{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"6ef322f1-57a4-43bf-8d0b-ff057a5638f1","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2013-01-31","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1898-02-12","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xrevherald\/items\/1.0186910\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" vr.rff  -ISSTTIEID   TWIOB-A-WEBE--W-EIDlsrESID^.irS    ^=-3ST3D    S^TTJK,3D^-yS-  Vol. II.    No.  8.  REVELSTOKE, B. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1898.  $2.00 a Year in Advance.  Hudson's Bay |  Company   |  [I.S-lOI'.I'OR.'.TKli I'.'.Tll] K-  jjjj The   Most   Upto-Date   Outfitters Q*-  K< in Western Canada.              g  I ~ZZ~ -   I.  CO Inte'iieliug Prospector-; shoulel write ns IA  -ffi for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \"' \"ur \"*'\"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"I'lers. which |y  W contains an excellent  Map ami an S'  ^) estimate ol   the   probable cost of a 0.'  nt complete on tii t f.ir the l.oM l-\"li'lel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. s  a I  i^J Hudson's Bay Stores,  C.lI'lAKY, Feb. 1, ISlVS.  Calgary. C  ^^^^^^^t^^f^^z^^^s^^Kf^y-ti.  Haipc & Crage  Sole Agents for  Revelstoke '*  ^\"^ Townsite  MINING,'  FIRE and LIFE INSURANCE  A  RTHUR G. M. SPRAGGE,  Barrister. Solicitor. &c.  Notary Public.  Office iip-ita'ra ii Si.iith's block, r.icific Ave.  Revelstoke Station. B.   C.  WM.  WHITE,  Q. C,  B>KHI-'TEE, F0LIC1T.II'.,  XOTARV   ri'llLIC, .KT<  Revelstoke, B.C.  Solicitor leir Imperial Hank of Ciiniiila.  GAMBLE & O'REILLY,  ClVII.  ESGINKEHS.   PltOVIXfJAL  I.ASIJ  SUUVKYIIIIS.  Accountants and (Jeueral Agents.  Kel-on and llusslaud, West Ke\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>tvnay,  llritie-h C-iluinhin.  V. C.  C.ami-.i.e, J. I*.. M. Inst..:. E., M..-~an. ~oi'.  ... I-:.. I*. I.. !\". ' T B. C. (late Ke-ideiit Kn-  gi'neer llcpartiiient of Public Works in  canaela in II. v..) Kelson. 11. f.  Fnisri*. J. O'KEll.l.v. Assoc. M. Ill-it. C. 1-.., I'. L.s..  for II. .\".. U.is-Iaail. II. '\". :*jlyti  G. B. Hume  Trousers,  Pants,  Breeches.  Call theni -.vliiit. you will. We  liavi* the choicest lini' lli.'it.'s to  l-o found anywhere in tmvii,  Lots of them. All kimls. For  tlu* i-i.ii.___clio.stj work in- tin* swell-  cst dress. Tlu* low prices wt*  ask liiive.' made our tailoring .-mil  ll'illly-tll-Wl'.-lf business tliu success it is.  R. S. WILSON,  The Merchant Teiilnr, Ucvel-eloke Station.  -E-LLIS-&-GROGAN,.  Our business during theX.uas  rush cqualli'd if not surpassed  our fullest expectations, and we  wish to thank tho numerous  friends and customers, who  helped to make things lively.,  ,  Busi.iess must be kept up  aitliough the holidays are. over,  nnd with this object in view we  ca*l attention to the following  announcement \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Our Dry Goods Department  te       ' \"  lias heen thoroughly  overhauled since the rush subsided. All our stock is in splendid shape- and new .lines,have  recently been added. We wish  to draw special attention to our  bargains in  Imported Flannels and Flannellettes  Pieces of Dress Goods  A Stock\" of Hosiery, just impor'cd  A Well Assorted Stock of Silks  Gents' Furnishing Department  f. Mccarty,  Whom......i.i: and ISkt.ui. Df.ai.kii in  Prime Beef, Pork, Mutton,  Sausage  -o  Fish and Game in Season  A RAILROAD TO THE NORTH  Markets   at   Revelstoke,   Itevelstoke  Station,  \".\"akusp. Trout Lake City ami Ferguson.  Sjiitt  Will be Built from Albert Canyon up the  North Fork, down Downie Creek and  Along the Columbia to Revelstoke\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  It will open up a Magnificent Mineral  Country\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Money is all Ready.  Tliu Hkrald loams on excellent,  authority Mutt the* Viiili'imil from Albert, (.'iiiyon. up the \"North Fopk of  Uit> Illecillewaet, down,Downie Creek  .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiid .-iloni; the Columliiii to Revelstoke  will be st.-ii-ted next summer. Tbe  money is .forthcoming for tbe. undertaking. Tins start will .probably be  ninde. from tliis end, but much will of  course depend on the surveyors' report.  The mad will open up it magnificent  mineral countiy and will be of enormous importance to Revelstoke. It  will form the lirst link of railroad connection with tliu Big Uentl and Canoe  River'country .and nt the same time  open iipntonce.Uieric.b met.illil'eious  section drained by Downie Creek ,-ind  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdllie North Fork. The .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiinouiiceinuiit  that this is not a mere charler-mongcr-  ing scheme is one of thi* most iinpnr-  t.-int to'tbis place, which the. Herald  has been able to make for some time.  NOTICE  Insurance, Commission and Mining  Brokers.  Agents for ihe Queen Fire Insurance Co.  Amerle-a.  K.:\\>re-eiiteel hy W. Morris. Heve'stoke.  of  fintt  ROBERT  SAMSON,  Dealer in Wood.  o,  Dra-inR  nnd   Peli\\i y Woi-U a  specialty  ot  ion-cat prices.  Teaiim always read* nt a moment's notice,  agent for the Stand irel Oil Coinp injr.  The Revelstoke Photo Co.  i-TVJ.1*-.   I)OI*al.A1 Ptrkkt.  Revelstoke,   -    -    -    B.C.  Mt\"  LOYAL ORANGE LODGE, No. \"658.  \"     PcciiUr m'*etlng8 nre he'd in the  OddiellowV Hn.ll on tlie w*co*d  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrd  fourth W.diio daya of caeh month nt  7:3~ p ni. Visiting brethren c41 dmlly  Invitert.  Dn T. Jeff*. XV. M.     T. .1. Ghaiiamr, Itcc.-See.  W. <:. HIR--.-V, Fin.-See.        It. S. \\\\ il.-os. Treas.  J.   R.   HULL   &   CO.,  8ncccsiOr3 to Hull Bros. ' Co.,  Butchers and Wholesale and Retail Dealors  in Beer, Pork, Etc.  KAMLOOPS  nnd   REVELSTOKE.  All orders tn our line promptly filled.  I        A HAMILTON LADY  ~~eiiii.u-c>|-ll~~ cured of trnlnri-h. Jap-  aiie.se Cntiinli Cui'i* cm es. Miss I.el.t-  toiiii-1 of 187 Main St., Bast Hamilton,  writes -. Japanese Celtarrli ('uie cm-t'd  me of a loni\" staiidinB case of catarrh.  I havo tried nearly all other leiiici.ic.s,  but they only relieved temporal iiy.  Hiuce nsiiiK Japanese Oiitan-h Cure,  about one year ngo. my catarrh hns  not troubled -nu*. Sold by W. A.  Ciiifllths & Co., 5(1 cents.  On account of the lar~c\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pvoportioii  of inenlliol in M.iKic Liniiiient. you  will find it invitl-.i-l-le_.fi-- lu'a.\"iu-hcs,  neuralgia, toothache and all pains.  Magic Liniment is superior to all  (jtliers.    For1 sale by  i. ^W. A. Griffiths & Co.,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduii'j'.iST.-. !1i:m:1*toki;.  A well assorted stock of Men's  Clothing made by the best clothing houses iu C nada is now  open to in-jiection by the public.  Our Suits'are in all styles and  for fit and cut look just a3 well  as cus.om-made clothes at a  third of the rost.  The Grocery and Provision  Department  is always kept stocked  wilh a full supply in every line  o  of the best and freshest goods.  We aire agents for Ram Lai's Tea,  the very best in the market.  Our prices are made to suit the  limes. We alvays keep in our  warehouses a good stock of hay,  oats aud vegetables.  To Contractors, Business Men  or Families \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~  Kvi|iilrhig any amount of llrcn-I from 1 tolOOll  loaves can have same 0:1 shortest ueuice Ii-oni  IU:vi-.i>tokk Station- Uakkiiv. Our oven\" are  iRTi-e; uud A 1, capable of turning out one ton  of Ilre-ti'.I elaily. Also Flour at lowei-i pricej by  lhe ton or cwt. .. _ _       .  Canned Gootls, font.- ctionerv and Fruit  . Free delivery to nny part of city or on  trains.  Revelstoke. Station Bakery  A. X, Smith, l'ropriulnr. r   .  Th6   Holidays, 7'  are over  But we must keel\", on doing a  holiday trade in- order to meel  commands. - To enable us lo ilo  (his onr prices- on Cli-oci'i-ies,  Confectionery, Flour. Feed, liny,  Potatoes, l~tc. have been reduced  to tin-lowest niitch. XVt' ensure,  prompt and careful delivery, and  give c.iir-ftil attention Io mail  orders. Terur.: Cash on the 1st  of every month.  Hutchison & Co.  The Popular Grocers.  .Rhodesia.^  Restaurant  and Boarding House,  Corner of HKe-eixii Strixt and Oiito.v Avr.NL'K,  Iikvkl-stijKK Station*.  Fnglish Cooking uneler the superinteiielence  of >Ir... l.nj.wortli.  Mi'iihiit nil hour.-.  I'leanline.s-s ami civility our motto.     Terms  liioelcrate. ' ' '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJltl MltS. LAl'WOin'H. Proprietress.  Tapping's Theatre^^-  Xeaii Station-.  liEi-T IN\" TIIK I.NTF.IIIOII.  KllKCTKD 18M.  Cor. Victoria Fd. and Ccnnauarht Ave,  NOTE AND COMMENT  The startling announcement made  by Hon. David Mills in the Senate  that there were rea'siins of hi};h statu  policy, which he. could not disclose,  but which, when revealed, would commend the Yukon rail wav policy of the  government lo the entire coiinininity,  places a new face on the a .fair and certainly removes it from the sphere of  justifiable criticism by tho press, m.it.l  the f u'.rfacts of the Case a re ma le clear.  Coupled with the sudden despatch*'of  Major Steele to the scene and the fact  that.at least tin oo. divisions of the  mounted police are uniler oriler*~.to,be  in readiness to proce'id at. a moments  notice to tho-Ynkon'.-it becoiues prel e,y  clear that tlie-.G-tnatliim .government  is expecting trouble froin the irrepressible Americanism of the majority of  the crowel of gold-seekers now beginning lo pour into the country. No  doubt it will come with- considerable  of a shock of sin prise I u a large number of these people that. the. United  Stales of America do not own the  whole earth, or that the Dominion'or  Canada has any rights that Ihey an*  bound to 1'i'speet. The Canada' f,ov-  oriiincnt is obvio'isly determined t^-i be  in a, position to handle the situation  adv.intngiously anil Ihey will not find  any loyal Canadian wi'slnng to hiii'ler  IhGin in their task. At. tliFsaui.* UTiTiT  it will be \"\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\ufffdll to keep quite cool.  T'ii'ii; is for instaiice no occasion to  fly oil' the handle because American  soldiers have been oidered to Skagway.  Tiu-y are obviously'not going there to  attempt any invasion of British territory, but simply to police the camp,  which certainly needs borne machin.ry  for llio enforcement of law and order  badly. Nothing is to be gained by  hysterics. The people and press of  Canada may rest assured that in  Majors Steele and Walsh, and Capt.  Constantino in Yukon, the have three  ollic-rs wjiial to any emergency.  lies, which always arise when a man  thinks he has done all he ought to be  asked to do and is disinclined for further exertion. Ju.-t at this slai_;e of  the game is, (be llicKAi.n ventures to  suggest, the point at wliich the Ke.vol-  \"toku Liberal Association might intervene with excellent effect. It might  with advantage be pointed out to Mr.  Bostock and ilr. Tai te. by lhat body  that, tbe present member for Yale-Cariboo was in it minority in Bevelstuke,  that this river bank (jiiestion is not one  to be trlled with or inidi'a subject of  oilicial excuses ami that if the present  Liberal government do nol, come to  time, their supporter is liable to find  hitn.-iclf at the next elections still more  decidedly left in Hi'velMoko than ilr.  Bostock was in 1S!>3. The tin'olTicial,  private and candid advice of the government on such matters as this, was  distinctly regarded as pi*,rt of the duty  of a Conservative Association under  tin- late administration, a duly, which  they thought tliey owed no less to tbe  public limn to the government. Eighteen years of office bad furnished them  wilh suificicient experience to know  that a hint from its friends goes further wilh a government than any other  kind of nianifestation of p'l'olic leeling.  There is of course uotliiuer hearing on  tliis method to bo fiuiiid in the little  two bit manuals on the ethcis of government. Ent. theie are a whole lot  of\" things, which go on in practical  politics, whicli are not to be found in  lhe popular handbooks on political  science. The Hiil'AT.u considers the  placing of a little friendly pressure on  their government on this point to be a  duty which the Liberals owe to thi-.  coiiiini.iiity. Some of theni do not  seem to know\" enough to adopt this  course, perhaps some of them do not  dare, pei haps even some of them do  not cart*. __' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  GREAT WESTERN LTD  Acquire   The Nettie L on The   Famous  Pool Group.  Arrangonienls have been concluded  by which the Great Western Ltd have  nci|iiire.l the Nettie L claim on the  well known Fool Group. LV miles from  Ferguson. The claim has a great  shewing of galena and carbonates,  rich both in gold and silver and very  similar in character to the Silver Cup  ore. In fact the Pool group is considered by miners as being on the same  lead as lhe Silver Cup group. The  promoters of the company have purchased the property for the benefit of  the company, which now possess in  the Great Western and Nettie L both  a silver and a gold proposition. Active  work will be stalled on both as soon  as the season opens. Holders of treasury stock gel the full advantage of the  new purchase.  FOUND DEADJN HIS TUNNEL  Dan Morrison Killed While Working  his Claim on the South Fork of the  Lardeau.  A telegram dated Feb. 10th was received hy the Gold Commissioner  from ilr. W. H. Viekers yesterday  morning which read as follows : \"Dan  Morrison killed in tunnel-on his own  claim. Body found yesterday; been  dead about \"one week. Working alf\"  alone.   Hard place to get to.\"  On receipt of the message the Gold  Commissioner notified Dr. McLean,  as coroner, whe left for Trout Lake  City this morning. Dan Morrison  was an old man, a Highland Scotch'  man and a cook by occupation. He  was a married man and his wife lives  in Winnipeg. His claim was locatecT  near the Silver Gup.  CLEKORA  A very strone frame .structure, \"OsCfi, two  storey, each ceilliiB being 12 It. clean; n llrst  clu-n stage. le'i.x'.Hi; two private boxex; two  elressiiiii rooms', L*xl~ ft. each; change.*, of  scenery; ventilator.-,' reflectors; '-'I electric  liclit\" installed, arranscil so as lo unit any  stnge act; a good hall room floor. Kvcrythini;  eeunplcte. A igooel piano tuul all the latest  modern improvement.*\". Everything strictly  lir-t elasi. To let only to respectable people.  Xo others need apply. Charges moderate,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjflin It. TAI'I'I\"-;, Proprietor.  One  verv  C. B. Hume & Co.  Revelstoke Station, Revelstoke ~~d  Trout Lake City, B.C.  P&BLIG AfelGTI0N  There will be sold hy public action, pursuant  to the decree of Honorable Mr. Justice Forin  made in an action in the County Court of  Kootenay holden at Kevelstoke on liltli day of  January, 1S3S, of McCarthy vs. Kennedy, by O.  K. Shaw, Deputy Sheriff, at the Columbia  Hotel in the town ol Itevelstoke, 15. C, on  Saturday, the 26th day of  February, 1898,  at the hour ol 11 o'clock in tiie forenoon, the  \"i~l.AI\"STONE\" MINERAL CLAIM, situate ou  the west side of a gulch, on the north side of  the Cana-Iian I'aeilic Railway track, opposite  Mnir's 'tunnel, about Two ' MlLia. from the  Illeci'.lew'eet Itiver, and about T.HRKE Miles  east fro.ni Illecillewaet Station.  Particulars and conditiems of sale may lie  had of the Wcputy Sheriff, and at the place,of  sale, and of WM. W.IITE. (J. c;,  r.ewltU'ke, IJ. C.  I'al'.il i-.t rebrucry. I*\"*,  The propos-eil line \"from Albert  Canyon to Revelstoke by the North  Fork of the Ulecillewuet, Downie  creel; and the Columbia valley, will  open up a-di-strict of great mineral  wealth and of vast importune.; to Kev-  elstol-e. Besides this it will form the  first lii*.k on the road to Big Bend and  the north, and will greatly help out  the transportation problem to tbe  Coldstream district Very rapid development .will .undoubtedly follow the  completion of this line and a big business district, will bu open up for Kevelstoke trade and enterprise. Tbo importance of the proposed roa'J to Kevelstoke is so gre-it and so obvious that  itis particularly gratifying-to know  that the applicants mean business and  thai it is not a mere charter-monger-  ing scheme, as are too many which  have obtained charters iu this province.  The tlElL-Ll\" has been informed that  the money for the road is ready and  that surveying will commence as soon  as the season permits.  The present slage of the proceeding  with regard to the river bank is that  Mr. Turner i.s not only ijuite ready to  fulfil his promises to the letter, but is  engaged in correspondence with the  Federal authorities, which up 10 date  h'iu!' been all on one side, as he cannot  get any reply to bis communications.  Mr. Bostock does not seem inclined to  put himself out very much any more  over the mat ter. His path is bent with  those kind of   insoninuiiitablo diflicnl-  ilifyiug feature of the  in' China is the fact  that it.seems to have impressed \"upon  .1 !ie_Ujiitt'd_Stati.\"s Ihe very sufficiently  palpable f.ici\"TIia(Tin tlie'.scrii'iilile for  territory in whicli the European powers are at present engaged, it is to her  own material interest to support Great  nrilain. A port or slice of territory  seized by Germany. France or Russia  means a port and ten itory closed to  all commerce except their own, while  British possessions, apart from the  self governing colonies, are as free: to  the trade of the whole worlel, as is  Gieat Britain herself. However closely Hit* Stales may stick to protection  for themselves, tbey cannot but. perceive the i'.iteresl, which tbey have,  in seeing the Hag of their great free,  trade-rival-triiimpliaiit-in-otlier\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdparts  of tho world.\" Noanioutit of sentimental jealousy can outweigh such a solid  advantage to a commercial p.-ople.  The. fact is that Gieat Britain in its  contests with the other European  powers has been ever lighting tin*  battle of the United States as much as  her own.\" Great nations represent  ideas as well as material interests and  while the European powers whether  empires, kingdoms or republics stand  for despotism either of a single individual or.a bureaucracy, Great Briliiin  andthe States .-.land for constitutional  liberty. Whellici allied by treaty or  not, they are allies by nature, not  merely Iiy leason of llu: tics of blood  and binguagc, but the even more stringent bonds of similarity in the aims  and principles ol* their constil iilions,  governments, peoples. And the day  when tlie Cnited Slates, laying aside  her gi mindless jealousy, frankly tic-  knowledgi'S this fact, aful place's herself on ri'cord as to be reckot'i'd wilh  by the European powers in the event  of any coalition against England, will  markthe coiiiiiieiicetiii.nl. of a new ei-.i _  iu her history and her entrance on the. t  scene as one of the thiee great powers  of civilization. Tin* <le.-.tiny of the  world today lies in lhe hands of Great  Btilain. llUNsia and tliu United States.  As soon as the latter takes up the task  which Providence bas ii-.signed to belaud boldly allies herself on the siele  where shonalurally belongs, lhe better  for civilization, liberty anil peace.  THE LIBERAL _CAMPAIGH FUND  No Conservative Need Apply.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Tlie New  Speaker Will be Ivir. Hclmc\",:en.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Gloomy Outlock i:i Liberal Circles.  The Victoria enrrespontUint. of the  Rossland Miiif-r says:'' Yowr correspondent learns \\.\\\\-.\\\\, another \"aspirant  for the position uf speaker in the local  house has arisen in the poison of J.  Booth, il. P. P. As stated before,  however, II. D. Hulmeken, M. P. P., is  most likely to be selected by the government as a successor lo Hon. ii., XV.  Higgins. .  In local opposition circles the selection uf F. J. Deane, editor ol the Kamloops Sentinel, as a candidate in the  opposition .-interest, to contest Chief  Commissioner Martin's seat at the.  approaching general elections, is looked upon with considerable disfavor.  Home' catilenel .that it was the best  choice that couhbbe -made tinder the  circumstances, bm, it is, conceded on  7iii~.srrci~_~r~-|-iratr~i\\Ti-.\"-T7eHJi~e~witiSitii_r\"i>e\"  anything like a match for the doughty  Martin. His youth, his great egotism,  his general attitude of irresponsibility  and radical tendencies are all against  him. j-  The question that is giving the oppo-  sil ionis'.s the nio.-il worry, however, is  that of the raising of a campaign fund.  Tlie one man possessed of enough  means to,ele>nute enough of the \"sinews of war\" for Lhe prop'ir, conduc t of  the campaign\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHewitt  Bostock, il. P.  The  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhas, it is said on the quiet, slated  emphatically that he may not be looked to for any contribution.- to be* used  lo assist in the elevation to office of  liiiU-bnund Tories like Messrs. Cotton  and Williams of Vancouver.  ll will readily be seen from the fore-  \"goiiiglliat-the outlonk-foi'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe sUC-(eS->-  of the oppositionists at the coming  elections is gloomy indeed.  Tu tlie event'of the Turner government being returned'to power\", which  seems, as matters are, now shaping,  very probable, variou** cabinet change-,  would follow after the election!-. XX.  P. l\"Hhct.,.\"I. P. 1?., is so. little of a  politician and takes such a small interest in public alfairs thai his well-known  aversion to parliamentary life may be  gratified by liis retirement.  The Kossland Record in a recent  issue was guilty of om* of tin* most  disgusting paragraphs thai have ever  di.sgracc.l the press of this, or the Hkiiald ventures to think, any oilier community. The account of the evi-oing's  proceedings at the International was  so gratuitously ofTensive as to make  one wonder v. hat was the obj'-et of its  insertion. H Ihe repmlis correct that  place of amusement requites immediate  attention from the Ros-shitid police. It  is not. necessary iu order to be metropolitan to tolerate proceedings, which  would disgust tiie habit lies or a sailors'  free and ea.sv on Katcliffe Highway.  The sooner tlie manager of the International places some check on the proceedings-of the women employed* tn  tiinusi* his audiences, anil the editor of  the Record some supervision over the  intelligence'furnished in Hie columns  of bis paper the* belter it will be for  common decency ami common sen^e.  CONTEMPORARY OPINION  in:ci~ivixi-. a paps i'iiom thk c. i: it.  It alVords ns unbounded s.u isfaction  lo be able to hold up our right hand  and state conscicncioiisly lhat Iho service eif the, C. I*. II. is undoubtedly the  most perfect in the whole of the civilized worlel. Trains run like clock  work at a phenomenal rate of speed  all over tin; system, within a fraction  of schedule time. The lines of the C.  P. K. form a perfect network all over  Canada, and it is a   plea-ure lo  know  hat they are doing well. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThis is due  to the excellent roadbed, the coloied  porters, and the really beautiful ties,  each ami everyone of which are worth  a dollar. The\" popularity of tiie C. P.  It. is explained by their give and take  (especially   takeaway   of   doing   busi  ness. their kindness to ship'ier.-. their  total sinking^ of self in their anxiety  '.ei plea*!*, ai-.d the fine --tt-i-k e>f prunes  carried by the \"Newsies.*' May they  live long and prosper.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sVetaskiwiii  (Alta.) Free Lame.  TIIK  YELLOW    l,Er;GHt)   t.GAlX.  C.ipt. Wood, of the Two Friends  Mine, Ltd., fh-t made a glowing report of tlie condition i*f the Two  Friends mine and later.When the bond  was thrown up   said  that   it was  not  .worth ten cents. Capt. Wood is an  \"expert.\" .T. B. Call than, a man who  knows nothing about mining except  what be* b-ariied with a pick and shovel  and   eliill   and   (laminer has succeeded  . in proving that (\"apt. Wood, the expert, never knew that the Two Friends  lead lia.l \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\"}) tons of ore in sight or  whether it wiu- not worth ten\" cents  or was worth a njillion dollars, for he  never saw the lead. Mr. Callahan is a  practical miner. He.never, made any  attempt to lind the lead with a pencil  nnel a piece of paper. He took the  more practical method of looking for  it with a pick and shovel. And he  found it.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-jloctin Pioneer.  New   Railway  Terminus -.on  th*S*  Stickine River  A   point   that   will  be a good deal  heard of within the next few  months'  is Glenora, ;>. landing place on the Stic  kine    River.   150   miles  above    Fort! .  Wrangel at   the   mouth.     Mr. \"J. H. - -  .McFarlane. who knows the place weir,*\",  told the Hekald that in 1S91, when hej.  left   that   district,   there was quite a.*.'  little mining settlement there, a hotel,'  a   big-store owned  Ivy'J. Lovell, and  another owned by R. IIylaiid,\"both of -  which carried  a'good  stock of provisions arid articles for  the   trade with  the mines in  Cassiar.     The   town is.  built on an extensive flat, which slopes- *  gradually down to the river, and the;   .  street is right on' the   bank.   ' Rivei*'  steamers can land goods and  passen-'  gers on to  the   street...   In   the-early~ -  sixties-before., the   Cassiar  6tampede:  there was a good deal of gold   digging  done around Glenora on the Stickine,-  and as  many as \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 500   mines  have at   -  TiTiielTTimde \"the   town\" 'their   winter-  quarters.   Navigation by'steiiniboat is  open as far as Glenora from' the middle of May to the beginning of October. J Behiud the town theMiills slope\"  very   gradually   back    to    the   great  plateau across which the Yukon rail\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  road will  be built.     Feed is good in-  summer on  this   plateau, and vegetables of excellent, quality   have been-  raised  both . near   Glenora   and Tele-\"-  graph Creek, round  which there are*-  several settlers   engaged   in   fanning-  and raising produce   for  the  Cassiar  market. \" Telegraph Creek landing, is  10 miles above Glenor.-v and can  only  l]f>.-re.'.ched-iip_to^-thei_earlyJ_p-trt^_of_____:  September    by   steamers.     There   is.  quite a little town   there  also,   a  big  store owned by  J.  C.  Calbreath,  two \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  good hotels, a large restaurant and a  tilacksmith's shop.   -The  townsite   is-,  not so favorable for the growth of it  large place us at Glenora as the mountain behind conies close down, to the...  river, whicli will  rlso render- Glenora  a better  point  from   which   to   com---  iiience the construction of   a   railway,  np from the valley of the Stickine to,  the   central  plateau. \" The navigation*-  of the Stickine river is easy   and   can  be made by steamers, sailing  boats ot  poling without trouble or danger.  Mr::-  McFarlane once  Hindu the   100  miles  between    Wrangel     and    Telegraph  landing poling up in a little  over five--  day.-, and he has also made the trip  it>--  winter from Wrangel to Rosellacreek,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>0   miles above  ilcDanie   in   Cassiar--  hauling his sled on the ice the whole  way, except tor  the  overland stretch 1  between the Stickene and Dease Lake.^  Feed is good ail along Dease river and  Sylvester's pack train used  to always-,;  winter on McDame creek.    To  shew  the open  and   easy   nature    of    the  country tor transportation   purposes,,,  a pack   mule load   was   always   considered to be 400 lbs.    ilr.  McFarlane \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  of the opinion that Glenora is destined  to be. a very busy and important point.:  almost   immediately,   and   he   thinks-  tliat big business houses will certain-  Iv go in and make it a great outfitting^  point for the Yukon.  TERRITORIAL  -The Winnipeg Tribune says: \"Mr;  Foulds, whose sister is tho wife or  Chief Factor Ctmsell at Fort Simpson,  has received a letter which states tbatr  while several of the boys were excavating for the foundation of a cabin on  the Liard 1 iver. where it empties into  the Mackenzie near Fort Simpsoii.thev  c.-ime upon rich deposits of placer gold,  the\" nuggets being the size of barley.  This find indicates that the placer deposits are not confined to the western  -lope of the Rocky Mountains, but  thitthev exist on'the 'eastern slope as  well.Which is most reaso -hie- and.  what might be expected..'. Revelstoke   Herald\nPublished in interests of\nRevelstoke, Lsrdeau, Big Bend, Trout Lake\nineoUlewaet. Albert Canyon, Jordan\nPass and Eagle Pass DiBtrictB.\nA. JOHNSON Proprlelo\".\nO. B. GROGAN Editor.\nA \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdemi-~~r\ufffd\ufffdekly Journal, published lo the\nia~*mu at Rorelstoko and lho surroundinR\ndistrict,-Wednesdays and Saturday s, making\njloMat eonnectlons with.all trains.\nAdvertising Rates: Display ads, *~l .SO per\ncolumn lask. 12.00 por inch whoninsertedou title\npara* Loral ads.. Uo per (nonpareil) line for\nMrst Insertion; So for each additional insertion.\nReading notices, 15o per line each issuo. Birth,\nMarnaie and Death notices, froo.\nBubseriptlon Rates: By mail or carrier. ?2 00\npar annum ; \ufffd\ufffd1.\"\" for six months, strictly in\n* Onr \"job Department: TnB Hekald Job\nDe-rpartmtnt is ona of the best equipped\nprinting oflloas in Weal Kootenay. and is pre-\npared to KCCnUs all kinds of printing in llrst\nclass style at honest prices Ono prico to all.\nNo job too large\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnone too small\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfor us. Alan\norders promptly attended to. tlivo us a trial\non your next order.         .\nTo Correspondents: We invito correspondence on any subject of Interest to the general\nnubile, aad desire a. reliable regular correspondent U every locality surrounding\nRevelstoke. In all csbss tho bona fide namo\nef the writer must accompany manuscript, but\nnot necessarily for publication.\nAddress all communications\nREVELSTOKE HERALD\nRevelstoke. 3. C.\nCONFIRMED   ON   AUTHORITY\nTHE RECENT   DISCOVERIES ON\nHAY RIVER\nNOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS-\n1. All correspondence must bo legibly\nwritten on eao side of the paper only.\n\". Correspondence containing personal\nmatter must be signed with thu pr per name\nof the writer.\n3. Correspondence with rofcrenco to any\nthiag that has appeared in another paper\nmust trst be offeree\" for publication to that\npaper before it can appear in The Herald.\nSA1URDAT.  FEBRUARY 12,  1S98.\nYUKON RAILWAY DEAL\nThe Saskatchewan Herald of\nJanuary 2Sth contains the following' editorial coniment, written\nbefore the news of the Mann-Me-\nkenzie deal had penetrated to\nBattleford:\n'.'The announcetxienfc that came\nfrom Ottawa last weekCoii the\nauthority ot Hon. Mr. Blair, the\nMinister of railways, that the Gov-\n\"ernment does not intend to grant\nany bonuses to railway companies\nreaching out towards Yukon is\n. one that will secure for Mr. Blair\nthe support of msu of all parties\nin the West; and if the men of the\neast could realize the situation,\nthey, too, would support him. The\npractice of giving to companies\nbonuses of land grants greater in\nvalue than the rjtvd when completed should be done away with.\"\nThe latest announcement.on the\nauthority of Mr. Blair that he has\nhanded over a big^'slice of the\nDominion to two enterprisiuE\"\ngentlemen, will entitle.him to the\nunited and loyal support of\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMann-\nMclienzie and our tried and disinterested friend, the Globe.\nOf Rev. Father Ancel of Hay River\nMission\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdProspectors Have Made\nRich Strikes on Hay and Buffalo\nRivers\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold Exists All Through\nthe   Country   North   of   Edmonton'\nThe Prince Albert Advocate of February 1st, gives the following details\nof the news of the discovery of gold\nin tho vicinity of Great Slave Lake:\nGreat excitement was created in\ntown Moutlav when a report was circulated to the ell'ect that gold had\nbeen found on the Hay and Hull'alo\nlakes, north of hero in good paying\nquantities. Knots of citizens Kather-\ned in different places, eagerly discussing tho situation, ahd askuie for definite information concerning the rumor\nbut tor a time no satisfaction in that\nregard could be obtained.\nThe authority for the report was a\nprivate letter addressed to His Lordship Bishop Pascal by How Father\nAncel, stationed at Hay Kiver mission\nwhich stated that a party of prospectors had made rich finds on both Hav\nand Buffalo rivers, in the yicmity of\nhis mission.\nThis authoritv is porlectly reliable,\nand there is no'doubt that the theory\nadvanced is being realized that gold\nexists-all through that couutry, as\nwell east as west of the mountains,\nand in the foot hills, and placer mining\nmay be successfully carried on in almost every stream or ancient river\nbed.\nThe Hay and Buffalo rivers How into\nGreat Slave Lake and aro easiest of\naccess from Edmonton, where the\nthe railroad ends.\nIt is worthy of note that gold has\nbpen found on the Peace, Liard and\nother streams east of the mountains\nand the opinion based on good authority and observation,is freely expressed\ntliat prospectors taking the North\nWest route for the Yukon will not re-\ni|uiic to go half way to that point, as\ngold to their heart's content *is to be\nhad all along the waterways used on\nthe journey. The North West routes\nare less expensive, more safe.and more\nlikely to produce results than tho\nBoomer's pass route on the coast.\nAn.English lawyer has been\nsuing.a newspaper for libel because it always left his name out\nin reporting lawsuits with which\nhe was connected. Most people\nsue newspapers because they get\ntheir names in. It is hard to please\neverybody, remarks the Ottawa\nJournal.\nFort Saskatchewan settlers are complaining bitterly of the withdrawal of\nthe usual Mounted Police patrols from\n\ufffd\ufffdthat district. The withdrawal is\nnecessary consequent upon the removal\nof nearly all the men to the Yukon.\nRobberies of grain aud hay are already\nreported.      _ .. . \t\nL'onr.st Canailicn is the title of a\nnew French paper published at Edmonton. It is well edited and it is\nplatform sound. There is ample room\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tor such a paper among the French\nspeaking people in the north, and The\nHerald gladly welcomes the latest\narrival in the journalistic field.\nT. TV. Chalmers, who is in charge of\nthe road making party sent out bv the\nTerritorial government, returned to\nEdmonton last Wednesday. The toad\nwill be open as far as Swann river by\nFebruary 20th. By going dowii the\nSwan river to Slave' Lake, a through\nroad for bob sleighs is open to Fort\nSt. John.\nAn Ottawa despatch announces that\nThe D each man Yukon Mining and\nTrading Co. seeks incorporation under\nthe Dominion statute. Among the\npromoters are A. F. Deachman, J. T.\nMacLaren and H. Wilson. The head\noffice of the company will be located\nin South Edmonton and their mining\nexplorations and operation-! will be\ncarried on extensively throughout the\nPeace ank Yukon river valleys.\nThere are some f.irmeis in the district surrounding Sault I'ecoIIet, a\nstation a short distance out of -Montreal, on the Xorth Shore line of the C.\nP.R., who are looking for the men who\nown a recent, shipment of clogs which\npassed thiough that place for the\nKlondyke. While lying on a siding,\n1* of the dogs broke out ot the car and\ncould not be captured before they bail\nVisited a farm yard near by and killed\neight pigs, four sheep and :_*) hens.\nTlie loss to the farmers is estimated at\nSHO. The animals killed were parti v\ndevoured bv the canine-* lnjfore thev\nleft theni to take to the woods where\nall but two are now running wild.\nMr. DougUs.sunerintendent of Banff\nNational Park, lias written to Mr.\nMcCreary, immigration commissioner,\nto the effect that the three buffalo now\nat the park, and which were shipped\nout from Texas last year, are thriving\nsplendidly. A n enclosure of It'\/' acres\nhas been made for the reception of the\nSilver Heights animals. Thrccrjuarteis\nof this area is as level as the prairie,\nthe balance is mountain. It stretches\nfor half a mile along the railway track\nso that travellers may have an excellent view of these unique animals.\nThree small creeks run through the\nbuffalo grounds and there is good\npasture there. Mr. McCreary will\nship tbe buffalo to the park as soon as\nthey have dropped their eal ves. It is\npossible that two of the Silver Heights\nanimals mav remain here as a gift to\ntbe city. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd WinnipegFree Press.\nOCEAN GREYHOUNDS\nSomething About the Fast Ones of the\nWhite Star Line\nThe new Oceanic, now building by\nMessrs. Harland and Wolff for the\nWhite Star line, will, no doubt, embody some new ideas. But if for nothing else she will be remarkable for her\nexceptional size. This vessel will be\nby several thousand tons larger than\nany other steamship either built or\nbudding. She will be 701 feet in extreme le'iigth 113 feet longer than the\nGreat Eastern) and her tonnage will\nexceed 17,01)0 tons.\nBut remarkable as may be the vessel\nabove named, the sister ships Britannic and Germanic are probably the\ntwo most successful ships ever built.\nWhen the late Mr. II. XV. Vanderbilt\nwas asked whv he. possessing such\ngreat wealth, did not employ ills own\nsteam yacht, he replied that the Britannic and Germanic were gro-1\nenough- yachts for him, and very\nfaithfully did he act up to his conviction, for until the year before his\ndeath, in lSS-, he regularly crossed\nonce a year by the White Star line,\nand by the steamers Britannic or\nGermanic if he could arrange it.\nThe Britannic commenced running\niu the Liverpool and Xew JYork service of the White Star line in 1.S74,\nand the Germanic in 1S7~. The latter,\nre-engined and re-boilered in IS!)**, and\nwith passenger quarters re-modelled\non the plan of the Teutonic and Majestic, has gained both in speed and\npopularity. The former continues to\nperform her work with tbe same regit*\n-laricy-which\"h;i~r~T~.l\\\\J^y~r~i~hara\"ctiiri%ed\"\nher.' On lier last voyage, which ended\nwith her arrival in the- .Mersey, after a\npassage which occupied only seven\ndays and eight hours, despite heavv\nweather, she completed her i\")0l.h\nround voyage to and from Xew York-\nand her 500th passage across the\nAtlantic. This means that she has\ntraveled a distance of 200 times G.200\nnautical miles, or more than 1,750.00')\nstatute miles without a renewal of\nengines or boilers, a performance\ndoubtless without parallel in the history of steam navigation. She has\nearned 57,10J saloon oassengers, and\n1C~,\"U0 steei.igo passengers: under\nsteam 11 \".(WO hours, and 100.SOO hours\nunder weigh. She has consumed r\\'i,-\n0*X) tons of coal, and her engines have\nmade a~0.000.000 revolutions. So that\nthe Britannic has well-done her part,\nin abridging distance and promoting\nthe civilization and happiness of the\npeoples on both sides of the Atlantic;\nand it is a matter for sincere regret\nthat Sir Edward Harland was not\nspared to witness the excellent work\nwhich has continued to be achieved by\nthis admirable example nf his skill as\na ship designer and  builder.\nVUK0_fl JVIAP\nPublished by Thk\nrIi\"i\"Ai_,r>, acknowledged to\nue the most complete and\nac'iirate map obtainable\nof the overland routes to\nthe Yukon\t\nLithographed,on heavy\nor light paper\t\n'-'rice $1.00.\nTogether with a copy\nof special edition of Tin-:\nI-Iekald, containing complete information regarding   routes,   supplies, etc.\nThe fiefsxld\nCaljgapy.\nAlberta..\nCALGARY MARKETS\nOh. welcome, frost anel hail  and sleet!\nlllow   winds of .lanuury,   blow!\nTlie rose o\ufffd\ufffd .liini) is not so sweet\nj\\s   white stai- blossoms  of the snow.\nFur .Tune  semis  Daphne   from   me>  far\n'J'o shlnim,' sands nnil  slilniot-Iiig sou,\nWhere rnilliinr mnl  remote,  a star.\nShe whirls through heaven, forgetting m*\nThrough till the fall   I count the days\n'Till  golf be  done ami shooting  past;\n'Till Christinas shopping,  from ils  inaze.\nyields  Daphne  buck   lo ine  at lust.\nThen   'ere her  Lenten   prayers  arise\nAmi churches claim her, lhis for me\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA   month when   I  gaxo in her eyes,\nAcross a  daily   cup  of   tea! ;\n\"Wherefore.  O h.'isle yo, frost and blcetl\nI.low,    winds  of  January,   blow!\nLove counts than June's  rose    far    uioi\nsweet\nThe white slar blossoms of the snow.\n__. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdXew   Vork Journal.\nWHEN CHILDREN PLAY,\nWholesale   Prices   as They   To-Day\nStand.\nButler (salt) .\" 0 20     $ 0 00\nButter (fresh)  0 23 0 00\nCheese  0 10 to    0 12J\nEggs  0 35 to   [0 00\nPotatoes  0 a\"5 0 00\nTurnips  0 25 0 00\nBacon (dry sal I)  0   !J| 0 00\nHay  (i 00 7 00\nOats  0 :.0 0 CO\nBarlev  0 30 0 00\nWheat No. 1 Hard..-.. 0 07 0 70\nNo. 2 Hard.... 0(a 0 00\nNo. 3J lard.... 0 57 0 00\nNo. 1 Frosted. 0 5(1 0 00\nNo. 2 Frosted. 0-10 0-15\n\"      No.  J rejected\n1 Hard'  0 53 0 00\n\"      No 2   rejected\n2 Hard'  0-15 0 00\nowaq-Ho\nWholesale dealei s iu\nAles, Wiqes, Spirits aqd Cigars.\nA Combined Nursery anil Ciyiniiusiiiu. **.'\nSmall I'xpciisc.\nWJiat to do Willi. restless, noisy\nclnldieu on a rainy clay is no longer u\nbitter question with the progressiva\nmother, whose babies are learned liltla\nltiiidci*Kii.ritii*.'rs and who is llrm\nugainuL whips or severity as a m-etum\noi ket-iihij*- ipeace ia the \"louse.\nHer secret of restful rainy days U\nclearly explained by a, glnmise at her\nijyninaisuiu\"nursery. Itis a deliaiiU-'ul\nplace. Perhaps it cost a 'trine morn\nthan tiie ordinary nursery in 'tile- be-\nKiiinhiS. but wluil of UiatV Down\nstairs all during Uie siwws Saturday-i\nthe literary head of the 'loiist* si in\npeacefully at his diss'., with no tuni-\nbiin-r a'.oul of amateur bear liauters\nor i>.erc;!'iis shrieks of human loconio-\nUvos to unset liis train of ii~_tc-uglii~-\nJS'o pantries ai\\; raidc-U, no oewks set\nbv the ears ~\"'0 maternal bronchia,\ntubes were hoarse trout correction au'\nfairy-story tcl-inij. ' because of this\nhome of athletics.\nThe children themselves set tin-oust)\nthe doy without quarreling, \"rettina\nor faUins inLo mischief, and rather rejoice in Uie imslemient wca'thc-i- tha\"\nkeeps Uiean biuy over -Uioir n*-*'.v-found\nti ettsures. .\n~*vow. the nursery gymnasium is beat\nset in the marret. if the liouae boost-..\na large and airy one\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdno ma.tter if tnu\nrcof slopes, provided the windows e*an\nbe cut out a generous Slice\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Uvat is al.\nthat is needed. The best gymnasium\nof Its 1-incl. ii.;.~a.at, the. lirst, io uio\nv-rMj-r's knowledge,   that was started-*\nWilS firuL,-** ii oi'cji -lo  (_-h.il.clecru  In \"a **\"al-\nret room quite unp.Iastere-.I.\nSo much the better, for a gymaiaslam\nought to 'hav.:* iwoc-desi walls. Thia-e-\n\ufffd\ufffdore, ovor the beams plain boards wer.*\nnailed. Then the chil-di-en were taken\ndown, the five of tiiem, to a sportina\ngoc'ds shop and allowed to select tho\nic-ciuifrii\"e furmishin-g. Thi-: tnxeve 1'iya\nanel two giria were given their choice\nond'on a portable stTiking ,bag thoy ali_\ncom.-bi.-ned. A. -\"ViiiiteiT \"ex* irob-er to?\nbvaiy one ci.' the fiv-; ~>v-as tiie next\nfolectlon, and th^u a rowing -apT'ara.\ntus and a pair o-J climbing ilatiHern.\n.According to :h-2ir incLi\\\"idL--.l \ufffd\ufffdtreiig*-t.\neae.ii one o; ib-- c'niidrc-n was g~ven 3\nj).iir of iron dumb-bells; au adjustable\ntrapeze! and a Dai-r ot swinging rings\ntruade tip the sum or gymnasium fit*\ntir.c*-?.\n. With 'very one -Of. thegyi r'S-rfthas---*\nOie dealer st*\"\".? a; j.ap-~ wnM oi \\n-\natruc-t-ons away, ajr. th^-n Uie chi-zL-en\n-.o-t<* rc-i'.drod to put their ly-mpir- of\nf-jthle-'.i't-; ia OT..V-T. T_i**y '\"iii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\". and\n\ufffd\ufffdrcn l~..i.t time f'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.h. th-? <-<v.v*nsKiir.~\nr.-eu-.serj\" wss dw*3rtc-*i; Of cddvm,\nsinijilB tlstzinn\". sh:7-*.s anel kn:okc*r'.vock-\ners .wre \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdproYicIe'l.. -with, .cheap \"at-\nhee?.ed sho*\ufffd\ufffd. for al! five, and tr-aJr.1n\ufffd\ufffd\nu-j-1 -musc'isr br?j3i'i7rj* tJfc order of th-\ufffd\ufffd_\ndav.\nRules were postr-d up on ih-*- ptyrr.-\nmvsiirn rloor that nnWy sh'\/ul'l <*vi**r\n~irtvi my v th*iir club*-. *ti-., lyin?\nni-rot-l!-' :;r <ra.r%s*. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw-.re r rev.-i'ie-d frn\nown-ili'T..-, nnd any quarrj'-lint; m'.-ant\nbs_nlf-.hn-.fjit **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" the oflV-n'K-r- f\"-r a. w-<*k\nIf rum the- s-ar-':'--r'\ufffd\ufffd,ra. Or, \"riokir.-,-\noTre,<* a 'lay ir.'tm J.hr; _ryiTilT-i.=: wn .-i.-h*?\nmother of tl)<* family 7-.ire*!y sit any\ntt-_iVi>n t'j r-nf-trc-p. |-3ie* tviia-it,-'*-*--\/ -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnd\na.s sho \".vate-Ti-vl th\ufffd\ufffd childresn Ph<* came\nto the \"oiir-Iiiidm tiin.t y\ufffd\ufffding \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdptnli.'S a.\ufffd\ufffd\nwe-II a*? young m.iods nitirir.h unde-T tlie-\nproD<*r sort or  tm.Int-*g.\n7_\"nele*r th^'prnba* of playing th\" >\".-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-\narid irlrls 1 e-^.in te\". tlt^rtr.-.r f< v th**-m-\nfj=-Ivc* brn'.vn axel mvs^^e n.n.l !>}- ln-\nrtlnr-t they .'.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdII Into drill* -ind r'-cru'.tT\nfxerciPos-    Two or tl-.r.-e* 1.1^: o'i\\  mat-\nft\nEvery woman should realize that her\nhealth is like a bank account. At the outset she has so much deposited to her credit\nin the hank of health. If she draws out\nmore than she ptitii iu she will soon overdraw her account. An over-dmwn account\nin the bank of health means one of two\nthings, a life of hopeless suffering or an\nearly death.\nThe woman who neglects her health in a\nwomanly way i.s making big drafts on her\naccount with the bank of health and will\nsii'.,-.i be a physical bankrupt. Disorders of\nthi- description wreck a woman's general\nhealth quicker than anything else in lhe\nworld. Tliey soon transform a healthy,\nhappy, amiable woman into a weak, sickly,\nfretful and despondent invalid. They utterly unfit a woman for wifehood or motherhood. For all disorders of this nature Dr.\nPierce's Favorite Prescription is the best\nof all medicines. It acts directly on the'\ndelicate and iiupoitanl oigaus concerned\nin maternity, giving them health, strength,\nvigor and elasticity. Il relieves pain,\nallays inflammation, checks debilitating\ndrains, aud quickly subdues all other symptoms. Tl at once stops the dragging- pains\nand sinking spells, the nervousness*, the\ndigestive disturbances and other complications that arise from the same cause. Taken\nduring the months of expectant maternity,\nit banishes the usual discomforts aiid\nmakes baby's advent easy and almost painless. -It insures the new-comer's health\nand a plentiful supply of nourishment.\nThousands of women have testified to its\nmarvelous merits. An houe-.t dealer will\nnot suggetl an infeiior substitute for the\nsake of extra profit.\nFRONT STREET\nREVELSTOKE, B- 0.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC  RY. CO.\nflerchant's Hotel\nTIES\nThe Company will pay 25 Cents each for\nTamarac Ties deUvorcd on its elation grounds\nclear of encumbrances in accordance with tho\nbelow mentioned spccltications:\nAll ties will bo carefully inspected, and this\nprice only will be paid forthoso which como\nup to tho spesifications, and on which there is\nno claim for Crown dues.\nParties desiring to cut ties on lands other\nthan their own must not proceed without\npermit from tho Crown Timber Agont at\nEdmonton, and in ah cases Crown dues at tho\nrale of three cents per Tie will be deducted\nFrom abovo price unless a letter is produced\n'rom the Crown Timber Agent certifying that\nTics aro clour of dues. Settlers who havo cut\nI'ics oir thoir own or other patented lands\nmutt furnish Crown Timber Agcr.t. wilh\nsatisfactory sworn evidence where Tics wero\ncut before ho can Issue clearance and before\nCompany can accent Tics.\nCedar or Jack Pino Tics will bn tnkon at u\nreduccel price according to the quality. Spruce\nwill not be accepted at nil.\nParties who propose delivering Ties must\napply lo the Conip.ui>'s agont at points whero\ntliere is one, for file to pile Ties, and at other\npoints will apply for site to section foreman.\nTho -'onipeiny will send an inspector over\ntho road us soon in deliveries arc conipletoel,\not which duo notie-e will bo giveu to enable\nconlrnctor.j. to bo present. Parlies delivering\nTies inuit lurnifh receipts showing tliey havo\npaid all bills for labor anil supplies incurred in\n.-onncrlton wilh the -vork, and nuiet, establish\ntheir title to the Ties to tho satisfaction of the\nCompany's intpector.\nSl\"i:Cll*ICAT*.ON 1*011 TIKS.\nTamarac Ties: All Tios must ho good,\n'ourd, live tamarac, exactly eight (S) foet.long,\neul square at each end. six (6) inches thick, and\nal least tix (U) iuoheo en tho face clear of the\nbark at tho smallest part; io be smoothly\nhewn, free from shakes anel score maiks,\nperfectly straight, and must bo mund.\nCedar and Jack Pine Ties: All Ties must ho\n<ood, sound. live Cedar or Jack I'iiie.'cxuetly\neighr, (S) feet long, cut squaro Rt each ond, six\n<U) inches thick, nnd at least Bex (li) inches on\nho I'nee clear of bark nt the emallost part; to\nbo smoothly hewn, frco from shakes and score\nmarks, perfectly straight, and must bo sound.\nr. VV. WHYTE,\nManager.\nWinnipeg, 4th November, 1807.   -    nl ~-dw*t(\nIllecillewaet, B. C.\nFirst-class in every respect.    Good iiucoinniodatiou.\nWines, Liquors and Cigars at the liar.\nHost\nW. J. Lappan, Proprietor.\nColumbia House\nwfm^f1\n>?\n^\nFree Trial To Any Honest Man\nThe Foremost Medical Company\n_    in the World in the Cure of\nWeak Men 'Makes this Offer.\nHEALTH AND ENERGY ASSURED.\nHAPPY MARRIAGE,  GOOD\nTEMPER, LONG LIFE.\nIn all tho world to-d.iy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin all thei history of the>\nworld\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdno eloctor nor institutlor hag troated and\nrestored so many men as lia-i\"tb9 famed KUUS\nilEDlCAIj CO. of Buffalo, N. Y.\nThis is due to the fact tha't the company controls\nsome iuTontions and discoveries which have no\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdqual in the whole realm of medical science.\n5CIENCETRIM~~1N<J\n\"THELAMPOf',\nSo mtie-b dee-pptinn hftn beejn practiced in ad-\nvertirlr.^ that llu. granel olel company now for lho\nflrat tlm\ufffd\ufffd ma'rfe,- thi. startling offer :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe\ufffd\ufffdy will \"isml tl_j*.r coHtly anei rn'igically effective f.p'jl.aiic*. i.i.il r. wholo month's course ol re-\nBtofjtjve. rim-Mi.--, positively on trial vrltbont\ntrx |>\ufffd\ufffd'[ist> to .iny !.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jj,t anel relinhle) n.au I\nNot e. dollar ),...-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.1 bo nejvanceel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot a penny\nrift!.]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtill r.-suit- nr., known to and acknotvledgod\nby the) e..iti\ufffd\ufffdnt.\nTho Krie Meelic.il Company's appliance* and\nrTne\ufffd\ufffd.li*'*j have !\/.'.-n .talkeel about nnel written\nabout ali over -.1,*. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*or.d, till every man has heard\nOf tlje'171.\nTbey rMSo.-e r.r crcatfl .strength, vigor, healthy\nti\ufffd\ufffdne and n--*-** .if\"\nTb'-y quickly st\/ip dr\ufffd\ufffdlm on the system that lap\ntile energy.\nThey cierrt nerv*,-i**iei<9, eloiepondency an.l all\n^ the*rifj-ctj. of evil r.-ibitJ*. exce..iie8f overwork, etc.\nTh'.*yiIro fuii _.-re-r>(tt.., developme-nt anel tone\nto e.i-ry pj-\ufffd\ufffdrt.,.r) nr.,! or^an of the liody.\nK,.i3'_i\"re 1* Inip-.-iiMe- and ase Is no tiarrler.\nTills \" Tr!..' wi-lioijt Kaepenso \" olTe-r in limited\nby tho corupeinv ;,. a short tllnc, ODel application\nma't be rr.a.Ie at unce.\n_S*> C O. ll. r-).. me, no bogus philanthropy nor\ndeception, y.o fxyiure\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda clenn onsSiie.**) proiKjsl-\ntlon hy a con-,i,rt:.y of hit*** financl..! and profti-\nnio-ia'.'ntandir.y.\n\"Write, to tlio ERIE MEWCAL \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".\"'\"\"rPAKT,\n\"\"CFyALe\"). X.Y . ar.d refer to-.going th\ufffd\ufffd account\nol their olfer i i. :1.1m paper.\nA TVPICAt,  Xi:U\"i:UV CYMX.lSItM.\nto-\ufffd\ufffdt'jCv-> v\/ere hauled up inlj-j Ut; gymnasium and by frla<':,ng thc-m \\in.*l*:-r the\nrings, trapeze and la\/lel'-rp, nn ttirnl-'i'.'S\nWeie attended wilh bruisc-H an-I wlion\na bad elay set in a eiixus waa the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdorder of thu day. A!J tli.* <-hildr*-n\nch\/jse -funey narr.-es. drew on long\nwhito or pink stockings, the b\"ys woth\nfalse rnusUichcs, th<* girls l..-t ili\/wn\ntheir hair, every Bo'ly wa.-j elonne;!\nv.-ILh gilt papor stare, and gj-njMl exhibitions followed.\nOrhri- boys anel girls cnvwd-'l in to\nBee It he fun. and grceat \"was the ap-\npefcitisc f.howered on the youthful prov,--\nf\ufffd\ufffds elisplayc-I. The- news of the: gym-\nn.-it-ium gc-tti.ng- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffda.boti-.. i>Ll)--'i- wlso\nmothons. fe>llo-,ve-eI suit, in dialing oait\ntho ytiporabuii'Ian-t'i* of loys uri'l ple*-\nturr- books iind sul'Stitiitliig complelo\n\"ithl-it'lc fining.**. In muny \"nsit;i.nces\ntho gay wall paper was torn off nnd\nplain wnejj| wa.insec'ti-itg put on this to\nafford strong wall Fpncc for adjusting\nchest i>uIIi->-h .'Uiil pltitfeniTi strikinc\nhsuzK. Flo \/i-s eif Tinrel wooel have in\nmany instmn<__es taken 1he place of oar-\npets and ovr.-r the loss of so'Tntich luxury not a child complains, while in r-rr3\nInstance a family of ambitious children, -w-heose parents wore not able to do\nriver thesr n-urseiry  in  approved style,\ngorked lor at*. ~~~u-n,t t^dc\n*B~\"~~~. v\" 2 J i ui v'-ii^ua.i.' 1 j....-  .:\nD. W. IV|arsfi\nCALQARY\nWholesxl\nan\n\/Groceries,    -   -   -\nI Dry Coed ,   Clothing\nd^rau  JMen's Fu-nisl-ings -\nKais and Caps -   -\nBoots and Shoes   -\nCrockery,   Glassware\nHour Cnxtom   UcHpectfullv Mollcltce!\nSolo A\ufffd\ufffdnnt for O. K.;.~ J. a alt.\nWholese.10 Groecrw.\nTho triJo only supplied.\nTRY  OUR    COFFEES\nThe   largest hotel   iu   town.        Centrally    located\nChoice   Wines,   Li'\"uors   and  Cigars\nBest    accommodation. Kates    SI     per    day.\nBrown & Pool, Proprietors\nREVELSTOKE\n, Table    fui'iiislicil' with'\nthe clioifest; the market'\n-ilToi'ds.     Best    Wines,\nLiquors    and      Oi_?ars.\nLargo -light bed rooms.     Jiatos  $1.00 a clay.     JMouthlv race.\n.T. ALBERT STONE,Troprictoi'.   \"\nIMPERIAL rUWi\\\n OF Gi\\HA\nHead Offiee, Toronto\nPaid Up Capiial $2,000,000\nReserve     -   - .-   .-   1,200,000\nDirectors:\nH. S. Howland, President\nr.R.Merntt, Vice Pres., (St.C.atharines)\nWilliam Ramsay, Robert Jai~ray,\nHugh Ryan,   T. Sutherland Stayner\nElias Rogers.\n' D. R. Wilkie, General Manager.\nBranches\nNorth West and British Columbia\nBrandon     IPortage la Vancouvei\nCalgary Prairie Winnipeg\nEdmonton |Prince Albert  Revelstoke\nSouth Kdmonton.\nErses ---    Niag.-tra-Falls^jSfc.-Thomas\nFergus        Port Colborne [Toronto\nGait Rat Portage     jWelland\nIngersoll    Sault St. MarieiWoodstock\nSt, Catharines |\nMontreal, Quebec. ESS!\nAgents   in   Great   Britain\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrjloyd't\nBank,  Ltd., 72 Lombard St., London,\nwith whom  money may be deposited\ncor transfer by letter or cable to\nof above branches.\nAgents in the United States\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew\nYork, Bank of Montreal, Bank ol\nAmerica; Chicago, First National\nBank; St, Paul. Second National Bank\nSavings Bank Department\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeposit\"\nof SI and upwards received- and\ninterest allowed.\nDebentures*- Provincial, -Municipal\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmd other debentures purchased.\nDrafts and Letters of Credit\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAvail-\ntl le at all points in Canada, United\nKingdom, United States, Europe,\nfr.dia, China, Japan, Australia, New\nZealand, etc\nGold  Purchased \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA. R. E. HEARN.\nMnnapfOP Rovelstoko Brar.uh\nREVELSTOKE\nIRON WORKS..\nBlack smithing-' -Jobbing:\nPlnmbin-:, Pipe Fitting\nTin smithing\nSheet Iron Work\nMachinery Repaired\nMini-g Work a Specialty__\ufffd\ufffdas-.\nROBT. GORDON\nRcvclstoko Stn.\nF(evelstQr\\e  Hospital\nMaternity Room in connection.\nVaccine   kept    on   hand.\nDrs.  McKechnic   and   Jeffs. Attendants\nPrice, \"8.00\nFamily Knitter\n\"Will-Jo nil Knitting icqulrcd\nin a family, home-pun or factory yarn. SIMPLEST Knitter on the MARKET.  .\nWc guarantee every machine to\ndo pood work.! A gents wanted.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdffril\" for paftic-alant.\nCandas Knitting Machine Co.\nDUNDA8  ONT.\ni\ufffd\ufffd;riji^i-_D^iE_D\nDoors\nSasl?,\nTurnings'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.Mouldings\nTRY THE NEW YARD\nArrowhead Saw St 'Plaining1 Mills\nRovolstol-e Agents:   PIPPY & WRIGHT.\nTHE, PIONEER LIVERY-\nFeed asd Sale Stable of tbo Lardoau and Trout Lake District\nS.icl-lle    and _ Puck    Horses\nalways for hire.\nFreighting  and  Teaming   a\n.. specialty.\nDaily Stage leaves Thomson's' Landing\" every morning at 7 o'clock\nfor Trout Lake City. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd For particulars write\nCRAIG 'to U1LLMAN, Thomson's Landixo.\nTHE\nLAST\nTo seeuro ono oi\"  thosi* desirable   lots\nCUEA1' on the C.  ct K. Steam Navi-\n. gatiou Company's site.\nDont wait till the boom hits the\ntown in the spring like a cyclone,\nbut BUY NOW.\n__JHAJJ3L& J0_ RA_G_E\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSole Agents.\nC. B. JWaolean\nARCHITECT\nand BUILDER\nRsllninlcs fn'nishcil. riiina Mill spcii-\nIIciitloiiB innilo. Am uleo iD-upiircil to elo\nshop nnei .io!) work on tlib BhortcHt\nnotice. .Satisfnolion (.'iinranlotel ia\novory case   Oalt or write for terms.\nMain Street      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      Rovelstoko\nW. S. BIRcNEY\nPJIIJlTERand\nDECORATOR.\nFirst Street fast, Revelstoke Station\nGraining-, Paper Hanging,\nHard Wood Finishing, House\nPainting in - all Branches,\nCarriage Painting, Glazing, Etc.\nL. JI. FRETZ\nContpaetop and Buildep.\n'      Shop opposite Imporial Bank.\nWorkmanship Guaranteed\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTerms Oash\nIf You J^ave a\nJAine to Sell\nor -ivii-h a cjnip.-iny formed, or\nwant to buy a mine or shares\nin any mine, want to invest in\nSpokane real estate or wish to\nmake a borrow, write at once to\n(-JJI.MES   L.   FORD   &   CO\nMine Brokers.     Mining Stocks\nNo. 9 .Mill St., between Riverside and\nSprague, Spokane, Wash,\nFERGUSON\nThe Centre  of the  Lardeau  Mines\nTl!ePioneep\nStores\n of Ferguson\nand Ten .Mile\nCummins & Co.\"\nGENERAL MERCHANTS\nDealer in Miners' Supplies, Hardware,\nGroceries, Dry Goods.       , -..\nEverything to ho found in a general store.\n,' i'o3t Office in concoction.\nAt our TEN-MILE BRANCH Ftoro\nPowder, Caps. Fuse, Coal, Steel,\nand all .Miners' and Prospectors' Supplies aro\nkept on hund\nBo Sure and register at the\nBJIUWOOL HOTEL\nWhen you reach FERGUSON.\nThe table is provided with the best\nthe market affords.     Rates from $2\nto $3 per day.\nCUMMINGS BROS.,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Proprietors.\nSam Needham\nClothes\nCleaned\nAltered\nRepaired\nIn Good Style at Lowest Prices.\nI Douglas Street \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Revelstoke FT  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'}\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  OVER    ONE     HUNDRED   RINKS  ENTERED  BRITAIN'S  CHINESE   POLICY  What the Times Says on the Subject-  Withdrawal of iConditions Only a  Diplomatic Move \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Britain Will  Strictly Maintain Her Rights-  Supposed Murder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTroops   Wanted  WixNii'iai, Feb. \".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOver 101) rinks  h-ive ciiti'ivil for the big lionspii*),  which begins here today. The li.it  comprises visitors from all parts of  Manitoba, Ontario, North Went Territories and the United Stales. Play  is now on mid hot contests nre expected in tho different competitions. The  The Calgary link has reported and  good work is expected of them although tliey are drawn against some  of the old time champions.  IIIUTAIX'S CIIINKSE   POLICY  London, Feb. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Ireat Britain hns  at last taken a decided stand in her  attitude on the Chiuese question. Although withdiawing her condition re-  earding the opening of Tiilietiinaii,  says the Times: .\"Tlio fuel of such  withdrawal is of course consistent  with the adoption of entirely dilfeicnt  policies upon out part. It might be  on one hand an unworthy, and humiliating surrender by it -statesman, who  havinu proimilgiifed a great pol icy and  defended it with brave wordshad then  run away from it on the llrst show of  the opposition it was certain to  provoke. On the other bund il may  be a judicious example of the old and  tried diplomatic method of adding in  the lirst instance, to the terms of a  bargain some particular object which  it was not really desired or expected  to attain and afterwards sacrificing  this supeillous article in order lo  secure the real end in view. But while  it is logically compatible with I'ilhor  of these alternatives we are cntilled  lo.assuuie that the second policy is  that which is being followed by Loid  Salisbury.\"  \"On tliis assumption the withdrawal  of the condition is no more than a  graceful concr.*.jion effected on the  principle of \"dti.ii\/ des.'' the. gift on  onr part heii.g the privilege of access  to a not especially desirable pot t. and  lIil* condition wo\" receive the acceptance of the more\" essential terms of  oiiroitiT. This is what li.is -ippioxi-  mately taken place.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRussia's objections to a free port at  Talienwan are' not unintelligible and  if she has olfered a compromise on  this point, and also di-*L-oulinucs her  objection at Pekin to the remaining  conditions of the Britihh loan, sensible  persons in llus country will >ee no  reason lo cry out the de fere nee shown  lierFiiseCeptibihties.  Itis gratifying to know that the  United Stales'is supporting Great  Bi-il.-tin's policy most. beat-Lily.  Balfour hns ass-tired his constituents  limn Great Britain  will strictly  main-  lain her rights in the f.ir east.  .SYNOPSIS OV NEWS  Three bundled men have sailed  from Southampton, bound for the  Yukon goldlields.  A woman has been found dead in  Totonto, inurdL-r being suspected. The  police have taken the matter in hand,  hub so fiir no particulars are obtainable.       '  .1. F. Foy. Q.C., has been nominated  by the Smith Toronto Conservatives  iii the provincial elections.  Shipments of ore from the Kr.oi.e-  nay districts aggregate over 00,000  tons since January 1st.  Italy has decided to press her claim  m the Oorruti .'tlfair against Columbia.  The movements of Spanisti'iuid U.S.  warships is causing great anxiety in  Havana.  The people of Skitgwny  and   Dyea  \"-iu'^lTetitionTng\"f6\"r^\"t'rob~ps_t6~i)res\"erve  order and martial law will most likely  be declared.  Experts .have advanced the statement lhat there is a noticcablediininu-  tion of seals in Behring  Sea 'and that  has been caused by a parasite.'  Canadians are exempted from the  provisions of Mr. Corliss' new immigration bill, in the U.S. House of  rc-pree-entatives.  The proposed reduction of the Canadian militia is causing much adyerse  comment in Great Britain.  It is rumored at Quebec that Peler-  t v. Tail.  &   Co.,   have   successfully  floated   the   fast   Atlantic  steamship  \" service, but no oilicial announcement  has been made.  Sir Hihhott Tupper has* severely-  criticized Lord Aberdeen's speech at  Toronto recently on preferential trade.  , imports and exports at the port of  Montreal for January show a large  increase over the same month last  year.  SESSION  OPENED WEDNESDAY  THE QUEEN'S SPEECH  A LOT OF IMPORTANT BILLS  Before the House and Some Difficult  Problems'to Remedy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEmile 'Zola's  Trial Commenced Today \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- The  Stikene Trail in Good Condition for  Travel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sir Hibbert Tupper Scores  London, February S.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn a I'o.'ecastof  the Queen's speech which will he read  tomorrow at the opening of the  imperial Parliament it is noticed that  congratulations are in order on the  peaceful,!?) relations which at present  exist between the great powers on the  eastern question, indicating that  hostilities are out, of range for the  present. Reference is made to lhe  peace arrangement between Greece  and Turkey and hope is expressed that  both parties will endeavor to support  th a agreement. The campaign in  India is noticed and the brilliant  aclion of the troops commented on.  A serious crisis in the matter is not  anticipated. A general commentary  is made on trade conditions throughout lhe Empire.  DOMINION\" 110USI__] ,  Ottawa, February 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe debate  on the address in reply to the speech  from the throne still continues, long  speeches apparently heinp: in order..  The question was asked by Daviii if  Mculullen, of Centre Wellington, had  been appointed*Lieutenant Governor  of the Territories. The Premier in  replying stated that this was the first  intimation he received of any such  appointment.  Major Cartwright. son of Sir  Richard Cartwright, has heen tip*  txiinr.ed Assistant Adjutant General  in the militia department.  zola liKKOiti\" tup: couiits.  1~ai~is, February S,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe trial of  Finite Zulu, tho famous novelist, was  commenced today. The case, which  arises\" out of his fearless, criticism of  the secrecy and injustice \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of the  Dreyfus trial, is creating a great deal  of interest, and exciting disclosures  aie expected. ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYUKON   MATTEUS  The Stikcuc trail is reported to be in  good condition at present for travel  and many are taking advantage of  the fact.  Hon. Geo. J~. Foster declares that  the Stikenc'railway contiact is without  justification, the grants being hugely  out of proportion to the work lo be  undertaken.  it has heen found that the road  to'the Yukon gold fields via the  Copper River is impracticable.  The United States Government have  given the Reindeer trail.\"portatien  contract to it Pennsylvania railway.  These animals nre to be taken to  Alaska and an elfoit made to re-tock  that counlrv. \"  TUPPER   MAKES   A  SPEECH  The Best Advertising* Medium in Western  Kootenay Is  A STAGE SERVICE  New Company lo Inaugurate a Stage  Line From Edmonton Towards the  Yukon Gold Fields.  The following announcement appeals in the Montreal Daily Star of  Monday last:  \"The Commonwealth Development.  Mining and Transportation Co., will  inaugurate this week a stage service  from Edmonton, N. XV. T\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd north towards the Gold fields in the Yukon  district. Many details will have to bo  ai ranged befoie the service is extended to Dawson City. Boats will be  utilized at the opening of navigation.  It is expected that a big busincssin forwarding supplies will be secured. The  capital slock is $2,000,000, held hy forty  .subscribers of .*j!50,000 each. Th*. Hon*  trealers interested are: Hon. A. A.  Thibaudeau. Messrs. J. U* Holden, It.  Jiickerrtikii*, W. Strachan, D. L. Lock-  4-1 hv. V LBeique. Q. C S. O. and C.  I,. Shorey. Tin; general manager, Mr.  J. D. Powell, has temporarily located  hia headquarters in Toi-oulo. where  many of the e-tockholtlers iu the enlei-  jjrize reside.  A Swlfl Current rancher is about to  titartforthe Yukon by the Albert n  route wil h 100 head of beef, besides 20  oN-i'ii'on which be will pack bis stip-  pliee.  The Yankees   Refuse .'to   Assist  a Disabled  Steamer.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn   Exclusion   of  Fruit \"and  Horses   from   Germany  Ottawa, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe debate on the  address  in  reply   to  tho'speech  fiom  the Throne is in progress in-the Commons.    Sir Charles Tupper in a  vigorous   speech imindly,  denounced     the  action  of   Lord    Aberdeen,   who,   he  clet-iiued, had violated thu constitution  of the Dominion  hy   refusing   to sign  the Orders   in   Council   submitted to  Iii tn by the late Government.  He also twitted the Premier with  having on the occasion of his visit to  England, accepted \"tin pot\" titles  which he had so often held up to ridicule, and also with wearing a decoration conferred by the French Govern-  ment-without-having-first-obtained-  the approval of hisSovereign.  D~G\"~I1-TI\"1\" NEUTRALITY  Vancouver, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe, captain  of the United States steamer,'Augusta  refused to render any assistance to tbe  disabled steamer Coquitlam.  THE YANKEES AKE WITH US  - New Yoitic, Feb. .\").\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe New York  chamber of \"commerce will adopt a  resolution favoring Great Britain's  policy in China.  Gl'K-IANY JIKCIPKOCATES  \\V~A!s!liNC*TON..Feh. Ti.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd United Stales  fruit and horses will be excluded from  Germany under the -recent regulations.  CANADIAN THAI\"\"  Mdntkeal, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCanadian trade  has been considerably affected hy tbe  snow storms of the past week.  JlOItE power  Montkeal, Feb. I.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOwing to the  new Canadian Pacific railway service,  the road is shoit of rolling stock and  orders for at least forty new locomotives will he placed at once.  TOM NCI.TY CONVICTED _,  Joi.iette. Que.. Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTom Nulty  the perpetrator of the Rawdon murders, was last night found guilty and  sentenced to death.  THAT CHINESE LOAN  London, Fob.  5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRussia and Germany are now bidding for the Chinese  loan.   The Times of yesterday referr-1  ing to the matter says: \"It is of course  possible that the story is not without  foundation.    There is not much doubt  that Russia can procure the money if  she can   induce China to enter more  deeply into her   books.   She   is   well  versed in the habits of Chinese officials     and     has      almost     an  intuitive perception of the motives determining their acts.    It is  quite  jiossible  that the timelv appeals to these might  result in somesuchdiplomatic triumph  as is rumored in St. Petersburg.    If so  our position is clear.     We are limited  to our trcatv rights, and  both partiec  of the State\", with ihe whole country  at their hack, are pledged to enforce  them upon that  subject.     Retreat or  vacillation is impossible.     We are not  going to he either forced  or jockeyed  out of our trade with one of the most  lucrative markets of Asia.  TEIl~t~TOI~.l~~S CAN'T GET G~~OI.G~~  London. Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe  Cretan   legislature will endorse Prince George,  of  Greece, as goveinoi.  It .;.-*.-* I.\\.\"s FAMINE  London, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA terrible famine  exists! in Central and Southeastern  Russia.  PUBLISHED   TWICE   A   WEEK   AT  CHURCH DIRECTORY.  \"METHODIST CHURCH \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Rovelatolce.  a*x Preaching sen lei s at 11 a.m. at.d 7:30  p.m. data meeting at the clone of the  morning servico. talibath School and Bible  Olnsa at 2:30 p.m. Weekly prayer meeting  ovory Wednesday cvonlng at 7:30 p.m. The  public aro cordially invited. Seats freo.   ItEV. J. A. WOOD; Pa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtor.  f~HU~~CH OS* ENGLAND-Sl. Peter's,  \"s-* Kevolutoko Houra of service: Evening  prayer dally at 5 o'clock. Fridays at 7:30  Sundays and Festivals: Holy Communion at 8  n,n!'-.K1Pr9?_l,l\" P\"0''\"1\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt 11* Sunday School  Rnd Biblo Claps at \":~~, cvoiiing pr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvir at 7:30.  Hrst Sunday in the mouth Holy Communion  at morning services.   FRANK A. FORD. Vicar.  PRE3HYTEItlAN CHURCH-Rcyclatoke.  ' Servico every Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7 ~0  p.m. lllb'e CIib.1 nt HM p.m., to which  all nre welcome. Prayer meeting at b p.m.  every >\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cdnesday.   REV. P. D. MUIR, Pastor.  WOMAN   CATHOLIC   CHURCH-Revel*  AV   stoke.     Mans  second Sunday in  month  at 10:30 a.m.    REV. FATHER PEYTAVIN.  Strictly in the Wood  Business now. I have at the present  time about  100 cords of gootl, ili-y  F.ir and Hemlock Wood  Full ineasiire guaranteed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprices  right. All order*, left with W. 11.  Pease & Co., Uevel**toke Station, or  at The Hekald ollice will receive  prompt attention.  \" JAS. C. Hutchison.  Sdtf.        Wood Dealer and Carter.  Wood! Vvood!  G namnteed Pull  Cord Measure.  The undersigned has a large supply  iif Hemlock, Spruce, Fir and Pine  Wood for sale. Any person requiring  wood will kindlv leave .their orders  with Mr. AV. M. Lawrence, Reqelstoke  Station, or with II. N. Coursier,  Front Street, Revelstoke.  17ntf FRANK JULIAN.  We Have a Good Supply of  Building  Material  a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd Lumber  CUT PRICES TOR SPOT CASH  Call aud see us. We can fix you  REVELSTOKE SAW MILLS  Revelstoke Station, B. C.  f anadian  \\ Pacific l\\x)  AND SC O PACIFIC LINE.  _The_.best. aiid__-.cheaDest_route_.from  TJevelstoke lo all points east and west.  Through tickets lo Vancouver,  Winnipeg, St. Paul. Chicago, New  York, Montreal and Toronto.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  First class dining and sleeping cars  on all trains.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Through tourist cars to St, Paul  daily, and to Toronto every Monday,  Montreal and Boston on Thursday, and  Moutreal and  Portland eyery Friday.  Purchase tickets to your destination  and have baggage checked through.  For  full   information'as \"to. rates,  time, etc., applv to nearest'agent, to  T. W. BRADSHAW,  Agent, Itevelstoke.  ,      Or to E. J. COYLE,  Dis. Passenger Agent, Vancouver.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTlie-Caiiadian-PaciilcSteamshipCompany's\"  Steamers Natuep and Kootenay leave  Arrowhead dally for all points in Kootenay,  makinc connection at Nakusp tor all points  on Nakuap and slocan Railway, and Slocan  Lake-  Close connection at Robson for Nelson,  Kaslo, Balfour, Pilot Bny, Trail. Rossland,  Norlliport. and all points south.  For  full  ic formation,  tickets,  map?,  etc..  call on or addrCES  T. \\V. BRADSHAW.  Agent Itevelstoke.   Or to  \\V. B. CARSON.  Travelling Passenger Agent, Nelt-on.  E J.COYLE, Die. PassengcrAgcnt,Vancouver  TIME C-V.D  Subject to change without notice.  Trains run on Pacific Standard Time  Townsite  Changed   : * : .  Hai)ds ..  Although not much advertising  has been done, Rosebery townsite,  at the head of Slocan Lake, h'a~  been steadily coining to the front  for the last three months.  Wl]at Strong Points  Rosebery Holds on  the   Slocan Lake  Rosebery will have an ore  sampling works in a few months  with a capacity of a 100 tons a day.  Rosebery is in the centre of and  distributing point for Slocan City,  Sandon, \"Nakusp, New Denver,  Silverton, Enterprise, Three Forks.  Concentrator and Cody, only* 12  miles distant from the mining  centre of the Slocan(Sandon).  Rosebery is destined to be the  concentrating point.  Rosebery is the sampler point.  Rosebery is the ship yard of the  Slocan. ~  Rosebery is the only safe harbor  on the lake. \"  Buy Lots How....  If  You Want  To   Mai's Mof~ey.  Seud   at  once  to    the   general  agent for maps and price list'or.  any further information.   . '  A. M. Beattie,\"  General Agent.  oO-tt-  O.R.&N.  Is'the Shortest and     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  . Quickest Line to...  WALLACE,   FARM1XGTON,  GARFIELD,     OAKESDALE,  PULLMAN,   * LEWISTON,  COEUR D'ALENE MINES.  DAYTON,   WALLA WALLA.  PORTLAND,    PENDLETON, .  SAN FRANCISCO, MOSCOW,  CRIPPLE CREEK,  AND   ALI, POINTS   EAST OR ' SOUTH.  THE ONLY  LINE   .   .  EAST  '\" Via S-ilt Lake, Denver,  Omaha and Kansas City.  Subscribe  for  this paper and send it 0to  your friends\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJust as good  i,  o  as   a   letter.  GOING WEST D.J.II.V .GOING EAST  8*0am Leave Kaslo Arrivo~:~0p m  8:301111 ...South Fork... 3:15pm  9:.~fiani       '    Sproule's\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \"      2:1\" p m  1:51 am       \"    ...Wiiitcwster...   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"      2*0pm  10.03am      '     Rear Lake...   \"      1:18pm  10:18ara       '     ...McQuiKan    '*      1.33 p m  10:38 am       \"     Cdy Junction     \"      1:12 pm  10:60 am Arrive... Sandon Leave if Op m  CODY LINE  Leave 11:00am Sandon.....\" rrive 11:45am  Arrive 11:20 am Cody..' Leave 11:25 am  ROBKUT. IRVING  Q. F. and P. A.  GEO.F.COPELAND  Snperlntcn ent  Steamship Tickets to and from  Europe and other foreign countries^  Train for tbe East and Portland  departs-7:15 p.m. dailv. Wallace and  Moscow accommodation depaits 7:45  a.m. daily.- Through service. No  delays or lay overs anywhere,  Get through tickets and further information of U.  R. to N. city ticket  office.    No.    -1~0,   Riverside    avenue,  corner Stevens St., Spokane. Wash.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> J: Campbell,  General Agent, Spokane,  W. II. Hurllmrt, G. P. A.. Portland.  Wendell Maclean  Wholesale  and Retail  Spokane Falls and JJoptljepn  .Nelson and Ft. Sfoeppapd  Red .Mountain Rys.  Druggist, Calgary  The on\"y all rail roat<* without ch-infte o  cars between Spokane. ~~cn\"eport, Rowland  and Nelson; also between Rossland and  Nelson.  Mail Orders Promptly Attended To.  K~-tf  PATENTS  PROMPTLY SECURED!  DAILY      EXCEPT      SUNDAY  LRAVK. ,  NORTHPORT ABHIVE.  ForSDokane\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd From Spokane\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  1:20 p.m I:i0p m.  For Hoisland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd From Rc-sland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  1:10 pm 1:10 a.m.  For Nelson\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd From Nelson\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  l:IDp.m 12-58 p.m.  Close conijrciions at \"elson  trith steamer  for Ka2lo and all Kootenay L*iko points.  Passengers for Ketllc River and Boundary  Creek connect at Marcus with stage daily \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  GBT RICH QUICKLY. Write to-day for  onr beautiful illustrated Rook on PatcnUand  the fascinating story of a poor Inventor w&o  made S2~0.0~0.00. Send us a rou\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~i ~~~\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt<\"~~  or model of yonr invention and wo \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwnl  promntly tell yon ~~~~~~\"~ if it .ii new tuid  V^^YiJJ&nf, Bonnet Service. Specialty:  Tour* eaaea rejected in other hand* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnd  foreign applications. XtolartagM :.H~B~>>  RbleTT. Bcrthiaume, prop, of \"LaPrew.  Honorable D. A. Boss, the leading ntrwii-  papcrs. Banks, Express Companies & cdMaM  In any locality. All Patents secured through  Uor aBcri<5 a& bronght before the pnbUeSy  b. enccial notice in over SOO newspapers.  HUSUOK * BIAKIOK. P\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtent BoA  Temple Uuildmg.lSSSt-iame9,SH^0ntTe~~..  The only firn-Tof C~*~td-a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd---*~u3a~-~\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlithe Dominion transacting paten-, BUIIMM  azclusiTely,  MentianUiisp-per. rv\nFOR\t\nCatarrh,\nAsthma,\nCold in the Head\nSick Headache\nSl.I.   OUIl   VAIHETY   OK\nitE.M~.WES.\nWe have for Catarrh\nAgnew's,\nChase's,\nKellogg's\nHalls,\nWi, De, Meyers and\nNasal Balm.\nFor Cold in the Head and Sick Headache, some elegant remedies made\nby ourselves, fresh and effective.\nWhite  Pine  and  Tab for Coughs\ncannot be beat.\nAT.\n\/\"panada Drug \ufffd\ufffd&\n~^--    Book Co., Ltd.\nCun. P.. Macdonald, Manager.\nRevelstoke  Station. B.C.\nLOCAL AHD JDENERAL   NEWS\nAn Interesting Budget of Local, Personal\nand   General  Items  Round and\n0 About Revelstoke.\nNest Monday is Valentine's Day.\nReal estate dealers have good grounds\nto advertise.\n% Fresh groceries cheap for cash at\nHutchison to Go's.   Free delivery.\nRev. F. A. Ford returned from his\ntrip to New l'cn ver on Thursday afternoon.\nMr. R. S. Wilson was taken to the\nhospital yesterday suffering from a\nsevere attack of fever.\nTwenty two men, started to work\nthis morning putting on an extra\ntelegraph wire between here and Vancouver.\nDr. Mathison, D. D. S., will be at his\n' office over the Canada Drug to Book\nCo's store between Feb. 2Sth and \"larch\n15th next.\nThe Revelstoke Water, Power and\nLight Co's dam has been fixed and the\nmanagement expect to turn the lights\non in a day or two.\n2012 columns of news and advertising\nmatter in one year for S2. when you\ntake the Herald. Free delivery to\nany residence in town.\nEd, .Fay,   who    naiiowly   escaped\nlynching for shooting a deputy mar-\nshall in Skagway, is said to   he a printer by trade and to have worked a few\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddays for the-HERALD-last-fall;\t\nD. Ferguson turned up in good shapi*\nyesterday    mornine:.     He   was    not\ndrowned in  the wreck of the Core ma\nfor the very excellent   reason  that In\nnever went further than Tacoma.\nT Apples! We have a le-t of 'apple:\nwhich we are offering at from $1.50 to\nS2.25 in boxes of 50 lbs. each. Ot-di'i\nearly as they are selling fast, ll'itchi-\nson to Co.\nThe leading paper in Revelstoke is\nthe Hekald. Its weekly -circulation\nis four times larger than any other in\nNorth Kootenay, and it is patronized\nby the leading advertisers,\nA prominent Methodist minister in\nthe Slocan will resigh his charge next\nMay in order to he received into the\nAnglican church and receiving nrdin-\n.ation at the hands of the Bishop of\niicw Westminster.\nThe Ladies' Aid ot the Methodist\nchurch invites the general public to a\nfarewell social given in honor of Mr.\nand Mrs. Melville on Monday night\nat the church. Musical programme\nand refreshments, etc., will be provided. A good time is expected anil\neverybody is welcome.\nThe Waverley Mine Ltd., wliich is\n\"at present quartered in a temporary\noffice in the Cowan Block, intend to\nput up a building in the siiiiiuii.-r cim-\ntaing offices for the engineer and manager and a board room. They will\nprobably be located at the east end of\nThird St.\nGOOD Ads. like good eggs may he\n\"spoiled in the setting. If you want\ngood ads or any kind of c-ominei-ci.il\nJirintiiig, set or printed in a style to\n\"command attention and respect, just\ndrop in and see the Herald.\nCaptain Bailey anived here ycsti-i-\nday from Spokane and he will have\ncharge of the Salvation Army po**t\n\"here,\"relieving Captain Fisher who is\nPick. As soon .as the latter recovers\nsufficiently to take charge again Capt.\nBailey will proceed to Itevelstoke,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhere'-it is the intention to establish a\nnew*post.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRus-daiid Miner.\n~-Mrs. Hehaeh left on Wi-iliic.-.ilay\nevening last for a two month's trip to\nthe const, cities.\nJ'lie public tchool report and c< m-\niiiuiiicat.ii'ii signed \"I'i'!)\" are unavoidably held over till Wcdnesilny.\nMr. and Mrs. Melville nsmt-tcil by lhe\nchoir will give Iheir last song service\nin the Methodist church tin Sunday\nceiling.\nMr. Jones, late purser on the Trail\nwas in town vestei'ilay, on his way lo\nthe Uk.-inagan Lake, where lie is taking over the Aberdeen fur a while.\nHe is accompanied hy Mis. Jones.\nThe first annual general meet ing of\nthe Conservative Associatinn will\nbe held in the Kindergarten building\nnext Friday evening fnr (lie purpose\nof electing olllccrs for (he ensuing\nyear.\nThe Bachelors' B.ill last night, was a\ngreat success, hut the pressure on onr\nspace forbids us publishing a lengthy\naccount, which with a full li.-t of\nnames of those present will appear in\nonr next issue.\nThe latest venture in KuiiU'ii.-iy\njournalism is the* Mineral City News,\ndevoted to the interests of the development of Ciirihoo Creek ami other\ncamps on the Arrow Lake. The lii-st\nnumber will appear next week.\nA farewell reception was given to\nMr. and Mrs. Melville and Mr. Taylor,\npresident of the American club, at Mrs.\nDown's residence last, night, at which\nabout twenty-live members were\npresent and a very pleasant evening\nwas spent.\nJlr. A. E. Kincaide. came in from the\nLardeau on Thursday. The ice on the\nArm is very bad and sloppy'and getting worse in this soft weather. The\nArcher is laid up for.iepaii-s, and as\nsoon as she is mended they intend to\nbreak a passage with her.\nHon. C. H. Mackinto-.li came up\nfrom the south on Wednesday en\nroute \"for the old country to confer\nwith the home officers i.n he corporation relative to the furl her nperat inns\nof the company, lie was accompanied\nby Mr. Hector Mcl~*ie who has been\nintimately associated with him in his\ninvestments in the Hoss'.-tnil mining\ncamp.\nThe s. s. Kootenay is on the ways al\nNakusp, having run on a big ruck in\nthe river near Robson, which toi e a\nhole thirty feet long in her hull. All\nthe crew and passengers hail lo turn\nloose on lho puinps but thev finally\nmanaged to beach her anil then patched her up with canvas and blankets,\nand got her up to Nakusp. where she\nwas got up on Hie si.-tys vesteruay.\nThey expect to have, her running\nagain early next week.\nMARRIEDc\nAY land\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Aylwin\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIii New Denver,\n11. (!.. on the 7th inst.., at, the lesi-\ndi'lice nf the bride by Hev. F. A.\nFord, vicar of Revelstokr*. Geo. II.\nAylanil to Miss M. E. Aylwin. both\nof New Denver.\nSmith Eit inc. alk\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKiukwood\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn New\nDenver, IJ. C. on Weilnesdav. Feb.\n2nd. 1S03. lit the residence of the\nbride's liiother. R. 1. Kirk we mil, bv\nKev. Robt. Frew, of N\"l-i.n. I\". Ci,\n... 1~. SiiiitheiitiS-.tli* ro Miss K. D  A.\n~\"~K i rk wiToil7hTH Iruf-Ne' v-DeiT*.-\"?!*:\nDR.   R.  HATHISON\nDENTIST.\nWill be) fit his e)~)e*e! over ('fitieiitii IIoo*:\n\" Priijr Co.'.* \"tore, lle'v.'l.toke Station,\nfrom Feb. 23th to March 15th, '93.\nTO    WHOM    IT    MAY   CONCERN\nThe owners nf the Townsite* of\nBui ton City. li. ('.. hereby i^ive notice\nthat thev will not be icspnii'-ihlc finally liabilities ine-ui-i-eil oi- 1 mitf-icts\nentered into on lln-ir h'-hnlf hy A. M.\nBeattie, of V.-iiif oiivci-, II. ('., i\"vhe> h.i-.\nnow no interest whatever in tile said\nTownsite.\n\\\\\". R. UCUi.\nI!. S.  nI.\"I\"TON.\nFRANK II. UOrTHNF.\nOwneis eif till* Blll'tnll\nCity Towns-ite.\nDated .\"th Feb., lt-ftS. V2f ll.\nYou Can\nEntertain\nVour fi lends at any time with\nthe best the world pi-orluee-s-, if\nyou have .in l.Ml'liovp.i)\nNational f'l'A.Yforno.vrc. It\n\"talks l.ilk\" ns 110 oilier inu-\nc-hine ever lie^.m to do. :md its\nsongs nml insti uini'iital music\nare now genuine ii-pi oduc-\ntious. not for ;t iiioiiient |<, lit-\ncompared with iiulislintt and\nfeeble imitations hy !i.<.-i sne-\ncessful methods. |)e, ilf>l.\ntherefore, make the niistiike- ot'\nthinking yon have he.-n-il ;i\niikal t.-ilkiug mac hine t ill you\nhave heaid the liiipio've-el\nGramophone, with its new\nsound box, new iimtnr, ami\nnew record--.\nI have one or lwo on h.iriel\nand will put in to the lirst\npure-baser a complete mat bine-\nand 2li lecoicls. all good (their\niejrul.-ir price is (V) cents each\nin New York) for i$Tt).\nAdiliess or c all on\n11. p. PirrniMiccH.\nI.eveislnk*.'.\nTHE MEDICINE WOMAN\n[Wrltls'ii fur Hie-' II K!Iai.i> by I'lU'k Lewi*]\n\"Here's the ro.nl. Siifeaer has\nfound it. Turn sharp tu the ri_*ht,\nwhen you come up out of the slough\nand then keep ilose behind me. Its\nas black as the inside of a black cow\nin these eiu-seil pines, but the old fellow will inisi: tl.e trail out.\" It was a\nblack dark night and from where I sat\non Sneezer's broad back under the\npines 1 could see nothing, but my remarks into space were speedily followed by the humping and banging of the\npatrol wagon as it. splashed intn the\nslough and aidi'd by some vigorous\nAnglo-Saxon from lhe teamster\nemerged safely behind me. I w.is al\nthat 1 erioil a sergeant of N. ~,V.\nMounted police, a 1 nrps, which iu my\nlime did not used to throw nn more\nswagger than llie law entitled it and\nwas compatible with decent self-\nrespect, They do say. now I H.it its\nJubilee detachment rode behind General 'Bobs' at the head of the whole\nBritish army at. Aldershot. that it\ntakes an entire barrack septan; to ac-\nI'omnmiliile ono man. However iny\ntime was in the old days before lhe\nforce was ijiiiie such a gentleman's job\nas it has since got to be, and I was out.\nin charge of a patrol party in the wild\ncountry north of the Saskatchewan\nliver. Half breed and Indian runners\nwere, known to be going round among\nthe reserves and halfbi-eed settlements,\nand I was ordered to lind out all 1\ncould about their movements, which 1\nknew very well was likely to be\nprecious little. We bad been delayed\nat a place called I*.iidi*rhy on the government telegraph lino where an\noperator was stationed and where. 1\nhad waited till late in Hie morning to\nri'seive an answer to a telegram, which\nI sent tn headquarters. It was the\nmouth of October, the evenings weie\nbeginning to draw in, there was no\nmoon and night fall found us several\nmiles Ii-rnii our destination in the\nblack d.-irkuess of a long stretch of\npine woods.\nHowever we made the best time we\ncould. 1 kept ahead and let old\nSneezer smell out the trail as lie jogged\nalong, lie was as sure-footed as a\ngnat, ami bail 11.010 sense than a good\nmany men. Behind the patrol wagon\nc.-iii.e lumbering along, the pole swaying cruelly too and fro against llie\nhoises shoulders, as lhe wheels rose\nand sank in lhe ruts. \\\\ Iiich cnnsl.il 11'ed\nthe (rail, while creation itself seemed\nalmost to protest against the bang i.ml\nclaller with which our onward- progress, tilled the quiet solitudes of the\nwilderness. Behind the wagon the\ntwo mounted men of the patrol bumn-\neel aloi.g. anil I could feel them in\nevery hum* cueing me fm- not ramping at. I he hist creek.\nBut 1 wanted to get nu as I knew\nthat a welioine awa'ted me at the\nnext reserve, where a man, with whom\nI had been \"recruits\" some ten years\nhefnre, had got a job as farm in-\n-ti-iicrni-. Tom Knglish iu fact, was\nlhe Hrst of my hatch of reei iiils I had\nmet when 1 joined. We were nil\n01 tiered to rendi-j-vons at Sarnia and\nwe put in om-  fi:st  night   in the force\n1 together in a second  eia-s  carriage  oT\nI the Grand Trunk  full   e.f  German   im-\nI migrant.-.   .Tot;: was: a   g.twky vontll\nj in tho-e day.-.    His people hud   a   poli\n[tietlpiili  in  Piiin'c  Edward's  Nlunil.\n[ and so got   hi in   taken   1111   the   te.ice.\nlie was vei y i-i*ligious,   strong  on   the\nteiupiM-ani e cpiotinn and about an   unlikely a piece  of  raw   material   for   a\nII noper of the Queen as could p')--ibly\nli\" imagined. In a very mouth.-., however, he been.ic as gone) ;i, hand at\npoker c 1 a v. hi-key peiinit.e-.i-: niiyn.ie\ncoal.! wi-li to see, while his .-lock e.f\nEnglish ll'i'f-.'inu* greatly impimril in\nbreadth .iml fve'eleint But lie- w.i-,\noiilv a yiiung fool at, iie-ett in .spit\" of\nthis veneei' uf \\ve-te;n .le-reinipli-h-\nnients. and before hi- tenii of M-iiii\"\nwas up had *.ett,!eel hiiiiself for I lie\nle-ti'f his I'M-le-ncc by Hurrying a\nh.ilfbiei-il. without leave nt tint. Hi-\nci)iiiiiiandin_r officer hud no line for\nTom aftc r ih.il, and his c-oiuiii.uniii.-_r\nofficer\"*, wife had no use for Mrs. Te.ni,\nso after a fe-w months of expel ieiie-c e,f\nmnrri'.'d life without le.ive in thefon''.\nwith Hit* htisb.ind sleeping every night\niu bnriacks. except when he could get\na pass \"to visit friends- in the vicinity.\"\nTom decided to buy out, which In* .lid\nor lather the Prince' ivlw.iieVs I-land\ncontingent diel for him. fm'hei- pro'\ncoeding to utilize the family pull up\ngelling Tom a job on tho Indian Department, under *-ti ict conditions that\nbe stopped where he. was with his\nhall bleed wife, f did once; know a\nmini in the early days who mat-ii'-d a\nscpiaw, who was- a chief's daughter,\nand    whose;    p\"ople   clown    ea-t   were\nJ epiite pleased wit h   him    for  manyiiig\nI \"an Indian princi'ss\" and sent h'-r  out\n1 silk ill esses and  a   lot   of   oilier   useful\nI t lungs nl\" that kind in their enthusiasm\nbut Tom's people weie not  appaienlly\nof Hint, sen t.    So Tom   becan.c  a   I'.um\ninsli-iu (ni- nu the Ilea ver Lake lesei-v\".\nwithout   a    white   man   within   foil.y\nmiles  of  him, 11 semi-oc casicmal   mail,\nwbeii'*ve-r the Indian   agent  over  him\nor .1 police, patrol happened  along, and\nnothing   to   do   but  contend with bis\nvicious, cunning, childish   charges .-mil\nj if  I here is a more (.'oil forsaken job 011\nenrlh I don't know it.\nOld Sneezer wa.sjoggiiigaloiig.mil I\nwin, thinking iiver these thing- when a\nrise in the road took us clear of the\nof the trees and away up on a hill to\nthe right I caught sight of a flame,\nwhich looked like a camp Iiie. 1\nthought no more ol* it nt the lime,\nthough I did not know of any trail in\nthat, direction and a few mure miles of\nhumping and clattering along brought,\nus to lhe reserve. Tom came out to\nmeet us with an ell'usive welcome.\nThe further fiom civilization the nioie\nunbounded i.s hospitality. I have seen\nfellows, baching it on the plains spend\nthree or four huurs rooking lirst one\ndinner and then another, some of them\nfor men they had never seen before in\ntheir lives- But when an old moulded\npnlit ennui runs up against a man who\nbelonged to bis particular batch of\nreeiiiits, the sit nation demands extraordinary exertions. 1 don't know bow\nil, is. A man may have been no pai-\nliciilai- friend of your.-., bin. if he made\nthai lung month's trip iu the old days\nnp lhe. Missouri and aci-i'ss the plains\nI o Cypress t here is nl ways a suit spot\nin vour heart I'm- him.\nSo Tom diel himself proud and started his wife baking bannocks ami frying\nbeefsteaks while he .shewed us where\nto put our horses and helped the boys\npilch Iheir tent by llu; house. As for\nnie I was In sleep in his best bed or die\nin my tracks and so we all sat down to\na good sipiare in Tom's big log shack\nwith its single 1 nnm dnwust.-iiis, kil-\n1 hen. dining room and pallor cumin 1 led.\n(Te) be contiiuic.I.)\nAgent ror the  ;-licko:i__*c;ei'rer\nTypewriter\"\nr. B. VEbbS\nSuccessor to GILKER  & WELLS\nDealer in Hats, Caps. Boots,\nShoes, Gents' Furnishings, Stationery,\nPatent.yMedicines. Tobaccos and Cigars.\nToilet and  Fancy Articles, Fruits, Etc.\nPOST OFFICE STORE,\nREVELSTOKE,  B. C.\nFor Sale\nA Mm by \ufffd\ufffdir i v,i\\ '\\*i\"v<*iim..i- I-miiii. r .''--mir:\nm-i\", in fii'rf.'.-l nr IlT. To..J; Mr-i. \\tv\\\/.ts -it llu-\nChicuj;-)  I'A'iiusii iu) 1.     !*!\t\ni-n--h.   A}.pi\/ Ml!*.** ilr.u'iiM, ('nl.:\nl'.'j u\nWhat\n1 hey\nFine feed for Jiigs is barley chop,\nWheat,  slides'slick   lo   the   1 Hosier's\ncrop,\nMilk rich and sweet abundant (lows    ,\nFrom  the cow  lhat slinrls and bran\nwell knows.\nFor carl, horse strong and racer lleet,\nH.iy and oats well dried and sweet,\nWith a littlo bran or chop mixed in,\nMakes muscle hard and glossy skin.\nA nd domestic beasts of every kind\niu mixed chop a feast m.iy find :\nBut they will not w.-inl for any feed\n\".Vhi'.c   Pease'    supplies^   Iheir    every\nneed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNol  cracked, ov dried  or green, you\nknow\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBut Pease, onr Pease, of Pease & Co.\nW. B. Pease 6: Co.\nREVELSTOKR  DIVISION\nOf West Kootenay District.\nNotice\nXntit'i1 ii lu\ufffd\ufffdroby -rivi-ii tli m -i;-nliri-l'\ufffd\ufffd>n -\\ ill\n1-'.* liui'Iu id tlie \"r.iriiiimhjtil ni C.iii'i in, nl il~-\nmwt hUN\ufffd\ufffd-ioii, for tin A< t t > hiri-r.-iir.\".!-.- .i mui-\nimiiy to be known n- \"Vhu Iaw.i (\\innl iu:-!\nI'ultnn Ilniluiiy (.'(mipjiny,\" wilh power tu rnii-\n*-tnicl, uiiuip, operate and iiiiiintnin it railwny\noi\" f-ltindiinl or inn* otber jiivii-re irum ii |.oini n't\nor lien:1 the heml of l.ynn (^'nipil, ntirihuiird\ntiloiijj Diiltnii's Trail, or as near therein av prnc-\nlictiblu lo a point at nr near Kort SulkirK, in\nlhe Nurlhuest Territories, with vower tn <ou-\nneel with any railway in American territory,\nand to eonMniel, maintain and operate ln-unHi\nline-* and all netessnrv roiidwnys, bi'id^e^\nand ferries and to build, own nnd inatniuiu\nuluirvuhiind dotl;-. in connection therewith;\nto carry on in thu Province of MritMi Columbia and in the Xorlhwe*.t Territories the\nbusiness of carrier.-., Inrviarder-* nnd t ru importation agents nnd all other bnsinesh incident thereto or connected therewith, and also\nthe bnsiiio'-h of wliarlin^er*-, shipper-and vessel nwner.s; and may for all or any of the snid\npurposes, juueiinse.' bold, lease or otherwise\niici'uire timber, liimN, bniidiiiKk~, d.oclcs, works,\nboats, vijs.seK vehicles, jroods, ware.-, or mer-\n(diandis-- and other properly real .i:nl pergonal,\nmovable and immovable,' and improve, extend, n:ann;:e, devehip, 1im*\"u, niortpaife,\ne.\\(di:in^e, sell, di-~roso oi, nr turn to nccoiiui\nIhe Mime; and may cM*ih!ish hhops or stt-re-*\non lhe snid land**; and may puicinise nnd\nvend general jiii'vcliandi^e. clothing, pii>visions, stores ni null iii-cry nnd .supplies and\nmny deiil in miner.il products, on.\"-, mines and\npiecious met UN, :md genera! Iv mny do all sueh\nother thine.s as are incideiital or conducive to\nthe at lain ment of the nbo\\e objects; ;o build,\nacquire and operate ileum and other ves*eN;\nlo l:il;e and use v.nter for general:ng elect neity\nnud to transfer and dispose of the power therefrom for lijilitiujr. heating and motive purposes; with power 11I-.0 to curry un the busiuess\nof a jrcner.il tradinjr compnny tn* an.uNpres-\ncoinpauy ; al'-o to own, manage nnd least-\nhotels; *[o acquire limber limits nnd operate\n-aw mills for the production , and Mile of\nlumber, and to mine nud develop, mineral\nland\"; nud to curry ou a general mining and\nore smelting busine-*-* including the erection\nand operation of Mi-ijitei'-- nn(i conceulrTttor..;\nwith power to e:_.pi\\>print(i-lands for tbe purposes of the ''onipauy, nml lo acquire lands,\nbonuses, privilege*; and other aids from any\ngo\\erument, municipal corporation or or her\nnursons or bodies, and to levy and collect tolls\nfrom all parlies usin;_;and on all freight passing over any of such muds railway, ferries,\nwharves and' vessels, juul with 'power to make\ntrafiie or other -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt'rau.\/cmenls with railway,\nsteamboat or other < (~ni] aide.-, nnd 1 < r nil\nother 111n-es-.1i.ry i-r incidental rights, power.-\nand privilege^ in that behalf\nX. K. _f.AFI_.VMMK,\nSolieiior for appiictints.\nMojitrcal, :UHh December, 1S'.)7. Jfutti\nVTOTl'T; S !i\ufffd\ufffdt b- \ufffd\ufffd ,I'll, in n,t conlavo villi\n* ^ !>,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -rut .h - *' . I'rovuicia! Ki'\\-'nu*' Tn\\\na.vI all tax* - b'1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .'Are lh\" A'-c-^U'ent Arl\nuri nn* due forMi-- >r.Tlt-W. All '-f Hie nl^vc\nn\ufffd\ufffdr\/:e'i ['i\\\"s rob, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd vithin ll\ufffd\ufffd- fieve^iokc\ndi\\ i-:--:i >*f :*ji- V- - y< oiormy DistrJ\"t are pay-\nabb1' *-t i.,v t,\\V\\\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . -(dstokc, ft-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.-,. 1.11 \\a\\n-\nare volU-f t,'li'.'* ti\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ' .''dlovvlng ra*;ei\\i\/:\nH   paid on  r-r'k-I .-(-r>Jr.h Jtiii---, ]fc?s thrfc.}\n;'if:b-- tii ' : \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r cunt, on r'-nl proj urty,\nt.-oci-':   1.    ,\ufffd\ufffd'f :n'r rout, on a-s^iSMl\n\\Hiii\" <<]'   .   . t i.-in-'i.\nOn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-': 1'    A dth; tjpT ce\".it. on \\i r-.oii-\na: pr--;.' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nf<n -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . 1 of Jbe in' ot:.'; of nny ,\np-r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>!! .- >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-one 'hn-.i-rtnd d'dl \\r< \\\nme foilo' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- - -j-.t<-, nfi!-ii-I>, np^n f-ucd .\nt\\>'! s- '-*f *i~' r.., uhen iht* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\/,.-- u no* ;\nnwr- t).-*.. *';i tboi^.uid 'b.IIiir-^ uvf'i\np--r r\ufffd\ufffd-n:.; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ',. t *iieli c_xce-x j- t,\\i-r t*-ri 1\nUio\ufffd\ufffd\"*'tr:--i ! i.Iar-', Rnd not more tlian j\ntv.'-\ufffd\ufffd}!y i'.'.i .irid riollirs, on-'jiiiil o.m-.\nfjuarti-r >_>' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -- j>or cent.; wl.'-n -\"iic!- \\\n(\"ff \ufffd\ufffd- \\* 'r, r * iirtily thrwnii'l flolbir-, [\nrinrj nn 1 o:e  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ijf of .>n'- tiff r-ur !\nrf [.aid 071 or Mi - ist July, J*t\"\ufffd\ufffd, four-fi\/'h \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I\nof one (.''i\" (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -it. on r^al proin ciy, tiiri f '\ny.*T r-ciit. on \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffde-wd -ftlue of wild'.\nlands I\n\"liir\"\"* \\t, ,r; f|H of one  c..'   on   [' r- ;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-oni\"! pp.-,' r*\ufffd\ufffd- i\n(\"Mi  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-!  hrich  f)f  tTio  iiifonw- r\ufffd\ufffdf nny j\nT.'jr-on i' , r a -~f-ij\ufffd\ufffd- f.nc th'-u^nnd dtillar \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd !\n' t\nlh-* folio.- 1:\ufffd\ufffdvf rnti-\". mitrif Iv. upon -iwdi '\nevf ess, w Je n th\" -nni'' is iiftt i.i\"it than I\nten thcu---.i:id dnlbir*, one nnd one qnnr-\nt\ufffd\ufffdT-# of oil\" pi. r ciit.; when Mich I'Xii^*.\nis in it (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ti thoiiwfiiid dolbirs rnd nn|\nmore thn 11 twenty tliou-'innl dollar>>.\non\" nnd one-ii\ufffd\ufffdi If of n~~c per cent.; when\nMuch \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*:(-'-\ufffd\ufffd. i*- o\\\ufffd\ufffd*r twenty thnn-and\ndollar-, one imkI three-quarter, of onc\n]'fr ' ent\n1-ro\\iiifinl Ib-vemie tnx \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?--{ (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd for e\\ery male\nperson nwr ihe ncc of IS years.\nJOHN I\ufffd\ufffd. SIIlHAId).\nA*\"~-*'s-,(ir and Collector.\nJ.u-,e!sloke, Jainj-iry:.!, I-?.'*.\nNotice\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Xoticc i\ufffd\ufffd hereby liiven that applioallon will\nbe ma<!e to the 'I'nvliament of Canada, al ils\nnext .session, to incorporate,.\", company to he\nknnw\/11 i\\s (ho Mrit-sh Columbiti and Northern\nItailway Company, to Min .true t a railway to he\no;>e 1* a ted )>y steuiii, ele\"tr:ciiy or other motive\npower, froni or on a pot 11 roi the Canadian I'ncilic\nKail way Com pauy c.e ir the ! iv, n 01 Aslu'roft to\nrun in a nurihwesit rly c'lirectuiu jilon.; the\nvalley of t'ce i-ra-'T, bv* r.n*r iitu.trt ba'.e, io\nthe head v.,i:c:*-i of tho ^tiv'kme i'iver. and\nt'neiiee, n.-rthori;.. di\ufffd\ufffd-\\n the valb-y 01 tiie\nLew is l-'iv er to I'oit f-el'-cir!:; w i'h -nil power to\niliveit ihe \ufffd\ufffdbo\\e _\\-n.d iii may be loumi most\nsuitable nn future uNpli-r'.tior.\" and siirvev 01\neagiueerj, a:ul with jower to coii-truct,\nneq.iir*1, operate nn I ni'U-iM.u br inch liiieo\nund nil ne'es-ary britl^e-., i-uK'ert-.. r.uulwnjs,\nferrie'-, docl..-, t osil bunker.-, and w at or tanks in\nconnection theiev.Hu to carry on in the l':*n-\nvinte of i\ufffd\ufffdrin-h c-duml-in n~:d iu the Nortli-\nwe-r Ter.-ilorie- the busine-.: ,of carrier:,\nforwarder.* and tran.sportation agent- and ail\nother bnsin-j.s- incident thereto 01* connected\ntherewith, and a No tlie business uf wluii-f-\niu,rer.s shippers und -.c-^cl owners; and may\nlur ail or any 01 ihe t-nid pi*;'po-e>-, purchas^,\nhold, lea-e e.r othenvi-e acquire Limber, hinds.\nbuildings, docI-__3. w(\ufffd\ufffdr!-s, boats. vc:;-els, veil i tde.-, goods, '.i mvs or men baud i-e and oilier\nproperty rci-i and lersonal, niti\\abiu and immovable ; and _ii\".inr.)\\e, extend, niauag*!..,\ni!0Tulirp~I^^<^7~^u\"riv''a7e7l^^^lntnge~\npo-e of, or turn In ii'rsniiit thc-ame; and may\nestablish shop* or -tore- on the s,i_-d binds; and\nmay puroh-i-o and icnd geuei.-'l merchandise,\ncdotiiiug, prnviMons. : i.ires, machinery and\nsiipplieti, and may deal in mineral product\",\nores, mines and precious metal \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, and generally\nmay do all m.. Ii oilier things a- are incidental\nor-condiici',0 to the miaimnent of the ;(h-i\\-_-\nobjects; to build, acquire and (-pernio steam\nand other ve.sel-; to tc'co and u-e water tor\ngenerating idt-'tri'dty nud to iran'-for aud di.---\npose of the power therefrom for lightin.\". homing and umtiu1 purpn-c*.; with power.iKo t'<\ncarry on tin' b\"i'ni' s nt a \/enor-t! tru ilu^r tnni-\n[.any or nn coiil-'I (.wiipany; ::l*.i to own,\nmanage an 1 le t-\ufffd\ufffd x.ot-d ; to ucqMir'1 tiin'oe.*\nlimit- aud (q.ciaie -a*v mill, for the production\nand s-iio of lumber. ,i'id to mine and d-*-v!op\niiiEnern! bind\"; and t<-; ar.'y on n i~c:i*,r..I iimu-\nuig nud nre smelling biiMtie--, intdiiding the\ni-:e\ufffd\ufffdiiuu i.ud (ij i-i\\.ii -a id ,^.i.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!!,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:'.. a.id <.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nt entr.ii'jr-*.\nMcCtOt;;; ,v kx;{:..\\xij,\nAlti i\".K vs,\nr.ritMi ('(duribia iind Xorihei'ii ll. 11. ro,\njTifontreal. :*Jitli Dei ci.itie\/, l^r,7. l!fv.*\ufffd\ufffdit\nKo::ca\n,V(\ufffd\ufffdticc i*-- hiTidiy fiven that application will\n),-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd made \ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd tin-' I'nriiaineiu of Cnundn, nl itff\"\nnrvi '-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdssitiri. to incorporat\" n coinpnnv 10 be\nkriov. 11 n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I he Xor;h\"r:i .V Vukon Itailwnv\nCompiiiij,\" tn b> operated b- steam, oleein, ity\nor (di.'T nu-'i'-- pi;v i r, from IMmonton iu a\nnorth v. e-l' rly diri'i'tiiin by the Pence Itiver\ndown thrnu'.'h T<- tin laikf\/aud tn build s*(1ir^\n!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._ the ln-nd wii'er- 01 th'1 Mael;en\/ie Itiver.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.~i[!( pi.ver in diwrl the above road i;s mav b\"\nf-Mindjiiif-**! sintnolc on further exploration\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmd -Mr1 fi*, 11:11! v Jth powi'i* to con1-: met. oj-or-\nut>: a\ufffd\ufffd\"l niiiinti'i'i brjiiich lines nnd all iiect--\n-nrv b.-idg' *-. r > t'l-.'.n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=, ferries, d,.c_<s nnd cold\nu.j.r.''--_t in c-inii''(*i:fi:i (hnrew ith, railwa-*\n-:- ti-.ni', ->.> tec. tf,,i'--~. fie.; ni-o*tu constrin'i\nmid up- rill- r*-7\"g:aph nnd t'dephone line- for\nth'* l:dii-ii;!-\"'.,ii (tf jne-sitgos for lhe public; to\nenrrj on m Mi\" Ivovin'i* '\ufffd\ufffdf Isriti-h (.(ilinili:n\niind\/m tbi* s'nrth'v'-t Ti'rriiorle-- the busine--*\n>>: ' urn r for.* nrdt-r-. and ir\/insportion iigums\nfii'l '-.ll oib t b'.^lr.e \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> intddent thcrctii or cou-\n.!''(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd d theii'W ith, nnd h1-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the bosjnes*- of\nv* iinr.\" ii^i-r-, sbipjiers and \\i-^-<d owpit*-; and\njii.i\/frr k.-or i>u> of (he ^ai'l pu\/po-.e*'. pur-\nf-iiu '* bold. Ii-ii\"* or nth\ufffd\ufffd*rv i\"-\ufffd\ufffd- tu'ffiijrc timber,\nhinds bniM;ii\"-:, \ufffd\ufffdIoeI*s, ..,01 k*-, 1\/iniH, m --.\"Is,\n-,. ht''I<-- go \/d-, uiir-' ur inert handise and nthi-r\npro), -r(,-_ r,.:ij Hti.i juT-ounl, fiiovtib!-' and im-\nHif\ufffd\ufffd\\i~.iilc, and irnpro\".-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, rMcud, munnirc. de-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. doj., Pm 1-, luort\/n-;\", evcluiin'\", -welh di-|\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd-''\nof. or ^'irn :o .ittonnt th\ufffd\ufffd- smnc; nnd mnv\n\" -i-iblMi -hop-* oj* '-tor\"1- on the ^ni>1 Iniidf*; anti\n.'inl'. port .hi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd aiel *. \"iri ('eii'T'd m*'r( li\ufffd\ufffditdi-e.\nclolbin \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, pro\\ iuiiiii*-. Mure*., mm-hiii\";*;. and\n- ippb\"-. nnd m-i. deal iu iiiiii'Tm) i\ufffd\ufffdro'dnf I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\nores. i:r.oi. nod pr.'cio-Js ilti ijil**. mei ki-ihthIIv\ni.ir.*, do .ill \ufffd\ufffdu' h iitle-r thitiL\"- uJ are iii'dd-'innl\nor 'on hi\"tki i'i th\" fittnint'iCi'it of the above\noliji-t 1 ; 1 , build, in qiriv and -oi'Taie ^teani\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdind orh-T-,'*--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd N; to tni-e and n-**- wale.' for\nn<-n'r'si.urf \ufffd\ufffdIi-ctri(It> and b> rianJf\"r and di--\npns. of rb\ufffd\ufffd power thi-refroei for iJLditliiL' lnnt-\nnig nnd pioiiv,- purpose*, v i!h putver uN.i ft\ncurrv on th\" Ine-ii-i'-'s t,i a g*\"iicr.:! trading\ncin.pii.iv nr an \ufffd\ufffd\\<pre\ufffd\ufffds cointpaTiv : n!-o to ow n,\nitirtiiiigc nud I**i~\ufffd\ufffd.(- hf-Ji*l-' to ai'ijMire timl~er\nlimit- and opera te --*.<.- ruilN for the prod tu tion\nand -.nie of lumber, and m min*.- and develop\nmineral binds ; mid tu carry ou a gcn-urnl mining and ore snmltlmr bi.-ifiLs-. including the\nerwliori un.ii operation nf -iiieltur** and <on-\nccnlralor-'. ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nKIIMI NI> <~n:r'TV. '\nAtlorney for die North- rn aiel Vukon Ttv. Co.\nMoiitre-Tl. ::uth Peceml-'^i. js'.it. JfwPt\np\\ AVING a fow left, and not wishing to\ni^V carry Ihem ovor uniil noxt season, I will\ndispose oi\" them at very reasonable figures,\nSkatos at 75c, nickel-platrd at $1.25, best\nskates at S2.50, best nickel-plated at 33.50, a\nlew nickel-plated hockey at $3. Gall and ece\nif 1 hr-ve your size.\nSPECIAL  NOTICE\nTlcforc K(>lliii\ufffd\ufffd yinii' ituiv l*\"ur.s. call on mu and j_;et niy\nqiiiitaliun.s.    Il will pay you lo do so.\nW. M. LAWRENCE, SarS.-SI,.'\"\"\"\"\"\"-\"\ni&V.\nTIN   SHOP.\nih:. *w\\ \"sroTj^^A.3srs7 riPsoiE'ia-i^To-R..\nNotice\nNotice is heroby i*iveii lluil nppliealion will\nbe made lo the Pnrliamoni of Canada, at its\nnext session, {<-> ini'urporale a company to lie\nknown as \"The Stickine and 'Teslin\nbnke ilaihvny Couipnny\" to cnuslruel a\nrailway to - be opera led by steam,\nelectricity ov ol her motive, power fruin\ni'or I '-Yt-nii^cH. following the Plickino Kiver\nnorth to Telegraph Creek; from (hence to Furl\nS'dkirk by w ay of Teslin Lake, with power to\ndivert llie above road ns may bo found mnst\nsuitable ou injure exploration ; and with\npower to construct, neon ire, u porn to and maintain branch line-', and nil necessary bridges,\nroadways feme*, dorks and < oal buukeis in\neon nee tion thcrew it h and railw ay station:!\nand waler ran!-.*.; also lo construct and operate\nlele-iraph and telephone lines ior the trans-\nmis-don oi iue-isnj;es for (be public; to build,\nacquire and operate steam and other vessels;\nto tnl:o and use water for generating elec-\n1 riuiLy and to irails*or and dispose oT tbo\npower therefruiu for lightlni-, heating inul mo-'\nu\\e purj i*s-.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-, with power also to carry on the\nhiisinc-sof a irenernl trnditnz -nmpany or an\nexpress company; al-o to own, mamige and\nleas\" hotels; iti acquire limber limits nnd\nopera le saw mills for tho pindurtlon and sale\not lumber, nnd to mine and develop mimml\nl.'Mid--.; and to carry on a general mining nud\noie smelt'Ug bn-inoss, including Iho erection\nnnd ope ral inn of smelter.s nud conceit itntors.\nW. K. KITClIiK,\nAtlornev for applicants.\nMontreal, \"(Ith December, lh'.'\/.\nNotice\nNot he is hereby j*ivon I hat uj'plicntion will\nbe made to the I'nvliament nf Canada, at its\niie.M se-siin>, (o incorporate a iouip:iny lo be\nknown a- the \"Yukon nnd I'm iiie I'. nil way\nCompany,\" to con-trnet a rnilwav to be operate-1 bv\" steam, clot trieitj or other motive\npower from -Skiuwny ov Dyea to bake Dennett,\naiul lrom thence bv wiMeraud oilier means to\nCurl Selkirk nnd further tu Dawsuu Cily, and\nfrom Korl Selkirk to a point ntornn the (iruat\nslave l.nke, with power^ in divert the above\nro.id in may be loiind nio'-t suitable on future\nc.xplora-ion: and vriih po.ver to couslrnct. ac-\nrjtiire, operate nnd lualntaiiijjr.uich line.-, and\nall necessary bridge-, ronttwnys. terries, do\"l;s\nnnd conl bunkers in connection therewith;\nalso to construct und operate telegraph and\ntelephone lines for the tran iiais-don of mes-\nmico.s for llie imbUe; to build, acquire, len.-*e\nand operate sto'iin nnd other vessel.-, to mko\nand use water for generaling1 electricity, and\nto transfer and dispose of lho power therefrom\nfor lighting, heating and motive juirpose-n;\nwith power also to carry on tho business of n\ngeneral iridiiuj company or an e\\]>res.s company; nl.-o to own. manage and lea-e hotels;\nlo acquire timber limits and operate s*rw mill*\nfnr the productinu and sale of lumber, uud tn\nown and mine anrl develop mineral lands; and\n-In carry or, n gt-uiural-miniug-nnd-oro-Mnoltinri-\nbusjne-s, ineinding the erection and operation\norsnielters and coueentrnlor.s.\n0 KOFI-' id OX, HOIII0X A: AI.1_.AX.\nr.funtreal, .\"Oth Dei ember, 1-M.7. 2fwl\ufffd\ufffdt\nIf yon   w-iiit. (Miiployincnt, or .\nlooking fur.-i honsi* to rc\ufffd\ufffdnt\nwlRdi you roach V.-incouvei-\n;ipply to lhe\nVancouver Employment and\nHouse Renting: Agency.\n:#I ll.-isliiigs St., Wost.\nHarry Edwards,\nTaxidermist\nThird   Sti-eet,  just   east   of   the\n.    School House.\nDeer Iluuels, Ulrils inul Aiiiinnls, elc, prcserveil\nnml ununited, JIn'l Orelers promptly\nntlcii'lL'il lo. 8ellm\nJ. Harris & Co,,\nCalgary, Alta.\nWIIOI.HS.M.K   DlCAl.HIIS  IN\"\nOATS,   HAY\nand Chopped Feed.\nCnrlnmlri i-liipiieel on shnrl n'liticc*.\nCoi-respoiiilein'e soliclte:!. lij\ufffd\ufffdtf\nNOTICE.\nrCoti.-o is hereby given that application\nv.-ill be nnule to tho Legislative Assembly uf\nthe p'Mvincu of Unti-h Otlunihia, at its next\nses-sinn, fur au act to incorporate a com- any\nwith power In construct, equip, operate by any\nkind or kinds uf motive power, and maintain\nell her a standard or narrow gauge i ail way for\ndie purp-iso of conve;. ing passelitrer.-. \"and\nfreight, including all kinds of inen-hnndi.-.e,\nfrom a point at or near J!nz\ufffd\ufffddti\ufffd\ufffdn on the Skeena\nrivi'i\", <*t--iMr dtstilei, hr.li-h Columbia, bv\ntiie most direct nnd feasible route lo n, point on\nthe Omineca river, Cassiar di-triet, Dritish\n('(duinbia, iind from there tn n point on the\ni'Cticv river, vvith power to construct, equip,\noper.'te and m.iiniain branch line.; and ull\nnet es-sary roads, bridgi'i, ways, ferri-1-'.\nw harws, docks nnd e.-ril bunker-; and with\npov er tu build, ow u. equip, operate and main*\ni tii in steam and other \\i;m.'!i and botits~and\nwith power to build equip, opertato aud maintain telegraph ninl telephone lines in (onnec-\ntlou vvith snid railway and branches, and tn\ncarry on n general express hu-dnoss, and to\nbuild an.! operate all hinds of plain fur tbe\npurpose of supidvnig light, heat, electricity, or\nany kind of nintfvo power; and with power lo\ncxjirupriatc binds for the purposes of the emu-\npnny, and lo acquire binds, bnnii-es pri\\ ileges,\nor other aids from any guv eminent, municipality or other por.sons or bodies corporate; and\nto* make lr.\ufffd\ufffd!iic or other arrangements with\nrailway, steamboat, or other (onipanies; and\nwith pow er tn build v. aggnn rpad.s to bo used,\niu the con-tructinu of sueh railway and In advance nf the same, and to levy and'cnllect tolls\nfrom nil parries using nnd nn all freight pas,.\ning over any of sii< Ii road-* built by the\n(lunpany, wl'icther built beforo or after the\nconst ruction of the railway; and with all\nother usual, necessnry, or 'incidental rights,\npower-, or privileges as may be necessary or\nmcidonlnl or conducive ru the attainment of\nth\ufffd\ufffd- above objects nr nnv of them.\nDated nl the city of Victoria the (ftl. day of\nJanuai v, A. 1>, Ib'.M.\nDODWKLT. A:  DC1T,\nlijvvtit Foliciinrs foi the Applicant*-'.\nCERTIFICATE OF iMPROVEMEMTS\nCnrpKi: !*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.'.( tio.n ?riNEi:AL Cl.\\i.v.\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-itnate in th'.' Il!eeille.vaet Mining Division\nWot Kn--[c;uiy Di-tnct. Where located:\nDeing a imrtherlv (\"-Tension upon fin- >il-\not  I!\"\\v ir.ineriil t-ihiiu, near<*opper I'cak.\nA Shave\nA Haircut\nA Bith\nSmoking; Tobacco\nChewing \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Tobacco.\n\"\"\"' \"Choic~est_Cigafs\nBig- Assortment :.\nConfectionery. Fruits, Etc.\nJ\".   A.   ^rOILC3-A__.3_<r\nTonsorial An ist,\n-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"host Stiiekt, Keveutokk.\n^ave Your Eyes\nAiniiu will tent them for you.\njMI slj^lit.s i-iilteil Iiy new process.\ntilti-M*. for every elegrce of .sliort-\nM'cliteiliies-s nt moilcrnte prtres.\nLook in unit try tliem. j*k Inrgo\niis.seirimeiit of ,Mtiokeel ftiul col-\nore'el ulnsse^.\nChas. J. Aman.\nOl'l*0*)ITE Tl.'K .'TAIION.\nTji'.i. ueiiie-e Umii I, Wiilter Se-olt. lie-tin^' u~\nii'r.'iil fi.r llie- KisJi l'.i\\er Ceipper nnil J-il\\e-r\n.**iiitiri\ufffd\ufffd_r (\"ei.. I.t'I.. Kre-.- Mine'i-'s **i.-rtiim-m?*- Ne..\n'I,KM. iii).'n'l. -ixlr 'Iiiv- from the ilu:e lu-reeif,\nto iipply to thi' Mininjr Il.-e-eir-ler for 11 e-er-\nlifie me \"nf iinj.ren.'inellts. for the i'lirjios,.. ol\ne>lite*.iniiiix ii ' ro-.\\ n urieiit of llie' aUi\\e e-l...irei.\nAnel fnrilie--r tH-ce neitie-.* that   \ufffd\ufffde-tinn. uneler\nse'e-tie.ll   'Xi.    11111*1   le*'   e-einillje-ne-e-Ml   lje*feire   tile\ni.-imni'.- of Mie--*. e-e-rtiiie tite eif iini.r..\\uin..-nt-.\nD.-.te'I thi* Ilth tinv of Ji'.'.lUf-r'.. I.-W-.      2_=j;\ufffd\ufffdtiv\nBALL PSOGSiSlfflES *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd!:B.'SS!','.1 JOB PRiiiTINO AT THE HERALD\nJAS.McMILLAMCO.\nINCOKPOMATCO.\nEXPORTERS AND IHtPOBTEflS.\n200-212 First Ave. North.\nMINNEAPOLIS,    MINN.\nBranch: 55 whw\" st, VICTORIA, B, C.\nJ. A. BROWHE.Manmeii.\n(^-Shipments Solicited. Write for CIrcular.~~~~~|","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Revelstoke (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Revelstoke_Herald_1898-02-12","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0186910","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"50.9988889","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.1972222","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Print Run: 1897-1905<br><br>Frequency: Semi-weekly","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Revelstoke, B.C. : A. Johnson","@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"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1898-02-12 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1898-02-12 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Revelstoke Herald","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0186910"}