations and places of residences, lit the case of firms, the actual signature, the nature of the occupation and place of residence of each member of .the firm must be given. Each tender must be accompanied by an accepted cheque on a chartered bank, made payable to the order of the Honourable the Minis ter of Public Works, edual to ten per cent (10 p. c.) of the amount of the tender for one year's packimr. which will be forfeited if the person tendering decline to enter into a contract when called upon to do so, or fail to complete the work contracted for. If the tender be not accepted the cheque will be returned. The Department does not bind itself to accept the lowest or any tender. By order, NAPOLEON TESSIER, Secretary. Department of Public Works, Ottawa. September 24, 1W5. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER of the estate of Ola John son, late of Midway, iu the County of Yale, deceased. NOTICE Is hereby given pursuant to the Revised Statutes of British Columbia. /'h.tpter IS", ili.il all creditors and others having claims against the estate of the said Ola . oh'is-n:. who diei on orab ml !n�� 1nMi day of I*ecenil)or, l'AJu, are required on or bi/fme the i!ud day of October, lW, to send by post, pre- ii:i:d, or delivr to the i ndersigned. Solicitor 1;.r Andrew K.itf . i'i�� <'.\ooulor of the last will .ind tfst��ini<Mit ol il" said deceased, their Chris- lain umnes ;;n,l .-..rnaiues. pddresses and de. scrip'.iors. the full description of tln-ir claims and the nature of til'* serurities, if any, held by them. Ami luriher, take notice, that aft r such last nteuliiiiied date, the executor will proceed to' ilistri'iiile the assets of iln�� deceased arr odg the V-trties entitled tlu'reto. having reirard to the ciaims .nlv ot which lieshail then have notice, and mat the said executor will not be liable for tht-t-ai.l assets, or any part thereof, to any person or tmrsons of \vhosc c-aims notice st-all mil h ire b;'eu received at the time of 6uch distribution. Uatet at Green wood. Ii. C, this 20th day of Sepauiilt r, WK J. P. MCLEOD. 3-4t Solicitor for the Executor. LOST A Jady's h'ack satin coat, between Boundary Fall-* and Midway, on Friday, September 3rJ Finder will please lia ve the sanio at the Times oflice, and Newspapers will not be paid for this adver- j phot|e pjloer)jx Tviv-erv stable. No. 37, tisement if they insert it without authority : . from the Department. ��� Phoeuix, ajid receive reward. Catholic.���Church of the Sacred Heart.���Divine service 1st, tliirdand fourth Sunday in each month. Holy mass at 10 a. m.; vespers and benediction at 7:30 p. m.; Sunday school a' 2:30 p.m. Rbv. J. A. Bkdabd, O. M. I. pastor. Church of England (St. Jude's)��� IOvery Sunday, Morning- and evening. Matins, 11 a. m. Evensong, 7:30 p. tn. Sunday school, 2.30 p m. Holy Communion, 1st and 3rd Sundays at 8 a.m; other Sundays at 11 a. m. Saints' Day services as announced in Church. Rev. F Vernon Venables, Vicar. Copper HANDBOOK. (New Edition issued March, 1908.) Size : Octavo. Pages : 1228. Chapters : 25. Scope: The Copper Industry of the World. Covering-; Copper History, Geology, Geography, Chemistry, Mineralolgy, Mining, Milling, Leaching, Smelting, Refining, Brands, Grades, Impurities, Alloys, Uses, Substitutes,Terruinology Deposits by Districts, States,Countries and Continents, Mines in Detail, Statistics of Production, Consumption, imports, Exports, Finances, Dividends, eic. The Copper Handbook is concededly the OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOO H. BUNTING CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Dealer in all kinds of Rough and Dressed Lumber, Mouldings, Windows, Doors, Shingles, Bricks, Cement, etc., etc, ESTIMATES FURNISHED. GREENWOOD, : B. C. PHONE 65. 0000<X>00<>OOC<>0<><)0000000000 The Miner needs the book for the facts it gives him regardi' g Geology, Mining, Copper Deposits and Copper- Mines, >��� The Copper Consumer needs the book il for every chapter it contains. It tells what and explains how and why. The Investor in Copper Shares cannot afford to be without it. The Copper Handbook g ives statistics and gen eral information on one hand, with fj thousands of detailed mine descrtpt- j] ions on the other, covering the copper mines of the entire world, and the 40 "il pages of condensed statistical tables alone are worth more than the price of the book to each and every owner of copper mining shares. Price : $5.00 in Buckram with gilt top, or $7.50 in full library morocco. Terms : The most liberal. Send no money, but order the book sent you, all carriage chatges prepaid, on one week's approval, to be returned if unsatisfactory, or paid for if it suits. Can you afford not to see the book and judge for yourself of its value to you ? WRITE NOW to the editor and publisher, HORACE J. STEVENS 453 SHELDON BUILDING, HOUGH- if TON, MICH., U.S.A. THE BOUNDARY CREEK TIMES * Satan �� Sanderson By HALLIE ERMINIE RIVES. Author of Hearts Courageous, Etc. Copyright 1908. The Bobbs-Merrill Company. wring faces, and the old lust of daring leaped up instantly to grapple with the rejuvenated character. Devlin's voice came over the heads of the crowd as, burly and shirt sleeved, he strode across the street: "Hand over the dust you've stolen before you are tarred and feathered, Hugh Stires!" Harry looked at him, surprised, his mind Instantly recurring to the placard he had seen. Here was a tangible accusation. "I have stolen nothing," he responded quietly. "Where did he get what he just sold ��� me?" The jeweler's sour query rose ! behind him from the doorway. "We'll find that out!" was the rough rejoinder. In face of his threatening peril Jessica forgot all else���the restive horse, the child. She sprang to the ground, her face pained and indignant, and started to run across the street But, with a cry of dismay, she turned back. The horse had caught sight of the red automobile and, snorting and wild ��yed, had swung Into the rtoadway. "It's Devlin's kid!'' some one cried out, and Devlin, turning, went suddenly ashen. The baby was the one soft spot In his ruffianly heart. He sprang toward the animal, but the movement and the hands clutching at the bridle sent it to a leaping terror. In another Instant it had broken through the ring of bystanders and, frenzied at Its freedom, daohed down the long, level street with the child clinging to the Mddle pommel. It was all the work of a moment, one of panic and confusion, through which rang Jessica's scream of remorse <and fright Torpor held the crowd���all save one, whose action followed the scream as leap follows the spur. In a single step Harry gained the automobile. With an instantaneous movement he pushed the lever down and jerked the throttle wide. The machine bounded into its pace, the people rolling back before it, and, gathering headway, darted after the runaway. The spectators stood staring. "He'll never catch him," said Michael Halloran, who had joined the crowd. "Funeral Hollow's only a rAile away." With others he hurried to\ the hotel balcony, where he could watch the exciting race. Jessica stood stock still, as blanched as Devlin, wringing her bands. With the first bound of the car under him, as the crowd was snatched behind, a weird, exultant thrill shot through Harry's every nerve. Bach bolt and bar he knew as one would tell his fingers. Somewhere, at some time, he had known such flight���through mellow sunlight with the air singing past Where? When? Not for the fraction of a second, however, did his gaze waver. He knew that the flat on which the town was built fell away In a hollow ravine to the southward���he could see It from the cabin doorway���a stretch of breakneck road only a mile ahead. Could the child hold on? Could he distance , those frenzied hoofs in time? The arrow of the Indicator stole forward on the dial. Far behind as the crowd watched a I cry rose from the hotel balcony. It was Barney McGinn, the freighter, with a glass at his eye. "He's gaining!" he shouted. "He has almost overtaken the horse!" The horse's first fury of speed was tiring. The steel steed was creeping closer. A thunder of* hoofs In pursuit would have maddened the flying animal, but the gliding thing that was now so close to him came on with noiseless swiftness. Harry, had reserved with the nicety of a practiced hand a last increment of speed. With the front wheels at the horse's flank, he drew suddenly on this. As the car Be lifted ihe child from the saddle. responded he swerved It sharply In Y and, holding with one hand, leaned far out from the step and lifted the child from the saddle. The automobile halted again before the hotel amid a hush. The men who \! a little while before had been ripe for violence now stood In shamefaced silence. It was Jessica who ran forward and took the child, still sobbing I' a little,' from Harry's hands. One long look passed between them���a look on her part brimming with a great gratitude for his lifting of ber weight of dread and compunction and with something besides that mantled her cheeks with rich color. She kissed the child and placed her In her father's arms. Devlin's countenance broke up. He struggled to speak, but could not and, burying his face in the child's dress and crying like a baby, he crossed tbe street hastily to his own door. Harry stepped to tbe pavement with a dull kind of embarrassment at the manifold scrutiny. He had misconstrued Jessica's flushing silence, and the Inference stung. The floes zest was gone, and the rankling barb ol accusation smarted. He should apologize to the owner, he reflected satirically, for helping himself to tbe automobile���he who stole gold dust, he at whose door the town laid its unferret- ed thieveries, be who was the scapegoat for the town's offenses. That owner, in very fact stood just then In the hotel doorway regarding him with interest. He was the sheriff of the county. He was about to step forward when an interruption occurred. A scuffle and a weak bark sounded, and a lean brown streak shot across the pavement "Rummy!" cried Harry. "Rummy!" Through some chink of the dead wall In his brain the name slipped out, a tiny atom of flotsam retrieved from the wreck of memory. That was all. but to the animal which had just found its lost master the word meant a sublimation of delight, the clearing of the puzzle of namelessness that had perplexed Its canine brain. The dog's heaven was reached. Down on his knees on the pavement went Harry, with his arms about the starved, palpitating little creature and his cheek against Its shaggy coat In another moment he had picked it up Id his arms and was walking up the street. He went back to his cabin with a strange feeling of exaltation and disappointment���exaltation at the recurrence of something of his old adventures, disappointment at the flushed silence with which Jessica had received the child. -.*** Chapter 19 ESSICA bore back from the town that afternoon a spirit of tremulous gladness. In the few moments of that thrilling ride and rescue a mysterious change had been wrought in her. In the past days her soul had been possessed by a painful agitation which she did not attempt to analyze. At moments the ingrained hatred of Hugh's act, the resentment that had been the result of that year of pain, had risen to battle for the inherent justice of things. At such.times she was restless and sat much alone, puzzling David Stires by meaningless responses. She could not tell him that the son whose' name he never took upon his lips was so near; that he whose crime his father's pride of name had hidden through all the months since then had gone down with the current, shunned by honest folk, adding to his one dismal act the weight of persistent repetition. She could not tell him this, even though that son now lived without memory of the evil he had done, though he struggled under a cloud of. hatred, reaching out to clean deed and high resolve. Now, however, ail distrust and trepidation had vanished. Strangely and suddenly the complex warfare in her mind had stilled. Standing with Mrs. Halloran, she had listened to the comment with shining eyes. Not that she distinguished any sudden change of opinion to turn persecution to popularity and make the reprobate of today the favorite of tomorrow, but in its very reserve she instinctively felt a new tension of respect. Suspicion and dislike aside, there was none there who would again hinder the man who bad made that race with death. For her own part, she only knew that she had no longer fear of soul or sense of Irrevocable loss or suffering. The Hugh she now loved was not the Hugh who had sinned. He must some time learn the facta of his past Was it not better to know the very worst it contained now, to put all behind him and face a future that held no hidden menace? She alone could tell him what had clouded his career, the thing whose sign and symbol was the forged draft She carried the slip of paper In the bosom of her dress, and every day she took it out and looked at it as at some maleficent relic. It was a token of the old buried misery that, its final purpose accomplished, should be forgotten forever. How to convey the truth with as little pain as might be, this was the problem, and she had found the solution. She would leave the draft secret ly in the cabin, where be must see it It bore his own name, and the deadly word David Stires' cramped fist bad written across it told its significant stpry. How it got there Hugh would not question. It would be to blm only a detail of his forgotten life there. She was glad when late tbe next afternoon Dr. Brent came for his chal with David Stires, and the latter sent her out for a walk. All was quiet No wisp of smoke curled from the cabin chimney, no work was forward, for Harry bad climbed far up the mountain, alone with his thoughts. It was a favorable opportunity. Jessica had the fateful draft in hei hand as she ran quickly down the trail and across the cleared space to the cabin door. It was wide open. Peering warily, she saw that both rooms were empty, and, with a guilty last glance about her, she entered. A nail In the wall held an old violin, and beneath it was a shelf of books. She took one from the meager row and opened it curiously. It was "David Copperfield," and she saw with kindling Interest that heavy lines were drawn afong certain of the pages. 8aa looked about her. Where should she put tbe draft? He had left a marker Id tbe book. He would, open It again ao doubt. She laid the draft between the printed leaves, beyond the marker. Then, ���replacing the volume on the shelf, she ran from the door and hastened back up the steep trail to the Knob. Leaning back against the warm rock, lapped in ihe Serene peacefulness of the spot, Jessica fell into reverie. Never since her wedding day had she said to herself boldly "I love him" ���never till yesterday. Now all was changed. Her thought was a tremulous assurance: "I shall stay-here near him day after day, watching. Some day his memory will come back, and then my love will comfort him. The town,will forget it has hated and will come to honor him' Some time, seeing how he is changed, his father will forgive him and take him buck, and we shall all three go home to the white house in the awpens. If not. then my place will still be with Hugh. Perhaps we shall live here Perhaps it cabin like thnt will be homo, and I shall II w with him and work with him and care for him." Thus she dreamed ��� a new tiny dream, unravnged bv the sordid tests of verity. So absorbed was she that she did no! hear n step approaching over the springy moss, a sharply broken breath as the intruder stilled an erielamalior. She had drawn ber handkerchief across her eyes against the dnnoin;.: glimmer of sunlight. Suddenly it drop ped to her lap. and she half turned. In an instant of surprise, as Harry's look flushed into hers, a name sprang unbidden to ber lips���a name that Struck his strained t'aee to sudden whiteness, ringing in liis ears like the note of a sunken hell. All that was cluraoring in him for speech rushed into words. "You call my name!" he cried. "Yon know me! Have I ever been 'Hugh' to you? Your face, that white band across your eyes, your voice, they came to me like something far away thut I have known. I was mistaken. I was crazy to think that you"��� He stopped^ A wave of sympathy passed over her. She felt a mad wish to throw all aside, to cry to him: "You did know me! You loved me once! I am Jessica���I am your wife!" So intense was her emotion that it seemed to her as if she had spoken his name again audibly, but her lips had not moved, and the tap of a woodpecker on a nearby trunk sounded with harsh distinctness. "I have wanted to speak to you," she said after an instant in which she struggled for self control. "You did a brave thing yesterday ��� a splendid thing. It saved me from sorrow all my life!" He put aside her thanks with a gesture. "You saved me also. You found me ill and suffering, and your horse carried me to my cabin." "I want to tell you," she went od hastily, her fingers lacing, "that I do not judge you as others do. I know about your past life���what you have forgotten. I know you have put it all behind you." His face changed swiftly. Today the determination with which he had striven, to put from his mind the problem of his clouded past had broken down. In tbe light of the charge which had been flung in his teeth the afternoon before, his imagination had dwelt intolerably on it. "You know!" he said hoarsely. "Yet. you say that! They stoned me in the street the day I came back. Yesterday they counted me a thief. It is like a hideous nightmare that 1 can't wake from. Who am I? Where did I come from? I dare not ask for fear of further shame! Can you imagine what that means?" Sho ou��no vn>se to him and touched his arm. "I know all that you suffer." she said. "You are doing the strong thing, the brave thing! The man in you is not astray now; {MINES AND .MINING! tattntitivfftfavisoAttea^iKntiOdei, The St. Anthony gold mine, Sturgeon lake, is rf*port<-d sold for $350,000. Axel Li'Zf'tiberfr was fataH\ crushed by a enr train in th�� Graiiby mines last F id;iv. Tlie A Una M, H miles I'nmi Nelson, has been bonded to two piominent men at tin: coast. Fifurli lllilidieu lUe;i ;���!,' r lll|- <d on Oiler crer-k, Alaska. ;n:��! ac'ive pliiCi r mining i-, u; <uI' swinjr. The strife between the Western Federation and ]'>:���::'>>. is at Htilw is ?ruled and tin n,. u mici- m re ai work. William A. Clark, son of former .Senator Clark ol Mont;.:'.., Leckle's New Shoe Catalogue- You ought to send and get it We have just received a copy and examined it carefully Just as a catalogue���just as a piece of first- class, artistic printing- you ought to see it. to realize what can be done at the Pacific coast. As a superior product of Pacific coast craftsmanship, it evidently embodies the spirit of its publuh ers, tbe J. Leckie, Co., Ltd., uf Vancouver. The quality of thi'ir catalogue is a g )od standard- by which t<> judge the qu.iliiy of ilU: b,.ots and slices they make for British Columbia wear rs. The hoot.-, are shown in the natunil colors, a- d are described in detail. Nothing of practical interest ���nothing that will be useful in buying shoes Ims been omitted from tho information which this fine catalogue contains. There are. three distinct fen- Steel ange The oven door of the Kootenay drops down and provides a shelf upon -which to rest the pans drawn from the has prrkcieil a new pr< c s.s for ; turns about it. The first import- extiacting zinc, at muchly creased profit. in- IVsidT.t Taft visitrd the 1200 foot level of the Lenard copper mine, near Helena, Mon., Last week. He was accompanied by John Hays Hammond. 'Sandy" Faulds, well known to mining men of British Columbia, is heading a party of prospectors on a trip up the Slik- ene, where there is said to be some unusually good coal.���Hos- mer Times. C Murray of Fort William has recorded SO acres of mining property eight miles east of English river station on the Canadian Pacific. He claims to have made the first discovery of Nickel west of Sudbury. The Vancouver group, a well knovrn silver-lead mine at Silver- ton, has been sold to the Le Roi No 2, for a sum in the neighborhood of $150,000. The deal was put through by A, N. Pelly, formerly of Greenwood, who acquired the property 14 vears ago. "You are doing i'tc stroiif/ thing." way back. When your memory comes you will see that it is fate that has beenleadingyou. There was noth ing in your past that cannot be buried and forgotten. What you have been you will never be again. I know that! I saw you tight Devlin^ancl I know why you did it. I heard you play the violin. Whatever has been, I have faith in you now!" She spoke breathlessly, in very abandon, carried away by her feeling. As she spoke he had turned toward her. his paleness Hushed, his eyes leaping up like hungry tiros, devouring her face. At the look timidity rushed upon her. She stopped abruptly and took a startled ritep from him. He turned from her Instantly. His hands dropped at his sides. The word thut had almost sprung to speech had slipped back Into the void. "I thank you for the charity you have for me," he said, "which 1 in no way deserve. I���I shall always remember it" , She hesitated an instant made as if to speak. Then, turning, sln> went quickly from him. At the edge of the bushes she stopped with a sudden impulse. She looked at the handkerchief she held. Some tiny lettering was embroidered in its corner, the word "Jessica.'' She glanced behind her. He had not moved. Rolling it into a ball, she threw it back over the bushes, then ran on hastily through the trees. After a time Harry turned slowly, his shoulders lifting in a deep respiration. The white and filmy cambric ccvighc his eve lying at the base of (Continued next week.) Granite Bay mining district, on Valdez Island. B. C. ^ -*" tractW ��"��mon just now. Phenomenal gold values are reported from recent discoveries. The Mumfqrd syndicate are opening up some high grade copper- , .. ,_ . gold ore bodies. A dock has It was lost but �� it has found its been built at Granite Bay to accommodate 3oo ton scows to transport the ore to coast smelters. This island lies between the main land and Vancouver Island One fact is better than ten hearsays- ���Ask Doctor Burgess, Supt. Hospital for Insane, Montreal, for his opinion of "The D. L," Menthol Plaster. The genuine made only by Davis & Lawrence Co. A SERMON IN RHYME If you have a friend worth loviug, Love liiin: Yes, and let him know That you love him ere life's evening Tinge his brow with sunset glow; Why should good words ne'er be said Of a friend- till he is dead Scatter thua your seeds of kindness, All enriching as you go: Leave them; trust the Harvest-giver, He will make each seed to grow. So, until life's happy end, You shall never lack a friei-cl J H Iir, wn ant one is that it shows the points of the shoe. It is an education in this line, of unusual benefit for the buyer of shoes. It is well to know what to look for when buying shoes. You will understand it better when you examine this catalogue. Then, in the second place, it tells vou the retail prices of Leckie shoes. You can decide on the shoe you want from the catalogue, and know exactly how mqch it will cost. In the third place it tells you where you can get Leckie shoes. It gives the names of all tbe dealers who handle this celebrated line. All you have to do to get this artistic, useful book is to address J. Leckie Co., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C, on a postal card, telling them you read about their catalogue in the Boundary Creek Times and would like to have a copy. Best do it right now, while you have it in mind. For Bronchitis and asthma: try Allen's Lung Balsam; the best cough prescription known. A GOLD STAMPEDE sale by the Honter=Kendrick Co., Ltd. ���.Auuiuei great gold stampede has started in the district near Nome, according to news brought by the steamer Umatilla which arrived in Seattle recently, which reports that five steamer loads of stampeders have gone from Cape Nome to a discovery on the Idita- rod, a tribulary of the Innoko river. The richest finds are on Otter creek, where the ground is shallow and the pay deep. The United States will issue a two-cent stamp in commemoration of the Fulton celebration at New York next fall. RAH RAH DAY .October If) will be the last day of the A. Y. P. Exposition, and ''Rah Rah Day" will be one of general thanksgiving for the most successful fair ever held in the west. Everything in the fair grounds will b,e wide open. Grotesque-costumes, ear-loads of confetti; millions of tin horns and cow bells, steam -whistles and sky-rockets, will be the. order of the day and night. Everybody will know everybody else; bands will plav not Wagner and Donizetti but "There'll be a Hot Time" and "We Won't go Home till morning." President Chilherg will officially give the keys of every locked door on the ground, including his cellar, to a popular king ziinr.*-..'i K., iUo m-i.%1, oiiri urill then throw his hat over the Government building, roll over three times in the bed of geraniums in front of the statute of George Washington, and from that minute pandemonium will reign. Such is the begining but not tho end of "Rah Rah Day." Doctors are especially invited to attend. NORTHEIN RECORDS The holders of the farthest- north record at various times have been: '158S, John Davys, En if., ship, degrees 72. minutes 12. 1594, Wm. Barents, Hoi., ship, degrees 77, minutes, 20. Io07. Henry Hudson! Eug., ship, degrees SO. minutes 23. 1773, J. C. Phipps. Eng., ship, degrees SO, minute< 48. 1806, W. S. Scoreshy, Eug., ship, degrees 81, minutes 50. 1827, W. A. Parry, Eng., ship, degrees 82, minutes 45. 1875, G. 3. Nares, Eng., sledge, degrees 83, minutes 20. 18S2, A. W. Greely, Amer., sledge, degrees 83, minutes 24. 1895, F. Nansen, Norway, sledge, degrees 8i>, minutes 14. 1900, Duke d Abruzzi, Italian, slerlge, octrees on, minui/es .-o. 1905, R. E. Peary, Amer.. sledge, degrees S7, minutes (>. 1908. Dr. Cook, Amer.. sledge, degrees 90, north pole 1909, R. E. Peary, Amer., sledge, degrees 9H, north pole. The Mormons arrived at Salt Lake valley, Utah, July 24, 1847. The first ascent by means of h fire balloon was made by the Brothers Montgolfier, at Anuo- nay, June 5th, 1783, The Bank of England was founded by Wm. Patterson, in 1C>94. "The D. & L "Emultions taken in cases of ifencr.il ih'bili'.y and loss of appetite, is sure in t;ivc tho best uf reMilts. It restores health and gives renewed vitality. The year year. Too 2.O0O wi la; local bachelor- ing. be a leap I >r some of our id aro still wait- In lo03 L'>!'don h.id n popifa- tiou of 150.000 only. aXj ke&iise the Danjre V J) r-*&f*i DEATH OFTEN LURKS IN A CUT. Ferrovfm, the invigorating tonic, contains Beef, the most strengthing food in the least bulk, Iron, which maices rich red blood and gives strength and vitality to the whole body and just enough pure Spanish Sherry Wine to stimulate the digestion and thus aid the assimilation of the Iron and Beef. ��1.00 per bottle at druggists. THE ISLE OF PINES This island Iks io the south of the island of Cuba and- has of recent ve;;rs come into prominence through the .-imerican invasion of land seeker1-. A glorious climate, ferule soil and .-.Lur.daut mineral springs are some of its principal attractions. As a winter resort the island has drawn a great number of amen can pleasure seekers but the future of its prosperity lies in the soil itself where every manner of marketable fruit can be raised at enormous profit. Our idea of a fool man is OLe who will kiss a woman after seeing her kiss a pet dog, /: / it A VOU see this danger illustrated in the case of Mr. W. C. Edwards, a well-known Friendly Society leader, of Peter Street, Toronto. He cut one of his lingers with a piece of glass, and instead of applying Zam-Buk to prevent blood poison and to heal it, he neglected the cut, and blood poison followed. He says:-"The blood- poison from the finger spread up my hand and arm and caused me terrible agony. After two months' treatment the doctor said there was no cure, and amputation would have to take place if I intended to save my arm. I left that doctor and consulted another. After a few weeks' treatment, he also told me that operation would be necessary. He said the bone had become diseased and the finger would have to be opened so that the bone could be scraped. 1 went away to consider when I would have the operation performed and met a friend who advised me to try Zam-Buk. "That night 1 bathed the wound and put. on some Zam-Buk. I got. a little tleep for the first time for many nights. In the morning the wound began to bleed instead of the foul discharging as in the past. This was a healthy sign so I went on with the Zam-Buk. Well, to cut. a long story short, in a few days I put away the sling, and in a few weeks the finger was healed completely. To-day that, finger is as sound as a bell and I owe it. to Zam-Buk. I spent, over S20 in doctors fees and when I think how Zam-Buk at, such a trifling cost, saved me from amputation WHAT ZAIVI-BUK CURES. 1 am very, grateful for the balm 1 can tell you." Zani-Huk cures cnN. lmrtis. sjir;iins. feRterint: sores, nlc ������!'-. m--:1.!s. 1 ���!��������..! ji'-i-onini.'. ec/.c;n:t. Ui.i 1 tr, iliseiisci ;mk It-.-. rMiitiiiL' mip-s. riu^wcni:. coIil-cnieUs. c!i:i|-|m-<! l.alnl--. i iiil'iuiiti-. :m<l a!l % ilnif.".-'i-iT >r |><"-; I'rc'- ! . K.-fi:-v :.:n ;���! I:<-J" -<Kin i;;<i:;im's n:\-s .-.Il ::i l)\)c. i Z:m',-P.uk C... ;���: ..iTcrci -i-st %~\:, J, ��������??. ..IW.1������ -^rtb ' ������'," VST. ^TVBHTtff*^ THE BOUNDARY CREEK TIMES 3A1 able Grape Cream, of M?* vr^r. *r*j-B*." Bi ������:i>.t? <4 Uv.lur !iseil in Dr. Price's Baking ���;.: i; ii e.xiu * f��.}rm and composition in '.-.-:.���.;:.--,'; a Au. Usrioiis, healthful grape. ;"vf\- ��� v >���>. s tie 7017iV TOPICS 4) Vancouver, returning to Greenwood at the end of the month. "^ s.e die *ej jVo //me 'Phosphate I Oiti :i ()I<1 I Old N\-\v r-li-'hl Healers. I mix 1 leaU rs, coal Healers ��� ."lir-ti^lit Heaters SI.00 and up 2.50 and up 3.00 and up o.30 and up ;0 w ave the Goods e will accept your old stove in exchange. Phone 16 The Stove and Furniture Man �� Greenwood, B. C. Mrs. Jordan is still in the hospital. J. R. Jackson, left for the coast, on Tuesday. I. H. Hallett paid a flying visit to Fairview this week. Mrs. H. McCutcheon is visiting relatives at the coast. The School report for September will appear next week. R. Kerr, custom officer at Midway was in town on Saturday. Alex McDonald made a flying trip to Phoenix on Wednesday. George Kumbcrger paid a visit to Greenwood on Saturday last. R. D. Tait was a visitor to town from Rock Creek this week. Mr. and Mrs. Baillie, ot Eholt, were visitors to town on Tuesday. Next Friday will be Hospital Tag Day. Have your two bits ready. Rev. F. Vernon Venables conducted divine service at Eholt, last Sunday. E, T. Wickwire left for Spokane and the coast this week on a short visit. R. Roberts, manager ot the Jewell mine, was a visitor in town ' on Wednesday. Is your subscription due? You can easily tell bv looking at the label of your paper. Mrs. Alex Greig, of the Pacific hotel, returned on Wednesday from a visit to the coast. The Windsor Hotel has changed hands and now the business is in the hands of J. McCreath. Born���To Mr. and Mrs. J H. Macfarlane, Vancouver, twins, boy and girl, September 15th. An old friend at Prince Pupert sent us congratulations on our 13th birthday. Many Thanks. A. A. Frechette, left for Nelson on Tuesday's train on business and returned on Thursday The Greenwood Orchestra are not heard often these days, but they are steadily practicing each week. Collin Gillis was in town this week. He is with the C. P.. R. A SOUVENIR NUMBER A C. P. R. freight engine ran off the track last Saturday, but was back on the lines after some little'work the same afternoon. Last Sunday the dry house at the���Mother Lode, burnt down. This is a serious loss. The dry was the best in tbe country. Construction on the new building has commenced C. J. Wilson, Manager of P. Burns & Co, was a visitor to Greenwood last Saturday. He is suffering from a lame knee, having allowed a bovine to kick him in Vernon last week. Father Bedard has built an extensive woodshed at the back of his house, and will fit it up with a swing etc., for the use of any and all children, who want a good game and a place to romp. Father Bedard left for Nelson, on Tuesday, to conduct the services at the funeral of Ella Madden, eldest daughter of the proprietor of the Madden House, who died last Monday at the age of 16. Father Bedard had known her since she was a little child. W. W. Craig, who is doing business in the old Miller block opposite the Pacific hotel, expects to move into his new brick corner by December 1st, He will couduct a cash business exclusively and handle groceries and gents furnishings. D. S. Hardy will assist Mr. Craig. Rev. W. F. Williams is the new Methodist minister appointed to Greenwood. He is au advocate of the Pleasant Sunday Afternoon society and will hold musical services at his church every afternoon. Mr. Williams is a doctor of music and will be an acquisition to Greenwood. The Montreal Standard's special number has come to hand, and is a most creditable production. [t has a magnificent cover in colors, painted by one of America's best known artists. Tbe number contains nearly 150 half-tone | plates devoted to subjects of general interest, and has two superb panoramic viewBof Montreal suitable for framing. The printing is first-class, aud we understand that many thousands of the issue have been sent to friends abroad. Bearine. the standard hair pomade, is mad ; from the grease of the Canadian I3ear which has the heaviest coat of hair of any animal. 50c. a jar. METALS. "I COULDN'T KEEP HOUSE WITHOUT A SACK OF New York, Oct. 7���Silver, 51^; Electrolytic copper, 12 50 lo 12.65. London, Oct. 7���Silver 23^; lead, ��\Z 6s 3d. Oct. 7���Closing quotations on the New York curb and Spokane exchange: Did Asked B. C. Copper 7.00 7.12 Granby 93.00 100.00 AND Universal Bread Maker" Is what housekeepers everywhere say. You can get them at the store of Russell-Law-Caulfield Co., Ltd. ALSO EVERYTHING IN Groceries and Fruits CANADA IN 1920 Japanese Menthol is unequalled as a pain relieving agent. Applied in the " D. & L." Menthol Plaster it is the most effective remedy known for Lumbago, Sciatica, Rheumatic Aches and Pains. Try a "D. & L." Menthol Plaster the next, time you are suffering from any one of these complaints aud be convinced. 25c. each at druggists. {{ USE 12 SS .3E3K3K EGINA 1 WATCHES wV����j��k.,,"P ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED AL,L�� SIZSS AL��L. PRICES surve? party cref k. on fourth of July >K0 *=9 COME IN AND SEE THEM AT I UXogan $ go $��� [ m IN0S0R fv|��TEL CHARLES McCLUNG, Proprietor. Finest Furnished House in the Boundary Steam Heated. Lighted throughout with electric lights. First-class Bar, Strictly up-to-date goods. FIRST CLASS CAFE, OPEN DAY AND NIGHT WANTED���Position as housekeeper ci' governess in British Columbia by a lady in England Address letters to | " N," Times office. Greenwood, B. C. I SUBSCRIBE FOR THE TIMES D. McD. Hunter, formerly the principal of Greenwood school', has a similar position at Prince Rupert. Miss Watson has resumed her duties in J. D, Spence's office, having returned from the east on Sunday last. There will be a social dance at the Eagles Hall at 8 o'clock on Friday night. Everyone is cordially invited. Mrs. Manross, who was seriously ill at the hospital last week, is much better and once more at home. Harry Johns has returned from the Seattle fair, where he met Ralph Cunningham, a former Green woodite.. Austin Logan is expected home from Calgary, and other towns iu the Northwest, at the end of the week. The Jeuks brothers havo bought out thp Banbury milk business, Mr. Banbury will shortly leave for the coast- Walter Kennedy has at last taken a well earned holiday. H�� is vihiting Vernon aud the Okanagan, and will later go to Lord Strathcona stated in London last week that in ten years' time he believed Canada would be able to supply Great Britain with all the breadstuffs she required. MentllOl "i the form of Davis, Meri- Satve is the best application for mosquito and insect bites and stings, old sores, <tc. 25c. a tin at drug-gists. Count Leo Tolstoi, the eminent Russian author, is 81 years old. -"- -*mel can travel 800 miles in eight days. IQym A ipEsnditi Tonic Dice's tags the System f t2 3K?g*ftens the Muscles ''^'os Now Lifo ! .... ; r ,'i.;j >:!e��:cIao dealers. t.j\ig i; L.-:wrea-:o Co., liontreal. N , ��� FOR SALE Four-roomed house and lot at corner of Church street and Kimberly ave.��� $200 cash. Write to W. D. Flinn, Top- penish, Wash. FOR SALE $ Just the thing CORBY'S SPECIAL SELECTED RYE WHISKY Greenwood Ciquor Co. IMPORTERS GREENWOOD ft i n i <\ ft ft ft -ft i i ft ft i ft ft l=^3*K��jSN2*55N��N^^ Palace Livery Stables Small steel range, only used a short time. Price, $15. - Apply P. O. Box 44, Greenwood. r 'S im Balsam La Contoins no Opium. Is the one Snfe and Effective Cough Remedy for general fatally use DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Montreal. *5 First wreck one mile below the Jew tunnel and half a mile above the Gentile tunnel. Sunshine struck Jack Frost and knocked him into the moisture. Help the sun by buying a Heater of the Stove and Furniture man, A. L,. White. ROOMS FOR RENT in brick block. Apply at Thomas Drug Store. Newand old Heating- Stoves. New and old Stove Pipe. New and old Stove Boards. New and old A. L,. White. If You Have a Counh, Have Long Troubles. Have Lost Flesh. Are Threatened with Consumption. Try "Ik- ITiitdu Jlork) Miss Clark, Supt. Grace Hospital, Toronto, writes they have used it with the best results. SOc. and SI.00 Bottles. DAVIS & LAWREN'CE CO., Montreal. For Sale or Rent���Pianos, Sewing Machines. The O. I. C. New and 2nd Hand store. A. L,. White, Phone 16. FOR RENT���3-room house suitable for bacl.ing. Apply at Thomas Drug Co. Why not take it easy by the side of a Heater bought of A. L,. White? For Sewing Machine Needles and Oil see A. L. White, the Stove and Furniture man. MINING CLAIM FOR SALE ron saxe Fine three-year-old colt, well bred, and very gentle, ready to break. Call at Fritz Hnussener's pla;e, near Greenwood. 50 F "^ GREENWOOD and MIDWAY STIGE Leavss Greenwood at 7 a m. to connect with Spokane train; ind at 2 p.m with Keremeos train. J. McDonell. ik A DRAYING���We Can Move Anything P. C. BUCKLESS PROPRIETOR WATER NOTICE In Wellington Camp The property known as The Golden Crown, with plant and equipement now found thereon. For terms and particulars apply to G. R. Coi.dwei.1., Brandon, Manitoba. TVTOTICE Is hereby given that an applica- i-M. tioii will he made under Part V of the "Water Act, 1909," to obtain a license in the Similkameen Water District, Division of Yale District. (a.) The name, address and occupation of the applicant: Isaac K. Hallett, Greenwood, 15. C, Solicitor. lb.) The name of the lake, stream or source is McCarren creek, a creek arising- in Central amp, and emptying Into Boundary r.reck. (c.) The point of diversion: On Lot 30S3, and about the ceutre of said Lot. (d.) The quantity of water applied for (in cubic leet per second): Two. (e.) The character of the proposed-works: A dun with flume in pipes lending therefrom. (f.) The premises on which the water is to be used is the Garnet Mineral Claim, Lot "2794, in Siuiilkumeeii Oivisiou ul" Vale. (g-.) The purposes for which the water is to be used: Irrigation purposes, and purposes incidental ihen"i>. (h.) If fur irrigation describe the land intended to be irrigated, (riving acreage: Lot 2724, iu Similkameen Division of Yale District, containing 51 acros. (i.) .'.rea of Crown land intended to be occupied bv the propused works: fiutauy. lj ) This notice was posted jn the 20th day of August, 1909, ami application will be made to the Commissioner on the Fifth day of October, 1909. (k ) Give the names aud addresses of any riparian proprietors or liceus -s who, or whose land*, are likely to be affected by the proposed works, either above or beiow the outlet. Mark Ohistenson, Boundary Falls, B. C, Robert \ ood and ass dates, Greenwood, Ii. C, S. T. Smith, Grand Forks, II. C. I. H. HALLETT, 52-4t Greenwood, R. C. THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Paid-up Capital, $10,000,000 Reserve, $6,000,000 DRAFTS ON FOREIGN COUNTRIES Arrangements have recently been completed under which the branches of this Bank are able to issue Drafts on the principal points in the following countries: Austria-Hungary Finland Ireland Russia Belgium Formosa- Italy Brazil France Japan Bulgaria Fr'ch Cochin-China Java Ceylon Germany Manchuria China Great Britain Mexico Crete Greece Norway Denmark Holland Persia Egypt Iceland Phillipine Islands Faroe Islands India Roumania Servia Siam South Africa Straits Settlement*' Swedeu Switzerland Turkey West Indies and elsewhere NO DELAY IN ISSUING. FULL PARTICULARS ON APPLICATION J. T. BEATTIE, Manager - Greenwood Branch ���=*&?&&&&&��<&��<&��&��&��*&&�� ARE Y0H BRY? WE BREW GOOD BEER AND ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS Call up 'Phone 138, Greenwood Phoenix Brewery Co. BEER BEER - BEER i i i ^j^-^^3?iHS��^^^?S��5��<r5��^��^ u v\r< SiliOOL Large assortment of Scriblers, Exercise Books, Pimm ir^' Pencils, Rubbers, Crayons, Pencil Boxes, SUPFLltibi Compasses* at Reasonable Prices* BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, KODAKS AND SUPPLIES
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Boundary Creek Times 1909-10-08
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Item Metadata
Title | Boundary Creek Times |
Alternate Title | [The Greenwood Weekly Times] |
Publisher | Greenwood, B.C. : Boundary Creek Printing and Publishing Company |
Date Issued | 1909-10-08 |
Description | The Boundary Creek Times was published in Greenwood, in the Kootenay Boundary region of southern British Columbia, and ran from September 1896 to March 1911. The Times was published first by the Times Publishing Company (1896-99), and then by the Boundary Creek Printing and Publishing Company (1901-1911), and its longest-serving editor was Duncan Ross (1897-1907). In April 1911, the Times was absorbed by another Greenwood-based paper, the Ledge. The Times was revived in 1983, and it continues to be published out of a small building in downtown Greenwood to this day. |
Geographic Location |
Greenwood (B.C.) |
Genre |
Newspapers |
Type |
Text |
FileFormat | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Notes | Print Run: 1896-1911 |
Identifier | Boundary_Creek_Times_1909_10_08 |
Collection |
BC Historical Newspapers |
Source | Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives. |
Date Available | 2013-01-14 |
Provider | Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library |
Rights | Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/ |
AIPUUID | be1f4886-25dd-47fd-bf34-a069860817ed |
DOI | 10.14288/1.0171172 |
Latitude | 49.1000000 |
Longitude | -118.6833000 |
AggregatedSourceRepository | CONTENTdm |
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