{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"fd1e2cef-1a9e-4dd9-8799-2e25dc937884","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":"2012-12-20","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":"1901-03-06","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\/1.0188939\/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":" *~ *     .*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"' it\"'  ^7^-^^^xp^^^^^W^  .IvV3\"--  DAILY EDITION   BY MAIL  FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif^M  WEEKLY EDITION BY MAIL  TWO DOLLARS A YEAR  ^      **>v \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* v  NINTH YEAR.  THE TRIBUNE: NELSON B. C. WEDNESDAY, MARCH G, 1901  PRICE FIVE CENTS  SOME MINING STATISTICS  OUTPUT OFMETALIFEROUS MINES  OF THE PROVINCE.  A Grand Total.pf Almost Seventeen  Million .Dollars\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSchool Appropriations\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOther Matters.  Victoria, March 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd[Special to  The Tribune.]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStatistics obtained,  from the mines show that'the mefc-  x\"al ifei;ouS'mines of the;.province.dui>  \/ingTifljOfa\/:^  \/\/\/\/\/du^  X ^lod^min^  ,\/\/siIy<^  \/;^ea^  ^y^ni^iy'goid^^  \/*\/nag^\/pf.\/<^  -\/\/total ;hum^  \/\/\/number pf;m^  \/s^tpu^OO;'^  A-\ufffd\ufffd Mdergrburid^^  ;\/;|\/tfr\"mind\/l^  \/\/increase:bf'putp^^  '77[. of;the products \/of\/the\/coal;; mines  \/yg\/^\/$5,8*^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSli^ta^^^  \/\/.miries^b\ufffd\ufffd  gJS^The^^^  \/;Mmbi\ufffd\ufffdp*^  . |f$[ithe^^  Tg^^itjg^h^  ::||pt$r^^  \" :S-Vi*pfcovi*^\ufffd\ufffdn3'^  M.'JVd MAI IMA'^-ArAlaAn'^XrAiWTlAririniniiHniAu''1  ner is the man for the position.at  present\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda splendid organizer, stern,  but not inhuman; not a brilliant  general in the field, not as good, as  men of whom little has been heard,  for it was not lord Kitchener who  woir the Soudan campaign so much  as Hunter and MacDonald, and but  for. the action of these generals  Great Britain would have, been in  \"Queer\" street.\" \"But then lord  Kitchener organized the compaign.  He had three months' supplies  ready to hand.' There was no detail missing. He finances; he knows  just how far every shilling will _go.  It ia genius. But' there * are better  fighters than lord'Kitchener.\" ' * >  MINES OF THE KOOTENAYS  PRINCIPAL PRODUCERS OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.   .  An Immense Metaliferous Belt Whose  Possibilities Can Scarcely Bo    >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -  ' Conjectured.-,  ;gen:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^Tteriaimp;-^^  yf!a^|Ro9^  IlliCorpc^^  .*JS|f!ki|.*-hj^  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd't^i%f||five^  I';f-ik%Tli0^  77y;7BEkm:^arch7 ^^The^exf  eral meetirig\/bf\/theminiate:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpowersiwiUi-o^ls^^g^^^  oftlie^Chinesef-pJ^i^  \\gardirig\/tiielegation;quarters >fo*W;  established inChiiii^|public^buHd  ;ings.;\/Tb^  ;liaveS:takerii they board\/Vpf\/works\ufffd\ufffd  iboard\/pf revenue amd^o^d\/^pere\/  jiripniate;\/^lie\/;I^  . trip\/ eliriperbr.'s^templeiof*; wpr:\" \"  -Fire lias de^roj^'tHe^^tei^^^  ?of^tlw7timpiextf \"WDQ^y^ra^in^iTbhe;  J&ummper'pala^  ^pffigyjofjBu^  ^apo^s*^?^^  >\/traris j^rts\/ ^aku|  |Thfe\/;i^  ;;th\/ere:is^  i'^S  i\/I^NiMtfj'-Marc  liaye\/beem  Tpus^iaunching^^^^  frieftv; warinips^ti^  fela|*|rj^  \"Albeririarle, first-class battleship of  |T4';0pp&^M^^  .cruiser of:l4,000 tons, aiid'-the Kent,  $riripr^icrui^ii\ufffd\ufffd!pf|\/98^  fcruiseri--, .  at!  '\"3  to''; first-class-: cities,; $15\/iu\/secorid  ^g\/^h^s^  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'i^\ufffd\ufffd7$bwatM|t^^  |H\/\/empk^^  l^^:;s^\ufffd\ufffdw\ufffd\ufffdaa;ipfJ|th[M^granJ^  tonsf  ^h\/B\ufffd\ufffdfoui^]wi^iiml;\ufffd\ufffd:^  United 'Kingdom,' but \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd owing tb the  unfavorable weather^at'Portsmbuth:'  |tKbf'la^  . Ki\"pbstpbtii6!d\/'7l:!\\fPha':SfnnSi-_Xi^li.-^a__.-_ci.  ;be@  The   four   vessels'  aggregate a displacement fof 42,000  tons, which makes a total of :92,000;  vipn'j^  the accession-bf king;,Edward.'-;>The  Montague...was lauuched -at. Daveri;  *~*^rt;W:t*^  arid\/tl^Dralfey^^  The Kootenays, : considering the  short, time the'great mining industry Has been under headway, have  tprobaJbly, prpduced^more: shipping  \/mines\/than|^i^pti^pmining:^isi;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdttrictibn: the f fiaee of ^h&'giobe^fAfe  \"idiougliSBiitto-is\/su^  Uis-i-^*\"''-^'\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv*-'--**';::%V'.t*i-\"-:.> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^'-^jT-.^'-aviSs-  ^astlarea; which^ contains I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM^enpr-V  mous:\/riumb\/e^  \/whiettfis ni^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdai^cei^it\/bf\/il&e^  .^\/the$;ag^^  such avl^gbSnum^iSibfspriMucers;  \/br.: an\/eq^ial: '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd output; 'yA^S^^xpvea^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdent ti^^  ipirig\/to\/tti^^  ^riti-^\/Ccdu  \"smelteirel?:^  theirf output tp|Em^e^^d^lieiS  Cppjjiits^^  lttiatji\ufffd\ufffd\/i*^^  ^tryiingbpri^anie's |tp|fln*d us^mid y\ufffd\ufffd  ^jj-mrketj\/.T^  'tliiMpr*^^  spEgi-eatill7^^  ^pn*^|thieMKp^^^|wiU^  to the first place among the mining  icentersspf^he^p^diypflwjisii^  jwhpn|||takin^intip  ^seen-  \"v.con^  gexcess^.  _  vincial reyehiie    __ ^      .. .^iltSl^plWiraisM';  p\ufffd\ufffd^$5;afeyiM;fa^^ii^  b;gpjjbyjthe province;^ <*^\ufffd\ufffds. I'-m* -^x^x^.-:-.-'  l'*7^XV-^X^l^_-i:K}rtnar_'Xinr.r  ^^jTj^S^a^in^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffdiif'aof.*innllxr.r\ufffd\ufffdWcaoo^';+.Kvni'i\ufffd\ufffd  I is. ri<^^be|^ligh:tes^r*e ;  ;-^goyei^^*OT^s|itnalung^n^^  l^^he!Siitogimein^  :^lMt'ter|Ueyptei^lly^|iw  i^^W|^ee^ingT*'^febn*to  Sc^a^ibn^fa;refineixini^  May Visit the Coast.  -:y.  Agictio^  7 |dbn cables sayfthe duke and duchess  A.o\ufffd\ufffd S^P'rk } vWili nbi^^nt^u^theii^  A^anadiaii ^xSir^tp^thp ^cMc'Jc^oasti?  - premfer J^n^nuir^h^  ':;frbmT^ttawa ls^mgftlw^^Ui.r^v;?  }\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *;\/In-:!the7;legi^turegtpday\/ a'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; new^  mining biUiwas^inti^uc^,y^hich'l  '*; aims atprOTpnting abuses; ^uchais  :-,* i arp3e I during (ythe ^rusjli^^to i-tlib7  P nortHern' 'gptd'\"fleldi.^:<7^l:;.'!.;?ASAS''-  'xxS:Ai'-^biiriSwas. intrbducedT by:'the\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdy attorneys general^^endwing*giutt^  *' necessary? Jhe; rental-i^  t of ;; public ;?fiui^  7[ demisebfth^ci^'wn^Prpywibnsbf:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tlie :.Hill ^are'^ma,de^^  - cover contingencies ^arising :.,piit;:;;pf i  r tlie death-^ttlie late^  -i.:^::^:^*^P?^^  AA^'-^^^M^&^^^W^'^^W':  T tp; The'Tribune;]^^talcbnyeirtibh  \"; of ;city ;G^ngemen ;last Iriightjr^p-  ; hitions werepassed  action \"of^vm^bersKpf sparliaii^tj  s especially^rs^ei^  :; ui^^^aiiist^  -cbniwt^iw; with^hp^  , to:Cattiplic^  Thp rebplutipu.. particularly 'regret-:.'\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:*.'nted'::th^  \"7: weli^jM.^.^;pngtl^;m^te^   fvi^'-^-S:  :As:ssA^^^a^^SF^^AxA[Sss:  ^^iCTpBTA,3; March ;:5.^Accbrding  .: tor Miss: Gpw^and; Bey;:^arid\" Mrsr  .;,-'. Jarvis^ who:haye just Ja,*rriyedLfrbm;  :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.' India,7 the, rains there -have;,failed  this   year .-and a<: famine: in some  jj]aee8,;pv<m;^r^ia\\than'that b?last  ' year,, is. feared. .,*;     y:       'y: A'Si}  7- -^  MoNTBBAt,, March 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpeaking  of lord Kitchener today, Frederick  yiliiers,^ -tlib - veteran war correspondent; who,isin the city to. lect-;  urothi?\" evening- oh the war iri:  South Africa, said: \"Lord Kitche-\"  ;t-X.  'Londdri-SNewsSNotM^I^;^ ;g  igcEONDbN^M*^^  ibasi|i*^cdgprS^aj^^^  fre\ufffd\ufffdruitingf|^  ?grbund^tl^'thegb^r^^  ::liasTaf;man^mi^  ^-.Gpmmumtotio^  j;m'te^i^e*d|JS^a?g^Jj^^  ^gKinlg:^d^aM:g^^  \/pat*entj^e\\^p^Hn^  Cornwall and York to confer knighthood while-he is Jin^;Aiistralia.S^^i^  Tadded to the-class .of^.shippers,- and  .'wttich-will   more than-'double -the  <pres^fonu^e^f^s^p\ufffd\ufffd^^^  gs^he^reat^nem^  Slc^u;. alone,\" which; has7(probabIy  been explbred.tp' a; g'reateiv extent  Ittenfan^-b^fcrerfe  |Bnpis@fOpiumtifi^f4^  '\", \"'\"^itSnmnht^^  ^-tidp^fiiveiy)^  l^ti^ll^pp^  ithi^*^^^}|gr(Sii^^  1'themii;'6emg^^i^^  mi^\"'^e^the|;^yne%Slc^  out the district which have of late  been added to the.list, but as -yet  no definite information has been  obtained from them.  'To treat this -large output- there  are only five smelters\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe .Canadian Smelting Works at Trail, Hall  Mines Smelting ^Company at Nelson, British Columbia Copper Company at Greenwood, Granby Consolidated Mining & Smelting-'Company at Grand Forks and the Standard Pyritic-Smelting' Company'^at  Boundary v Falls.\/^ The smelter' at  Trail treats 'copper\/ores of Rossland,-  Boundary.- <3reeK,p3ast Kooetnay,  Kootenay Lake and the silver-lead  ore of .the. Slocan. The one at  Nelson treats the'ores of this1 dis-  triet,;.. Slocan,, East...Kootenay and  }l$SiOti^  ^fJ\ufffd\ufffdGre^wc>^  ^rtfailifrpm^  3$eated:;by2ti^nsti^  ^OTdi:;@;TJtte.^Sn\ufffd\ufffd^t^'0^  it^-^sith^p^  ?*I*Mnsia*OT.^n*^;Ltiaet^  ^roperti^5*^tfe|=Bounda^  ^Cal^lpOT^Oc^pf |tlie!' copper-ores;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdib^thi^buii^i^^ili {be treated; by|  i$he;Boundar^'|^a^  :-:''|f\ufffd\ufffd;Mi^ng^^  __ ^Ke^min^ll^i^  jtib^^N^i^ng^lY*^  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdre^'a^l^  fjujiJgmpnliilflilal^^^  Patrick, &-Wilspn*against George H.  'p^^er|?^&i^n^|^he|;bw^  ^e^*rpu]^Tl|SaiimfMnt^^  ^$70|pi-TJtepa|e^iilit^  ^tlia^^ri'^a^Bfii^l^n  ?atfH?p'cl**be^  |l^K^j-Tii^]p'oj|^uti^  :ahdTshbuld;cbmmaiid a  '\/SB  RELATIONS ARE UNCHANGED  VON  BUELOW  MANY'S  EXPLAINS  POSITION.  OEB-  Defends the Emperor's Course on His  Visit tb England\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFriendship  and Unity 'Desired.-.  -Jtwr,-;'   price;?.  THE LECACY OF JOHN NEILD  ^Included insthe-vaat. fortune left  jbyithe 4late*qiieen|WictbriaHwasi; as  |legaby>ain:oi\ufffd\ufffditih*ptb|*^  lOQOiwhichiwai^illed '-to herjibyJbhn!  iCamden?Neild,anreccentric;,oId;gen-;T  |tlemari;bf^BuekinlBrF-\"-Vii^*-,~-~t'  BuckihghamsKire; almost  IliElf eFceiiSaS^  mprath^  Berlin, , March   5.4r Chancellor  Von Buelow in a speech.today laid  emphasis  on .the Tnbble1. impulse'  actuating the emperor in the matter  of relations between Great\" Britain  \"and Germany: -\"I'\"observed two  months ago,\" said, the chancellor,  '\"and I repeat today,., that nothing  Js' changed in - our-s relations' with  Great Britain since I \"declared iu the'  reichstag that we' were* ready and  willing to live in peace^ friendship  and unity with Great Britain,-on  the-basisr of mutual--consideration  ;ahd;*absolute;equalit^^';^  ^^f^berefbre,f^hb^m  |h&;presence|E^^  ^la^^bpeBr^edfthe^wa^fb^TJ^  ^anc^^up*hJSbrnm^gg^  ^^is^^S^un^g^iSlt^^  ;i&ie^^N&!dbubt^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,X---.X'<y. :>--pX;,^-r^+\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?,!:rX?\"jrX;$3^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^*;-X -^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.^-^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:--\\Z;.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  asprel^intssb^we^lt^J^^b^  ''tries',\", but all - the 'same, there 'are  ; immCTpuR^M^necjMsary^  Icprd^^bpti^ei^  lijprl^relatibnsja^  reason; why we shbuldrnbt cultivate  relations; with'Great-vBritainiri'*as  ::PerhapS;thb^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^pJ3M;th^thelb^^  realized^hich^ia^bttdvahtagTOu^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -.V----' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^\"t'..'Ti..T;'.'.Tv^*T'>T.^.T:^.^w-.^..,>--J',v:c;.'.T:-.... .-^-.\"'-T-t^V-t  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RutbVAmericari'Bby, Ajax, Argenta,  Last ChanceVIvauhoe, Reco, Good:  ^^Th^mempri^it^^ee^  i'suggestedfe'l^^  : miriistws'aiid-f^mi^m^  ;approyM;by;kingripSd^i^  ;a^onui|^n^1%l^nibs^  Ifeatiiro'tpf^wUic^  thie^queerijTtjo:. bo erected ;near:TvIes t\ufffd\ufffd  minster'^^bbey^'br Buckingham  'palace.-**-:*\":-.^:. ':r;i .-.xAr. c-y t--^u-^*^^-;  r-r^J:-^v:;^?^Tr^3r': Expires--:7''\/;' 7 ^saas  :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;- r^^SHiNOTpN, March ftApbeHay.  ^JE'auricefb'te treaty;^ int^det^ to re-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrplace -the-Clay ton-Bulweri treaty {re-;  latingstb \/the -bbristruction.;; bfVthe:  Isthmian waterways^ diedjiati-nbori  yesterday^ ^the^last^ci&user of itlip  treaty7allbyrod'Jpnly': *uf^^tp^March *  4th for its ratification.  Neither thei  government-^^ of-rtheftUnited^ States.v  npi^;Groat^Britain appears .to'have'  made any formal effort7t6[['extend-  that periodi    Though\/tiie treaty^ fa  dead from the point of international  law; it^riiayvjstill ';>' serye^a:f purpose\/  There * is^rpasbni tpv believe..that  '-negotiations'v*wiil ;bec resumed for;  the;cpnelu8ion;;.bf r^ne^trOaty^itlvi  a[view tp';meeting if;. possible^ the  pbjectibns^raised by:the^'senate; to  .the-brigm^\/fcre  \/:\/:'^*^M^s^ge^From^e'*;:ffin&^^^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;. :^cwobN,;Marcir 5.\/--Iri^tlie\/hbuse;  of^commOnsv tbdayi^theaphancellbr'  of \"iiihe^^exchectiier.sir Micha:el Hicks\/  Beach;':; readi a message T-froui\/^  king   asking-parliament 'to--make  suitable^ provisio'n:-fprthe honorable  support7\/and.; mainteriance -of; the  duke -and-duchess,of Cornwall arid?  York, the duchess ofc Fife, the princess Victoria. and;'^'Pharles\/of'..'Deri^  iriark7arid7the.queen in the.event of  her- surviving liim; and ihe '\/duchess-  ; of \/Pprk-in ,rthe.; eyent of'her surviving her busbarid..\/\/ *::\/\/'r*\/:.  \"\/ En Route to the Coast. \/  MoNTRBAE, \/March\"7^57\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTwenty-  : seven sailors from the depot ship  : Duke of Wellington, at Portsmouth,  arrived   in   the'city today.   They  leave tomorrow morning for Vancouver to join the Pacific squadron.  Tsilyer*:le^^e^iBMejp^|t^  {Stai^^ln^shii^^  ^tfiier^pro  rN^|^en^g|ar6^*!Bj)'^^  T?H^im^;Tp;a^\/Ala^i^^^^  ?Ei^erpris^5Eh^r|^ise^*^  |tbni|^akefieidjj^^c^^  Hewett^ .Willemar group, ^eepawa,  fEiiuIy|Edith^^  ;JSlp&n:Gi ijyjf ^Uln^ttMij,Slocan Kilpi^  Black)Priricei arid T^\"Fi'ierida;ffatt  CSout^Fprlra7\/^S||^ f |at [  Caribbb\/jWhltewater7 and; SuriJ3et\/  ^t^Cpdyj,\/N6We;TM  ; Creek,^ theTCht^eaa^ I^^whicll  ?ar\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT::shippirig r cpricentra;tes\/are: the  \"Wakefield,''Whitewater -and Noble  ^&^A:^AS'%-A'.yZA::A^_'.;  i, rxFrbm^Ea^t7K_opikn&y7there are  - four properties,7 afi\/of;which\/ have:  :been;..shipping:ftov a. considerable;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'time\/past.\/' They^ are-Jthe\/North  ^Starv\/SulliyanVi 7Sfc SEugerie'v^rid  tSpwety\/Girli [thelJSt.. Ej^ene^iBhipr;  ;ping ;cbnceritrates\/\/;^'\/  \/Boundary \/Creeks has\/pirbduced'  ,twerityrtwo shippers and they are  Jthe\/B.rG. 7mine, ^Braridpn^ Golden  *Crpwri^: \/Beetbrii\/ Gold ' Cbmpariy;  Cariboo, City of Paris, Athelstan,  Gold Drbp\/Gblderi Eagle, Buckhorn,  Lala, Brooklyn,\/Mother,\/Lode, Ore  Denero,     Rat^inrilleri\/   Republicj  Snowshoe^\" Sunset; Winnipeg, Knob  Hill;, \/Old j Ironsides\/; Yankee 'Girl  \/and ?Victprial '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%. 0rily;;.twb^.ot, ^these  vship.eoucentrat68, being the.Cariboo  \/andJRepub]i*c\/:-\/\/,;l-:v;-'^  A OhKootenay; lakethere\/are nine  which have shipped arid they are  'the JHectbrJ Iiittle Phil, Molly Gibr  sptii N6i lyT.Suriset, Tariff;<Fourth of  July,   Highland rVMines arid Silve?\/  her death.. This is perhaps the most  .remarkable instance on - record of. a  great fortune, being' conferred 'on\/a7:  l^u^p\/^^f *^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdan] !vpliq^^\/^h e Sjiiacl\/  Tpf bb^ablyrfrieyei'r\/s^rilf^i^spplceri^tp^  \/aiw^i^in^lwh^-iga'^i  \/>^hife|8^7rjaKarl^ble^  ;\/S]^^^aa;?a;\/m;iii^^  ^io^^lMh\/ad.im^  ^t>is^ai&fo.tHat:\/ hef^pi^i^aAwa.yB:  ?superih^5ad^|anx^.w^  ibeing]ciraeZfbr;;hh^  | muetei ncpriv^ience  \/tanmlre!;sure\/t*^^  uBHea^liim\"^^  ^i^used tb\/haye\/hiis cli^es^brushed;;  Tbecause\/Zlie;! said,;' it\/^^igly^rthe;  iriap;,^TWhen Neild camp\/iptoSpOSr\/  LlEfesibn\/jbfi^iiisIfathe^s\/'fbiAu^  7Sai.  Six shippers are in the vicinity of:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNelson. They are Granite;\/ Athabasca,\/ Hall\/Miigjes, \/Vpriiis\/ Silver  King and Ferri7^\/ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -:. ,x.S7x 7.SSA.7  :- \/At Ymir there \/are: three,; being  the Ymir, Arlington\/and 'Yellowstone.-' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 77..f A7 77: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\/'*\/' ;V \/ :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \/ \/\/\/ ^  . ; Beatrice, Nellie L, Sunshine, Silver  Cup,- Triuney Byrori White and  Grpmwellare;the.seven \\\\rell-kriowri  mines that have a large output in  the Lardeau district.       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-[.-.  There are also seven , shippers at  Rossland, which probably gives the  largest output of any other district.  They are thelron Mask, Le Roi, Indian: Chief, Iron -Colt, Centre Star,'  War Eagle and Monte Cristo. :<,  There are a few others: through-;  \/dbybl(^ied syiriptbms^bf;miserliriess\/\/  i thbiiojgK from:; tirrie. tbj^ime\/te\/pbr-  \"ifbrmied acts ;pf -, charity\/;\/\/%^i\/\/&\/;\/  \/\/In 1852; at Neild's\/?deatl^^it;fwas  found'by his iwill that;;\/mth\/the ex\/  jceptiou of a few legacies,^ his\/whole  fbrtune\/--a yast onein thPse\/days\/-^-'\/  had been left to the^q^BeEufifpriier;  T8ole^use; -it j^\/possibl-e\/thattierei  ;was some rbrnance in^\/Neild's\/early  life .because of which^he had - never'  married; in his .later ^earsjKe iriiist  Have been deeply impfessed-by\/the  beauty t of the young\/andv\/;loyely\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  queen; whose pictures: He had seen  everywhere,: and : who\/\/wa,s\/ billy*  about thirty years of age when he  died\/'\/;,\/'\/\/\/' ^'^AffA-ASfA  \/ WKenfthe queen was notified that  this fortune had -\\been \/left\" .to\/ her  she was reluctant;\"about accepting-  the money. -She made77i\ufffd\ufffdreiful.'in\/  quiry.'to ascertain' if Neild. had left  any relatives,:, - arid, 7 upon \/finding;  that.-.hci had n6t,\/accepted;-the\/be-,  quest.'\/Shei increased\/tlie\\ legacies  of\/th|9>\/executbrs byi\/^IOOp. ..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd She  also\/conferred an annuit?sr,ori a'Mrs.  Neale,a^nantjof-Neild^\/whpihad  saved his life when lie .attempted to  cbmiriit suicide in;182S.i\/.v 7y -.7- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/.  Another, thing she did in his memory was to rebuild the chancel of  North Marston church\/ He ^was the  patron of ^the parish; and'having  once been asked to repair the roof  of the .chancel, ho fdid\/it\/by filling  up the fissures with strips of painted calico, saying that> they would  last his time. This job queen Victoria had done properly, and she  otherwise beautified the structure.  The reredos of the church, bears  this inscription : \"This reredos and  the stained-glass window above it  were erected by her majesty Victoria in the eighteenth:year of her  reign in memory of John Camden  Neild, esq., of this parish, who died  Aug. 30,1852, aged aeventyrtwo.\"  \ufffd\ufffdyisit\/nplajte^  :^e\/Sp^h;!^ri^^ |lijtiao^  'lalsp\/g\/'seeriZlflM^  \/empe5ra^|y^it^p  rriori-receptibri* of &Kruger\/iriaBerliri.\"  vTne\/paralIels^iwe-jrib*^c;OTr  ;|iybvi^^^iMl^p*^ide^  |pr^cife^purn^t^  -\/c^pel\/u^an^  iinfcffij^^iriitjiejSbut  ipl^tibnsj^^lwreas\/liisi;\/iDnaj esty^  ^i|i^^;|j^land^  ^witKl^neil\/Sb^  ^ei^i?,t^^^st^i^h^  *iHatttffe\/'em^rp^*^t'^  ^ritrar^\/^jth^int^^  ^uritryjitfad^tirig;&^  \/^?att^tibns[\/\/:t\/\/\/;\/;\/\/\/\/\/^T^  \/\"^^e^^dirig^the 'decprating\/of lord  ^Rbberts.l#vithi^^  ! Black\/Es^lp\/that wias \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd solely 'a mat-  ter fbrja kirig^\/of >PTussia;to decide;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-It us ai question\/ of the   cbnstitu-r';  \/tipnal;'persbrial prerpgfStive\/'bfthe  crbwri\/ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Lord  Roberts * is 7riot\/a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpolitical- persdiiage, '.., therefore\/ the  distinction is bf no political iinpovi-  \\ance.77ryxx':777x'-7xC7'7':A:^.:!^'77[:\/  y_''Regarding;\":\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Russia^ I \/am\/fully  corivincedthat one of the foremost  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd endeavors of7 oiir policy is to ciilti^-  vate the most \/friendly and' most  neighborly relations\/ I airi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd firmly,  convinced that German and Rus-\"  sian ;.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd interests  are side by side in  most matters, and there isino point  i%vhere with5 iriutual,goodwill prevailing pur   interests, need'<- clash;  There is no .antagonism separating  the two empires which cannot be  bridged. * But here also we require  complete equality.   Germany is no  more   dependent   on   Russia \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd than  they are dependent upon us.\"   :  \/ Referriug to the criticism of hira-^  self published in the Russian Commercial and Industrial Gazette be^  \"cause he had not regarded German  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdagriculture as a negotiable quantity,  the chancellor said it is the^right  and duty of every goverririierit to  give all the concessions it can .with-'  but prejudicing the interests of its  own country, but appreciation of  those interests did not imply hostility against \"our heretofore,.and  I   hope   our    future, - commercial  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd friends.    I hope we shall come to  understanding in this respect,  sideration nor ties of \"relationship,  but solely by calm, deliberate consideration of the interests of state.  He little knows ' the\" emperor who.  thinks  that  other  motives sway  him ' than . those   promoted; by  conscientious-solicitude for the*welfare of the empire and would., misjudge^  me _ sorely   who - believed'  that    I    could.  be    won    over  to'  any   policy\/ but ^ a * German  national policy, which I sum up \"in  the words'\"gpod'and friendly-retentions with those powers who wish  to live in peace and friendship with  us,.but the absolute inainteriance of  that  political-and economic inde-.  pendence to which the German, nation has gained an inalienable right  by its  struggles \"for ^ labor and a  high level'of civilization.\"\/ .  The^chancellor insisted that the  government must endeavor, with  the co-operation of, the Treichstag,  to reconcile\"the.existing conflict' of  interests in regard \"to commercial  treaties upon' which 'depend' the  whole economic future. At the conclusion of his speech chancellor von  Buelow was loudly cheered.' - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The Insurance Bates.  ^Anpthe^tetter-h^jbeen^  by the city officials frbui C. R; Gil^  '-v5^M-:#an\";.\"-AJ*'^^  Jber t;; secretary of- the ^Insurance As-\/  rf\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd*T^>T7'~^v^j.:ta^'i;\/*vi?jutjsts^^  sociatiou; concerning the reduction;  Iiminsiiran'&\/rat^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?;rii^tZis!redrgam^  St-^he\/cpfficU  sTHe';letteHreMs?'Srf6llO  ^ect^yp^fc^A.^g:^^  jthat^eiredu^ipu^pfKlC^p  f^i^iOT^^n|m^eij|^^  - instant, woiild apply ,.tb; the'existing  Ij^rii^JraSl^pr^^uu^  ^{wmr^^p-Wlilm^  ductibrifroni. the premiums written  f andpaidyfoiv by the.-:property^pwn;f  i,';;.''^-.'V~'*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1-,K\ufffd\ufffd mrnmtk^i m~^'^^~'^'ii-_.-i\/m* m^r.'ri-,.._v^^;---.--'.i^i--.~b.~'i m~r,j>Lr*~-$'fa&;  ers. .  This would mean -that there  j avould be the \"rebatetof \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 10 per cent -  WON'T STAND COMPARISON  METHODS OF  v- {\">'  -   CIHO  OUNABD ANI> PA-  MAIL.        ~ S-S  Latter Company Has. Lost, Nineteen  \/ , Ships, the Former bat Two '^'.  - or Three. '\"V-f-v '' S \"  4  \\-s7A ^\/^M'  ^i  -5 '_ ^ \"-.   - Salt Lake Trtbune. \/. ,%-'.*  ~Thel.roeord 'of t%?Pacific\" __:riT,  Steamship Coriipany names nineteen4\/^|^  ships that the \"ctmipany-hM^iosf.S'fSM^-  That is altogether a shairieful show:'*C'^^  ing.   Some 'were*vpld^\"hulks --that; 'fel^-m  \"ought'not tbvhave been'iwrmittedC^^^f  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"-t.  to,go to sea. .\"The old Southerner  was.one-.of these; 'the- Sacramento;  was another.  The Golden .Gate was  burned and probably'no^one\"was\/toi  blame,* but the' truth* is that some,  of, these ships we're -Built\/so:'light -i'T&M  that x they would\" ney^r  |undeMtand?tni8:pnern  ^i^it^\/rOTprtl^the7^^  -\"-\"tl *r    1,t'4>''*^;j**?':',*,vhl'*'\".-',-'*''''^;i'?\".w^  ships, and nevers one life \"through  ys^^fwirak;^  :plbsibri;ftTh^;mi^n8^^  pli8hed;shipmasters^have:'tbl5serve,  4general:!i^nager]^^  -;Vermpnt Railfoad.lias teriUere^hfa\/'  '|rJBsignatiPn*^to^  Jqi^^ai^jf^^bpar*^^  ^i^z)iiagK\ufffd\ufffdieayS^tp^  |*:i^^tMtipbs^ibri'^it^t^Sbu^  iPacificS^e\/:^^  ^presiii^it' arid;g^eral\ufffd\ufffdrii^agM|:bfT:  ^thje\/IJVMe^pnt^peritr^  \/being\/fiTOugh't  ^aysi\/pr*^iden^bf;\/:tne^  r^abiflc\/whplwas^^^fprmerlyl'chairriian]  \/|tf\/^eil^r^of directors oi theVer\/  \/^nt^entral\/ Robert; S;\/ Lbgan,\/as\/  ^sistarit:tb\/the^ce-president; is meri\/  . tipned\/a.8 ^itztugh^^ccesspr\/T, '[A  I'mandi'mTKeiPnoiCuMfdeffc  ._. 18l|msperfeC|;g:  ., ._ _ Ttrainedio*rew.\ufffd\ufffd<ThenK  r.the3rule,i.eternaliyigilan(^lis^  pnceiof safety^is '.never^relajEed^s  =th*eroifarlB^Moutii^Cw\ufffd\ufffd^  .trusted man who:stands .whAr\ufffd\ufffdrahn.-.'x.  Wk  trusted hian:who\/'starids\/wnere  Tinspections  \/and^thefcre^a^sbf*^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIan:^^emergpncj^-every^ man knows'<m^4msm  f.\"-'-\/'-'*:''i,i:i:--\"T;'.'1-.riv.'rt. -rJV-?Zrif\\?>.:*. .-.--\ufffd\ufffd-f-*='''V,^-\/^\/>>4\\''V^^'-:V'','>'-t]^S^-'\"\/<'  'Stantly^his^swe^andf^to^  \/\/i\/:\/;\/\/:Made\/ari:^Assi*g^erit\/^\/r  \/\/TNEW3iYpRk\/:March^r5^Jolm^  iSeai'les,-: tlie; well-knpwri\/financier  arid at present: in\/the^general cor-  \/pprationj\/and0financiaI^businM  niade an assignment today for the:  benefit of r his creditbrs tb: Edward;  F. Dwight.\/': Mr; Searles Tvasf treas-'  urer;,of;\/the^American; Sugar:Rp-:  fining Company uritil a few years,  ago arid was president -.\/pf;the Western National Bank of that city;,:  succeeding Braytbri TvesV \/ -I:\/-\/  : The Journal of Gornmerce today  .will say: \"Estimates of Mr. Searles'.  liabilities are-anywhere from \".$1;\/.  000,000 tp ^2^000,000:   He was gen-,  erally    regarded   heretofore    and;  some of his friends considered him  worth several millions.  tImtrompari;\ufffd\ufffdH^  ^theifogsfttitfi^Sw  j&Uisipn^f^  paliU'tl^\/'fciB^p^hi^  \"hblds\/-fbK\/clbse\/ftU^  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd_  ^'.'^^-l  an  But here again the basis can only  be complete reciprocity and the independence of our own country.\"  The chancellor proceeded to remark that if he directed his course  in accordance with foreign customs,  he would not imply friendship but  vassalage. He continued: \"Our  foreign policy, now as fprinerly, is  determined neither by love nor a.-.o\ufffd\ufffd> xunvoaaui  bate, and neither by dynastic con- { Mount Vernon.  Mad Dog Buns Amuck.  Pittston', Pennsylvania, March 5.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTlie appearance of a triad dog in  Christopher street today caused  : much excitement among the farmers who reside in that section; i'ln  its rampage about the town the animal bit many horses and attacked  two men. Another; man0 shielded  himself with a dinner-pail,\" but the  animal; bit right; through - the tin;  The dog was finally, shot.  Death by'Surgeon's Error.    '  ; Toledo, Ohio\/March 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiss Via  Lewis, a pretty \/young society  woman of Findlay, died last night  its tlie result of \/an; operation. for  tonsilitis. The surgeon's instrument slipped, severing an artery,  aud before he knew the result or  his error she was dying.  Death's Doings.  Philadelphia, March 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dr.  James Dunglison, an eminent editor  and author bf many valuable medical works, is dead at his home here  of dropsy and heart failure, superinduced by pneumonia.  New York, March 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdErnest D.  Hadley, a former speaker of the  New York \"assembly, died' today in  ,..t  .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ..,._..,,,,...--. ,,,,,.^^rs\/:\/f*:,.,..,J.;i,  \/atid'ri-b\/life^h^jb-e^'lbstislltc^rib^  V7:7:.The\/cpj^  .._ ^iddie''*^wheel.^8te^e^  im  ^bulkhe^s;tp*diyide;tli^  ?8]e^bnsand.with^  |ieyergeriginesi#Itf\/:b^  \/s'j^m\/riayigatipn\/:fpn\/;;;]^  :v^,;b^t^-ari:\/;.expwi*^^  de8perateTex^nnierit:\/;TKp:pict^  \/of; bhe\/bfthe; first': ships ^compared\/\/-  with the Laconia shbyra\/thbmarw^\/\/ fi  rous changes that have .J^ri',wrbugKt;^\/,:  ; in fifty; years \/'in\/;_s*^^iupi;\/ Imild^\"\/\/  ;ing\/ but there -lias \/bberi^riplch^ge^\/\/\/  in the rigid fbrmula\/^ri\/which\/itU  ships; are\/sailed.\"\/; 'SA-A'A AASAyA  y TlieAs^yrreck seems \/to\/\/b^tlio\/\/\/  very wm-stt  ever .suffered ,\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/ -unless \/, it \/ be \/\/the S'7  Coliina.   .The^i^  kept her! undpr\/way. with\/a' lieayy\/;  deck load after\/the\/ship\/had. -listed\/\/.;\/.  so that all saw that in a little more \/  time she would- capsize-and sink.   \/  But the Rio was,inside the bar :in    .  smooth water, the Cliff .house and\/  the north-end'light) in\/ sight: and.\/  still   she was \/driven straight to \/  destruction. Some one was terribly  \/toTblame.\"\/'..\/-:.\/\/\/:V'\/\/.-:'^;*\/;_77y <..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/;  \/ ; War Office Discussion. ;  London, Marelr S^The duke: p^  Devonshire' in the house of lords \/  today, as president of the cbuncil\/\" \/\/  defended the war office system. ;\"\/\/  Lord   Rosebery \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd described    lord-     ;  Woisley's speech, as a public-spirited  effort to call attention to isome of \/  the: defects he had found in the \/\/\/  practical    working , of  the   army\/  administration.     He   suggested   a\/f  secret parliamentary enquiry; into\/   *.;  the: deficiencies of the: war;\/office. \/\/\/  Lord Salisbury saicf the disciplinists \/  had not realized that the army was\/   \/  under parliament and thatthe min-\/  ister who condemned the, army did    \/\/  it as one responsible to parliament, \/ \/  and represented' all tiie ^authority    ;  with which parliament had invested'  him. : The commander-in-chief must    \/  be subordinateV^to the secretary of;   ;  state\/    The  system   had  worked; \/-  well in the past and must be made  to work w\ufffd\ufffdU in the future.   '   \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd y.  ,.*r*\ufffd\ufffd*~..\ufffd\ufffdi' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. . 4  THE TRIBUNE: NELSON B. 0  WEDNESDAY, MARCH G, 1901\"  X'-:-i -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  77h  \\lr      .  15\"  :. *  li-^i *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  V'. -'  Is?  ft  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV .  ?! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  A  3'   ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  T.'n      . -  v* : .  \\mA  1' '\"'1-  .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi*I t  ii\/\/  I#^-;  4&r -*  t\/:  7>_d'- -  |**fiM\ufffd\ufffd\"-*'  |\"*3?*4.j\ufffd\ufffd''*  ^'- -  s^s**\"  is*^  \"5:tp;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"  *T'4<f  t\"J  t  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>'- ' >  The  of The New  THE VERY LATEST  NOVELTIES  SPRING 1901  ARRIVED TODAY  Chiffon Ties, gold  otherwise.  trimmed and  Collars, in a I shapes, styles and  shades.  Fronts and Ornaments, with Se-  - quin, Ball and Lace trimmings  Crinkled- Chiffon Ties, trimmed  in newest styles.  way program from the conflict they  will join the good councillors of  Phoenix, and* countenance an export duty on coal and coke, although  it would puzzle the best of them to  explain what good a railway would  be to the coal fields with a prohibitive export duty upon the only  tonnage that tbe coal fields offers  it. ^With senator Cox so willing to  countenance an export duty which,  would kill the business of his pet  railway scheme, sincere advocates  of such a tax as a protective  measure might do well to canvass  the situation and see what chance  there is for securing such legislation.  Applique   Laces,  designs.  in   the   latest  Applique Lace Collars, twenty  different kinds.  New Styles of Ladies' Beits, fancy  belt buckles and many other  beautiful and useful articles.  :-1>~  THE f  HMJS0FS  \ufffd\ufffdJte \ufffd\ufffdrlbmm  ;-'\/_ -The   'miningT industry' ,of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'the  province,.aside\" from \"coal' ruining,\"  .  furnishes \/direct ;employment '.for,  \ufffd\ufffd.2731 men, and of this number,-2426  work underground\/\"       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \"'' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd y\"  .  \" * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^'(_.<. i'~^:~. =       .   - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '.   -The assurance of the Crowds Nest;  Pass'Coal Company, that the grant-'  'ink bf'the'Hill railway.charter*will  \\not be allowed to .interfere with'  the fueh{supply of . tho British Co-  - lumbia ^smelters, will' probably be;  no \ufffd\ufffd more * binding*' - upon4 the coal -  'company \/than its' present obligation to sell coal.to consumers f. o.b.  at Fernie for $2 per ton.  t    *     \"        * x  ' , The debate, in .the commons upon;  the Clare bill, to,restrict the importation  of   all.\" aliens   into Canada i  under contract, has brought'out the;  ^fact that-premier^Laurier does-not  propose,to give the^workingmen of  When the eight-hour'law was  enacted the political mine-managers  said it would paralyze the mining  industry. When'the two per cent,  tax was enacted upon the output of  the mines they gaid it would suck  the life-blood out of - mining enterprises. These predictions may- now  be set against* what really did  happen. The mines of the province  during the year 1900 iucreased their i  output just 40 per cent.- over that  of the previous year.  When   the    government's   proposal   to   increase   the   provincial  revenue   tax   from    three   to five  dollars reaches the legislature, an  amendment should be incorporated  to relieve old men  from the operation; of the tax. .If the tax was  made,to apply to all males between  the ages of eighteen and. fifty years  no exception* could be taken to it;  or'if fifty years be deemed too early  ,an age to,relieve a man\" from  the  attentions of the tax gatherer, the  limit-might be set at. sixty years.  Taxation should be' arranged upon  some'basis which does not'render it  necessary .to\/follow a   man-from  maturity . to' ,the* , grave.     There  should be. some deadline over'which'  the tax gatherer could not\"go.'  Senator Cox of the Crow's Nest  Pass -Coal  Company, can\" discount  Harry Bentley iri-telling-fairy tales.  He is now assuring the-people of  Eastern Canada that the building  of the Hill \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd railway frbrii his1 company's coal -'fields' to   the\" United  S -bates '* would ' assist,1 rather   than  hamper-the smelting, and refining  industry of -British Columbia. -,He  addsthat the cars which'carry Fernie coal' to'1 United States smelters'  will -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd bring .back dry, ores for the;  treatment of tlie galena of the Slo-'  can,  so that; the diversion of the  fuel supply of the British Colum-  ,bian smelters\" will  really act as a,  -benefit   to I home   smelting.     This  goes'to .\"'show that ^senator Cox has  not taken his Kootenay agents into'  his confidence.    Even Bentley did  -not promise so much as this.  An important bill, to amend the  thingjike $2000 per annum to be  made up by the city council. It is.  notfikely that the people Of Nelson  will make any kick. The general  opinion is that the cities should  bear the greater proportion of the  cost; of school maintenance. One  result of the change in Nelson will  be the stimulating of interest in  school matters, since it presents an  opportunity of making Nelson the  educational center of the interior.  EASTERN   CANADA TELEGRAMS.  '*f&Py5^y& v^^ i^55v 29^9 ^S- ** ^^S ^       ^ ^^ ^^ ^.^^fr'5?.^*.^;^?^^ ^^5*.  I\ufffd\ufffdf \"'.*-  'V'  \\V'.  ' the Dominion any measure \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of -protection which - they * seek without the consent pf the government.  This may be .accepted as an. intimation that all efforts to make the  present alien labor act efficient and  \\vorkable will be quietly throttled.  \/ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - ~ I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  - THB-secret of'the successful operation of the alien labor laws of the  ~ tJnited States lies in the fact that  across the border the government  solicits the co-operation of the labor  organizations' in its enforcement,  which in Canada the policy of the  government appears to be to place  every obstacle in the way of the  enforcement of the act. Last year  the United States spent $99,000 in  keeping contracted aliens out, or-in  deporting them after they got into  the country, while in Canada less  than $3000 was spent aud this almost wholly upon salaries.  Senator Cox, of the Crow's Nest  Pass Coal Company, agrees with  the members of the Phoenix'city  council that the best way to protect the fuel supply of East Koote-  jiay is by the imposition of export  duties upon coal and coke. This  goes to show that senator Cox and  his associates would very much prefer to fight the;people of British  Columbia upon a tariff issue than  upon a railway issue. They desire  to secure for James J. Hill his  railway entrance into the coal fields  fit all costs.   To remove \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd their r\ufffd\ufffdU-  -School-Actris expeeted-in-the legislature today.    Briefly, the object of  the bill is to relieve the governirient  from much of its financial obligation with respect to school\" maintenance, and to' transfer the same  from   the   government  to the incorporated cities of the province.  As outlined in the press dispatches  the bill proposes the division of the  cities   into   three    classes;     first,  second   and .third.    Victoria and  Vancouver   monopolize    the    first  class, while   Nelson and Rossland  figure in the second.   By the terms  of   the bill the   government proposes    to    take   over    again   the  collection       of     the      provincial  revenue      tax     which     formerly  went to Victoria aud Vancouver to  defray school expenses, and to increase the .per capita grant upon  average school attendance from $10  to $13.    In-the case of Nelson the  change,will give the city charge of  its own schools, with a per capita  grant of $15 upon average school  attendance,   while the   provincial  revenue tax will   continue   to be  collected by the government.    The  increase in the per capita will about  make up what the Nelson  school  trustees expected to receive through  the   collection   of   the    provincial  revenue tax.   Based upon the present school attendance the per capita  grant in  the case of Nelson  will  range   somewhere   between   $3750  and $4000, which when applied to  the present cost of school maintenance will leave a deficit of some* J  Halifax.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr. J. R. Dewolfe, a  well-known physician of this city,  is dead, aged 81 years.  Brockville, Ontario. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thomas  Hackett, probably the oldest resident of Brockville, is dead. He had  just about reached the century  mark.  Halifax.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThesteamerNumidian  is hourly expected here. The  weather has been thick all day and  continues foggy so that-the steamship will probably be delayed.  Montreal. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The failure of  Lafieur & Decary,' large boot and  shoe manufacturers of St. Henri, a  suburb of this city, is announced.  Liabilities $100,000, assets about  $57,000.    \"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Montreal.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLieutenant Holland  of No. 2 police station, who has received an offer of the chiefship  of the Rossland police, says he is  not able to announce his acceptance for a week.  Montreal. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Today, tomorrow  and Thursday millinery displays  will be held.in connection with the  wholesale millinery trade.' Buyers  are here from British Columbia  and the rest of the Dominion.  Montreal. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Arthur Cunning,  one time a prominent builder at  Toronto, fell from a scaffold _ while  at work here this afternoon sustaining injuries which physicians at the  general hospital r,say will result in  death before-many hours.  Halifax.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd revenue of. Nova  Scotia\/ last year ^ was ,$l,014,000i  leaving a surplus of $76,000. Since  1893 the Dominion ,-Coal ..Companyv  has >.paid' \"$1,089,000, iri royalties;  which accounts for,the satisfactory  .financial position-of the province.  i~ Wingham,\/ Ontario.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Andrew  Cruickshank is under arrest charged  .with-shooting at a Mr. -Sanborn,  who was escorting Miss Currie home  on Sunday night. The bullet, however, passed harmlessly through the  victim's coat. ' Jealously' is said * to  have been the'\/causp.      ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  __  Guysboro, Nova Scotia. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The  residence of captain S. Campbell  Peart,' with all its contents, was  totally destroyed by fire at 4 o'clock  Sunday morning and, Mrs. Hendry.  Lilldale, who was ill, perished in'  the flames and the occupants barely  escaped - with their lives. _ Loss  $5000.^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \"'      'J     ' '      '       ,    i  Perth, Ontario.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA cattle drover  named Wa'riatnaker of Eldorado,  Ontario, in charge\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof a car'of cattle,  on an east-bound freiglit which'hadv  been sidetracked to permit another  east-bound train to pass; was struck  by the latter and instantly killed'  this inorning. He was ' about 50  years of-age.\" ~  Ottawa.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll the British Colum-  -bia-'members-\"of-7parliamentrexcept-  Galliher of Yale-Cariboo, together,  with a large number of members  for eastern Canada and a number  of, prominent men' from Toronto,  Montreal and Ottawa waited on  the government this morning and  urged that the government aid in  technical education. The-premier  in reply assured the delegation.that  the matter would haye good consideration.  OF SUMMER PRINTS, GINGHAMS, MUSLINS AND FLANNELETTES  COMMENCING THIS MORNING AT EIGHT O'CLOCK  Having had two bales of spring goods damaged in transit by the leakage of a car of  claim at once adjusted by-lhe C. P. R, we are prepared to give our customers the full  we will sell at just half the regular price.  lubricating oil, and having had our  benefit of the same.   These goods  20 pieces of print, regular prices 12ic to 20c, now , ' 6Jc to 8c  4 pieces of ginghams, regular prices 20c to 30c, now .\"... .10c  12 pieces of striped flannelette, regular price 10c to 20c, now 5c to 8c  We intend also to include'some of our regular stock with this sale.  10 flannelette blouses, regular prices $1 to $1.76,.now 60c  24 fine French flannel blouses, regular,prices $2.60 to $4, now .<- $1  8Qipair of ladies* corsets,R. &, G., P. D. and D. & A., regular price $1 to $3, now 60c to $1.60  Also remnants of sdds and ends in all departments.       Do not miss this chance to secure some good bargains  pimmnnniiir  nrtnii:  i7TXZz]axxzzzxxxxnxxxz:zzxizzxzzzzzxxx2ZXZi  Fred Irvine & Co.  \ufffd\ufffd.  i    GREAT  DAM AGED.GOODS  SALE  GREAT  DAMAGED GOODS  SALE  36 Bakep Street  m  m  t^^.*^^ . ^^ **G^ * ^^ *^ft^ * ^Bk \"^^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^^. \ufffd\ufffd*^Mfc * '^^^ *^ftk * '^^ *^K * ^^ ****^^ * '^^ * ' ^0 ' 0t&' 4K0 ' 00' 00 * 00' ^0 * 4^^\ufffd\ufffd 00 * 00* 00 * 0^' 00 * 00' 00 ' 00 m ^^  S21 to 331 Bi}ker Street, Nelson  \"ft*  American* aqci .\"European Plans.  MEALS  CENTS  \" ROOMS LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY  AND HKATBD BY STEAM  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 88 CBNTS-TO $1  QUEEN'S HOTEL  -**\"      BAKER STREET. NELSON.  Lighted by Electricity and Heat-  . ed with .Hot Air. -  Large -comfortable .'*b\ufffd\ufffddrooms antl flrsb-dass  dining-room. Sample rooms for-poromerolal men.  RATES $2,PER DAY  flelson Saw and Planing N|ills  Lifted..  CHARLES HILLYER^. A HARRY  HOUSTON,.  President^and General Manager.. ^    - --Secretary-Treasurer  - A.\"'   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>- All .Communicationsltd, be addressed to either of the above  '?   , , ,  We are prepared to Furnish \/  by Rail,. Barge or Teams   < - '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  DIMENSION LUMBER . ,       ' \\      ''  ROUGH and DRESSED LUMBER  LOCAL and COAST CEILING  -u  :;     . LOjCAL and COAST FLOORING  . \":      A   DOUBLE \"DRESSED COAST CEDAR       ;  - RUSTIC, SHIPLAP,. STEPPING    .  ,    , PINE and CEDAR CASINGS <  DOOR >JAMBS, WINDOW STILES  TURNED WORK, BAND-SAWING  BRACKETSyNEWEL POSTS  TURNED VERANDA POSTS  STORE FRONTS  DOORS, WINDOWS and GLASS.  Get Our Prloes before ,  purchasing elsewhere. -  WHOLESALE TRADE  CRATED AND MINERAL WATERS.  rpHORPE & CO., LIMITKD.-Corner Vernon  of  lit BVTUDB. . Sole    _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   'elephone 00.  and Cedar utreeta, Nelson,' manufacturers  and wholesale dealors in earated waters and  fruit syrups.., Sole agents for Halcyon Sprlnga  mineral water.\"-'Te\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \" \"  .   ASSAYERS'   SUPPLIES.  WF. TEETZEL\" tc CO.-Corner Baker and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Josephine streets, Nelson, wholosale deal -  ers ln  assayers supplies.   Agent* tor Denve  Fire Clay Co. of Denver. Colorado.  S      COMMISSION MERCHANTS. . -  HJ. EVANS \"tc CO.-Baker street, Nelson  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wholesalo dealers in liquors, olgars  oement, flro brlok and flro olay, water plpetand  steel rails, and general commission merchants.  ..    . ELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES..  KOOTENAY ELECTRIC SUPPLY. & ' CON-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ST RUCTION COMPAN Y-Wholeaale dealers ln telephones, annunciators, 'bells,' batteries,  fixtures, etc, Houston blook. Nelson.  ] ,   FLOUR AND FEED. ;  gRACKMAN^KHR  MILLING .COMPANY  OFFICE: CORNER HALL AND  FACTORY: HALL STREET, C. P. R. CROSSING.  FRONT STREETS.-  MILLS: HALL STREET WHARF  KJrs. E. G. GlarKe, Prop.  LATE Off-THE KOYAL HOTKIv OAISABS*^.  N|adclen House  Baker and Ward  Streets, Nelson  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  KOOTENAY.  coffee: CO.  **************'**********  Coffee Boasters .  Dealers In fea an(j Coffee  ************************  Wo are offering at lowest prices the best  grndeB of Coylon, India, China and Japan  Teas.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Our Boa*1, Mocha and Java Coffee, per  ,  pound 9  40  Mocha and Java Blend, 3 pounds ....   1 00  Choice Blond Coffeo, i pounds    1 00  Special Blend Coffee, ti pounds i' 1 00  Rio Blend Coffee, G pounds    1 00  Special Blend Ceylon Tea, per pound     30  Tho onlj hotel In Nelson that haa remained  under one management slnoa 1890,  The bod-rooms aro well furnished and lighted  by oleotrlolty.  The bar ia always stooked by the best dom \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  bio and Imported liquors and olgara.   THOMAfl MADDEN, Proprietor.  SLOCAN JUNCTION HOTEL  3. B. MoMANUS, Manager  P. Bums & Co.  Wholesale and Retail-r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Dealers in Meats,      Straight or  tp all  Kootenay Point*.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCereals, Flour, Grain, Hay.  mixed oars 'shlppod to all  Koot  Grain elevators at all principal points on Calgary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Edmonton K. B.   Mills at Viotoria, New West  minster, and Edmonton, Alberta. -<  FRESH AND SALT MEATS.  BURNS tc   CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBaker  street, ' Nelson,  Head Office at  .   NELSON^ B.O.  Markets at. Nelson,  Rossland,  Trail,  Kaslo, Ymir, Sandon,  Silverton, Nev  Denver, Revelstoke, Ferguson; Grand Forks, Greenwood, Cascade City, Mid \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ' way, and -Vancouver. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   t '  MairOrders Promptly Forwarded     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  wholesale dealers ln fresh and oured moate  Cold storage.  GROCERIES.  A MACDONALD & CO.-Corner Front and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HaU streets, wholesale grocers aud  'obbers ln blankets, gloves, mitts, boots, rubbers,  maokinawa and miners' sundries.  OOTKNAY SUPPLY   COMPANY,  LIMI-  TE\"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -          \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   -  grocers.  TOHN CHOLDITCH Sc CO.-Front street. J^el-  **   son, wholesale grooers.  Y. GRIFFIN tc CO.-Front street, Nelsou.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  wholesale   doalers   ln  provisions,   cured  -meats.-bntter and egga.-5^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd= =-   HARDWARE AND MINING SUPPLIES.  H BYERS tc CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Bakerand Josephlno  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   streots; Nelson, wholesale dealers ln-hard-  ware and mining supplies.  Powder Co.  Agents for Giant  Bar stooked with best brands of wlnea, liquors,  and Cigars. Beer on draught. .Large comfortable rooms,   f trotKilans table boa d.  R. REISTERER & CO.  i'     * '  BRBWKBa:AND BOXZUQU OV  FINE LAGER BEER, ALE  AND PORTER  i Prompt and rogular  delivery to the trad*  Brewery at Melton  A TRIAL ORDER SOLICITED.  KOOTENAY COFFEE CO.  Telephone 177.  P. 0. Box 182.  WEST.BAKER STREET, NELSON.  A. R. BARROW, A.M.I.C.E\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  PROVINCIAL  LAND SURVEYOR  West Kootenay Butcher Go.  ALL KINDS OF  FRESH AND-8ALTED MEATS  WHOUO0ALB \/J4D RETAIL  ,         FISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON  Baker Street, Nelson             \ufffd\ufffd   (J#   TRAVES,   Manag6P  ORnRRR nv uxitt nwamirt. axfmrvr. amd ronwyf AtrwHTinw   ROSSUAIND   BIVailNEBRirVQ  WORKS  'CUNLIPFIB \ufffd\ufffds MoMILLAN  Fdundors and Maohinlsts, Specialty of Ore Cars, Ore-Bin Dobre and General,Mining Maohlnery.  List of second-hand machinery on hand, whicli has been thoroughly overhauled and Is as good  T AWRKNCH  -LJ   Baker St.,  hardware and n  plumbers' supplios.      HAKPWABK    COMPANY  Baker St., Nelson, wholenalo   dealers in  hardware and mining supplies, and wator and  nlnmhara1 nnnnllnA. ^  1 t!\"x8\" Double-Cylinder Friction Drain-Hols^, built by Ingersoll Co.  1 2--H. P. Locomotive-type boiler, with engine attached and all fittings, ready to turn on stoam.  ~    \" -Cylinder Friction Praln-Hois., *--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"* *-- T \" *\"-  1 Sinking Pump, No. 5 Cameron. New York.  1 Sinking Pump, 10\"x5\"xl3\". outside packed plunger pattern,  this udvortisemout for further lists, or write us before  Corner Victoria and Kootenay Bt\"\ufffd\ufffdte.  P. O. Box KB. TFJJ8PHONW KO,  BS  nra  MRS. CARR  LATE OF VANCOUVER  LADIES' TAILOR  Parlors formerly occupied by Miss MucMillan,  Viotoria Block.  The patronage of Nelson ladies solicited*  Home Grown  I'Yuil und Ornamental Trees Rose*, Shrubs  Vines, BulbH, Hedge Plants and Seeds.  Extra choico stock of Pcnch, Apricot, Plum.  Cherry and Prune Trees. Now importation of  llibt-class Rhododendrons, Rosee, Climatus, Bay  Troos, Hollies, etc.  80,000 to cIioomo from. No ngents or commission to pay. No fuinlg.ilion or inspection charges.  Gii-onhouse plants, agricultiiral IinpIeuientR, fer-  tillzci-H. bee supplies, etc, Largost nnd most  complote s'ook in tho province. Sond for catalogue before placing your orders.  Addrew  ^. J. HENRY, Vancouver, B.C..  Whito labor OnlF. i  , Watchi   may havo just what you want.  Agents for Northoy Pumps,  P.  O.  Box 198.  you buy for complete list.  We  SWck carried.  'HIRD AVENUE,  ROSSLAND.  LIQDOBS AND DRY GOODS.  rpURNER, BKETON & CO.-Corner Vernon  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and Josephine stroets. Nolson, wholenale  doalers In liquors, olgars and dry goods. Agente  for Pabst Brewing Co. of Milwaukee and Col  gaiy Brewing Co. of Calgary.  POWDEB, CAPS AND FUSEL  HAMILTON POWDER COMPANY-Baker  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstreet. Nelson, manufacturers of dynamtto,  sporting, stumping and block blasting powder*,  wholesale dealers In oaps and fuse, and oleotrio  Wasting apparatus.  DOOBS.           PLANING   MILLS,  LIMITED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Front and Hall streets.  Nelaon, manufacturers of and wholesale dealors  In sam and doowi all kinds of factory work mado  to order. (  .    .       -  WINES AND CIGARS.  CALIFORNIA WINH COMPANY, LIMITED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Front and HaU streeta, Nel-  odd, wholesale dealers In wines (oase and bulk,  nnddameottn and Imnortail Maaro.  .  SASH AND  JTBLSON. SAW   AND  MUSIC.  STRACHAN  BROTHERS  PLUMBERS.  PLUMBING  All plumbing is not alike.    See >our goods.  Same price as other dealers aud  20 per cent Better.  OPPOSITE! POSTOFFIOB. NELSON. B. O  REILEY & BENOY  SUCCESSORS TO H. D. ASHCROFT)  BLACKSMITHS   AND   WOOD  WORIW.0  EXPERT H0R8E8H0EIHG.  Special attention given to JI kinds of re;  aud custom work from c\/talde poini-C  bolt* made to order on \ufffd\ufffdhsi< nolloo. **  ring  P. J. RUSSELL  Buyer ana Exporter of  RAW   FURS  Mrs. D. B. Murray, graduate in vocal and instrumental muslo. is now prepared to recclie  pupils for Instruction in voice culture, Italian  tuethodt also piano and organ.'  For terms and-further particulars apply room  S, A. Macdonald building, corner Josephine and  veraonjfltreeti.  KOOTENAY LAKE GENERAL HOS-  PITAL   SOOIBTY.  NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING.  In accordance wilh the bylaws of the Socioty,  the annual eeneral meeting will bo held in tho  1 room on Tuesday, March 12tb, at  Highest Prices  Prompt Returns  Pair Assortment  J Ship by Bfcproo. NELSON, B. C.  3 o'olock p m.  All annual subscribers of tho sum of $10 are  members of the Society and eliglblo to take part  in the election of directors for tlie ensuing year.     ) ]  NOTICE OF CHANGE OF TITLE.  'Notice is horeby given that at tho annual meeting of tho Kootenay Jake General Hospital  Socioty a resolution will be moved asking tl e  lieutenant governoMn- council to grant a chnnge  of title from ' The Kootenay Lake General Hos-  gital Socioty\" to \"The Nelson General Hospital  octoty.\"  F. W. SWANNELL, Secretary. 3S\ufffd\ufffd?\ufffd\ufffdsP5^\ufffd\ufffd^  -C-V-J\\-v  =*!.**_  ^ml_n---________m  BANK OF M0NTBBA1  CAPITAL. aU paid up....$12,000,000.00  RHST .'    7.000,000.00  UNDIVIDED PROFITS       427,180.80  Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal ...President  Hon. George A. Drummond Yicc-Prosidont  . E. 8. Clooston General Manager  NELSON BRANCH        .......  Corner Baker and Kootenay Streots.  y-X A. H. BUCHANAN, Manager.  ; y    7A:   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.    \"' \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        9\" .'.*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,'  Branones In .London (Kuglond) Nkw York,  Chicago, and all tho principal oltles la Canada.  SHe  \"*HE \ufffd\ufffdb&^a-%M\ufffd\ufffdS&.- B. 0. WEDiOESBAf *MAfiCH.6*-\ufffd\ufffdl96i  THE CANADIAN  BANE OF COMMERCE  WITn WHICH IS AMALGAMATED  THE BANK  OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.  HEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.  IMPERIAL BANK  oif  o\\a.:n-.a_:d.a.  HEAD  OFFICE. TORONTO.  Paid-up Capital,  ReserveFund.  t8.000.000  2,000,000  ACCRECATE RESOURCES OVER $65,000,000.  Bny and sell Sterling Exohango and Cable  .Transfers.  Grant. Commercial and Travolors' Credits,  available in any part of tho world.  Drafts Issued, Collections Mado, Eto.  Hon. Qeo.  A. Cox,  President.  Robt. Kilgour,   __      Vice-President.  London Offloe, CO Lombard Street. H. O.  New York  Offloe, 10   Bxohange   Place.  . .and Cj Branches in Canada and tho    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  United States.  Saving's Bank Branch  CDIIIUCNT RATE OK INTEREST PAID.  **J\"'\"      \"'-.,'..   !'Yi' --' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH\"Ll\ufffd\ufffdr          .n'L.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  TOEONTO STOCK EXCHANGE.  TUESDAY'S  QUOTATIONS.  btock. Asked.  B. C. Gold Fields 9       3  Black Tail        ill  Brandon & Golden Crown  8  Canadian Golddelds Syndicate...      - 7}  Cariboo (McKinney)         38  Cariboo Hydraulic      1 65  Centre Star      1 20  . Crow's Nest Pass Coal    70 00  -California   Deor  Trail   Consolidated   ',   Evening Star ,  Golden Star .*.   Falrvlew Corporation   Giant   Granby  Smelter   Iron Mask   Jim Blaino   Knob Hill   Montreal & London   Morning  Glory   Morrison.'.   Mountain Lion   Noble Five   North Star   Old Ironnidos .-  Olive -..  Payne    Rambler-Cariboo Consolidated.,  Republic   Slocan Sovereign   Virtue f   War Eaglo Consolidated   Waterloo   Whito Bear   Winnipeg   Sullivan \".   SALES.  '   2000 Hammond Reef   2000 Payno   10000 Goldon Star '.....  lOWO Golden Star   flOO Fairview   20o0 Rambler-Cariboo    \".     .....  WW White Bear ?r   500 White Bear   \ufffd\ufffd  3  7  2*  3  a  47  12  <)  GO  51  8  71  id  4  83  80  12  401  27  421  \ufffd\ufffdi  30  40  3  51  Wo  Bid.  * 3  4  61  35  1 52  70  62 00  n  5  2  3  >3*  43  35}  4  45  I1  7  15  85}  - 60  10  40  29  42  J*  25  35  P  121  U  40*-  ~i  2J  3  27  31  38.  SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Intorest allowed  on deposits.   PrcHont rate  .three percent.  GRANGE V. HOLT,  Manager Nelson Branch.  Capital  Rest  $2,500,000  $1,725,000  H. S. HOWL AND...*:..:..'.:\"...;....... President.  D. R. WILKIE..... .General Mnimger.  It,. HAY Inspector.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"[ iM  \"*-\"\"-m  zamsm  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd31  ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=j;  :&&&&&&&  %\ufffd\ufffd-&.  %*  \ufffd\ufffd  SAVINGS   BANK   DEPARTMENT.  THK   CURKKNT   KATK   OK    INTKRKB'f   ALLOWED.  <  A-Personal Transformation.  The   'personal     transformation  which king EdwarcLhas \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd undergone  . is astounding to everybody. Society  is asking-itself, Can it possibly last ?  Since Henry V: ascended the throne  and incontinently,.cast oft. his light  companions there has been nothing  like it.,  Edward's friends are' still  - waiting, hoping against hope, \"to be  ,, summoned to, the royal presence,  .but there is no .sign 39 far,'that  J king Edward is awareT even- of the  -   existence of the booh companions  and baccarat cronies of the prince  of Wales.    Lord Marcus Beresford  is tlie only one of his old pals whom  he; has summoned; ' As   prince 'of  Wales Edward was very familiar  with Marcus, who comes of a family  that stands no nonsense even from  royalty. 'It   used\" to^ be,   '.'Well,  J Marky, my boy.V   This time Marcus  was ushered in with the   utmost  state, while the king-assumed the  loftiest    possible-    manner   ;and  addressed him \"formally by his<full,  title and communicated his royal  wishes,like a stage king. !  In the same fashion he freezes off  every one and extorts to the\"last  drop the homage due to this position   by   court.   etiquette. -   Not  7   only court officials find liim an inexorable   taskmaster,   the household cavalry officers are bored to  death by having constantly to pro-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvido-escorts^fo^Hiis-goings about.-  Even the ministers are getting|\"sore\"  over his  interference   in   matters  which the queen never touched. He  has been having long reports direct  from general Kitchener, whom he  plied with questions about the state  of the array and the conduct of the  war.    It is suspected, that this has  been -inspired by his nephew, the  kaiser.  As tb tlie king's health, a correspondent traced the origin of the recent   alarming   report   before the-  queen's death to his throat giving \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  him   trouble.   A   consultation    of  surgeons was held,' and they pronounced him to be suffering from  \"smoker's throat\" in an aggravated  form, aud, in view of the family  tendency to cancer, they ordered  him to give up smoking\/   The king  positively refused at first, but finally as a compromise undertook to  smoke only three cigars daily and  drop cigarettes altogether. Formerly his   quota was eight or   ten  cigars and twenty or thirty cigarettes.   It  is understood that the  doctors formally warned him that  they did not regard this as compliance with their advice and that  the present throat affliction may  possibly be converted into a malignant disease if he persists in smoking.  of the catcher's' lines, was altered  so that the catcher will have to  stand within ten feet\" of the plate.  This places the catcher \"up behind  the' bat\" throughout a game.  A rule making the pitcher deliver  the ball to the batsman as soon as  the latter takes his position at the  plate, was adopted. Should the  pitcher deliver the ball to any other  place than the plate a ball will be  called for each delivery.  A rule was' passed which* penalized one ball against the pitcher if  he fail to deliver the ball to the  batsman within twenty seconds  after the latter has taken his position. Also 'one empowering the  umpire to remove from the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd game,  and if need be from the grounds,  any player guilty of using improper language to another player,  captain, manager, or <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd spectator.  Written proof of'the offence must  be submitted to the president of  the league within twenty-four  hours, when he may, if the,proof  be',, satisfactory; suspend tlie\" of->  fender from play.- -    *  A'batsman may not. henceforth  take his base if hit by a- pitched  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdball, but the'-'ball will count as a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdball \"against\" the. pitcher.. Several  rules conflicting with\" the changes  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnamed were stricken out or changed  to conform^tqthe'alterations.   '    '-  Nelson Branch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBums Block, 221 Baker  Street.  J. M. LAY, Manager.  1901  Tlie First Year of % Twentieth Century  w S We *le* e,even. year,S 0,d-n\ufffd\ufffdht ,n th* Prime of business manhood-full of energy-ready and-anxious to work  for the building up and increasing of our trade in tine jeuelery,   Come with us for this spring and see what we ca?do to   vou  In the meantime we extend our hearty invitation to you all to inspect our beautiful lines of up-to-date goods ^ *  Changes in Baseball Rules.  The National League baseball  magnates have announced the following changes in the playing rjjles  for next season. A rule was adopted  which does away with the intentional \" fouling off\" of pitched balls  by a batsman. .The first and second  foul balls hit by the batsmen, unless  two strikes have already been  called against him, shall henceforth  be counted as strikes. \";\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Rule No. 3, defining the position  \"A Globe;.Tfptter'a Experience. -.  \"I was \"the first white \"man to sit,  ^ipon the dragon throne of'the, dowager empress in the imperial palace  in Pekin,\", said J.;MartinMillerof  No. 138 West Eleventh .street toa  New* York World reporter recently.  Mr. Miller has,just returned from a  -trip around -the world,'and was in  Pekin when the allies arrived.  \"What I saw in Pekin was butch-,  ery,\" he said.\"   .\"The.French and  Russian soldiers are ,the most cruel  in the world. \"They.spared neither  man, woman'nor child.\"  The stories  of  tlie   rivers -being clogged with  dead   bodies   were   literally   true\/  After, Pekin wasTcut up \"into secr  tions the natives   began - to drift  back to the English, American and  Japanese quarters,   but - they did  not enter the Rus'sian'and- French  quarters.   Even up to the time I  came   away no_ Chinese - dared to  walk on the street,without carrying  an American or a-Japanese flag.1\"  \"It is no secret over there that Li  Hung Chang is to be made governor  of Manchuria by. Russia.  , Russia  can then safely withdraw, knowing  that in the settlement she has a  friend among the native peace commissioners.  It was when the Amer-  icari^troops mareKe&~tfirougli_the_  impei ial palace in the Forbidden  Inner City that I, with several generals and newspaper men, found my  way into the throne room, and I  waa the first to take my. seat upon  the famous, dragon throne of China.  It is   an   ordinary   affair,   richly,  carved,   and would   make a good  hall seat for a Fifth avenue house.  \"While in Ceylon I visited Kandy,  100 miles up the country, where,  many of the Boer officers are staying.   The English at Colombo think  that   the   government  treats   the  prisoners too kindly.   The officers  seem to have plenty of money and  live at the best hotels, paying in  gold.   Some of them pay $4 a day  for board, ride about on wheels and  automobiles, and dress like princes.  It is a mystery where the money  comes from.   They have to report  once a week, being out on parole.  But the privates are kept in a large  wire fence stockade and guarded by  English troops.   They are fed well  and given all the liberty that can  be   granted  them.    While I was  there a prisoner tried to escape, by  crawling under the fence.   He was  challenged three times, warned and  then   shot,   but   not   killed.    The  sentry was tried and on the testimony of the prisoners  themselves  he was judged to havo done only-  his duty.\"  Mr. Miller was at The Hague  when the.queen was married. And  this is his conclusion : \"There is no  city jn the world as orderly-apd  decent on a great day as our own  city of New York. The Hague,  even on this great.national holiday,  was like a country village oompared  to New York on Dewey day.\"  Pen Sketch of Carrie,  A stepdaughter of Mrs. Nation  supports    herself   by   sewing   in  Columbus, Ohio.   She had to quit  home because her stepmother was  too tough.     She   says   her   stepmother came from a good family,  .her maiden name being Moore, and  one of her brothers-is on the bench  in Kansas City.    She eloped with  her first  husband,   Dr.   Gloyd, a  brilliant man, who   died  later of  delirium   tremens.      This   woman  says she left home because -of Mrs.  Nation's unpleasant ways and her  cruel treatment, of the other children, one of whom she beat with a  poker.because he would not' go to  church.    When asked if her father  ever whipped Mrs. Nation, she v replied:    -\"My father would never  raise his hand against a .woman,  and   my stepmother\" is   the   last  woman in the world to permit it.  Why, she would   have   had   her  hatchet out in energetic' work long  before it   was if-my   father had  raised his hand against her.\"     She  says her father was a good lawyer,  who had togive up his profession  on account of-throat trouble; that  he has been a successful editor bf-  several papers.    Of her stepmother,,  she says she is crazy rthat she was  crazy' once before on the subject of  religion,','- just went* wild \"over it,  and she 'thinks\" she will end' her  Bays'in a lunatic asylum.--\"' \".   -'  ALL WATCH REPAIRING GUARANTEED  MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE OUR.PROMPT AND CAREFUL-ATTENTION  The Jeweler, Nelson, B.C.  *-.\/fAT\\    - *< j'JpEy*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^_1 ^__^J C^ 'C^> - C?  \ufffd\ufffde&rggiggga   ,    . \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -s  Compound  Syrup..--.-.  OF WHITE PINE AND TAR  WILL CURE YOUR COLD.  Remotnber tho'new stand  at Corner of Ward  arid Baker Streets.  .COMB AND SEE  US.  Canada Drug & Book Co.  .Limited.  in  REAL; ESTATE AND  INSURANCE AGENTS  Agents for J. A J. TAYLOR SAFES  *  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<5f  \"5*1  LINE OF  Desirable Business and Residence Lots  ln (Bogustown) Fairview Addition:  Offlco on Baker Street, wost of Stanloy Street  7 .   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'    \/    ,  <''NELSON.  Dp. Hawkey  Has Removed to the  TURNER-BOECKH BLOCK  Corner of Ward and Baker Streets.  BOARD OF HEALTH REGULATIONS  For the Prevention of the Spread of  Smallpox in the City of Nelson.  All passengers arriving at tho_City_of Nelson  from all points oast of the Kootenay River will  , be required to furnish the inspector or ofilcer In  charge of the carrying out of these regulations  with a certificate from the health officer of the  city or town from which he or she has left, containing the following particulars:  - 1. (a) That he or sho has not been In any placo  or building lnfcoted with smallpox.      >  (bKThat he or she has not lived In any placo  or building whloh lies dangorously near any in-  fected building or district.  (c) That ho or she has been successfully vaccinated since January, 1901.  , 2. If tho inspector believes that any person is  infeoted, or that his or her clothing or other  effects contain infection tho inspector shall detain such ncrsonand his or her clothing and offects  iisaforosald, until the porlod of inoubatlonls over,  and suoh person and his or her clothing and other  effects shall be at onco disinfected.  3. If bo only Buspects that any person on board,  or the affects of any such porson havo boon exposed to infection, ho shall notify the medical  health oilioor of tho locality to whloh tho person  is going to moot tlio train or boat, nnd to keep the  porsonlhornaftor undor observation.  i. In tho event of any passenger bringing any  baggago (hnnd or otherwlso) or whothor tho samo  than bo forwarded hy express, tho following  cortiflcato may also be required from tho health  ofllcor of tho town or city aforesaid:  (a) That the said baggage (hero give a full  description of said baggago so that thero can bo  no question as to identification) has not been in  any placo or building Infected with smallpox.  (b) That tho said baggago has not been stored  or usod in any place or Building whioh lies dan-  gcroii'ly uoar to any Infected building or district.  5. All railway and steamboat compi  strictly adhere to the following regulations:  (a) All mall and baggage from points al\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...  mentionod destined for tho City of Nelson, on or  ; Front;>Doors       ',  Inside: Doors  Screen) Doors  'Windows a \"'  Inside^Finish ;  ' local aiid ooaoh    '  Flooring  -    local and coast.  Newel, Posts  Stair Bail  Mouldings  Shingles  Rough and    '  I . Dressed Lumber  .. ot ail kinds. (_   \ufffd\ufffd  W WHAT TOU WANT IB NOT IS STOCK  Wl WIU MAKE IT VOB TOC  CALL AND OBT PRICBS,  J. A. Sayward  BALL AND LAKE BTBKXTB. NELSON  Porto Rico Lumber Co.  * (LIMITED)  CORNER OF  HENDRYX AND VERNON 8TRBHT3  Dressed  Lumber  Shingles  Mouldings  A-1 White Pine Lumber Always in  StocH-  We carry a complete stock of  Ooast Flooring, Ceiling, Inside Finish, Turned Work, Sash and Doors.  Special order work will receive  prompt attention.  r ****************** .*       ,    -  *    -      The census of Canada will.be^ taken-in April,-and the population of.the several 'incorporated cities will he known a, sliort *' |  time afterwards.   The, Tribune publishes' Daily and Weekly  editions at the following rates of subscription by,mail: Weekly,,'  -one year $2; Daily, six months, $2.50; one year, $5^   The Daily'  is delivered in Nelson by carrier ,at, the following -rates: Three .  ..months, $2.50; six'- months, $5; one year,\" $10.','A'large number ~  of subscribers are in arrears, and a large number of subscriptions\\  are about to expire, besides a large number of people in Kootenay  _ and Yale are about to renew subscriptions for, newspapers for the,, J  . year.   In order to make it an object for all these'people to pat-  - rouize The Tribune, the following sums are offered as prizes\"; cm  - the following conditions:     , _, ,j-__        - --,  Nelson  Canada  \/. t $100  British Columbia .-.    25  Northwest Territories,..\"   25  : Manitoba ~ :, 25  Ontario .7..'.:  '25*  Quebec^...' = ....'. .\\\ufffd\ufffd'- 25'  New Brunswick .7     25\ufffd\ufffd  Nova Scotia \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..'.:..    25;  Rossland '.:  ! Kaslo1......  .Sandon ...  Revelstoke'  Grand Forks  $50  .    25,  ,\\ \"26^  .:   25  ..    25^  .25  Phoenix :  .    25;  Greenwood .Y.:..:.'-.....   25'*  lhe subscriber;remitting- $2 in payment of either arrears' '|  or advance subscriptions to The Tribune will be entitled to give\"  an estimate on the populatiori-of any two places in the list named  above; $2.50, to three estimates; $5.00, to five estimates : $10, to  ten- estimates.   Fill out^ blank < below, in accordance with abovo  terms, and remit amount bf subscription to  The Tribune Association, Limited  Name ..:     NELSON, B.  IIIIIIMTIIIllliiiii tmimium^,  5. All railway and steamboat companies must  ctly adhere to tlio following regulations:  (a) All mall and baggage from points above  itionod destined for tho City of Nelson, on or  before leaving tho last point of call on Kootenay  River must furnish the inspector or officer in  charge of the carrying out of these regulations,  with a certificate from the health ofilcer of such  points whero fumigation takes plaoe that same  has been done.  (b);AJ1 oars or steamboats on whloh \"have  been discovered infeoted persons, baggage or  mail, will not bo permitted to .again convey passengers, baggage, etc.. into tho City of Nelson  until disinfected and fumigated to the satisfaction of the medical health officer of this city,  (c) No Indians shall bo allowed to land in the  City of Nelson under any conditions,   s  This proclamation goes Into effeot immediately.  FRANK FLETCHER,  Mayor of tho City of Nelson.  BAU,  Porto Rico LumberCo. Ltd,  H. L T. HAULTAIN, C. E.  MINING  ENGINEER  -    NELSON  OFFIOE-8, 9, 10,  K.-W.-C. Block  Post Office \\mm\\  Province -  Amount enclosed $ -  Subscription to  Edition of The Tribune  Estimate as to population of  Canada      British Columbia  _North-West_Territories  Manitoba  Ontario  Quebec  New   Brunswick  Nova   Soctia  City of Nelson  City of Rossland  City   of Kaslo  City of Sandon  City of Revelstoke  City of Grand Forks  City of Phoenix....  City of Greenwood..  This offer holds good until the 1st of April, 1901.  a* .ii m i ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdii^x^zxiiuit\ufffd\ufffdiiiirixniiixiiaan?arn\ufffd\ufffdiBtniixriuixiiiiju  D. LA  Queensland, Australia, is 12 times  larger than England, with a population about ecgualto   Birmingham.  Medical Health Ofllcor.  Nolson, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd March 2nd. 1901,  \"* '   ' ..... ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    LIIJ     ... - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     _ ,  Notioe of 'Application to Transfer a  License.  Notieo is horoby glvon that I intend to apply ab  the next sitting of tho Board of License Commissioners of the City of Nelson for permission  to transfor my rotall Hqiior licenso for the prem-  jsos situate on the south end of Lot 1, Block 6, In  tho City of Nelson, and known as the Manhattan  aaloon, to Charles H. Ink and Sicgel Boyd.  ...      charles a. Waterman.  Dated at Nelson, B.C., this 15th day of Febrn-  ary.1801  m  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdItnesa: Abthub: K-Vauopan.^  ESTATE OP FRANK S. CAMPBELL.  In the matter of tho Estate of Frank S. CaniD-  % ^_.H\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRlfr ?\ufffd\ufffd Nel80n*\"\ufffd\ufffdt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdePiovinw  of British Columbia, doceased.  Notice Is horeby given, pursuant to tho \"Trustees and Executors Act' of tho revised statutes  of the Provinco of British Columbia. 189^ Cap!  187, to all creditors and others having claims  against tho estate of tho said Frank 8. Campbell  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyh&d,,S&\ufffd\ufffdP or alJ0?t the 23rd d<\ufffd\ufffdy of December  A. D. 1900, to send by post prepaid or dolivered  to Messrs. Gallihor & Wilson of tho said olty of  Nolson, solicitors foi Olcnn M. Bpqny, the administrator of tho personal estate ana effects of the  said deceased, or ta the said Glenn Ml Benny of  the tqwR of Sirdar In the provluee of British  Columbia, their Christian and surnames, ad--  dressos, descriptions and full particulars of thoir  claims, statement of their accounts and the nature of the security. If any, hold by them, on or  hofoyo tho 1st day of April, A. D. 1901.  And further tako notioe that after such last-  montioned date tho said administrator will proceed to distribute the aesote of the deceased to'  the parties ontitled thereto, having regard oulv  to the olalms of which he shall then have notice  The said administrator will not be liable for the  said assets or any part thoreof to any person or  persons of whose claims notice shallfnot have  been received by him at tho timo of such distribution. GALLIHER & WILSON  Bollcitpra for  Glenn M. Benny, administrator  for Frank H. Campbell, deceased ttui^u*^^\ufffd\ufffdar  Dat\ufffd\ufffdd tM\ufffd\ufffd 28tfc day of Febr^ryilfiOli   . ~y_  MORRISON & CALDWELL  GROCERIES  AND  PROVISIONS  PUR LEADERS-  The well-known Newdale Creamery Butter  In all sized packages and 1-pound bricks  September Selected Ontario Cheese  Choice Matured Canadian Stilton Cheese  Fre.sh Bogustown Ranch Eggs  Sole Agents for Regal Brand Tea, Coffee and Spices?  Morrison & Caldwell, Baker Street, Nelson  * TRADES \"UNIQN8P-    A  jifBLBONrJONERS- UNIONNO. 88.'W.'IVcf 17$M\\  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <- M-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMejts in miners', union rooms, north. : >-\ufffd\ufffdjfl  gastoornerVictoria andKewtoMystoBets. every .' -fr<?f  teJTe,T R Mowatt,' PrwddentT Janjo k.^%l  SH? SSSfS?1    DwrcucT-Per shift:   machine ^-^fm X  men, $3.60: hammersmen miners. f3.&; muckere.. .\\7P^  carmen shovelers and'other WeVground labS^. -'f  ers, *fitw. \\     ( \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^. _     -.\/ (l  4  mRADES AND LABOR COUNCIL.-The reitn.'-*  Council will be held In the miners', union hall, -'  zhJ;.' b\"ildL\"\ufffd\ufffdr. cornor Bakor and Stanley'  streets, on the first and third Thursday of eaot *  r*Me,UYZry?; J' \"\"^ ^^'T  Clayton. President!.  John MeLeod. Seeretwy. y '_Z  B  t*y***E; I  m  sharp,  attend.  VWtjnijr brothers.oordi2ly lnvlteS~to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#-J-M  ,^K*?*?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd]treasurer: J. C. Gardnor, recordlng'.fe^   =i^  A \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-' \"'.-'%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - -\ufffd\ufffd   -.- ',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -v-yyys.FA  T A ur_r_VT>a. ihttaxt    \ufffd\ufffdT_. ,*_,_-_   . ^    .i-*53#vsf  L-^BOREM'.UNION.-Nelson^Labdrers^ Pro^ ay. \ufffd\ufffd,  ^f   teotlve Union, No. 8121. A. F. of L., meetefrA. ^M-'L  Miners' Union bail, C. P. R. block^corner of ^    ti^l  A.--'J.J Curie,'President,  cording secretary,  John- ltoberts,Ar ro-  President; Will J. Hatch. Seoretwy. \"-,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; .^   v  Q0OKS- AND WAITERS' -UNION -RegnW  77. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffde?un?? overy Tuesday evening at)8:30  oclock, in Miners' Union Hall..oorner of Baker  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK1J?iS&,ll?t greets.-,VIsting brethren corfially  Invited. Chris. Lnft, president; H\/Smolser. lln-  ancial and recording secretary.,; 7^ ,      -     \/ '  s^w^S0^ ^^^^andltaSSrXeeta^*  R o'olook.  'J.   D. Mover,   presldenl  Vice, secrotary, P. Q. Box 61C.    \ufffd\ufffd  iys  A;,  William  ^%\\  \" '4-1  \".A*>\\  '^**i I  J \\*\\  A  FRATERNAL  SOCIETIES.  NBL80NLODGI  Meeta second We  NO.S8, A.F.fcA.M  ___^_____z -;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdir -:^~nesdas- In each month.  Sojourning brethren Invited. ,      -    -   LBv  buiwiiOi  i  Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock.  Visiting Knights  oordtolfy lnvgedto attend.  H. M. Vtocentc! C.  Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock,  .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ titea to attend  A. T. Park, K. of R. & 8.  trOOTENAY TENT NO. 7, K.-0.-T..M.-  TSLa 'if their regular meotings on tho flrst and  third Thursdays of each month. Visiting Sir  Knights ai'C=cordlally-lnVited-to atlond\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdO-Ar-  \ufffd\ufffdwwn. R. Iv.; A. \\V. ~    -     ~        ~   ~  Purdy, Com.; R. J. Steel.    _  M, A. Minty. Recording-Secretary,  NELSON LICENCE DISTRICT.  Notice is hereby given that David Church of  Erie has made application undor the provisions  of tho \"Liquor Llocnce Act, 1900.\" for an hotel  licenco for the B. C. Hotol at Erie, and that a  \"ipotlng of Uio Board of Licenco Commissioners  will bo hold to consider such application at tho  court house, at tho city of Nelson, on Thursday,  the fourteenth day of-March, 1001 at the hour of  eleven o'clock in the forenoon.  W. H. BULLOCK-WEBSTER  ,._ i . _.     ....   ___* Chjuf Licence Inspector.  Chief Constable's Office, Nolson, B. C.  27th February, 1901.  NOTICE TO DELINQUENT CO-OWNERS  To Gko. H. Lammrus, J. R. Cranston, op to  any person or persons lo whom ho may havo  transferred his Interest ln the Harvey Joy  mineral claim, at Morning Mountain, >\/elson  Mining Division.  You aro hereby notified that I haveorpendod  Ono Hundred Dollars in labor and improvements  upon the above mentioned mineral claim. In  order to hold said mineral claim under tho  provisions of the Minoral Act. and if within  ninoty days from tho date of this notice you full  or refuse to contribute your proportion of such  expenditure, together with all costs of advertising, your interest in said claim will becomo the  property of tho subscriber, under section four of  an Act ontitled \"An Aot to Amend the Mineral  Act, 1900.\" SILAS H. CROSS.  Dated this 12th day of December, 1900.  NOTICE TO-DELINQUENT CO-OWNERS  To T. A. Stkvknson, or to any person or persons to whom he may have transferred his  interest in the Llla mineral claim, at Morn  ing Mountain. Nelson Mining Division:  You aro horeby notified that I^have expe;  tho sum of One Hundred and Fifty-Soven Dollars  in labor and improvements upon the above  mentioned mineral olaim, in order to hold said  mineral claim-, under the provisions- of the  Mineral Act, and if within ninety days from tho  date of this notice you fall or refuse to contribute  under section four of an Act entltled\"An Act to  Amend the Mineral Act,' 1900. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd DANIEL  HERB.  Dated this 12th day of February. 1901.  ARCHITECTS.  THWART tc OARRIE-AmhUsota.   Rmhm  -C ana H Aberdeen tdook,B\ufffd\ufffdk\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, NiSw. THE TRIBUNE: NELSON B C. WEDNESDAY MAUCH \"6. 1901\nAssayers Supplies\nWe carry in stock a full - lire of Assayers' and Chemists'\nSupplies. The quality of cir goods cannot be excelled\nand  our prices are  reasonaale. i^=_r\u2014    ~~^~- =^=-~~~\nWa are Brltlnh Columbia Agents for      ..\u25a0\u00bb\nTHE DENVER FIRE CLAY CO.'S GOODS\nWM. AINSWORTH & SON'S BALANCES\nSMITH & THOMPSON'S BALANCES\nBRUNSTON'S POCKET TRANSITS\nW. F. \"TEETZEL & CO.\nVICTORIA   BLOCK NELSON,   B. O.\n. t\nTHE\nMansfield Manufacturing Go.\nnelson, b. c.\nBuilders and., *\nContractors\nHaving taken over the business ot the West Kootenay Brick &\nLime Company, Limited, of Nelson, I beg- to ask for a continuance\nof the patronage which you have heretofore extended them. My\naim will- be at all times to supply you with our products at lowest\npossible prices.~ Being in a position to manufacture goods ln larger\nquantities than before, we shall be able to supply the 'trade at a\nlower figure.\nIt Is our.intention to'Install machinery to manufacture our\n'marble, products, and next season we'shall be In a position to supply\nthese products at reasonable rates.\nCITY LOCAL NEWS       BUSINESS IN THE COURTS\nWe shall also Keep on hand\nTiles and Cement.\na stock'of Fire Brick,'Flro Clay,'\nIn*1   J        *\n_\\ fi.-*.*.*.      \u25a0\">\n.  Our Bricks and Lime Bock have taken the First Frizes at the\nSpokane Industrial Exposition in 1899 and also this year\/ We also\n, ^ secured prizes last year and this year for Ornamental and Building -\nStone. \"-\u25a0'\u25a0 \\\" -    - \u2022 _.\n-' nT    _. _-   ~   .     *\u2022   i . \u25a0>' -   '\nIviS   Wer are (prepared to offer special rates to; Contractors and\nTBullders..    . T     \"\nernest\/mansfield,\ntor Tbe Mansfield\"Manufacturing Company..\n'\" ^     ~ *\u00bb.\nSuccessors to ,., ...\nTbe West Kootenay Brick tf Lime,Co., Ltd.\nThe members of the Terpsicho-\nrean Club will give a social dance\nat Fraternity hall tomorrow evening.\nThe* board of public works will\nheld a meeting at the city hall at\n10 o'clock Friday morning. The\nextension of sidewalks and other\nimprovements will be discussed.\nThe monthly meeting of \u2022 the\nfinance committee of the city council will be held at S o'clock Friday\nevening, when the monthly accounts aud other matters will be\nconsidered.\nSince Sunday a crew of mon havo\nbeen engaged in repairing trestle\nNo. 74, on whicli the freight traiu\nwas wrecked Sunday morning. The\ngreater portion of the trestle is\nbeing replaced by new timber. The\nwork will be completed in a day or\ntwo.\nA number of Chinamen are clearing off about 40 acres of land at the\nmouth of Grohman creek, and are\ngetting ready for the spring planting. Last summer there were only\ntwo or three working there, but\nsome of the ones driven off the\nland now occupied by. tlie C. P. E.\nyards have moved over the river,\nforming a small colony.\nThe city fathers have abandoned\nthe idea of planking the west end\nof Baker street which becomes so\nmuddy as to inconvenience traffic\nduring the fall and spriug. The\nnew scheme, is, tb excavate the\nstreet from the bridge over Cottonwood creek to within a short distance of Fails street to a depth of\none foot and then grade with\ncrushed rock and gravel. -\nH.E. Macdonnell, the local freight\nagent of the C. P. R., left yesterday\nmorning for the Crow's Nest Pass,\nwhere he will meet W. R. Mclnnes,\ngeneral freight agent; J. Osborne,\ngeneral superintendent,\" and C. E.\nMacPherson, general passenger\nagent of the Winnipeg division.\nThe^officials^are making a!-tour of\ninspection over.the western-portion-\nof their .division, which-extends,to\nKootenay landing. Mr. Macdonnell\nmay return tomorrow.^.\nTattersall vs. McMillian.\nThe spring session of the county\ncourt of Kootenay, which opened\nat   tho   court   house   on Monday,\nclosed ' yesterday    morning.     Although there was a largo list of\ncases, the greater poi tion of them\nwere set a&ide until the next session,   which   will   be   held    here\nJune 17th.    There was only   one\ncase considered yesterday, ifc being\ntliat of P. A. Tattersall vs.  S. O.\nMcMillian and  the former against\nMr. Hauck, all of Slocan City.   The\nplaintiff was suing for $2.30 which\nwas due him from defendant McMillian.   This portion of the case\nlasted only a few minutes, and at\nits conclusion judgment was given\nin favor of the plaintiff in the full\namount *of his claims.   The other\npart of theease, which was Tattersall vs. jHaiick, was quite complicated   and ^\"occupied   considerable\ntime., Ifc appears that Hauck owed\nMcMillian a sufficient sum of money\nto cover plaintiff's claim, and therefore    Tattersall    garnisheed    any\nmoney of McMillian's which was in\nHauck's possession.   Hauck states\nthat   he  had\"accepted orders for\nthis amount before he was served\nwith   the rgarnishee notice.     The\nsuit was brought to set aside \"'these\norders and-make Hauck liable for\nthe   money.     The    evidence .\"was\nsomewhat contradictory.   The case\nwasadjourned until Thursday\/when\nit will be reconsidered in chambers,\"\nthe 'points jof law then being argued.\"\n3BL    B1TBBS   <fe  OO.\nITElLSOlSr\nKASLO\ns-A.3sri303sr\nSTOVES!   STOVES!   STOVES!\nHEATING STOVES, COOKING STOVES, AND STEEL RANGES\nSple Agents for tip Original Cole's Hot Blast Coal Heaters\nc SEE OUR GUNS AND RIFLES\nHEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF AMMUNITION\nTKLKPHONK ft 8toTOt Corl,er Bftkor and joseph,no st,co(|\n\u25a0    - The* Curlers. \/   i\"5*      :\n. For the past'two evenings, 'owing\nto^ _ the heavy '.frosts, \\the curling\nsheets at the rink have \"been iu a\nsplendid ' condition, ~and seyeral\ninteresting games'have been played.\nThe line up and results were~'as follows : ,   \" '\nPerhaps, you did not know,\n-but we'want you - to * learn\n'r\" now ,?and .remember that\nwe. rmake\"- a~- feature of\ncheese of all kinds.\nMacLaren's' Imperial In all Sizes.\nMacLaren's Roquefort.\nImported t Swiss.\nAlso the-Finest Canadian Cream.\n\u25a0- <\nhR \u25a0\nif-\n\\fU' >    -\nhfc,'^.\"'..\nKIRKPATRICK & WILSON\nLi j ,\n     The Leading Grocers.,\nD. S. Stanloy  . '\nO. Miller ,   *,\nJ. F. Weir\nJ. H. Wallaco, skip 7.\nC. Wilson\nP. E. Wilson   -\nJ. H. Wulhvce        1     -\nJudge Forin, skip 9.\nJ. Dover\nDr. Ai nistrong\nJ. A. Turner\nJudgo Forin, skip 7.\" \"\nA. E. Amiable\nPrincipal Soady\nJ. H'Fox\nF. A. Tamblyn, skip 12.\nJ. Iinurenson\"\n,H. Wright,      -      -.-\u00a3-.\n.1. A. Turner .\nF. A. Tamblyn; skip 12.\nC. D. J. Christie\nW. Irving ' *\nA. T. Walloy    '\nF. A. Tamblyn, skip 12.\nH. Wright\nD.J.'lieivni   \\\nC. Morrison\nJ. H. Wallace, skip 12.\nK. Smyth   i '.\",\nW.Irving '     ' *\nC. Smith.\nF. Heteher, skip 9.     -\nI ft-\"ft\n\\\u00a3>\nl\"\nK\n\\i   1\nJ*\nl-fl\nlit.\nIrflt-\niHS\nw<\nlei- ,\ntit-\nk\n\\]77\nx%\nXi\nTelephone 10\nK-W-C Baker Street\nThe Nelson Clothing House\nGreat Slaughter Sale\n\u2022\u2022\nt\u00a7\nFROM 10 TO 25% DISCOUNT FOR THE\nNEXT THIRTY DAYS.\nIn order to niako room for Spring Good ^ I havo decided to sell for tho noxt thirty days nil\nItoods In stock at cro.itlyi educed prlcos. All henvy goodx away down, cost not considered, and in\nClothing, Gents' FiirnisnlngH, Huts nnd Caps, and JlooU and Shoos I will givo from 10 to '25 por cent,\n(IUconnt, and nil Hubbcr Goods at coHt. Now iH the clinnce to partake of tho best bargains ever\nijlfered in tho KooUmays. My stook is all now and up to dato and tho sale is genuino, so now avail\nvoursolf of tho best opportunity to get good goods at less than wholesale prices. Remember this is\nlor only-30 days. \u00ab\u2014\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab.\u2014\u2022\u2014\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab  '     ' -     *i\nJ.  A.   GIUKBR,   Proprietor.\nIK**'\nXP1'\nw\nI\"\"*\nI* '-\nI\" .\u25a0\u00bb\n\u25a0 -i\u00bb\nMURALO\nMURALO\n'an\nmm*\nIt\ntx-\n1^\nIt'\nAs housecleaning will soon be the order of the day we would\nInvite your attention to our stock of PAINTS and VARNISHES. \\\nFor kalsomining there is nothing that gives better satisfaction\nthan MURALO.   We -have twenty-five shades to select from.\nAsk for color card.    \t\nLawrence Hardware Co.\nBEAUTIFUL  GRAVDRES  AND  ETCHINGS\nof Landscapes and other scenes, Free with every purchase\nof two packages of Cream of Wheat, the Breakfast Dainty.\nBuying a Team. >.    - .\nThe   council   having^ decided., to\npurchase a new, team for, the\" fire\ndepartment, chief Lillie was Susy\n.yesterday; inspecting' a number- of\nhorses which had been offered\" at *a\nfair price.   After examination he\nconcluded that none' of them were\nwhat, the city required. - Several\nletters from Spokane parties con-\n\"cerning^ the~sale~of \"gobd teafios^have\"\nbeen received and it is likely that\nis where the animals will be pro-1\ncured.    Chief,Lillie and\"probably\nono of the members  of tho committee will go to Spokane during'\nthe first part of next week to consider, the   oifers   that' have been\nmade.   It.is said that horses can\nbe purchased there at a lower price\nthan here.   The present team will\nbe used by the health department\nin cleaning up the alleys, streets\nand yards throughout the city, as\nthere is more work to be done than\ncan be handled by the two teams\nat present engaged.\nTwo Interesting! Cases.\n\" It is\" seldom that the small debts\ncourt heldairNelsou is of particular\ninterest, but the tfvo eases that\ncame up before magistrate Crease\nat the court' house yesterday wei e\n^of^ special interest. The first.was\nThomas Egan vs. ex-constable Kerr;\nin which -tlie ^plaintiff- issuing for\n$ JO which^he'gave the defendant to\nsettle ^accounts in connection with\n:McAllester'sVarrest and<trial.^ It'\nappears that S. Calkin had a' claim\nagainst Egan; and in order to settle\nthe mattorV'Kerr \" paid\/ the\" debtv\nwithout anyinstructionsffrom Egan,\"\nusing thelatter's\" money. It is the\nsame trouble'whicli \"came to light\nduring KerVa ^investigation before\nthe police commissioners a few days\nago. The 'plaintiff.- did not-put in\nan appearance fa\/nd' the case' was\nadjourned until next. Tuesday.\n\u2014 Convict 'Emqry^wbo is. now serving six months'- at ~>the\"\"\"provincial\njail, having \"been found guiltylof\nstealing _fa __ suit,1, of\" clothes,\"- was\nbrought -before'-'his ' worship and\ncharged with obtaining a time check\nto the amount oft $56 from'the Hall\nMines smelter uhder false pretence.\nThe prisoner waste found -guilty by\n^magistrate Creaie,\\~who 'reserved\njudgment untiljtgday.- Those who\n-testified ~ in \\thei Tease were Albert\nBenson, T. W. Snowden, G. A. Ger-\nsell and Hugh-McDonald,'all employed at\u201e the smelter? .They told\nhqjw the>prisoner_liad obtained the\nmoney. \" * ~* '~\"_\\ '\"\"\" \"^*       .\nThe penalty attached to such a\ncrime is three years. It isc,a rare\nease in the history bf Nelson where'\na prisoner -who is' serving,, time is\n-tried for another offence and-given-\na longer sentence, y   ~\nmines, and of the kind which are a\ncredit to a mining center.\"\nMr. Ritchie also said that all of\nthe mines of that district were\nlooking well, and that the prospects\nfor the coming season were exceed-'\ningly bright. He leaves for his\nhome this morning.\nMining Records.^\nThe following mining transactions * were recorded yesterday:\nCertificates of work' \u2014 To John\nWaldbeser on Mountain Chief and\nStandard. Locations\u2014Dolphin on\nTamarac mountain,\"near Ymir, by\nWalter Blanchfield. Transfers-\nProm Mat Nelson to Robert Mc-\nCoimick, both of Nolson, two-thirds\ninterest in the Dewey for a nominal\n'consideration.\nPERSONAL. ,   \"-\nJoseph Doiran of Slocan is at the\nQuoon's.\nW. R. Hogan of. Sirdar is at the\nTremont.\nArthur Phillips of Erie arrived in\nthe cily last evening.\n7W. N. Brayton of Kaslo was in\nthe city for a few hours yosterday.\"\nJ H; T. Kingsbury of Sloean and\nJohn Love of iWlnnipejr ai-o at the Humo.   - ~\nMr. and Mrs. J.  C.' McBride   of\nSalmo aro spending a low days In tho city.'-..\n, J. G. Parr of .Pilot Bay arrived in\nthe city yesterday.  He Is at the Madden House.\n* J. H. Paff and G. Hr,Miiler bf.Vic-\ntoila.P. L. Venalles of New Westminster, and\nAlien Archer of Ymir are at the Phair,'v _ *  ,\n': BUSINESS   MENTION. \\r \/ -\n' \".Cellar, td\"Rent\u2014Apply The Royal\nBank of .Canada. ^   _~  .    ^^.  y^.Ty-,7'1\n\"'Tolet^-Purnishe'd* rooms' in Carney block.  Apply Miss Garrett.   ~-\\_\u2014\"\nGoto.theOld Curiosity^Shop if\nyou -want to buy or sell anything. ^ .\"'    v      - ' -\n' Cash-paid for \"scrag - iron, * brass'\n'and copper. .Nelson IronJWorks.^   -   -        '--\n, _ Hack V calls left at^\" the - Pacific\nTransfer barn.on Vernon street.    Telephone\ncall 35. -   _,\nNelson\n.  . Commencing March 1st, and continuing for four days, we\nwill give with every order, if requested, a fancy bottle of'Royal\"\nSalad Dressing.\"   This is an entirely new dressing, and in quality it surpasses any preparation that has ever been introduced.\nEqually as good tor meats as for salads.\nLEAVE YOUR ORDER AN1J. GET A BOTTLE.\nWILLIAM HUNTER & COMPANY\ndROCEKIKS AND CROCKERY.\nBAKER STREET, NELSON.    '_\nK. W. C. Block, ^\nWard Street.\nTelephone 251\nA_\\\n.TEA_ AND   COFFEE L PARLORS.\nThis Is the place where the ladies mcot^\nTo havo i heir afternoon tea,    .-,      .\nThis Is the place -where the people meet\n*;   _ To buy their fi ait and candy.      -   *\nThis is the placo where you want to buy\n-An> thing in our line,      - -    ' , -\nWe guaranteo fiesh goods and full weight\nAnd your mon\u00aby'-i worth evei y time.\n..\"^   1'\nHouston Block.\nTelephone 181.\nP. O. Box no.\nJOHN \\. IRVING & CO.\nGetting Ready, for Business.\nThe    Mansfield    Manufacturing\nCompany  is preparing .to do   au\nimmense business during the coming   summer.    The   pressed   brick\nsheds hi Fairview Addition have\nbeen rebuilt'and enlarged, the'work\nbeing completed yesterday..   Other\nimprovements will be made at once,\nand as soon as the weather permits\nthe manufacturing of bricks will be\nstarted.   Active work is being carried on\"-Hst the quarry at Kaslo, and\na. large quantity of lime is being\nproduced.    The  first consignment\nhas-already been received in Nelsou\nand is meeting with a ready demand.\nThe lime is of a superior quality\nand can be used to better advantage than that which has hitherto\nbeen imported from Spokane and\nother   places.     It   was   this   lime\nwhich   was   used in finishing the\nwalls and constructing the cornices\nat the new depot, and the interior\nnow'has an excellent appearance.\nThe brick and lime industry will be\ncarried on with activity this summer, and it is probable that the\nimportation -of these articles will be\ngreatly reduced.\nIn Chambers.'   <\nThe will of the late Rebecca Jane\nStutter was proven by A*. M. John-i\nston on behalf of . the \"husband,\nHarry Stutter ot' Nelson, for the\npurpose of obtaining letters' of\nprobate for the administering ofi\nthe estate. '\n' M. H. Peters, the 'plaintiff in\nthe case of ^Peters vs.^the Nelson\nElectric- Tramway^ Company^ will\nbe examined for discovery before\nregistrar Simpkins this-morning.   '\nRossland Mines.\nJ. Fred Ritchie, a prominent mining engineer from Rossland, was in\nthe city* yesterday\/ - In speaking of\nthe   rich  strike which was   made\nabout a week ago''oh the 300-foot\nlevel of the Homestake group, situated to the south of the city, adjoining the Sunset group operated\nby the Canadian Goldfields Syndicate, he said the\" ledge was continuing in place aud that it had improved considerably since first encountered.   The, lead   is   the full\nwidth of the drift and is well defined by walls of slate and granite.\nIt has now been followed for a distance of 70 feet, and the indications\naro that it will continue.   It is the\nsame lead which has been developed\nat the 200-foot level. j\n\"At present,\" said he, ,\"it is  the I\nbest strike without exception that\nhas ever   before been made in the '\nRossland   district.   It will be the '\n] means of several other properties\nopening up and carrying on active\ndevelopment.   It will also havo its '\neffect in attracting capital, of which\nI expect to see, larger investments\nj this year.   At an early date we ex-\n1 jsect to pee our city surrounded by j.\nEmployment ..Agency,\nBaker.street, J. Hr Love. 'Help \"of all kind,\nfurnished.;    <   .   \u201e     r s-F.   -.    ,,\u2014 j     _       \\\n- Por Rent.\u2014Two^ fine offices- centrally located. Apply to'A. H. Buchanan, Bank\nof Montreal. ,.\u201e. j-\u25a0*-..->    1     . .\n' Two large,- well-furriished rooms\nto lct.< l^and S Macdonald block, corner Josephine and,Vpruon.i, ., * * t ~ _ - -      ,.   . N\nLost\u2014-A red pocketbook contain-:\ning mono}; $10 reward for its return to adjutant\nMoGill, Salvation Ainiy. -\nJapan-Tea_of all-kinds to,suit\nyour taste. \"Sun Cured, Spider Lefr, Pan Fired\nIn bulk or packagoR.   Kootenay Coffee Co. *\u25a0\nWanted\u2014A few first-class stone\nmasons and stonecutters on the. Robson bridged\nUnion^wngos' paid. \u25a0*\u2022 Apply at the work. Jolin\nGunn:     - ,   -      '\nI For fresh candies, fruits, nuts, &c,\neigaia and tobaccos of the best brands, call at the\nBon Ton Confectionery, Baker streot, Miss A.'\nL. KUnkwitz.\nFurnished Room to Let\u2014Large\nfront room to lot: centrally located. Apply to M.'\nM. Fiasor, Kast viotoria_8treot._iiear_comeR.of-\nHendryx. .     , _\nFound\u2014A gold chain,and locket.\nOwner can havo same by proving property and\npaj Ing for this advertisement. Apply \"Locket,\"\nTribune ollicc. \" _.\nThat fine blend of Ceylon Tea we\nare selling at thirty cent i per pound is giving\nthe best of satisfaction to our many customers.\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nFor Sale\u2014Barber shop, fruit and\nnews stand. Close to steamboat landing and\nstation. Choap. \" Satisfactory reason\/or leaving.\nApply T. Plnuloho, barbor, Nakusp, B. C.    \"\nWestern Canadian Employment\nOlllco\u2014Male and female help of all kinds furnished free of ohargo. Vlctoi la Btreet, noxt door\nto Publlo Library.  Phone 270.  P. O. Box 711.\nFor rent\u2014On March 1st, house on <\ncorner of Front and Park streets. Flvo rooms,\nbath room, etc. Rent, including water, 825. Apply to K. Kllby, next door to McBride's stables.\nCopper, Copper, Copper. Copper\nmines and prospoots wanted. Send samples and\nreport to Tho Prospectors' Exohongo. Room 4,\nK-W-C Block, Nolson, B. C. Phono 101. V. O.\nbox No. 700.\nWe   have   Indian,   Ceylon   and\nChina Teas in great varioty, choicest quality.\nWo make a specialty of blending toas and sell\nthorn in any quantity at lowest rates. Kootenay\nCoffee Co.\nGold,   Gold,   Gold.  Free   milling\ngold mino8 and prospect s wanted. Sond samples\nand report to Andrew F. Rosenberger, Room 4,\nK-W-O Block, Nelsou. Telephone lOi P. 0. box\nNo. 700.\nJohn Love, representing the Con-\nrolidatcd Stationery Company, Ltd , Winnipeg,\nis in the olty. lie will be in the Kootenay, Slocan and Boundary districts for several weeks,\ndining which time his headquarters will be at\nthe Hotol Hume.\nWanted \u2014 A woman   who   can\ntake charge of gonoral housework. Three\nchildren. Good homo for right person. Wages\n318 a month. Will pay half faro lo Ferguson.\nWrite at once to R. P. Pcttiplece, Ferguson, B. C,\ncare of Engl?.\n\u25a0^ ,\n>-\\\nWe*are still paying the newspapers to tell'the people that we\" are selling Stew-\ny ^   \"       art's,*'Lowhey's and\" Ganong's Chocolate Bon Bona. -,\nOur Phone Number is 25J.   You may use-it all.\nyou like.- Wo aro pleased to havo jou ling us\nup whon an  order  is in sight.-\nThe\nWE HAVE\nAll tlie fashionable creations\nin Spring and Summerwear\nare included in my Mast consignment of Scotch^ and Irish'\nSerges, Tweeds and Worst-\ntedss_and_-Fancy_Trbuserings\nImproved *\u2022 Incandescent-\nMirror .; Globe- -Lamps v\nNow~ in    Stock.     They.'\nImprove^ Electric\" Light'-\nFifty- per \"cent.     ; '\u25a0*\nE. Skinner\nNeelands' Building, Baker Street).\nFRED J. SQUIRE, Manager.\nKOOTENAY ELECTRIC SUPPLY\n& CONSTRUCTION CO.\nARTHUR   GEE\nMERCHANT TAILOR.\nTREMONT HOTEL BLOCK.\nLarge stock of hlgh-olass Imported goods.  A\nspeoialty of tbe square   shoulder\u2014the  latest\n-7 (\nln<\nfashion in coats\nC.W. West & Co.\nCOAL I     WOOD!\nThe Gait\nremoved\ning,   on\ndoors west C.-P.\nA full supply of\nCoal office has been\nto the Ward build-\nBaker   street\u2014two\nIt. offices.\nGait Coal\nnow on hand.\nW. P. TIERNEY,\nTelephone No^2G5     General Agent.\nAnthracite..:     810.75\nCrow's Nest    . ; J .   fi.15\nBlairmore              0.75\nDBLI-VHB11D\nAGENTS .IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY. LTD.\nNo order can be accepted unless accompanied\nby cash. \t\nOffice:  Cornor nf Hall\nand Baker Stroets.\nTELEPHONE.33.\nNOTIOE.\nTo Contractors and Builder**! \u2014On antl_ftfter\nMarch 11th, l'Wl. journeymen plasterers' wages\nwill be SI) \"0 per dq.y of eight hours. By order of\nlocal Union No. 1T2, O.P.I A.\nJ. V. MOYER, Prosident,\nW. Vick, Seorotary.\nSAVINC INVENTION\nANP   JPROFEB81QNA&\nTHE CBEAT\nINYALUiBLp TO\nLABOR\nBUBINKSS\nMEN\nThe C-an-Dex Copying Book and Inl^\nLot tors and other documents can ho copied per-\nfecily and quickly without the use of water,\npress, brush or moisture pad'      ~     \u25a0*   *\nJOHN BLANEY, Agent, Nelaon, B. C,\nTHOMPSON & DOUGLAS\n.Victoria Street.\nPAINTERS\nDecorators and\nPaper Bangers.\nSTRATHCONAS\nAre now oh the market. Give\nthem a trial.-Manufactured by\nthe Nelson Cigar Factory.\nJ. Lovell Smith; Prop.\n-   Victoria Street*       '   *\nTHE GRANVILLE SCHOOL\n1175 Haro Street, Vancouver.\n$2\nIf you want all the Mining\nNews of the Lardeau, you\nmust become a paid-up\nreader of 'the\nLARDEAU EAGLE\nFERGUSON, B. C.\nper year. It fills the bill.\nBoarding and Day School for Girls. Will reopen January lath. Terms moderate. For term i\nand prospectus apply to\nMADAMOISELLE KERN. Principal.\nThe Cabinet Cigar Store\nG. B. MATTHEW, Proprietor.\nHeadquarters for\n\"CARAMEL\"   \"POMMERY\"\n\"SMILAX\"   \"VIRGIN   GOLD\"\nSmoking and Plpse.\n\\","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"The_Tribune_1901_03_06","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0188939","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.5000000","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.2832999","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"No paper 1895-1896, 1897-1905<br><br>Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled The Tribune from 1892-12-01 to 1901-08-14. 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":"1901-03-06 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":"1901-03-06 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":""}]}