{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"f482abc9-9ce0-4d43-9c8b-11f38140da07","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers Collection","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2012-12-18","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1900-10-18","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"Description":[{"label":"Description","value":"The Tribune was published in Nelson, in the Central Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, and ran from November 1892 to November 1905. The Tribune was published and edited by John Houston, an outspoken journalist who would later embark on a successful political career, which included four terms as the mayor of Nelson and two terms in the provincial legislature. Houston had established the Miner in Nelson in 1890, and, after leaving the Miner in the summer of 1892, he established the Tribune to compete with his former paper. In August 1901, the title of the paper was changed to the Nelson Tribune.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:description"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An account of the resource.; Description may include but is not limited to: an abstract, a table of contents, a graphical representation, or a free-text account of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xtribune\/items\/1.0188244\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","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":"Full Text","value":" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0yt. \":\u25a0&. ?;Es\u00ab?^SS*S%*i?)al\n--,--\u25a0 y.^',y':.y-yy_yit^r^mt\n!%W\"f0._\nDAILY EDITION   BV MAIL\nFIVE  DOLLARS A YEAR\nmt\nWEEKLY EDITION BY MAIL\nTWO DOLLARS A YEAR\nEIGHTH YEAE.\nKELSON:   THURSDAY MORNING OCTOBER 18  1900\nPRICE FIVE CENTS\n- >i\nRETURN OF A KOOTENAY PIONEER\nWilliam Alperson, Representing the Richmond Company,\nVisits Nelson After a Long Absence.\nHIS FIRST VENTURE WAS IN THE AINSWORTH DISTRICT\nAVilliam Alperson, one of the pioneer mining operators ol' Kootenay,\nis iu Nelson renewing old acquaintances .- and  incidentally looking \"up\ntlio interests of the Richmond Mining   Company   of   New   York,   of\nwliich  he is vice president.    \"Bill,\"\nas he was familiarly called  by all\nthe'-old-timers yesterday, has covered a good deal of the globe since\nhis  last visit  to Nelson.    Ho came\n\u25a0to  Kootenay in 1S89, when  Nelson\nwas   playing  second fiddle to the\nold town of Ainsworth, and acting\nwith Steve Bailey, whose' \"name is\ninseparably   associated   with    the\nPayne   mine   in   the  Slocan, \u25a0purchased  tho Dollie   property in   the\nAinsworth cam p.    The vendors  of\nthe Dfillie used  to tell  Iioav Alperson   did   them   up   on- the Dellie\ndeal, but   Bill   and    his   partners\nhave   not   yet   realized  anything.\nThey spent   about   $25,000 on the\nproperty, which is now owned by\nan incorporated company, and  expect some day to get all their money\nback.      Another    property   whicli\nAlperson   purchased  in   the Ainsworth   camp was , the Jeff Davis.\nThis he purchased upon the day the\nclaim was located, and afterwards\nspent $7000 in development. Saving\nthe returns  upon  a carload  shipment of Jeff Davis ore, none of the\nexpenditure upon this  venture has\nreturned, but Alperson is confident\nthat it-is .-only a  matter * of time,\nlie regards the Jeff Davis as  the\ngreatest-property of the Ainsworth.\noanfyyarid'iscoiifident that his pre'-r\ndiction will-be realized.\nMr. Alperson-has had his ups.and\ndowns-like?most mining men, but is\nnow-on easy street, and spent\n$14,00.Q_some two years ago. in seeing what the people on the Euro-'\npean continent looked like.    Since\n\"his... return, he has carried on a\nmining broker's business in New\n\\*\"orky\\where he is now located.\nHere the Richmond Mining Company was\\formed, in which some\nvery wealthy eastern men are interested, anil in which Bill was\nnamed as vice-president. The company hit upon the Windermere district of East Ko'otenay as the most\npromising district to prospect, and\nits efforts in this direction have\nbeen eminently successful. It is\nMr. Al person's aim\" to build the\nRichmond Company up.into a rival\nof tbe Anaconda'. Copper Cohipanjv\n-and-in-view-of\u2014his-company-9--suc=\ncess in the \"Windermere district his\ndream is-in a fair way of realization. He lias just returned from\nEast Kootenay, and the story of\nsuccess which he tells is sufficient\nfoundation upon which to build almost any hope in the mining world.\nAmong the properties which his\ncompany now control are tho Morning Glory group of two claims, located on Toby creek about 22 miles\nfrom the Columbia river. The vein\non this property as shown up for\n200 feet is about 10 feet wide and\nassays 19 per cent in copper, $5 in\ngold and H) ounces silver, One mile\nnearer the Columbia on the same\ncreek is the Monarch and Majestic\nproperty. Upon this the vein has\nbeen stripped for 1500 feet, with\ncuts 12 feet deep. This work has\ndisclosed a vein 10 feet wide from\nwhich assays have been' secured\nshowing 7 per cent copper and 32\nounces silver.\nThe Silver Pass and Silver Peak\nproperties, however, aro what Alperson regards as the most valuable\nof i his company's holdings. These\n.properties are located on McDonald creek, about 35 miles from the\nColumbia river. It is a silver-lead\nproperty, upon which development\nhas disclosed a ledge carrying 2h\nfeet of solid galena, assaying 71\nounces in silver and 20 per cent\nlead. Along the side of the galena\nis also a six-foot body of decomposed quartz carrying good lead\nvalues. This vein has been developed to a depth of 14 feet, and\ntraced for 400 feet. It is an adjoining claim to the Iron Cap and Red\nLine, now being developed by Col-\nlett and Starbird, upon which some\n15 men are employed.   Thie so far\nis regarded as the biggest thing in\n\"Windermere, but it has no advantage over .the Silver Pass and Silver\nPeak. The Richmond Company\nowns one-half of these properties,\nand for the remaining half Alperson last week offered $8000 in cash\nand $200,000 \"in stock, biit the offer\nwas refused.\nAmong the other properties secured by the company are the\nMoonlight and Daylight on No. 1\ncreek, some 22 miles from the Columbia river. They have been developed to a depth of 40 feet. The\nvein upon them is 4Jt feet wide and\ngives assays of from $10.00 to\n$19 gold, with 17 ounces silver and\na uniform assay of 7 per cent, copper.. The Pasco is another property which has been secured by\nthe Richmond Company. It is located some 000 . feet , above the\nMorning Glory aud has a'-.S} foot\nvein which has been developed to a\ndepth of 19 feet. It carries pyrites\nof copper, samples of which show 9\nper cent, copper, $9 gold and 8\nounces silver. The ledge has been\nopened for the full length of the\nclaim.\nSpeaking generally of the \"Windermere district, Mr. Alperson says\nthat from the tshowings his company has it is destined to be a very\nbusy mining center.   The showings\n|'on his company's holdings are sufficient to warrant this, and what his\ncompany holds is but a very small\nfraction   of   the  holding of   individual miners.   What is necessary,\nhowever, to secure the development\nof   the   district   is to secure   the\n-transfer of the,properties..from the\npresent holders wlio are unable to\nwork them to companies who can.\nThe Deal Closed.\n< An * announcement - was .. made\nyesterday that the Fletcher gronp\nat Whitewater had been taken up\nby the syndicate recently formed\nby Charles Plowman in England. A\nsubstantial payment was made at\nKaslo yesterday, thereby closing\nthe deal. The bonding of the\nFletcher group was one of the most\nrapid mining transactions on record.\nFrom the time that the documents\nwere signed at Kaslo to the date of\nthe first payment only 21 days\nelapsed, Mr .\"Plowman.\" crossing the\nAtlantic in the meantime and forming his syndicate. This is an indication that the confidence of\nEnglish capitalists in British Columbia's mineral properties - is unimpaired. The deal was made on the\nnJalisT*>f^$30;000-cash.\nThe group comprises five claims\nabout one mile from the Whitewater mine and a mile and a half\nfrom the Kaslo & Slocan railroad.\nA splendid trail leads into the\ncamp aiul a comfortable cabin,\nlarge enough to accommodate a\nsmall crew, is on the ground. The\nore is free milling. There is a fine\nshowing, the ore ranging from\neighteen inches to three feet in\nwidth and stripped for 700 feet.\nA number of assays have been\nhad, in all cases high gold values\nhaving been obtained. An average\nassay from the property is about\n$50; while assays have been had as\nhigh as $127. New buildings are\nbeing erected and it is the1 inteu-\ntion of the new owners to proceed with development on a comprehensive scale. The work to\ndate has given satisfactory results.\nA tunnel has been driven on the\nvein exposing a solid body of ore\ntwo feet in width, from which a\nseries of assays gave an average of\n$05 in gold. Jt i.s proposed to drift\non the lead for 500 feet when a\ndepth?uf 390,feet will be secured.\nThe Fletcher group cannot, be excelled for ease of access and experts\nhave given the opinion that it is\nlikely to become a large producer,\nand in view of the program outlined by the syndicate this will\nprobably be achieved at an early\ndate.\t\nBonded Lardeau Property.\nThe Imperial Development Syndicate of Nelson closed a deal yesterday for a bond on a promising\nLardeau property. The syndicate\nacquires the group including the\nHighland Mary, Eva, Last Chance\nand Iron Dollar claims on Lexington . mountain at the junction of\nPoole and Fish creeks. The property is free-milling, carrying free\ngold and has several paystreaks\nfrom which assays ranging .into\nhundreds of dollars have been obtained. As a whole the group is\nmedium grade free-milling, but the\nunusually large ore bodies give it\nexceptional merit. The lead is from-\nsix to fifty feet in width with values distributed throughout. The\nbond is drawn on a cash basis, a\nsubstantial price being paid by the\nsyndicate. Some work has been\ndone on the group, arid it is the intention of the company to put on a\ncrew of men at once. A. H. Gracey\nand several directors left for Lardeau last night to go over the\nproperty. ','\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 <\nMINING  STOCK QUOTATIONS.\nThe following were the quotations of British Columbia mining\nstocks on the Toronto Stock- Exchange yesterday:\nSTOOK.\nAsked,\nBid.\n.? 6 05\n? 5 5'J\n..         3]\n3\n2*\nU\n12\n10\n;i\n1\n.>\nCanadian Goldfields Syndicate*..\n8'\n7(1\nGO\n.     1 io\n1 10\n.      1  13\n1 25\n.     43 DO\n40 00\n8\n3i\n'-'i\n7\n4\n3\n_\nIJ\n1\n-     3\ni'i\n23\n3-'\n2.-,\nH\n5\n0\n.\nIn\ni'i\nLone Pine-Surprise Consolidated.\nU\n- (i '\n\u25a0>'.\n1\n3\n2\n12\n85\n10\n8\n4\n2\n50\n35\nC\n3\n(i\n&j\nS\n92\n3\n2\n70\nSO\n1!)\n11\"\n!)0f\n91\n4\n<>\nHumbler-Cariboo Consolidated...\nOgl\n27\nTo}\n\u25a0ai\n11\n7\n45\n35\nWar Eagle Consolidated      1 lo      1 07\nWaterloo  3* 2f\nWhite Bear......        34-        3\nWinnipeg  i '.',\nSales-Deer Trail 5000 at3. Golden Star 1000 '\u25a0nt,\na, 500 atli, Hammond Reef 500 at 2:1, 5500 at2\"}, 500\ntit.,, War Eafjle 590, 500 at $1.02  .   '   ..\nTHE CHALLENGE ACCEPTED\nNEW YORK CLUB SATISFIED WITH\nTHE CONDITIONS.\nRace to Take Place in. August,   1901.\n\u2014Lipton's New Yacht Called\nShamrock II.\nNew York, October. 17.\u2014Sir\nThomas Lipton's challenge for the\nAmerica cup was accepted by the\nNew York Yacht Club today, a\ncommittee was empowered to arrange the terms . of the proposed\n=mateh=and=make any=arrangements'\nas to dates, courses, number of\ntrials, rules and sailing regulations\nand any and all conditions of the\nmatch, the same to be sailed under\nthe direction of the \"regatta committee, pursuant to the constitution. The Lipton challenge names\nTuesday, Aug. 20 th, Thursday,\nAug. 22nd, and Saturday, Aug.\n24th, 1901,as the days for the races;\nfurther races, if any, to be sailed\nupon the same days iii the following week.\nThe name of the challenging\nyacht is \"Shamrock If,\" cutter\nrigged, length on load water line\n89.5 feet.\nThe committee met later, and the\nfollowing cablegram was sent:\n\"Hugh G. Kelly, secretary Royal\nYacht Club, Belfast: Meeting of\ncommittee held. Your challenge\naccepted. Conditions same as they\nstood at the close of last year's\nrace, including private agreement as\nto accidents, and except as modified\nas to days of race by your challenge\nand extending limit of time of\nstart to 2 p.ni., suitable to change\nof mojaths.**- lgs this satisfactory?\n'^ \"\u2022\u2022(\u2022frmiE, secretary.\"\n<**h*t&i~,\u2014\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0'\"\u25a0'\"\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u2014:\u2014;\u2014 .\nLinaresTo'Reorganize the Array.   \u00bb\nMadrid, October 17.\u2014General\nLinares to whom the Premier,\nSenor Silva, has offered the portfolio of war, stipulates as a condition of acceptance that heshall have\nperfect freedom t6 introduce\nsweeping military reforms and\nto reorganize the entire army.\nHe also stipulates that his\nmethod of reaching those ends must\nrest solely with himself. Senor\nSilva, it is understood, has signi\nfied his acceptance, of the conditions, and the nomination of general Linares is therefore practically\nassured.    . ^_\nCut' the Record.\nChicago, October. 17. \u2014 Johnny\nNelson, tho middle distance bicycle\nchampion, cut 32 1-5 seconds off the\nworld's indoor motor paced record\nfor 15 miles at the Coliseum tonight\nin his match with- Fisher. Nelson\nwent the distance in 27 minutes,\n4 2-2 seconds and beat Fisher by\nover 9even laps.\nAnent' Buller's Recall.\nLondon, October J ti.\u2014Under re-,\nserve the'Daily Express published a\nreport that general sir Redvers\nBuller had been summoned from\nSouth Africa to suceee'cUord'Wolseley as commander-in-chief, - lord\nRoberts declining to accept the\nposition without a free hand.\nCANTON IN CRAVE DANCER\nFOLEY WAS COBDIALLY RECEIYBD\nHUI    CHOW   REPORTED    TAKEN\nLAST MONDAY.'\nResidents Assert if This News Be True\nthe Rebels Can Occupy the\nCity Within'a Week.\nHong Kong, October 17.\u2014Advices\nfrom Canton say it us reported there\nthat Sun Yat Sen, the reformer,\ncaptured Hui. Chow last Monday.\nThe Cantonese assert that if Hui\nChow, which resisted the insurgents\nin the Tai Ping .rebellion, falls, the\nrebels will be able' to take Canton\nwithin a week.  * .%\u25a0\nAdmiral Ho, -with the bulk of his\nforces, left Sam China this morning\nin pursuit of the rebels, leaving 250\ntroops to protect Sam Chun and\nsending 200 to* garrison' the mandarin station at Nao Tau.\nRussians Had No Easy Thing.\nSt. Petersbuucj, t.Ojptpber 17.\u2014.\nDetailed reportsto-the war office of-\nthe occupation of Mukden, Manchuria, show that the Russians met\nwith strong opposition at Schacho,\nwhere the Chinese with-thirty battalions, twenty field guns, Krupps\nand Maxims, occupied the railway\nembankment and heights. The\nfighting continued from 9 in the\nmorning until 1 in the afternoon.\nAfter artillery preparations, the\nwhole Russian column was thrown\nagainst the Chinese, who by eveniug were in full retreat. Next day\nthe Chinese made a stubborn stand\nin a strong position in the' mountains. The position was captured\nat noon, but the Russians were unable to pursue-tiie Chinese owing to\nextreme fatigue and: the difficult\nnature of the country. The ^Russians, in the course of the two days'\noperations, lost fifty killed and\nwounded.   Thej' captured  several\n.guns.=^     \u25a0        __=__^t_. \u2014L-~__\nSuffering From Beri Beri.\nFalmouth, England, October 17.\n\u2014The Norwegian bark Brilliant\nfrom .Newcastle, New Brunswick,\ntoday landed at this port with\neight seamen suffering from beri\nberi and the body of one man who\nhad died from the disease, all of\nwhom had been taken from the\nNorwegian bark Homewood, which\nwas spoken by the Brilliant on October 8th in aAvaterlogged condition\nin latitude 48 north and longitude\n25 west. Captain Potter and six of\nthe crew of the Homewood refused\nto leave the vessel. The Homewood\nwill proceed for Havre. The Norwegian bark Homewood is of 1020\ntons net. She was built at St.\nJohn, New. Brunswick, in 1874, and\nis owned by John Johnson of Cliris-\ntiauia. ' '\nImportant Capture.\nManila, October 17.\u2014Under cover\nof a stormy night captain Elliott\nof the Forty-ninth infantry surprised the rebels' headquarters near\nOroquita, island of Mindanao, and\ncaptured without fighting general\nAlvarez with In\"!' staff '.Mid twenty-\nfive soldiers.     ;\nThe capture is important aud\nwill tend to pacify the district.\nAlvarez had for a long time been\nprovoking hostilities in Mindanao.\nIt was he who effected the disastrous attack on Oroquita some time\nago, and he was preparing for another wheu he was captured. Detachments of the Twenty-sixth and\nEighteenth regiments engaged the\nrebels near Tunbungan, in southern\nPanay, routing them, killing 20 and\nwounding many.\nThe Labor  Candidate Fills the Committee  Rooms and\nMakes a Spirited Address.\nWILL FIGHT ACAINST CHINESE AND PAUPER IMMIGRATION\n\"We must show the government\nof Canada that the laboring men of\nthis country will  no.t, tamely submit to surrender their birthright to\nthe Orientals   who   are swarming\nacross the Pacific ocean !\"  was the\nconcluding sentence of   candidate\nFoley's address at the Independent\nLabor party's rally last night, and\nthe words epitomize the sentiments\nwhich underlaid his  remarks from\nstart to finish.     The   erection   of\nlegislative barriers against Oriental\nand pauper immigration is evidently\nto be the slogan of Mr. Foley's campaign, and the idea found a hearty\nendorsation \"judging from the warm\napplause whicli greeted its elaboration.\nThe committee room was packed\nto the doors, and the gathering was\nenthusiastic. C. J. Clayton, president of the Trades and Labor\nCouncil, presided, and brief speeches\nwere made, by James Wilks and\nWalter R. Kee, secretary of the\ncampaign committee in Nelson.\nCandidate Foley was well received'and made a stirring speech.\nIn opening, he said he would endeavor to show why the Labor party\nhad entered the political arena.\nThey had crossed the rubicoh and\nburned their bridges behind. The\nlight was on in earnest, and he\nhoped every man would consider\nthe contest his personal struggle\nrather than that of any candidate.\nHe was an implicit believer in the\naxiom laid down by- the famous\nJefferson:; \"All men are born, free\nand equal,\" but Jefferson' did not\nrealize that in 135 or 140 years the\nwork of the revolutionary fathers\nwould be practically undone. Corporation greed was getting the\nupper hand in the United States,\nand in Canada we were\ndrifting along the same channel as\nthe Americans and would shortly\narrive in the same harbor. It was\ntherefore essential for labor to safeguard against such a result by taking independent political action.\nHe believed that as labor constituted an immense majority of the\nelectorate it should the conceded\nprotection against aliens. As citizens liable to be called out in event\nof war they should be guarded\nagainst the importation of the ignorant foreign element brought into the country with a view of reducing the Canadian workingman\nto the level of the   native   of   the\ncountries from whicli-\"they \u2014come.\nThe same reasoning applied to this\nas might be used against piling\npassengers into an open boat already filled to the water-mark. Labor organization could do nothing\nby boycott or strike in the face of\nconstantly arriving hordes of Chinamen, Japanese or foreigners from\nthe downtrodden European countries. The mechanical ingenuity of\nman had Avrought a revolution in\ntho last 50 years, but the advantage had accrued to the few and\nthese were using the power thus\nobtained for the damnable end of\nsecuring political supremacy by\nbribing or coercing governments.\nThe press had become the mouthpiece of monopolists, while the military strength of the country had\nbeen transferred to the industrial\naristocracy. The militia was utilized to tie the hands of labor while\nthe cannery princes robbed the\nworkingman.\nThe cry was raised that labor\nmust learn to respect the law aiid\nhe agreed with this, but held that\nthe law should be the same for all.\nIndustrial corporations coerced\ntheir employees forcing them to\nlive in company boarding houses,\ntrade at company stores, refrain\nfrom speaking what tliey thought\nin public and even forcing men to\nlie in the witness box lest they\nshould lose their, jobs. Despite this\ncoercion, the laboriug man was decried when he endeavored to retaliate. The authorities did little\nto discourage coercion on the part\nof corporations. Witness what\nhappened in the Sudbury nickel\nmines when the miners wished to '\nform a union as had been attempted\non several occasions.    Every time a\nminers' union represen tati ve entered\nSudbury   he was shadowed by a\ndetective   and   every   man  found\nspeaking to the delegate was discharged, blacklisted and turned on\nthe world with the mark of industrial  Cain  oh  his forehead.     The\n^government  should have put the\nsleuth hounds  of the  law on  the\ntrack of these industrial coercion-\nists, but they did nothing. When the\nlaboring   men. grew restive under\nthe injustice meted out to them and\nsought to retaliate the mailed hand\nof the warrior was stretched out\nand the  people were crushed beneath the  iron heel of militarism,\nor buried in a dungeon by the cold\nand unrelenting hand of the law.\nThe laboring men had begun to\nrealize that nothing was to be expected from the old political parties.   They had lots of sympathy\nand a wilderness of promises, but\nno practical relief.    The leaders of\nthe Conservative ' party had cut-\nlived their usefulness and had written across the -. path of   progress:\n\"No thoroughfare here.\"   To adapt\nIngersoll to the situation he would\nsay: \"Sir Charles * Tupper and his\ncolleagues are old, blind political\nowls occupying dead limbs on the-\ntree of   progress and hooting.the\nsame old hoots they had hooted for\nthirty-five years.   [Laughter.]   The\n-protective tariff, originally intended\nto benefit all classes,' had' worked to\nbuild up gigaptic monopolies, while\nan open door for cheap labor had\nforced-down the price.,of. labor as\nlow, if not lower, than would liave.\nbeen the case without a protective\n-tariff.\"- \/The Conservatives had built\nthe.C. P. R., but at what an awful\ncost?   Canada paid $110,000,000 iu\ncash and lands, and the country had\nnot a single spike from Vancouver to\nMontrealtoshowforthe outlay. The\nConservatives were quoted as the\ngreatest   friends   of the   working\nmen, but it was a fact that they\nallowed 8000 Chinamen to be imported to work on the Onderdonk\ncontract.   These Orientals were to\nhaA-e'been deported but were, instead, allowed to flood the country,\ndestroying the labor market,driving\nwhite men out of\" the mines, the\nfarms, the fisheries and the canneries.    The tide of Orientals were\ndriving the white man further back\ninto the hills  every  day and  this\n\u2022would'-continue until the white man\nwas caught by the current of cheap\nforeign   labor   from  tho  east and\ncrushed beneath theopposiug forces.;\nJThe-Gonservative=party=was=dead=\nand it was best to keep it in  the\ngrave.   ...'.\u25a0-,\nTurning to the Liberals, Mr.\nFoley said that while the party\ncontained many good frieuds of the\nworking men,' there were two or\nthree incidents in which sir Wilfrid\nLaurier had proved that he was not\nan honest friend of labor. For instance, the importation of men\nfrom Michigan during the recent\nstrike was well known. Petition\nafter petition was sent to the premier urging, him to enforce tlio\nAlien Labor Act, but itAvas not until the mine owners had accomplished their purpose that a man\ncame to Rosslaiid and secretly notified the mine owners that the importation of alien labor must cease.\nThen when the men employed in\nthe salmon fisheries struck, Japan-\nes6 imported for that express purpose were used to fill all vacancies,\nand Canadians were compelled to\nsubmit to this usurpation of an inferior foreign race by the military.\nUp to tho present the laboring\nmen had fed on crumbs and their\npolitical stomachs revolted. Now\nthey proposed to secure a better\ndiet and before they were through\nwould make Premier Laurier dish\nup the best in liis pantry. (Laughter.).\nAs to his opponents in the campaign Mr. Foley had fow personal\ncriticisms to make, save that both\nwere lawyers. He did not like\nlawyers aud particularly criticized\nMr. MacNeill because of the company the latter kept. A feature of\nthe Conservative hippodrome in\nthe riding was Mayor Goodeve of\nRossland, a serpent  in the  grass.\nMayor Goodeve was the man who\nswore in the'detectives to coerce ~\nthe men employed in Rossland _.\nmines. - lie had- an insinuating\ntongue and would try to convince . \">,\nthe workingmen of Nelson that \u25a0 -\\-\nevery thought emanating from his i\nbrain was laden with honey, .-.but '*?\nhe (Foley) warned them that it was * \"\u2022'\nuot honey but poison. .The labor-__ -\ners motto in the fight should ' be'\u2022' \u2022___\n\"We never forget,\" and this should ^r ,*\nbe borne in mind when Mr. Goodeve*^ \\\"~_\nvisited Nelsou. \u25a0    \u25a0       __\nReferring to himself, Mr. Foley \/\"i\nsaid he was a man of no education  <4rt\nor polish.   As a boy he ran away -\"^\nfrom home and all  he knew had   '&\"\nbeen picked up among the mountains and deserts of the west.   . He-. ^\nwas a working man and stood every';.J^\/,\nday. at' his machine.     His rapral^\u00a3-j&\ncharacter    might    not\"  pas's   the^vi\n'scrutiny of the average- Salvation* FC-'\nArmy captain, but he asked-laborerJV'\";\nand business man\"to scan his record \\^:.y\nand find out if anything that,. was-\"r':~5\nnot   fair .or   reasonable  could;tieV^i?\nscored up against him.     Mr. FoleytpJ_?{\nwound up by impressing upon the.'^l\nworkingmen to stand together in^v&j\nthis campaign, aiid was\" accorded a ;.V^\nhearty round of .cheers. \"\"   ''-\u25a0**\ni\u00a3l\nmm\nMore Lightermen Quit. \u25a0>\nLondon, October 17.\u2014Au ad\nditional 300 lightermen today joinedy--\"\u00a3f\nthe 1500 now on strike. There does\/-4;Jfe\nnot seem to be any prospect - of theV^'\ntrouble being arbitrated. \" The coa-fi.'f-\ngestion of boats is now, more'seri-<\"\\*iX\nous. Hundreds, of barges of' pro- ,^'j\nvisions and merchandise remain un- -v','i'.'\nloaded,\" affecting traffic seriouslyo;j\u00a3'\nand affecting the merchants .whocf-?\nare. awaiting thec goods. . The'*t;h,\nstriker's^will be' materially assiste'd,..-'^.\nby the action, of a leading merchantC^T\nwho disapproves of the stand taken'&.Jz\\\nby the Employers j Association, ^He.,'!^\nhas made a deal direct. withVthe*-'^!'\nmen's uniou aud hereafter\"' =will; do'^j!\nhis own lighterage: \\-,-vJf.\n\u2022   Hohenlohe to. Resign,   -.^.^^if\n. Berlin, October 17.\u2014Most.of-.thet^l\npapers here credit the report thatj^n\nprince Hohenlohe is to resign from*''' *'\noffice on account of his age._ J._ ?   '\"\nCOAL MINERS VICTORIOUS\n*\u00a5\u00a7\u00abi?\nPRACTICAL END OF THE' QBE AT \u00a3*\n.   ANTHRACITE; STRIKE.\nOperators Concede Everything --Asked:\nBy the Scranton Convention\u2014-    \"*_'\nMen Were Out a\" Month.\nPhiladelphia,\" October 17.\u2014The,-1\ngreat strike of the anthracite\/miner\nworkers of Pennsylvania, which began September 17, practically ended .\ntoday,   when the   Philadelphia &\nReading Coal & Iron Company and ,\nthe   Lehigh Valley  Coal Company\nagreed to abolish the  scale in their .\nrespective regions and- to grant au.\nadvance  in wages of  10 per cent,\",'\nthe advance to remain in operation\nuntil April,   1901, and'.'thereafter.'\nThis action meets  the demands of\nthe Scranton   miners'  convention.1\nThe decision was arrived at after\na conference between representatives of the individual coal operators and * tho large coal carrying\ncompanies. The conference began\nyesterday. Today's action was the\nculmination of tho recent meeting\nof the individual operators at Scranton following the mine workers',\nconvention in the same city.\nNearly all of the collieries in. the\ncoal regions had previously to the\nmine workers'   convention   posted\nnotices granting an advance  of   10\nper   cent.   The   mine   workers   in\nconsidering this demanded that the\nsliding scale   in   the   Lehigh   and\nSchuylkill   districts   be   abolished,\nth'e increase, to be   guaranteed   until April 1, 1901, and all other   differences to be submitted to arbitration.      Tho   individual    operators\nagreed, to everything and ' the   appointment of a   committee   to   induce the Heading and Lehigh  companies to abolish the   sliding   scale\nand make the wage increase permanent followed.\nJust how soon the official order\nnotifying the men that the strike\nis ended and to return to work will\nbe issued by president Mitchell can \" j\nonly be conjectured. It is the belief here that the order to return\"\nwill not bo issued until a notice\nsimilar to or in line with that of\nthe Reading and Lehigh companies\nis posted,, at all the mines.\n:_\u00a3_______>______\\'\u00a3&\u00a3Sx 2  THE TRIBUNE: KELSON B. C. THURSDAY OCTOBER 18 1900  HUDSON'S BAY  COMPANY. *  INCORPORATED 16T0.  Rubbers  Don't wait  until you catch  cold from wet  feet.  It is cheaper to buy rubbers  than pay doctor's bills.  All Sizes  MEN'S  LADIES1  CHILDREN'S  s  \ufffd\ufffdfe QKrttnme*-'-  NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.  From and after-October 1st,.all  subscribers to the Daily Tribune  who are served by carrier will  be required to pay their, subscriptions weekly to the carrier.  SUBSCRIPTION RATES,  Weekly, by carrier .      .  Monthly, by carrier     .       .  Three Months, by carrier  j Six Months, by carrier. .  |  One Year, by carrier  .$     SS  1 00  .   2 SO i  5 00..  . 10 00  I  mrtTTrmixixinTrTrxuniTiiTti  Tub Thibune will observe a time  honored custom in country newspaper offices today, and give its  eraploj'ees a chance to eat Thanksgiving turkey at then\"leisure. The  Tribune will, therefore, not be  published on Friday morning.   The , Semi- Weekly Industrial,  World of Rossland and the. Evening  Miner of Nelson are of one opinion.  The former is said to be the official  organ of the Western Federation  of Miners in this province,- and is  owned by the Miners' Union of  Kossland; the latter is the official  organ ot the Mine Owners'As9ocia-  * tions and is owned by Hugh Sutherland of Toronto. When the one  was fighting for Smith Curtis, as  the embodiment of all that is pure  and potential in politics, the other  was denouncing the members of  Miners'    Unions    who . supported  j Curtis as anarchists and thugs.  Now these two journals are  battling against the common  enemy; but if the Industrial  World has no more influence at  Kossland than the Miner has at  Nelson, the enemy will not be  badly injured. '  \" It eaniiot be denied that the  \" postponement of the Yale-Cariboo  \" election for two weeks will give a  \" decided advantage to.which ever  \" party wins in the east.\" The  words quoted above are from the  Nelson Economist, an orthodox  Conservative newspaper. The  Kcouomist will now be read out of  the grand old party for daring to  express views that are not in accord  with those who, in times past, have  considered themselves   entitled to  the right to do the thinking for all  the men who call themselves Conservatives.       Some   of   the   spellbinders do not take  kindly  to the  idea that the people of Yale-Cariboo  can best be served by a member of  parliament who is in  accord   with  tho  party  in   power.    ,Of course,  these spellbinders are sticklers after  principles;     principle    alone   controls   all     tlieir    actions,    but    it  i-     difficult     to     make     common  everyday    business    men    believe  any such twaddle.    This is a practical nge, and tho people want men  in oflice who can accomplish  something.       What  has  either   \"Tom\"  Rarle   or   \"colonel\"   Prior   accomplished for British Columbia during  tlio years that the Laurier goA'ernment   has   been in   ollice?   What  could Aulay Morrison or \"Kill\" Galliher accomplish for the province in  the next five years.were Hugh John  Macdonald to carry the country on  November 7th?   It will be argued  by a few that there are principles  at stake.    The average man can see  little difference between the principles   of   the   two  parties.     The  Liberals   out   of   office were   free  traders.    In office they are protectionists, for they found  that the  government could not be carried on  successfully by any other system  of taxation than the one that had  been     adopted     by     the      Conservatives. Conservatives     out  of     office     are      shouting     \"re-  (renchnient.\"      Vet were  they   to  gain office they would find that in  a   country growing as  Canada is  growing, the government expenditures must of necessity increase as  the   business   of   the  country expands.    For taking a practical view  of these questions, The Tribune is  denounced by the spellbinders of  both the Conservative and the Lib;  eral parties; but as The Tribune is  an independent newspaper,' it cannot change its views as readily as  spellainderscan,their drinks or pol-^  iticians their principles;  Canada paid six millions, of dollars  less in customs taxation than they  would, have done had the Conservative tariff of 1800 remained in force,  a reduction equal to very nearly $1  for every man, woman and child in  the Dominion, a reduction that  means that every man, woman and  child has had an extra dollar to  spend. This i.s a very appreciable  reduction, the yards of editorial  aforesaid notwithstanding.  Favors the United States.  Lon'mon, October 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt the  meeting of the Chartered Bank of  India, Australia and China today  the president referred to the bank's  important interests in tho Philippines, and said he viewed with  equanimity the transfer of the  islands to the United States, as he  anticipated that Anglo-Saxon vigor  would create a strong government,  crush the rebellion and foster commerce.  Wilson's  tou#0S'  <P\ufffd\ufffdilT WiNt  WRITTEN BY LIBERALS.  [Tiik Tuibunk has placed a part ot one column  at the disposal ot the Liberals, whose views *will  be expressed therein from time .to Lime during  the campuign. A like privilege \"is accorded the  Conservative!) and:the Independent Luborers.)  Sir Charles Tupper is asking to  be returned because, if elected, he  will retire from public life atthe  following general elections. This.is  tho most tempting bribe ever  offered to the electors of Canada.  Good news continues to* come in \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  from all parts of the constituency.  The latest bulletin is from Kaslo,  where the Liberals are np and  doing. They are well organized  aud.are as confident as their opponents are discouraged. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Candidate  Galliher will have a good majority  in Kaslo.           The Miner during the past few  weeks has devoted a good many  yards-of heavy editorial to an attempt to prove that the Liberals  have increased \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd taxation and have  not appreciably reduced the tariff.  =As-a-matter-of=fact,-up-to-the end-  of the last fiscal year the people of  Specially recommended  for dyspepsia,   loss of  appetite,   sleeplessness,  indigestion,    weakness  from  whatever  cause,  nervousness,       fevers,  consumption,    malaria  and general debility.  Women  complain   of  a  tired feeling.   Wilson's Invalid's Port Is immediate  and efficacious, leaving no  riarmful effects.  Men will find it particularly valuable as a restorative and a strongLhcner of  the body and nerve system  We recommend this tonic  CANADA DRUG  AND BOOK  C0MPANV  v Nelson, B, C  C. W. West & Co.  COAL.!      \"WOOD I  Hard Coal  Anthracite  $9.65  Crow's Neat  Cool  $6.15  DBLIVEEBD  AGENTS IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY, Ltd.  No order can he accepted unless accompanied  by cash.    Office:   Cornor or Hall  and i'alter Streets.  TELEPHONE 33.  Lethbridge Gait Goal  Tho heal) vftluo for the money. In the market  for all purposes.  terms cash     W. P. Tucrnkt. General Agent  Teleohnne 147. ' Offloe with C. I). J. Christie.  Kootenay   Coffee   Co.  NELSON. B. O. '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Coffee roasters and dealers In Tea and Coffee.  Offer ritisu roasted coffee of best quality, as  follows i  Java and Arabian Macha, por pound......t  10  Java and Mocha friend, 3 pounds  1 00.  Kino Santos, 4 pounds ~.. 1 00  Santos Blend, 6 pounds _\ufffd\ufffd 1- 00.  Our Special Blond. _ pounda:  100  Our Klo Boast, 0 pounds - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1 00  A tiial order soliolbed. Salesroom !i doora east  of Oddfellows Monk. Wnsti Raker Hlireeh.  ~ MUSIC. ~  Mrs. D. B. Murray, graduate in vocal and in-,  Hlniuiental music, is now prepared to receive  pupils for instruction in voice culture, Italian  method, also piano and organ.   |ror-terms=and=further-particulars=apply-room=  5. A. Macdotiald building, corner .lo3ophine and  Vernon street.  VOTE  FOR . . . .  A.  H.  MacNEILL  of Rossland  Candidate of the Liberal-Conservative Party for Member  of the House of Commons for Yale-Cariboo.  9\\  ^- __*-^> ^ >&>.&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^.-jm\/- ^0. 0_*-,__* ^Z->\ufffd\ufffdm--^-_T->>t_..^.>mK  VTN\"E &*  CO.  m  m  9\\  Dress Goods, Millinery  Carpets and Men's Furnishings  l_,adies'   Department  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (A  (fl  (fl  Special sale of ladies' and children's wool vests, drawers,  and combination suits, flannelette night dresses,  drawers and skirts.  Ladies' flannelette\/ cashmere, alpacia, silk, satin, and  French flannel-blouse-waists.  Ladies' mantles, jackets, and tailor-made suits from best  makers at exceedingly low prices.  Ladies'  ready-made dress skirts, from $2.00 each up.  Ladies' \"-R & G,\" \"P D,\" and \"D A\" corsets from 25  cents up.  Children's coats, reefers, and jackets, from t to 10 years  of age.  Ladies' golf capes, from $3.00 up.  Millinery   Department  We are now showing the balance of our imported pattern  hats at cost prices; also a largeQstock of ladies'  ready-to-wear hats at low prices.  Men's   Department.  We are offering men's fleece-lined underwear, in sizes 34  to 44, from 65 cents each up.  Men's Cart right & Warner's national wool and cashmere  shirts and drawers, from $1.50 each up.  Men's flannel, cotton flannelette, cashmere and silk night  shirts. Men's pajamas in all wights. Black cashmere sox 25 cents per pair.  Latest novelties in neckwear, collars, cuffs, regatta negligee and fllannel shirts.  House   Purnishing   Department.  m  White lace curtains, from 75c per pair ; chenile and tapestry portieres, from $3.50 per pair; chenile and  tapestry table covers from 75 cents.  Tapestry carpets, from 45c per yard up ; Brussel carpets,  from $1.00 per yard up; Wiltons from $1.25, per  yard up ; Axminsters, from $1.25 per yard up.  Floor oilcloth, from 35 cents per yard up.  White bed spreads- in all qualities ; Wool comfortables  from $1.25 up ; Wool blankets (grey) from $2.50 up;  wool blanket (white) from $3.50 up.  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  A.II    Carpets   Sewn    and    Laid    Free    of   Charge.  IRVINE <& CO  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  (fl  SAW &  NELSON  PLANING  MILLS  321 to 331-Baker Street, Nolson.  - . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  American and European Plans.  MEALS  GENTS  ROOMS LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY  AND HEATED BY STEAM  s  PLATFORM  Adopted by the Liberal-Conservative Parly in Convention  at Revelstoke, September 15th, 1900  We, the delegates of the Liberal-Conservative party of Yale-Cariboo  constituency, in convention assembled, reaflirm the principles of the  party, and more particularly that cardinal principle, protection to home  industries, and that that principle be carried out so that all sections of  the cdtmtry. shall equally share its benefits.  The. one industry on -which the prosperity of this constituency is  almost wholly dependent is mining ; and we believe that our mining industries are as fairly entitled to-protection as the manufacturing industries of Eastern Canada ; therefore, we advocate that the duties on lead  and lead products be in creased jso that they shall be as high as those now  imposed by the United States on the same articles.  That the output of. the precious metal mines is largely increasing,  therefore we favor tlio establishment of a mint, so that ..the specie in circulation sliall be that of our own instead of that of a foreign country.  We advocate the restriction of the-immigration, of Chinese and Japanese, and all classes who cannot become good citizens .of the Dominion  of Canada, and suggest the adoption of the principles of the Natal Act.  British Columbia lias not now the representation in the federal parliament that she is entitled to: therefore we advocate that When the-  redistribution of seats is made that this constituency shall be given representation according to its population.  That it augurs well \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for the success of tho party that Hugh John  Macdonald has decided to leave the field of provincial politics to take  part in the larger one that affects the people of the whole of Canada.  BAKER STREET. NELSON.  Lighted by Electricity and Heated with Hot Air.  Largo comfortable bedrooms and  first-class  dining-room. Sample rooms lor commercial men,  RATES $2 PER DAY  Mrs. E. 0. GlarKe, Prop.  lATK OV THE ROYAL HOTEL, CAIX3ARY  EVERY   DAY  AT j THE  Club Hotel  BIG   SCHOONER  Beer or Half-and-half only  Limited.  We are prepared to Furnish  by Rail, Barge or Teams  DIMENSION LUMBER  ROUGH and DRESSED LUMBER  LOCAL and COAST CEILING  LOCAL and COAST FLOORING  DOUBLE DRESSED COAST CEDAR  RUSTIC, SHIPLAP, STEPPING  PINE and CEDAR CASINGS  DOOR JAMBS, WINDOW STILES  TURNED WORK, BAND-SAWING  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .    BRACKETS, NEWEL POSTS  lOe  FRESH    |f JDC*   COOL  The only good Beer In Nelson  E. J. CURRAN, Prop.  - Corner Stanley and Silica StroetH.  tyadden House  Baker aud Ward  Streets, Nelsou  CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE ROOMS IN NELSON  Houston Block, Corner of Baker and Josephine Streets.  The only-hotel In Nelson thab has remained'  under one management since 1890.  The bed-rooms are well furnished aud lighted  by electricity.  The bar Is always stocked by the best dom a-  tlo and Imported liquors and olgars.  THOMAS MADDEN. Proprietor.  SLOCAN JUNCTION HOTEL  J. li. MoMANUS, Managor  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTUENED'VERANDA^POSTS  STORE FRONTS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd DOORS; WINDOWS and GLASS.  Get Our Prices before  purchasing elsewhere.  OEFICE: CORNER HALL AND FRONT STREETS.  FACTORY: HALL STREET^ C. P. R. CROSSING.   MILLS: HALL STREET WHARF  Pi Burns & Co.  Wholesale and Retail  -\"-\"Sn^oVa o. Dealers in Meats  DERATED AND MINERAL -WATERS.-\"  THORPE & CO., LIMITED.-Cornor Vornon  and Cedar Htrcols, Nelson; inuuufacLururs  of and wholesale dealers in (crated waters and  fruit syrups.   Solo agents for Halcyon Springs.'  mineral water.   Telephone 0U. .      .  ASSAYERS'   SUPPLIES.  WF. TEETZEL & CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Baker and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Josephino streets, Nelson, wholesale doalers in assayers supplies. Agents for Denver  Firo Clay Co. of Denver. Colorado.  COMMISSION MERCHANTS.  HJ. EVANS Sc CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBakor street, Nelsou  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wholesale dealers in liquors, cigars  cement, lira brick and fire clay\/, water pipe und  steel rails, and general commission inorohants.  ELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES.  KOOTENAY ELECTRIC SUPPLY & CONSTRUCTION COll PAN Y\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWholesale dealers In telephones, annunciators, bells, batteries,  fixtures, etc., Houston block. Nelson..  FLOUR AND FEED.  BRACKMAN-KER MILLING COMPANY  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCereals, Flour, Grain, Hay. StriRglit or  mixed cars shipped to all Kootenay Points.  Grain elevators at all principal points on Calgary-  Kduionton lt. R. Mills at VicLoria, New Westminster, and Edmonton, Alborta.  rpAYLOR   FEED & PRODUCE   CO.-Baker  :A==street,==Neliion^(Georgo-mlL'.=cMotion'8=oId=  stand),   Flour, Feed, Grain, Hay and Produce.  Car lots a specialty.   Correspondence solicited..  Phone 26.  FRESH AND SALT MEATS.  P    BURNS &   CO.-Baker  street,   Nelson,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   wholesalo dealers In fresh and cured meats.  Cold storage.  Bar stocked with best brands of wines, liquors,  and Cigars. Beer ou draught. Iiarge comfortable rooms,  Elrstrplaaa table board.  Markets,at  Nelson,  Rossland, Trail,  Kaslo, Ymir,  Sandon,  Silverton, New  Denver,' Revelstoke, Ferguson Grand Forks, Greenwood, Cascade Oity, Mid  way, and Vancouver.   - Mail Orders Promptly Forwarded  West Kootenay Butcher Go.  ALL KINDS OF \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"  FRESH AND SALTED MEATS  WHOLESALE AND RETAIL  FISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON!  BaM, street, Neiso\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        E. G. TRAVES, Manager   -     ORmCRB HY MAIL RWCJMVM CAREFUL AND PROMPT'*A0fOTl)M**n:pN  Kootenay Electric Supply & Coostmction Co.9 Ltd.  Electric Fixtures Electric Fans  Medical Batteries  Nelson, B. C.  GROCERIES.  A MACDONALD & CO.-Corner Front and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ball streots, wholesale grocers and  -fobbere lu blankets, gloves, mitts, boots, rubbers,  mackinaws and miners' sundries. -  KOOTENAY SUPPLY  COMPANY,   LIMITED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVernon   street, Nelson,   wholesale  grocers. -.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ,j   TOHN CHOLDITCH & CO.-Front stroet, Nol-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd **   son,.wholesale grocers.  PR. STB WART& CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWarehouses' on C. P.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd R. track, foot of Stanley street; Nelson,  wholesale dealers in provisions, produce and.  fruits. Cold storage. Agents Armour & Co.'s  bacon, hams, lard and other products.  JY. GRIFFIN & CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFront street, Nolson,  . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wholesale dealers In provisions, oured  meats, butter and egga. _^   HARDWARE AND MINING SUPPLIES. \"  H BYERS & COi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Baker and Josephine  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   streets, Nelson; wholesale dealers In hard  ware and. mining supplies.  Powder Co.         '  Agents, for. Giant  T AWRENCE HARDWARE COMPANY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  J-J Baker St., Nelson, wholesale dealers In  hardware and mining supplios, and'water and  plumbers'supplies.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  LIQUORS AND DRY GOODS.     I  rpORNER, BEETON Sc CO.-Corner. \"Vernon  J> and Josephine streets, Nelaon, wholesalo  dealers In liquors, olgars and dry goods. Agents  for Pabst Brewing Co. of .-Milwaukee, and Calgary Brewing Co. of Calgary;  '  POWDER,. CAPS AND FUSE..  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprAMILTON. POWDER  COMPANY-Baker  street, Nelson, manufacturers of dynamite,  ing, stumping r   osale dealers ii  blasting apparatus.  sporting, stumping aud black blasting powdora,  wholosale dealers In oapB and fuse, and oloctrio  HOUSTON BLOCK,  CORNER BAKER AND JoajIPHINE STREETS,  SASH AND DOORS.  NELSON SAW AND PLANING MILLS.  LIMITKD-Corner Front and Hall streets,  Nelson, manufacturers of and wholesale dealers  In sash and doors; all kinds of faotory work made  to order. -    WINES AND CIGARS.  r\ufffd\ufffdALIFORNIA   WINE   COMPANY     LIMI-  vs   TED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Front) and Hall streeta, Nelson, wholesale dealors In wines (case and bulk,  ftnddotnaatib and Unported.olgarfl.    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtt-rm^'mmtm  THE TEIBU^E: KELSOK B. C   THURSdIT; OGTOBEB 18 1900  S  BANK OP MONTREAL  CAPITAL, all paid up....$12,000,000.00  REST    7,000,000.00  UNDIVIDED PROFITS       427,180.80  Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal ...Presidont  Hun. Georgo A. Drummond Vice-President  K. a. Clouston General Malinger  NKLSON BRANCH  Corner Buker and Kootenay Streets.  _     A. H. BUCHANAN, Manager.  Ilranchos In London (England) Nkw Yonir,  Ckiimoo, und all tho principal oities in Canada.  Buy aud sell Sterling Exohango and Cable  i'r insfors.  (irant Commercial and Travelers' CrodllH,  available In any part of the world.  Drafts Issued, Collections Made, ICto,  Saving's Bank Branch  CUKltKNT HATK OK INTKKKST 1\"A1I>.  SERVANT GIRLS  DECEIVED  Left Penniless in Winnipegr  TiasL .spring it was decided to  si-lid someone to England, in order  (ii.'it a' number of servant girls  might be brought out for the people  of the Northwest, says the AVinnipeg Telegram, ancl W. F. McCreary,  , commissioner of immigration, sent  n a lady by the name of Mrs. Ellen  Sanford. A number of people, who  were iu want of servants, paid Mrs.  Sanford $30 apiece for the passage  money of the girl which would be  kept from them. Mrs. Sanford left  this city some time during May-and  started to get girls in Ireland, and  it then went to Scotland aud England.  From time to time she wrote to Mrs.  McCreary, telling of the success she  was meeting with. On August oth  .she returned to this city and most  of the girls she brought were given  employment.  Beatrice Lavelle, one of those  who came out with Mrs. Sanford, is  now in the city and gives the following account of her experiences:  \"I had a good position in England  and was visited one day by Mrs.  Sanford. She asked me -if .1.-would  like to go to Canada. I said \"I  would, but did not want to leave  the situation I then had. She offered rae a position-iu a fruit store  at Pincher Creek if I cared,to come.  All she required me to do was to  , give her \ufffd\ufffd0 ($29.10) for an intermediate , passage to. Winnipeg... .By  leaving without .giving sufficient  notice to my employers I\" forfeited  three weeks' wages. I was \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to sail  by thej jbake \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Champlain. - -When- J  gob on. board. I saw Mrs. Sanford;  aiid asked, her to show me to my  berth. She said she had not time  , then, and.gave the. same answer to  a number of the other girls who  had made \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe same request. -Before we went on board I under-  . stand that this woman had told all  the girls that she was not connected with any immigration office,  and that she was paying her own  expenses. She certainly told me  f.his. In addition she said that she  would travel with the-girls. - I  shall never forget that passage;1 It  v?frs lawful. With some rough  boards cattle pens were made into  berths for us on. the lower deck.  \"The smell was terrible and I was  I obliged to spend most of my time  on deck.   We   were   not   as   well  berthed as the steerage passengers,-  but   had   the   same   food.    Every-  Lkuife,=fork=and=spoou=i=we==had=^=to=  scrape and wash before they were  1 fit to use.   Tea   was   served   in   a  I large bowl, into whicli we   had to  dip our cups.   The food was served  iii the same way.   There, was a terrible light for soap, but I was more  1 fortunate than the Vest, for I had a  j small piece on the fourth day out  j,nd kept it concealed for   my own  use for the rest of the voyage.   No;  I jilrs. Sanford did not travel in   this  way, as,sho had told us she would.  She went saloon.   I was tliankfuj  when we reached  Montreal,  as   I  thought my troubles oyer, but they  were not.   Mrs. Sanford had a greed  to feed us on   the   train,   but   we  hardly had enough to   keep. body  and   soul   together.     During   the  whole trip I did riot taste any milk.  JAt last we   arrived   at   Winnipeg  I after experiencing a terrible time.  jUpon getting off the train here we  (were marched to the immigration  j hall and given breakfast. It was  Ithere I asked Mrfi. Sanford about  jthe situation she had promised me  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin the fruit store at Pincher Creek.  |1 was informed that it was' can-  Belled and I must get   a   place   for  [myself^ '  \"There was I, left in a strange  [city,with neither money nor friends.  II went to the Girls' Home, and after  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbeing there for a day was engaged  Ito work in a hotel out.west, where  II have been until now, and have lef t'  [on account of it closing for the winker. Mrs. Sanford managed to get  Ihold of my trunk and held it for  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrepayment of my passage money,  jl did not get a situation according  Ito her agreement with me so I did  Jnot think she was entitled to it.  [She held my trunk for over a mouth  land only after several threats, of  [Jegal proceedings did she give it up.  THE BANK OF  BRITISH   COLUMBIA  NELSON  Is now prepared to issue Drafts and  Letters of Credit on Skaguay, U. S.,  Atlin. B. C. and Dawson City, N. W. T.  Imperial Bank of Ganada  HlCAl)  OFFICE. TORONTO.  Established inJNelson in 1890.  Wholesale and Retail  *    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Capital Authorized $2,500,000  Capital Paid up $2,458,603  Rest $1,700,000  1). It. Wtlkie, General Mftiiagor.  10. Hay, Inspector.  Nelson Branch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBurns Block, 221 Haker Street  J. Al. LAY, Manager.  1 have written to my friends in  Phigland and warned them against  any other schemes of a like nature  which might crop up.\"  There are several of these girls  now in the city who tell a similar  tale. At present Miss Lavelle is at  the Seymour house.  Elevator Consumption.  \"Winter is coming,\" said the man  in charge of an express elevator in  one of the skyscrapers in lower  Broadway.  As he spoke he wiped the perspiration from his brow with a dirty  handkerchief,and the winter seemed  far off indeed.  \"Why don't you ask me if it's  warm enough for me?\" growled the  grumpy tenant; \"or whether I  wouldn't like to be the iceman?\"  \"I didn't mean it that way at all,  sir,\" said the elevator man. respectfully. \"I was just wouderin' how  inany of us would go next winter.\"  \"Go! C4o where?\" asked the  grumpy man. \"Don't they run as  many elevators in winter as in summer?\"  \"Lord, yes!\" was the answer. \"I  didn't mean that we'd lose our jobs,  but that some of ns will go where  we won't want any jobs. We're a  doomed lot, we elevater people, and  no one seems to have noticed it.\" .  \"I don't understand how that is,\"  said, the grumpy man. \"You have  almost no accidents now, with yoirV  electric brakes aud safety catches,\"  \"Did you ever hear of elevator  consumption?\" asked tho elevator  man. \"That's what is the matter  jwith us. Tt comes from shooting  Tip and down these draughty shafts  foi1 twelve hours a ' day. Most of  the time we're bent over, and you  can't keep the cold air out of your  lungs, and comin' down you take in  a lot of bad, hot air, and there you  are. it was last wiuter that we began to notice how the new elevator  disease was taking the boys off. I'm  bavin' a doctor  watch my lungs,  Surpassing  Display in  Fall Suitings  All the fashionable creations  in Fall and Winter wear are  included in my last consignee n t^of^Scotch-^and^l ristr  Serges, Tweeds and Worsteds, and Fancy Trouserings  E. Skinner  Neelands'Building, Bakor Street.  FRED J. SQUIRE. Manager.  ARTHUR   GEE  MERCHANT TAILOR.  OPPOSITE   THE  QUEEN'S   HOTEL.  Large stock of high-class imported goods. A  specialty of tlio square . shoulder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe latest  fashion in coats.  .-   MRS.  MCLAUGHLIN'S  Millinery  Parlors  JOSEPHINE STREET  Nelson.  MRS.  ENFIELD'S  ... for fine .  HALL   BLOCK,   NELSON.  OOSTELLO'S EXPRESS  AND TRANSFER  Baggage and express moved to any part of the  oity.  Special attention givon to heavy teaming.  Office oorner Victoria and Ward streets. Telephone 1S2. W. A. COSTELLO. Manager.  ENGINEERS.  \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"1HARLKS PARKER\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMining and milling en-  *** glneer. Tnrner-BoockU Block, Buter street,  Nsleoa,  in Business.  DEPENDS ON HOW YOU BUY  Wholesale and Retail  9     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  OUR  STOCK  OF  GOODS  BOUGHT THIS  YEAR  HAS  NO  EQUAL  IN  B. C.  For quality and price, you can buy the latest  up-to-date goods from me and save 25 per cent on  every dollar.  My goods are purchesed direct from New York,  England, France, Germany and Austria, and consist of lines that are not shown any where else in  this Province.  Everyone is welcome to call and inspect them  whether they buy or not.  PIANOS  ONYX TABLED  JARDINIERE  STANDS  LAMPS  VASES  MIRRORS  FIRE SETS  TENDERS  Diamonds Loose, and Set  Jewelry of every description.  Watches for Ladies and Gentlemen  Clocks with and without Music  Manicure Sets, Manicure Pieces  Cut Glass direct from Belgium^  Jardinieres, latest from Austria0  Flatware, Sterling and Silverplate  A Thousand other things .   :  JACOB  DOVER, The   Jeweler  Our Watch Making and Jewelry Department has no equal.   All work guaranteed  and if I get trace of it I'll quit my  job aud go off to the country.\"  \"Humph!\" exclaimed the grumpy  man, as he got off at the top floor.  \"Elevator consumption, indeed.  Next thing we know tho newsboys  will be getting blood poisoning from  the red paint on their extras, and  the bootblacks will refuse to bend  over for fear of spinal curvature.\"  Mining Records.  Yesterday's mining records were:  Locations\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe Monarch on Eagle  mountain by R. G. MeLeod and J.  Hon Opera House  TWO NIGHTS ONLY  Commencing  THURSDAY, OCT- 18th  WILLIS  G00I-JT0WN 400  in a Rag-Time  Operetta  20 COLORED  ARTISTS   20  Vocalists, Comedians,  Dancers,* Pretty Girls.  Tlie'onlycolorecl'organizationbook--  ed for Nelson this season.  PRICES   50    and   75    CENTS  Seats on sale Wednesday, 10 a. m.  NOTICE TO  C0NTRACT0ES.  Sealed tenders will bo received by the undersigned up to noon on Saturday, October 20th,  1!XM>, for tho construction ot a government ollice  at tne town of Creston, Goat River Mining division. Plans and specifications can be seen nt tho  government agents office in Nelson, and utthe  ollice of Mr. 10. Mnllaimlnlne, Creston.  Tlio lowest or any tender not necessarily no-  cepted\\ .I0IINT A.  TURNER,  Government Agent.  Nelson, B. C, October 10th, 11)00.  SHERIFF'S SALE.  Province of British Columbia, Nelson, in Wes  Kootenay, to wit:  By virtue of a writ of fleri-facias, issued out of  the Supreme Court of Britith Columbia, at the  suit of the Bank of Montreal,, plaintiffs,,and to  me directed, against the -goods and chat  tcls of the -Two Friends Mine, Limited  Liability, defendants, I have seized and  taken in execution all the right, title and interest  of tho said defendants, Two Friends Mine Linv  Ited Liability,' in the mineral claim known as  and culled \"Two Friends,\"situated on the divide  between Lemon and Springer crocks, on the east  slopo of Lemon creek, located on tho 31st day of  July, A. D. 189;'), and recorded in the ofllce of the  mining recorder for tho Slocan Cily Mining Division ot the W>ft Kootenay District, on the 10th  day of August;-A. I). 1805; and also all the right  title and: interest of the said defendants, Two  Friends Mine'-Limited Liability, in sixty (CO) tons  of ore, more 6r.?ress,; mined from the mineral  claim 'Two Friends, 'and now upon the pro--  perty: To recover the sum ot two thousand and  eighty-nine dollars and eighty-five cents (82.089-  .8.6) together with interest ou two thousand and .  eighty-six dollars and thirty-live cents ($2086 35)  at six per centum per annum, from the 20th day  of September, 1900, until payment, besides slier-.  ill's poundage, officer's fees, and all other legal  incidental expenses: All of which I shall expose  for sale, or sufficient thereof to satisfy said judgment, debt, and costs, at the front of my offloe  next to the court house, in the city of Nelson, Ii.  C, on Friday tho 28th day of October, A. D., 1900  ut the hour of cloven o'clock In the forenoon.  Note.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIntending purchasers will satisfy themselves as to interest and title of the said defendants.  Dated at Slocan City tho 12th day of October,  1900.  5. P. TUCK, Sheriff of South Kootenay,  W. Mulholland; the Copper King  on Morning mountain by It. G. MeLeod and J.. Wi .Mulholland ; tlio  Perhaps on Wild Horse creek, ten  miles frqnvYmir, by Richard Greene  and Thomas.Kane ; the No. 2 at the  head of the Tough Nut basin and  formerly a part of the Shandon  group by P. J. Nichols; the Osceola  at the head of Wild Horse creek by  A. W. . Godfrey. Certificates of  work\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto Patrick Burns et al oh  the Alta.  A FULL LINE OF  Front Doors  .   Inside Doors  Screen Doors  Windows  Inside Finish  v local aiid coast.  Flooring  local aud coast.  Newel Posts  Stair, Rail  Mouldings -  Shingles  Hough and  Dressed Lumber  of ali kinds. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.  Xt WHAT YOU WANT IS NOT IN STOOK  WE WILL MAKR IT KOR YOU  CALL AND GET PRICKS.  J. A. Sayward  HAIX AND LAKK'STRKKTS, NKT.SON  Porto Rico LumberCo.  (LIMITED)  CORNER OF  ===HKNDRYX,AND^ii!RN0N=8TKEKTS=  Rough and  Dressed  Lumber  Shingles  Mouldings  A-1 White Pine Lumber Always in  StocK-  We carry a complete stock of  Coast Flooring, Ceiling,'Inside Finish, Turned Work, Sash and Doors.  Special order work will receive  prompt attention. Y  Porto Rico LumberCo. Ltd.  Contractors and Builders  \"WILL DO WELL TO  Buy Their Lumber  AT  CO. Buchanan's  A large - stock of firsti-class dry material on  band, also a (all Hue ol sash; doom, mouldings,  turned work, eto.  Factory Work a Specialty  Yardi  Foot) of Hendryx street), Nelson  lephoe. ei John Rae, Agent  NELSON LOTS FOR SALE.  i  Good building lots for sale. Cornor and one  adjoining, .10x150; 932;1. Two inside lots .10x120,  $250. All on Mill street. Title clear. Apply to  Strachan Brothers, opposite the post office,  FOR   SALE  ON   EASY TERMS  THE PROPKIITV  KNOWN  AS  The Florence Park Hotel  or Roberts' Ranch  143 acres more or loss. A flrst-olass going business, with tit] acres of first-class land under cultivation, 580 fruit trees, a large proportion bearing  fruit; 1000 small fruits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdraspberries, blackberries  and currants.  One mile east of the tcrminous of the electric  tramway.  For particulars apply to  HUGH R. CAMERON  Insurance Agent  BAKER STREET NELSON  D. J. Dewar, J. P.  Notary Public\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdConveyancer;  *\"' VORSALK  Cottage on Mices road. 7 room*, full plumbing,  beautiful location, .?1IA*>0, SoOOeash.  7-room bouse on Carbonate street, two stories,  double stairway, $2,000, cosy terms.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  2 nice building lot\", Latimer street, 100x120, S0O0.  House in Hume addition, 82.100: S20M cash, $2.1.00  Iierinontli pays the balance, interest and principal. This house has full plumbing, stone  foundation, and lot 45x130.  Nice house and lot near Ward street, on the  south side of Silica, \ufffd\ufffd2,250; rents for \ufffd\ufffd30, and  only n block from tho pest ofllce.  TO REt'T.  4-room coltngo in rear of my house on Victoiia  .street, \ufffd\ufffd12.   'I his cottage is comfortable and  most convenient to town.  7-room house on Mines road,-\ufffd\ufffd2.5.  MnddenBlook      D\ufffd\ufffd   <J\ufffd\ufffd   -DEVVAR  Ward Bros.  REAL ESTATE AND  INSURANCE AGENTS  IlliLeading Scotch Whisky.  Agents for J. & J. TAYLOR SAFES  Bogustown)   Fairview   Addition.  CAN|BLE & O'REILLY  Baker Street  REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE  AGENTS  FOR  RENT  (i-roomed house and bath, together wilh kitchen  range, complete with hot and cold water, Observatory street, magnificent view; rent, including water rale, \ufffd\ufffd25 per inonth.  fi-roonicd house, corner Cedar nnd Carbonate  streets; $20 per month.  .1-roomcd house, Hume Addition ; $1.1 per month.  I-roomed cottage, Gore street 812.;10 per month.  Il-roomcil house, corner of Mill and Hall streets;  S.'SO per month, from 1st Novomour.  Bents collected.   Loans made.  Agents for British Columbia Permanent Loan  & Havings Company.  MINING STOCKS  BOUGHT AND SOLD  R. P. RITHET & CO., Ltd.  VICTORIA.  Agents for British Columbia.  A. B. GRAY, Box 521, Nelson  Kootenay Representative.  xrirsxiTiiriiiiTinnirriinixiiiiiiixiiixjiiriiii:  JUST   ARRIVED  '\"A Car Load of  Allen's Apple Cider.  THORPE & CO.  tTvmmtztrzmTtitivixxxmimziaiiZTzixzzjzjitl_  R. REISTERER & CO.  BREWKKB AND BOTTLERS Or  FINE LAGER BEER, ALE  AND PORTER  Richelieu, 1000  FOR SALE.  Sis-room houBO, Hume Addition, J.S.10,  A complete But of tlnuer'ri loold.  Team, harness and wagon, f Ift).  CALL ON  H. A. Prosser  HROKICU. WARD STRKKT   \"FOfTSALE-OHEAP  Six lols corner Observatory and  Hall slreels,  drained and cleared for building.  Charles St. Barbe, Agent  MONEY TO LOAN  AT 7 PER CENT  ON BUSINESS PROPERTY  Pa0engUn\ufffd\ufffd^     Brewery at Maison  Contracting Painters, Decorators, Paperhangers.  Full lino of wall paper, mouldings, oto,   Kalso-  mintng and Tinting.   Strictly llrst-clasa  work.  Kstluiatcu furnlslicu.  Rosidonoo Mill Streot,   X!VX QHN    R   P  Opposite School IIouso   JN\ufffd\ufffd1jOU.\ufffd\ufffd, *>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \\j.  H. D.  ASHCROFT  BLACKSMITHING  AND EXPERT  HORSESHOEING  Wagon repairing promptly attended bo by a  nrsti-oiasa whoolwrlaht.  .   Speoial attention given to all kinds of repair-  lug and custom work from outside points.  '   ShODi   HaU Bt>.. bnliwenn  linker and Vnrnnn.  7&  K  FRATERNAL   SOCIETIES.  NKLSON LODGR, NO. 23, A. V. SC A. M.  Meets second Wouuouday in eaoh mouth,  Sojourning brethren invited.  NIGHTS OK I'STTHIAS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Nolson Lodge, No,  2fi, Knights of Pythias, meets In 1, O. O. V.  3. A. PuquclU), K. of lt. & S.  NJ  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdELSON L. 0.1_, No. 1092, moots in I. O. O. F.  Hall, oorner llaker and Kootonay streeta,  lab and 3rd Friday of oach month. Visiting  brethern cordially Invited. R. Robinson, *VV. M,  \\V. Crawford, Rocordiiig-Secretary.  NKLSON ACRIR, Number 22, Fraternal Order  of Kagles, moots every second and fourth  Wednesday Uieaoh month lu Fraternity Hall.    Visiting brethren wetoomo.   W. lloanell, Preal  Appl? (i, Ii, WBNNOX, Bollolbor, Ndann U, V 1 daub,  ObMlaa rt-oadar, B\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8t\ufffd\ufffdr?.  E. P. Whalley, J. P.;\"..  NOTARY PUBLIC  Ofllce with C. W. \\Vest& Co., corner HaU and  Baker streets.  City office of the N'elson Sodawater Faotory.  A. R. BARROW, A.M.I.C.E.  PROVINCIAL  LAND SURVEYOR  Corner Viotoria and Kootenay Streets. -. -     '  P. O. Box 569. TELEPHONE NO..96    ,t  ARCHITECTS.  \"CiWART &  CARRIE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdArchitects.   Rooms 7   -  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   and 8 Aboideen block, Bakor street. Nelson.  TRADES   UNIONS. ;'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM-EL80N MINERS' UNION NO. 96. *W. F. o '  x,>   M.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMoots in miners' union rooms, north-...?::  east cornor Victoria and Kootenay streots, every -  Saturday evening at 8 o'clock.   Visiting mem .  bers welcome. M. R. Mowalt, President. Jamo  Wilkes,   Secretary.    Union Scai.b ok Wages   ~ '  koh Nelson    District\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPer  shift,   machino  men, ?3.50: hammersinen miners. $3.25; muckers,\"i.' '  carmen, shoveleraand other underground labor- .'  ers, $3.00.        ' - -     \" -  TRADES AND LABOR CO UNCIL.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTho regular meetings of the Nelson Trades and Labor  Council will behold in the:miners' union hall,  corner of Victoria and Kootenay stieets, on tho  first and third Thursday of each month, ab  7.30 p.m. (i. J. Thorpe, President. J.H.Matheson, Secretary.  rpHE rogular meetings of the Carpenters' Union  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd aro held on Wednesday evening of each  week, ab 7 o'clock, in the Miners' Union hall corner Victoria and Kootenay streets. R. Robinson, President.   James Colling, Secretary.  BARBERS' UNION.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNelson Union, No. 1IW. of  tho International Journeymen Barber's Union of America, meets every llrat and thiid Mon-\"  day of each month in Miner's Union Hall, corner  of Viotoria and Kootenay streets, at 8:30 p.m.  sharp. Visiting brothers cordially t invited to  attend. J. H. Matheson, President. W. S. Bel-  vllle, Secretary.  BRICKLAYERS AND MASONS' UNION.  Tho' Bricklayers and Masons' International  Union No. 3 of Nelson meets second and fourth  Tuesdays in'each month at -Miners Union hall.  J. W. htcher, president; Joseph Clark, lecording  and corresponding secretary.  LABORERS' UNION.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNelson Laborers' Pro  tective Union, No. 8121, A. F. of Ij., meets in  Fraternity Hall, Oddfellow's block, corner of Baker aud Kootenay Htreets, every Monday evening  at 7:;tO_p.iu.-8harp.=VJsi ting-mem bers of tho American Federation cordially invited to attend. A. W.  McFeo, President. Percy Shackclton, Secretary.  NELSON PAINTERS' UNION\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTho regular  meeting of tho Painters' Union is held  the first and third Fridays in each month at Miners' Union hall at 7:30 sharp. J. H. Millnaul,  President; Will J. Hatch, Secretary.  PLASTERERS' UNION\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTho O. P. I. A. No.  172, meets every Monday evening in the  Elliot block, corner Baker and Stanley streets, ab  8 o'clock. J. D. Movor, president; Donald Mo  Lean, socretary1  CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON  NOTICE.  By resolution of the City Council, passed In  regular session on Monday, October Sth, 1(100,1  was instructed to cause notice to be given, by  publication In a newsoapur circulating in the  City of Nelson, to all parties In an pan, for excessive amounts for water and electric light  rates, who havo been duly nolillcd of such arrears, that if such arrears are not paid on or before October 20th, 1900, that their -water and  electric light services will ho discontinued ou  that date.        J.\" IC. STRACHAN, City Clerk.  Nelson, 3. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd October Sth, 1900.  ESTATE  OP  HENRY A.   GERVAN.  In the matter of the estate of IleiiryA.Gerraii.  late of the City of Nelson In the jiioriiice of  British Columbia, deceased.  Notice is hereby given pursuant to lhe\"Tru3  tees and Executors Act\" of the rc\\ isrel statutes  of the Pro Wee ot British Columbia, 1S17, Cap  187, thnt all creditors and others h.iving tUlini  against the estate of the said Henry A. Goivau.  who died on or about tho 2Mh day ol Match,  11)00, to send by post prepaid, or deliver loMe\ufffd\ufffdsrs.  tialllliorfc Wilson, of Un; waid City \"f Nelson,  solicitors for Thomas J. JMcCamuion, t lie administrator of the personal estate nnd effects of the  said deceased, or to t he said Thonias .1. McCammon of tho Oity of Nelson aforesaid, their christian and surnames, addresses and descriptions,  the full particulars of their claims, the statement)  of their accounts and the nature ot tlio securities, if any; held by tlieui, on or betoie the 20th  day of October, 1900.  And further tako notice that after inch last  mentioned date tho said administrator will pio-  ceed to distribute tho assets of the deceased  among the parties 'jntitled thereto, lumng regard only to the claims which he shall then havo  notice, and tho said administrator will not bo  liable for the said assets or any part thereof to  any person or persons ot whose claims notice  shall.nol have been received by. him at the time  of such distribution. v  OALLIHKR & WILSON.  Solicitors for Thomas J. McCammon, admlnla.  later for Henry A. Gervan, deceased.  Dated this 20th day of September, 1900.  .' \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd  I'M  v*->  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TRIBUNE: NELSON, B. -&, THURSDAY OCTOBER IS 1900  ueen Victoria Chocolates  THE   BEST   OUST  THE   MiLBKET  SOLD orrrrr-z* BY  W. F. Teetzel & Co.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdftjo? Tj**ip x*rsr 25 u^-isr*o  50 cEJ-rsro? **Bo*x:*E3rt  CORNER BAKER AND JOSEPHINE STREETS.  Ho!-For Fall Clothing-Ho!  See our celebrated Fit Reform Clothing, also our magnificent lines of fancy vests. The very latest in style  ancl   pattern.    Our   stock   is   complete   in   all   lines.  The Nelson  Clothing Bouse  21\" AND 219 BAKER STREET. NELSON.  STOVES!       STOVES!  We are sole agents for the celebrated  COLE'S HOT BLAST HEATERS  Will burn anything.   Results unequalled  in any line of heaters.  LAWRENCE HARDWARE COMPANY  The Nev\/  Shoe  We Can Fit  any Type of  Woman's Foot  or with High or Low  Instep, with  Q     LONG,    SHORT,    THICK,    THIN  M  E  N UP-TO-DATE STYLES  FOR  DRESSY WOMEN  NeelancTs Shoe Go.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>-e_'.&>.e=.-<=2c3T&-(=>-  TO  m  Contractors and       %  Builders %  Having disposed of our business, to Mr. Ernest Mansfield, we Kv.  bespeak for him a continuance of that liberal share of patronage ^  which has been extended us during our career in Nelson. We can j^jQ  only say that those traits whieh have built up for us and maintained ^m  our reputation for reliable dealings will be continued throughout ijs  by the new Arm. We therefore take great pleasure in recommend- W  ing him to all our old customers\/and also to any new ones who ^  may honor him with their patronage.  . 0$\\  Thanking you for past, favors,  The West Kootenay Brick & time Co., ltd.  T. G   PROCTER, . .  Late Managing Director  Nelson, B. C, 5tit October, 1900.  #  M To the Public...  m  Having taken over the business of the West Kootenay Brick &  j\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Lime Company, Limited, of Nelson, I beg to ask for a continuance jm  jjL of the patronage which you have heretofore extended them. My ii-.  W aim will be at all times to supply you with our products at lowest W  *$l possible prices.. Being in a position to manufacture goods in larger ^  0jf\\ quantities than before, we shall be able to supply the trade at a ^  ^ lower figure. -'fife  (\/($. It Is our intention to install machinery to manufacture our 0{$  jm marble products, and next season we shall be in a position to supply jrm  ;& these products at reasonable rates. jjk,  (ffl\\ We shall also keep on hand a stock of Fire Briek, Fire Clay, (^  jm Tiles and Cement. gm  \/fa Our Brleks and Lime Rock havo taken the First Prizes at the 0JJQ  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpm Spokane Industrial Exposition in 1899 and also this year. We also jri  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^secured prizes last year and this iVear for Ornamental and Building%k  M Stone.      : : . .gg  HOH- '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,     '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-. (Xfo-  sfc We are.prepared to offer special rates to Contractors  and ^  ^ Builders^ .:'-   ' . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      .   'W  #.;'.'.\" ERNEST MANSFIELD, . %  b\\j\\ for The Mansfield Manufacturing'Company. 0$  ti$t Successors to $$  P The West Kootenay Brick tf Lime Co., Ltd. (^  Nelson, B.'C, 5th October, 1900. .M  m  g@@g:ggi@g@gg-$\ufffd\ufffd   ^mmm^^^&  TOWN LOTS  FOR SALE  Two K\"od biiBlnesH lots In tlio town of Plioonix,  50 tent frontage. Original cost $1,000. Will (sell  I'or the name fiKuro on tho following terms: One-  third caRh; balance In nix and twelve months,  Address, F. B. H., post offlce bos IDS, Nelson, B.C.  Private    School  And Kindergarten.  Thorough Kucllsli, Calisthenics, Mnsio, flor-  man and French if required. Fall term commences 3rd Soptember.  For uarUo.ulars apply to  MISS I'ALMER, Joaephlna Streab.  CITY LOCAL NEWS  A short Thanksgiving service will,  be hold this morning in tlio Baptist  mission room, llunie Addition, at  11 o'clock.  The gun club will wind up the  season afc the traps today. Two  matches will be fired, thus winding  up the button series.  The auxiliary hose station on  Hendryx street, between Mill , and  Latirher streets, has been completed.  The building is equipped, with a  hand reel containing G00 feet of  hose. '...'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , = \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfc^V; .      ;..'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\". '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  CD. Jarvis, of the provincial,  goal, lias imported the first pair of  thoroughbred bloodhounds ever  brought into Nelson. c;The animals  are four months old and splendidly  matched.  Rossland parties coming in yes-  - tecday state thafc fche plan i'or tonight's production of'The Mikado\"  by the Nelson amateurs is sold out  and a large house is assured for tomorrow night also.  Mrs. P. Lamont gave a pleasant  tea and social evening at her residence on Carbonatestreet lastnight  for the benefit of fche Ladies' Aid of  Sfc. Paul's Presbyterian church.  The affair was well attended.  The football season . in Nelson  this year was rather expensive  from the standpoint of the insurance companies. The Dominion  Accident Company has paid over  $125 to members of the Nelson  club.  John Crowley, a miuer [employed  at the Bird's Eye mine, is at the  General Hospital suffering from a  broken collar bone. Crowley was  working in the shaft when the  bucket fell, striking him on the  shoulder.  Married, at the residence of Rev.  Robert Frew, in Nelson, Andrew  Stewart aud Miss Mary Bisland  Barclay. Both of the high contracting parties reside at Silverton,  Mr. Stewart being foreman at the  Noonday mino.  On Tuesday evening Ernest R.  Purdy, local representative of the  Bradstreet Company, and Miss  Amy Giles Smith, of Canton, Illinois, were, united in marriage at  St. Savior's Episcopal Church, by  Rev. Akehurst. They will make  their home in Nelson.  The Nelson Checker Club meets  on Monday night at D. J. .Dewar's  office to reorganize. It is proposed  to extend the constitution to include chess. The club will be known  as the.Nelson Chess and Checker  Club, and will have a membership  of twenty-two ou the start.  Rev. father Ferland leffc last  night for Vancouver to be present  on Sunday when monseignor Fal-  conio, papal ablegate to Canada,  blesses fche chime of bells purchased  afc=the=Paeand=foundi'-y,=Savoy,=  France, for the new church of the  Holy Rosary. Father Cote will  officiate in Nelson on Sunday.  Today is Thanksgiving day, and  will be observed as a holiday  throughout the cifcy. All the business houses are to be closed and  banks and government offices are  required to suspend business by  statute. A union service will be  held this morning at 11 o'clock in  the Methodist church.  The Congregational church ivill  not be opened on November 4 as  expected owing to the delay in forwarding the heating and seating  appliances. It is hoped that the  opening can be held on November  18. The club rooms in the church  will be opened on the original date,  however, and the social organization promises to be most successful.  Got His Blankets.  Sam Gormley, of Ymir,  is registered at the Madden.    He spent   his  first day iu Nelson in  bucking   the  N. & F. S.   railway   company   and  succeeded in   doing   ifc.   When   he  bought liis ticket he had liis blankets   checked   through   to   Nelson.  When he   called   at   the   baggage  room he was referred to   the   company's up-town office. Here he was referred to the oflice of a local transfer company,  where he   was   confronted with a demand for twenty-  five cents before the blankets would  be   released.    Gormley,is the   kind  of a man who will pay five   dollars  for   defence   before   he   will   pay  twenty-five cents   iu   tribute.    He  was entitled to the blankets   without paying the twenty-five cents so  he engaged Galliher &   Wilson   to  secure them for him. They killed  two birds with one stone getting  the blankets and the five dollars  and Gormley considers it money  well spent.  EIGHTEEN MONTHS IN JAIL  Yesterday's Court Proceedings.  At yesterday's session of the  assizes Fred Kettner, a German  prospector, was sentenced to  eighteen months' imprisonment for  obtaining mouejr under false pretences in connection withamining  deal, liis partner, Fred Frederick,  was found not guilty and discharged. The trial lasted .all day,  and was not concluded until 9  o'olock lasfc night, when the jury  returned with their verdict.  The fraud transpired in connection with the 'sale of a mineral  claim in tiie1. Burnt Rasiu district.  John H. Dilberger of Tacoma was  induced to'purchase the property  an the strength\" of specimens which  Ketfcuer claimed to have taken from  the claim. When Dilberger visited  the claim he failed to find mineral,  hence the prosecution. A number  of letters in.German were produced  as testimony against Ketfcner, and  were translated to the court by H.  E. McDonald. Mr. justice Walkem  agreed with the verdict and censured Kettner severely for his  fraud. The prisoner defended himself stoutly, maintaining that Dilberger had perjured himself. H. A.  MacLean prosecuted and J. A. Macdonald of Rossland defeuded.  The grand jury concluded\" its  work yesterday, finding 13 true  bills out of\"! \"Vi 'cases presented, to  them, the. exception being that.of  Regina vs Carlyle and Sutherland  arising out of the change of management in the Lode Star Mining  Company. The jurors visited the  gaol and the hospital. They were  also taken for a run over the street  car line as the guests of captain  Duncan. The jury asked to be discharged, but his honor declined to  fulfill the request on the ground  that new cases might crop up during the next week which would require their'attention. Accordingly  an adjournment was made to Monday next.  No session of court will be held  today because of the statutory holiday, but court will resume tomorrow morning, when the Albi case  will probably come up. The criminal eases will.occupy the attention  of the court well into next week.  AGREE TO PAY UNION WAGES  Ymir Mine Falls Into Line.  The wages, for mine workers in  Kootenay. has been as follows for  months: Men working in shafts,  $4; machine men, $3,50; hammers-  men, $3.25; carmen, muckers and  laborers, $3. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. This is known as the  Slocan compromise scale, and is  now paid byj every mine working  in Slocan district, every mine in  Ainsworth district;, every mine in  Nelson district, every mine iu  Moyie district, every mine in the  Boundary district and every mine  in the Lardo district. In fact in  the two last-named districts ham-  mer3men=get^$3r50\"==a=i=dayr=or=i25=  cents more than the scale. The  management of the Ymir mine, in  the Nelson district, have caused  notices to be posted at that mine  that the standard scale would be  paid, in future. This is gratifying  news to the men who work in  mines, for it means that the cause  for friction between employer and  employee is reduced to the minimum.  .',-. Conservative Rally.  The Conservatives of Nelson will  have a rally in the committee rooms  in the Houston block on Friday  night. Local men will make short  speeches, and some of them will be  worth hearing. Jacob Dover, one  of the most enthusiastic of Conservatives, has agreed to deliver a 10-  minute speech on condition that he  be allowed to invite James McPhee  to make a 10-ininute speech in reply. Mr, McPhee is as strong and  enthusiastic a Libera* as Mr. Dover  is ..a Conservative. Arrangements  are\"''being made by the Conserva'-  tives for a public meeting to be  held at the opera house some night  next week. R. F. Green, M. P. P.,  of Kaslo and Dr. Edward Bowes of  Rossland will, be invited to make  addresses.  ..\"  Last Night's Fire.  The fire brigade had a two hours'  fight on the Nelson Saw & Planing  Mills', Limited wharf last night to  save the rniill building. A blaze  was discovered iu the mill at 8:45  o'clock and proved to be located  beneath the boiler, the foundation  having become overheated, setting  fire to the superstructure of the  wharf.    The   chemical   apparatus  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMKF  SI.   IB^IEIIRS   &   CO.  *N**El*r_,SO'N*  \"K\\A.s:r_.o  S-A.*fc-*r-DO\"N  STOVES!   STOVES!   STOVES!  HEATING STOVES, COOKING STOVES, AND STEEL RANGES  Sole Agents for % Original Cole's Hot Blast Goal Heaters  SEE OUR GUNS AND RIFLES  HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF AMMUNITION  TKWOKHONK 27  Store, Corner linker and Josephino Slrre  was turned on the fire and practically subdued the flames. To  stamp it out thoroughly a line of  hose was laid and a section of hose  placed from the nearest hydrant.  'Chief Thompson and firemen  Houston and Archibald had an unpleasant experience while working  at, the fire. They took the line of  hose iuto a boat beneath the deck  of the wharf, but the craft filled  and upset throwing the trio into  eight feet of water. They escaped  none the worse for the ducking. To  put the boiler in aueh shape to avoid  danger of similar fires in future  will cost the company about $500.  PERSONAL.  II. R. Cameron leaves today on a  I rip through the Slocan in the interests ol the  Great West Assurance Company.  Harry Aitkin, one of tho owners  of the Juno group, left yesterday for  Los  Angeles, California, to spend part ot the winter.  J. Fred Ritchie, P. L. S. of Rossland was in the eity yesterday enronle lo Pilot  Ray, where he was looUiny; over some 'mineral  propert ics.  BUSINESS   MENTION.  Cellar to Rent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdApply Merchants  Bank of Halifax.  Nicely Furnished Rooms\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcorner  Vernon and Cedar streets.  Wanted\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTick   makers    at   the  Kootenay Wire Works, Front street.  Hack   calls left at   the   Pacific  Transfer barn ou Vernon streot. Telephone  call 35.  Wanted.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree furnished rooms  suitable for housekeeping. Address box 131,  \"Nelson.  For Rent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStore in Tremont  Hotel block. Apply to Malone & Tregillus,  Tremont hotel.  Large well furnished   rooms to  let. Apply rooms ] n,*><l 5 \"Macdonald building,  corner Josephine and Vernon streets.  To Let\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFurnished room at veas-  able figure; private board next door. Fourth  house above city hall, Victoiia street.  For Rent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnfurnished six-room  cottage. Water, electric light and sewerage.  Apply lo Mrs. Croasdaile, Observatory street.  For Rent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWell Furnished rooms,  bath, electric lights, hot air. Mrs. Ogilvie, north  side Carbonate street between Josephine and  Ward.'  To Let\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFrom and after Nov. 1st,  cottage at the corner of Falls and Hoover Sts.  Four i ooms and lean-to. Apply K. P. Whalley,  box SIS, Nolson, li. C.  DR.  ALEXANDER  FORINJ  OFFICE AND  HESIDENCK  Silica   street, between Ward  and  Josephine streets.  Telephone 120.  ABOUT THIS TIME  OF YEAR...  Many people begin wearing  spectacles to read wi th in  the evening. They rest the  eye and assist it when the  light is poor.\"  We sell gold-filled frames, fitted with the best lenses, for  $1.50, and up to $5.00; also  nickel frames for $1.00.  \"If Brown said  so, its right.\"  T. H. BROWN  STANLEY PIANOS  178 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.  NELSON TENT AND  A.WNING FACTORY  The best equipped establishment in British. Columbia for turning out  all kinds of canvas goods.  Ji\ufffd\ufffd&&&&&&.&&&&&.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 9f3i-S'9ai999S9;  MP  & Something New  to  to  to,  $   MORRELL'S  jjj   CELEBRATED  |jj   HAMSandB^CON  to  to  to  i|jf Direct from Iowa's world famed Corn Belt.  to    Iowa's Pride Ham, 22c Iowa's Pride Bacon, 25c  to    to KIRKPATRICK & WILSON  to   Telephone 10 185 Bakep Street  ^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjg-*g-a>-&,^,'i>-'g-'ft-'a,'g,i'g       __\\_s____[_\ufffd\ufffd__t  _t^m^^__>_^^_Z_  ____1_^^__\\_^^__t^^___t_^^__\\-^^__\\*  .-mm-m^ST^S Sl^l ^_**_ ^_\\WZ B5^\"t S  ^.  MORRELL'S  CELEBRATED  HAMS and BACON  -*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  Indeed you should  be Thankful  When you consider the opportunities  you   have  of selecting from  our stock  an  assortment  of goods for your  THANKSGIVING DINNER  Wm. Hunter & Co.  SUCCESSORS TO  THE WESTERN MERCANTILE CO., Limited.  $9,000 FIRE SACE  Nelson Furniture Co.  The entire stock of the Nelson Furniture Company  has been purchased by  The OLD CURIOSITY SHOP  and will be Sold at  Tremendous Sacrifice Prices  The stock consists of Furniture, Carpets, Linoleums,.,  Pictures, Upholstered Goods, Fancy Rockers,etc.  -E^ER-^T^ING\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrjSO^GQr  Doors Open Thursday Morning, October 4th  New Fall Goods  New Dress Goods in Tweed, Costume Cloth, Homespun     ^j  and Black Goods.  Shirt Waists in Corduroy Flannel Mercerised Sateen  and Flannelette.  A large range of Bjack  Dress Skirts.    Underskirts from $1.25 to j  $7.00.   Latest styles in Ladies' and Children's Jackets. 1  Children's Flannelette Underwear.  Our Clothing,  Gents'  Furnishings, and* Boot and  Shoe Stock isj  complete.   We have the celebrated Carss' Mackinaw  Jackets and Pants.  A full line of Rubber Goods.  A. FERLAND & CO.!  Maple Syrupy  and  r\ufffd\ufffdY.t  n  THEO tyADSOfi, Proprietor.  Baker Streot, Nelson.  Vote for Niekerson  . to repair your watch. He was  bom ia the wateh business.  His platform is first-class workmanship. Baker Street, opposite Queen's hotel.  We have just received a large consignment of Old Settlers' Maple Syrup, the besj  on the market ; also sortie pure Ontario' White Clover Honey.   Try it.  Houston Block.  Telephone 161.  P. O. Box 176.  JOHN A. IRVING & CO  2SS EffgllIT.COSTS BUT ONE CENT|\ufffd\ufffd^^-0-s-^T-s--'  | ARK NOI3ELESi|  To drop us a post card that we may call and give estimates.   It Raves many dollars.  Never  have any plumbing done until you havo seen our goods. and our prices,      \ufffd\ufffd  OPP08ITE  POBTOFFXCffi.  STRACHAN BROTHERS, Plumbers!  HMSli  '^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ^^'^L^t^iA^^__i","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. 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Titled The Nelson Tribune from 1901-08-15 to 1903-12-19.<br><br>Published by John Houston & Co. from 1892-12-01 to 1894-12-29; The Tribune Publishing Company from 1897-01-02 to 1898-12-31; an unidentified party from 1899-01-07 to 1901-08-31 and from 1902-08-30 to 1903-02-07; The Tribune Association from 1901-09-02 to 1902-02-25; and The Tribune Company from 1903-02-14 to 1903-12-19.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : Tribune Publishing Company","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":"Sort Date","value":"1900-10-18 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":"1900-10-18 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 Nelson Tribune","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":""}]}