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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" THE SLOCAN\nL.\nIV., No. 17.\nJjVov. Library,\n.in I\narm Weather Talk\nThis is tlie hardest time of the yeur to cuter to one's\nappetite. Cooking over a hot stove does not help it\nany, so to avoid this discomfort and have something\npalateable, try some* of our Meats, ready cooked:\nkoAST MUTTON, ROAST BEEP, VEAL LOAF, CHICKEN.\nTONGUE, TURKEY.\nThen for f-omething nice in Tnble Fruit, try a tin of\nPineapple, one of the nicest fruits for thr. hot weather.\n\\ T. Shatford & Co.\nIOB\nPRSIMTING\noa\nCAN, B. C, JULY 24, 1(103.\nA . \"\u25a0**\u2022**\u25a0\n12.00 PER ANNUM.\nMEETING OF COUNCIL\nI'OT.ICK MA.'lSTKATl\" CURTIS\nItKSIClNlCIi.\n^ A FIRST-CLASS STOCK. . . ^\n\u00a3: HIGH GRADE WORK ^\n^ REASONABLE PRICES. . . -^t\nsjmmimkmmmkMmmmaFj\n\u25baRILL\nOFFICE\nWILSON HOUSE\n5L0CAN, B. C.\nIs reached by any trail or road\nthat runs into the Town.\nDo not go past its door when\nyou are dry, weary or hungry.\nA. E. TEETER,\nProprietor.\n'Arlington. Plotel\nSLOCAN, B. C.\nKNOWLES & PATREQUIN, Proprietors.\nTo Data from alsily 1 Itrlaula' fl\u00bbr THXP*.\nRxlontlad In Sriili'iiilim- 1 \u2014All \u00ab'I1 .v\nN.otasa uin I'uiil Up-Meatus.* Manilas\n('\u2022mils'*; lu Frcsoly.\nThere were no absentees from lust\nMonday evening's meeting of the city\ncouncil.\nAt tlm outset Aid. Arnot moved the\namendment of lust week's minutes by\nstriking oul tho clause, regarding the\nappointment of city clerk, \"and such\nother duties as the council may see fit\nto request hiin to perforin.\" lie stated\nthe clerk objected to tlmt clause and\nasked ti) have it expunged.\nAid. Teeter and McNeish did not\nquite see tho point, ns thev thought\ntne clerk was to perform all the duties\nof tbe city.\nIt was explained the motion of appointment enumerated all the offices\nlie was called on to perform, and he\nobjected to being callsM on to do street\nwork.\nAid. Worden seconded the motion\nand it carried.\nCorrespondenceread! From the city\nsolicitor, advising that tke city was\nliable for keep of prisoner committed\nunder small debts court.\nAid. McNeish held that tke council\nmay be compelled to pay the bill, but\nhe did not think it right.\nAid. Arnot said the bill had Iwn\nsent in merely to prove liability of the\nproper persons to pay. II** believed\nthe party i.uiu:- sliould pa\"\" the bill,\nCity Solicitor Joraud.bemg present,\nsaid he had gone inti the case thoroughly, and as the commitment \u00ab\u2022\"**\u2022\nin the interests cf justice, tbe city\nwas thorefore liable. The prisoner\nhad been committed for contempt aa...\nu.it for not paying his d -lit *.\nA discussion followed, in which fi\nI doubt was expre-ised us to tha real\nstatem tit of eommitm3at of tke prist\"\n: oner in question.\ni Tha case waa referred back 11 tlu\nIsohcitor for further investigation.\nFrom tlm Victoria Colon: t, submlt-\nting a figure ol $10.50up for a minute\n! book; Tliomp8on station iry Co., Vau-\nI couver, quoting prices of 92&0 nnd\n84.50 for a book. Th.- clerk said ho\ncould not get anything suitable in\neither Nelson or hers. Ho was in\nstruct d t.i -secure the S1.5U book from\nthe Vancouver firm.\nFrom Government Agent Chipman\nfrom W. T, Shatford, but they balk < education, and, if enforced here, riev\non the price. They state they mean i eral persons would be cut out. The\nbusiness, though they are getting | attorney general has been asked for a\ntheir supplies in Nelson.\nKI.KCTIONS AKF, BET.\nNs.\n\u25a0itnntloni sm October\nnn tlss* aim.\nruling on the section.\nFOR A l.A 11(1 It MAN.\n0 unsl I'.slllnit Slecsaii Will Sensl lH-lt. khI<.\u00bb te tho New\nDeliver t.'aiivesstloii.\nSaturday night a public meeting\nate | was held in the Union hall, for the\npurpose of considering tke advisability\nof plaeing a Labor candidate In the\nthe nomi-! field jn the Slocan riding in the forth*\nElections coming elections. About 50 men were\npresent. J. E. Skinner was chairman\nand \\V. II. Davidson acted ns secretary. A number of speeches wore offered, of which those by Al. Teeter,\n.lames Baker nud \\V. II. Davidson\nwere tho meatiest, and thov favored\nLast week's Ga\/.ott.' contained the\nforma! proclamation fixing tlie i\nfor th-* issuing of the new writs, which\ntook place on Thursday. There also\nappears a proclamation foi\nnations, on October 16th.\nwill therefore follow about two week\nafter, taking place on October 81.\nThe postponing of the date of the\nelections until the last of October is\nexplained by members of the government as essential, in order to allow\ntime for any appeals being taken from I the idea of an independent candidate,\nthe court of revision with respect to Others were there who thought the\nnames on the voters'lists. _ j cause would be advanced by allying\nFollowing are the returning officers\nappointed for the various interior\nconstituencies i\nNelson Robert A. Reawick.\nKossland Richard Armstrong.\nKaslo Wm. Henry Walby.\nYmir Bobort M. Perdue.\n(ira'.nl Forks II. C. Kernai*.\nGreenwood Geo. Cunningham.\nKamloops E. T. W. Pearse.\nYale John McRae.\nSloean Hubert G. Henderson.\nCranbrook .lohn Hutehisoa.\nColumbia 'J. W. Devlin,\nFeruie John S. T. Alexander.\nRevelstoke George T. Newman,\nthenit-t'lres with one of the old parties,\nthe aim lieing to endorse the candidature of*the Liberal nomine?.\nOn a vote being taken several refrained from taking a stand, but the\nballot stood 'Hi to (i in favor of bringing out n Labor man. Subsssquently\nthe following delegates were appointed\nto at tend the nominating convention,\nto be helsl nt \"New Denver on Aug. 1:\nVV. J. Adcock, A. E. Teeter, D. B.\nO'Neail. J. H. Howarth, W. H. Harrison. The delegates will go instructed to bring out a straight Lalior c.iu-\ndidate, on a platform of Socialistic\nconstruction. The Labor men are\nquite enthusiastic.\nOUR ORE SHIPMENTS\nSUBSTANTIA!. SHOWING MADE BV\nTHIS DIVISION.\ni.stsst Ys*itr'\u00bb Shipment! Were 6388 Tons\u2014\nA Healthy Kvlsl since of the Mfo taissi\n\\V..iBltU uf the Ctanip\u2014Uvterprlae the\nllitfucat Shipper.\nTwo properties are in the shipping\nlist this week aad both of them from\nTen Mile. The Enterprise shipped\n20 tons to Trail, and with it went two\ntons from the Highland Light, being\nthe first from that property iu years.\nOre has been comin;,' down from the\nRepublic and Meteor, the latt.u- sending out a ear next week, to lie followed\nlater ou by a second car. The Myrtle\nwill also make a shipment in a few\ndavs.\nFor 1902 the ore shipments from\nthe local division amounted to tisl-'ia\ntons, made up from 12 properties.\nFollowing is a full list ot the shipments this year to date:\nMINE. WRKK.\nEnterprise 20\nArlington\t\nOttawa\t\nBlack Prince\t\nBondholder\t\nDayton\t\nRepublic\t\nMeteor\t\nHamilton\t\nHighland Light 2\nTOT all..\n40\n120\ni;\n;\n4\nfil)\n12\n4\n2\n6'b*\nSt. littgctie Mine to Start,\nTho St. Eugene mine, at .Moyie,one\nof tli\" biggest lead mines in th'* couu-\n.\"\u2022>\u25a0 is to resume operations. Manager\nCronh says ii will tnke\ntoe t the mine ruuning at its normal| tween gold using and\nSilver to Strengthen lis Price.\nSays the Mining Reporter: An\nj agreement establishing a ratio of ex-\ntwo months I change relative to silver and gold be-\nsilver usin,\ncapacity, but he expo-ta that the pro ; nations, as is rxintemplatod by the in-\nrjsrty will bo ruuuiug ngaiu in that ternational silver conference now in\niime. 1! i rurthor remarked; \"I shall I -.oasion in Europe would have the ef-\n l.fl ... - S 1.1 ,.t ll.. r . , . ' a ... ,\n\u25a0 probably toko perso\n4*St. Eueeno a\n\u25a0grt.il!. i ir.st ot all we\nmust put i.i more power and we shall\n:uld an engine to run the mi:!, for water power is not sufficient thera to run\nall tho year round. We shall also put\ni.<. some nine co*Jcentratoa*3, In the\npast our zinc has crone over with the\nt.i\n-.1 1 charge of tbe. f(,ct 0f stead vim*; and possibly advanc\n!. I.. .. ... ..II ...\u00bb \u2022 .. \u2022 r -, ' ,, \u2022 .\nKaslo. enclosing a check\nfor S2n for\nilings. 1 do not know thai we shall\nIk able to skip th.' zinc al present,but\nwe shad certainly \"\u00bbV0 i. until such\ntime as the market for it opens. We\nf irmerly shipped 2500 tons of con-cen-\n. iiii Donular hotel is ennvenietit to tho boats and trains. The dining room j protecting Slocan river bridge;. Filed Urates a month, which means the min\n|i ttrlttly apto-dato while the bar is supplied with the best in the market and cheek turned into treasury. ; ' \" *.\u25a0.....*...\u2022.\u25a0\nGOOD SAMPLE ROOMS IN CONNECTION.\nFrom H. D. Curtis.\ntrate. to acting mavor\npolice magis\nSmith, stating\nhe had resigned his position.the sat.ii'\nto date from July L Filed\ning of about 10,000 tons of crude on\nand from that we shall probably be\nable to save SOD tous ef zincconcaa-\ntrates.\n'*! look for no difficulty in getting\nIn a \"TCC \u2022 Travelling men, using Sample Rooms, $:\nwithout Sample Rooms,^ board $8pen**\"\"ck* nie.al.-:l.V'\nlay\nFrom Canadkin Hank of Comm five. \u25a0 fair treatment for our ores from W. A.\nJKe opened under\nIt lie old tuans-jenient.\nnot\nFormer customers\ncordially invited to return Sloan direct.\nThe Royal Hotel,\nCor. Artltni- Stiaaat esssl Dal\u00bbeojr Atssubis*\n[Biiildin_f thoroughly renovated\nlend re. st eked with the best\nSlsicnn.\nJAS. CROSI5,\nProprietor.\n[Fruit, Confectionery, Tobacco\nYou can get anything in these lines that you\nrequire from us. Our stock in each is always\nkept fresh and well assorted. Wc handle the\nbest tlie market affords. Prices are right.\nA. C. SMITH,\t\nm\/ the price of silver. Bo* Instance,\nif tho rati') of 32 to 1 were agreed on,\nit would te:isl to fix the price of silver\nat aliout (i'i cents an ounce. It i.s believed ia many quarters thnt this will\nbe the ratio established. In the meantime there is a sharp eonts^st on between the American Smelting tS. Kenning Co. and the London brokers for\nascendency in controlling the Bilver\nmarket. The supremacy of the former\nmean, that tho price will be fixed in\nNew York, instead of iti London as\nheretofore. The American company.\nwhich i- indirectly heavily concerned\nin production, is interested in higher\nprices.\n1 i*!ia*l MllisU'SS i;*-Ol'!_aflflii\/a-U .\nThe Fisher Maiden Co.. operating\non Four Mile, has been re-organized\nou the assessment basis, the limit being throe cents per share. There is a\ndebt on the property of 16000, and the\nCty elerkr-ported thai S205out ofI\u00ab* a 815 a ton tonus f-,r the mine jftj^jfty^^\n$270 had been collected o:i traders owner, and ho figured that he could\nlicenses afford to cut out his bounty for the comP1**7\nBills 'presented: Mrs. Hicks, meals'sake of tho increased smelting busi- \"''.'\\?\/', *, \u25a0 ,.\nto prisoner. 70c. Referred lo Qnance ness which he would get from tbe lead | \u2022*>*\u2022\u2022 I*1'1*- t(\" 8niPmem'\ncommittee. i miners with the bounty payable direct\nA statement was presented .showing \u25a0 to thu miner*..\nthat thore was J100 In the treasury -Sines' we stopped shipping at the\nukiI no indebtedness. ' St. Eugene,we have spent about 11150,*\nThe Ume rilowed for the rebate of 000 in development, and have ore\ntaxes was extended from Aug. 1 to enough for two or three years at our\nSunt. 1. j normal rate of production. We are\nAid. McNeish inquired if anything down In a winae 70 fest below tbe\nnow had turned up relative to the | lerel of Moyie lake, but we are not\ntroubled mnch with seepage water, as\nthe lake la practically bottomed with\na waterproof layer of mud and rock.\"\nNelsoa, notifying city of date of pay\nment of the Sloan note for $825. lh\nchairman Bald the note was not drawn\n\u2014 I oa the batik, but\nnd aMcNeish\nCarried\nto Sloan. Aid. Ar-\nmoved payment to\nAldridge of the Trail smelter. I hav\nalways found bits disposed to make\ngood terms with the mineowners. In\nfact he voluntarily renounced the\nbounty of .*?\u25a0> a ion which he was getting for refining lead ores. He want-\nclaims to hatve a large repay ore blocked out and\nSLOGAN\nFurniture\nGlassware\nCrockery\nand\nGeneral\nHouse\nFurnishings^^\nD. D. ROBERTSON\nInsurance!\nFIRE ACCIDENT.\nGUARANTEE and\nEMPLOYERS' LIABILITY.\nRepresenting the strongest com-\npanics iloinsr business in Canada.\nBbe kew accident policy, with participation in profits, coverin-r sickness and operat'wns.\nIL D. CURTIS, Notary Public\nPioneer Livery\nand Feed Stables,\nSlocan, H. C.\nGeneral Packing and Forwarding attended to at the\nshortest Notice.\nSaddle and Pack Horses for\nhire nt reasonable rates.\nmayor's resignation nn.l was tol-1 uo.\nHe explained that the point arose as\ntai whether they oouJ 1 continu \u25a0 to\nlegally do business In their present\nshape. Tin clerk said he had written\nfor Information on the subject, and iu\nthe meant inn* the mayor's let tor was\n' laid over.\nAld.Teoter Inquired if the clerli had\nj assumed his duties ss chief of |ioli \u2022\u2022'.\nj aud was informed by Aid. McNeish\nthat the commissioners bad the mat*\nt ir under consideration.\nCouncil adjourned.\nSisilivnn HtneStarting.\n(tne of the lirst properties to take\nadvantage of the government bounty\nI on lead is Hi** big .Sullivan mine in\n| East Ko itenay, where orders have\n: been received to ship 1000 tons of ore.\nThere ii on the dump now several\nthousand tons of ore. which can be\nsorted down for shipment. The company will a'so complete their smelter\nat llarysville.\nR. E. ALLEN,\nManager\nft I GENERAL HOSPITAL\nSLOCAN, B C.\nMed. Supt., S. W. Keith, M.D.\nUATKS: lts*s*iil\u00abr nihwrlberi,$1 i'\"r r-ionth\nsir$inn vi'tir: non-\u00abiibiwbor\u00ab,(e-iclii\u00bbivotii\nmmllenl \u00bbHendRno-s)-*\"Mr-lay, . Pr'v:'l\"\",:;.l;'1,s\n11 per day sltrs. Special fttuUtiai tor miueni-\nIty sAissoa.\nTor furtlitr psttleulatl npl'b' tO.\nD. B. O'Neail, Sec\nBpringer Rend in Shttpe.\n(Seo. Nichol and his gang of workmen completed tha repairs to the\nSpringer road on Saturday and thi\nrtagoai crtintiieiici'd going up on Mou*\ndav. The total cost of the repairs\nwas only *?trifl. being less thin the\ngovernment estimate and about oao*\nsixth of what private individuals\nwanted to do it for under contract. A\nsplendid job has beeu made, and with\nthe Riling up of ruts subsequently\ndone, the road ii in as good shape as\never.\nItssssk of BilSjlantj -V-.s I. an:.\nA Nelson outfit, known as the Pin\nneer Mining Co., is actively developing the Hank of England claim, ad\njoining the Two Prieuds, In whieh\nthey also held a controlling Interest,\nHalf a dozen men urn employed under\nthe superintendence of J. W. Moffatt.\nThis wsseh the company Imported a\nlot of second hand mine equipment)\nII a st l fillips\nBob Alien this week received a eon\ntract from tha ownersof the Myrtle\ngroup, on Twelve Xlile, to bring down\naliout sis tons ol ore. which is t'i be\nshipped as a lest, lt has been Borted\nfrom ore taken out of tin* mills' during\ndevelopment last winter,and will ^iv.-\nhigh returns. Tha* Myrtle has a ledge\n1 in a;i\/.* and s'aieil'jih to thill of\nTh.* .My it I\nequal In size and strength to that <>\nthe Arlington and bids fair to develop\ninto a iKiiiati\/.a.\nnight-Ms** Lightships.\nsiitst QuetntleMS.\nFollowing are the quotations for bar\ndirer on the various days during the\nweek since last issue:\nFriday\t\nSaturday\t\nM outlay\t\nTuesda;.\t\nWednesday\t\nThursday\t\n582 cunts\n54S\nuu\\\n543\na itli; 1'ajrrell.\nLast Saturday was payday in the\nDuring tho week anew shipper j Crow's Nest coalfields, comprising\nmade its appearance, being the High- three camps, and the enormous sum\nland Light claim, on Ten Mile, owned j 0f $130,021.0\"* was distributed anioug\nby the < Hough Bros, and P< te Switn.' i_iir employees. There was an increase\nTin* shipment consist,xl of about two over the ptecediag month of $14,817.25.\nlimit-*' tons and went forward in B carload of Al Coal creek $49,880.40 was paid out\nFntevpri.-.e ore, and was sent to Trail\nT!i>. ore was struck while doing\nthis year's assessmeu. and was high\ngrade.\n\u2022as | >\nit Michel $48,371.50, and nt Morrissey\n\u00ab,\",2SU).l.r>.\nf*\u00abst Sisstis. Nlrs* Ore.\nAl Wilds and lien Kne.boiie. of\nSilverton, eanie down from Twelve\noa Tuesday, having ro npleted asses\nliispeotor nf Hulls*.'..\nThe government h:is appointed A\nSutherland, master mechanic of ths,. :\n,, , ,, , , ,, . ment on the Silver Bow claim. I iuv\nVelvet mine, Boss and, as the inspte \u00ab , drfft t((|,, d nml (.ut\n,\u201e\u2022 of \"team toilers for lv \u00bb....\u25a0 na . ,''r,,..*,_. paystreak of Four inches\nHis headquarters will be located at SfhlS grSlS dry ore, The men fell\n\u2022SclK(,n' _ j woll satisfied with thoir labors.\nAll I aaap.al Uml I'.il'll.\nThe attention of H. P.Christie, Geo. Moir has been removed from\ncollector of votes, was last wee!\" drawn < Nakusp to Sandon as C.P.B. agent.\nMIXES ASD MINING.\nSandon mines hidt week shipped 66\n.oas of ore.\nIhere is aj-aiu a shortage of coke in\nthe Boundary.\nA dearth of miners is reported all\nover the country.\nThe Crusader group i.s bs\u00bbine* surveyed for a crown grant,\nThe Qteenwood smelter will add\nmore furnaces to its equipment.\nA estitple of ilo\/.-Mi men are working\non claims at'the lu>ad of Letuoii.\nPfiul Hauck is doing some wiirk on\nthe Champion and Sapphire, Twelve\nMile.\nT. Armstrong taiok out supplies on\nMonday, to develop his claims at the\nhead of Lemon creek.\nTwo men commenced work, this\nwe.'k on the Gatineau group, to tbe\neast of the Enterprise.\nThos. .Tones, the Kansas zinc man,\nis operating the Lucky Jim mine,\nsending the product to Iola.\nFrancis ,L O'Reilly, on behalf of N.\nF. McNaught, is applying for a crown\ngrant on the Hampton group.\nDave Sloan went up to Three Forks\non Monday, to work his property oa\nthe north fork of Carpenter creek.\nAt the Xansen group. Lemon creek,\nW. Thomlinson and W.B, Young havo\nerected an orehouse and blacksmith\nshop.\nGill Finkls and Tom Beaton have\nerected camp buildings at the Lady\nFranklin group, at head of Lemon\ncreek.\nSome very fine specimens of ore are\nbeing shown from the Bachelor, on\nTwelve Mile, on which some work has\nbeen done.\nToday the silver-lead mineowners\nare meeting at Sandon, lo devise\nmeans to better the condition of the\nmining industry.\nThe C.P.Tt. says it is able now to\nhandle the Boundary sire traffic, the\nweekly shipments of which are In ex-\ncess of 11,000 tons.\nThe gold strikes ou Poplar oreek\naro attracting much attention on the\noutside and many buyers are going in\nto acquire property.\nA shipment of ore is lo lie made\nshortly from the Nansen group, on\nLemon creek, formerly known as the\nOcean. It will go out by way of Six\nMils' to Kootenay lake.\nSeveral parlies got disappointed\nover the U and I group, Ten Mile, on\nSaturday, as they expected it to run\nout. It is owned bv Pete Larsen anil\nC. I>. Band and at the last moment the\nmoney was paid into the recorder.\nA eavein occurred last Monday iu\nthe No. 1 tunnel of the Whitewater\nmine, T. Hawes and IL Mason, the\nlessees, haiing a narrow escape from\ndeath. Both were caught but rescued\nin time. Hawes being severely bruised.\nVetei Dribbling lis.\nApplications to be placed on tho\nvoters' list keep dribbling lu each day,\n(hero beiug a little over 550 names\nnow in. It looks as if the entire vote\nof the riding Would total close to 8(H),\naud even then there will bo many left\noff through carelessness. There remains just three weeks more in which\nI b register. ?i\n_^B\n\u25a0\n\u2022a\n*\u25a0.+.&'\u25a0\u2022*-\u2022\u25a0**'\u25a0*>\u2022++'\u25a0*>\u25a0'+>'*>\u25a0 \u00bb \u2022 S>\u00bbt*\u00bb\n\u25a0 HER CANINE (\nCHAUFFEUR|\nI\nBy Bennet Musson ^\u2014*\nCopyright, 19ui, bu T. C. Met hue\n.-S-.S\u00bb.\u00ab.\u00ab.*\u00bb.\u00ab-a>.S\u00bb.\u00bb.S*>.^.S\nIt was a dull day for bulldogs, ruffs,\nwhose bull baiting ancestors bad bequeathed bim a love of adventure, sat\non tlie veranda of the villa and\nyawned.\nA Rrs?eu automobile rolled along the\ndriveway of the bouse. When it stopped at the veranda, a pretty, brown\nhaired girl of twenty laughingly greeted her enthusiastic friend, who leaped\nupon her, regardless of tbo damage\nwhish dirty paws inflicted on a white\nBfirge dress.\n\"One would think I bud been away a\nyear instead of n week,\" the girl said\nBayly. j\n'\u25a0Is it only a week since I first met !\nyou?\" replied ber companion, \"I seem\nto have known you always.\"\nFlorence Hastings' face became serious as she putted the wriggling I'iiITs.\n\"1 am afraid your Imagination is over- ;\npowerful, Mr. Oakley,\" she said. \"Any- ;\nway, you've saved uie a dismal railway journey from tbe N'ewlons'. I was '.\nglad to let my trunks take lt alone. So,\nwhatever your condition of mind, you\nmust come lu and meet papa.\"\n\"Is he at home?*'\n\"He comes ou tbe 5 o'clock 'relief ;\nexpress.' That's what lie calls uny\ntrain which takes bim away from Wall\nstreet.\"\n\"He leaves his ollice at 4?\"\n\"Yes. Do you hesitate at the ordeal\nof passing the interval with nie'r\" Florence was smiling again.\nPorter Oakley laughed protesting!\"*,\n\"I was hesitating because of an important business affair,\" tie said anally.\n\"Is there a telegraph ollice iu the village?\"\n\"There Is, aud 1 will send a groom\nwith your message.\"\nOakley looked at his watch. \"Quarter of 3,\" he murmured. \"Will you\npardon me If I go to tbe office In thc\nautomobile?\" be asked. \"It will save\nfifteen valuable minutes.\"\nAs the machine puffed along the\ndriveway Florence watched it musingly and Inwardly resented bor feeling\nof relief \u2014 It seemed like weakness.\nWhen she first met Oakley at the New-\ntons' country bouse, sbe vaguely dls-\nliksnl him. As she watched the automobile speeding toward the village\nshe thought of Trilby and smiled.\nThen she grew serious and felt sorry\nthat sho had asked Oakley to stay, but\nshe knew tbat If tbe little scene near\nthe veranda were to be reacted she\nwould ask him again.\n\"Do you believe in hypnotic influence. Puffs?\" slu* said softly, putting\nan arm uround the bulldog's muscular\nneck.\nPuffs did not. Every line In his\nsturdy figure expressed disbelief. Then\nhe conveyed sympathy and encouragement by extending a few Inches saf\ndamp pink tongue toward bis mistress'\ncheek.\nTbat evening Florence sat on the\nveranda with Porter Oakley. Her father did not arrive on the \"relief ex*\npress,\" nor bad word come from bim.\nOakley bad waited for the older nmn,\nbail accepted an Invitation t'i dine, and\nnow he sat with Floren e and watched\nthe moon creep toward ths. Orange\nmountains.\n\"There Is still an hour or so of moonlight, aud I sball have a bright road\nto New York,\" he said.\n\"I tbougbt father would surely be\nhere on the 8 o'clock train,\" paid Florence.\nOakley held tbe face of bis watch to\nhis cigar tii). \"Half past 8 now,\" he\nanswered. \"When does the next train\narrive?\"\n\"At 0.\"\n\"Your father may be on that. Why\ndon't you run down to the station with\nuu* and meet bim?\" Oakley snid.\nFlorence looked up at bim quickly.\n\"Why, I-I\"\u2014 she began, but Oakley\nwas leaning toward her, the mo mllght\nshining on bis face and lighting bis\ngray eyes, which were fixed on hers,\nFive minutes later the automobile\nwas running nlong the country road,\ncontaining one uneasy and one triumphant person und followed by a\nwhite, four legged creature whose under jaw protruded at the ancle of determination und who patiently blinked\nnway tbe dust aroused by tbe (lying\nmonster In front\nThe hands of thc little red faced\nclock ln the tower of the station pointed to n quarter of tbe hour, and they\npassed on, Oakley saying that they\nwould have five minutes of speeding\nbefore returning to wait for tho train.\nTbe lights of the village dl inppean d,\nond tho moon was bidden by tlie overhanging trees of the raid along wblcb\ntbey Hew. Puffs stretched his legs\nand galloped bis hardest Tin* machine\ndrew rapidly away from blm, but he\nfollowed, with the perseverance of his\nkind.\n\"Wc had better turn back.\" said Florence as tbey reached an open stret.ii\nof road,\nOakley consulted bis watch. \"After\n0,\" be said, in apparent surprise. \"Wo\ncan't meet your father now. Shan't\nwe keep on?\"\n\"I prefer to go home,\" Florence replied coldly.\nOakley leaned over thc steering lever\nas the machine sped on Its way. Then\nhe turned and his eyes met Florence's,\n\"I am the chauffeur,\" he said quietly.\nFlorence looked steadily at bim. I'or*\nter Oakley returned lu'r gaze, but the\ntrilling power that hnd made her forget conventionalities was dissipated by\nthe honest wrath which glowed In tbo\ngirl's eyes.\n\"Mr. Oakley, will you turn back'\/\"\nsbe said sharply.\n\"'Miss Hastings*, we are not going\nback.\" Oakley replied mockingly.\n\"What slu you niciiu:\"\n\"1 mean that 1 have known and\nwanted you for a sveek, it usually\ntakes less than a Week for tne to get\nanything I want. You will go home,\nbut it will be tomorrow\u2014and it will\nbe as Mrs. Oakley.\"\nFlorence rose from ber seat, \"if you\nj^*0000*3t--3,0-3*X\u00a3?.,\n0 SPIDER M'GANN'S\nJ REPUTATION\nBy RICHARD BARKER\nSHELTON\n0\n0\nCopyright, lilt', hy T, C. McClure\n1\n0\n0\n9\n9\n9\nour bounden duty to relieve tbis su\nperfluous pomposity. ,\n\"Tbls was our plan: Some years ago .\nthere came to the gym a little fellow\nI \"Vou say you took automobile\nrides i'or the sake of exorcise ?\"\nA writer says that\nmay make him stupid i\n\u2022Certainly.\"\n\u2022llut where does tho physical exer\nts true, but we think u\nly to make hlm smart\n,W^**-.W\nwhan\nis llu\nire\n'\u25a0Ail\nclso como in\ndo not stop, 1 shall jump out,\" she said. .-, \u2014\u2022\u00ab..\u00ab,..\u201e...-,-,-. .\nOakley seized ber arm, but she strug- llK^-OOO-OO-OO^dl-\ngled. His grasp on tbe steering lever\nbecame unsteady, the machine swerved\nviolently, and be gradually brought it\nto a standstill at the side of the road.\nFlorence jumped to the ground and\nstarted toward home, but Oakley\nplaced himself ln her way.\n\"You shall not go back.\" be said. \"If\nyou won't go on, we can stay in this\nlonely place, and in the morning, when\nit is known that you have passed tbe\nnight with me, you may be more willing to accept my proposals.\"\nFlorence stopped and faced Oakley.\nHer hands were clinched, but sbe was\ntrembling pitiably, lie smiled aud\ncame toward ber.\n\"Come, now. Marriage is easy In\nNew Jersey,\" be said. \"We can go\"\u2014\nA white, panting form shot from tho\nroad nnd came lietween them. Florence threw herself on tbe ground,\nclasped ber arms uround a muscular\nneck aud sobbed: \"Thank God, you\nbave come, ruffs! Thank Ood, you\nhave come!\"\nOakley drew back. He was not smiling. \"You don't think I shall let a dog\nInterfere with my plans, do you?\" he\nasked.\nHe stepped to the nutomobile, placed\nbis band under the scat, and when he\nwithdrew it it held a glittering object\nFlorence gave a low cry, and a white\nstreak flew from tbe road. The next\ninstant Oakley was kneeling on the\nground, Puffs' teeth were firmly hold-\nlug his wrist, nnd tbe useless weapon\nwas lying in tbe dust.\nFlorence looked at him helplessly;\nthen her eyes brightened, \"Come,\nPuffs, we shall go home,\" she said,\n\"and he will take us.\"\nHalf an hour later a green automobile drew slowly up the driveway of\nthe Hastings country house. Seated in\nit were a young woman and a sullen\nlooking num. Between them, with his\nback to tbe girl and his eyes lixetl on\ntbe man, was a stolid and dusty lwill-\ndog.\nWhen Mr. Hastings arrived on tbe\n11 o'clock train, he found bis daughter\nIn a subdued mood.\n\"What is the meaning of this?\" he\nasked, waving a telegram before ber.\nFlorence took the paper and read:\nMeet ir.e at thc uptown ferry, 10 o'clock\ntoi.Ight. FLORENCE.\n\"This is why you stayed In the city,\"\nsb'* said slowly. Then, ns she realized\nthe meaning of the message, \"It must\nhave been Mr. Oakley's Important business.\"\nWhen Mr. Hustings had recovered a\ndegree of equanimity after the story\nof the automobile, he looked fondly at\nPuffs.\n\"I'll buy one of those machines some\nday,\" be said, gravely extending his\nhand, into which a responsive paw was\nplaced; \"and wben I do I shan't have\nto look far for a chauffeur.\"\nVcrj- Old ehnreh.\nThe Chnrcb of San Miguel, at Santa\nFe. is claimed by New Mexicans to be\nthe oldest In the l'nited States. There\nis much dispute over the exact date of\nits erection, but it was certainly built\nbe'.ween 200 and .'00 years ago by the\nfifi-t Indian converts under the direc\ntion of the Spanish padres\u2014some say\nns long ago as 1545, Insisle it is like a\nvault, blnck and crumbling, with\ncracked adobe walls and roof, and a\ngallery whose woodwork still shows\ntraces of the figures painted there by\nthe Indians, designs like those tbey put\nupon their pottery today.\nBut tbe most Interesting thing In San\nMiguel is the old bell, St. Joseph.\nBlack with age, it looks like a mass of\nold iron In its dim recesses. But strike\nIt, and it gives forth a mellow note of\nsilvery clearness, echoing with marvelous sweetness through tbe vnultlike\nold church. The quality of tbe bell\nniB'tal make:; tbe richness of the note,\nnmi there is a tradition that it was\nmade of the gold and silver ornaments\nof iho Spanish as n thank ottering for\na victory over tlie Moors.\nAt any rate, the old Spanish padres\nbrought the bell, already ancient,\nacross the seas from Spain and over\nmountains and plateaus from Mexico.\nThe Moors uro gone, Spain's great empire of the west has vanished, and still\nthe old bell mauda tbere, older than\nAmerican civilization.\nThr Fun In Illtstory.\nAs in a mirror, the fan, the origin of\nwhich ls lost in the twilight of oriental\nlegend, reflects tbe habits, customs, art\nnud taste of every country which has\nmade a friend of an artldle so useful\nnnd ornamental. Greece was the lirst\nEuropean country to adopt the fan-\ntwo birds' wings-one of Its uss-s being\nby acolytes in the temples to drive\nnway the flics from tbe sacrifice. It\nserved the early Christians in tbe catacombs a similar purpose when the\nbread and wine were spread for tbo\nsacrament, a custom Which lasted In\nthe Roman Catholic cburcb to the fourteenth century.\nIn this same century the fan made\nan almost simultaneous appearance\nthroughout Italy end France, in England and Spain. Its most artistic flights\nbave been achieved In France, but not\neven to France will Spain yield in its\nuse of the fan as \"an important weapon in tbe mimic warfare of coquetry\nnnd flirtation.\" Whether the Spanish\nlady Is In church or a place of amusement, whether visiting or walking, It\nls always ln her bands, frequently\nportraying the honors ol Ilie bullfight\nCorresponding with these, certain\nFrench revolution funs represent Charlotte Corday carrying a dagger in one\nband and a fun iu the otbcrl\nThe Rev. Charles Aloysius Hall\nwould scarcely have been taken for a\nminister of the gospel ns he sat in the\ncorner of a downtown hotel that\nmorning, Intent ou the columns of a\ntime table. There was uo \"Prince Albert,\" no high hat, no clerical collar, no\nhigh buttoned vest. His clothes, of not\ntho latest cut, yet carefully brushed\nand pressed, would have stamped him\na young business man, and nfter a\nglance at his face\u2014a firm, clean shaven\nface, with thc brows at that moment\nknit in a frown\u2014one would have said\nthat business was not all the gentleman in question could have wished lt.\nIt was a favorite remark of tbe Rev.\nMr. Hall tbat if his dally life and\ndeeds gave no Inkling to his profession\ntho symbols of tbe cloth never would.\nFor the first time In the long fight the\nRev. Charles Hnll was discouraged.\nHe realized that now Indeed the church\nat Ccdarvllle, bis church, was lu tbe\nlast ditch. The roof leaked and that\ncracked tbe plastering, the carpet was\nln tatters, the paint was losing faith ln\nthe clapboards and tho spire was so\nbadly out of plumb that the town\nboard had threatened to take lt down\nunless lt wns given prompt attention.\nSome subscription papers, circulated\nthrough the town, had netted returns\npitifully small. The envelope weekly\noffering system had been woefully inadequate to cover the pastor's salary,\nand the Ladles' Aid society, with\nthree suppers and a fair, had raised\njust $08.37. He smiled grimly as he remembered that last year his salary\nhad been $200 short and this year bade\nfair to be another hundred shorter. i\nThere had remained yet one hope.\nCedarville was quite a summer resort,\nand during the hot months numerous\nwell to do men from the neighboring\ncity stayed there with their families. ,\nSome of these nttended the church.\nAs a last resort Rev. Mr. Hall had come\nto the city to make personal appeul to\nthese men. But Brother Jones and j\nBrother Hayes aud Brother Benton i\nhad other channels for their currency, I\nand when Hall, weary and heartsick,\nsat down in the corridor of tbe hotel, :\nho had raised but $20 In cash, with .\npledges of perhaps $3S more.\nHe had opened bis time table again\nwhen some one touched bis shoulder.\n\"Oh, I say, Bplder,\" said a voice in j\ndeprecation, \"this isn't just square,\nyou know. We've been hunting high\nand low for you. Why didu't you scud |\nus word?\"\nHall looked up. Two young fellows,\nevidently college men, stood before\nbim.\n\"Were you aildressing me?\" said\nHall.\n\"That's pretty good,\" said the other\nyoung man. \"You're funny when you\nhnvo a try at dignity, old boy.\"\n'There's no use mincing matters,\"\nsai'l No. 1. \"If you're going to back\ndown, we want the deposit back; that's\nall.\"\n\"Gentlemen,\" said Hall curtly, \"I'll\ngivo your seeming Impertinence tbe\nbenefit of the doubt. Ihere Is evidently some mistake bere.\"\n\"Oh, ring off; ring off!\" said tbe first\nspeaker wearily. \"You've led us enough\nof a chase already.\"\n\"See here,\" said Hall, rising angrily;\n\"I've no IntentiiAii\"\u2014\n\"Have you the nerve to say you're\nnot Spider Median?\" said No. 2 while\nbe favored bis companion with a pon\nderous wink.\n\"Most certainly I'm not,\" said Hall.\n\"Would you mind letting ns ss*e your\nleft forearm?\" saiil So. 1. with tbe air\nof a man who has trumped the trick.\n\"Certainly not,\" said Hall, with some\nasperity, \"If It will be a means of convincing you.\"\nHe bared his left forearm, and the\ntwsi bent over It critically.\n\"Ry Qeorgel Ths're aren't any tnttsso\nmarks here,\" said the shorter of the\npair. \"We owe you every apology,\nsir, for a very stupid blunder. Will\nyou join us?\" He nodded toward a\npair of swinging doors from behind\nwhich the dink of glusscs was plainly\naudible.\n\"No, thank you,\" said Hall shortly\nnud turned again to his time table.\nAgain be felt tbe touch ou bis shoulder.\n\"We don't mean to intrude,\" said a\nrespectful voice.\nHall looked up and found the young\nfellows again before hlm.\n\"Well?\" he said.\n\"You see,\" began the taller chap,\n\"we're in the deuce of a fix. nnd we\nthought perhaps\u2014bare chance, you\nknow\u2014you might care to help us out\nand Incidentally make a neat bit out\nof it There's several hundred lu lt\nfor some one.\"\nHall thought of the church nnd his\nmorning's work for the $'',s.\n\"I'm certainly open to suggestions,\"\nbe said, smiling grimly.\n\"Can you box?\" said his Interlocutor.\nHall's face wore a puzzled expression at the inquiry. \"1 havo In years\npast,\" be admitted.\n\"Oood:\" said tho other. \"If we can\ncome to terms, yon are the very man\nwe need just at present. This gentleman is Mr. Burns. I am Robert\nDix.\n\"Ymi see.\" nix continued, \"at the\ngym there Is n trainer called Hefty\nBurke, He's put out every man In college wlm has had the courage to give\nhim a go, by virtue of which Mr.\nBurke has begun to think himself the\nwhole thing, sud it therefore becomes\nWAS CURED OF PILES\nSEVEN YEARS AGO\nA Ghronlo Oase of Twenty Years' Standi-**\nCured Permanently by ^\nDR. CHASE'S OINTMENT.\nrilm or aaaxanUHa ax* \u00bbmong (most favorably spoken ot, -_____\u2022-J\nrtmm ... __ \u00bbk. recommendation f innt- . ._ **m\nwell ss the\nnamed Spider McUauu. Spider was a Tr,,\"**., ,\n,, i\u00bb i.i, ii.. .. ,\u2022 . .. i '(letting out to see what\ncoming lightweight, which truth ilidn t\nstrike Hefty until Hefty struck the ,er \t\nfloor. But the affair blew over, and Pftt_Sui.r _\u2022_. lnV down my loife for\nnow he is crowing again. So we hunt- I Norah ?\ned up McGaun, who is n lightweight * i^oinl\u00bb\u2014Itut would vou\nchampion now, and offered hiin \"\u00a300 i,.,,,.,,^ f()1. m0i Patrlok ?\nto go up against Burke. The mill\ncomes off tonight at the Macedonian\nclub, and poor old lefty thinks lie's I\nup against the Macs'i.oniati club's train-\ner. It Ml be rare to see his face when ;\nhe finds it's Spider Mcliitnn. Spider-1\nwill lay down In the ninth, and Hefty |\nwill simply swell. He'll continue to\nswell until tbe Annual comes out. This .\nWill be in tt.\" i\nHe banded Hall a slip of paper. In a I\nscrawling band was written:\nThis is to certify Ikal 1, Spider Mc- j\nClaim, laid down In my fight with Hefty i\nBurke. I could have punched hlm full of |\nholes as a sieve If 1st had a mint! to, i\nsame's as I done once hefore.\nSPIDER ttl'QANN,\nLightweight Champion of ths World,\n\"Now, the point is, Spider's gone |\nback on us.\"\n\"Thnt's It,\" said Burns. \"We've got\nto pull It off BOmebOW. We've sold\nover 1,000 tickets at anywhere from\n\"Ci up. All the old grails 1 Icily has\nfloored will be tbere ready\nhlm* you see, uo one knows\nbut Dls and I and tbe board of editors\nof the Annual.\"\n\"And you're the Image of Spider\nMcGaun.\" snld Dis. \"Our proposition\nIs to give you the |800 to meet Hefty\ntonight. If we couldn't tell you from\nSpider McCanu, he couldn't You're\ndue to go out anyway, so it won't\nmake very much difference when yon\ndo, only we'd want you to stay as\nmany rounds as you could for the sake\nof appearances.\"\nHall was thinking deeply. \"For the\nchurch! For the cburcb!\" ran through\nhis head.\n\"Gentlemen,\" said he, \"Spider McGaun pro tetn. Is at your service.\"\n\"You're a brick!\" said Dix, wringing \u2022\nHall's bund. \"Meet us here at 5, nnsi I\nwe can talk it over at dinner. And\"\u2014\nBailing In bis pocket\u2014\"here's fifty to '\nclinch it. We'll give you the rest after\nthe mill.\" j\nAt Ts Hall was pacing the corridor,\nwhen Burns and Dix came In. After !\ndinner, at which Hall was given many\nvaluable points as to Hetty's style of !\nboxing, tbe three entered a cab ami\nwere driven rapidly to the Macedonian\nclub.\nIt wus precisely 8 o'clock when the\nKev. Charles Aloysius Hall, clad in\ngreen trunks, faced Hefty Burke. Thnt\ngentleman's face was a study. Beyond\ns doubt he was suffering from tin* 1\nshock of recognition.\n\"Not Quite so easy as last time.\" i\nthe mat- There is no despi\n,,0Jijjsolui,\ntbat which cornea with that* *-\nments of our first great sorr tt*\nwe have not yet known whnt u'\"!*S\nhave suffered and\nties-mi\nEliot.\nIny down a despaired and have recoi'.n.!l,'P S\n\u00ab. . Il,*titi\u00bbii\nhe healed, ij j **\u25a0\necovered i,\n' \"\"luul\nbox\nery\nwas on a fair\ncontinued the\nths most common\nmost torturing ailments that affllot\nhumanity. Ths keen distress caused\nby ths Itching, especially when the\nbody g\u00abU warm, is almost beyond\nthe power of description.\n. , , , , Ths very mention of piles suggests\n.\" 'I ' 11. Chase's Ointment as it Is beyond\n1 S \u00b0Xetl denial the only actual cure for tbls\nloathsom. disease. If you ask your\ndoctor, your drusjglst or your friends\nwhat to use for piles they will\nnino cases out of ten adv.se\nChase's Ointment. ^^^^\nMr Alex. McLaughlin, for 30 years ease\nresident of Bowmanvilie. Ont..; Dr. unoae s uinunent is the 0nh\nabsolute and guaranteed\nrecommendation 1 took a box\n\"After three applications I _t._tw |\nter, and by the tinn I had us-*- ~\nway tu rec\u201e,\ntreatment in.\ntil thoroughly cured, and 1 _mv, *\nsuffered any since. I am iir,\u201eiv _?\nvlnced that \u00bb>*\u25a0\u00bb \u00ab'-* \u2022 ' *\u2022*\nperfect cure.\n\"I consider\nthe ointi\nDr\nnont madi\nChase'\nIn\nDr.\n, , ,, s Ointmut I\nan Invaluable treatment for pilea\nmy case I think the cure wu t_\nmarkable when you consider that I\nam getting up in years, and JI\nbeen so long a sufferer from this d3\na ....,,,_.,. Chase's Ointment\nwrIteS ' iBmawvBA.a-v*. uaaa. kaiiii HIIUS'll Cllre ... I\n\u2022\u2022For twenty long years 1 suffered every form of piles It has a r*eM\nfrom itching piles, and only persons of cures unpnralleh'ii in the hi...,\nhava been trounled witb that of medicine. 60 cants a box,\nwho \t\nannoying disease csn imagine what\nI endured during that time Aliout\nicven yenrs ago T asked a druggist\nif he had anything to cure nie Re\ns-siii that Dr Chase's Ointment was\nlot*\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014m at ij\ndealers, or Edmonson Hates i (>\nToronto. To protect ymi againstS\niintiotis tlie portrait ami BignatM\nof Dr A. W Chase, the taainus\nCclpt book author ;m\never) box.\nare: you building?\n**\u00ab**\u00abr\nUSE EDDY'S\nIMPERVIOUS SHEATHING\nTHE BEST BUILDIHQ PAPER MADI\nIt !\u2022 rer; amb ttronter \u2022nil thlikrr than any other (tarred or biillrjlul\nIt la liB*.|irrvlfliua tn wins!, keejii out oolst, keapa ln li uu\n\"If a stVou aii-ldi'i ill,* can break In .\nibis way a mull's .. tin aa- is, in uiy j\na plu nn. no room in doul: tt.... It coul I, t\nil ii desired, break wltb a v.. II dii I\ned blow a man's lc-.\"\ni\nTl.e Its- |slr. .! Isll |.\n\"Strange, isn't ir.\" n-uni |\nLAW AGENTS WANTfl\nBurke muttered between clinched j\nteeth, aud liuii could not restrain a i\nchuckle.\n\"Time!\" The referee's voice sounded\nin almost absolute stillness. Then al\nit tbey went. Hefty was nervous and ,\nHall wns cool. He could Imagine hlm\nself buck at the (ivin in his unlversitj l\ndays. He side stepped Hefty's sledge j\nhammer blows; he dodged und ducked\nin a manner that brought tit.' crowd\nto Its feet. Hi' would do his utmost to\nstay those nine rounds.\nIn one of the boxes Hums and l\u00bbix\nwere hugging each otber.\n\"It's great, greatF' said liiv \"Hefty\nwill surely think it was Spider.\"\nAnd tbere was even mon- cause for\nHefty to think so when the end came\nrather suddenly early iu the eighth\nHull dui'ked a vicious jab ainl at the\nsame time swung with his rinht The\nblow landed with terriiic force ou\nHefty's neck, nud he went down blow\nine like n grampus. Then the referee\ncounted off ten seconds. The crowd , \"Strange, isn't it.\" iwnnrLed the In-\nbowled. It was some minutes liefore j iplred idiot, \"Ihnt some |ieo:i \u2022 _tpread\nScnudal wholesale by retailing it ev*\nft*-* MBst SWrt Smttortm ami Wat* *\na\u2014e tat\u2014SmcaA \"Ml* sa ast-fSt Csx-1 ttttX\n\u00abJ\u00bbe- ?t rM>ta tar aaapU rU ttrau \u00bb m\nBRUSH at \"O., Dept. W. T0RWII|\n\u00ab ii aaimiur\u2014\u2014\u2014y\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014m\u2014amsm\nTHE MAlidl OTJl\nO\ni\nerrwherOi*\"\u2014Baltimore Herald.\n.GHAKY NERVE8.\nHall realised wbat had happened, nnil\nwhen be did be vaulted the ropes ami\nbroke fsir his dressing room, while be\nbiud bim tbe cheerlug redoubled.\nAt Cedarville two days later Hall re\ncelved the following letter:\nRev. Charles Aloysius Hail:\nDs*ar Sir\u2014You Will probably woinlrr how\nwe know your name ami address. A card |\nfell frsim your |inakot \\i\\ ysnir dressing'\nr.iom, aad we havt guarded it Jealously.\nYour score! Is safe with 'ia.\nIt was because ws had th* card thai\nwe let you depart that night without a\nsaying mors nbout tin* money afta-r you I\nhad refused It bsKSUM you a lalmed you j\nhad broken your contract by flooring\nHetty. You earned it. *\u2022*\u2022 gods,\nrichly earned It. The lirst thing Hefty\nsaisl when they Kot him tu In. cornel\nwhs, \"Well, I uln't SO much, mu IT\"\nInclosed please find shea k sm Third Na\nllontil for \u00bbVjn.\nIVn 1ihv\u00ab secured from Splala r a nrvnni\nstatement that In. did nui fight Hefty\nllurke on the evening of A|irii 7. Thla\nwill appear In the Annual, with a poi a\non Hefty's fall before the greal unknown\nUreal unknown! Vuu shall remain sucli,\nbut permit us to express sun gratitude to I proof is offered\nyou. Sincerely yours. Itoin.li'l' DIX j..,, ss-\nJOHN BURNH '\nI\nThis ItsBE I hs, Spell.\nThere ls n south side lady who owns\nu Gordon setter wblcb sin* believes is\nendowed with nlinsist human Intelligence, says tbe Chicago News. Tbls Is\nnot a hastily formed nor unfounded\nopinion, but bas bs's'n developed by\nyears of experience. Here is une of\ntbe many Incidents from Which Ims\nsprung ber faith in her dog:\nOne Sunday, having finished her dln-\nSufr< rem frnm Nerv ina Tronbloi * ro In a\nSlate of Oiintliiuoiis Tortiire-Muineatloni\nM t\u00bb How the Trull tile Can be Sraraetaa.\nWhen your nerves ure slinky youi\nsell-control is shattered\u2014your will\npowor is broken. Budden sounds\nstartle you; your temper is irritable,\nvour ha.nis tremble; there is weakness in J our kneel : your i kin is \u25a0 ale\niml parched . you arc restless .st\nyou night und tired wben you wako. ii\n.ill comes fiiuii nervous exhaustion,\nperhaps din* tBi overwork and worry.\ni.ita hours, Iml days, utul want ol\nMosul In. Williams' link I'illa Is\nlin- otil,\\ in!\u25a0 The} iniike new, rich,\nnil iiiuiiii I In > in a. i- no langlod\nnerves and strengthen tired backs.\nThey give health and energy to dull,\ndespondent im'n and women Si rom;\nin lie case ui Mis\nests's'tt, ol Seaforlh, friends nmi nelghl\ndrowsily lu the sunshine. The lady's\ntwo sons were still in (ho dining room\nWas\nfinishing the repast, i id the mother\noverheard Something saiil aboul bum's\nNow, tlie good lady has a mortal dread\nthnt her beautiful don will click,, t,,\ndentil on n bone some day. s,, raising\nber voice, she called out, \"Huts, doit i\ngive Dan any ch | c ke n b*o n e s,\"\nspelling these two words sn the dog's\nattention would not be attracted \"I'm\nnfrald be will choke.\"\nAs she spelled \"chicken\" tha. dog\nrnised bis bead; nt \"bones\" he got up,\nwalked into the dining room and look\ned at the bones the boy* Van nletrlnri\niscnin enjoying pood health, and\nhnvo since been strong and well l\ns|o not know mn t hlng to 0f|Ua1 Dl\nWillinms' I*inl-. Pills when tho sys-\nti.in is run down \"\nWhat the pills hove dono for otbora\nthey will 'I.s fin .v.an if vbbii will give\n< '.fin ss fair 11 inl Sold tiy all inedi-\nI'lno dealers, or sent post paid at\n50 cents a bos or siv boxes for\n\"\"i\".0fl, by addressinc* this Dr, Wil\nHams ITedlelno Co., Brockville, Ont.\nThoro have been no duels among\nBelgian military men for fourtes-n\nyears Disputes are decided by courts\nof honor.\nI'm hn; \".'\" I ' :!\"r\n\u2022..lini I\nI. nigh It ! ts a \u25a0 h Stltttf\nI II I.IV I\n;.ri l.no\u00ab Hi \u2022 rrj twitter\nOf t! rohii.-. i i ths Ir glee\ngoon shall o; ' me,\n*. i i i , tci \u2022 ->3\nWill Ij. playli '\u25a0\u25a0*\nWith lhe ro. .. pu-si'i\nOh. I hnll lhe V. \u2022r, ti wlndi \u25a0.lH'HJ'i\nThough thi i ireal\nM i,i :k ai m itn '. rather badly\nin th<' Btreet!\nI'nani ihe rtaL.li i where ll \u2022' ea\"]r\nI., ... i now bi i rurnlnalc,\nGrowing fuw \u25a0 ns lb y w\u00bblt*\nAll the lamhs und colts and h.-ir-ra\n..>on will nisi, t . greet the lepnyn\nBwooplng ilaaia *i across lhe state.\ntearing \u2022\nirinf.\n. ..\u00bb.iilnl\nOh. the March winds Hint go '\nin full ^^^^^^\nNe'er respecting, never sp\nAnything)\nRuin lhe grave professor iv\na.i they whisk hla h*\\ swayi\ni behold th'ir willful play\nWhile he madly hurries \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab__,\u2022_,___,\nAnd my heart ll Blled with H\">tm\nForty-seven tlnns u day.\nOh. the March winds that <'\u2022\"\"\" \u25a0\"*\u2022*\"!\nO'er the lens. .hlDtlHl\nThat bo howling- through Ihaw'vr\nAt the quayrt.\nHave an Htii-ry wav of nippms\nAt tho gentle maidens noss.\nllut In every blest that WOW\"\nThere's a promise for tha WW\nAnd the faith that lifts the cover\nWhere the dnn.Mlon prow\"<\u25a0 ^\n-S. E. Klser In Chloag*0 Uia ord-H\"\u2014\nThe Ilrnl Thins.\nNapoleon wns rostlcaUngon* ^\n\"I wonder,\" he uiused. w*\"\ncall tne Corporal Violet.\"\n\"Probably,\" asserted tie C\u00ab\ncnuso they think yon at*\nbunch.\" _A\u201e.\n\u2022\u2022HlKht.\"exelnl.iiedth<'\u00ab'mPc*;%,fJ\ntbat ls why Louis XVIII. Caff*\nto pay for me.\" .,V.P mlJU1*\nUugbmgat tbelr expewlM i ^,\nto fell to thinking how rnnca\nIt would have been to call \"\"\u00bb\n-New York Herald.\n;.rd. *\nthe w***\n\u2022Out of Uueatlo*1'\nKwater-Well, .vo\" *'*'oW\nIt's *\npsf\nrule that won't work both ,v\u00ab*y' j-jl\nWiseman-Nonsense\nYou\nninn\nto Im\npossibly expect a headlong \"' I,,'*.\nlong beaded, for Instance.-*\nphla l'rcss. The Drill.\nit: AN,\nBU1TI8H COLUMBIA.\nims submitted\nilll'lli.V\nfor\n\u201evuie hus siiuiiii>.\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 to\n,[ science, Tuna- an\ntypsAisetting by tole-\n' current being made\nIplitieii\n.l>* ' (. ,hftl.acters on a -roving\n\"\"\u2022\"\u25a0 \"'\".\u201e\u201e, with a typesetting\n\u25a0luiini'si the oontrlv-\nIcnii'f _\u2022 \" ,,__, \u201e,_,,.__ 0f M, Rod-\nwith tranicrlp-\nii.ii't'' ^^\nli is ci\n, hid. is tiie wor\nill ilispi'iise\n'Lother for press purposes,\nSt.'\ntill\"\nl'>\n.ot \u2022'\nSS'ie\nI'\nci\n..ill. :\nl is\nKM\niluli''\n''\nMie\n111\nri\nMl\n0(* o( Bronchitis anil\nMiNAllD-B LTN1MENT.\nMltS. A. LIVINGSTONE.\n'. B. I- ., , f\n,,,(l nf a severo attacK oi\n,\u201e ,,v MINAltD'H I-INI-\nJOHN MADEtt.\n..'.'inl u severely sprained\n.aivutus LINIMENT.\n\"' ii.SlllIA WYNAOHT.\ntvnli'i\ni ti\nadvises his patis-nis to\n(| frivolous nt meal\n| 1,1'il-lal IUI\n,I\u201e.N would piesfrvi\n,,i full vigor.\ntheir cli-\nIViferi llt*ts|sii i. Hull.\nFor perfect respiration two thinits\nre ii,'(er,y,ir.v -clai-st capacity and\nnvtitli control. The im*i'uge Inilivltiuui.\n\u25a0'mnnn especially, uses but u llmlteil\nifirtloii of the Itintffl uml upper chest\nll iiri'inary breathing. Whenever a\nilttle iiinisual physical effort mattes demand for an extra breathing rapacity,\niiote I'.ow she pull's aud pants, almost\no a point of gitsplng. The reason for\nlliU ls that the muscles of the lower\nclient, waist mid abdomen have become\nwell nigh atrophied through neglect\nand abuse. Tliey are stilt ami unresponsive ti tit I have now to lie coaxed\nbas-u to a condition of activity and\nu'uislienee.\nlt is quite us possible to educate\ntiu'se muscles so Ihnt they shall re-\nspoud to our slightest demand us it la\nUnit our baii'ls are trained to do our\nbidding. Different teachers Will advocate different forma of breathing\u2014upper chest, side s Inst, lower chest and\nabnormal breathing\u2014but what we\nmont want lu absolute control, such\ncontrol of the UlllSCleS us shall enable\nu* to mut'i' use of any desired form of\nliivutltltlg at Hi'.' word of command, for\nnil tonus huve special values. Full upper cheat breathing is used most, but\nlower ehest uud aliilniiilii.il breathing\nlire very valuable1 III eiiHcs of nervous\nlies.-.. Iiullgestlon, stomach and bowel\n\u2022.roubles.\nHE'S AT WORK\nONCE MORE\nSimon V. Landry Cured by\nDodd's Kidney Pills.\nIlllAlA\n, , I'll' '1''B*.|SB, |\nail I'oUIlt*; I\n. rlienev ssiaki'ifl osstti\n'llr\u201e,r of ihs* Urns\n(\nall\nlira*\n1\nHsnl\nact\nla sa\nnmi\nI\nt nss I ns. Its\n_____ *\u2022\u25a0 V\" \"'\nloltla.' ilU^ltieHIS ill till' City\nnuutv ami Stat* flsfiiresisiil.\n, , ..-.d in in will \"\u00bb.V the \u00bb\">.' '>;\n\u00abs \u00bb -h< TraM\"*.\u2122^\n,,. in btsforsl me fsnil sulnsrillieal is.\n\" ',.,\",, (hit \u00abih dssv of bsK\u00abOlll\u00ab\">,\nRfi \\ W (ll.KASON.\nNflilary Public\nCutnrih Cure is taken inu*inn.ll.v.\ndirectly on the hlooil anil nsu-\ni ic\u00aba of tbe eyst-in. *-*>nit '<\" \"\u25a0\"*\u2022\n'TlV.NKV * Ott . Toledo- o\nCONGRESS KOR CHEMISTRY.\nAt\n.1\n\u25a0ratal I \u2022 \u00bb\nnil - I\"\n\u201e ttruwl'sti, 7ue . ,\n\u25a0nils TUN arc ths? hest\nIan\na-.ii\nTlio Ti'i'.t'.iful risinrrr.\n\u2022one il..v.\" n.iiii the truthful pioneer,\n\u25a0\u2022I wis v.'hut'klug up soiiu* wood down\nUy lisp t i'\"i u. mid ten Indiana loomed\nup, They wore pretty thirsty even for\nImllaiM, nnd they saisl the.v knew 1\nluul a jug stuiinwhere, ami Ihey want*\ns d lo sample it. I had a log about litII\" j\nspill at tin' time, and the ux was sticU- '\nillg iu it. I told them If they would\nhelp me get lhat log In two 1 would\nshow ths'ui where the jujj wns. So tbey\nlook holil, live ou one Ride and live ou\nthe other, and pulled. Ansl when I\nlook the ax oul the In;. Sprung together\nand hi'lsl ihi'iu ull by the Sogers, Then\nI walked nway to the house nnd loaded\nIbe shotgun uud three or four pistols\nand then went buck and argued witb\ntheni, und tbey reformed right nway.\"\nThis story, says tbe Nebraska Slate\nJournal, was originally told of Daniel\nlloone or Davy Crockett and bus done\n\u25a0^ood service ever since. It is nol copyrighted, however, and there is no good\nrs'uson why Nebraska pioneers should\nnot use It\t\nEye. With Doable PaplU.\nle beard la roumi in ueuwa *.n, a-., Cicero says tbat \"tbe glance of all\nfcere we reasl that Joseph on being women wltb tbe double pupil In the eye\naimoned before the king sbuved Is noxious, blighting and withering.\"\nnself. There are several refereuces Cadmus tells us thnt sucb persons\nto shaving in Leviticus, aud the would not drown. Htiii Others say tlmt |\nsctlee is alluded to In many other If they did drown the body would nev\ntrtn of tbe Bible. However, Egypt er sink, neither would It decay. They\nhe only country mentioned ln the 'mild cure the dist>ase of the ehest-\n\" - : consumption\u2014by rubbing their perspiration on the affected parts of tbe individual, nud In case the double pupils\n,v..iv red Instead \nSafloilirrn Kurapr.\n. traveler writes: \"I bave often been\nuck by the ease with which people\nsouthern Europe are amused. In\njirls 100,000 people go out to Ixmg-\nanips for tbe Grand Prix race, and\na million people go out and line\nroads on tbelr -eturn to iee them\nnn* back. In RoJue at the feast of the\nDlvlno A more\" 5,000 people go out on\nCampagna to a spot where onco\na temple to Venus and hold a\n:, while 50,000 go out and line the\nbplan way to see them return. Ia\nadrld this peculiarity la even mora\nirked. On the I'uerta del Sol about a\nuusiiiui people stand around and do\nteari's Lioimeat Cores Colds, etc\nlse Lexer':. Dry Soup (a powder,\nto wash wooh'iis ninl flannels,\u2014ytsuii\nli!..' it.\nSubtle Ilii8ljand\u2014There was o pcr-\nfcctlv lovely woman In tho the.it;\nIrjenlght. mv dear. 1 couldn't ki\nlily eyes tiff her.\nWife\u2014Indeed ' How kind nl yon\ntell me !\nKeep calm, mv lovs*. koep cultii\nviis ViBiuself '\nSICKI.Y BABIES.\nWfl'Hk,. sickly linliies are a great\n- \u201e_.\u201e _\u2014 ,-,111:1 to mothers. Thoy n'*ed constant\n\"fthlng outdoors, while crowds of pec- '_.,._,.,. |,oth night and day and soon\nsit Indoors or lean from balconies to \u201e,,\u201e,\u2022 the mother out. IBaby's little\nU'b tbem do lt And In (Seville tbe -stomach is the cause o! most of ths*\nle rich sit in clubs and cafes on the irouble; it la very weak, and in uin\nirpes to watch tbe lower classes walk '*iquence very ensi.y upset. Babys\n. while the lower classes walk by to Own Tablets will cure all baby ty\u201e\\i-\nten tbe Idle rich sitting in the clubs lies They are mildly laxatlvo ana\nId ii f,\nis on the Slerpes.\"\n\"mine llnlr In I llialirlha Time.\nil Elb-ubetll bad eighty wigs In\ncollection, and ber cousin, Mary,\n'\u2022ii nf Seuts, bail \"as many ns a hun-\n\u25a0sl.'' ninl n,ai,aiij{ Die iiiesiugruous\nwhile conllned\nand au\n\u2022nts mud\nher\nBive prompt relief Concerning them\nM,u. k J. Balfour, Omemce, Oni\nM.ys \"1 have usesl Baby's Own\n'I'ableU for Btomach troubles and\nconstipation from which my littlo\nenl suffered and they entirely eurcd\nher. They produced sound refreshing\nnnsi I regard them ns Indlspen\nUse Second Slating In tt\u00bbr!ln Sir \"*\"*.\n< riiiiken *pa i.a- mi ,\\. utter.\nThe International Congress for Ap-\nplii'd Chemistry held u second plenary silting in Uorlln recently, during\nwhich Sir William Crookes dollvored\nan udilress entitled \"Msuluru Views\non Matter; 'J'ho ileali\/.ulion of a\nDream \" The lecturer saiti thut for\nnearly u contury men of science luul\nbwn dri'itming of atoms, molecules,\nand ultraiiiuudanu particles, und luul\nbeen speculating as to tho origin of\nmutter. Tiny luul now got so far us\nto admit tho possibility of resolving\ntho chomlcal oloiuouts Into simpler\nforms of matter, or even of refining\nthorn awuy altogothor Into ethereal\nvibrations or electrical energy,\nSir William Crookes then gave a\nbrief account of some Investigations\nbearing on the constitution of matter und Uie possibility of dissociating the chemical elements. lie remarked that a number of isolated\nhypotheses as to the existence of\nninl ier iii iiii ultra-gaseous state, tho\noxiBtenco of material particles smaller Hum atoms, the existence of electrical atoms or electrons, tho constitution of Iloentgon rays and their\npassage through opaque bodies, the\nemanations from uranium, and tho\ndissociation of the elements wire\nnow welded Into one harmonious\ntheory by I lie discovery of radium.\nAfter paying a high tribute to tho\nlabors of M, und Mmo, Curia and \"M.\nBemont, ho proceeded to describe\nsoiiiii of the characteristic of radium.\nHe snid thai ihe most striking property of radium wus its power to\nscud forth torrents of emanations. A\nconvenient method of observing these\nOmanatiOUS was to fit a blende screen\nat thu end of a brass tube with a\nspeck of radium salt in front about\na millimeter ofl ond to have a Ions\nnt the other end. The emanations\ncould then be observed in tho form\nof scintillations on tho screen. In\nconclusion, Sir William Crookes remarked With regard to this and other experiments:\n\"Indulging in a 'scientific use of the\nimagination' and pushing the hypothesis of tho electronic constitution\nof matter to what 1 consider its logical limit, we muy be in fact witnessing a spontaneous dissoeiution of\nradium\u2014and we bi'gin to doubt the\npermanent stability of mutter. The\nCliemical atom may bo actually suffering u catabollc transformation,\nbut ut so slow a rato that, supposing a million atoms Ily off every\nSecond, it would take a century for\nits weight to diminish by one milligramme\n\"It must never be forgotten thnt\ntheories are only useful so long us\nthoy admit of the harmonious correlation of facts into a reasonable system. Directly a fart refuses to be\npigeon-holed und will not be explained on theorotic grounds, tho theory\nmust go nr it must be revised to\nadmit the new 1'n.i-t. The nineteenth\ncentury saw the birth of now views\nof atoms, electricity, and other. Our\nviews to-day of the constitution of\nmutter may appear satisfactory to\nus. but how will it be at. lli\" closo\nof the twentieth century? An* we not\nincessantly learning the lesson that\nour researches have only a provisional value? A hundred yeurs hence\nshall we acquiesce in the resolution\nof tho material universe Into a swarm\nof rushing electrons?\n\"This fatal quality of atomic slis-\nsociation appears to be universal,\nund operates whenever we brush a\npi.ro of gloss with silk: it works In\ntho sunshine and raindrops, and In\nile.' lightnings and flame; it prevails\nIn the waterfall and the stormy sen.\nAnd although the whole range of\nhuman experience is all too short to\nafiord a parallax whereby the date\nof the extinction of matter ran be\ncalculated, 'protyle,' tho 'formless\nmist,' onee again mny reign supnsp.o\nand the hour-hand of eternity will\nhave Completed one revolution.\"\u2014\nLoudon Times Correspondent.\n**\u00ab*\u00bb*a;il<* Geometry.\nIn the Allevniuir, tho school mng-\nu.'ii 0 of Dulwich, uppe.-w's u witty\npui er on \"Seaside l\"comutry,\n1\nGood Bread\u2014Good Children.\nOther things being equal, the\nchild wbo is best nourished\u2014has\nmore of brain and brawn than his\nplayfellows\u2014makes tho best mat\nsnd the best citizen.\nOGILVIE'S HUNGARIAN\nis the flour that produces the\nbroad tbat nourishes tho child\nthat makes thu best citizen, and\nthat's easily demonstrated.\nThe Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Ltd.\n\"The honorable gentlemen\nopposite may scarcely oredit\nthis, but it is my firm belief\nthat if a few boxes of these\nmost exc\u00abllent cigars had been\njudiciously distributed among\nthe Boer (icncrals their savage natures would have been\nsoothed and that cruel war\nmight never have taken\nplace.\"\nChamberlain\nTha acknowledged I.\u2014\u25a0_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0__\u00ab\u25a0_\u00ab_\u25a0__\u25a0__\u25a0\u00ab_\u25a0_\u25a0___\u25a0__\u25a0\u25a0_\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\n*$hoes \u25a0_. Q 5 O\nfor Men\nWith the \u00bbpi>ri-in.i li of sprini? come\u2022 wot, slushy weather\u2014that\nla the time your aliens get iho A.^.cutnnt. tout. Do yoo want\na Pair of Shoaa that will keep yssur foot, dry\u2014will wilh*\ni-tsinit nlush and water\u2014ure rtlways pliuble ansl comfortable sm the\ntoot, and will outwtMir anything yen over had bolorel That's\nthe Kind we want to soil you.\nNo btiQks, nails or lunipi, bul an isinooih aod.Ye.ir and English Welt* carefully mads oxprcsHly for ub by\noipei't workmen. Heavy soles ainl uppers i'or heavy wear,\nmedium soiea and upper* for iiitlit wear, and in iho siogis. soi*\nlight \u2022hofs for dress wear. The leather* are Box Calf.\nDongola Ki ;, or Patant Leather. Tell us tho mirt\nof boot you want and tii*- size, ana yon will he dolighleil with\nwha we sens's you. (If you are not xiiislliid with tliem when\nyou see them you have the privilege 11( returning at our expense,\n1 and we will refund your money.) tlrtlcr a pah\" today. They am\n_a,ual to the beat $3.50 ani! UM slui \u2022 \u2022 ynu over saw.\nWOULD YOU LIK'E OUR CATALOGUE?\nIt's brimming over wilh now things for mi'n and boys, and\n.tome things fnr laali.-s, iv.v.i you will lind it a greal money-\naver\u2014ynu ri*.illy can't afford io he without it. Send ua a\npout otara witli your nkine suid addren suid ws arill mail you\none FREE.\nPHILIP JAMIESON\nImporter and Manufacturer, \"~\nToronto, Ont.\n\u25a0~na\n - te rilooiv'LMUi^ n\";v *1\"0,,,p whm' th9Pfl \"n\n\"' htUng lifhi'iiilcil, wIbs wore au-!;l',1(, <\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0***>\u2022\" nunaida\n Gentlemen who particularly Mothers iron, all parU *J^\u00ab\u00ab\nfche* to p,ea.e their lad, friends pre-1 j\u00a3%^^*8? SJft* \u00a3\nhen. with wig. of the ales ^ l^Zst medicine for all the\n'\" \"I hiiir ami newest style of\nWtirlng, 1'ainy a gentleman of to-\nprpsentlng his sweetheart the last\nA Somerset Innkeeper, who has fnil-\n,'ii iii hia business, __ave \"\u2022- a reason\nfor his Insolvency at his public examination that \"the whole of the\nvillagers hail turned teetotallers.\"\nM 11\nback Imlr!\nJJamboo\nlliii'i,\nllniubsso Opnla.\nopals nre peculiar gems\nare sometimes found In the\nof Ihe bamboo, This gem is very\nfrom the fact that not one in a\ntousand bamboo stems contains it.\nvegetable growths are called\npacur by the Filipinos. Some of\nhn nre so simllar-that ls, they ex-\nfell so perfectly the characteristics of\n0 Opal -that even exports frequently\n11 to distinguish them from the real\nIlll.\nminor ills of infants and young children Cuniuntced to contain no opiate, Trice 25 cents a box, at all\ndruggists or direct from The Pr\nWilliams' Medicine Co., Brockville,\nOut.\nI Wlij- H, Ai.plnn.lrsl.\nAr'' ymi fsuid of miiRlcV\" ashed a\nfanger or the young inun at the con*\nF who wan applauding vigorously\nf'\"'' n pretty girl bad sung a song In\nly'1'' painful wny.\n\"Nol nartlcultirly,\" replied the young i\n1,11 frankly, \"but I am extremely w\n**\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022 of the musician.\"\nCharacter Is the substance: reputation the shadow.\nin nttin\" boots ami shoes caussitwrns.\nKolloway's I'orn Core la the sHJ'1''J1\nut.s c.i-t n bottle at ones nmi rare voui\ncorns,\nThat automobile rnci.ig will be permanently prohibited In Prance is unlikely. Automobile building now sji-\nnages more than 20,on(i skilled workmen 'n Prance, and tho races give\nworld-wide advertising Io Trench mis\nchines.\nih\ni.iiia* persons bave periodical attacks\nCanadian Cholera Dysentery Ixtndon.\nWhat, we reap depends upon wim:\nthe other fellows sow.\nJtouMliMpmijmralh^^\ntfrfaca\/vtfie^\nmtAiso\/itytAafe\nQ0LD51NDARD\nIt Tells in the\ntShow Ring\nIf Ton hope to exhiUt yonr situ\u2014 at the\nI Pall Pairs, start now and get them is paw-\nfeet health by using\nRick's Blood Purifier\nIt will Hair-* \u2014om\\ %m asxt\u2014T off %\u2014\u2022\nBla* Ribbon.\nFifty Cents per peokege.\ntTUUiNO, MHJtS A COl, K-mtt-Ml, A\u00abnts,\nTaki\nfew Bwlmming lessons\nfore barning your bridges behind you.\nAs i':siius*lfl'i*'s Vegetable Pills contain\nMandrake and Dandelion, the*, cure Liver\nni.'l Kiiius?v Complaints with unerrlno\nIcciialnty They ulso roniain roots and\nllla-iia... which nave specific virtues trulv\ntvnndorful in their action on the stomach\nand bowels, Mr !\u25a0'. A Cairncross,\nShake! pi air'.'* writes: \"I consider Par-\nn.elce's \"ills nn s*xcellent remedv lor Biliousness and derangement ol the liver.\nhavinu uss\u00bbil them myself tor Borne time.\"\nSomebody says that politeness Is\n\\\\Ye an air-cushion\u2014there may be nothing In it. but il eases our jolts\nwonderfully.\nA Sweet Stomach\ncomes only by having a perfect\nacting liver and good digestion\u2014\nboth can easily be had by using\nBeecham's\nPills\nBold F.TB'rywlu.ro. In boxes, % cents.\ni 'I'lie Austrian empire is tho greet\n'es; of Royal sportsmen Between\n1.856 and 1807 he killed l 348 deer\njural 730 chamois, besides thousands\n'of head 0. other gamo.\nChronic Deraaarementfl ol Mia* Stomach\nLiver ami lllcunl are speedily removed\nli. the active principle .at' the Insrredlonts\nt-t.terinf*. Into the composition nf Par-\nmelee's Vegetable Pills These pills an\nsi-si'iftt'nllv t'n the deraneed nrs-tans Btlni*\nii'itiiic lo action tlie doriuanl enemies\n.ui the Bystem. therebt removl Psensi\n; il i'i'iia..A. in - lifo mui vitality ti> Iho a:\nit'a t, il In this li-'-i iii.' creel s rr t \u25a0 I\nthe popuiarltv nf Parmolte's VeiretuMi\nl'ills\now Inpi in the hiaa.ii price ol Drli i s t Inun\nine tho hippopotamus quarters whet)\nun latiiimil. which wns always ronsld-\nir.-esi harmless, rushed iitinn hiin, na\nijig Its trend ns a Imttei'lnr* ram Thc\nibrute tore open his chest and crushed\nhis body. '\u25bc\u25a0\nTHK DRILL, SLOCAN, B. C, JULY 24, 1808\nTHE SLOCAN DRILL\nC. E. Smitiikrinuau*, Editor and Prop.\n18 rilHLISUBll BV\"****\" rRIIiAY AT\nSLOCAN, - - \u2022 \u2022 B. 0.\nLegal Advertising 10 cents a line for\n.tho tirst insertion ami 5 cents a lino each\n(BubSfquent insertion.\nCertificates of improvement, t}7 each.\nTransient advertisements at same rates\nas legal advertising.\nLocals will be charged 10 cents a line\nfor each insertion1.\nCommercial Kates made known upon\napplication.\nThe Subscription is f2 per year, Bt.idly in advance; f'-'.uO a year if not so paid.\nAddress all letters to\u2014\nTHE SLOCAN DRILL,\nSloc.an, B. C.\nlong purse, but even that will not savo\nhini from defeat. Workingmen will\nremember hlm for bis fondness for\nChinese cooks at tho Washington\nmine. When Bob Green lickeil him\nin the Turner electiou sonic years ago,\nRetallnck flow to Spokane mid milked\nthoro for mun j* unions; when Hob K*'ts\nthrough with him this time, John may\nbe looked for to tuko passage for\nChiiialaiui, there to mingle with the\nnatives on a more friendly basis.\nVsJ\nFRIDAY, JULY 24th, 1803,\nkui iss.tiAi, u-tori'in us.\nThe Rossland World characterizes\ntlio'Uiit platform ns wishy-washy and\nsuggests gettiiif** the party together\nnnd drafting now articles of faith\nsomething they could speak of nud\nnot feel ashamed.\nCranbrook Liberals met lust week to\nnominate a candidate, but tho ina-\nchinery did not run smoothly, so the\nconveutiou adjourned for two weeks.\nBy that time it is hoped to have\nthings in fair running shape.\nPope Leo,the grand old mnu of the\nRoman Catholic church, passed away\non Monday afternoon, after a strenuous struggle lasting for two weeks.\nIn him the church had for its hend a\nman of extraordinary ability, judgment and tact, and much lasting glory\nresulted from his statesmanlike government.\nDown in the Delta constituency the\nLilieral family is at outs. John Oliver,\nthe famous, has announced himself as\n\u2022t a candidate, without waiting ft v a\nconvention, and lie has given it out\nthat ho wants none of Joo Mini in.\nEx-Speaker Foster will also be a candidate. The Tories will likely nominate W. H. Ladner, who lias u dead\neasy game to win.\nSilver this week touched the highest\nprice it has readied iu n year, and a\nniiieli blighter complexion has bona\nput on things in the Slocan in consequence. Thore is an opinion obtaining among mineownors that the white\nmetal will ascend to (if) cunts, and\nthore become a permanent fixture.\nShould it do so, the Klondike will uot\nlie in it with the Sloean.\nBohold tho love of these Grits one\nfor the other. At Eliurue, the other\nnight, Jot* Martin made a speech and\nreplied to the strictures passed on him\nby Smith Curtis. Joseph accused\nCurtis of accepting passes from railways while openly condemning the\npractice in others. Hn concluded his\nremarks thusly: \"A man who offers to\nthe public such a silly argument as\ndoes Smith Curtis, is only lit for a\nlunatic asylum.\"\nIt has been officially announced the\nprovincial elections will take place on\nOctober 81, with the nominations on\nthe loth. That givus three long\nmonths in which to enlighten the\npeople as to tho pros and cons of\nmodern politick', witli tho certainty\nthat the Conservative cause will not\nbe a loser thereby. It is quite likely\nAugust 15 will be the date si\u00bbt for\nholding the Toify nominations throughout the province, and by that time\nmost of tho Grits will have be8H se\nlooted, as well as the Independents.\nTho political pot will br boiling merrily, therefore, in another three ws96ks.\nThore have been great doings nnd\nrejoicings iu Manitoba this woek\namong the Conservatives, by reason\nof the general elections held tbere on\nMonday, the result of which was ,'HI\nTories returned as against s Lilierals.\nTo the latter thu blow is trebly hard,\nbecause of their loud boastings of victory, because of the effect of that victory on tin*' forthcoming elections in\nBritish Columbia, and because of the\neffect of that victory also in determining the result of the contemplated\nfederal elections. And fortkese three\nprecis** reasons the Conservatives arc\nrejoicing. What Manitoba did on\nJuly 20, British Columbia will em-\npliasizo oa October 31.\nBy nominating John L, Retallack\nOB Tuesday, to contest the Kaslo riding against Hon. Robt. (ircrn, minister of mines, the Liberals have practically made a free gift of the election\nto the Conservatives. John's one\n\u2022junlificatiou for nomination was his\nDRILL POINTS.\nWiulaw wants a teacker for its pub\nlie school.\nJohn Craig lian moved from Skag\nway to Discovery, B.C,\nMiss M. McGregor has gono to Vic\ntoria, to further her education,\nThero is abetter feeling in tin* country and business is improving.\nKossland niiuos are shipping upwards of 1(100 tons of ore a dav.\nMrs. Crowe took charge of the Arlington dining room on Monday.\nMrs. IL sT.MoPhee nud son returned\nto their home iu Spokaueon Friday.\nStuart Henderson is tho Grit nominee In Yale and P. Herman in Skcfna.\nHarry Matheson is publishing the\nBlail'USOre Times, Frank being off the\nmap.\nD. St. Denis and family moved into\ntown tliis week from the head of the\nlake.\nJudge Forin granted naturalization\npapers to 27 aliens in Nelson this\nweek.\nTwenty-eight aliens were naturalized\nin Kaslo last week, many of them lieing Chinese.\nSloean ore shipments are slowly\nclimbing, being now a little in excess\nof 7100 tons.\nThe chief occupation thew days i.i\ncentred around keeping cool, by bathing in tho lake.\nMeLo.au Si Wallace have commenced\nthe erection of the new Clever block\nat New Denver.\nOperations havo been resumed at\nthe Last Chance, after being closed\ndown for u year.\nReturning Officer Henderson yesterday received his writ of election fer\nthe Slocau riding.\nJ. R, Brown, a lawyer, has been\nnominated by the Liberals ia the\nQronnwood riding.\nNew buukhotues are being erected\nnt the Molly Gibson and operations\nresumed at the mine.\nTho Labor men of Nakusp will send\ntwo men to the party convention at\nNew Denver ou Aug. 1.\nJames Baker organized a new miners' union at Camborne last week.with\na flourishing membership.\nThe Liberals of the Slocan riding\nwill hold their nominating convention\nat New Denver on the 28th.\nW. J. Suodgrass will make the run\nin the Similkameen riding for the Liberals against L. W. Shatford.\nThose desirous of getting on the\nvoters' list can have their wants sup\nplied by calling at this office.\nBoundary ore shipments last week\nwere in excess of 15,000 tons, making\nover 800,000 tons for the year.\nVancouver won the big lacrosse\nmatch from New Westminster last\nSaturday, by a score of 7 to 5.\nHarry Wright, mining recorder at\nKelson, is spoken of as the Conservative candidate iu tho Ymir riding.\nThe government has enlarged the\npowen. of collectors of votes, so that\nthey may take votes ia any constituency.\nFor tho week ending Julv 14 the C.\nP.R. traffic returns were $822,000. For\ntho s une week last vein* thev wero\n55628,000.\nG, B, Atkinson, at one time accountant at the Enterprise, has gone to\nSiberia to work for the Siberia Goldflelds, ltd.\n0. Zontagh, late manager of the Le\nRoi smelter nt Northport, committed\nsuicide in Spokane Tuesday by shooting himself.\nThe Conservatives have had a gorge nis banner put up over their oSm*\nmittee room, quite eclipsing that oi\ntheir oppon nta.\nGeorge Ager received a cable from\nhis wife in England, Tuesday, conveying ths aid intelligence of the\ndeath of his young son.\n.1. A. Anderson left Thursday on a\nte i days' vuit to the prairie country.\nDr. Ktiith i.s looking after the drug\nstore during Iiis absence.\nMonday's train was five hours late,\neoised by the blockade of rock from\na big blast on tho railway near Nol\nsn, the blast taking place on Suncuv'.\nR. I. Bentley having declined the\nposition of chief of police, tho eotn-\nmissionors met Wednesday and appointed John Pinchbeck tothe vacant\nposition.\nBy an explosion of firedamp in\nDunamuir's coal mino ut Cumberland\nlast week, 12 Chinese wero killed and\n8 seriously iiijtued.tliree of whom subsequently died.\nThe Conservative committee rooms\nare in tho Music Hall block and are\nopen every night. All tho leading\npapers are to be found there and the\npublic are cordially invited.\nWm. Hunter, of Silverton, was here\non Monday for it short time. He is\ngirding himself ui> for tho coming\npolitical fight, in which he predicts a\nvictory for the Conservatives.\nGeorge Henderson,of this place'.bas\nbeen appointed returning officer for\nthe Sloean riding in the approaching\nelections. Ths appointment is a poplar one, as he is known to everyone in\nthe country.\nWord was received in the city this\nweek that Thos. Chew aud Jas. TinT\nhopc, of the Ontario-Slocan Lumber\nCo., would start from Orillia for this\nplace iu a few days, with the object of\nresuming operations at tho shingle\nmill.\nBy an advertisement in this issue it\nwill be seen that a meeting of the\nLabor party will be hold in the Union\nHall on tlio .'list. Full instructions\nwill then be given the delegates attending the convention at New Denver\nthe next day.\nThe delegates to the Liberal convention at Kaslo Tuesday were: T. L.\nFor Sale, Cheap.\n\\ PARTY, being dotlroui of leaving tliis locality, offor* tor sale, at a vi'i-y low price\nfor call]. Iiis property, consisting of n one anil\noni'-linlf story alwellins; nnil lot in Brandon, and\nnn iniprnrB'il lot,00x208 feel, in Slocan, Botli\nproperties are in (Irst-classcondition,bolugwell\nfenced, nn'l tbe laits planted in orchard nn.l\nsmall fruits. Kor farther particulars apply to:\nKiiifuan, Robert Madden, J. Currie,\nTrout Luke; Robert Hodge, John Q.\nMcKinnon. A. F.-Rankin, Ferguson;\nM. J. Halpin, Whitewater; H. Gio-\ngerich, Ainsworth; E. Latham, D. C.\nMcGregor, -lohn Keen, Dave Kant\\W.\nBradshaw and A. Jardine.\nmining RKconns.\nAppended is a complete list of the var-\niout records registered atthe local registry office, H. P. Christis being niininjj\nreco i'(ier;\nLOCATION-.\nJuly 16\u2014Bell fr, on Erin mountain, W\nII Davidson,\nIda (r, adjoining ths Bondholder, w s,\nWordtn.\n18\u2014Eclipse, on Fulls crock, F Benson.\nFloat (r, oh let 11 i Lemon, W llinch-\nKilo N\u00bb 2, Springer creek. W Harris.\nSuperior fr, satno, J l> Kciil.\nRamhlsr, Baino, A M Rc-gete.\nBlue Bird, on 1st n ( Cednr creak, Jos\nDearin,\nAS.1KSS.MI.NTS.\nJuly ll)-Silver Lotlc, Troy You.\n13\u2014Madonna, Kathleen, Col. Rellarp,\nOroonwood, Deadwood, Valhalla, Piccadilly..\n_8_Stockton, Sun alose, Knimcit, Lou*\nvrs, Own Ros, Emmetl fr, Snnt'wlJ and\nTexas, all (or two yeaia; K B.\nIT\u2014Ails, Montoai.\n18\u2014TJ and 1. Three tiiisrdsinen.\nSlater Shoe Advertising\nArt in Shoe Making\nShort talks by the Slater Shoe ad man, No. 7-\nSlocan Branch\nOP THE*\nill\nN'OTK'I* i, lisraby Riven tlmt n insisting of\ntlis. nlaaivs. iBr_.,'ini\/.'itin\" will In lisilil in thn\nMin.-...' Union Hull, on Friday droning, July\nai. fair lIts. pur| ii-i* of Instructing Una ileiogntnn\nto bIio Party convention nt New Doivor the\nt.illowlng slny, aiitl fa,r the Iran action !i\nasl.hnr btntttmtts na mny come before tin* i\natll mpporters of the cfttise sta ronupni**-! \u2022\nni.'a I,..\nIt. A. BRADSHAW\nCONSERVATIVE PLATFORM\n1 Adopted at Revclstoko. .September 13th. 101 2. |\n!. That Litis convention roafflrnm tho -pollc?\n>\u00ab brought about as a\n.urst step in tho acquisition of public utilities*-\n5. That a portion of every coal arcs hereafter\nto be disposed ot should In* reserved from sale\nor leas.1, so that state owned mini-s may be easily accessible, if thoir oporatiou becomes necessary or advlsablOa\nG. That In the pulp land leases provision\nshould be ma-lc for refofestln,g and thai steps\nshould he taken fnr tlm general preservation of\nforests by guarding Qgalnst the wasteful destruction of timber.\n7. That the legislature and .government of the\nprovince should porsevore in tho effort to secure\nilie exclusion of Asia, ic labor.\n*\u2022. That the matter of hotter t\u00bbniis in the way\nof subsidy and appropriations for the province\nshould ho vigorously pressed upon tho Dominion\ngovernment*\n... That tho silver-lead Industries of tho province ho fostered and encouraged W\/ the Impo*\nfition of Increased customs duties on lend and\nlead products Imported into Canada. And tlut\nthe Conservative members <\u00bbf the Dominion\nBouse be urged to support any motion introduced fur such a purposo.\n10. That as ludusl rial disputes nlmost invariably result Ln groat loss and injury both to tho\nparties directly concornod and to the public\nlegislation sliould be passed to provide means\nfor au amicable adjustment of such disputes between employers and employ\/oes<\nit. That it is advisable to foster tho manufacture of the raw products of the province\nI within the province as far as practicable by\nmoans of taxation on tii\" said raw nroducts,\nsubject to rebate of the samr Is whole or part\nwhen manufactured In British Columbia.\nConservative Conventions.\nAl \u00ab iiiiBfl-'ing \"f the oxocutlvO nf tin' I'roi'iu-\nctnl ( tuiNflA-rvnti-a- Association, hcltl nt Vancou*\n\\ ST. lilt* linatiliri; WHS alis ia|a>,| into li va> llis i-.il ill-a\nfair organisation purpose*. Tlio gootcnay-\nBoundnry tlWUlon Ii tnsde up of ilu* following\npraivinrinl aloctlon dlstrictm Revelitoke, t'ol-\nimiliia. Pernio. Crttobronk, Ymir, Ka*lo, BiBDcaii,\nQrand Forks, Oroonwood. tha City of RossTfind,\nnnd the City of Nelson. At the tam* moating\nthe followinii roaolutfoDs were adopted!\ni. That conventions f\u00abar nominating cansli\ndatos for members of the loglalatlv* ns**nibly\nl ade up of delegates chosen 111 follow*:\nTai Ln tslty olactoral dlstrlctSa .\u2022.,\u00ab. delegate\nfor every fifty and fraction i.f flftj rsstes pollml\nnt tin' provlnolnl olectlon Iwll In ItWO.iinil if thn\n<-it>\u25a0 is divided inlii wards, ilu* proportion of\ndelegates for each ward slmll beonsadon thc\nvote pollod iu oaeh wnrsl nt the last munlelpal\nI'li'a-lliill.\nalii In other olectornl districts, ono detegnto\nfor every ftftyior fraction of fifty votes imlleil nt\ntho provlnclnl olectlon hold In 1000, tho dole-\ngates tn In* apporl iiir.i* I taa polling places, nr as\nns-.'ir ilii.'Ttn n, will be fair to tli\" voters \"f tlio\ndifTerent neighborhoods.\n2, Tin* elect inn aaf delegates shall bo at pnb-\nlip meetings. 1 i.*l*l nt n designated coutrnl plnr-..\nin each imlliiur Alisi.iaaii. ot- in onch wnrd In city\nelectoral districts, if the city ii divided Into\nwards, At sucli publia mooting* only thoso who\niii,- li_i. thomselvos to vote f..r ilia- cnnclldato or\ncan ti-lati's selected nt the nominal Ing convon*\nliian sliall bo entltlod tun vote tor delegates.\n;i. Two woeka iiiiiiaa. shall bo gtvonof the\npnblic meetings nl which tlolegntos uro to lie\neloctt'd, an I uoininntiiif* convention shnij '\"\u25a0\nhi*|.| in i-it.a olectornl districts two tlnys after\nthe dny nn which delegates aro elected, nntl In\nothoroleetornl districts seven dnysnfter. All\nnominations thrnuglianl tin provlni to bo\nssisi'l.- ni o .I 'slguntoil central pines* in each i 1\"a'\ntiiriil ,li*iriA t. ntul on thn snm* day.\nI. All until\" - .if the date of piiblirmcotlnsis\nfor tho olectlon of delogates i \u2022 > uomlnnting con*\ns'lAiitinns, tho apportionment of doh nates, an,l\ntho place and data sif Dominating coiiTpntions\nin i Im sa.M.ral electoral district*shall hn prepared by tho momber of tho exeoutivoof thealvi.\n-ii.ii iii vsliii-li tin' ntoetoral districts nrn \u2022 i\u25a0 nm\u25a0..\nami Issued ovor the'names of tho president nnil\n\u25a0secretary aaf the Provincial Conisrvallve \\,s,,\nI'liiuii.\nAlex. Rogers,\nTonsorial Artist.\nThe Loading Parlorsi\nMAIN STREET, SLOCAN\nTimber Notice.\nNOTiCK Is lioreby give* thai .\"'i days aftor\n.ial\" I inli*iiil In apply tn tlie Hon, tlir\nChief CommlKslonar of Lauds i Works at Victoria, faT a spi't-ial llconso, to cut nnil i-nrry\naway timber from the following desoribea\nL'ommonclngat n postmarked \"BurtChow'*\nsoutheait cornar post,\" situated one milsi from\ntlie wost ^Iinri' nf slm-nii lake, am Alt,*;. McKay's\nwest liniiiialiiry Hue; thencs west 80 chains:\nthonce smith 20 chains | iIihih-ia wost SO chains;\nthenco south 20 chains: thenca ws-st 20 chain* j\ntlience nortli HO chain*; thenco i-nst 100 chains!\nthenco north 20 chains; thouco ea*t 20 chain*i\nthene* smiili no chnln*. to tho placo ssf com-\nniiaia \u25a0an,.nt. containing BIO nore*.\nDatotl this liith day nf June, 1WJ3.\nBERTCHEW\n5AVE MONEY\n^JOINING the\nMUTUAL LITERARY MU5ICCLUB\nV',:; :^0>.Al*lElljtA *,.\u25a0\ns)C Cs'tits pays for tbrco nionths' mcmberahlp.\nLo Kaich ms'nilaer rrccivos tlieolTicialclnbor*aa\nf very inontli.iucliidinfiCiiiocrsof tiitlb-clssaavocsil\nand iustrumeDtal iu-'v uiu.io each muntli. 18\nI a ,','fi in all: also a LVrtincato of Memlicrahlp\nsshich gives tho tarivila-go of L'lub Koaim lis Now\nYork I'ity. ssml of buying literal uro, umaic or mo-\naical instniTncntH of huv (!.^,Tii,l,,,n at wholoasle\npricra, niivinst ton from 'J0.V to 6Sl*< on yooT pur-\nchaaob. Don't fail to jninfttaanco.Yaau will get much\nmoro thun your inoney'aworth. MiiTUAi. Lirr.a-\nabv-Mlbic i.'luu, Dept, , ISO Nisaasu Ht., N.Y-\nMere wear in a shoe is comparatively\neasy\u2014plowman's hobnailed brogans to wit.\nFoot comfortu as exemplified in your\neasy going house slippers, does not imply\neither beauty, shape retention or street-wear\ndurability.\nYet wear in a brogan and comfort in\na slipper are secured by a modicum of shoe\nmaking skilL\nBut to produce a shoe of wear, oi\ncomfort, of beauty and then to challenge\npublic criticism under the limelight rays of\nadvertising requires art, shoe making art\u2014\nnot the art which hides by cleverly concealing defects but the art which assembles in\nthc shoe -ill the elements of wear, of foot\ncomfort, of shape retention and shoe beauty.\n' iSuch shoe art the M Slater Shoe\"'1\nmakers are compelled, by advertising, to\nimpart to the \" Slater Shoe.\"\nThat's why the man or woman who\nbuys and wears a \"Slater Shoe \"is assured\nc! all he or she has right to expect in a high-\ngrade shoe bearing upon it the stamp of the\nmaker's responsibility as does\nThe Slater Shoe\nflMai'e in Canada 40 years. Goodyear Welted.\nFor men $4.00 and $5.50.\nFor women $3.50 and $5.00.\nSole Agent:\nDavid Arnot, Slocan.\nAs an advertising modium\nThe Drill is Unexcelled\n| Slocan I\nI Bakery^ |\n1 J. Pinchbeck, Proprietor |\nt .I\nI Fresh Fruits of Every |!\n| Kind Arriving Daily. I\n1 I\nJ Our Ico Cream Parlor ii \u2022\njg now opea and will be kopt t\n# running nil tin1 Summer.\ns\nfM l.A'in\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u00bb uf ila caial for *il .\n1 aa!l Wright ansl S'iii. 11 *.,\nIssam-unlrtsfll.\nSlocan, B. C. 1\n^es3t^sMt^^st)S^F\nSteel Ranges\nfor $18.25.\nWhy ha without a i-ftM-re when\nyou cun get one so t*lif*;i|s ? Tlir\\\narc preferrable toitovcaand giv\u00ab\nbetter i-.nti-*i*;iet.ion. TIipso rnng\u00ab8\nburn wood or coal and will be\nset 11 j* free.\nNotice to Delinquent Co-owner\nTo J. F. Armitronf,tilminlitratorol Uir\nuiitits ul Martin Murcliiion, detMNd,\nor to any person or person) lo whom\nlie mny 1 iiivc tiansfeiii'il lh* itltO**MI\nnl Maiiin Minrliison, Smoillllilig li> '^\nin each of ilii\" Nansen, Frnm and Burden minoral clii'uns, Fitunteil on tin*\nlioud of Lemon creek,Slocan City mining division.\nYou aro hereby notified that 1 have\nexpended tin* cum of threo hundred and\nseven dollars and fifty cents in labor and\nimprovements upon ilie abovo men i( tliis notice you fail oi\nrefuse tn contribute your proportion ol\nH'.ifli expenditure, together with all i'bbsIi-\naa( advertising, ymir interest in the saiil\nclaims will become the property oi ih*-\nsubscriber, nnder section four ot nn Asm\nen tit let 1 \"An Actio amend the Mineral\nAct, 1900,\"\ntinted thin Mi slav of June, 1003,\n12-0-0H M.E. YOUNG\nSubscribe\nGwiilim & Johnson,\nMIXING ENGINEER8\nAND ASSAYERS.\nSlocan,\nll.C\nOf\nli-ri-\nrt\nsrin-\n.1. lv f-i. i NNErt, Chairman\nW. Jl. DAV1DHON, Secruusi:.'1\nA meotlniat of Uin provincial oxncutlris will Im\nliolsl ni Vnnconvnr tvltliln a monlli.Bndtlii i\nfor Iml lli ii diitricl noinlnntliiH r-otivs'ti I\n, uuserTBtiva \/isiooi\t\nNolson, .J.ma. otls, l(K '\u25a0;.\nI. J.\nTINSMITH AND PLUMBER.\nJ. A. Anderson\nDealer in:\nDRUGS\nMEDICINES\nCHEHICALS\nPERFUHES\nTOILET GOODS\nFANCY GOODS\nKodaks antl Supplies\nfor\nThe\nSLOGAN\nB.C I\nSlocan\nDrill,\n$2.00\ntn\/px\n-i_js- 'tirxx\nTsassssssucU. Fsalla Vlsssv V>.. S.tai Tamarack No. S Kssactlon Hln*r\u00bblClsl\u00ab>\nSituate In the Slocan City rninini*\nsion ol West K-wtenay district \u00bbl\u00bb\nlocated:\u2014About four miles upSp'\nger creek,\nTAKK NUTKT lhat 1. \u2022' I';*\"'\nderson, l\u00bb.L.8\u201e of Trail, n.i'.. sgsiil _\n.1 no F.IioWen.free miner's certincaisse\nUU4709, intend, sixtv days from lhs\u00abJ\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Hr*\u00abe\u00bb\nI'm certificates ol Improvi-meii's, \u00bbrwj\npurpose ssf obtaining crown \u2022\"rsiiU011\nabove claims. ,\u2022..\nAnd further lake notiro tn.\" ;u,'.'_i\nunder *>--.--,-ti*\u00bbis 37, must l\u00ab\" \"\"l!n\"'','' \u2022\nbeforo tlio Issuance of sucli ccrtmiMw\nImnrovemcnts.\nRatotl tliis 8rd day of Jmie.lW.\n\u2022.'fi-ii-o:!\nParle Mines-ill l Isslsss.\nSituate in the8iocan City MlDiniPg\n\u25a0ion oi the Went Kootensy I \u00ab\"\u00bb\nWhere located: Nenr the Arlin|W\nbasin on north lido ol gpringsrcivT\nTako notice thst I, !\"\u2022\u00bb 1I,J,;\nacting sn nn agent for > \u00bb. d\nfire miner's certificate No T'i **V ,'i-nS\nsixty days from tliedate hereof, w-ww\ntothe Mining Kero.tler f\u00bbr s rertin\u00bb\nof Improtementi, for the i,l,ri,\",,0|'1)0r_\ntaining a crown giant '\"' \"',\ns'laini- . a., actios,\nAn.l further tnke notics Wtt^J\nunder section .17, must be wjgj-j\nbefore the Issuance ol mdi csriinw\nImprovements. . , ,nni\nbated this llth day cf July. m,0\n17-7-03 PANIIA-\nIlKsiiptoii, Ktli.l\"k.ia.1 \u00bb'\"\"< \"nS\ntloisail Mlns-ssal rinl\"\"'\nSitunte in the Slocan City Mii\"',nLrict.\nlion of the Went Koo en\u00ab M ' ^\nWhero located :-< In 8P\u00bbP\u00ab*rn Otf,\nabout eight miles from Biocse ^\nTAKE NOTICE that.^'\"L_\\m\\im\nRellly, of the city of Neion, w\"^.,.,._,\u201e\nN.r.M,-.Na..ght,rr,'.'^l>->7.tf'r;)l,,il',.\nNo. B64887. intend, sixty \"\u2022*\",. ill(,lle\nB.... s.- I s\u201e .,\u201e\u201eli. Ill tllO a'1\"\"\", hi\nttf\nale hereof, to apply tpthl,\neorder lorcertlflcoUso ;n'~ttttf>\nthe purpose ol obtaining * \"\u2022\u2022,l\nof tho aiiove claims.\nAnd further take notIC\" \t\nunder section 87, must \u00bb' ;iXifloat*****\"\nbefore thelisuanoo ol b\"*:\" ll\n; Improvomenti . , siisj:). ^\nHated this I lib slay i)[_JuJ}Wtt_SlU<\u00bb\n184-7*08 l.'HANCl\u00bbJ',M^\nt.for\ntlmt \u00abcti\u00abJj\ncm**!!}","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":"Slocan (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."},{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Slocan","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":"The_Slocan_Drill_1903_07_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\/1.0220965","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":"49.767778","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":"-117.466111","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"}],"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":"Slocan, B.C. : C.E. Smitheringale","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."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1903-07-24 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":"1903-07-24 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 Slocan Drill","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":""}]}