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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" tv\n\\ Kead T1m& |\n^SILVERTONIAN I\n\u00a3 $2 Per Annum. 5\ni^,:MKS<\u00bbaaoK\u00bbo*ooo *o*oso*c *o*c*o*o*i-*o*c*o*c>(s)\nMJL s\\\ni \u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u2022-\u00ab -\u00bb-*s*:*->*-j\u00bb-s-t!^i\nJot> Work J\nNeatly & Promptly Done\nWe can quoto you bedrock prices\n(gso*o\u00ab0*0 *CK*-*c\u00bb-.*c*c*r.*c*c*eo*a*-J*o*c*-.\nVOLUME TWO.\nSILVERTON, BRITISH: COLUMBIA, SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24, 1898.\nNUMBER 13\nTHE BOSUN MINE.\nThat Properly Examined\u2014A Splendid\nrOMSTOCR CONCENTRATOR BEGIN.\nGeneral Note* of Interest* to Kilning\nMen -oncernlniq- The Hlocan\nLake Mine*.\nSo much has been taHted and written\nlately about the now noted Bosun mine,\nmostly by people who know nothing\nabout it. that we deem it of interest to\naur readers, to submit herewith an article\ndescribing tho property, its surface and\nunderground workings complete up to\nthe present date.\nThe Bosun Mining Company owtiR and\nopenates the Tyro and Boatswain Fraction mineral claims, situated about half\nway between Silverton and New Denver\nand covering all tbe ground between the\nFidelity and this lake shore, thus having\nplenty of room aud ground to enable\nthem to carry on active mining operations for years to come without interfere\u2014\ningor being interfered with hv any\notiiside pnr!W. The location cf Ihe\nproperty is ideal for mining purposes\nThe property wos first brought into\nnotice on the 10th. of June last, when\nW. II. Sandiford the representative and\nengineer of the North West Mining\nSyndicate Ltd. of Kngland, who had\nbeen watching the property for some\ntime aud whoso thorough knowledge of\nthe mini'.ig business satisfied him that\nit was the making ol a mino, secured nn\noption to purchase. Mr. . Sandiford nt\nonce put men to work on the property\nwith the result tliat within 'AO days Upvalue of the property hud been proven\nup sulficently to justify the purchase\noutright of the property, chich was done,\nsome |7.'-00. wall being paid to tin*\noriginal owner. Work since that time,\nhas heen pusbod along systematically\nand aa fast .as possible, the force bring\nadded to from time to time as room wan\nnude in tho various workings Qpabling\nminers to work ti an advantage. Tbe\ncompany at the present time is working\na fotc** of __ man, with N. C. Dingni-ii\nuh foreman.\nThe ledg-) is a tine fissure ve in in a\nslate formation, the mineral strike being\nnorth-easterly nnd south-westerly. The\nvein pitches easterly into the mountain\natn pitch of about 5o degrees. Tliealste\nformation in which this rain lies is the\nnuns ulato form ition in which the bit;\nmines of Sandon occur,\nThe workings at present consist of two\ntunnels ami a shaft, -.-side* nunttaroua\nbin-low opening*!, made for the purpose\nof tracing the ledge. The shait, which\nis sunk on tne lodge at a point 230 feet\nfrom the Fidelity boundary line reached\na depth of 65 feet, when the flow of\nlU\/ir in the vein became such that the\nmanagement suspended sinking, as this\nwater andeliait will ba drainol hy tunnel No. 1, when a raise will be made'to\nconnect with the shaft, which will then\nbe used as au air 6haft. All ore extracted will be taken to the surface\ntin mull this tunnel. In sinking this\nshaft the ore came in near the surfnee as\na leather ft-go aud at a depth of ten foot\nthere was about two inches of clean ore.\nIt bas gradually widenod and in the\nbottom shows up three feet wide of solid\nclean, steel galena. Levels have been\nstarted at the 50 foot and are now being\ndriven night and day. The ore body is\nholding its width and value, in the\nsouth drift being over 18 inches of clean\nore and tbe ledge showing itselt to be\nJour feet wide, and in the north drift tho\nthe dean ore being three fct't in width.\nThe amount of ore exposed aud blocked\nout by the Workings at this shaft is more\nthan enough to pay for the cost of the\nmine several times over. No stoping\nhas as yet been done, but the amount of\nore extracted in doing this actual developement work Is some 150 tons of\nclean ore. Four car loads havo already\nbeen shipped, tbe tifth car is completed\nand but a few sac lu remain to be filled\nto complete the sixth car from this shaft,\ngiving smelter returns of $100. per ton,\nbesides piling on the dump Irom 20 to 30\ntons of good concentrating ore.\nTuunelNo. lis 175 feet down the\nhill, on tbe vein from the shaft, and will\nhave a depth of 85 feet, whon it strikes\nbelow the shaft, whon an upraise will bo\ndriven *nd connections made. When\nthis work is completed stoping will be\ncommenced. This tunnel is driven on\nthe ledge, which is shown to be from\nfour to five feet wide aud well mineral-\nir.edbutasyetnot!lean ore has been\noncontered. The manage men. however\nexpects to strike the ore shute \u00abP\u00b0*\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\nin the shaft at a distance In of about 100\nfeet. This tunnel is now in M ,\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u2022\nAt the mouth of this tunnel preparations\nare being made for o.o bins and ofe\nsorters quarters.\nTunnel No. 2 is still further down the\nhill on the vein being below the shaft\n400 feet, surface measurement, and will\ngain a depth, by the time it reaches the\nshaft of 170 feet. This tunnel is now in\n130 feet and is being driven on the vein\nshowing it to be as strong, well defined\nand iu place, as in tunnel No.l. The\nfirst part of this tunnel is a cross-cut,\nthe ledge being struck at a distance of\n35 feet in, und from that point it follows\nthe vein. The flrBt part of this tunnel,\nafter striking the vein, is running\nthrough ths top of what is undoubtedly\na big ore shute and \u00abome very fine oro\nIms been taken out. This ore shute will\nhave to be tapped from below o worked\nby means of a shaft. The altitude of\nthese workings Is ubout tiOO feet above\nthe lake, and no doubt the vein will be\ntraced down to and a tunnel driven from\nthe lake shore.\nThe Bosun Company has built on tho\nproperty at the lake shore a commodious ore dock, at whiuh tho CPU boats\ncall and take on ore whenever a carload\nIs ready. The company has just completed a good waggon road from the\nmine to the wharf and ore is delivered\nat a cost of ninety cents a ton. This\nroad like the wharf is the private property and on tho grounds ol the. com pan v,\nAt the mouth of No. 2 tunnel will he situated the company's buildings which\ntue being erected. Extensive preparations are heid^ made for ore bins and all\noilier necessary buildings and before tlu*\nsnow flies the management expects to\nhave everything iu tliape for pushing\nwork all wiuter.\nThe timbering for tho workings shows\nthat the manngemeut calculate ou ihe\npermanency of tbe mine and no expense\nnr trouble Is being spared in having the\nbuildings substantially built ami the\nmine systematically opened up.\nIt is very [yrtunate for the Slocan ilia''\ntbis mine has fallen into such goodliands\nas it bus, The Bosun Company i* composed of a number of English capitalists\norganized for the purpose ol carrying on\nof mining enterprises and mining rs a\nlegitimate business, avoiding all wild\"\ncatting and stock manipulating as much\nas po-iiiible. Mr. Sandiford, who has\npersonal charge of the property, in their\nrepresentative in this country and lias\nbait world wide ex'Kuieni-ein the handling and opuroJinji of nitnua, coming to\nthis country from Bervla, wln-rj he had\ncharge of a hi;* concentrating proposition.\nUpon (ouiing to British Columbia to rep-\nresent this uompany, Mr. Sandiford was\nsiicce-ditd in Servia by his son. lt is\nowing to his training nml his thorough\nknowlege of the mining biuiiess tliat\nenabled him to grasp the possibilities of\nthis property.\nWORK STARTED.\nThe contract for the Comstock Concentrator has been let, ground bos been\nbroken, mechanics and supplies are on\nthe spot and work will lie pnshod. Mr.\nMitchell, who will erect the plant, hos\nhad considerable experience in the\nerection of mills through tho Slocan\nreeion. so it will not be long before the\nComstock mill will be pounding away on\nFour Mile ores.\nfX)0_ 30CS : Z Z 3C -OC3CC -OOOOCO\n* MINING LOCALS. \u00a7\n00090000000000000C _ooocoo8\nThe Idaho Mine Ins shipped GOO toi.s\nsince July 1st.\nA new strike is reported on the Two\nFriends mino.\nPros-iecis on Gold Hill, near Slocan\nCity, are looking well and that ireotion\npromises well ss a gold producer.\nFrank Provo and II. McMillan have\ngone up by the Wakefield to represent\nthe Silver Cup claim.\nDan Murphy, who has been blacksmith at the Enterprise mino for some\ntime, is taking a loy off of a few days.\nJ. Tinling, after a short stay in town\nhas again returued to Coffey creek and\nwill push work on tbo trail up tbat creek\nto the Sellers Group.\nA temporary shut-down bas taken\nplace at tbe Cniiodinn group above Sandon. U cannot definitely bo stated when\nwork will recommence,\nFerguson, Sept. 9.\u2014Messrs. Perry,\nLenko and Phillips nre examining tho\nBadshot and Bade Bros.' gold property\nou Gainer ereok.\u2014Revelstoke Herald.\nMr. McCollum, owner of the Now\nJerusalem mine nt. Ainswoith, made a\ntrip tip Ten Mile last Wednesday to\nexamine properties on tho north fork,\nwith a view of purchasing.\nL. .1. Lobert and John Gillis, went np\nto-day to start work on the Napoleon\nclaim, just bolow the Comstock mine.\nThis claim is the property ol Mr. Lebert\naud has a lino showing.\nAssessment work just completed on\nthe Little Eva claim ou Twelve Milo\ncreek bus showr* up a good strong lead.\nThis claim is owned by Br. Brouso and\nS T Walker of New Denver.\nR. Kirkwood is having cabins built ou\nthe Ohio and Mabou claims on Ten Mile\ncreek. Mr. Kirkwood is making big\npreparations for working these promising\nproperties through the winter.\nTho evening Star mine has now its\nsteam hoist at the mine and will be\nready to push developement work soon,\nA mistake made by the shippers of the\nmachinery is delaying operations.\nJ. Sturgeon of Nelson was in town on\nMonday looking after his ruining interests. Mr. Sturgeon was the purchaser\nof the claims recently Hold bv D VunDorn,\nconsisting of the Iron A.ou'nlain, Silver\nCup No. 3, Mountain Chief No, 3 and the\nSarnia.\nThe Enterprise mino hai shipped\ntbis season 18 cars of ore and lias now\nlying in its bins ut the wharf 32 car-\nloudsorC40 tons. At the mine itself\nore is rapidly accumulating in the bins,\nno sloping in being done nnd the ore\nextracted is taken out in driving levels\nputting in tip-raises and other necessary\ndevelopement work.\nMessrs Teeters Bros snd Rackliff of\nSlocan City, lessees of the Hoodoo mine,\nhnve their winter quarters almost completed and aro t_kinif out and sacking\nconsiderable ore, preparatory to milking\na shipment. The Hoodoo mine adjoin*\ntlie Howard Fraction on Lemon creek\nand average -Slays from the paystreak\ngave a value of $2iX). a ton i-.i gold and\nsilver.\nC. B. Taylor, of Ten Mile, bus a good\nthing on the head of the nortti fork of\nTen Milo creek, near the divide, in his\nclaim filled the Butte. Assays running\nas high as 291 ounces in silver per ton\nhave been obtained. The Idgo shows to\nbe sf_ fret wide with a paystreak of\nover a foot ai clean ore. The ledge has\nbeen traced lor over 3000 feet und opened\nup in numerous places, n cabin and trail\nh_s been built and it is the intention of\nthn owner to go ahead and make a mine\nout of it.\nThe Kootenay Queen and Slocan Cbiel\nproperties on thc head of the couth fork\nof Kaslo. crock, are to be vigorously\nworked all winter. A large amount ol\nsupplies are being sent up and a crew of\nmen will be put to work at once. Both\nclaims are on tlio same vein and several\nopenings havo been made on it including\ntwo tcimels wbieh are in 25 and 30 feet\nrespectively. The ledge Shows to be live\nfeet wide with a twelve inch paystreak,\nthat gave assay** ranging from oti'l to 044\nounces in silver per ton. The owners\nBert Pearson and Frank IjoCusto are\nmare ihan pleased with tbe way the\nproperty has developed so far nnd will\npush work as f.i,-t as possible.\nA PROMISING PROGRAM.\nA concert which promises to be even\nmore than good will bo eiven in Clover's\nHall, New Denver, on the evening ot\nSept. 28th ut 8 o'clook. The proirram\nconsibting of vocal and iusMinncnta*\nmusic, readings, tableaux, &c. will be\ngiven by the local talent ussietcu bv Miss\nJoan Terry, the gifted elocutionist oi\nNelsou and Miss Clnra Bennett, well\nknown through the Slocan as a talented\nvocalist. The New Denver Orchestra\nwill be in altendnnce.\nCOMMUNICATED,\nSILVERTON'S NUISANCE GROUND.\nEditor Sii.vkrtomas:-\nSilverton's Nuisance\nGround was sometime ago located np the\nAlpha trail, and it was not at all suitable\nfor that purpose as tho ground sloped\ntowards and was near Four Mile Creek'\nand in consequence the wash therefrom\nwould pollute tho water therein, which\nis used by many for household purposes,\nand might be predudical to the health ol\nthe community. This location has, I am\ninformed, been recently changed to one\nnear the lake on the bed ol the old channel of Four Milo creek. This does net\nseem to be a change for the better. The\nwash therefrom will bo carried into the\nlake a very short distance north nf the\ntown (and the Lake flows south) and\nclose tQ the place where Silvertoninns\nhavo been in the habit of going into the\nLake to bathe. Unless when (aaislhe\nease atpiesent} the Four Mile creek i-t\nunusually low, its water is always running over this old be'l where it is proposed to dump tho filth nnd refuse of the\ncommunity, which will in conseipience\nbe carried to and deposited in Slocnn\nLuke near tho town. Could not a more\nsuitable place bo selected for this purpose? I think it would be diflicult to\nselect a h'f-n* unsuitable placo.\nA. B. C.\nCure (hat Cough with Shiloh's Cure\nThe best CoUgh Cure. Believes Croup\npromptly. One million bottles sold lust\nyear. 40 doses for 25cts. Sold by Tbo\nSilvertpp Drug Store, t\nTHE LOCAL LAYOUT.\nC_w2C03,\"iC IOC Z 30CC DQO'.\nPrivate, bath rooms, at Tom Mulveys.\nLeslie Hill, manager of tho Vancouver\nmine, returned to town Monday.\nJ. Barry came over from Brooklyn\nfor a few days this week.\nJ. A. McDonald is again filling bis old\nposition of Purser on the s.s. Slocan.\nMessrs. Rammelmeyer and Bartlett\nmade a rush trip upTen Mile on Monday*\nBrooklyn hss its opera house and is\nnow figuring on a school and church.\nGeo. Aylard, manager of the Enterprise Mine, made a trip down tbe Lake\non Wednesday.\nIf yon would lenn on tbe staff of life\nuse Mulvey's bread. Always good-\nFresh Daily,\nE. B. Ir.'iscr, manager of the Galena\nmines, made a business trip to Nelson\nthis week.\nMrs. Barclay entertained hor friends\nat a^progressive whist party at ber home\non Wednesday evening.\nFrank L Byron, who hns been feeling\nindisposed the last few days, has gone to\nNelson to recuperate.\nBorn; On Sept. 20th, to tho wife of\nNeil Get bin:;, a daughter. With care-\niiil nursiu^ the father will recover.\nT A Camming, who has mads Silver-\nton Ids headquarters for some time, lal't\nfor Rossland on Thursday.\nCaptain Seaman ha3 secured a sbor.\nIny-off from duty and his place on the\nss. Slocan is being lillod by Capt.\nFrasar.\nManager Short of the Bank of B.N.A.\nof Slocan City, bas returned from bis\nvacation, looking well, and can be found\nat bis old stand iu the Bank.\nW. Hunter has let a contract for a\ndwelling house to bc built on the bench\noverlooking the town. Tho site chosen\ni9 just beside the Turner cottage.\nRobf. Malloy nccoiup.tnie-1 by hia\nmother arrived in town from Brampton,\nOtit. on Wednesday. All of Bob's frieno's\nare glad to see him back lo the camp\nagain.\nLaundry, neatly and quickly done at\nSln'vey's Laundry.\nOar enterprising butcher and commis.\nsion merchant, Conrad Bill, bus received\na large variety of fresh vcgoiables. Aiiy-\nthing from a roasting car to a. pumpkin\ncan bc purchased at his establishment.\nWo:_ received a short time ngo from\nJ Anderson of tho local firm of Anderson\n& Brady, reports that he is doiniz a good\nbusiuos* in Glenora. Jimmy bus not yet\ndecided whether lo return to Silverton or\nnot this winter,\nEd. Nelson, wha passed through here\na few weeks aco en route to Brooklyn,\nbas been laid up iu the Nelson hospital\never since with typhoid fever. The\ndoctor promises to have him out iu two\nweeks more.\nHewitt Bostock M. P., our member, is\nin this constituency nnd has visited\nGrand Forks, Trail, Brooklyn and Rossland. We hope to seo and hear our representative in Silverton before he concludes his tour.\nA slight epidemic of scarlet fever has\nbroken out in Slocan City, necessitating\nthe closing up of the school for a short\ntime. The fever is not of a daouerotis\nnature but Dr. Brouso felt justified in\ntaking the action noted above regarding\nthe school.\nThe Social Entertainment given by\ntbe Companions of Foresters of Slocan\nCity on Tuesday evening was a largely\nattended success. The ladies nro entitled\nto much credit for tho entertainment afforded. The program consisted of recitations and music, About ten o'clock\ndancing commenced and refreshments\nwere served\u2014sandwiches, cake, coffee,\n&c. Batchelors were plentiful und entered joyously into tho dancing, forget-\ning for the time being all their troubles.\nOno of the most enjoyable evenings\never passed bv the lovers of the light\nfantastic in Silverton was spent in Mc*\nKitinon's Hull on Friday eveninir of last\nweek. About twenty-five of tho town's\npleasure seekers attended the social hop\ngiven and if laughter and hearty dancing\nexhibit enjoyment, this was a social success. Musis waa furnished by J R Gates\nof New Denver assisted by Al. Wilds.\nC. McNichols acted ns prompter, for\nwhich due thanks is given by all who\nattended. The Quadrille Club committee wish to thank Mr. McKinnon for his\nkindness iu allowing them the use of the\nhall for tlie occasion.\nLadies, Tako tho best. If you aro\nTroubled with Constipation. Sallow Skin\nand a Tired Fetlini;, tako Carl's Clover\ntea, it if pleasant to tako. Sold by Tha\nSilverton Drug Store. t\nKarl'*. Clover Boot Tea is a pleasant\nlaxative. Regulates the bowols, purifies\nthe blood, Cleats the complexion. F.asy\nto make nnd pleasant to take. 25i:ts.\nSold by The pilverton Drug Storp. t\nJ. A. M\u00b0KINNON & CO.\n\u2022Silverton, _B. C.\nCARRY A FULL LINE OF\n% Oeneral\nMereJfci \u00abnai\u00bbeT\nAND\nminer's\nSupplies\n*+*>r>r\\ AjVVWi**V*W\u00bb>-WV*VVVV\nammmmmmmwmm\nT0 M* 3Vt\u00ab 3BJED1V-ED-DXJ1M:,\nSilverton. .... B.C.\nLAKEVIEW HOTEL\n Silvrton \t\nC^THIS HOTEL IS NEW AND NEATLY FURNISHED,\nTHE BAH IS SUPPLIED WITH BEST BRANDS OF\nWINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.\nX_i, %\u00a3m 2^no\"^rles, -Prop.\n.\u00a3..-\u2022(\u2022\u2022.*\u2022*\u00bb(\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u00bb:\u2022 t\u00bb(\u00ab\u00ab'o(\u00abf*C\u00ab(\u00bbr\u00abCeC\u00bbfti <:\u2022(\u2022(\u2022(\u2022 (e(\u00ab(.\u00ab(aC*;*(*(e(* (\u2022\u00bb\u00bb(\u2022*<*(\u2022*(\u2022\u00bb(\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab(\u2022<\u2022(\u2022 (.\u2022*_>\n! FINE TAILORING\nI Fall and Win er Suit Patterns Now on Hand, |\n% I would respectfully invite gentlemen to an early inspection of my x\n*' selections in Spring and Summer Suitings. 9\n2 m\n|\u00bb My prices will be found moderate. I make it a point to 'keep them as j^\nS low as is consistent with good material, good workmanaliiu and tho care \u00a3\n9 and attention requistn to get up thoroughly satisfactory garments. 9\nLiebscher- the Tailor,\nI Lake View avenne. Silverton, I. C*\n\u00aeo)\u00bb>>>>>)*;*>j\u00bb>)o>)ej*5o)e>>W\nHotel Selkirk:::\nBrandon & Barrett, Props.\nLARGE AND COMFORTABLE ROOMS. FITTED WITH ALL THE\nMODERN IMPROVEMENTS. TABLE UNSURPASSED\nIN THE NORTHWEST.\nFine View of the Lake. Up to Date Service.\nCHOICE WISES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.\nCOURTEOUS TREATMENT. CALL AN1VSEE US\nOpposite the SILVERTON WHARF-\nCROSS tSti CO.,\nOeneral Agents arndL ';\u2022.? $\u2022\u00a3\n<\u2022-\u00bb\u00ab %w*; -Mining: Brokers.\nf>*V\u00ab*\nMINF. OWNERS WILL DO WELL TO\" LIST THEIR PROPERTY WITH US.\nTHE SALES WE ARE MAKING PROVE WE HAVE THE BUYERS.\n\u2666**\u00bb\u00bb**\u00bb#\nSole Agents For\n*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb#\nSILVERTON TOWNSITE.\nALL KINDS OF INSURANCE WRITTEN.\nOFFICE OPPOSITE THE WHARF, SILVERTON, B. C,\nI\n1\n\\\np THE SILVERTONIAN,\nR. 0. and Harry Matheson, Editors\n3 m\n'Am\ni\nm\nSILVERTON,\nB.C.\nUH 11 W\nREBEL CHIEF WANTS PEACE.\nIN MEMORY OF DEAD EMPRESS.\nThe Conn tea* -scarp**, j- I* tbe First\nOne to Heeelve the Grand Oros*\nVienna, Sept. 19.\u2014A rescript of the\nemperor to the Count Von Tliiuin Hohen-\nstein, president of the Austrian council\nof ministers, was published yesterday, expressing in eloquent and pathetic Ian-\nguggs the emperor's thanks for the ex-\nHe Denle* All the Storlea of Friction\nln the Filtptnoa\u2014The Prealdent la\nPleaaed, but Sends More Troop*\nto Manila.\nNew York, Sept 19\u2014The following\ndispatch has been received at the Associated Press Office:\nManila, Sept. 19.\u2014The Filipino government desires to inform the American\ngovernment and people thut thc many\nrumors circulated regarding the strained *|\nrelations between the Filipino and American forces arc base, malicious slanders of\nan enemy of both parties; are without\ntrutli and are circulated for the purpose\nof prejudicing tlie appeal of the Filipinos\nfor release from the oppression and cruelty of Spain.\nThe relations of our people and yours\nhave been and will continue of the most\nfriendly nature, and we have withdrawn\nour forces from the suburbs of Manila as\nadditional evidence of our confidence in\nthe great American republic.\nAGUINALDO.\nWill Take No Chance*.\nWashington, Sept. 19.\u2014The Associated\nPress dispatch conveying Aguinaldo's\nmessage to the .American people was regarded with much interest at the White\nhouse.\nThe president read the statement with\nevident appreciation of its importance,\nbut did not volunteer any information as\nto the attitude of the government. -\nOfficials near him speak of the message\nas \"a very important document.\" While\nthe officials do not care to discuss thc\nmatter for publication, it wus evident the\nmain source of their satisfaction waa the\ninternal evidence contained in the document that Aguinaldo had profited by the\nwarnings of the American commanders\nand gracefully receded from the arrogant\nattitude assumed by him just before Merritt left Manila for Paris.\nIn connection with the sending of fresh\ntroops to the Philippines, mention may be\nmade of the fact that the battleships\nIowa and Oregon are to go to Manila as\nquickly as possible, and mechanics are\nworking night and day to get them ready\nfor the long voyage. Vessels of this kind\nare needed to keep the Philippine insurgents in order and their assembling at\nManila in conjunction with the dispatch\nof heavy reinforcements of troops for the\nAmerican land forces can not but be regarded aa significant.\nIn well informed circles here it is seen\nthe real purpose of the president in milking these preparations is to insure the\npeace commissioners against any interference in the work of disposing of thc\nfuture of the Philippines according ti\ntheir best judgment. Not having disclosed his plans in respect to the islands\noutside of Luzon, the seat of the capital\nof the group, tbe president reserves for\nthe American peace commissioners the\nright to dispose of the remainder of the\nislands as tbey may deem best. ,\nGermany'* Bad Move*.\nA long line of curious incidents to.\nwhich one of the great European powers\nhas been a party has beyond question\ndone much to cause a feeling of uneasiness on the part of the administration as\ntending to show a purpose to interfere in\nour free uction in the Philippines, and\nthese have only been slightly diminished\nby an apparently frank disclaimer of any\nulterior purpose, because the incidents\ncontinue to occur quietly and in a manner calculated to avoid attracting atteu\ntion. Sueh for instance is the gathering\nof naval vessels to the south of the Philippines, the only explanation of which is\na purpose of acquiring either by seizure\nor by some secret compact with the Spanish government, the important island uf\nPalawan.\nIt ia gathered that it is the purpose of\nthe president to prevent the alienation by\nSpain of any of the Philippine group, and\nthese preparations, naval as well as military, are but a step toward the execution\nof this purpose. With the addition to the\nfleet of the two battleships, we will have\na force only second to that of Great Brit-\n\u2022in in eastern waters, while on shore Otis\nwill have a more numerous army than\nany European power save Russia.\npressions of national sympathy with him\nin his great bereavement. In the course\nof the rescript, his majesty laments that\nan enemy to all social society ih blind\nand purposeless hate, struck a heart\nwhich knew not hate and beat only for\ngood.\n\"Among the unmeasured grief by\nwhich I and my house are stricken and\nin the presence of the unheard-of deed\nwhich has Bent a shudder through tlie\nwhole civilized world, the voice of my\nbeloved people first brings balm to my\nheart in affecting unison with the resound of universal lamentation for our\nimmeasurable loss, like a faithful echo\nof all that moves my own soul. From\nmy deeply sorrowing heart, I thank all\nfor this new pledge of devoted sympathy. If the festive peals which should\nhave greeted this year ahould remain\ndumb, there yet remains to me the memory of innumerable proofs of loyalty and\ndeep sympathy, the most precious gift\nwhich could have been bestowed upon\nme.\n\"Our common grief weaves a new and\nintimate bond between the throne and\nthe fatherland.\"\nA New Order la Founded.\nAnother imperial rescript founds a new\norder, and medals of St. Elizabeth, in\nmemory of the deceased, will be conferred\nupon women and girls meriting distinction bi the various avocations oi life or\nin special religious, humanitarian and\nphilanthropic work.\nThe emperor is invested with the sole\nright of conferring the order, which\ncomprises three degrees, with a grand\ncross for the first and second classes,\nbearing an enameled picture of St. Elizabeth of Thuringia.\nThe first recipient of the order was\nCountess Szcarpay, who has received an\nautograph letter from the emperor conferring upon her the grand cross of the\norder in recognition of her devoted services to the dead empress in her last moments.\nTHE FRENCH ARMY SUSPECTED.\nKaterhaa*- Promise* to Tell Some\nMore Lie*, bnt No One Will Believe Anything He Say*.\nMORE TROOPS FOR CUBA.\nNew York, Sept, 19.\u2014A dispatch from\nParis says:\nParis is quiet outwardly. There seems\nto be a sense of relief because a revision\nhas virtually been determined on. But\nthere is a great commotion among the\nchiefs of the army. They undoubtedly\nhave the disposition, if not the courage,\nto try to prevent a revision at the eleventh\nhour by a military coup d'etat.\nM. Cavaignac, who resigned lately as\nminister of war and who has cast his lot\nunreservedly with the army, is pointed to\nas a possible dictator, but public sentiment will be a most effective bar against\nsuch designs. It has veered around completely in favor of revision and justice,\nwhich everywhere is recognized now except by a couple of anti-Dreyfus organs.\nEsterhazy's promised confession ( is\nawaited with the keenest curiosity,\nthough no one will believe a word he says\nunless he is supported by independent\ntestimony.\nJules Perries, a leading member of the\nFrench bar, comments upon the present\nlegal status of the Dreyfus cose as follows:\n\"Judicially, the ministerial decision to refer the case to an examining committee of\nthree decides nothing in the light of recent events. The committee's findings\nwill determine whether there shall be a\nrevision or not. The decision is only important particularly in that it reveals and\napproves the sentiment of the country in\nfavor of a revision.\"\nA MURDER AT PENDLETON.\nMan\nKilled, Woman Probably Fa-\ntally Wound.**!.\nPendleton, Ore., Sept. 17\u2014C. C. Cunningham of Milton, this county, this evening shot and killed 0. Young and seriously wounded Mrs. Julius J. Worcester\nnt the 0. K. k N. depot. Cunningham,\nYELLOW FEVER IN THE SOUTH.\nAn Official Epitome of the Situation\nLast Saturday.\nAdministration Decides to Mix Reg-\n'nlara With Volunteer*.\nChicago, Sept 19. \u2014 A special from\nWashington says:\nThe war department is now engaged in\nmaking plans for thc occupation of Cuba\nby United States forces. The preliminary\nsteps to this effect have already been\ntaken, and thc plan of the campaign will\nbe rapidly worked out. It has already\nbeen decided to have a full army corps in\nCuba. The corps will be composed of\nboth regular and volunteer troops. It\nwas at first thought that the army of\noccupation would be composed entirely of\nvolunteers, but the war department considers it advisable to have a few regiments of regulars included. This will give\nthe volunteer forces the benefit of the\nregulars' experience, and in a very short\ntime they will become seasoned and experienced troops.\nJust what troops will take part in the\noccupation of Cuba has not yet been decided, but the splendid condition and situation for such an expedition of General\nLee's command, the Seventh army corps,\nat Jacksonville, makes it seem probable\nthat a great portion of the volunteer\ntroops will be taken from that corps, if\nthis is done three Illinois regiments who\nare in Lee's command will be sent to\nCuba \u2014the Second, Fourth and Ninth.\nThe army of occupation will be distributed over a greater portion of the island.\nGarrisons will be established in most of\nthe larger towns, and will be maintained\nuntil a definite Cuban policy is determined upon.\nThe commissary and quartermaster's\ndepartments are now perfecting plans for\nthe sending of supplies to the troops.\nEnough snips ure not now on hand to accomplish this, but by the time that the\narmy of occupation is ready to move both\nof the supply departments of the army\nwill be abundantly equipped with transports to take food and clothing to Cuba.\nBefore final plans for the occupation of\nCuba ore agreed upon, the war department will wait for the report of the Cu\nban military commission.\nLouisville, Sept. 19.\u2014Following is on\nepitome of the yellow fever situation in\nthe south as it existed Saturday:\nPresident Souchin of the Louisiana\nboard of health reported a genuine case\nof yellow fever in the city of New Orleans. The case is that of Mallory\nKennedy, son of Dr. T. S. Kennedy. The\npatient,is on the rood to recovery.\nThe board of health uas proclaimed a\nquarantine against New Orleans. Freight\nand passenger traffic will be carried on\nunder the regulations of the Atlantic\nconvention.\nThe state of Mississippi has also quarantined against New Orleans.\nInspector Jiarrietson telegraphed the\nJackson health authorities aa follows\nfrom that city: \"Many cases of yellow\nfever here. Believe it will be officially\nannounced today er tonight.\"\nThe situation at Jackson is quiet. No\nnew cases were reported. About half\ntne population remains in the city. Two\nnew cases were reported at or wood and\none at Taylor's. They are all doing well\nat both places, the health authorities\nhave declared an unconditional quarantine against New Orleans and issued orders to all Texas quarantine stations to\nallow no passenger or freight trains to\nenter the state from New Orleans until\nfurther orders.\nwith a cocked revolver, chased Miss Ef-\nfle Worcester for a block, firing three\nshots at her, but the young woman ran\ninto a saloon and eluded the murderer.\nHe ran through the saloon into the\nGreat Eastern hotel, here he snapped his\nrevolver twice at Mrs. Johnson, the proprietor's wife.\nYoung is an employe of the 0. R. k N.\nHe was talking witu Mrs. Worcester and\nher daughter Eflie at the depot when\nCunningham, crazed by drink, > ew out\nhis revolver and commenced firing at the\ngroup. Young was shot through tho\nheart and died almost instantly. Cunningham then turned on Mrs. Worcester\nand shot her in the small of the back,\ninflicting a dangerous wound. Miss\nWorcester started to run up Main street,\nwhen Cunningham fired three snots at\nher, none of which struck her. , With\nthe empty pistol he kept on snapping\nu.e trigger repeatedly until they came\nto the Last Chance saloon, a block\naway. A man standing in the saloon\ndoor called to her to come inside, which\nshe did, darting under a billiard' table\nfor refuge from her bloodthirsty pursuer.\nCouncilman Mitchell, George Reading\nand several others came up and Reading\ngrappled tho murderer. Both fell to the\nground, Reading holding Cunningham's\npistol hand as they struggled. Officer\nSpeer ran up and by mistake struck\nReading on the head with a heavy cane.\nCunningham was finally landed ih the\ncounty jail. He could not say how he\ncume to do it. He seemed dazed and\nnot entirely accountable. He has been\noften in court here charged with selling\nliquor without a license at Milton. Citizens are much enraged at his dastardly\ndeed and threaten to lynch him. \u2022 The\notlicers are nervous over these threats.\nThe physicians doubt the recovery ot\nMrs. Worcester, whose condition is serious. She is the wife of a well known\nmining man.\nj mile and a half southeast of the Big finf\nfalo. The ledge is large and crow L\nnearly 1000 feet, lt is a contact vein u\nI tween granite and schist. It is reported\nin Florence that un average sample of\n' eight feet of the ledge gave gold value,\nof $174.33. lt is said that Mr. Glidden\nEmpire Camp Coming to the Front- will lit once put a force of men to wort\nAn Important DeeUlon on Sur- oil the property.\nveylnir Clnl_i\u00ab-A ltepubllc Iilvi- j News comes from Florence that other\ndend-Uenl at Buffalo Hump- | milling capitalistslure investigating ihw\nNEWS OF PRECIOUS METALS.\nPlacer* on the lle\u00bbervallo~\u2014Wln-\nlnii Koto*.\nEmpire camp, which lies four\nwest of Curlew creek and about 2<\nmiles\n20 from\nprospects on Buffalo Hump, and that\nseveral deals arc in prospect.\nThe Iron Crown of Nevraome.\nDr. A. J. Lauterman of the iron (jrown\nmine ut Ncwsomc, Idaho, is one of tine\nRepublic, is onee more attracting atteu- j prindp.1 owners of the Vindicator mine\n1 ' . ., \u201e . inn,,'-** Cripple Creek, Colorado, whieh vialris\ntion. There was a b->\" \u00bb-e; ^, $80,000 monthly and he said he r ^\nmore than a year ago, but it subside-. the In). Crow_ a8 ^ ^ ^ .^ ^\nand since then everything has been mov-1 )uj ig intpregt0u> Two Kineaid mi|U ^\ning slowly. The ores are a combination been installed upon it und are crushing\nof gold, silver and copper and the ledges | twenty tons of ore per day. Dr. Liiutor-\nare strong. Their values are sueh as ( man says that he was informed by the\nEGYPT, CRETE AND DREYFUS.\nAll\nThree Question* Hnve Reached\nan Acute Stave.\nA Startling Theory.\nLondon, Sept. 19.\u2014David Christie\nMurray publishes in a morning paper a\nstory regarding the Dreyfus affair. The\nauthor vouches for the trutli of the story\nbut declares he can not disclose the source\nfrom which he obtained his information.\nThe article states in part that Dreyfus\nwas engaged as a spy. in the employ of\na secret department of the French army\nagainst those suspected of trafficking\nwith Germany and other (lowers. His\nzeal, so tbe story goes, led him to become\nthe victim of revenge on the part of\nColonel Henry, Count Esterhazy and\nColonel I'aty du Clam, who themselves\nwere concerned in the treasonable practices.\nBurned Hia Store to Convince Him.\nMcConnellsville, Ohio, Sept 10.\u2014A terrible fire broke out in the business part\nof thia city this morning in the ware-\nrooms owned by C. L. Barker. The warehouse was destroyed and much property\ndamaged, but by great efforts the court\nhouse and adjoining buildings were saved.\nAs McConnellsville votes on waterworks today and Barker was a leader of\nthe opposition the fire has caused quite\na sensation. Some claim that incenduries\nare to blame.\nTrylnu; to Trick Hanker*.\nNew York, Sept. 19.\u2014A dispatch to the\nHerald from Valparaiso says:\nArgentina's circular note instructing her\nrepresentatives abroad to deny the rumors in connection with her differences\nwith Chile, and to state that she is not\nhostile to the general plan of arbitration\nproposed by Chile, has not caused a cessation nf the preparations of Chile to\nmeet any emergency. The note is regarded as a trick designed to allure the bankers to place a new loan in Europe for\nwar purposes. As evidence of this, it is\npointed out that Argentina is pushing\nlu?r war preparations harder than ever, in\nspite of such peaceful declarations.\nChampagne Ia to Be t*\u00bbed.\nSpringfield, III., Sept. 10.\u2014Governor\nTanner has decided the battleship Illinois shall be christene- with champagne,\nand Saturday in a letter to the committee of tho W. C. T. U., who protested\nagainst christening the battleship with\nwine, notified them of his decision.\nThe Congregational iats have one minister to every 114 members of their\nchurches.\nCorea'a King la Safe.\nSeoul, Corea, Sept. 19.\u2014The emperor\nis recovering from Ihe attempt to poison\nhim, but the crown prince is still ill. An\ninferior cook at the palace has confessed\nthat he placed poison in the coffee served\nto the emperor and the prince.\nMore than 60,000 Frenchmen belong to\ntbe Legion of Honor. Thirty-two thousand of these are connected with the\narmy. The rest are civilians.\nReady to Leave.\nSan Juan de Puerto Rico, Sept. 19.\u2014\nThe final preparations for the embarkation of the Spanish troops are reported\nto be complete, although the American\ncommissioners have not been officially advised to that effect\nTwo ships of tbe Campania Trans-At-\nlantica are expected to arrive here on the\n20th inst. Five vessels will be required\nto transport all the baggage and field\nartillery and equipment. The Puerto\nRican troops are to be landed near Cadiz.\nThe United States commissioners have\nagreed that such troops as desire to remain here may do so, and especially all\ntbe volunteers and some of the regulars\nwhose families and interests are here will\nremain. If the neceeaary ships were here\nthe island could be evacuated and formally in our possession within three days.\nThe AmericarTcommissioners are highly gratified with the spirit shown by the\nSpaniards. The unexpected has happened. Where it was expected that opposition and delay would be encountered, in\ngood fnith the Spanish commissioners\nhave met the Americans and arranged\nwith them the terms of evacuation. Our\ncommissioners expect to see the American\nHag hoisted and the Spanish flag hauled\ndown forever within three weeks.\nShatter Will Come Weat Again.\nWashington, Sept. 19.\u2014Major General\/\nBates and Summer, who were prominent\nin the Santiago campaign, reported at tho\nwar department today. They are expecting a new assignment under the plan\nwhich is contemplated for the distribution\nof troops.\nIt is almost settled that Shafter will\nreturn to San Francisco and rcsumu command of the department of California.\nSuch is his desire. Meet of the officers\ndesire to remain in the service, und'influence is already being brought to liear to\nkeep them on the rolls of the war department.\nLondon, Sept. 19.\u2014Three or four black\nthunder clouds arc overhanging the po*\nlitical horizon of Europe. The Dreyfus,\nCretan and Egyptian questions have become more acute and it is difficult at\npresent to forecast the outcome in either case. An indication of the activity in\nthe official world is found in the fact\nthut the Marquis of Salisbury, who went\nfor a quiet holiday to take the waters\nof Centerville, has had a special telegraph office established at his hotel this\nweek in order to deal with the mass of\nofficial telegrams pouring in aud out. It\nis expected that the British premier has\nordered that the most stringent measures be taken at Candia, where British\ntroops were recently fired upon by mus-\nsidmans, thc execution of which only\nawuits the airival of sufficient reinforcements of her majesty's soldiers, who\nnow number 2000 there, while another\nbattalion is on its way to Candia from\nEgypt. The most recent advices tend\nto show that the powers are disposed to\ngive Great Britain a free hand to obtain\nreparation foi the massacre of Christians\nand the insult to British arms. Admiral Noel, the British naval commander\nof Cretan w*aters, has arranged with the\nother admirals for the immediate withdrawal of tbe military contingent-. Tho\nBritish squadron now before Candia is\npowerful enough to raze that place in a\nfew hours. The Turkish authorities at\nOandia are playing their old gume of\nsurrendering a number of nobodies as the\nringleaders of the mo-sacrers, while a\nnumber of beys, who are known to be the\nreal instigators of the trouble, are still\nat liberty and are likely to remain so until considerable further pressure is\nbrought, to bear upon the Turks.\nPlenty of Beer.\nCleveland, Sept. 19.\u2014 Some 250 men\nwhose business it is to see that the 1,093,-\n201,740 gallons of beer which this country\nuses each year to refresh the inner man is\nof the proper quality and contains the\nright ingredients are attending the annual convention of the Brewmastcrs' National Association, which began here today. Among the cities largely represent\ned are Cincinnati, Chicago, Toledo, Detroit, Buffalo, St. Louis, Milwaukee and\nColumbus. The convention will be in session several days, during which time\nmany questions relating to improved\nmethods in thc manufacture of beer will\nbe discussed in a technical manner.\nUncle Sum to Act a* Hunker.\nWashington, Sept. 19.\u2014An ordeJ was\nissued Saturday by First Assistant] Post\nmuster General Heath which authorizes\npostmasters to issue money order! pay\nable at their own offices. This pjuctice\nlias not heretofore been followed asu the\nnew departure is for the accommodation\nof people who, not having an account\nwith a bank, desire to follow thh economical and absolutely safe metljod in\npayment of bills, etc.\nThe Russian soldiers invariably wash\nand dress with extra care before t battle, as they be\"eve physical cleanliness\nto play an important part iu helping\nthem, to enter heaven.\nNo Spanlah at Santiago.\nWashington, Sept. 19.\u2014General Law-\nton reports to the war department tonight that all but eight of the Spanish\nprisoners have been shipped from SiAli-\nago to Spain. Following is thc text of\nGoneral Lawton's dispatch:\nSantiago de Cuba, Sept. 18 (via Haiti),\n12:23 p. in.\u2014Adjutant General, Washington: All Spanish prisoners have been\nshipped, except one at Barcoa and seven\nat Guatanumo\u2014sick, yellow fever.\nLAWTON. Major General.\nMust lllniirm the Rioter*.\nCandia, Crete, Sept. 19.\u2014Admiral\nNoel, the Hritish naval commander here,\nlast evening handed Edhem l-uslvi, tbe\nTurkish governor, a demand for tho\ndisarmament of the mussulman population. Eunem Pasha is awaiting instructions from the Turkish government on\nthe subject.\nwould seem to offer more than an ordinary inducement to investors. A gentleman who is thoroughly posted on mining wus in the camp a few duys *>ince,\nand says:\n\"There is no doubt about the future\nof Empire's mines. The ledges are there\nplenty of them, und the ores cany exceptional values. Like all other camps,\nthe owners of prospects either arc afraid\nof their muscles or their money. 'J hey\nare too sparing of each either for their\nown good or that of the country. If the\nowners would display half the activity in\ndeveloping some of their ledges that they\ndid in making and setting sUkei, thero\nwould undoubtedly have been more than\none mine in camp ere this. What tlie\ncuinp mo9t needs at this time is the id-\nfusion of new blood. This must come before there will be great material progress\nin the shape of development. There aro\na few holders who while probably not burdened by wealth have some energy, and\nspare muscle, and are now using it til\nsome purpose.\n\"There are some excellent showings in\nthe camp. Among those thut are mere\nthnn ordinarily promising and upon which\nwork is now in progress or soo'i will be\nis tho Crown Point, lt hus a 20-foot\nshaft und about five feet of solid quint\/..\nIt is said that the ore averages Mid*\nthing over |80 per ton.\nrineer* on the Reaervallon.\nPlacer gold in paying quantity lin*\nbeen discovered on the north half of the\nreservation, and the coming spring will\nprobably see a lively camp on Boulder\ncreek. I!. H. Itedmun bus bcei in He-\npublic for a few duys looking after b.isi-\nness matters, lie is the locator and discoverer of the placer diggings, lie said:\n'*! wus convinced that placer nines\ncould bc found on the reservation, and U\nI believe sueh properties offer quicker\nreturns than quartz propositions 1 started on a vigorous search. I went '.o Boulder creek, which is ubout 10 miies nest\nof Meyers creek. The indicalio'is -Kiintcd\numnistukubly to tho existence of -{old in\ntin- si renin and on the low bars. 1 milk\na few holes and found gravel. I foun I\ngold in all of them, occasionally getting\ncoarse pieces ranging from 5 cents to\n10 cents iu value. Colors were plentiful.\n\"After prospecting over a large uvea of\nground 1 became satisfied that when\noperated with a sluice it would pay about\n$5 per day to each man working. At a\nconservative estimate the ground will pay\n30 cents per cubic yard from top to bottom. The gravel contains few boulders\nof any great size. It is loose enough to\nground sluice advantageously.\n\"I am putting in a bedrock flume and\nhave reached a depth of nine (set, but\nam not on bedrock. So far I have ground\nsluiced only, but as soon aa I get the upper end of the flume to bedrock I shall\nput in a hydraulic plant. Thc ground is\ntopographically well adapted to that style\nof mining. The creek has considerable\nfall, affording excellent f.nilities fur\ndumping, with no possibility of hindrance\nfrom tailings. By constructing a few\nhundreds yards of ditch or laying pipe, a\nfall of 200 feet can be obtained, which\nwill bc ample to move the gravel rapidly.\nMo t\\ S. Surveyor Needed.\nA decision of the secretary of the interior has been received at the land office\non motion for review of the commissioner's decision of April 10, 1898, in the case\nof W. D. McPadden et al. v\u00ab. the Mountain View Mining k Milling Company.\nThe plaintiffs filed an adverse claim in\nthe local lund office, which was rejected\nfor reasons (1) that it was not evidenced\nin manner prescribed by the rules of the\ndepartment; (2) plat of adverse claim\nwas not made by a deputy United States\nmineral surveyor; (3) no showing as to\nvalue and ownership of labor and improvements upon the claims us required\nby the rules of the department. These\n'objections were sustained by the commissioner of the general land office. The\nsecretary of the interior now overrules\nthe decision and holds that the adverse as\npresented at the local land office by 'McPadden was sufficient and that it was not\nnecessary for a deputy Unted States mineral surveyor to make survey and plat\nwhicli was filed with the adverse.\nThe secretary follows the decision in\nthc case of Anchor et al. vs. Howe et al.,\n60th Federal Reporter, 300.\nThe secretary further holds that rules\nmade by the commissioner of the general\nland office can not bc binding when said\nrules exceed the scope of the law, therefore tho rule requiring that a deputy\nUnited States mineral surveyor shall\nmake plat and survey for an adverse\nclaim is not binding and does not have\nthe force and effect of law.\nViral Buffalo Hump Deal.\nA Spokane man took the first bond on\none of thc promising claims in thc Buffalo Hump district of Idaho, where tho\nrecent exciting stampede took place, Thc\nclaim is tho Hob-ion's Choice, and II. M.\nGlidden gets the property for $33,333. The\ndeal was consummated in Florence last\nmunuger, W. H. Wolf, that the output\nwould be $1000 per day us long us ore\nlike that now being crushed can lie supplied. The uupply seems to be beyond\nestimate from present developments.\nI.iirue Mineral Patent.\nJacob Goetz appeared lust week and\nfiled at the land ollice final proof for probably the largest contiguous body of mineral hind ever patented in the state of\nWashington. The property is the famc\nFoot group, sometimes called tho Frankfurt, comprising 11 claims as follows:\nIjhiiio Foot, lion Mountain, Holyoke,\nMiners' Delight, Luke Shore, Curlew, En*\ntcrprise, W. J. Bryan, Sunset, Portland\nand Lucky Boy. The claims are on the\nwest side of Curlew lake on the reservation. They include 151 ueres and th.)\ncush paid for the lund alone was *7.Vi.\nThe cost of the surveyor general's plats\nalone waa $300.\nThe property is a low grade proposition.\nOn the Lame Foot a solid body of ore\n100 feet wide luu-> been opened up. Over\n$10,000 has been expended in development. A compressor plant is on the property. Transportation is necessary More\nthe mine can become profitable.\nKtirtlniiinkr* In Maine.\nPortland, Me.. Sept. 19.\u2014Two earthquake shocks occurred in Deering Saturday morning. The first was felt at 10:45,\nlasting several seconds, followed after an\ninterval of 11 seconds by a second shock,\nlasting five seconds.\nJewish Xeiv Year.\nPortland, Sept. 19.\u2014Saturday was the\nfirst day of the Jewish month Tisri, the\nbeginning of tbe year 5059. It whs the\nfirst day of Hush Hoahonoh, the beginning and the most important part of the\nJewish Now Year observance.\nKaslo & Slocan\nTIME CARD.\nTime card No. 2, taking effect at 1\no'clock a. in., September 1, 1898, Pacific\nor 120th meridian time.\u2014First class passenger trains:\nLv. Daily. Arr. Daily.\n8:30 a. m Kaslo 3:30 p.m.\n8:55 a. m.\n0:45a. m.\n10.00 am..\n10:08 a.m.\n10:20a.m.\n10:34 a.m.\n10:35 a.m.\n10:45 a. in.,\nArr. Daily.\nSouth Fork 3:05 p.m.\n... Sproules 2:10p.m.\nWhitewater\n. ..Bear Lake....\n... McGuigan ..\n. ..Payne Tram..\n..Cody Junction.\n.... Sandon ...\n, .2:00p.m.\n..1:50p.m.\n..1:38p.m.\n.1:23 p.m.\n, .1:22 p.m.\n,. 1:15 p. in.\nLv. Daily.\nCODY BRANCH.\nMixed Trains.\nLv. Daily. Arr. Daily.\nll:00a.m Sandon 11:59a.m.\n11:10a.m.. .Cody Junction.. .11:50a, in.\nll:25a.m Cody 11:35a.m.\nArr. Duilv. Lv. Dailv.\nROUT. IRVING, 0. F. COPELAND,'\n0. F. k P. Agt. Superintendent.\nCuller's Prultlesa Crnlae.\nSeattle, Sept. 19.\u2014The revenue cutter \t\nGrant, which went up into Alaskan wa-1 week. J. C. Moore, L. R. Yates and Billy\nters in a fruitless search for a Spanish Palmer were thc vendors,\nprivateer, arrived here from Sitka to- The Hob-ton's (,'hoicc is one of the first\nni\u00abut- . ' | locations In thc i-amp and lies about u\nNavigation and Trading\nCompany.\nLIMITED.\nSteamers \"International\" and \"Alberta\"\non Kootenay Lake and River.\nFive Mile Point connection with all\npassenger trains of N. & F. S. R. R. to\nand from Northport, Rossland and Spokane. Tickets and baggage checked to all\nUnited States points.\nIjcuvc Kaslo for Nelson and wny points,\ndaily, except Sunday, 6:45 a. in. Arrive\nNorthport 12:15 p. in.; Rossland, 3:40 p.\nm.j Spokane, 0 p. m.\nLeave Nelson for Kaslo and way points\ndaily, except Sunday, 4:35 p. m. Leave\nSpokane, 8 a. m.; Rossland, 10:30 a. m ;\nNorthport, 1:60 p. m.\nNFjW SKKV1CE ON KOOTENA _ 1-AKE.\nIjeave Nelson for Kaslo, etc., Tuesday,\nWednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday\nut 8:30 a. in.; arrive Kaslo, 12:30 p. m.\nLeave Kaslo for Nelson, etc., Monday,\nTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,\n4 p. in.; arrive Nelson, 8 p. m.\nBONNER'S FERRY AND KOOTENAY\nRIVER SERVICE\nIjeave Kaslo Saturday 4 p. m.j arrlvs\nBoundary midnight; arrive Bonner's Ferry Sunduy 10:30 a. m.\nIjeave Bonner's Ferry Sunday 1 p. m.|\narrive Boundary Sunday 5 p. m.; arrive\nKb-do Sunday 10 a. m.\nClose connection at Bonner's Ferry with\ntrains eastbound, leaving Spokane 7:40\na. in., and westbound arriving Spokane\n7 p. m.\nG. ALEXANDER, Gen. Manager.\nKaslo. B. 0., Oct 1, 1897. -\nI Nervous People\nAre crest sufferers snd they deserve sympathy rather than censure. Their blood Is\n\u201eoor and thin and their nerves are con\nLeuiiently weak. Such people find relief\nami cure in Hood'B Sartaparilla because it\nuuriliesand enriches the blood and gives\nit power to feed, strengthen and sustain\nthe nerves. If you are nervous and cannot sleep, take Hood's Sarsaparilla and\nHood's Sarsaparilla\nIs America's Greatest Medicine, ll; six for $5.\nHood's Plll\u00bb C13r<' *'* -'|VCI' 111'- 2* cent*.\nJIM HILL TAKES A NEW ROAD.\nllu* Put the lliiltliiiore A Ohio Into\nHI* Ciilleellii-i.\nChicago, Sept. 19.--The Times-Herald\nsays:\ni'hilip D. Armour, Marshall Field and\nNormnn H. Iteiini have secured control of\nthe Baltimore _ Ohio railroad. They\nhave made James J. Hill, president\nft\nFIGHT OVEE THE PHILIPPINES\nPear an ICruiitloii.\nNuples, Sept. 19.\u2014A state of gloomy\napprehension prevails uniong the population regarding the eruption of Vesuvius,\nwhich is hourly becoming more active\nnnd menacing. Streams of lava are\nspreading in every direction. The most\nthreatening of these flows through thc\nVedrino vulley, which is almost filled.\nThe observatory, which originally stood\nnt a height of G10 metres, is now only\n_7 metres above thc sea level, owing to\nUie sinking of the ground. Seven new\ncraters huvc formed around thc central\none, and this has not tended to diminish\nthe fears formerly felt which were based\nupon the eruption of stones and scoria\nsimilar to that which occurred in 1808.\nof\nTlie New Maine.\nWashington, Sept. 17.\u2014Secretary bong\nhas directed that the battleship which is\nto be built by 'he I'nion iron works at\nSan Francisco shall be named the Ohio.\nThe ('ramps will build the Muine and the\nNewport News companny the Missouri.\n'|-*--*'^'Ss--S*-*N^^\u00ab-*N*-tN**'N'**-S^^s\nI \"A Perfect Type of the Highest Order\n\u25a0 Excellence in Manufacture-\"\n I\nWalter BaKev & Ba:s\nBreakfast\nAbsolutely Pure,\nDelicious,\nNutritious.\ncosts Less Tftan WE CEMT11\ni\nBe sura that you (et thc Genuine Article,\nnude st DORCH-5TBR, MASS. b\u00bb\n\u2022 \u25a0'. \u2022iiiiui, \"lU'i'i u , -mi, i\/u;niuvni \\n\ntne~Greut Northern railroad, the dorai-\nnating factor in the reorganization of\nthe system und have guined for Chicago\nand the northwest what is practically\na trunk line from occun to ocean, controlled by Chicago capital.\nMr. Beam engineered the deal by\nwhich his wealth, that of Mr. Hill and\nof Messrs. Armour and Field gained a\ncontrolling interest in the Baltimore k\nOhio, which henceforth is to be a Chicago enterprise, fed and ( sustained in\ntranscontinental affairs by the immense\n\u25a0lineage of the Great Northern railroad.\nIf any road completes the gup between\nthe terminus of the Orcut Northern railroad in St. Paul und the terminus pf the\nBaltimore & Ohio in Chicago, it will be\nthe Chicago Great Western road, but\nthat is a matter for the future.\nMr. Beam will become a member of\n..e executive committee of the reorganized road 'ind either Mr. Field or Mr. Armour inny become a director, although in\nall probability the trio will be represented by Mr. Ileum.\nMr. Bill's connection with the transaction foreshadows the statement that he\nwill be the prime factor of thc road.\nWhile the price paid by the Chicago\nmen is not known the details of the\ntransfer of Ihe properties of the road are\nbeing discussed at a conference held in\nthe Auditorium annex. At this conference President Hill, Mr. Ream, John K.\nCowen, president of tho Baltimore k\nOhio, and Oscar Murray, receiver, and\nWilliam Greene, general manager of the\nroad, were present.\nMr. Beam declined to bc interviewed,\nbut one of the Baltimore k Ohio officials\nconfirmed tne report current in Wall\nstreet Thursday and in Chicago railroad\ncircles that in addition to the holdings\nof thc roud w hieh the Rockefellers' interests are reported to have secured last\nweek for western backers of the road,\nMessrs. Field, Armour und Beam had secured sufficient reorganization stock to\nmake Chicago and the west uie dominant\ndement in the future management of\nthe road.\nPresident Cowen was not prepared to\nmake S full statement until after he had\nconsulted with Mr. Henm.\nPresident Hill wus In a jubilant frame\nof mind and would not deny that Field,\nArmour and Ream had assisted him in\n1 almost realizing his dream of having a\nroml from the Pacific to the Atlantic\ncontrolled by western men.\nGeneral Wheeler Thln-a the Wnr\nMutt\/ lie Heaumeil-The Prealdent\nKeeps One Hundred Thonaand\nVolunteer* In Service Until Peace\n1* Settled.\n> WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. \\\nEst aslis Hsu 178*.\n\\apftap1ks^At*0+lW^r*^t\nThe left side of the face is considered\n\u2022\u25a0 by artists and photographers more beau-\n1 tiful than the right\nUMIU \"W\nA Beautiful Present\nhs crJar te i_rt_er Introduce CLASTIC STARCH (Flat Iron Brand),\nmm \u25a0sua-u-turers, J. C. H-bln*\u00abr Brae. _*, el Keokuk, Iowa. ear*\n\u00abacided to OIVB AWAY a beautiful prtM.t with eeck package ot\n\u25a0ank sold. These presents are ia the lens ol\nBeautiful Pastel Pictures\nTWy en mn\"-\"-p** j**____**! ______**_*\nLHactand\nPanj-l-t-iv*\nPanttef\nend\nMarguerite*.\n(our in number, by the\nPastel pictures\nOne ol these pictures \u2014 -\nwill be tlven awaj\nwith each *.***\u2022\"\u201e\npar-based of your \u00ab\"__\u00a3_..\nis sold for 10 cents a package.\nbeautiful picture.\ni \u25a0l_,S^\u00ab_5W^_St6i\u00ab\nI -*_S_srr_.waS\u00bb_.\n1 of color and artistic urn*. m\nElastic Starch\nC**\"*Srtfta .\n\u25a0otiiimsTi\nlimine ol any lira e 1\t\nalrueiert machine, not capable ot routining tlio 1\nare 01. ilie market, made o( liuiii material, with\nstructvd ns not to be able to hold the pressure w<\n REDUCED PRICE8\t\n6 GAL. SIZE S30 OO 3 CAL SIZE 9IB.OO\nIncluding Supply ot Chemical Charges with Kacb\n\"lade Woolen Mills,\n. _ _.?_ u-\u2122l. Fleece Wool Clothing,. Furnishim\n703\nRiverside,\nSpokane. w w * c-ot*.ing, Furnishing!\n703\nRiverside,\nSpokane.\nClothing. Furnishings. Blankets\n'-- dotbing\nChicago, Sept. 11).---A Washington special says:\nThe opinion of Major General Joseph\nWheeler that the war is not over and\nthat Spain will refuse to give up the\nPhilippines until forced to do so is shared by many nrmy officers and by members of the cabinet.\nPresident McKinley iB not an optimist as lo thc continuance of peace and he\nhas insisted that the war department\nshall keep fully 100,000 volunteers in the\nservice until the pence commissioners\nhave succeeded in drafting a satisfactory\ntreaty or have failed in this effort.\nThe president has been importuned by\nsenators, congressmen and governors to\nmuster out particular regiments, but he\nhas put his foot down and said that the\nwur depuifluent shall muintain sufficient\ntroops to bo ready for any emergency,\neven that of resuming hostilities, in the\nevent of failure to agree upon a settlement of the Philippine question.\nTo an Ohio delegation that called at\nthe White house a few days ago to urge\nthe muster out of another Ohio regiment\nthe president stated his position very\nclearly. lie told them he had little\nconfidence in the peace negotiation*!\nwith Spain except as they were backed\nup by the determination of this government to enforce all its demands and be\nready to do this by resuming hostilities\non short notice.\n\\u Confldrnce In Simln.\nThe president's experience in seeking\nto settle the controversy with Spain\nwithout retorting to war lias not given\nhint nor his advisers much confidence in\nSpain when diplomacy is the method <>f\nreaching a settlement. Spain is a master of that kind of diplomacy which\nmeans delay, and, while she sought\nterms of peace when her fleets were destroyed and her army at Santiago surrendered, she has done nothing as yet\nto propare for thc consummation of her\npromises.\nThere bas been no preparation made\nfor the evacuation of Cuba, and there\nare indications that the.Spanish commissioners in Cuba will attempt to drag\nIn many other questions besides the\nplain and simple one of evacuation. The\nAmerican commissioners in Cuba have\nbeen instructed to hold to this as the only question for settlement there and\nleave all other questions to the peuee\ncommissioners in Puris.\nThe president bos the best of reqsons\nin the action of the cortes for doubting\nhis ability to secure a final peace without at least lieing ready to resume hostilities, lie has therefore impressed upon\nhis importunate callers that he can not\nmuster out all of the volunteer army,\nbut must keep a sufficient number of\ntroops in readiness to enforce his demands. He must be ready to throw a\nlarge body of troops into Cuba again at\nshort notice and he must be ready to\nsend re-enforeeinents to the Philippines\nto show Spnin thut he is just as determined now to have a prompt und definite acceptance of his terms of peace as\nhe was when he went to wur.\nTi-rin* of fence.\nThe terms of peace have been laid\ndown, and they are explicit as to Cuba\nand Puerto P.ico. There i9 only one\nquestion thut is not definite about thc\nPhilippines, and that is as to just what\npart of the itsiunds this government proposes to place under the American flag.\nThat is to be the purpose of the peace\ncommissioners. They are to say whether S|>ain shall release all or only a part of\nthe islands. Hut this question must\nbo settled apart from the Cuban question. The evacuation of Cuba will not\nbe allowed lo have any bearing upon the\nPhilippines, though it is apparent that\nthe Spaniards are again trying to get\nround to that old diplomatic position\nof surrendering Cuba and retaining u\nlarge part of the Philippines.\nMull Be Hinily to IIkIiI.\nThe president has told some of his congressional callers in the last few days\nthat with such a condition und with the\nuncertainty of the Spanish churucter, he\nis not justified in assuming that thc war\niB over and mustering out the volunteers, lie bus stated to some of these\ncullers just what General Wheeler stated\nin a public interview, that the wur is\nnot over, but is likely to be resumed in\na few months unless the Spanish politicians show a better disposition toward\npermanent peace by providing for the release of territory as agreed upon in the\nterms of peace.\nAt least one of the peace commissioners shares this suspicion and doubts the\nability of the two commissions to agree\nupon any proposition concerning thc\nPhilippines. The American commissioners will insist upon retaining at least the\nisland of Luson, if not the whole group,\nand thc Spanish commissioners will not\ndure, in the present state of public\nopinion in Spain, to agree to cither of\nthese propositions. it is therefore feared that the negotiations of the pence\ncommissioners will bc long drawn out\nand finally come to naught unless the\npresident stands ready to break off thc\nnegotiations and resume hostilities.\nThis is the reason why President Mi\nKinlcy does not intend to muster out the\nwhole volunteer army. He bus no de-\nBire to resume the war and renew thc\nsacrifices of blood and treasure, but he\nintends to ha*vc peace, definite and final,\nwithin a few months if he has to fight\nfor it nnd again order the army and thc\nnavy into active service. The volunteers who are compluining that they do\nnot want garrison duty may find that\nthey will have something more exciting\nin the literal expulsion of thc 8|*nnish\ntroops from Cuba nnd Puerto Rieo, or\neven the invasion of Spain to enforce the\nold rule of dictating peace in tbe capital\nof the enemy.\nThere le more Catarrh In this section of the\ncountry than all other disease* put together,\nand until the lest few years wo* supposed to\nbe Incurable. For a great many years doctor*\npronounced It a local disease, and prescrtbea\nlocsl remedies, and by constantly (ailing to\ncure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science ha* proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hull's Catarrh Cure,\nmanufactured by F. J. Cheney St Co., Toledo,\n\"OBIS, m Um only constitutional curs nn th*.\nmarket. It 1* taken Internally In dose* from\n10 drops to a teaapoonful. It act* directly on\nthe blood and mucous surfaces of th* system.\nThey offer one hundred dollar* for any case\nIt falls to cur*. Bend (or circular* and testimonials. Address,\nF. J. CHHN-Y St CO., Toledo, O.\nBold by I>ruggl*t*. **\">(\u25a0.\nHull** Family Pill* are tha beat\nCONSUMPTION\nCAN BE CURED\nTo a correspondent who wants lo\nknow what is the greatest .width of thc\nUnited States the Galveston News replies that the distance from Puerto Rico\nto Manila is about 12,000 miles.\n[Ill Permanently Cured. lHoSUor nervousnes\nrile after first day'* use of Dr. Kline's Great\nNervr Aestorer. -end lor ritKK St.OI) trial\nbottle and treatise. DR. IL II. KUjNK, Ltd., WW\nArch street, I*UU\u00bbdelpUl_, f_\nA rose bush bearing blossoms of five\ndifferent colors was one of the principal\nattractions iu a Belfast (Me.) flower garden this summer.\nNo household Is complete without a bottle of\nthe famous Jesse Moore Whiskey. It Is a pure\nand wholesome stimulant recommended by all\nphysicians. Don't neglect this necessity.\nThe sweet potato crop this year on\nthe Maryland and Virginia peninsula is\nestimated at 2,000,000 barrels.\nTwo bottles of Plso's Cure for Consumption cured me of a bad lung trouble.\u2014 Mrs\nJ. Nichols, Princeton. Ind.. Mar. 26. 1895.\nA Norwegian engineer bas invented a\nprocess for producing puper glue, dressing gum und soap from seaweed.\nTry Schilling's Beit U* and baking powder.\nNickel, which has of lute become a\nvery important metal, is practically supplied by two countries only\u2014New Caledonia and Canada.\nThriBoctor^fo\nProven Beyond Any Doubt Its\nPositive Power Over the\nDread Disease*\nEXTERMINATING THE CURSE OF AGES\nBy Special Arrangement with the Doctor, Three Free Bottles\nWill be Sent to All Readers of This Paper.\nThe Doctor Slocum System,\nas the name implies, is a comprehensive and complete system of treatment, which attacks every vulnerable point\nof the disease and completely\nvanquishes it. It leaves no\npoint unguarded; it leaves\nno phase of the trouble neglected; it cures, and cures\nforever,Weak Lungs. Coughs,\nbronchitis, Catarrh,\nConsumption and all\nother throat and lung -4\ndiseases by absolutely\nobliterating tbe cause.\nOPEN LETTERS FROM\nJennie B. Green and Mrs. Harry\nHardy.\nJ-mnts E Obkir, Denmark, Iowa,\nwrites to Mrs. Pinkham:\n\"I had been sick at my monthly\nperiods for seven years, and tried\nalmost everything I ever heard of, but\nwithout any benefit. Was troubled\nwith backache, headache, pains in the\nshoulders and dizziness. Through my\nmother I was induced to try Lydia E.\nPlnkham's Vegetable Compound, and\nlt has done me so mucb good. I am\nnow sound and well.\"\nMrs. Harry Hardy, Riverside, Iowa,\nwrites to Mrs. Pinkham the story of\nher struggle with serious ovarian trouble, and the benefit she received from\nthe use of Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound. This is ber letter:\n\" How tuankfiil I am tbat I took\nyour medicine. I was troubled for\ntwo years with inflammation of the\nwomb and ovaries, womb was also very\nlow. 1 was in constant misery. I bad\nheart trouble, was short of breath and\ncould not walk five blocks to save my\nlife. Suffered very much with my\nback, bad headache all the time, was\nnervous, menstruations were irregular\nand painful, had a bad discharge and\nwas troubled with bloating. I was a\nperfect wreck. Had doctored and\ntaken local treatments, but still was no\nbetter. I was advised by one of my\nneighbors to write to you. I have now\nfinished the second bottle of Mrs. Pink-\nham's Vegetable Compound, and am\nbetter in every way. I am able to do\nall my own work and can walk nearly\na mile without fatigue; something I\nhad not been able to do for over two\nyears. Your medicine bas done me\nmore good than all the doctors.\"\nI\n\u25a0\nOsteopathy.\n_ \u2014\nOsteopathy 1* the science of manipulating\nth. bones and muscles. All dtsouse* treated\nby Doctors Murray, Iiodson \u2014 Wilcox. Mm.\nDoctor Murray, Female Socialist. School\nopens Nov. 1; fur particulars address Doctors\nMurray, Dodson A Wilcox. 237, 238, J3S, 140,\nMl Rookery building, Bpokane, Washington.\nI'rlvatn entrance 620 Sprague avenue.\n*\u25a0' we *\\\nEditorial Note.\u2014Tbe Doctor Slocum System is Medicine reduced to an\nExact Science by the World's most Famous Physician. All readers of this paper,\nanxious regarding the health of themselves, children, relatives or friends, may\nhave three free bottles as represented in the above illustration, with complete\ndirections, pamphlets, testimonials, advice, etc., by sending their full address to\nDr. T.' A. Slocum, the Slocum liuilding, New York City. This is a plain, honest,\nstraightforward offer, and is made to introduce the merits of The New System of\nTreatment that Cures, and we advise all sufferers to accept this philanthropic\noffer at once. When writing the Doctor please mention this paper. All letters\nreceive immediate and careful attention.\nIf You Suffer\nFrom Epilepsy, Epileptic Spells, Fits.\nSt. Vitas' Dance, Falling Sickness,\nVertigo, etc, have children or\nrelatives that do so, or know\npeople that are afflicted,\nMy New Discovery,\nEpilepticide,\nWill cure them, and all you are asked to\ndo is to send for a Free Bottle and try it.\nI am quite prepared to abide by the\nresult. It has cured thousands where\neverything else has failed. Please give\nfull name, AWE, and postoffice and\nexpress address v\n_ . __*, WM. H. MAY, M.D., May Laboratory,\n\"Not to take a cure for an otherwise fatal\ndlseuc Is to practically commit suicide.\" 94 Pine St., New York City.\nEditor's Note.\u2014All sufferers are advised to send for Gratuitous Export Advice and a Pre*\nBottle of this New Discovery, which is an Unfailing Cur. for any and all cf the frightful forms ol\nEpilepsy *nd allied nervous diseases. When writing Doctor May, pleas* mention this paper.\nUlveia training that qualities the* student\nfor a practical business life, as t-pokkeeper,\nitenographer, teacher, or general accountant.\nBUND POK CATAMX1UK.\nU H. C. BLAIR, A. TB., Prill.\nCor. 1st and Post. BPOKANK, WASH.\nIs It Wreag\nGet It Right\n. Keep It Right\nUemeefe Wktrwomlei \u25a0\u2014\u2022\u00bb-? will \u00ab\u2022 It Thr*.\n\u2022mm w*i *-**\u25a0\u2022 tee I*el eettkee. \u2022*\u2666 It teem\ntern \u00abrmgfWi et aem wHole**J. drag Weem, m\n\u25a0teW-H * BO-MS Drag Co, Mlk\nYOUR LIVER\nTRIED TO SINK A SHIP.\nNni-rim Ksoiiiie of PiiNfu-iiniTH lloiiml\nfur Al-skii.\nCAPTAIN CAPRON IS DEAD.\nOne of Ilie llc.1 Known Officer* In\nIlie iti-Kiilnr Army.\nBUY THE GENUINE\nSYRUP OF FIGS\n... MANUFACTURED BT...\nCALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO.\nUT* NOTE THE If A MB.\nJURE YOURSELF!\nUse Uig \u00abl for nunaturti\nclinch-irci\", Inflammations,\nIrritations or ulceration,\nof mucous niembraDs*\n,.- i'uin!\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb, *nil not astrln\n,\u201e\u201e\"f\\\u201e gent or poisonous.\nm69i Bold b, Dra-ntoU.\nor sent In plain wrappei\nby express, prepaid, fol\n\u2022I .IHI, or S buttlss, 12.78.\nCircular tout dn rwjuoel.\nMOJirHIIfB\nCOOAIMB\ndPIUMj^s.5\ns .1.0. Ha*T_A*.tt4Iikb*llaBl-g,C-le-go.IU\nSim Francisco, Sept. 10\u00ab\u2014News hns\nbeen received here of a dastardly nt-\ntempt to Link the whaling bark Northern Light, v hieh sailed front here ia la t\nMny for t-otsebue sound. The baric\nhud heen tinnsfiiriiied into n passenger\nvessel und sue took 108 men bound for\nthe mythical land of gold. Thc vessel\nwas commanded by Captain Whiteside.\nOn May j-. when only a few days out,\nit was discovered that the Northern\nLight was 11 akiiiL* water at a rapid rule.\nThe pumps were manned, but the water still came np rapidly. A March was\ninstituted nml the leak wns located in\nthe I\"1\". Further search showed that\nfour auger holes hud been bored through\nthe timbers, going clear through the side\nto the water. . Three of the holes were\nplugged up but il was impossible to\nreach the fourth. The pumps had been\ngoing until Kot\/.ebue sound wus reached.\nCaptain Porter of thc Jessie Freeman,\nwho returned from tlie north yesterday,\nsnys that the prospectors ut Kot\/.ebue\nhave gone to poor fields. As far us :i\nknown im gold has been found.\nWashington, .-<*pt. IS.\u2014Onptnin Allyn\nI Capron, ol the First artillery, died at his\nThe trip of the Monterey to thc Philippines demonstrates that with good\nweather this clnns of vessel mny, wtth\nher own steam und a tow. cross the Pacific ocean.\nThe Spnnish government hits published\na decree culling to nrtns 100,000 men, out\nof whom 80,000 ure for the colonics, presumably for the Philippines.\nhome near Fort Myer, Vn., today. Cap*\ntain Capron wus one of the best known\nJ ollieeis iu the regular nrmy. He hnd de-\nI voted himself particularly to the artil-\n\\ lery branch of thc service, having been\nj an honor gruduutc of the artillery school\nin 1873 nnd wus regarded as nn authority\non artillery tactics. When Oeneral Shaft-\n'\u25a0 er's corps went to Santiago Capron ac-\ncoiupnnied it and his buttery did notably\nline work in the buttle of Santiago. Dur-\nj ing the first iluy's fighting before the city\n! Captain Capron's son. Captain Allyn K.\nI Capron of the Rough Riders, wus killed.\n: The death of his son preyed upon tho\nfather's mind, but he never swerved for\n1 an instant from his duty during the tcr-'\nrible days that followed. The seeds of\ndisease were sown in his system during\nthe Cuban campaign und he returned to\nhis home at Fort Myer, near this city,\nonly to be stricken down with typhoid\nfever. His death occurred nbout 12 o'elock\ntoduy. \u2022\nThere arc 350 female blacksmiths in\nKngland.\nGood!\nPeople who buy Schillings Best drink more tea a\nyear than other people. M\n'!;\n_f_fi__-Ua_-_BBBIfl\n_J trr\n_ST\n\u25a0___\nv *uj u.\nUl\"*.!!1*! li\"\"!'1\nJ-_-\u00bb*.. '1K-!\n\u25a0\u2022gufiswii-\n\u25a0***J-\n.1\n'*Ar>rNM^^\u00bb>^rNr^^^yVVy^^^^^*^V^^>^\\*^r-^^V>rV^r>*^*^r>^A*\u00bb\\l\nTHL Wm. HUNTER CO., LIMITED\nare- Now -Projp-ax-ed\nX*^ f_**T> \u2022p.tal-neaw.\t\nAND CARRY\nr*^ OJB* GBNKRAL\nAT THE FOLLOWING PLACES\nSILVERTON, THREE FORKS,\nALAMO CONCENTRATOR, -\n& BROOK LYN B. C.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPRQVEMENTS\nNOTICE:\u2014 \"Nettie Fraction\" iMineral\nClaim; eitttaln in the Slocan Mining\nDivision of West Kootenay District.\nWhere located:\u2014 On the Four Mile\nCreek bounded on the north by the\nTenderfoot, south, by the Read, \"east,\nby the Carnation,\nTake notice that I, Evan Dailey Fraser,\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 5537, as\nManager for the Vancouver nnd British\n.Columbian General Exploration Co, Li in\nited, Certificate No. 32621A, intend sixty\ndays from the date hereof, to apply to the\nMfniiij? Recorder for a Certificate of Jm\nprovemente, for the purpose of obtainiii);\na Crown Grant of the abovo claim.\nAnd further take notice that action\nunder section 37, mut*t be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate of\nImprovements.\nDated this 4th day of July 1898.\nE. B. Fbaskr\n.CERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nNOTICE,\u2014 \"Prescott\" and \"Prescott\nFraction No. 1.\", Mineral Claims;\nsituate in the Slocan Mining Division of West Kootenny District.\nWhere located:\u2014 On tho North side\nof Four-Mile creek about one and one\nhalf miles from Slocan Lnlce.\nTake notice that I, Kenneth L. Burnet,\n(acting as agent tor the Prescott Mining Company Limited Liability, F. M.\nL. No.0094.ij Free Miner's Certificate\nNo. 5.197A, intend sixty days from the\ndate hereof, to apply to \"th* Mining Recorder for Certificates of Improvements\nfor the purpose of obtaining Crown\nGrants of both the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder .section 37, must be commenced\nbelore the issuance of such Certificates\nof Improvements.\nDated this 22nd day of July 1893.\n. But net\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\n-NOTICE:\u2014 \"Lorna Doone\" and \"Prior\"\nMineral Claims-situate in the Slocan\nMining Division of West Kootenay\nDistrict, Where located \u2022\u2014On the\nSouth side of Four-Mile creek to the\nWest of the Vancouver Group of Mineral Claims.\nTake notice that I, Francis J. O'Reilly\nof Silverton, B. C. as spent for Frank\nCulver, Frae Miner's Certificate No.\n11038 A., intend sixty davsfrom the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder\nfor Certificates of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of\nboth the above claims.\nAnd further tako notice thst action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificates\nof Improvements. \u2022\nDated ttiis 21st day of Julv, 1898.\nFrancis J. O'Reii.li\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nNOTICE,- \"Hopk No. 2.\" Mineral\nClaim, situate in the $|ocan City\nMining Divisio\/i of West Kootenay\nDistrict.\nWhero located:\u2014 On tlie north-east\nside of Cameronian Creek, % of a mile\nfrom its junction with the north fori; of\nLemon.\nTake notice that I, J. M. McGregor,\nacting ns agent for Robert Cooper. Free\nMiner's Certificate No. ll794A,and Henry Slieran, 12001 a,intend sixty dnys from\nthe date hereof, tn apply to the Mining\nRecorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for tho purpose of obtaining a\nCrown Grunt of tho above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nii'fore tbe issuance of such Certificate of\nImprovements.\nDated this 8th day of September, 189S.\nIjY\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nNOTICE,\u2014\"Morning Star No 7 \" mineral claim, situate in the Slocan mining\ndivision of West Kootenav district.\nWhere located: On the south slope of\nLemon creek, 8 miles from Ihe mouth.\nTake notice tbat 1 Samuel L. Long,\nacting as sgent for W. A. Campbell, free\nminer's certificate No. 11,415 A intend,\nsixty days from the date hereof, to apply\nto the mining recorder for a certificate of\nimprovements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant for the above claim,\nAnd farther take notice that action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\n^before the issuance of such certificate of\nimprovements.\nDated this 4th. day of August 1898.\nSAMUEL L. LONG.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENT\nNOTICE,-\"The Alpine Group of Mineral Claims\" (the Swiss, Highland\nChief, Berne, Kootenay Pass and\nRocky Fraction), situate in the Nelson\nand Slocan Citv Mining Divisions of\nWest Kootenay District. Where located :\u2014On the divide between Kootenay\nand Slocan Lakes, east of Summit\nPass.\n.Take notice that I, J. Murray McGregor,\nacting is agent for Chas Fans, F. M, C.\n11784 A, Henry Ste.e F. M. C. 79147.\nHerman Clever F. M. C.A10979, W.H.\nCrawford F.M.C.4180.A and Max Hickman F.M.C. 4274 A, intend sixty days\nfrom the dste hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of\nImprovements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the above claims.\nAud fnrther take notice that action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements,\nDated this 27th. day of August, 1898,\nJ. M. McGrkqob.\nA\nJUST A MOMENT!\n_ BLUE PEXCII. MARK ty**oto*j\u00ab*~*>*\u00bbQ\nIN THIS SQUARE MEAN'S\nTHAT YOUB SU1ISCBIP-\nTION IS DUE ANB THAT j_ ~__jl\nTHE EDITOR IS ANXIOUS TOWBrrE^AJUJ'-'.\nCEll'T FOR YOU.\nEDITORIAL OIITrROPim\n88888888S888888888S8SS88S\nAlthough Silverton is well supplied\nwith business houses, still there is\nroom here for a drygoods establishment, Silverton is fast losing its\nwild and wooly character, and\nbecoming a city of homes. The number of families living here would more\nthan justify a d**ygoods store, as it is\nour ladies are compelled to go to\nneighboring towns to do their shopping.\nThe needs of Silverton are few, but\nabout the most pressing need of this\nthriving camp is a hank. All tho\nmining companies operating in the\nlake j-rgton are with only one or two\nexceptions in the immediate vicinity\nof Silverton. The heaviest merchant\nile buisness is carried on hero and if\ntowns that are living on air and past\nglories can support a bank, why can\nnot we? If a bank was established\nhere the banking business of the lake\nwould quickly by transfercd to\nSilverton. *\nFULL\n:\u2022:\u25a0' like\nOf -E^orLO^r\nand\n(Stable\nGROCEKIES\nCANNED GOODS - - - _\n- - - PRESERVED FRUIT.\nFRESH DREAD DAILY.\nMATHESQN'S BAKERY.\nNEW DENVER B. C.\nCANADIAN\nPAQIFIO\nRAIJL\/WAY-\nFor Constipation take Karl'*. Clover\nRoot Tea, the great EJqgd Purifier Cures\nHeadache, Nervousness, Eruptions of\nthe face, and makes the head as clear as\na hall. Sold at\nThe Silverton Drug Store, t\nAND SOO PACIFIC LINE.\nIs the most comfortable and direct\nroute to all points East. To Pacific and\ntbaxh-Pacific points. To the rich mining districts of\nKLONDYKE AND THE YUKON,\nTourist Cars pass Revelstoke Daily to\nSt. Paul. Daily (except Wednesday) to\nEastern Canadian and UNrrKn States\nPoints. Magnificent .Sleeping and Din-\njpg Cars on all traips.\nTickets Issued Through And Baguage\nChecked To Destination.\nDaily connection (excepting Sunday)\nvia Rosebery; 8:05 a.m. leaves Silverton\narrives 4:30 p.m.\nAscertain present reduced rates and\nfull information hy addressing, r-eurest\nlocal agent, or\nW. S. CLARK, Agent, Silverton.\nW. F. ANDERSON,\nTrav. Pass. Agent, Nelson.\nE. J. COYLE.\nDist. Pass. Agent, Vancouver\nDreadfully Nervous.\nGents:\u2014I was dreadfully nervous\nand for relief took your Karl's Clover\nRoot Tea. It quieted my nerves and\nstrengthened my whole Nervous System. Iwas troubled with Constipation,\nKidney and Bowel trouble. Your The\nsoon cleansed my system so throughly\nthat I rapidly regained health mid\nstrength. Mrs. 8, A. Sweet, Hartfort\nConn. Sold by The Silverton Drug Store\nBe not deceived I A Cough, Hoarseness or Croup are not to be trirled with.\nL dose in time of Shiloh Cure will save\nvot] much trouble, Sold at Drug Store.\nThe Government of Canada is\naskiug tbe opinion of every voter in\nCanada concerning the pat-sin;' of a\nprohibition law for our country. Our\nrepresentative* are asking each\nindividual voter to eny equarely and\nunequivocally wheth\"*)* he is in favor\nof prohibition or opposed to it. Such\nan appeal deserves u _tr.ii*^!iC forward\nanswer and overy voter should \"ivo it.\nIf you think it to the advantage of our\ncountry that a prohibitory measure be\n\u2022Hissed, 6ny so by your ballot If ynu\nai*'! of the opinion that such un act\nwpuld be detrimental to our bu\u00bbiuess\ninterests, your duty is fo inform tho\nGovernment of it, The Goyeniinent\nis fairly facing the ccuutry and is\nwaiting it? coniuianu). Your duty is\nto give it.\nHigh-handed proceedings, such as\nthe seizure of tho above lots, is not an\nact palculated to make a favorable\nimpression on outsiders looking for\ninvestments. The offiicals through\nthis section should remember that\ntheir offices are gifts from the voters\nand that the voters aro entitled to\nsome cnnaidftrftr.ir-1-i -t\u2014their\u2014hands. -\nThere is such a thing as dismissing\narbitrary officials.\nIn another column will ba fonnd a\nletter from A. B. C. which points out\na $tate pf affairs -estaliiished in onr\nmidst tliat calls for some sort cf nn\nexplanation. Al-out two months ago\nour citizer 8 were served with notices\nrespecting tho sanitary condition of\ntheir premises and ordering certain\nchanges. A scavenger was nlso\nappointed for the town. Since that\ntime the scavenger has not been seen\nin the place and had thn notices been\nregarded it is quite probable that an\nepidemic would have been raging here.\nThis week we are informed, tho scavenger has again made his appearance\nand as is eeon by A. B. O's letter a\ngarbage dump has been selected. The\nchange in the location of ibis place\nwas made, we understand, for the convenience pf the scavenger and he is\nthe only one who has been consulted\nas to tbe change. The site chosen is\npractically in the middle of oar town-\nsite, on the lots of private individuals\nwho were not consulted or even advised of the use to which our; zealous\nofficials intend to put their property.\nNot one single citizen was consulted\nin anyway regarding this proceeding\nand the convenience of our friend, the\n\u25a0scavenger, was the only excuse given\nfor the establishing of this peat breeding garbage dump in our town, within\nfive hundred yards of the business\nblocks and in such a paaitioi as to\ncontaminate both the lake front and\nthe waters of Four Mile creek. We\nwould like to know by what authority\nthe lands of individuals can\nsummarily seized and why he conveniences of a scavenger, wh > is ,|ot\neven a citizen of our town, should be\nregarded of greater weight than the\nwishes and the health of\ncitizens.\nSilverton has always been free from\ntyphoid fever and bas always ittended\nto its sanitary conditions itielf. In\nADDITIONAL LOCALS.\nMiss Curtilage, who has spent the lust\nyear in Silverton, leaves on Mpnday for\nher home in the East,\nThe saniples of oro from the various\nmipes that are to be displayed at the\nSpokane Fruit Fair will be shipped on\nMonday next. W S Clark, who will\nhave charge of the exhibit, wishes all\nwho have not yet brought in their ores,\nto '\"\u2022\" so u-ithout fail to-morrow (Sunday)\nore nly Monday morning.\nBelow will be found a list of the polling\nplaces in the Slocan district fqr the\nvoto on the Plebiscite, which is to be\nheld tbrought the Dominion on the 20th.\nof this month.\nThroe Forks, J B Foster's Building.\nNew Denver, Williamson's Block.\nSilverton, MoKtnnon'sH-11.\nSandon, Gilbert Sample Room. Repo St.\nWhitewater Station, Nesl'* _ Store,\nAinsworth. Government *Bu liiin-j.\nKaslo. Kyle's House.\nPilot Bay, Wartington's Honso.\nBrooklyn, Court Houso.\nRobson, Robaon Hotel Sitting Room.\nSlocan City, Government Office.\nA SPECIAL SERVICE.\nA Sunday School Review Service will\nbo held in the Church to-morrow at 2.30\np.m. Tbocliilil-en will bo reviewed in\ntheir work by Mrs. Cnlbick. Rev. It, N\nPowell and Mr. Bartlett will give \"d-\nilreapes during thriservice. Special music will bo furnished hy Miss fiftjndon nnii\nMrs. Gardiner, while the children will\nsing several choruses in which Ihey have\nbeen trained for tho occasion. The service will be enjoyable to old and young\nalike. All are cordially in vited to attend.\n(JUADBILLE CLUB.\nA meeting for tho purpose of organizing n Quadrille Club in Hlvsrton was\nheld in the reading room .if the Victoria\nHotel on Tuesday eveninjf. .\"..'.'.-urs. J.\nR. Woods, D. Darg snd H. Brmly were\nelected to manage and arlvanco the interests of the Club diirin,* its first season\nwhich i: is hoped will not be its last. The\nofficers elected by Ihe cnuiuilivc are:\nJ A McKinnon. Hon. President; Grunt\n'Ihorburn.'Hon. Vice-President j Dmi-his\nDarg, President; If, Brady, Vice-President; J. It. Woods, Secretin*,!-Tii'iistifr.\nFurther notice will he given In dtts time\nas to assemblies ifcc.\nMi_vm*\u00bb \u00ab& PROSPEJCTo^\nTHE SILVERTONIAN IS ALWAYS\nWILLING TO HELP YOU BY PUBLISHING RELIABLE REPORTS ON\nANY PROPERTY OF MERIT.\nINVESTORS,\nboth Slocan City and New\nthere are at present easea ot\nand the sanitary arrangements are\nsimiliar to those just establist Jd here.\nOur readers can draw th\ninferences.\niiiiiirfiiiriiTffiiTr\"1\n,w, *\u2022*\u00bb>*\u00a3\u00a3-_&* \u25a0>*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb-.*.\u00bb*w*-*v.iv-^i**-\u25a0**\u00bb *\u00bb*\u25a0\u2022\u00bb \u2022\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u2022* \u2022\u2022*- '\u2022* \u2022*>\u2022\"-\u00bb \"'\u2022\"-\"--\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0-\u2022s*.\nMUM*-*!BBJ9Sisjpns***-f\u2014**\u2014MMswig**\u2014ui\u2014_j-\u2014*'\u25a0\u2014ii ww\u2014\u25a0 im i !\u25a0 - ...\u2022\u2014\u2014_\u25a0 - - -- - \t\nall our\nDenver\ntyphoid\nir own\nMIXING RECORDS.\nFollowing is a complete li\u00abf of the\nmining transuciions recorded during the\nweek for the Slocan Mining Division :\nNEW HENVHII\u2014LOCATIONS.\nSept 13\u2014Random, Carpenter, Henry\nBlown; Cove Head Fraction, Mctini-in\nSidine. same; LaHor Day, Silver Moiiu-\ntain, Russel Donald.\nSept 14\u2014Belmont, Fennel creek, Peter\nGrant; Bodnev, Light Alile. Geo. Park-\nison; Silver Cord, Kour Milo, Raoul\nGreen.\nSept 15\u2014Fitz, north fork Carpenter,\nAlice Trener.v; Yorkshire Bor, Silver-\nton, J R Roberts; Nancy Lee. same. A.\nL. Roberts; Prince, north fork Carpenter, Jus Black and .\\ C Van Moeikcsne;\nPasbv, south fork Carpenter, Jno. Dock-\nsteadcr.\nSept. IB\u2014Silverine, Dardanelles basin,\nJohn Swanson ; Orient Fraction, Sandon creek, G I* Knowles; Maud N, Mar\ntin creek, I B Martin; Maud M. same.\nJos. B Martin; Ella, Qtaolel creek, O,\nLemieux : Ellise. same, John 1! Mai tin;\nBlack Diamond, Four Mile, Norman .*lc-\nMillan.\nASSESSMENTS.\nSept 13\u2014Permit to transfer work from\nNoonday to Grey Eagle and Fourth of\nJuly.\n8ept 13\u2014Carrie. Ada Bell, Treasure\nVault, Naoma. Allegash, Ajax.\nSept 14\u2014Winton, Islington, Pure Gold\nSept IS\u2014Drum Lummond, Valkyrie.\nSept 10\u2014Cand K, Grey Fox, Legal\nTender\nSept 17\u2014Conder, Bay State, Producer.\ncertificates of improvements\nSept 13-Ocesn.\nSept 17\u2014J I C, WH R, Silverton Boy.\nCresent, Emily Edith, Jenny Jones Fraction, Arena Fraction.\nTRANSFERS,.\nSept 18\u2014Little Doru^, P Chisholm to\nMarion Lees, Sept 12.\nBanshee, J Vallamje to Ronlette M\u00ab_\nM Co. Sept, 10.\nSept 15\u2014Mazeppa '\u00a3. Randolph Saunders to Andrew J Murphy, Aug 24.\nWilla, Frank Watson to the Willa Gold\nMining Co. April 27.\nSept 16\u2014Bay State, Ferguson Armstrong to Nathan 8 Tucker, Kept 9.\nProvince 3-10, Jas. D Ryan to David\nSloan, Sept 1.\nSept 17\u2014Jehova >i, Joseph B Martin\nto Arthur Mullen. Sept 15, $332.50.\n. International, Thursday Fraction, % in\neach, L W Parkinson to J H Thompson,\nOct 12.\nOregon City %, Internstionnl j-i',\nThursday Fraction)^, J H Thompson to\nJohn A Whittier aud David W Moore\nOct 13.\nShareholder^, W Ryan to Oliver T\nStone, Sept 8.\nPower of Attorney, R G?orge to W. B.\nGeorge, July 30.\nSept 10\u2014Polo, Charlotte Henderson to\nT M Banting, April 1, ll.flOO.\nBlack Diamonds 8, N McMillan to H\nM Walker, Sept 10,\nMaich Bird and Snowflakc, >\u00bb' in ench\nJC Butler to s(tme, Sept 11).\nTHE PUBLISHED REPORTS APPEAP\nING IN THE SILVERTONIAN ON TH?\nVARIOUS MINES AND PROSPECTS OF THIS\nSECTION ARE WRITTEN AFTER PER80NAL\nINSPECTION OF THE PROPERTIES AND CAN\nBE RELIED UPON AS BEING SUBSTANTIALLY CORRECT.\nsent to any address, $2.00\na year.\nWilson Hotel.\nTeeter Bros. - - props >\n\u00a3*\u25a0> llcadqnartflrs For Mining And Coinmprcia! See,\nEverything First-class In All Hespefto. \\J$\nSLOGAN CITY, - - - B. C.\n2rv\u00a3_A.S32_:BT-\nCONRAD BILL\nSU.V.5ETOS\t\n- PROP.\n- \u2022 \u2022 Ii. C-\nFRESH\nAND\nSALT\nMEATS\nVICTORIA\nOS'S,\nI*\n\u2022I\n-\u25a0lOT_3_E#|!\n-tj\n8\nto\nIS\n\u2022I\n(\u2022\n*)\n<\u2022\n-DIRECTOR Y.:-\nJAMES BOWKS - - - - TliOP.\n\/rsrKVKRYTHI*. 8KW, NJ'AT.!? : i. u-.m; ncsi.M s^ .,1 v ;\u25a0\nAKB CLEAN. FINEST AP-\nPOIKTED IIOCSK IX\ni\u00bb\ni \u2022 > (\u00bb\n\u00ab*\u00bbr >-.\u00ab_\u00bb_?-. \u00ab\u2022\u2022 \u2022_\u00ab\u2022\u2022_ Sic*\nTill; KQOTKNAYS.\n:\u2022; Dcatlij-arter. For illiiiii!!,' W\u00bb :\u2022:\nHOTELS.\nSELKIRK\nVICTORIA\nI.AKl'.VIKW\nS'LYKIITON\nB, C\nljiumion & Barrel!\nJames BowstL,\nI.. Knouli'-i.\nG BN ERAL \u201el KUCHA NTS.\nJ. <;. CORDON',\nNOTARY PUBLIC.\nsUjVF.RTON. - - -IX. C\nOIJA& A. WATERMAN _ OO\nTIIK WILLIAM HUNTER<3\u00ab\n, J. A. McKJXNO.N k Co.\nTOBACCO k CONFECTIONERY.\nJ. I. McINTOSH.\nI REAL ESTATE A* INSURANCH\nCROSS St Co.\nI. C QOUQPN.\nj.uc-riosK-its, Customs Rhokkhs,\nAnd Cexkkai. Real Estatk Agknts,\nASSAY E R S.\n<\u00bblli>..|. In MraUr J.loi-k - - l*.;i*,. r St.\nNKI.SON, B, C.\n\/. M. Ui BEKNKBUM.\nM E RC 11 A NT TAILOR.\nJ. M. MoGEEGOB P. L. S. Ac.\nSLOCAN CITY,\nop McGbeook, Atkinson* & Co.\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYORS,\nMIXING ENGINEERS ANUS\nBROKERS.\nROS8LANB j^d SLOCAN.\nno,\nmmwi GLASSES,\nm COMPASSES.\nAT THE\nSILTKRTON DRUG STORE\nP. E. LIEBSCHER,\nSURVEYORS k ENGINEERS,\nF. J. O'RIELLY\nFREIGHT, PACKING!* LIVERY.\nANDERSON St BKAUY.\na. p. Mcdonald.\nPHARMACISTS\n8ILVERTON DRUGSTORE.\nOENERAL BLACKSMITH ING\nSANDFORD DA KILE\nMEAT ,fc PRODUCE\nCONRAD BILL.\nBARBER.\n11. C. WHEELER.\nBAKERY.\nIF YOU ARE THir XING OF\nPUrriNG UP\nFRUIT\nFOR THE\nWINTER 1 WOULD LIKE TO\nTALK TO YOU ABOUT IT.\nprices gurr be bkat.\n(\u00bb>9\/9-t^a\/9e,9fi,9S.9c.t\nJIM. McINTOSH.\nKH.VE^rCN, B. C,\nT. II, MULVEY.\nS0TUE.\n\u2014 \u2666\u2014.\t\nj_V SPECIAL Conrt otAssIse, Niii\n\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022A\" Priiw, Over and Terminer, and\nGencnil (foal Delivery will be holden at\nthe Citv of Nelson, in and for the Coun-\ntv of Kootenay. on Tuesday the 20th dsy\nof September. 181)8.\nBy Command,\nJ. FRED HUME,\nProvincial Secretary.\nProvincial Secretary'*\nOiUce, 31st AoKUst, 1898.\nNOTICE.\nParties cuttinjj wood on the property\nof the Silverton Townsite, or removm-\nsiime will be prosecuted. Squatters sre\nalso warned not to trespass on said property.\nSILVERTON TOWNSITE.\nby Cross A Co., Agenfc.\nk * *m *\u2022 .- ai \u2022\u25a0 it\u00abj .\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab it *\nk\u00abVIM| 'w \u2022\u25a0''\u25a0*'\u25a0 * -\u25a0\u25a0******' *\u2022' + \u2022*>.**\"- M i\n\u00bb*.y^-.*jt If .,- ***), ,'f\u00bb JJitv ** -Mii\u00ab'j>l*WS\u00a5->\ns \u2022 ..,* .,^\/-\u00ab, .*\u25a0 \u2666-","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Silverton (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Silverton_Silvertonian_1898_09_24","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"IsShownAt","value":"10.14288\/1.0312886","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.9508330","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.3580560","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled Silverton Silvertonian from 1898-01-01 to 1898-01-29; titled The Silvertonian from 1898-02-12 onward.
Published by James Cameron from 1898-01-01 to 1898-02-19; published by R.O. Matheson from 1898-02-26 to 1898-06-04; published by R.O. and Harry Matheson from 1898-06-01 to 1899-02-11; published by an unidentified party from 1899-02-25 to 1900-02-10; published by Matheson Bros. from 1900-02-17 and thereafter.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Silverton, B.C. : R.O. and Harry Matheson","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"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\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"Series":[{"label":"Series","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"oc:PublicationDescription","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1898-09-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1898-09-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title","value":"The Silvertonian","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}