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Walmsley came up from Nelson\nyesterday.\nA. J. Marks, of Nelson, arrived in\ntown yesterday.\nD. J. McLaughlin left for Greenwood, Thursday.\nMrs. F. L. Christie returned from\nCalifornia Saturday.\nThe case of Gomm vs The City Council was adjourned.\nBilly Innes returned from Aspen\nGrove, B. C, Wednesday.\nMrs. Dr. Gomm is very ill but at\nlasl accounts is resting easier.\nI). Moore, ore buyer for the Trail\nsmelter, was in town Thursday.\nL. W. Clark, K. & S. agent at Kaslo\npaid a visit to Sandon Thursday.\nThere are now four patients in the\nhospital, all progressing favorably.\nJack Moore, Provincial, Road Superintendent went to Kaslo yesterday.\nBorn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn Sandon on Friday, Sept.\n27th, to the wife of Dr. Gomm, a son.\nR. F. Green, M. P. P., passed thru\nto Kaslo on his way back from Victoria.\nNeil O'Donnel has purchased Wm.\nWalmsley's interest in the Filbert hotel.\nJ. H. Cameron, returned on Wednesday from a visit to his home in Edmonton.\nB. J. Perry, general manager ofthe\nNoble Five, came in from Victoria\nFriday.\nThe Star will start shipping over\nthe K. & S. next week to the Trail\nsmelter.\nA. B. Docksteader is back from an\nextended trip to the Boundary and\nCrow's Nest points.\nW. J. Walker, editor of the Freeman's Labor Journal, Spokan, was in\ntown a few days this week.\nMrs. Louisa Gomm and Miss Mary\nGomm, mother and sister to Dr. Gomm\narrived in town yesterday.\nMatheson Bros, will remove their\ndrugstore and newspaper plant from\nSilverton to Frank, Alberta.\nThe case of McLaughlin vs The Sandon Rink Co. was settled out of court.\nThe Rink Company paying McLaughlin $100.\nPat O'Hooligan, a miner at the Last\nChance had a narrow escape Tuesday,\nfrom suffocation from powder fumes.\nHe was brot to the hospital and was up\nFriday.\nA short swift trial, a quick sentence\nand it will be a still swifter execution,\nis the lot of President McKinley's ass-\nasin. He will be electrocuted on Monday, Oct 28th.\nNeil Gething, of Slocan City, is going\nto run things at the Red Fox mine at\nMcGuigan during the absence of Geo.\nAylard.\nThe Yacht races are being contested\noff New York harbor, the American\nyacht, Columbia seemingly having the\nadvantage.\nFrank Newcombe, of Kaslo, came in\nJast Monday with a gang of men to\nstart operations on the Dardanelles at\nMcGuigan.\nThe firm of Bowles & McFaggart\ndealing in air screws and cyclone\nspools have disolved owing to legal\ncomplications.\n.Magnus Smith, who has been filling\nthe position of blacksmith at the Queen\nBess mine, left for Maple creek Assa.\non Wednesday.\nA survey of the Mabou is being\nmade so as to determine how much of\nthe Enterprise vein is absorbed by the\nEmpress Fraction. ,\nIt is evident from despatches that the\nheavy end of this great and influential\njournal did not make his promised connections with Yorkey.\nC. K. Skales returned this week from\nNelson and is industriously engaged in\npainting the roof of H. Giegerich's and\nH. Byers &. Co's stores.\nA social will be held in Crawford's\nHall on Friday evening next, Oct 4th,\nunder the auspices of the Ladies Aid of\nthe Presbyterian church.\nMrs. McKinnon and Miss McKinnon\nleave on the first of the month for Cascade City and Phoenix with a big stock\nof milinery and ladies goods.\nThere seems to be a vast difference\nof opinion in regard to church property\ntaxation in Kaslo. It is queer the\nsame proposition never comes up in\nSandon.\nJas. Mack and Chas. F. Myers, who\nare working the Mack ore finder left\non Thursday for Spokan. They will\nstop a day at Ainsworth looking up\nbusiness for their Finder.\nFrank L. Christie returned on Wednesday from the England where he was\nrepresenting the Copeland interests in\nthe Cube Lode case before the Privy\ncouncil.    The decision was reserved.\nT. B. May, manager of the Bank of\nCommerce in this city during the last\nthree years leaves on Monday for Dawson City to assume the position of\nassistant manager of that branch of the\nbank. Mr. Scott of Skagway will take\nMr. May's place here.\nFor the Provincial Exhibition, New\nWestminster, Oct. ist to 4th. The\nC. P. R. will issue round trip tickets\nfrom Revelstoke at $12.35. l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTickets\non sale Sept. 27, 30, Oct. 1 and 2 good\nfor return till Oct. 7.\nA ROYAL RELIC.\nThere is in Toronto a little casket\nwhich for years has been an object of\ntender solicitude. It is small and elegant, and has been placed in many\nprominent places in the mansion it now\ngraces.\nSometimes it rests upon the marble-\nlopped mantle in the library, sometimes\non the onyx table in the parlor, but\never at night it is securely laid away.\nMounted with jewels and elegant in\nform and trappings, the lid raised reveals the real object of veneration\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\nsingle human hair.\nA relative of this Toronto lady who\nat present venerates this bit of caput\ncovering was wise in her day and generation, and when King Edward, who\nwas then Prince of Wales, came thru\nOntario, she ascertained where he\nwould perform his absolutions in a certain town not far from Toronto.\nThen she offered to provide a magnificent comb and brush.\nThe offer was accepted.\nHastening to the room after the\nwashing, combing, and brushing of the\nprincely person, she closely scanned the\nbristles, which had never before been\nacross a human noodle.\nAnd there\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhat extasy!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthere was\na hair that the prince had shed!\nWhat a cappilarical, hairsutieal, incomprehensible unbuyable, unbreakable, bendable, stealable, irreplaceable,\nlongedforable treasure.\nA real hair from the King's  Ko-Ko!\nA real think tank protector from the\nhead of the Ruler of Britain, and Emperor beyond the seas, a hair from the\nspot that the crown roosts on, a hair\nfrom the head that nods and millions\nanswer, a hair from the head that never\nuncovers unless the owner feels jolly\nwell like it.\nOne scintillation from the Royal\nDome of Thot!\nAnd when she realized it all she\npressed it to her heart, smiled at it,\nlaughed over it, kissed it, and then\nrested it in its present costly little\nhome.\nPretty soft for the hair, eh?\nKilled by a Bear.\nDan Rice, a prospector and hunter,\nof Kaslo, met his death on Friday of\nlast week in an encounter with a bear.\nHe went up Milford creek on that day\nwith Gus Adams on a bear hunting\ntrip. After the pair had been out some\ntime they became separated, and Adams\nnot finding him at the camp when he\nreturned, became alarmed and returned\nto Kaslo on Saturday. He formed a\nparty of ten men. who left that night,\nand on Sunday they formed a search\nI which was rewarded by finding Rice's\nbody in a badly mangled condition.\nFrom appearances he had stepped over\na log on top of a large silver-tip, which\nhad attacked him, breaking his right\narm. It had also struck him in the\nhead, tearing away his entire face and\nforehead, and tearing the skull back so\nas to expose the brain. The left arm\nwas also chewed badly. Death must\nhave been instantaneous. Rice had\nnot even time to fire his gun, which\nwas found beside him. The body was\nto Kaslo for burial \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLedge\nThe Drilling Contest\nAfter an exciting contest between the\nseveral drilling teams at Spokan the\nButte team won with a record of 55\ninches in 15 minutes. Walter Bradshaw and Joe Freethy are the names\nof the winning contestants who smashed\nall known records. The Sandon team\ndid extraordinary good work drilling 51 inches in the 15 minutes\nallowed. The contest was an exciting\none thruout, large crowds being in\nattendance. The interest of Sandonites\nhas been keen on the outcome of this\ncontest and when it was known the Sandon team smashed the record there was\ngreat rejoicing, and it was a great surprise totfiany when the news was received\nnext day that the Butte learn had beat\nthem by four inches. That the Sandon\nteam will strive for the winning place\nin the future is well known, this contest giving them some pointers. What\nmakes this kind of sport so popular\namong miners is the evident squareness\nand the fact that renders it still more\nexciting is that a small nodule of\nharder rock than ordinarily encountered, will turn the scale.\n$35,000 Bond.\nGeo. Alexander has bonded the\nFletcher group on Lyle creek, near\nWhitewater, for $35,000. On Monday\nten per cent of the purchase price,\namounting to $3,500, was paid over to\nthe owners, Fletcher Bros, and Wm.\nMoulse. These properties were under\nbond a year ago to Chas. Plowman,\nwho dropped the bond without doing\nany work. \\ party of surveyors left\non Wednesday for the property and it\nis understood that Mr. Alexander intends putting a force of men to work at\nonce to prove the property. The Fletcher group L a gold proposition and\nore taken out carries very high values\nin that metal.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKootenaian.\nA suit has been entered against the\nChapleau Mining Co. by F. Mourgues,\nthe engineer in charge of the company's interests on the first north fork\nof Lemon creek. The suit is for $1995\nbeing six months' selary at $300 and\ndamages for non-fulfillment of contract.\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,-t-a\n\\\"\n)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :.'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' v. :j\t PRESIDENTS THAT WERE\nKILLLED BY ASSASSINS\nThe shooting of President McKinley resembles in many respects\nthe assassination of President Oar-\nfield in 1881. His assailant, Chas.\nJ. Guiteau, was one of the thousands of persistent hunters of office\nwho pestered President Garfield.\nHe appeared in Washington during\nGarfield's visit there before the inauguration, and construed, or pretended to construe, a promise to\nsee him again into the promise to\ngrant him an appointment as consul\nat Marseilles.\nThe day after the inauguration\nGuiteau called at the White House\nto see President Garfield, but did\nnot find him there.   He then wrote\nto the President, asking an interview, to which he received no reply.\nHe then followed  the  President\nclosely,wherever he went,and stood\noutside for hours and watched the\nhouses where the President called,\nwaiting for a chance to press his\nsuit for an office.    Again and again\nhe intruded himself upon the President, who, after becoming convinced\nof the man'8 unfitness for official\nposition, frankly refused to grant the\npetition.   Guiteau was very angry,\nand refused to be satisfied with two\nor three denials; and at last be became so insulting in his demeanor\nthat the President, after a most remarkable display of patience, ordered the officers at the White House\nto expel the intruder, and refuse him\nadmittance should he attempt to\nenter again.    Mortified at his failure to obtain the coveted appointment, and angry beyond expression\nbecause of his forcible ejection from\nthe White House, he determined to\nhave revenge.     Various   schemes\nsuggested themselves to him,according to his own confession, which\nwould bring disgrace and failure\nupon the administration and shame\nupon the President,but none would\nor could satisfy him but the murder\nof President Garfield.    Once, it is\nsaid,he followed the President from\ntbe White House to the residence\nof Secretary Blaine, dodging along\nfrom dark corners and skulking bv\nstone balustrades; and the peaceful,\nconfident head of the nation walked\ncheerfully by those hiding-places,\nand   Guiteau,   with   his  revolver\ncocked,   could   not   muster   the\ncarriage, and Guiteau saw her thin\nhands and pale, sweet face, he was\ndefeated again; and, stuffing his\nrevolver in his pocket, said: \"I'll\nwait till she is better.\" He pondered over the matter, making\ncareful calculations on the effect of\nthe President's death, and planned\nhow to avoid the rage of the mob\nwhich the murder would be likely\nto raise. He wrote a letter beforehand to General Sherman, to be\ndelivered to him at once after the\nmurder, asking for troops to protect him at the jail.\nOn Friday, the first day of July,\nGuiteau saw by the papers that the\nPresident intended to take the train\nfor New York the next morning,\nand again determined to secure his\nrevenge:\nOn the morning of Saturday, July\n2nd, he loaded his revolver, hired a\nhack to take him hastily from the\nstation after he should have killed\nhis victim, and placed himself near\nthe entrance to the Baltimore Railroad waiting-room, thinking to kill\nthe President there. Soon after\nthe assassin had taken his post at\nthe door, President Garfield and\nSecretary Blaine alighted from their\ncarriage, and for five minutes stood\nclose to Guiteau, engaged in conversation. But he could not muster\nup courage to shoot then. The\nsudden call of the conductor, \"All\naboard !\" and the quick movements\nof the passengers in the station,\nhowever, enabled him to throw off\nthe spell, and, with a satanic desperation and horrible impulse, he\nturned, as the President passed\nhim, and fired the first shot. He\nwas so close to his victim that he\nsaw his aim had not been true, and\nas the startled President leaped to\none side the assassin took a surer\naim, and fired the second time with\ndeadly effect. The second bullet\nentered the President's side, tore\nthrough the spine, and remained\nlodged in the flesh. The horrified\nspectators rushed to the wounded\nman, seized the assassin, and for a\ntime there was the greatest confusion and terror. But soon the doors\nwere shut to keep out the excited\ncrowd, surgical aid called for the\nPresident, and the assassin hurried\naway to the jail. The surgeons\ncalled to aid tlie President declared\nat once that the shot inust be fatal,\nand ordered the fainting and bleeding man carried by ambulance to\nstrength to pull the trigger.    At-the White House\nanother time he followed the President's carriage to the railway station, determined to delay the deed\nno longer; but when the affectionate\nhusband lifted his wife from the\nWhen the President had lingered\nand suffered at the White House\nfor more than two months, holding\non to life with an almost miraculous tenacity, and suffering incess\nantly the acutest pain, a council of\nnoted physicians was called to consider the advisability of removing\nhim from the heat and malaria of\nWashington:\nHe had lost more than one hundred pounds in weight, and had\nbecome so weak that it did not\nseem possible that, without a change,\nhe could survive many days. He\nlonged to get away from the place\nin which he had suffered so much,\nand, as there seemed no hope for\nhim there, the physicians consented\nto undertake his removal to Long\nBranch, on the New Jersey shore.\nHis removal for so many hundred\nmiles in his dangerously low state\nwas one of the most remarkable\nfeats of modern days. The railroad\ncompany laid a track to the White\nHouse in Washington, and another\ntrack to the cottage which kind\nfriends furnished for him at the\nshore; so that he was taken from\ndoor to door in an elegant, comfortable and commodious car, and\ncarried from the house to the car\nand from the car to the seaside\ncottage, without sufficient commotion or movement of his couch to\ncause any considerable increase of\nhis pulse. Although he exhibited\nsigns of exhaustion the next day,\nhe did not attribute it to the journey so much as to the excitement\nand pleasure of being in a new\nplace and amid new scenes. Although the President at first rallied\nslightly, he gradually sank until,\non September l!)th, he passed away.\nThe immediate cause of Garfield's\ndeath was for some time a matter\nof dispute among physicians; but\nthe day after his death a post-mortem examination of his body was\nmade:\nWhen the operation was performed, it was found that the ball,\nafter fracturing the right eleventh\nrib, has passed through the spinal\ncolumn, fracturing the body of the\nfirst lumbar vertebrae, driving a\nnumber of small fragments of bone\ninto the adjacent soft parts, and\nlodging just below the pancreas,\nahout two inches and a half to the\nleft or the spine and Itehind the\nperitoneum, where it had become\ncompletely encysted. The immediate cause of death was secondary\nhemorrhage from one of the mesenteric arteries abjoiningthe track\nof the ball, the blood rupturing the\nperitoneum, and nearly a pint escaping into the abdominai cavity.\nThis hemorrhage is believed to have\nbeen the cause of the severe pain\nin the lower part of the chest, which\nPresident Garfield complained of\njust  before  death.     An   abscess\ncavity, six inches by four in dimen\nsions, was found in the vicinity of\nthe gall bladder, between the liver\nand the transverse colon, Wh*ch\nwere strongly interadherent. ft\ndid not involve the substance of\nthe liver, and no communication\nwas found between it and the\nwound. A long suppurating chan-\nnel extended from the external\nwound, between the loin muscles\nand the right kidney, almost to the\nright groin. The channel, now\nknown to be due to the burrowing\nof pus from the wound, wbh sup.\nposed during life to have been the\ntrack of the ball. On an examination of the organs of the chest, evi-\ndences of severe bronchitis wen\nfound on both sides, with broncho-\npneumonia of the lower portions rf\nthe right lung, and. though to much\nless extent, of the left. The lungs\ncontained no abscesses, and the\nheart no clots. The liver was enlarged and fatty, but free from abscesses. Nor were any found in\nany other organ except the led\nkidney, which contained near its\nsurface a small abscess, about one-\nthird of an inch in diameter.\nGuiteau,the assassi n. was charged\nwith murder,and after a sensational\ntrial, which lasted for -several days,\nand during which the defendant\nsought to escape the penalty of his\ncrime by pleading insanity, he was\nconvicted and sentenced to be\nbanged on June .10, 1882.\nSecretary of State .lohn Hay. in\nthe biography which ho wrote in\ncollaboration with John (.. Ni<ol\ufffd\ufffdy.\ngives a graphic account of the\nassassination of Abraham Lincoln\nat Ford's Theatre on April 14.1865.\nHe was at one time an assistant-\nsecretary and aid-de-camp to Lincoln.    He writes:\n\"Lincoln was fond of the theatre;\nit was one of his few means of recreation. Besides, the town was\nthronged with soldiers and officers,\nall eager to see him; it was represented to him that appearing occasionally in public would gratify\nmany people whom he could not\notherwise meet. Mrs. Lincoln had\nasked General and Mrs. (.rant to\naccompany her; they had accepted.\nand the announcement that they\nwould be present was made aa \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nadvertisement in the evening P\ufffd\ufffdPors\nbut they changed their minds and\nwent north by an afternoon train-\nMrs. Lincoln then invited in **\nstead Miss Harris and Major He\ufffd\ufffd0\nR. Rathbone, the daughter \ufffd\ufffd\"\nstepson of Senator Ira Harris. 1\nPresident's carriage called for WW\nyoung people, and the four\ntogether to the theatre.\nwen*\nhe Pre*' ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,f\nTHE PAYSTREAK, SANDON, B. C, SEPTEMBER 28,\nE. A. BROWN, M. E.\nUnderground Surveys\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Examinations. Dc\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* Jopment and Assess'\nnent Work. Surveys\nind Estimates made for\nTramways.\nVirginia Block, Sandon, B. C.\na. f. & A. M,\nALTA LODGE NO. 29.\nRegular Communication held first Thurs\n,|.iv in each month in Masonic Hall at H \\\\ m\nSojourning brethern are cordially invited to\nattend,\nA. B. l)OCKSTEADER, Secretary.\nP. L. Christie,\nL. L. B.,\nNOTARY PUBLIC, BARRISTER,\nSOLICITOR, ETC.\nATHERTON BLOCK SANDON\nSandon Cartage Co.\nWALMSLEY & McPHERSON\nExpress, Baggage,\nand Carriage.\nDelivery to  all   Parts of the City.\nEstablished i.**i\ufffd\ufffdA.\n\ufffd\ufffd. M.\nSandon, B. 0.\nNotary Pulblic.\nInsurance and Mining\nBroker.\nMining Stocks bo.if_.ht and wold. General aRont for Slocan Properties\nPromising  Projects  for  Sale.\nSandon Miners*\nHospital\nSubscribers, $i per month ; Private\npatients, $2 per day, exclusive of\nExpense of Physician or Surgeon\nand Drugs,\nOpen To The Public.\nDR. W. E. GOMM,   Attendant Physician.\nMISS S. L. CdllSlI.-I.M, Matron,\nd. H. MCNEILL, Pres. Hospital Hoard.\nANTHONY SH1LLAND, Secretary.\nShip Your Trophies of the Chase to\nHarry W. Edwards,\nTAXIDERMIST\nRevelstoke,    B. C.\nHe will  stuff and mount   in  Rood\nstyle any Bird, Beast, Reptile or Fish\nthat yoii can present. You do the killing.    We do the rest.\nSILVER CITY LODGE NO. 39.\nI. O. O. F.\nMeetings in the Union Hail every Friday\nEvening at 7:80.   Visiting Brethern coidially.\ninvite*! to attend. j\nR. CUNNING, N. G.\nGEO. WAITE,        JAS. H. THOMPSON j\nfceeretary. Vice Grand,\nNotice to Creditor!*.\nIn tlie matter of the estate of James William-\nson, late of the City of Sandon, B. C, Merchant, deoetued.\n*\nNOTICK IS HEREHY GIVEN PURSUANT\nto tin- \"Trustees and Executors Act,\" that\ntllcrediton end others having claims against\ntha Estate of the said .lames Williamson,\nwho died on thettnddaj. of July, A. D..1901,\nare required, on Of hefore the 1st day of Oc-\ntohcr l'.Hii, to send bypost prepaid, or deliver\ntoF. L. Chi i-.fi... of ths Atherton Block, Sandon, B.C., Solicitor for Mury Elizahoth Williamson the administratrix ofthe estate of\nJames Williamson, their christian and sur\nnames, addresses arid descriptions and full\nparticulars of their claims, the statement of\ntheir accounts and the nature of the securi-\nties, if any. held by them.\nAmi Notice is herehy further given that im-\nmediately after such last mentioned date the\n-;iid administratrix will proceed to distribute\nthe assets of the deceased among the parties\nentitled thereto, having regard only to tho\nclaims of which she shall then have notice;\nand that the said administratrix will not be\nliable for the said assets or any part thereof\nto any person or persons of whose claims notice\nshall not have been received hy her at the\ntime of such distribution\nF.L.CHRISTIE,\nSolicitor for the Admistratrix.\nHated the -'7th day of August, A. D., 1901,\nCertificate of Improvements.\nCONDORE AND CORLISS FRACTION MINERAL CLAIMS.\nSituate in the Slocan Mining ff)ivision of West\nKootenay District Where located: One\nquarter of one mile South West of Cody\nTownsite.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. B. Docksteader,\nas agent for Frederick A. Henneberg, Free\nMiner's Certificate No. B.*i2i>24, and John Docksteader, Free Miners' Certificate No. B52221,\nintend, sixty days from date hereof, to apply\nto the Mining Recorder for Certificates of\nImprovements, for the purpose of obtaining\nCrown grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action under\nsection 37 must be commenced before the\nissuance of such Certificates of Improvements\nA. B. DOCKSTEADER.\nAgent.\nDated this 27th day of August, A. D. 1001.\nApplication for 'Transfer of Li*\nquor License.\nNOTICE\nTO  DELINQUENT    CO-OWNERS  OF  THE\nSILVER CHORD MINERAL CLAIM.\nTo J. R. Cameron and A. R. Porter or any\nperson or persons to whom they may have\nassigned their interests in the Silver Chord\nMineral Claim, situated near Sandon and\nregistered in the Recorder's office for the\nSlocan Mining Division.\nYou are hereby notified that I, Philip J.\nHickey. aoting as agent for J. D. Farrell and\nVolney D. Williamson, have caused to he expended one hundred dollars in labor and improvements upon the above-mentioned mineral claim under the provisions of the Mineral\nAct, and if within ninety days from the date\nof this notice you fail or refuse to contribute\nyour proportion of such expenditure, together\nwith all costs of advertising, your interest in\nsaid claim will become the property of tne\nsubscriber under Section 4 of an Act entitled\n\"An Aot to Amend the Mineral Act, 1!.KW.\"\nVOLNEY I). WILLIAMSON,\nJ.D. FARRELL,\n[PHILIP J. HICKEY, Agent.*\nDated this 5th Day of August, 19C1.\nCity of Sandon Court of Revision\nNOTICE is hereby given that the annual\nsitting of the Court of Revision for the pur-\nof hearing all complaints against the assessment for the year 1001 as made by the assessor\nof tho City of Sandon, B. C. will be held in the\nCouncil Chamber, City Hall, Sandon, B. C, on\nSaturday Oct. 19th KKH at 10 o'clock a. m.\nC. E. LYONS,\nCity Clerk.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty days\nfrom date hereof we, the undersigned, intend\nto apply to the License Commissioners of the\ncity of Sandon for a transfer to us of the\nliquor license formerly held by Mrs. Annie\nEgan of the Palace Hotel.\nKNOWLES & FINLAY.\nDated at Sandon this 24th day of Aug., lftol.\nANADIAN\n'1PAC1F1C\nPAN-AiTERICAN\nEXCURSION to BUFFALO\nSIXTY DAY LIMIT.\nSept. 3, 17.     Oct. 1, 15.\nCHOICE OF ROUTES.\nALL RAIL -:- LAKES -:- 500 LINE\nVIA ST. PAUL OR CHICAQO.\nThe Art Piano of Canada.\nHeintzman Co.\nMAKERS,\nToronto,   Ont.\n0*\nThomas. Duffy,\nAGENT,\nSandon -- B. C.\nThrough Sleeping Car\nKootenay Landing to\nToronto. One Change\nto Buffalo.\nFor time tables, rates and full inform\nation  call on or address nearest local\nagent.\nH. W. Harbour.\nAgent. Sandon\nJ. S. Carter .  E. J. Coyle,\nD. P. A. A. G. P. A.,\nNelson, B. C. Vancouver, B. C.\nfresh Vegetables\na**\nf\naiJ\n4\nI\na#\n\\1A\\1A\nCarrots Beets 1\nCabbage      i;m^zwmwm-%\nZettuce\nOnions\nWabisbes\nCucumbers\nM Zavge Consignment\ngust Bvviveb.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfalland Xros.\nSandon   *   *   British Columbia\nSatisfaction\nThat is what everyone wants who orders\na suit of clothes or pair of trousers. We\nguaaantee SATISFACTION to all our customers.    Leave your order with us far a\nFALL SUIT.\nJ. R. CAHERON.\nFASHIONABLE\nTAILOR.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWa THE PAYSTREAK, SANDON, B. C, SEPTEMBER 28,\n\/\n^0\nThe Paystreak.\n1\nPublished Every Saturday in the heart of the Richest White\nMetal Gamp on Earth.\nOperated in the interests of the Editor,\nSubscription   -   -   -   -   $2.00 a year.\nStrictly in advance.\nSpecimens Shipped on Suspicion.\nWilliam MacAdams,   -   Publisher and Proprietor.\nSANDON, SEPTEMBER 28 igoi.\nSarnia, Sept. 19th, 1901\nDear Billy.\nWhere did I go off shift on the\nlast? Seems to me it was somewhere\ndown among the rocks. Well the\nrocks are still there. I am in Sarnia,\nof course that can hardly be held as an\nindictment against Sarnia. I entered\nduring the night and have been on the\nnight shift ever since. The coppers\nhere do their sleeping on the graveyard shift. Everyone is supposed to\nbe at home and in bed at that time but,\nremarkable as it may seem, they are\nnot. I have known boys here, even\nduring my short sojourn in these\nregions, who stay out as late as half\npast eleven. Some of them, young\nmen with excellent opportunities, employes of banks and drug stores and\nplaces like that, earning four or five\ndollars a week, actually blow their\nmoney buying cigarettes and other\nabsurd extravagancies. However, as\nthese youths are too notoriously thriftless to ever Ait any ice I cannot afford\nto waste time writing about them.\nThey should stagger up against an ace\nin the hole and go to the ceiling.\nThen they would learn economy.\nBut   about   those   rocks.    From\nwhat I could gather on the train and\nin  conversation  with   politicians  and\nhonest men in Toronto and elsewhere,\nit seems that not one in a thousand (I\nhave interviewed 4,726 men  and  one\nwoman)  appreciates the  value of this\nregion.    A large aggregation of wheal\ngrowers  from  Manitoba  had the de-\nstinguished  honor of coming down on\nthe same  train with yours  truly and I\nmade a  personal and  systematic  cap-\nvaaSs   of the  whole   bunch.    I   asked\neach  one  separately  what he  thot of\nthe North Shore.    The answer did not\nvary even a syllable.    It was  unanimously \"a hell of a country.\"    Yesterday I spent two hours and  thirty minuets  lecturing a prominent  politician\nwho  is a possible  cabinet  minister in\nj     the Ontario legislature on the vast resources   of  the   North   Shore.     He\nfrankly  admitted he did not  know the\nrudimentary  principles  of the   B.  C.\nprospecting laws, had not the slightest\nidea of how a claim was staked,   never\nsaw a prospector or a prospect and had\nonly a very hazy and remote idea of\nhow much the development of the\nmining industry would do toward\nbuilding up this sleepy province.\nOntario's prospecting law is simply rotten. No one seems to know\nmuch about it, but as near as I can\ngather a prospector is required to immediately survey and plat his ground,\nplace assays in the hands of the land\nregistrar and apply for a right to purchase at a price varying from $1.25 to\n$5.00 per acre. The Dawson City\nracket is worked to a finish and many\na poor prospector who has complied\nwith the formalities finds himself beat\nout by some pet ofthe registry office\nwho, after the prospector has furnished\nall the information, goes out and\nmakes a \"prior\" location. I imagine\nsome of the old timers in our camp up\nagainst a proposition like that.\nAnd yet the rubes in Ontario\nwonder why the North Shore is not\nopened up.\nBut, to switch, Toronto is a great,\ncheap and wholly irrational camp.\nPeople there are plum crazy on royalty\nYorkey is going to visit the burg some\ntime ,in the near future and Toronto\nfolks are about in the same frenzied\nstate as the Navajoe Indians were at\nWalker's lake during the Messiah\ncraze. Red coated militiamen are\nparading and practicing bugle and\ndrum exercises at all hours. Fiabby-\nfaced, pot-bellied yahoos who couldn't\nmarch to Three Forks are addressed as\nSargeant, Colonel, Major or General\naccording to the amount of booze they\nlap up. Gee-gaw shops are doing a\nbooming business selling photographs\nof Yorkey and his side partner. Restaurants, saloons, stores and all kinds\nof public places are in a free-for-all\ncompetition to display royalty emblems\nand royalty extravaganzas of all kinds.\nPreachers are praying for the Duke.\nSecturers are qualifying him. Newspapers are full of Douglas' three dollar\nshoe cuts fixed up to represent him\nand every gent in the land from the\ngin merchant to the gospel shark is on\nit and on it strong.\nAs I said before, people are plumb\nbatty on royalty. I feel sorry for\nYorkey.\nOne of the most interesting sights\nI witnessed in Toronto was to watch\nthe Eaton gang come off shift. The\nminers and householders in the Slocan\nwho are helping to build up this outfijt\nshould keep their money at home.\nEaton's is certainly a hard layout. Of\nall the thousand or so men, women\nboys an girls whom I saw emerge\nfrom his works and hurry off to wrestle\ndown a short-hour lunch I aSwear that\nthere was not one in the bunch whose\nclothes and general make-up indicated\nanything  better than   four dollars  a\nweek. And the appearance of them.\nBrazen and almost importuning in\ntheir manner but at the same time\nbearing a half dejected don't-give-a-.\ndam-whether-school-keeps-or-not sort\nof a way. I know now where the\nranks ofthe prostitutes are recruited\nfrom. And the Slocan miners who patronize Eaton help along the work.\nSome of these Toronto people are\npretty sore on B. C. mining stock.\nGeorge Gooderham, Tom Blackstock\nand other promoters threw it into their\nToronto friends cold-blooded on the\nRossland propositions and now you\nought to hear the lambs roar, the\npoor suckers bot the stock calculating\nthat it would go up and thev would\nunload on other poor suckers who\ndidn't know any better. But George\nand Tom arranged all that. Thev did\nthe unloading act.\nOne funny thing I noticed in Toronto. Very few seem to understand\nthat there is a strike on at Rosslaiul or\nthat the mines are closed down. When\nI first fell up against this fact it was\nan eye-opener and I investgated. It\nseems that anything like a definite\nknowledge of the situation in the Ross-\nland camp is very rare. Someone has\nbeen lying like a wild-catter but I will\nhave to throw the proposition into the\nassay office of investigation to determine the object.\nJoe Martin is a celebrated gentleman amontj the tenderfeet. All over\nthe country men arc asking about Joe.\nWhat is he going to do? What i; his\nnext move? How will he make out\nwith the liberal party, etc. etc. In\nfact Joe has Manitoba and Ontario and\nI suppose the whole Dominion guessing. The machine politicians are certainly airaid of him and the few liberal\nluminaries whom I met apprehend that\nif Joe gets control in B. C. and makes\na provincial rights case out ofthe disallowed Oriental Immigration Acts he\nwill put Laurier and his gang over the\ndump of oblivion in about the same\nway that he sent Tupper and his fossils\nfluey on the school question. There\nwill be millions of machine money\nready to down Joe when the play comes\nup that way.\nYours while not otherwise engaged.\nWm. MacAdams.\nThe swift avenging justice meted\nout to the assasin of President McKinley meets the approval of every right\nminded man. The trial was devoid\nof the sensational features of the Guiteau trial, which was made use o( to\nthe enrichment of many a cheap book\nconcern. The published account oi\nthe deed with the subsequent trial,\nsentence and death can be placed in a\nvery few pages, a This will avoid a\ngood deal of noteriety. THE PAYSTREAK, SANDON, B. C, SEPTEMBER 28,\nRugs\nRugs\nRugs\nBUY A RUG FOR\nYOUR ROOM\nAND KEEP\nFROM    HAVING\nCOLD FEET.\n$. JH. Mtherton, Co,\n(Ztmited.)\n%b. Bpers & Co.\nBealers in\nmine and mill\nIbardware\nOre Cats,\nSteel Kails,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCanton Steel,\npowder, Caps and\nStoves at\nSanbon   %   nelson   %\nfuse\nIkaslo\ncjTroTfiryYyinnnnf * ymnni BT^TnnryoTririnrainrir.r^innnnnnnrfli\nWe Zead in Cheap prices\ntoere is an Bssap of Wbat\nWe Can 60 in tbe\nI GENT'S   FURNISHING   LINE.\nREGULaAR PRICE       NOW\nWhite Shirts $1 25 $   75\nCollars          25 15\nCanadian Overalls  1 00 75\nBlue and Black Twill Serge Shirts  1 75 1 25\nFancy Colored Shirts, Collars, Cuffs at'd 1 25 75\nBlack Working Shirts  1 25 1 00\nFlannelette Reggato Shirts Collars at'd.  1 00 75\nSilk Front Shirts  1 25 1 00\nA large range of Fedora Hats, from $1.50 to $3.00 for best\nquality. See them and satisfy yourself. Gloves at prices that\nwill captivate you. Summer Underclothing, very finest quality\n$1.50 to $2.00 per suit. Similar reductions in all other lines\nsuch as neck-wear, hosiery, etc., etc.\nMlbert \ufffd\ufffd)avib> Wbe miners' traitor.\n1UU.U IUU -UUUUJt-dUUUUUUOUJUiUUU 1\nRossland Engineer's Worksc\ufffd\ufffdS!5J22S\nBOILERMAKERS.\nORE CABS, Skips, Gages, Receivers, Ore Bin Doors, Chutes and general wrought iron plate\nwork. Our ore oars are the best on the market. Write for references and full particulars.\nSECOND HAND MACBTBEBY. For Sale:-One S ft. Pelton water wheel under 600 ft, 8 to 16\nspiral pipe, one 10x5x18 and side packed plunger sinking pump. Bock Drills, Stoping\nCars, etc. etc.\nAgents for Northey PumDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStock Carried.\nP. 0. Box 198, Third Ave., Rossland \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\nluu l ii*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdliin mmmwmmWm mi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\/\nTHE PAYSTREAK, SANDON, B. C, SEPTEMBER 28,\nIVANHOE HOTEL\nJust received a brand\nnew stock of Whiskies, Brandies, Wines\netc. WW be pleased\nto have old customers\ncall and give them a\ntrial. Certain to\nplease and always\nwelcome.\nRichard  Orando.\nUnion Block Script.\nStranger\nShould Va>ur meanderings about\nthis mundane sphere take ycu to\nNew Denoer\nRemember that there is a hotel\nin the Lucerne of America at\nwhich pilgrims ma) enjoy all the\ncomforts of a home, at prices on\na par with the damage levied by\nother houses thruout the district.\nThe Idealistic Scenery of this\nBeauty Spot in Nature's Wonderland can be best enjoyed from\nthe balcony of the\nNewmarket Hotel.\nThe cuisine supplied assays high.\nThe bedrooms are large, airy\nand luxuriously furnished. The\nother accomodations are unexcelled in the Slocan, and the\nbrands of bottled comforters kept\nin stock are health-giving and\nsoul-inspiring when taken in\nproper quantities. The proprietor's name is\nHenry Stege.\nThe Most Complete Health  Resort on\nthe Continent of North America.\nSituated    'midst   Scenery   Unrivalled   for\nGrandeur.\nAU persons are hereby warned against the\npurchase of the following certificates of San-\nMiners' Union Block Script as the same has\nbeen satisfied.\nNo. 1, Aug. 21st, 1900 in faror of W L. Hagler\ngun\nNo. S3, Sept. 2\ufffd\ufffdnd,l't00,|n favor of Wm. Walmsley #0.\nNo. 44, Oct. 15th, 1900 in favor of John T.Campbell, tlOO\nNo. 51, Oct. 24th 1900, in favor of John T. Campbell, m\nNo. 65, Nov. 17th 1900, in favor of John T. Campbell, $38\nNo, 80, Dec. 28th, 1900, in favor of John T. Campbell (45.\nANTHONY SHILLAND, Sec.\nSandon, September 20th, 19OT.\nGale's Bartsej;op\nAND BATH ROOriS\ninnnnnr\nIs the best Tonsorial  Establishment in the Slocan.\n###\nBalmoral Building Main St.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nfioating\nFishing\nS\ufffd\ufffdSanitarium.S::\nPhysician\nHalcyon Springs, Arrow Lake B. G.\nTerms, $15 to $18 per week, according\nto re .idenee in Hotel or Villas.\nIts Baths cure all Nervous and Muscular Diseases.    Its waters heal all\nLiver, Kidney and Stomach\nAilments and Metallic  Poisoning.\nTelegraphic   Communication with al\nparts of the World.\nTwo Mails arrive and depart Every Day\nSunday excursion rate good leaving Satur-\nay, returning Monday, $2.75.\n*\nXOie\nfilbert  Cafe.\nOpen Day and Night.\nBest Meals in Town*\nEverything Necessar\/to\nSatisfy the Internal\nAnatomy \/\nBmertcan itnd\nEuropean plan.\nLLOYD & BENNETT,\nPROPRIETORS.\n*\nThe Auditorium\nOFTHE\nThe Denver.\nCody Ave.\nSandon\nComfortable Rooms\nReasonable Rates\nA Quiet, Orderly, Homelike Hotel\nTHE MINERS' UNION BLOCK\nIs the only hall in the city\nsuited for Theatrical Performances, Concerts, Dances and\nother public entertainments.\nFor  bookings write or wire\nAnthony Shilland,\nSecretary,   Sandon   Miners'   Union\nSandon, B. C.\nPIONEER HOTEL\nOF THE SLOGAN.\nV\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-\nHOTEL SANDON.\nROBERT CUNNING, Prop.\nTprmnnr innr mnr sTpnnrmnr\nA Table that is Replete with the\nChoicest Seasonable Viands.\na\nRooms: Large, Airy and\nComfortable. ,\nSpecial Attention to\nthe   Mining   Trade.\nfolliott & McMillan\nContractors and Builders.\nm\nDEALERS IN\t\n\/ Rough and Dressed Lumber, Coast\n\/   Flooring and Joint Finishing Lumber\nMoulding, Etc.\nSash and Door on  Hand to Order.\n-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO->\nFactory on Main Street\nConsignments\nKeceived\nMverp\nBap at\n**Wlilliams6n's**\nfresb fruit\nTHE PROSPECTORS' EXCHANGE.\nNo. 4 K. W. C. BLOCK, NELSON. B. C.\nGold, Silver-Lend and Copper mines wanted at the EXCHANGE.\nPREE MILLING 00LD properties wanted for Eastern investors.\nParties having mining property for sale are requested to send samples of their ore to tlie\nEXCHANGE for exhibition.\nAll samples should he sent by express PREPAID.\nCorrespondence solicited.   Address all communications to\nTelephone No. ii.   P. 0. Box, 7()0 ANDREW P. ROSENBERQER, Nelson, B. C\nBargains in\nfootwear\nIn order to close out a few lines of GFNTLE-\n1.1 EN'S FINE SHOES we are offering\nsome great bargains.     Look in the Window.\nZouis Ibupperten ent had been detained by visitors, fumes of brandy had for weeks kept\nad the play had made some pro- his brain in a morbid state.   He\n^,Ss.   When he appeared in the\nDx, the band struck up 'Hail to\nie Chief,' the actors ceased play-\n,g, and the audience rose,cheering\nimultuously; the President bowed\nI acknowledgment of this greeting,\nEid the play went on.\"\nI John Wilkes Booth, an actor, of\nfamily of famous players, ascer-\nlined the President's intention to\nttend the theatre iu the evening,\nnd,with a number of confederates,\nlanned to take the life of the Presi-\nent:\nHe was perfectly  at home in\nford's  Theatre,   where  he   was\nreatly liked by all the employees,\nvithout other reason than thesuffi-\nient one of his youth and good\nolffl.  Either by himself or with\ntie aid of his friends,  he arranged\nlis whole plan of attack and escape\nluring the afternoon.    He counted\niipon address and audacity to gain\nceess to the small passage behind\nfhe President's box; once there, he\nguarded against interference by an\narrangement of a wooden bar to be\nfastened by a simple mortise in the\ningle of the wall and the door by\nwhich he entered, so that the door\n(L-ould not be opened from without.\nIe even provided for the conting-\ney of not gaining entrance to the\nbox by boring a hole in its door,\nlirough which he might observe\nlie occupants to take aim and shoot,\nllie hired at a livery stable a small,\n[fleet horse, which he showed with\n[pride during the day to barkeepers\nland loafers among his friends. The\nI moon rose that night at 10 o'clock.\nIA few minutes before that hour he\ncalled one of the underlings of the\ntheatre to the back door and left\nhim there, holding the horse.    He\nthen went to a saloon near by,took\na drink of brandy, and,  entering\nthe theatre, passed rapidly through\nj the crowd in the rear of the dress-\nj circle, and made his way to the\npassage leading to the President's\nbox.   He showed a card to a servant in attendance, and was allowed\nto pass in.    He entered noiselessly,\nand, turning, fastened the door with\nthe bar he had previously made\nready, without disturbing any of\nthe occupants of the box.  between\nwhom and himself there yet remained the slight partition and the\ndoor through which he had bored\nthe hole.    Their eyes were fixed\nupon the stage; the play was \"Our\nAmerican   Cousin,\"   the   original\nversion   by  Tom   Taylor,   before\nSothern had made a new work of it\nby his elaboration of the part of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddundreary,    partisan hate and the\nfelt as if he were playing Brutus\noff tho boards; he posed, expecting\napplause.   Holding a pistol in one\nhand and a knife in the other, he\nopened the box-door, put the pisto.\nto the President's head, and fired;\ndropping the weapon, he took the\nknife !n his right hand, and, when\nMajor Rathbone sprang to  mie\nhim, he struck savagely at him.\nMajor Rathbone received the blow\non hia let* art.   suffering a wide\nand deep wound.   Booth, rushing\nforward, then placed his left hand\non the railing of the box and vaulted lightly over to the stage.    It\nwas a high leap, but nothing to\nsuch a trained athlete.   He would\nhave got away safely, but for his\nspur catching in the folds of the\nUnion flag with which the front of\nthe box was draped.   He fell on\nthe stage, tbe torn flag trailing on\nhis spur, but instantly rose as if he\nhad received no hurt,though in fact\nthe  fall had broken his leg; he\nturned to tl. j audience,brandishing\nhis dripping knife, and shouting\nthe State motto of Virginia,   \"Sio,\nSemper  Tyrannis,\"    fled  rapidly\nacross the stage and out of sight.\nMajor Rathbone had shout adi* Stop\nhim l\"   The cry went out:    \"He\nhas shot the  President.\"   From\nthe audience, at first stupid with\nsurprise, and afterward wild with\nexcitement and horror, two or three\nmen jumped upon the stage in pursuit of the flying assassin; but he\nran through the familiar passages,\nleaped upon his horse, which was\nwaiting in the alley behind,rewarded with a kick and curse the call-\nboy who had held him, and rode\nrapidly away in the light of the\njust risen moon.\nAfter he was shot, President Lincoln scarcely moved; his head dropped forward slightly, his eyes\nclosed:\nMajor Rathbone, at first not regarding his own grievous hurt,\nrushed to the door of the box to\nsummon aid. He found it barred\nand on the outside some one Was\nbeating and clamoring for entrance.\nHe opened the door; a young officer\nnamed Crawford entered; one or\ntwo array surgeons soon followed,\nwho hastily examined the wound.\nIt was at once seen to be mortal.\nIt was afterward ascertained that a\nlarge derringer bullet had entered\nthe back of the head, on the left\nside.and, passing through the brain,\nhad lodged just behind the left eye.\nBy direction of Rathbone and Crawford, the President was carried to\na house across the street and laid\nupon a bed in a small room at the\nrear of the hall, on the ground\nfloor. The President had been shot\na few minutes past 10. The wound\nwould have brought instant death\nto most men, but his vital tenacity\nwas extraordinary. He was, of\ncourse, unconscious from the first\nmoment; but he breathed with slow\nand regular respiration throughout\nthe night.  As the dawn came, and\nthe lamp-light grew pale in the\nfresher beams, his pulse began to\nfail; but his face even then was\nscarcely more haggard than those\nof the sorrowing group of statesmen\nand generals around him. His\nautomatic moaning,which had continued through the night, ceased; a\nlook of unspeakable peace came\nupon his worn features. At 7:22\nhe died. Stanton broke the silence\nby saying: \"Now he belongs to the\nages.\" Dr. Gurley kneeled by the\nbedside and prayed fervently. The\nwidow came in from the adjoining\nroom, supported by her son Robert,\nand cast herself with loud outcry\non the dead body.\nBooth was tracked and pursued\nby troops, and, on the night of\nApril 25th, a party under Lieut.E.\nP. Doherty surrounded a barn on\nGarrett's farm near Bowling Green,\nwhere the assassin and one of his\nconfederates, D. E. Herold, were\nsleeping:\nWhen called upon to surrender,\nBooth refused, and a parley took\nplace, lasting some minutes. Booth\noffered to fight the party at a hundred yards, and, when this was refused, cried out, in a theatrical\ntone: \"Well, my brave boys, prepare a stretcher for me.'' Doherty\nsurrendered. The barn was fired,\nand, while it was burning, Booth,\nwho was clearly visible by the flames\nthrough the cracks in the building,\nwas Bhot by Boston Corbett, a sergeant of cavalry, a soldier of a\ngloomy and fanatical disposition\nwhich afterward developed into insanity.\nSome wag played a joke on a\nwidow in Kansas. He put an ad\nfor a husband in the local paper\nand signed her name to it. When\nshe found it out this is the way she\nexplained it: I want to serve notice\nhere and now on the busybodies of\nLawrence to let me and my affairs\nalone. I never stole any of your\nhusbands and do not want any of\nthe critters. I simply want to do\nmy own courting and selecting. No\ndoubt younger girls can manage\nsuch things better, or rather can be\ncontent to let others manage for\nthem, but as for me, I am not so\ngentle that I will walk up and eat\nout of the hand of any of these old\nscarecrows. This advertisement\nmay have been considered a joke\non the part of the saphead who put\nit in the paper, but it was no joke\non me. I want to say right here\nthat while not averse to getting\nmarried the second time, I am not\nso hard pressed that I will take up\nwith any old skinflint who may\ndesire a soft job managing my\nproperty.\nAt the Indian Institute at Lawrence, Kansas, Mr. Bob Tail Bull\narrived on the same train with Mr.\nJohn Little Eyes, Mr. Benedict\nShoulder Blade, Miss Emma Beaver\nClaw, Miss Minnie Squint Eyes,\nMiss Laura Nice Talker and Miss\nMinnie Stands Up. There they\nfound Mr. Edward Woman's Leg-\ngins, Mr. Hinton Big Leg, Miss\nAnna Woudded Eye, Miss Bessie\nLittle Sun, Mr. Elmer Long Jaw,\nMr. Jerome Bear Tusk, Mr. Joseph\nCrazy Mule, Mr. John Stands-in-\nTiraber, Mr. John Pretty Bull, Mr.\nHall Red Nose, Miss Clara Rolling\nBull, Mr. Beans Young Bird and\nMiss Little White Man. These\npeople belong to the first families\nof America.\nIt is estimated that within the\npresent generation Canada will\nhave a population of 25 million\npeople. As a generation is only\n40 years of time Canada will have\nto pay more attention to the home\nproduction of babies, or increase\nthe importation of the full-grown\narticle from Europe in order to\nreach the estimated figures in 1941.\nAn Irish member of parliament\nremarked the other day that he believed Henry VIII is now in a\nplace \"where he can light his pipe\nwith his little finger.\" The Detroit Free Press remarks that there\nis still a few of us who have not\nbeen led astray by the higher criticism.\nGum chewers should never stick\ntheir quids where children can\nreach them. In Fargo a little boy\ngathered up several old quids,\nchewed them and died. The doctors say that the saliva on the gum\nhad become rank poison.\nIn the royal household of England if a candle is extinguished it\nmust never be relighted within the\nprecincts of the palace, although\nthe electric lights can be turned on\nwithout changing the plant daily.\nNo need to build your hen-house\non your neighbor's lot in Alaska.\nEvery 100 square miles only contains U inhabitants.\nmmwmi . \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\". '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'i\ufffd\ufffd****'\ufffd\ufffd('\ufffd\ufffdij>w';\ufffd\ufffdwi--h,>_kiii>hi>>v\n:.,\"\", \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nWHliIIWiKtt.il*n i'HI\n:J!K.\ufffd\ufffdv!j\ufffd\ufffd w*,^ THE PAYSTREAK, SANDON, B. C, SEPTEMBER 28,\nCertiflcate of Improvements*\nMINER BOY MINERAL CLAIM.\nSituat* in the Slocan Mining Division of West\nKootenay District Where located:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNorth\nof Bear Lake, about two miles from the\nK. & S. railway aud about i mile West of\nthe Loudon Mineral (\"!..*!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, W. J. H. Holmes, acting as agent for Charles Schoenberger, Free\nMiners Cert.ifieote, No B377\ufffd\ufffd>. August Frieder-\nioh Adams, Free Miner's Certificate No. B37781\nand Theodore Frederioh Adams, Free Miner's\nCertiflcate No. B37780, intend, sixty days from\nthe date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for\nthe purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the\nabove claim,\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nsection 37, murt be commenced before the issuance of such Certiflcate of Improvements.\nDated this 15th day of Sept.. A. D. 1901.\nW. J. H. HOLMES, P u. S.\nAgent.\nI\nFOR SALE.\nA limited number of shares in\nthe Similkameen Valley Coal\nCo,, Limited. For further particulars apply to\nW. W. FALLOWS.\nSandon, B. C.\nM. L. Grimmett,\nL. L.  B.,\nBARRISTER, SOLICITOR,\nNOTARY PUBLIC, ETC.\nSANDON, B. C.\nNOTICE.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works. Victoria,\nB. C, for a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands.\nCommencing at a post marked Willard V\nHill's South West Corner, about ono and one\nhalf miles South West from the head of Slocan Lake, thence South eighty chains, thence\nEast eighty chains, thence North eighty\nchains, thence West eighty chains to starting\npoint containing 640 acres.\nWILLARD V. HILL.\nDated September Oth, 1901.\nflbtlinerp\nWe have received , our fall\nmilinery and as we are taking\nmost of our stock to Phoenix\nand Cascade City on Oct. ist\nwe wish our patrons to come\nand take their choice before\nthat date.\nm. & B. mclkinnon\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnw*'***************^^\npalace Ibotel\nKNOWLES & FINLAY,\nW. W. WARNER,\nMINING ENGINEER.\n******\nMINING PROPERTIES HANDLED\nON COMMISSION.\n**#*\nMining Properties  Examined   and   Reports\nMade.   Will Open up Mining Properties by\nContract or Salary.   Twenty Years'\nExperience.\nSandon   Bottling\nC. A. BIGNEY.\n-*-%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nManufacturers or\nCarbonated Drinks\nof all kinds.\nCODY AVENUE       -       SANDON.\n^000000000000000000000000%\n1 Mvcvptf)ing     \\\n ^ \"\nThe dining room of the\nPalace Hotel has just been\nopened under competent management. Run on the American plan.\n4\nMeals 50c    Tickets $7\nmain St.   *    Sandon\nta\n*\nft\nI\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdft\n!\ns\ni\n!\n!\n?\nI\n!\nI\nMverpthing\nWou Wear\nShould be purchased\non a common sense\nbasis. You cannot\nget something for\nnothing. The man\nwho buys cheap\nshoddy is not only\nthe poorest but the\nmost expensively\ndressed. He does\nnot get the worth of\nhis money. The man\nwho buys good\nclothes dresses for\nless money. The\nbest is the cheapest\nevery time. There\nis a large difference\nbetween purchasing\ncheap goods and\npurchasing goods\ncheap,     0*0*0*\nSee Onv Stock.\n%1)0So JBvown.\n\\**000000000000000000000tt%\ns\ns\n!\n-a\n5\n1\n!\ns\ntap, Oats, SBran,\nand Wbeat at\n(Biegertch's\nTHE BIG 5T0RE\nHaving made special  arrangements to receive Bailp\nShipments of Oveen Ovocevies, fvesh DButtcv\nand ZEggS we are in a position to fill your orders promptly\nwith good selected stock.\nIN DRY GOODS.\nSpecial bargains in Ladies Shirt Waists consisting of\nSilks, Organdies, Muslins and All Over Laces. Ready-\nmade Skirts in Tweeds, Serges, Crash and Ducks.\nB few Sailov Ibats to Close Out at Cost\nMens' Furnishings.\nThe most complete line of shirts ever shown in the\nwest. Neglige, Cambric, Silk and Flannell Outing. A\nlarge shipment of ties in latest styles to arrive this week.\nXthe 1bunter*1kenbrick Co., Zimited\np. Burns <X Co,\n%beao Office,\nKelson,\n.C.\nTAeco Bvenue,\nSandon, 3B. C.\nmm\nBealevs 3n\nfresh\nand\nCured\nMeats\nof all\nTkinds.\nMARKETS IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL TOWNS OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Sandon (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Paystreak_1901_09_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0318560","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.9755560","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.2272220","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Issued simultaneously in Sandon and Cody; publisher headquarted in Sandon.  Published by Jno. J. Langstaff from 1896-09-26 to 1897-03-27; by an unidentified party from 1897-04-03 to 1899-04-08; and by WM. MacAdams from 1899-04-15 to 1899-12-30.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Sandon, B.C. : William MacAdams","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"Series":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1901-09-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1901-09-28 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Paystreak","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0318560"}