���������V^ / C '���������yUr-fr^K.. V VOL.1. NO. 14. SANDON, B. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,, 1897. PRICE FIVE CENTS. II >. A Homesick. Barber, Writes to His' Wife An Infamous Slander on Sandon. It is surprising what creatures there are in the world after all. Up to a fow day's ago there was in town a barber named J. W. Brichnell, and for the , sake of venting some unworthy feeling on the place, or some one in it, .wrote to his wife, and it got into a San Francisco paper,.'saying that ,the cholera was raging in this town and the people wcre.floeing for their lives. Now, any one with an ordinary , spirit of humanity, would scarcely sny this of any place, even'fpii 'hearsay; but when the falsehoods made out of whole cloth with the- full knowledge that it is a falsehood unadulterated, a good healthy dose of the severest penalty of the law is too good for him. Now Prichnell knew when he Wiis penning these lines there never was a case of'cholera in town and never a severe case of any contageous fever for that \-'' matter, and why he should when leav- \ ing the place himself pen such a libel ' it is most difficult to understand. Even the editor of the Examiner in whose columns this slander appeared, \' 'if he knew the size of the place and its surroundings, would have known the , latter was a slander to ease a slanderous mind. Cholera never originates in a small town, with the climate of Sandon, and never is limited to less than a section of country when it does break out. All we have to say to Brichnell \ is that if this is the principle he in- ;{, tends to be governed by through life, he will ere long come to some unexpected stop, and not a day too soon either for the country's welfare. The folllowing is the libel that appeared in the Examiner, scare headlines and all. Residents and people who have been here, one and all, know the utter falsity of every line in thi3 excerpt, but this docs not in any way jS lessen the injury it may do the place outside. Sandon is pronounced by the health officers as the healthiest place in the Kootenay, and tho fact that there has been but one death hero the past'six months, and that of a littio child, is full proof of this. Let Brcch- nell come this way again if wants to sec his face in bold relief : CHOLERA MAKES WAY TO SAN- DON'S HOMES. scarcity of minors. No estimate of the number of d< aths has been received. For the benefit of the Examiner we will add, by way of comment on "the small nnd sluggish stream" referred tw above, that mountain streams,-rarely, if ever, run sluggish/sind that the one in question has a fall in the town of nearly 6 per cent., varying in /grade down the. valley. From here to the mouth, at New Denver, is ten miles and that place is said to he 2,000 feet below San.Ion, giving an average fall of nearly 4 per cent. i noon io mi. General Railway Notes. Description of the Trail From Ash- croft to the Yukon and Its Feasibility. w Plague in a Town of the North. I}*- Alabm kl Among Many Peovle in British Columbia. It is announced that Canadian Pacific Railway in the construction of its lino from the present terminus to a connection with the Nelson & Fort Shoppard Railway, will go around Gray's saw mill nnd the work of driv ing pili s for the trestle will begin next week. Contractors are now busily engaged in getting out ties and it is expected (hat the rond will be completed within 30 days. Tho qucsticn of a new location for a station house is being considered but no decision has yet been arrived at. The new station is to bo more extensive than the present quarters. A ucw track is being built to the reverberatory furnace and is to be completed before the first of next month. The new track will facilitate the ' unloading of fuel, etc., and the loading of blister copper. Six miles of track of standard gauge have been completed on the Columbia & Western railway from Robson to Trail and there is a sufficient amount of steel on the ground to complete 15 mile? of rond to be built from- Robson to Trail is 21 miles Three miles of track have been laid on the Slocan river brunch of the Cnna- dian Pacific Railway and an enuine is expected to arrive during the middle of next week. Matters are to be pushed so that the road can be completed by Oct. 15. ' Fifty men arc at work on the track-laying department. So far 24 miles of road have been graded. A new station is being erected at - Slocan crossing and a telegraph office has been established. -.A new hotel' has also been hnilt there and is being well patronized by both sportsmen and prospectors. : ���������.. "' LORD KELVIN'S MESSAGE. Pleased With Canada and Her Enterprise and Loyalty. Residknts Lkave to EscArn the Danger ot? Early Death. News of the Calamity Received Fkom a Tacoma Woman's Husband. Miners Desert Claims Which Last year Had Bekn Purchased at Fabulous Prices. Houses Oyer a Sluggish Stream. The Place Visited by tub Dread Scourge Located Over One Hundred Miles From Rossland. Tacoma, Wash., Sept. 2.���������Word was received here to-day by Mrs. John W. Brechnel from her husband at Sandon, B. C, thj:t the peor:������ are fleeing for their lives from that town on account of cholera. , ; Sandon is situated in a narrow gulch leading to Bear Lake, about 150 miles to'the east and north of Rossiand. The houses are built upon piles and posts over the small and ��������� sluggish stream, which runs down the gulch, the stream acting as the sewer' for the entire camp. With the subsidence of vtal, are roaming around Dyea with no definite object in view and unable to know what to put their hand to Many steamers crowded beyond their capacity five times over have had to put into British Columbia ports atter thirty-six hours' sail srom Seattle for provisions and water. At this rate of sailing they would not get into Dyea for six weeks, and during that time the suffering of those on board would be terrible. 'ITw.o unseaworth'y tugs were loaded' with 150 souls, and in their top heavy condition would topple over at the. first heavy wave.' The rush to .Klondyke cannot be too strongly deprecated in the interests of humanity.. One digging has been discovered. If more are. not'discovered, the 'suffering will be appalling. , ADVANCE IK SILYER. Supposed to be Due to Holding of American Supplies. Back London, Sept. 7.���������There advance in the price. of silver is supposed to be due to the holding back of supplies by Americans and to the idea that silver currency 'will be wanted in India, The purchases will be -for immediate shipment by people having contracts to fulfil in India and .China. The Times and Standard concur in the opinion that tlie impression that India will buy silver is a mistaken one. The currency department of India holds 13,000,000 of rupees which would be realeasod against gold in the event of gold being exported to Indie.. A gentleman styling himself Capt. Phillips-Wollcy with a special 'emphasis on tho "Capt." and the hyphen "-," sanitary inspector of the province, came to town the other day with a flourish of trumpets, laid information against a dozen or so of persons for neglect of tlie sanitary regulations, which resulted in the fining of six or seven persons and tit" dismissal of a couple of charges ancnt privies and cess pools because it was subsequently learned the offences were committed by persons now removed and the nuis. ances were on the public highway. In this act the Captain managed to corral son)- $-10 for the enrichment of the uvusury at Yictoiia, and in the blaze of his g.ory he lit out for the c.ipital. Now what strikes one in this connection as singular is this: Why a government officer should be so conspicuously partial. In this connection wc have nothing to say about the fines imposed, but we assume they were lor actual infractions, as tho public health is a matter of first consideration. The fact, then,that the informations against the actual owners of 'the cess pools were Jaid by the Captain himself, iy- phen and all included is evidence their evistence was infrnnotions'of-the law, and the Captain simply winked at it,��������� saw the infraction acknowledged it by faying informations, and went away without taking one step towards enforcing a'corrcction of the violations. Now how does the Captain,exuecL others to ol ey the law in matters that are in doubt, when he himself ignores what he acknowledges by informations to be violations. The point is this: When the Uaptain learned tho violations were on government, property, why did he not see the government was compelled to carry out regulations of its own creation, if he wants private parties to respect the government, its officers or the governmentlaws? This is a plain proposition and one that requires no Euclid, Algebra or Greek to unravel it. The question is why did not the Captain, we beg pardon with tho fty- pncn, take somo of tho money he gobbled in tho town in fines, and pay some one for cleaning up the cesspools on the government property ? Is it to remain a case, of fleece the people as long as.possible for a rigid observance of the law, spend the money in Victoria or elsewhere in high salaries for government officials with Captains and hyphens, and let people here who want tho town to remain healthy clean up tho cess pools for the government at their own expense. If this is the rule; the only cure is to regard the government and its hyphened officials as as public cess pool and make one general clearing out whenever an opportunity presents itself. second north fork ot Lemon creek and directly opposite tu tuwnsito of Lemon creek.)) Work is being rapidly under the, supervision ' of ^>.....ii J. A. Baker, and a fine Jj*xly of ore is on tlie durn]) ready for transportation'. The Sundown Fraction is owned by a syndicate, who will spare no pains in endeavoring to make a mine of tho property, little dido gkoup. Manager Sh iw, of the Carnduff Mining and Developing company, Carnduff, N. W. T., has just completed the amount of development for this season and has moved his outfit into town. Several tunnels and 'open cuts have boon run on (he different claims to thoroughly calculate tlie full extent of the ore bodies. The work done on the property nas .-shown it up wonderfully well. Plenty of or'j is now in sight ready to be taken out and shipped as soon as proper facilities are to be obtained. tailings. Several tons of meteor ore is on the wharf awaiting shipment to the smelter. The mine is. being worked with all possible vigor, and the force will be increased as fast as room is made in the mine. l< . r Peter Schombc-rg, one of the owners of the Two Friends, reports the work of running the new tunnel progressing splendidlv. They are now in 32 feet, and the rock is changing, which, Mr. Schomberg thinks, indicates nearing the ledge. ��������� ' Martin Markeson has received a number of samples of fine looking rock from a location recently made near the fifth south fork of Lemon creek. It is called Martin the Big Loaf, and is owned by Messrs. bronghton, Gilbert and Markeson'���������Slocan Cit\ News. ll~ Identified at Nelson as the Right Man. Starving A Whole Town. James Taylor who was arrested for tho murder of Sheriff Byler in Baxter county, Arkansas, in June 1892, reached the scene of the murder without delay. When he reached Nelson, Justice Drake read the charge to him, and it was duly supported by Sheriff L. C. Smith of that state. Taylor waived extradition, and went along with the American officers. It appears the man's name is Hardy, alias Roper, alias Taylor. '1 he nature of his offence is this: The dead shiriff and assistants were going to arrest him for cattle stealing, when lie lied and tool: refuge in a vacant house. He then fired on his followers through a crack in the building and Sheriff Byler fell mortally wounded, and died in ��������� a short time after. Taylor then escaped nnd his whereabouts were unknown until recently, when he wrote a letter to his brother on one of the letter heads of ' the Selkirk mine. This fell into the hands of the o!''ce'rs and led to the 'arrest. ^ It appears it was Sheriff Smith who identified the man here. Since reaching His destiny he wrote to J. A. Smith, of the Selkirk mine telling him what to do with some effects here. He says he will be able to clear himself, which h'- will, if he is not the guilty party. Even if he is, it may be shown he simply fired on his followers at random and did not intend to hit any one, which may be construed into a mitigating circumstance. Bar- VIOLENTLY INSANE. Unknown Man Taken With Fits on Baker Street���������Ii Ended in Lunacy. On Thursday evening last an unknown man suddenly taken with fits or. tho East End of Baker street. He was later discovered by the police, in a domented condition, finally becoming so violent that force had to be resorted to in order to prevent, him doing himself bodily injury, lie was shackled hand and foot and placed in the jail for safe keeping, lie is unable to toll who he is or where he belongs, and there is nothing upon him to assist in his ^identification.���������Nelson Miner. ������������������ IB 118. Many of, the Mines Have Ore on the Dump. D. E. Rafuse' and W.'J.Baty have finished their contract on the Cold Blow, on upper Lemon creek, and rc: turned to town. '.-When they quit work, an SO foot incline tunnel with a splendid body of pro and a rich paystreak was Jeft in the face. / The property, under the supervision of F. S." Andrews, will be worked all winter, and as soon as the trail up that creek is completed regular shipments. will be made. The idea is to havoa good quantity of ore on the dump so that when the snow becomes deep enough for raw- hidin'g it may'be .brought to the place of shipment more cheaply than by pack train. . SUNDOWM FRACTION. A representative of the News made a trip to the Sundown Fraction, situated one mile and a half below the Astonishing Story of Spanish barity in Cuba. The curate of the town of La ' Esperanza," in Santa Claa Province, has sent the following despatch to the Bishop of Havana: "From the first of July all tho stores and markets in this town have been closod'by order of the Captain General In God's nameI beg Your Fxcellency to implore the Captain General to withdraw his order. Otherwise all the ' inhabitants will die of hunger. Many have died already." 'The Captain General intends to enforce his decree until the fortifications are finished around the town, and I am informed that the works will not, be finished for twenty days." At the same time the Mayor of th'- town of La Esperanza wrote to the Governor of the province : "The whole population is starving. The resources of the municipality are exhausted. Hundreds of .women and children cry despairingly for food and hundreds have died of hunger. I do not know what to do under theso horrible circumstances. The order of General We.yler closing the markets and forbidding the sale of all kinds of victuals I cannot disobey. Meanwhile must 1 contemplate with indifference the spectacle of the peopJe of La Esperanza dying of the direst calamities ? I beg from Your Excellency a prompt answer. Wc have no time to spare if we are unwilling that everybody should perish here." La Esperanza is a town of about 8,000 inhabitants. It has been raided several times by tho insurgents recently, and to chastise the inhabitants for not defending the town, General Wey- ler issued his barbarous decree, under pretext that the stores and markets attracted the insurgents. What is more cruel still is the fact that a strong Spanish column is encamped around town and the Spanish soldiers are well provided with food,but stringent orders are given' to them, under the severest penalties, not to give any help to the inhabitants. The most territ'lc tales of misery come from the town; Mothers kneeling' before the soldiers, with their children in their arms, vainly beseech the heartless Spaniards,for a little food. Men who attempt to break through the Spanish lines in order to get into tho country either to procure food or joiu the insurgents are immediately shot. In many cases they have tried to force a passage throught instead of getting away by stealth,,but being unarmed the Spanish soldiers easily overpower and slay them. The only hope, of the population is that the insurgents may come and rescue them. 'But there is a very slight prospect of this. The insurgent bands which raid the town in July have now moved to the West, invading the Province ot Matanzas, and tho Cuban forces near. La Esperanza at this time are too few, to cope, with the 5,000 Spanish soldiers sent to the town t>y.General Weyler. The latest reports from La Esperanza say that a sort, of epidemic madness has been produced by hunger among the inhabitants, and that they kill each other and commit suicide by scores. i Bartlott Bros, are now packing down a car or two of ore for the 'Ajax mine. Two cars of Ruth and one of Ibex ora were wrecked on the Oregon short line a few days ago. c The Jackson mine has a double compartment shaft 100 feet deep, and soon a hoisting plant is to.be installed. E. J, Field says work on the Wonderful will be pushed more briskly than ever this fall and winter. Thoy are making ample preparations for it, i For the four weeks ending August 27 the Hall Mines smelter 5,766 tons of ore which yielded 522 tons of matte containing approximately 232 tons of copper, 157,300 ozs. of silver and 215 ozs. of gold. The Eagle mine, at the head of Sandon creek above the 3Ur was located in 1892, though but little was done with it until recently. It is owned by McLaren, of Perth, Ont., W. A. Allan,' of Ottawa, and E. Watt, who is now in charge. A few days ago,after the tunnel has reached 110 feet a lead of 12 feet in ividth with a satisfactory showing was met. This was on a cross cut tunnel. Mr. Watt is jubilant over his discovery. London Warnings. London���������The Englishmen now returning from the Klondyke are earnestly warning the public,against an English rush there. "The Klondyke," says one, "is a lottery. The are now about one hundred to'one prize." Yet this man has netted $30,000. He returns to the gold fields in the spring. i. ' ���������*" The papers begin to warn investors not to touch the Klondyke companies,' but' to extend their preference to Kootenay, where their returns are sure. The insurance companies are refusing to insure those going to Klondyke nt any price, unless they are joining a wcll-pqaipped expedition. The papers, however, publish advertisements inviting men with ������250 to join an expedition in November by a short and secret route to the northern regions. ��������� Weak Point of the Scheme. The Post's Paris correspondent, com meriting upon the article in the Eclair' by M, Gervaille. a member of the chamber of deputies from the island of Gaudeloup, French West Indies, advocating a Franco-Russian-American alliance against the common enemy, Euglan'd, says the writer shows plainly what help America would give the dual alliance, but it is not equally clpar what benefit America would derive from it. -��������� -~x> ��������� -v--;.. - ���������#T IV te '-i h \ J f-.: ���������*������ ;* '* VJ- ��������� ���������> -. ������ i- * ' m 1 -���������. m -ill ii ' .'I j J! J * i\. t Jh-'tyJ- ���������'& I" i������ 'if +" "Ii t .',i.. v.. 'K; *"X': ., ���������V ���������������������������2-- ^,HE':-MIj>riNa.'.;RE������IE.W::;' ���������BATURDAS; SEPTJEMBER, 11 1897; ssssr.- -j������������i.j?r SANDON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, : SATURDAY.....SEPTEIMBER 11, 1897. .Suissckii'Tiox, ?2C0 PKR.YKAii; ���������������������������''' ''.''.'���������''������������������ SlI.'lCTLY IX A'nVANCK. ,; ���������;'. '���������]'. }.:/,i. DULL TIMES.;'. .' . ' ��������� If ; times' are'not as brisk'in town ��������� .,, one ..way-aii'd-thc-other, -as they ought. '. to be, .the people are' in themselves a great measure; responsible for it. .'���������'. There. are some from .the'east., who have brought, eastern, notions with ���������' ,' them, and think,the place ought to be .'..��������� .be made to;conibnh to eastern usages , . and customs. This; is" altogether. ':wrong. Sandon,is.a mining camp,. ', and the' privileges,' of mining camps '���������:.."' must":;not''''be' restricted, though, they should be held in reasonable bounds. ''���������'. People;who, do, not' care' to mix yp with mining'camp usuages need not do it���������they are in no way compelled, ���������to do it, thqugh,'" they live in such' a camp, 'and in abstaining they will be ' just as much' respected���������nay more ' respected byininers"; and associates, if -:". consistent. ��������� What.'we want to. say ,;. more particularly, however, is that, when tod heavy a restriction" is employed,', the money that should be in circulation wilfgo into other channels ���������and be cut off from business uses. ; ", Another, damaging influence is, un- ,; necessary alarm over the drop in' sil- . ver. -We have just here to: say that at the. present moment there are more, .'miners at work around Sandon, with a larger pay roll, than there ev.-r before was'in, the history of. the place at this ; time of: the year. In short the ��������� ore. . shipments we report frorh week to week plainly, show this. The cause of dullness then must be traced to some .other source,". for what it is. ��������� In the first place it must not'be forgotten that our . business: places have ; increased 'numerically very rapidly, and all can- , not handle as much as ��������� if they were fewer, in number, r The great cause of . the dullness, such as it is, arises from unnecessary', caution. Many,; think that 'because silver is low, there will . eventually be a suspension of business, ,,and. they should take. care, of what '��������� money they have for'a rainy day. This . is' ail. pure imagination, without' the ,;; slightest ground for support.' ������������������������������������:.��������� ', Of course with silver ; low and no. assurance as to where it is going to stop, the same amount of, new capital ��������� ' cannot be got into the country for new enterprises and development' work, .though a wise business stroke, is always to buy when a commodity, is <*heap *:'. but the owners of all present shippers (and their operation alone is enough'to.sustain the town well) have ..time and again repeated they will run ���������their mines to full capacity with silver at 40c, and even less. Should it drop even lower than this, there are so many interests involved here that the mines will be operated. Th.e-owners of" the mines are 'nearly all owners of town property they cannot afford to to become depreciated in value for , the lack of employed labors in' the ; vicinity. Then again: there are immense amounts of money invested in' 'railways concentrators, smelters, etc.��������� these can,K)t be sacrificed, when con- \cessions will keep them in value. A.ll of these would have to come to the rescue, and.dperate at actual cost and even below it, to keep the mines running if silver dropped below an otherwise'payingprice. The report that "mines in Colorado and elsewhere, are -suspending operations because of the low price of silver has nothing whatever to do with the matter. Ourbies are; of the highest grade in. the world, and consequently less expensive in handling and treatment per ���������yaluc than any other ores in the world. ���������Our. concentrators, trams, etc. are be one of them. It is, of 'course, a fact that it is;indelicate for any newspaper to criticise closely the merits of .a,case" after it is :b.efore a court,' as that may tend to prejudice evidence ;to be subsequently given and influence the'result unfairly; but that is all there' is abput< it.' : If Forin's view of the 'matter, were carried out--newspapers', reports of cases would be very tame indeed; but'then we do not live in China, where newspapers ..reports have to be submitted to autocratical,authority bjfore they are given to'the public. The Miner said, this was a brutal assault, and.it went on toshov/why it was brutal, dealing Vith. the provocation and the consequences of the assault, alleging :the assailant should be severely punished. : We. cannot see that the paper exceeded ;its, authority or natural license, in this country, in. its comments. . .Of course, if it laid down a course for the'court, to take in the: case-, defining the -punishment, it. would have ..as the judge declared exceeded ��������� its proper license, but we .cannot sec that it,did. If-tlie judge's view limited tlie scope 'of a paper, all it could say of any case rio matter liow sensational, cruel or brutal, would be ah unembellished,recital ,6'f. the facts which 'would be "Kold Kale", indeed for the appetite, of the newspaper reader of .the present:'day. In the 'case of-.,Wood, who was hanged at Nelson, all it could, say was Paddy Woods .was.'shot ; it-..was, asserted j. Wood shot him, ' Wood subsequently escaped from gaol, he was re-arrested,, and'would shortly come up, for trial. A newspaper run on such principles might afford reading enough for the Rossiand Judge, but it would - hardly do for the rest of Canada. ; "We take it, Col. Baker,, while here, if at all observing should have, seen Sandon; is in' the. greatest need., of a government building. ..The necessity for a record office is acknowledged on all'hands, and that for , a police building is scarcely, less, pressing. Just think of a ,couple of J. P.'s, .lawyer's and a dozen' or'' more, witnessess huddling-' into',an eight feet, square dungeon, like the darkrhole in, Calcutta, to try three or, four prisoners chained ,to the .floor and .occupying, half the room we have described.-Imagine this, and you have a painting of San'dp'n's police court. This town contributes well annually to the treasury of the province, and to be put ofl in this way with, such a' make shift' for a 1,'Court House" is simply a disgrace in this age q.f advancement. :Surely tha government knows all about these things, and to longer put off remedying the short coming is evidence that Sari- donites must be "a.'.'"patient and'1?'long-", suflering people. . " ' ',,',' .,' Bright's- Disease. .'"They have done 1110 any amount of good," wore the'words' of- Mr. -Nelson Green,, G--.ilt, Ont.,111 speaking ' of. ������������������ his rescue from kidney aiiil uninary difficulty by tlie. -use'of. .Doan's 'Kidney Pills. Mr. Green says that', lie;"only, ���������tried them out of curiosity.; .but-it was a lucky.oxperi.iien't, for Doan's Pills made a complete curcinhiS case. He is now a cured .man, feeling, strong, well and in good, spirits. ��������� ',-'' Criticism'-: on tiie Yukon Royalty. H. C.Holden. - " F. Mi-Gray,- ..H&OEI'g:GKftl���������: a������?Hn PA0TBRSI '''"', PAPER-HANGERS; &e., &c: : A'point; of law was decided in-the case of house breaking -that came before Justices McArthur and Sandi- lands the .other day, it may not be ai.,:s.s to refer to. The lot is owned by Air. Harris, as he jointly, owns the rest of the townsite. The. building had been occupied,' and the tenant had moved out arid sold" her right of -possession, etc., to another who was about to move in. , While the house was vacant,' that is after the one'party had moved out,.and before the other .moved in, an employee of Mr. Harris, under instructions, tore it down. ..The employee was at once arrested for house breaking and .theft. At the trial,, before the justices, they held there was not a case against the prisoner, and ��������� he was forthwith released. This shows that an owner may at any time, while vacant at least, destroy any building another party may erect or 'endeavor to control on his.property.. .There are some' who contend that a mining right does not constitute a valid title. Of course, it is not such a title as a. straight Crown grant, or, as the Torrens, system would give,, but it is one that deprives any one else, at least, of the right of ownership or peaceable occupancy, and we believe the courts have gone farther in declaring it quite valid. A mining right enables the owner at any time to-occupy it for mining purposes, whether to the mind of another, there is mineral there ,or not, and, of:course, this renders possession or, occupancy by another without the authority of the party holding the mining right simply'but of the question. The essence'of the whole matter - is that if a party gets a title fromcMr. Harris neither Crown nor any one else can dispossess him or his assignee, though the law would not consider it equal. to either, a-'crown patent or a Torrens'deed. It is a "moral certainty, that many.,a one now going;to the Klondyke, who, if''thoy'return, at all, will return 'in disgust. The territory : in .which gold is found is limited, the government is re ���������taining alternate-sections,of even, this, and exacting a. heavy royalty -on what is mined. Add to'this uncertainty,, of success in collections, a: most arduous trip, an. inhospitable.climate, and an absolute scarcity of provisions and other necessaries' of life for either love, or money, arid you have a '.condition- of things most unenyiting. Add., to all this the fact that the country will soon be .the refuge- for,-cut throats, .murderers' and outlaws, and you have a collection of facts'that should cause all intending emigrants to'pause, and consider before they put: their very-existence in jeopardy, ,, -1''-..- ;���������' Is It In Canada? ���������lessening the cost of marketing. As we have said at the outset all. the un- ���������easiness, such as it is, is a groundless fear, that at the present has no reason .able excuse; JUDGE FORIN'S IDEAL NEWSPAPER. ,-, The Rossiand Miner and Judge Form appear to have a bit of a tangle . over an assault case in P���������ossland. ��������� It appears .that one Costello, a contractor, assaulted a lawyer named 'Edward Cronyn, and the Miner' commented on it severely censuring Cos- iclio. When the case came up for ���������hearing before the Judge, the other (day, the latter gave the newspaper a ���������;seyerc lecturing tor its comments, asserting the paper was trying., the case for tlie court. -It is no. secret that some judges "as well as* some other Our good brother Lowry says that he was the first journalist in the country to mention the necessity of a mint for Canada. Our issue of the 26th of June contained an article which went quite fully into tlie matter, and .advanced practically all the arguments th.': i an be advanced in its favor. They of course can be hashed and re-hashed and manufactured into.many more. The. substance then is that Canada lias lost nearly a million dollars on the eighteen or twenty millions of American gold now circulating and held by the banks and treasury of the country j that we have lost correspond ingly on the silver and copper coin minted in the old country : and thai wc have suffered to be transferred to the United States and Great Britain all the labor and all the advantages of labor employed in the coining. These are our principal losses .in failing to do ' the coining at home, and a single valid argument cannot be advanced against the proposition. Whether out- good brother ,j was first or last in the adyocacy for home mints, if he can succeed in educating the parliament of Canada to "the necessity for the establishment of a mint, he will have Pew men have a better knowledge of the -constitutional ..law., and treaty history of ������������������ Can ad a than , Hon. David Mills, and ''some, recent utterances:,by him to'" a 'reporter of the-'London' Advertiser are decidedly interesting. He said,that if and when the Alaskan boundary.is properly "drawn Canadians, will have'plenty, of-access to tho Klondyke via tho Pacific ocean and the Yukon. Dyea, for instance, he claims, is in Canadian territory; and he strongly advocates the' route, through Lynn inlet,"which, he argues, Ties almost wholly within Canadian,territory. '���������Prom the headwaters of the inlet to the headwaters of some, of the ' trib'u- larieo of the Yukon, a short .railway stretch of 50 or 60-miles, established either through Chilcoot or White, Pass, would bo the only railway construction required-,'-" ho say^-, "and the construction of such a route would require an expenditure of .'a very moderate amount of'money, and would give people df'siring to go to that district an easy and comparatively cheap highway." The basis of. his>oiiteu,tion:is.-that tho bonndary'does not properly follow all the. windings of the shore,' but only does so when -"no coast, line'' intervenes. He'goes very fully into the question from the d.ays.of-Russian possession down, quoting the treaty clause in oxtenso. ������������������'' The ��������� treat}' makes ''the summit of the mountains situated parallel to the coast" , the boundary line from where it strikes the 5Gl,h degree of north latitude on the mainland until it intorsects the" 1-llst degree, west hingitude which it follows to theA'-ctic. Another explanatory clause . is "added in which 'it declares,' among other things, that wherever" the summit of the coast line "'shall, prove to be at-tirj distance 'of more than tcti marine ���������leagues from the ocean', tho limit between the British possessions and tlie line of coast, which' is to belong to Russia, as above mentioned, shall be formed by a lino parallel to tho windings of the coast, and which shall never exceed the distance of, ten mar- inr leagues therefrom." Now, Mr. -Mills argues that it was clearly the intention or the treaty to adhere to the coast lino wherever there was such a thing, no ni'itter if it crossed inlets or not. Tho Russians, ho points out, only wanted fishing rights 011 the coast, and so woro not likely to stand out for the right to go behind fho coast lino at any place. Now Lynn inlet is crossed by a range of mountains near tho coast, known as Sr.. Blias' Alps, whic contains 'a number of peaks ranging from 10,000 to, 10,000 feet high. There are a number'of other inlets in J the same -position, and he insists (hat they are all ' "Canadian waters lying in Canadian, boundaries."���������Yan- couvoi World. ��������� . ^CjJflBtt��������� ���������t-t :.������������������ ' The; Engineering and Mining Journal says': .On July 27th the Dominion cabinet decided to,demand a royalty on the, output of the--now. digging of'the. Yukonv Under i'ii.; uiations , previously issued-, a ,f-n ol'- ������������������?!���������"> .i-ier.claim." for-registry aun.ii tax ol' PH.;!-;pet' annnni 'werC imposed.;. !T\o,\v.k< ad:!ii.i;,'n .to this, a r'd'ya 1 ty! of .lQ.;p..'*.r-c.ent..of tlie ontpiit is to be colleel"(i I'ro.m all .claims producing lnnre ' i',h;!',i th.it. 'amount;/ .More-' ovVr, every, .:i:,';<.n!:Hii'.'"e!aim on .all jilacer ground: i.'i (0 be reserved .as, the property of the government,.to be:sold or.wprkcd for its revenue.''. The establishment, of such a system, which is, wc .believe,'without a. precedent on this continent since the end' of Spanish rul.3 in i\lo.\ieo, is startling to thos.o who have already acquired property,on tho Klondyke by -right \o(. location, and possession, .if. not by title from the government; and , by prospectors who. iU*o'prbp~bsi.iig to go there. ' Tlie right of the Ca.nadiari,government"��������� tomake. such .���������.regulations'- is unquestionable ; tho policy is doubtful.-. There.i*-a su; picion that they would hot haveboen. so severe if it were not,; that, most'of the miners' in tho district were Americans, and'; the rush of prospectors' promises to be chiefly "Americans also. It was, of "course, to be expected that the 'Canadian government "would take measures to rciniburse itself for"the expenses of administration in the ne,v district, and ..there is a plausible reason for a,departure from tho policy of liberality in granting public, mineral, land for. the purpose of developing the unsettled, parts of the country, since it is likely that the Yukon district has few . natural 'resources besides its mines, and when the latter are exhausted 'the d istrict will beabanddned, but this,looks only to the easily worked placer oeposits and fails'to take into account the lodes whence, they originated, which some day will require ca pital and industrial freedom' for their, exploration. The measures adopted however, seem to lis- unwise, owing Co the .retardation, in the development ol the .mineral resources of the Canadian Yukon'-which- they will cause, and the hard ., feeling thoy . fire sure to breed aniorig the American prospectors,.!who arc likely to clamor .-for''retaliatory- measnrcs.. .These will,. be, .moreover, difficult and ex]>'"nsive tiixes to collect,- since it will be nearly impossible- to watch every, miner, and'the Klondyke is so near the American frontier tliat clandestine exportation', can hardly he prevented. It is a sound 'principle, of govern Aleut that revenue ��������� needed should be raided'in the most iijosjioh- sl've miinner'. possible,' aiid any other system is unjust, to the people 'wh������ have to pay the taxes. Most of' all to be regretted, however, is tho possibility of, friction arising between t\vi> nations whose interests ace really, identical; since recent history has demonstrated that rich, gold mines, are a prolific source of contention and; hard feeling. A. large stock of Wall "Paper, &o,, .constantly,oriliand.- "v .������/ ; ',;;'���������;-;.' '''.'/..' We get oui paints from the East at reduced figures and give our custom era the;bcnefit. '.'' ��������� "..'-. .'-.: ,', ,. Can be found lit Black's hotel or the Balmoral-. ; ������������������'���������'���������' '��������� ' '. ;'.'. ''���������*-'���������'. ���������''., " GIVE US A CALL.' '��������� 3M%*#^^ mmmmm ���������-^'^~������������^MEiEffi>^^ . A Well-finisl.ied Pipe, the bestsamrile, of Tobacco, Ci ears and, Cigarettes '.'procurable���������and 'JACOB KELSEN. has them. ��������� He has,.also tho latest arrival of Fruits,- and Billiard ���������Tables for recreation.. Giro him a cal'lr ��������� ;'���������������������������.. ",:<,:, l.������.i.M.('l.'>.(.i.'l.( iM.*U,'t.f%i������l.f.^M.������.| THE.... ������������������-;/, ',.,' SANDON, B. C. .-.,:,-, . - ' -'��������� ��������� '-....���������.''.'��������� .���������������������������/:" '��������� ''".,'��������� ��������� '" ",.''" ,-'���������;- ������������������ ���������',. '���������. ���������' ' ��������� : ;-' ,' Aiuerican Plan, .',��������� ������3.5,0.' per dayi European' ETitn; ������2.00 per., day. . ; , ��������� : ������������������"'.'���������',', :' :' ���������':.- .7- ,��������� " "������������������ ��������� .V:';-- " '���������''! ,'.���������'".,..,'���������'.Strictly.'P.iRST-ciiAss. v v/ ' MRS,-!, A. SMITH, Prop. / ::-\ i ;(. < i Is headquarters in*the Slocan ; country; for the foil owing goods: f ;-Sf 'TflPPINfi'- ;jya- ���������0.������..;i'.Ul:.riiivU������ ;'; ���������������������������'���������'TRfllLi'B.X;"':y';: ', ' ���������'-.;'; ''���������"' ���������:" ��������� ��������� '���������' ���������''.. ��������� . ' ' [:? Has mines and mining stocks for sale; will try to'pjoloctinvestors. LOTS POP SALE IN , j TRAIL AND DEER PAKK. Will examine and'report on mines. ; : Twenty-eight years' experience in mining. Come or wrlle. , TKe ������������������Mining Review Handled b}^ all Newsdealers. '���������:���������;:��������� -.5,100-;; varities: r; ; ",- ��������� '-.''-.��������� ' ���������(; '' . '���������' ���������'"',,-', 'm ������������������'���������' ���������' "-o. ;. ��������� " " ���������. '������������������. - '':';" ' , " . '���������!.' ' \ " "'��������� ���������-��������� f^bvels^enclless variety; -v i - ���������I 1 . 1," * t i". ���������������������������r������i Bj-cp*" irr - 1 ��������� 1 - .-������ . J.-���������'���������.!, .1 Hi ��������� ' t I m'i r T / fc i ��������� 1 * -���������-! I * > I r. ���������������* *������||T������ -11 i������ ��������� ' ' il *i nf ��������� -���������������������������1 l'* - ������ ������*' "��������������� il 1 L ��������� i I > 1 " \ Wm SATIJRD A Y;' SEPTEMBER, 11,11897.. THE;MINING- REYIEW. ������ Stirring Picture of tne Great Bail: loon on Its Horttard Flight. 4 lit V, : .-The whole civilized wwrld 'is anxiously, wailing for hews ;pf Prof/Andree and. his companions. Perhaps he may -, be heard from-in the Yukon, and 'aeain' .'.he ..may;'never.' be lieardofnny where. 'How ho: started h as; be ok !: briefly re latod." Fuller particulars Of the ascent . iu-ci'nowto .hand.; .'The .morning of ... July.lith brought sunshine, and blue '.-"/sky at'.-' Tronisoe. , The -'.- rainsoaked 'things couid.no w' be, dried.; Moreover, ;a south-wind was. blowing/ not softly', ; ".but';right'freshly,,and(,it was.a genuine, .south wind. From on. board ' the ; 'Svenksund the crew at divine service ''-..!, were.Chanting. I,sat in silent devotion in: my'tent lind listened, says a ,. ' correspondent. Scarcelyhiul'thp ship's 'bell struck 11 than I became, aware of 'unwonted activity, on board. ''The .large' rowing boat and small steam launch were manned, and in theni -I recognized not,, only ���������' lier.r Andree's figure, but also,'; those of his two.companions, who landed together with the ��������� two. .'officers; and the- littio '-Frenchman. Did Ah'dre'e/intend': on' ���������": this" Sunday ������. morning,' and in this "strong, gusty, and ,-at times almost stormy,, wind, r to.vcri- " ture on an ascent ? Jt was : scarcely '.,. conceivable. It.; could^ be , .nothing, ���������/ more than a trial 'to see if .everything /"worked: smoothly., .,,,���������'. But that .thoy, .'might have, done yesterday. Why,:' on .': a Suuday ? -;\Whiie,I - was still ponder- ���������; ing over the matter :I observed several ;' men at :work; oh the -upper porfcion:��������� of " the front side of the balloon house.. -A moihent'later the planks'1 were,being: 'thrown down, the beams sawn '��������� through;- : 'and screws and rivets loosened. -Truly, ; this; must !be in earnest. Inhumed with speed, to the scene,, and learned ,���������'ihaji.Herr.Andreeintended forthwith .'theascent.. With almost painful ox- .,; pectation themen. were., putting forth . mosCstrenous exertions. Andree hiin- ��������� self-presently ^appeared o'n'-tlaebs'caflold- ing above aiid shouted his coirimaiKls to the men through the medium of; it, . speaking trumpet. He and his conir panidns '.were already;''cladVin their travelling costumes ���������--, Andree; ;and .;, Strindburg in a : dark \ blue,,.' "and Eracnkel in a grey suit, with collars of wolf's fur. In Peak house- -a pair : of. trial balloons were inflated/and; let. loose, and the I r'eeze-;-carried'- them in, . precisely". the - desired, direction.,. On '���������'��������� the beach the crew were : busy-laying . out the.drag ropes to prevent thepos': gibility: -of their tangling. ..With a . pni.sh- tlie loosened 'portion of the ' tower's -front waH'feli out. Inside the tower the greatest activity" prevailed. ' In every corner stood: men regulating the ropes by. -which ' the'balloon was .held. Everyone helped, even the commander, of thn gunboat. -The ballast bags wers liung-'in a 11 arrow,circle, so,' that the balloon might rise.: .Then,: when the north wall iiad been removed^, as. far. as the centre of the building, sound from the south eastsent the air- vessel back to the sea in a. north-.Wcstrr- ly- direction, and.struck it so strongly above that lor some seconds the car was trailing along the water,.' At-'the same .moment we,discovered that... the three drag ropes,from whose assistance Vridree had hoped'so much,lay- quietly- on the.beaelh. The swivel,, fastening them, to,-the, ring must, have been loosened at,the moment of the ascent. But how that wa'3 po'ssible' will.' never be explained; , As they have a '.reserve stock 01", ropes with them 'for ballast the loss of the three lines will-not, however, be ��������� irreparable^ .Meanwhile they had, thrown,. out sev.era):. ballast bags.,,.,A few'moment^ Jiad only passed since the tinie, -'-.exactly ,85 /minute's after,-1; at which, 'the start was made, and the balloon 'was now' seen . mo'.vihg exactly as Andree had wished over the flat peninsula, Hollaendernaes, toward the North. It is true that at-the north, end of the Smeerenburg-sound a southwesterly'air current caught: it again and apparently drove it;'.toward- the craggy, cliff,' of . Vogelsang, but with shaded eyes wo could . perceive it sail a few yards.-; above,:' this , clangor .point died the following;morning.' The .'proprietor ol. the sYilooii who .-carried Mr. .Lincoln from the. theatre->nbsequeritly informed me that John Wilkes/iBootb had spent a fow moment's in" his place just; before tlie close of'the second, act of the phi v. While there he drank nearly a glassful o! brandy." : .-���������">'. .������������������' The assassin, in .this..instance' was John'. Wilkes Booth, .who.- having, fortified ." himself with ".brandy,.committed' the cowardly...act which robbed the; United/States of'���������; its. great;' President,, who, with a single, dash , of his pen,' liberated from the. bondage of ' slavery upwards of 4,000,000 of human' beings, an act of statesmanship: the equal of which no other.country ever,witnessed. VH "trf1 im, >hl Ot g/^V^V^r^.w^jjj and proof ed completely free at' once more directed north "It Was- cisely 80'clock when tlie balloon appeared on the northern horizon. list pre- dis- ���������.-' The Wonder of the Age. : ' .'Dear Sirs,���������I must/honestly, say. J have tried your ..valuable ''medicine' B.B.B, for .the-disease called the prairie itch, nnd have, found' this remedy to bo the wonder of the.'.'i-ge:- T /.tool): ��������� only three bottles'a nd io my groat satisfaction was completely cured. lean highly recommend it to nil who sjuffcr from, any skin disease or impurity of >tlie blood. ... ' ',, ..'���������-.,:."��������� . .,'.- ' ,.-. Haroli'i Dix, '"'��������� ���������"'���������" '"���������:'"' dint Portage',-'Oni." KOl'S 1M ;Eye/Witness^;' of :;the; Event" Hooley' Tlleatre;, lasMngton ,;; in! April 1865.; : HEf ' TARIFF V RULING. m this circle was .still, further reduced. At last the lashings, were sccared to the last bolt, and the balloon swung " some two metres -from the ground. ,T helped Strindberg to fix the pigeon. 1 cages above jihe car, where also the food supply is stored." The cook carefully stowed; in a small barrel the dinner which would be the first to be eaten'aloft/ Fraenkel brought up ���������a few glasses of beer lor immediate use. ' The car was quickly, put in order.supcr- 'fluous ballast bags were scrvered from their fastenings, several of. them being placed in the car for preliminary use. '.'.'. From the west side of the balloon '. waved the Swedish colors, and beside . them a white silk,flag adorned with a blue anchor,"the happily conceived, and,it may be hoped,luck-bringing'gift of a. lady.. Immediately under the balloon was fastened .diagonally a bamboo, to vvhich sail-like wings were at- ' tached on either side! By means ' of vopes the aeronauts can ,'rriunipulate these sails from the car'..'' Shortly ' before 2.80 Andree was quile ready for the journey. Heartily' shaking ' hands with those'asseniblcd in the balloon- house, and nodding to the astonished trappers who. stood watching, he addressed warm, deeply-felt words of f-hnnks to all those whose hands he could not rcach,owing to thdirinabilitv to leave their post. With sturdy handshakes Fraenkel and Strindberg' also took thcirleavo. Strindberg -appeared to be deeply moved, and , indeed the solemnity of the moment impressed-all spectators; Then Andree called nloiid, "Fraenkel i Strindberg?" Standing in'the. car, the throe severed .the thin ropes holding them, Andree. counting one, two, three. At tluoe the hist cord . blinding them to the 'flour ol the' tower fell, n way. Proudly and majestically the balloon rose, passing directly, through'the open northern portion of its former dwelling. Andree gazed-with '-'happy. ...confidence, on.those who remained behind,- and then, he and his comrades waving their caps, he cried out, "Greetings at home to Sweden." Those who had- a 'photographing apparatus'took yet another snap-shot. Turning to the shore, we all saw.the balloon floating some 1K1 feet above, the water. .A . moment of intense anxiety followed, for the balloon was driving right .onto a jutting prominence of rock on the east side of Smcerenburg Sound and threatened to collide with it. Suddenly, however, a gust of wind coming through tho The recent assassinationsin Europe of prominent personages..have,.brought hack to. many the recollection of. the assassination of; Presidents ' Lincoln and Garfied.- :,-In a recent issue of the New York Sun' there have appeared letters iisking if there were not many people still living who, saw Abraham Lincoln assassinated, and have revealed the whereabouts, of several: '..Among them is James 2v Mill's, of ...Brooklyn,. "I was born in Brooklyn in 1845," said Mr. Mills'recchtly, "so that at the' outbreak of the war I'.was under ,10 'years ;6f age.- I' wanted, te go;t6the front :'as a.drummer boy, but when Fapplied to. the,'officers..of��������� a 'regiment:, called , the 'Brooklyn Phalanx,' afterward known as'the First, Long Island. Regiment, ���������they'dbld meT was'too' young. I after wards made my way to Washington; -without my'mother's consent aiid; enlisted as a: drummer -boy'-, in TS62. ��������� I served in the Army of the Potomac for three years/ and during the closing day's of the war was clerk in; the War Department.'" Oh the night of .the" assassination of President Lincoln I attended the theatre to.see.Laura Ke.eiie in 'Our American Cousin.' The theatre was packed. There must have- been 2,000 people in the house, every one desirous of seeing' the President and General Graiit,who,were expected to be present. After the. President took bis seat in the box and the cheering ceased, the crowd was absolutely still. I can only account for their' silence by' the fact that it was a cosmopolitan crowd, representing about' 'every . regiment located near Washington, and including'travellers from every Statp in the Union. Gen. Grant did not attend, and Mr. Lincoln, accompanied by Mrs. Lincoln and Colnel Bathbone, of the United States army, niade up the Presidental party. Thoy occupied the righthand box on the dress circle. The third act of the play had', begun, and 'Harry iTawk,tim actor in the company,' had just appeared on the stage, from the left, when there was the report of a pistol shot. 'Looking over at the. President's box, I saw a man standing and gesticulating at the occupants;. An instant-later the man jumped from,the box. to the stage, turned;(looked at the audience, and then disappeared.:. He muttered, something as he looked at the audience, but! have never been able to recall just what, he said. .Instantly .the-audience arose us if spellbound, the whisperings of a moment before became a roar of voices, and when it had dawned upon the audience that the .President had been assassinated, tho confusion was indescribable. I made my way .to the head of the stairs as-quickly ns the crowded condition of the house would permit, and, passing out into Tenth street, gave the alarm to the provost guards. Those-guards, by the way, were- stationed at all theatres for examine, the passes of soldiers in uniform w o were in the city after nightfall. ' The guard Isnoke to ran around to the. alley entrance of the theatre on F street and entered tin; backdoor. I returned to the front of the thealro nnd made my ' way to liie dress, circle,and to the box of the Presidental p..rty just as. Mr. 'Lincoln was being carried out. on tho shoulders .of two men. One of these, was the pro-, prietor of a sald'in adjoining the theatre. He was in his shirt 'sleeves, the head of Mr. Lincoln'resting on his shoulder and the blood trickling down the sleeves and the buck of his shirt. The President was carried down stairs ! anil across the street into Mrs. Tetci-j son's boarding house, dir c(.|y. oppusitei the lln-atre. As Airs. Lincoln . was. foi": the moment without an eSt'ort, I jeii'tiv I grasped her arm and led her from ti.e! box. She was nearly hysterical, crying j' nnd sulduin,' bitterly. Wo followed the i. Minister of,,- Custprrls Will,' Recornmencl a Chang-e to the Council. '; The. minister of customs has reached an^' important decision which he' will recommend, to tlio council-."'.for ..adoption. It will be a change in .the preferential tariff to allowjgoods from any, countries, coming under our reciprocal: schedule of duties, to ship, say by the English ports. /At present' thousands of dollars' worth of -French goods come to Canada 'by way/of Liverpool; "and, according, to' the terms of the tarifT adopted Jastsession, the full duty must be paid, because it is made a condition that 'goods..--must he shipped, direct.' The change', will have to be made by. an order-in-counoil. and is one'\. which, will satisfy. Canadian merchants and, importers', 'j-''.-/','������������������������������������;��������� ;,. ���������' ,/c "';���������;���������". ,' The,Hon..;B. W. Scott,- secretary of state, is one member, of: the govGrn- men't who/has ^tuckiclosC: to, his; de- partni wit- and d n ti es all thro ugh. - the surtvmor, and hass at one time' and -another administered.- almost 'the entire, service.- lao-.is. off -to-day. for ,a few' days' -rest/. There' is' a, council' to-day finishingiiip departmontai rputine.' .;'.', ' Have in "stock..or cut to order on short'notice, all kinds,of Rough and Dressed Lumber. "'Dimension sttiff up to 46-feet long. *; ���������' ", KILN DRIED LUMBER AND nlOULDiNGS; EQUAL TO ANY IMPORTED. ; A large.stock;of ali:kihds of-BUiLDERS'' SUPPLIES suable to the; local trad^;'now. on.'���������hand, including $\]_f\ DRIED Flooring, .Rustic ghiplap, Rebated Doorjambs,,Plowed Pulley Styles.'Square ahd'J'Ioulded Casing, Plain and. Moulded Base,' V Joint: Ceiling, Beaded/Wainscoting; also a great variety of Mouldings, including.Crown; Bed,.Boelection,'.'Wainscote Caping.; Cornice:and Sprung Moulds, as well as'a variety of,Cove, Quarter and ' Half Rounds,6. G. andSquare Stops, Parting Beads, ���������< Square and Beaded Balusters, Roof Rolls���������Grpuiids,. and all kinds.of finishing materials.: '��������� ;,';", ;'"'.;���������. HAVING LATELYRECEIVED A' CAR LOAD OF "::; ' ': / , / ��������� IN'AGREAT VARIETY OF STYLESAND SIZES.-' ��������� ;; ,..';; ���������': I am now able, to supply tlie public without delay, with anything in this line, of a first-class quality, and- at rock bottom'prices.- . ��������� . .'.������������������'���������' ��������� " . ALSO. A VARIETY OF TURNINGS, BRACKETS, SC. Newel'Posts,/Turned Balusters,'Verandah. Truss and other Fancy Brackets, Table. Legs (morticed), Corner .and. Plinth Blocks, Turned Stool Tops, &c. : ,,'Also in stock some of, the';-best Shingles manufactured.. " ".. .An, inspection of my stock is requested. ���������/"���������'' /;,:/.:'. ;,,';'';;^.',;;,' 'V:y.V''/���������,:���������; ; Don'tiorget ourCKEflF FUEL.; Short Slabs,$'.25, cart'load.deliveredi R:E.Paliiier,;B.^.^-Sc; PKOViNCIAl, Lanp Survbyoe, ,/ .";.'������������������ . Sandon. Agents-^Rand &' Wallbridjje. ���������. M.L. G-rimmett, L.L.B. :Babeistee, SoiriciTdR,. Notary ���������".'���������.,.' Poi'LIC, Eic. . ;Sandoh, : B. Q. ���������;' ;; ": -iaveS' :C& J. J. Godfrey." ��������� W. J. Bowser, L.L.B.' :r F.L.-Christie, L.L.b;j. '.";' Bowser, Crodfrey' ���������; , ' & Ghristie, B.AimisTKiis, Soucitoks, Etc.. Saiidon, B. O. /. Vancouver, B. C. .. Manufacturers and Dealers,'in, ;��������� '��������� 'stoves; / '';���������;./.'.; ���������;'' ���������'...';;-'. .'/���������FURkIceS ;'/,;- ,;// .--:-;-'i-.:. '���������';;' pieced: tinware'';,,; '''v '��������� copperware-.:;;:; -., ';, ��������� ;';'; galvakkei; IRONWARE .;,'/,, ; ATR PIPES' :,-.V/'":.':-''A"';;;. ���������.; ,'��������� ,' FANS' ,.:''':V ������������������'"��������� - - /';-',,; ',.'���������;''��������� ' Mning Work a Specialty,, ,���������/-'.;;; ,;, -'--sandon, b. g. -BANK ���������oOF.;:'^';;-;.^::;:-'-- BRITISS ; NORTE AMERICAN ESTABtlSUEB IN 1830.:, , Incoi-poratud by Royal 'Cii-AKTER in ism.'.' Paid-up Capital.. Reserve Fund..... ...84,866,666: ...-Si,338,333 KM DRIED COAST MBER Flooring, Siding, Wide Clear Fir. and Cedar, Wainscoting, Ceilings; ��������� Mouldings,-Moulded Casings, Finishing/Lumber; Brackets, Lath, Shingles, etc., etc. /.: .:','���������-' .''���������������������������.; ./,-���������' /.'���������;���������;v';;;;''.''"-::'- ''���������.' '���������.-;:������ " ���������";." ;���������'' ���������',���������'. "''" ':/.';"';; '/'"���������. '^ .- Entire bills of Finishing''Lumber-.furnished. ��������� ;g-. 'Orderstaken for Sash, Store Fronts, Bars, Refrigerators, ' '���������'��������� ", Storeand Office Fixtures, and Fire-proof Safes..' ; ���������'���������'��������� '.'.:. . FACTORY AND ,YAHD NEXT TO ELKCTKIO Pp-WKR-HOUSE, / : S ANDON. on the Cody road arc now, preparing for business';' andin a few days will be rea*dy to fill all prdersTor '���������" ��������� ;. -.'"',' EXTA FINE 'LAGER BEER, ��������� ' PORTER ant). BOTTLED BEER, Drej^erf& Hoffineier. . L'ONi)Ox.O'rFiCE-3.'ClementsLahe.' ��������� ��������� i.Omlj,ird,St!'ee[,E. 0.:, -.' '-."-; . ���������; COURT OP DIHKCTORS.'".' ��������� '���������' .I.H.Brodio \ , . E.AHo'nre . '' ' John James Cater --,, H. J. R. Kendall / Gaspard Fairer J. j. KinSsford: HenryR. Farrer - ��������� Frederic Dubbock Richard H. Glyn ��������� Geo. D.: Whatman ��������� . oecrelary���������A. G. Wallls./ e������ ^kbs������bB&. The undersigned begs to .inform the ladiesof Sandon: and vicinity that she has opened a; new Ladies Furnishing Store in Sandon. ��������� ��������� '-.,.-. . .,', ~i'r. Head Office in Caxada���������3t.^,7'ames St. ./' ontreal., ���������.' H. Stikemak, Geiveral Manager."'' ,' J. EursLY, Inspector.. '..' ' , BRANCHES IN CANADA;"-��������� '/,��������� ;,'" London /.��������� Kingston /;'Haiifax.N. S./ Branlford ,: Commercial ^ ���������Work that can. &L " ^ ' ^ be executed. .^ r.,..rt _, ��������� ',* r. i_n* ���������t^^i.ik ..7..������������������5,li,i������rS'k������ JK.jIiijji * THE MIMKGh REVIEW SATpfib^ SEBTEMBER ^1^1897: MOUNTAIN ECHOES. / The Majestic, near Sandon, .is now on its third car. of ore.'.". ,: ��������� 'Sir' Charles Tapper's Co. has bought the Violet mine for $G2,GuO;/ Eli, Carpenter and Peter McNichol have left;.-for the:.Klondyke.. ' .'; the Slocan ore shipments for July were live times those,of last year.' 'The. K. ifcS.hnsits newJr.olling stock ���������two fine coaches 'and 15'i'reigiit cars. .Some of .the surrounding hiils are now capped'with adate fall of tho beau-'' ;tifui.; ./��������� "'���������' ' "'.- ���������������������������; ���������������������������������������������'���������" '��������� - /"��������� .-. Mr. J. M. Harris .'is ask ing-for tenders for 100 cords of .wood; tenders'to be in by the 11th. ,.,',/ - - .'-> . To. the; 1st inst'; the Slocan' country this year -shipped 33,9SS. tons of ore, worth ^,888,017. / ��������� All the latest hovois :it Cilia's book store. .���������,.'- /'/': . ' ��������� ��������� .-.'"-, ' .Willi paper at Cliffe's/book store,- cheap. '."' . . Semcesat the .Methodist church to-, morrow at '11 a.m. and 745 p'.m.^.Re-v. A. M. Sanford. ������������������ . r PERSONAL MENTION. ������������������ We have had yery wet weather for tlie'past week, with a turn for the bet-: ���������;:ter.on''Thtirsilay. '���������/ ''-/'.., The Freddy,Leo has new. coijip'resser .;'machinery noiv oh/the 0. P. R. cars ' here awaiting reiiioval; ' Mr. and Airs. W, Bj:and O.Stratberno have gone'on a visit to O.rillia,: Ont. .' ."It is'said that Lieut-Governor Dewd- u<:'\-, when., his te'rih of office expires ill; November next, is.li.k; ly to locate in the Kootuuuy. where,he has -larirc. mining interests. .'. ."���������'.' ,.,' P. burns; ilift.meat'aiagnat.e, of, the K'ootdnny; ,'wiis in town this week fully recovered .from bis limping, the result of an accident at Calgary. ', ' ��������� 1 Jack jYIcCuigan and'Miss McG'uigan, Ins sister, who .'have .been visiting .at the Payne mine, Have left for' Spokane. ..\Iiss Fr.i.scT,'' representing the West Minstfcr (.Eng!) Gazette,' in making' a. tour of thii' western countrycollecting agricultural information, slopped oil' here a few hours on Sunday and was . During the week tlio Star shipped G j heaiied'around town by Wr. C.J. Smith. cars of ore ov r the C.,P. II. ; the. Reco j While her mission has but little to do BIRTHS. . ; ' 'CoNitAD���������On Wednesday, the Sth iiist.', 1 , the'wile of P.. Conrad,, of a son. . Sandon Ore Shipments. ' '..-,: The : following is alistof ore ship- ���������me-its- over tlie ' K. & S.. from Sandon from Sent.' 2 to' 0': / mine./ Payne;...,..,.'....:..-.,... rhitii-:...:-.'...............; 'Noble.Five.-1'.; ... Slocan Star........./ .. Wonderful Bird ��������� -.. tons ' ...:.SWs ,'....,.105 ......49 J ......;..G0 PRINCE-CHARLES :, OF DENMARK. 2, aiid'Majestic 1.'- ,-.'.. About half'of the grading on''the wagon road -between New Denver and ��������� Three Forks is completed'.. ��������� The shooting-season for several kinds ; ;6f g me opened on the 1st, but we/have .'not heard of any. feathers /lying in this direction. ������������������ ��������� . ��������� ��������� ���������" The Whitewater mine,'.Whitewater', ��������� have put up new complete lodging. .-;, buildings capable of holding 100 men. - Mr. Eaton'is a pusher. . ., ���������;-; ,: .' McArfhur, the lellow that'thi'itshod! Lillian Myers, and stole her diamond ...ring,' has.not/turned up yet, and no "one ..appears to know where,, ho has gone. v'"; TheTCooteniiiah says' that'.MrVO.-D. Band is likely to - locate in Kaslo, though no one else- appears to know ..anything about it. ;;���������;-��������� , -/, . '..;,. .. '���������'���������/ Work -on,, the: Piersph and Fisher liptel. is at a stand still for the . presept ;. pending some decision, -of the'; courts as to the ownship of the site. ���������The running horse, Wyafiaahbtt,'' //'owned by. Mrs. Barger, will be raffled for at the Waldorf Hotel, this eveting; ��������� Saturday, Sept. 11. at 9 p.m. - / "������������������'���������:, Kaslo is1 hunting for a j'upnlv/ of ���������.. pure water, and. yet it owns nil 'the , litigation of the Kootenay,country, a'c- cordihg to the tone of its papers. ������������������ .-���������-The:Vancouver World says the local opposition are hunting for a Closes to .lead them to victory. .Hardly, yet. ���������They'fi.rst want to find the bullrusbes : and the/ark. . . Mr..Harris has men and teams at work straightening.Sleen'n Star street from the liverystable west, which will "add much to the appearance of that part of the town; The Imperial Bank people are awaking to the neeossity for securing a: . share of the. Kootenay trade. They have located a branch, at Nelson,'..: and. .are looking for other sites. Charlotte S nith is'ursunc: the American government to send ,300 marriageable women 'to the Klondyke. The Mixing Bekiew has no objection to her going herself niid at once. ; D Bongard has leased the Beeo hotel and is busy overhauling and refitting. It . is ' reported Bobinson the late tenant has left suddenly.for- 'the Klondyke,.with his affairs under a heav.-s cloud. Silver andlead are still advancing in value. The. quotations for yesterday were : silver 53 J and lead S4.00. These prices will warrant mining on a more extensive scale,,eVen the obening up of new wet ore properties. Postmaster Atherton has a couple of gold bricks 'he'is showinc- to friends and wondering if it would pay him to to go to Calgary and endeavor to sell them to the enterprising banker t :ore that bought one some time ago. /The Spokesman-Boview, professes ti. give the ��������� ore shipments of the Slocan and it leaves out those of the Beeo. the Woederful, the 'Stars shipments via C. P. B.,, and several others. The Kaslo papers make the same mistake. Messrs. Deyer & Hoffemoier. of. the New York Brewery, on the Cody road, have their brewery now in, full operation, and by the looks of things they are going to control a large portion of the trade of other sections. The .beverigcs are said to be the very best. ��������� .' Mr. Harris is likely, to occupy the first apartment on. the ground floor of tho Virginia block himself,,and in it he will have with vault .and all arrangements oneof the best offices in the ���������whole country. Miss Wilson is likely to take his present office foramillinery store. . ��������� Since the arrival of Mrs.- Fitzgerald and.family Mr. F. lias taken hold of business with renewed vim. Tim firm are now -manufacturing all kinds of soft drinks on a most extensive scale ���������with their improved machinery .and shippintrton.il points on 'the K. Surve.ye'd ;.���������;(*������������������ -; Tlio undorsignej is ma'dnir'a. Survey ol the Kaslo ami Slocan.Kail way I,ahtl Grant, and will-be ready to..make Survey of, any Mining Glaiins'alousjSIaean lake.,, '>.,'���������".- '���������'���������;. A. 11. HBYLAND, . Ib.tel Siuidoii���������-F. 'J. Shendon, ;Tor- o:uo; Mrs: S. Bbsforth, Bosslnnd ; J. F. ronnian, Vancouver ; J. Shendon, Fort Steele; L'.'Alexander, Supt..B.,E. Lee,; J,'McAvby, Ottawa; F.F.FowIcr, Sloean City ; -,[. Sh (ford:, ..Lawrehc'c ; B. Holi- tiian/B,' Hoffman; Laurier; B. Coghla,n,: ,1'lCumming, Kaslo; T. MhBostie, G. Bergman, Hot"Springs.;' A. PI. Stirritt, Silveiton; J. B. Wood, Lunenburg; A. G. Brown. Inverness ; H. J. Wake, INew Di-nver; B-; E. Palmer, Winnipeg; A. \VI Hiil'oy, Nakusp ; J. Stewart; Mono-, ton. ���������:-.' l.. Black's���������S. Katz, Mrs. ,T. Goodhue, W..'ll.Grahii'i)i,,, Spokane ; H. Barton, P. Burns,M. P. Thompson, Nelson; H. ^Kennedy, Gaft; A.B. McKinley, H..H. Dawson, Toronto; B. Rogers, D. Chris- 'c'lan, Montreal; L/Devanporf; Trail; ���������T. \V. Thomas. Sturgiss;; H. Brust.on',- Hossland ; ��������� V- T. St. G*eorge, Victoria ; J. C. Conlin, Toronto; A. F.\ Wedde- comb," J. A. Wood, C. O. Boss, D,,W... ..vrooi', P. A.''. McPhee, C. J. Knapp,; Kaslo;.. B-'D. 'Greekdiloff, Mrs. . C. A. O'Neil, Mrs. J W. Troup, AV'al.a Walla; \V. H. McGaw, Vernon; llugh Suthiir- ���������i.-irid,-Winnipeg.''.- , Goodenough^-.E. Dowdney, Victoria; H. M. Ada ins,-' Bosslnnd.; L. A. Seo,w: don, E. J. Mathers, Kaslo; .1. li.'-Pea'rf- son, Edin'ontoii';-' li. E. 'Beimh-y, H. M. Ellis, H. W. Finch, Ct.'F; Carson, Net-' son ; A. J. Hallyner, Vancouver;, E..D. Carter, .Spokane; F. J. Lendrum and wife, Ainsworth. .-'.,"''". ��������� Mr liitef Proof From the People.- mi. ibissiona'rv foi" the -.";-:S!:<.n'-l..iji.-!jurite.Ci . Algoma, and North west;' 11 o ' writes':-^-'-! -;::wi^h .to say that Dr; Fowler's Extract: of' Wild rftrawb'err.v lias-been to me si' wonderful, soothing, speedy aiid ������������������effectual 'remedy, ll h.-is Iwx.'ii'.iwy CGnipanion ; ior severalyeaiv. during the labors and' ex-, ipniifes of. my tiiia'sioiiary 'work.-in (tlgoma:; Well it.is for old and young to have/it in store against .the' time of need.'- which so often ��������� comes without' warning. :'���������''���������:!' / , / Geo. Buskin,��������� Missionary,'/. Toronto;*On'tv /.:��������� Application for Liquor License Notice'Is hereby 'given that 30 days Irotii dato.the uuilersignedwill apply to the Stipen-, diary Mug'lstvnte'ol West. Kootenay, ior a linenseto sell liquor bv retnll-,: at hotel at Ten Mile, aboat 1(1 miles irom Kaslo oii'tho K-.it S. ���������Railway. ���������'' ^ ...���������;,; , ..-, -\. August'1st. ��������� ' ��������� '���������',.": , - '.-��������� ���������''-.''. .���������������������������;������������������ .It, A..CAJ1I2U0N. . '������������������: Transfer oi Liquor License, Notice Is hereby given! hat the undersigned nttlje r-xplriitlon oi ."udays from date will apply for n transfer liquor license, lor the Waldorf Hotel, at Sandon,'.Irom myself.-to Katie linri;������r. .'���������'���������;��������� To the Stipendiary .'Magistrate of West ��������� Koot-' .cniiy: ��������� '.,,������������������"' ,' Jf C,:-:WILUAMS?!' . Hag-yard's Yellow Oil.. .'.-������������������ i - - ' / - .The gro".t p:tin cure;' Used, externally eurr-s rlieumatism.swellings, spraiiis, braises, stiffness-, pain and soreness., of every description. "Internally' used it cures croup, colds,'..sore:throat,, hoarse-- ness, asthma, bronchitis, quinsy, etc. Price 25c., all druggists. ������:, '" DissoIutioD of Parliiprsiiip. Notice Is-lieniby'pl'von that Hie .-'riartnor- ship heretofore existing between, the unrter- sitrneU as the proprietors; and keepers of the White House Flor-cl, in Sandon, has this day been dissolved by;nnitual consent, William Klelnberg and Joseph Levinson retiring from said partnership. : / ,-..- <: . Edward ltoss will carry on the business, and wi'l collcctall debts owing said partneiship and pay all accounts owing by said partnership., , /.- ���������:; .���������"/,..������������������'" ,,'//���������/���������/ Dated this 10th day of Aiignst, 1S97. "'. "WM. KLraNBEJi.0.''/���������'; " ;'-. * '/: . e. kcss. :/\ .,.''..'/���������/.��������� JOSKPir LEVINSON.:/ Mining and Stack Brokers. " " /SOI.E AGENTS FOE SALE OF TBBASUBy STOCK. S*\r**\f.S*^fS*\j. ' ��������� I.am in ,t. better position, than ever to meet your'���������wants;- ���������", ���������'��������� Do; You Want a timepiece ? Canada Arming, . The,New York Time in a reee.nts' issue said-: A Quebec ooTcs/iondent informs'a"Boston papev that, the Dominion authorities, apparently ��������� anticipate-trouble of, a serious kind with somebody or other, and that they are making in many places on an extensive scale and in .obvious' haste what looks cxtrem ely like preparations for war. Tiiis, he admits, may be mere'y th"t.: occupation for peaceful days whose wisdom has , been commended by Theodore liobsevelt, George Wash-' ingt-du, Quintus Hcratius Flacoas, and other worthias. but the correopsndent is disposed, to think that-"'the sudden activity is tlie result of what are deemed urgent and definite contingencies. He has, according ; to the dispatch, gained entrance recently to the several armories, stores, and m-gaziiits in -and around Quebec, and was "quite amazed" by the quantity of new ordinances and ammunition which has now-'replaced, the .obsolete weapons aud cartridge's that have, cumbered these places since. 1870. '.l"ne stacks, of old sniders have disappeared to make room., for enough Lee-Enfield rifles to arm the wnokl Canadian militia, and in, the citedal milions oi' smokeless powder cartridges lire piled up ready for.quick distribution. Six batteries of 12-pound- ��������� er.breech-loading held guns have also arrived, and .could -be sent at once wherever needed, and with-theni is a pretty gathering of Muxim-NGrdenfeldt' quick-firing guns. Almos" every, steamer, this terrilying person deoUrcs, brings an addition to the stock of war material, and tho Superintendent of the citadel keeps a (orin'an and a dozen subordinates bmy receiving r.nd issuing it. Possibly there is some foundation in ff.ct for these statements, but it is not the sort of inl'i-rmatioii that, is to be intrusted, to men whose business it. is to tell what they hear. Ths cbr- re;,pondent tries to connect what be has learned���������or guessed at���������with tlie sealing question and the Klondyke discoveries hut these are ludicrously' insignificant when set alonside of tlie vision'of a war between England and United States. '' Surprise Party. J. . McCorvey1, was before .lustiees Sandilands and Lilly on Thursday. charged with breaking in Mr. J. S. Eeeder's door at ThreeForks, and striking Mrs. Eeeder. He was lined $20 for the assault and ������10, which with '"costs'amoumed to over $40. He paid the amount mid threatened to appeal ��������� which the justices told him he could do. I On Thursday evening some 40 people gathered at Silencer's hall at tlie hour of 0 o'clock, by invitati'/n of. a committee of ladies of the. Methodist church.' From there they wended their way to the residence of .Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Smith and completely took them by surprise, they never had the least intimation previously, of what was to befall them. As Mrs. Smith and .family arc- about to leave our midst, and being assiduous workers in tho. Methodist church, the ladies adopted', this -mode of bidding farewell, showing the high esti'm .tion and the. value of their services. A very pleasant time was spent by all, not forgetting the lunch. ���������MINING.' RE COEDS. Recorded at Mew Dpnver. ��������� LOCATIONS. 'A us! 31��������� C'lenwood. Slocan Luke'; A .TCFiui- quler; Camp Lod^e,Wil.son,"ClinsM.Hrewster;' Knstei n Township, same, Geo I, McVichoi. S-'.'l������t. l���������ifonii Fraction, Carpenter, John S Parker; lJlaIo.CurpenIer;.Gli.'irlottHenderson; AIKdi'e,.! S, II L Arnold; I,nlu .Fraction, Noble Kive ^fountain. .1 (1 ."UeGuisran. ���������Sept 2��������� Empress. Wilson, O Lenrieur; Proin, Carpenler, Kmll TTemdriekson; Dump Frau- t.on, jM'.fiuigan creek. M.I Swconv. ���������������������������SeptS���������Skylark..New Denver, Wm Baker;' Helolse, Vour JMilri'.'W & ITorton, Little Tiny Fraction, LastChanee Mountain,. I as Lathom; Aliens Fraction,'Galena Farm, A��������� "P'.Jto- DoaalU. . .: ' ,' ' ' ���������' ' Soptmnber 1���������Delaware, Dardanelles basin. Tlieo Peiekan; Snowslonn, Carpenter, T) 3T 1'ionsard; Dominol, Wilson, Geo, Jl. Hubbell; ilondn Kraction, XoblePive Mountain, AV W \\:arner.v - SsptV���������Nelly liae, New Denver,Thos M Uae and Gordon SuLlK-rlaiid. ��������� ,/ASSESSIIKXTS. "' .:-', -. AufjSI���������Kootenaian, Lone Star Ifraetion. Sept. 1���������Surprise Extension, Blizzard, Ulue' Jay. Starlight l>'r ic.tiou'. Silver Cord, JJttle Widow Fraction, Food No 2, Ulue Grouse Extension. :', Sept;)���������Prodenspfold, Bolder, Ilanshoe, Boa- bali; Lone Lake, Itod Gauntlet, Lost Lake, Eagles Nesl. ICnasind, Bryan.. S'eiitl���������Ne-ilectecl, Silver Moon ,Vyner.. j'.'pt 7���������Aiuerlean Girl. Washiinrion Frae- tlnu, Kokanee, Stormount, Xnomn, Allegasli, Prince Alexander. . . TKANSFFPS.. Aus -"��������� Forest Fire. 1-2, Win A YanTassell to Ji^le. Helena Ncllson,.ruly5,������1. Au',' 2S���������Arneriean Bov.Sebastian Haas and Eugene Dcnzul to The American Hoy JI &.JM C'o,.hiue22,Sl. , .',-������������������ Joker Fraotion, Robert Liinslll toNVm Coila- iin.ii, Aug2, SI. Aug oil���������Ulaok Xnal Ii'metion, 1-3, Joseph A Otto Io FHLauntz, Aug 20, SI. Omego Fraction, Thos J Danahue to Jethro A Smil.h, Aug 27, $1. Braid. Julius Kiser and Win Braic to Iteg- nnld Slrangeway, July U.SI., ,. AujrSl���������Suilaiia, CM' Cooper Coles to Chas C Uiisadall.'OetlS, SI. Iron Mask, J AMeDonell to Chas S Ilash- rtall.Oct 12, SI, ..Kootfcualnn, Frank M O'Brien to Wisconsin .Oonsolid.-ited .Mines, Ltd, Aug 18.$!. Sept.2���������Sincher, 1-8, Sinc.her Fraction, 7-X Geo W Hughes to AlIrcdW.MeCane, Ana 21,SI.' SeptD-rDIxe .tluminer, 1-a; Philip .1 Hickoy to Wm 1-1 Yawkey, Sei)l2,S2,.T00.. Km porium, 1-ti, J D Fa; rell toW n .Yawkey, sept 2, ������200. hushee. Roulette, Moantain Lilly, Xueky Move and Rebound, Hector A Pvoss, Thos Wall and Daniel .Mcltae to John Valliiuce, Oct,",, $i. . . Kasa, P J Hickoy to Sunshine Mining Co, Sc|)f2,$l.. .��������� ��������� , . ��������� Emporium Fraction: 1-:!, J P Hicfcey. to J D Fanvl,Sept2, $). Dixie Hum mer,l:2,P J Hlckey to D J 'Parrel, Sept.2, $2,r)0(). ��������� ... ���������..,.' Cross Poads, I) It, MuLeunto'SK Green, Feb is, $|. Fidelity, l-.l, F L Hyron to L F Holtz, Sept, 3. Cracker .lack, 1-2, I, K. Holts', to F L Byron; Su>l-:i. Cracker .lack, 1-2, L F Holly, to A SWillliim- sun, Sep; :i. ��������� Fidelity, 1-2, F L Hyron to AS Williamson; ���������Sc'in ;;. Helolse, W (.) Dorlon to it Green, Sept;!. Sept, 1���������0 p R, 1-2, Henry Hewer to Angus MuthcHon, Aug2. Sliver .Mooii/kEDiljar to Win Gleynn.blll ol Kale in escrow, Sept.1. ' ScptT���������Sincher. 1-12, Geo W Hugiies to Pi-lei- L.-n-sen, Aug.'W. Ilreaii .'Mimiitaiii No 2, .las J[ Jf Bcncdura to Aluerl. Poring,Septembei-7, $s.l>. FOI; OVEIt FIFTY YKAUS. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, has been used by millions ol'mothcrs for their children while teething. II' disturbed at. night and broken of your rest by a sick child, suflering and crying with pain of i-ul.tint: teeth. Send at once and get. a bottle i.l "Sirs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething. It. will relieve 1 he poor little sufferer Immediately. Depend upon It, motlier.-i, there, is no mistake about it., It, cures diarrhoea, regulates the slotnnch and bowel", cuies Wind Colic, sollens thegums ancl-reduceB Inflammation, and gives lone and energy to the system. ".Ylrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" lor children loel.hlng.is pleasant to tlie taste and is tlie prescription ol one of tlie oldest, arid best, femalephysh-iarts find-'nurses .in the United Slates. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists throughout tho world, licsnirctiiid ask lor "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup." Wanted. Position as Bookkeeper or Saleswoman by a young lady, having a good education , and best, recommendations. ,..''��������������������������� Apply B.S., CLIFFE'S BOOKSTORE, c; Man. Wanted. -' For every unoccupied district, in Canada to soil our High Grade Canadian Grown Nursery Stock. Every tree and bush guaranteed free from San Jose Scale. Liberal terms to part time men. and/good wages to those giving their entire time to the wbvk.- The demand for good gvown and acclimated NurseryStock' is on the'increaso. ..... '���������' Apply now anil secure good ground: ��������� All our stock, guaranteed true to namec'r purchase price refunded. . .-.���������'���������. a E..-P.'-BLACKFORD,& CO., Toronto, Ciin. ' Wanted. Men to sell for the FouUiill Nurseries. Over 700 acres of Cii tiadian G rown Stock. V- Wo- import no stock Irom'the States. iFarnVors,' l.iriwoi's' sous, implement, agents, students, teachers, retired ministers, "energetic clerks who wish lb make advancement���������find : the work of selling our Hardy, Homo .Grown Nursery Stock, pleasant, as well as profitable, We want more such hion this.season as the demand for our goods Is increasing owing to the fact that we -guarantee alt our stock free from San Jose Scale. We make contracts with .whole or part time men. Employment the year round. We pay both commission and salary. Write us for our terms. Outfit free., , - .-. STONE .t WELLINGTON, Toronto,.Ont. Grrqeeries, Hardw Dvj GrOtids^ Olothing-Boots aiid Shoes. WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF EVERYTHING. ,V;" / ���������;; ,; sa.ndojst 'and: Rossi and. '^ ,; "v Then take, a Hampden, Waltham or . Elgin���������-solid ", nickel 'case ���������stem wind and stem.setr-^.;,;-; ..,'' ���������;��������� : Beautiful'Opal.Rings Irom'$4.60,up,' see the in and you-willbuy.-. ���������>���������.. ��������� '," Fine Watch-. Repairing a specialty. All custom work kept in a firerproof sale..:/' ;���������." --:''./ *��������� ���������'/"��������� 'V :/': / ���������';''.-";' At SaMonvpsslafldilelson, Kaslo, Pilot Bay and Three Forks.; Sandon. ��������� Slocan City-; Wm. K. Leighton. A. D. WiiiriiMB FINING OPERATORS AND BR0KER8.- ^ornciAL obMoeers.; IEWELLER AND OPTICIAN. uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii Irl^^^^^^^^^^^^P^^^^^^^i^lil WHEN-in 'S'flKbO'N STOP AT THE SassS 1 1 SANDON, B. C. Eat.es S2.50 to S4.0O per day. .', Headquarters for Mining '������������������'���������'���������." .***"������������������'���������' '. '/"���������"���������-;"^���������=-f^ and Commerciiil Men. R. CUNNING-, Fkopiuetoii. v ,-������<^*S"^' ���������5t������ -^ * lg&- ������srs>- - TT.T^,rFT,-^rrnr^n-~.^. -J P^���������'������~7 -r-���������������������������"V nr >���������-^...|f if- -n -57���������-"T -,���������' ���������~^1' TftK?g������nl ��������� h������ '*J* *.���������������''-- J" *i *��������� i^* * r,'. h . ������ I i J *.*��������������������������� h ��������� * * i* ���������*> . I ' i V pp^ * -^ i * > * ' * l ������ I , ,. , ' 1. v * i' i >ir* ^i8**,. ii.-t* ii 'i,**-^-' - * l **- * H '' mffii&x ������������������'.- "������������������rt'i-.v".-^ . .-* ��������� .'������.���������' v, '- i sc��������� ii ���������-;. i ,.'*ri,,,j, " . -J- *r ... ' m. , . I.'-. t-^'V . *���������"������.���������- ., . ,i . , ���������. t. 4< 4i- ,'.,-, T( f. s������, it*- *������������������,������������������ i ,��������� ^> . *,. .* ������������������ i> ���������'���������.-. 'U ,-.'--, i-"������-J-v -���������* ���������,,'���������'