{"@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","Description":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","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":"4eb56663-f83e-46ab-930c-f9e4b29f625c","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers Collection","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2012-12-20","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1899-04-28","@language":"en"}],"Description":[{"@value":"The Tribune was published in Nelson, in the Central Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, and ran from November 1892 to November 1905. The Tribune was published and edited by John Houston, an outspoken journalist who would later embark on a successful political career, which included four terms as the mayor of Nelson and two terms in the provincial legislature. Houston had established the Miner in Nelson in 1890, and, after leaving the Miner in the summer of 1892, he established the Tribune to compete with his former paper. In August 1901, the title of the paper was changed to the Nelson Tribune.","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xtribune\/items\/1.0188589\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" $mi.\nBOSTOCK'S   FREE   PASS   BILL\nWAS   KNOCKED   OUT.\nSpecial to Tlio Tribune.\nOttawa, April 27.\u2014In the house today\nBostock's bill to compel railways to issue\npasses to members of tlie seuate and\ncommons came up for its second reading,\nbut was killed. Mr. Bostock spoke briefly\nin \"justification of the bill. He said His\npurpose was to dispel the idea that is so\nprevalent that raihvay companies issue\npasses to legislators iu order to get something in return. Railway men had told\nhim passes -were issued simply as continuing an old practice and Avithout any\nintention ot influencing anyone. As rail-\nAvay companies issued passes anyhow, tlie\nbill would inflict no hardship upon them,\nand in order that members ol' parliament\nmight legislate intelligently, it was desirable they .should have opportunities to\ntravel extensively.\nSir Charles Tupper  Avannly attacked\nthe bill, and asked Avhether Mr. Bostock's\npurpose Avas to  make Canada an object\nof contempt and  the laughing stock of\nthe world.    If there Avas any. excuse for\nthe bill it Avould be different, but the -railways'of Canada -were in the habit of extending   the   courtesy   of passes  to  all\nlegislators, Avithout regard to party, and\nno   one   considered   the   acceptance   of\npasses   in  any Avay   influenced   the recipients.    The raihvays-in issuing  passes\nAvere  consulting  their  oavu interests in\ngiving members of parliament an  opportunity to see the country and   its   progress and the  good work  the  railways\nthemselves Avere  carrying  on.    Proceeding, sir Charles said the  bill was an infringement on   private  rights,  and the\nfarce might as-Avoll be completed by providing  for free tickets for'dining cars.\nHe said the house had the power, but not\n,,the  right, to  use  the 'property-;of   any\ncorporation, or convert it to  their  own\nuse.\u25a0'\"-. '': V \/ .-V\nSir Wilfrid Laurier said  he could not\nagree\"'with the principle of the bill.    The\njn'oposition Avasone of such a far-reaching   character   that   tlie   house   should\npause before enacting it.    The property\nof a raihvay AAras its oavu.   If it preferred\nto, giAre passes  it Avas all right;  but to\ncoinijcl it to do so was... a -.different question.    The English  practice Avas  to pay\ntlie   most absolute   respect:vto'.',private\nrights. ' Sir  Wilfrid agreed  that passes\ndid not influence members of i>aiiiameiit,\nbut    he   said   ^public    confidence   was\ntouched with respect to the use of passes\nwhen inil cage f\\vas ^accepted.    He admitted ^heirniightbe grounds forVcohsider-^\ning thei qtrestiori6f,Vconipellin^\n(of passes byrail ways subsidized|by Do-%\n\u25a0minion paTVliaineii^vMit^that^^ies^ioif\n^wbiddSliaS-cVtp^\n\"'tioh^vith\/uileageV ^\n\" *dicl!npt make oiiy.-^rpYiiioiOn .ftfe\/liilec\/\nitiohythe pieuiieivsnggestectdttCsho\n^dropped ;for the^present.*\n*%>\u201e.\n\u2022irt,\n%\nPUBLISHED AT NBLt\n'.)\u25a0\nFRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 28,  1899.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nDAILY (BY MAIL) $5 A YEAR;  WEEKLY, $2.\nA WORKING BOND OBTAINED ON\nTOAD   MOUNTAIN   CLAIMS.\nj^ddiiio:^\n'^^Siftgii^\n*\u00ab*tlie,re:~was Isdine ^dublciajb' iMifc-bpuifd'ary-r\ni^Myy y.y..\n'SineTnear.'Skag^\nBW~\"\"*~*aiito^ttheJ^I\u00bbnkoii\"': through-la\\*3niis-q\nE. Nelson Fell, mine manager at the\nAthabasca, and representative in Kootenay of the British Columbia & New Find\nGoldfields Corporation, Limited, was at\ntlie Phair last oA'cning. In discussing the\ndeal wliich the latter company hits made\nupon,tlie Dandy, Starlight, Great Eastern\nand-other claims on Toad mountain, Mr.\nFell explained that the-British Columbia\n<fc New Kind Corporation had not purchased the'properties in question,but had\ntaken a six 'months' --Avorking bond upon\nthem.\nThe deal avms negotiated by A. E. liand\nwhile he Avas in England recently. It\nincludes eighteen claimsin all, which form\npractically a solid block of mineral claims,\nextending from the Silver King mine Avell\ndown forwards the saAvmill betAAreen the\nHall Mines traimvay and tlie creek. As to\nthe conditions of the bond Mr. Fell declined to speak, saAre that they required,\nthe corporation to expend a certain\namount of money in the deArelopment of\nthe claims during the life of the-bond.\nThe corporation has the right to do the\nAvork upon any of the claims in the group,\nbut as the Dandy has had the greater\namount of Avork done upon it, it'will probably receive the bulk of the expenditure. Mr. Fell Avill have charge of the\ndevelopment, and he proposes within\nthirty days to put a force of from fifteen\nto twenty-five men at Avorkin the Dandy\nmine and test the property as they can\nwithin the period covered by the bond.\nThe Dandy, he says, is in such shape that\npractical, mining hiay be commenced almost immediately. The ore is also de-\nsi red.at the Hall Mines smelter and he\nhas already made AreryfaArorable arrangements for the delivery of all ore\ntaken out during development, the Hall\nMines taking delivery of the same at the\nDaudy dump;-?\ny:] As to the^ cprppratipn's;iuteuti6ns Avith^\nVespe^t\/tqv^\n\u2022.the. deid, ^\nfso\" little, \u00bbwqrk^\u00b0d\n>iiothi*ug^cquld^^^leeided|*\u00abl^^tiilr^lie\n!|.no*w%qes'qf|:T;.tlio gmun^^&:>:V^^-;tr^\n^Speakii^\n:\u00bbFiiid;Gn\\\"dfiel ds\" CrtY'iVnrn.tinir\"- >T ,i iiiihvlStMi>'.'\nFiiWfjoldfieids^\nNEWS OF THE TOWNS AND MINING DISTRICTS IN SOUTHERN KOOTENAY.\nFROM   SPECIAL   CORRESPONDENTS   OF   THE   TRIBUNE.\n*ys\u00a3dpped.\"'at'ithe boimdar^uihd^notallcjwcd\"\n^olprbfe\"^\n?\u2122smnV\u00bb^^^^\ni&Satfer^fe^iuMijbly ^'dttlecl'.vow^fcf-^C'V\"\nyyfplThe: minister ojy marine' statecl,;iUi,reply\u201e\n'^|Mi^^I^^^the:%3ta1 ^osfx||3tii^'\n; 'l;!Be'h^ihgV^^^^^\n\" \"\u25a0\"\" l*7^'<sJi?,M:^i^tetoWas*pj^\nabei:s. or .tlie - cabin et^os, tra*\\reling.:ex4\/\n'iiiemlj\naiidfieys^pr \"the*^\"thabas^\n:yiptua*lly\u201e tlie*. preseut^cpmpanyL *that. n\u00a7\\\\\njTopTeru*Biug!^\n5A:thIi;ba^\"ca*ednipanfeAl:1;hiu^\n?|njvn pf jthe ;b\u201eo^^^^^\n?lirqs|ii:t]cqm*bfui^\n;:cj:faU-mi|*4|>ife:?A>^\nVALIi\nCANADIAN\n:NEWS:\nSpocial.toVTlip TriburicI'\npfpih.ment^figutfe'Sih\n^\u201e;>**\u00a3th.:bJhe^^^ tb\n^f%iyil\u00b0\"seiJvaiits iii acTdit(5u ,-fcq Iheir salaries\n^Cf^tli-iirVbVl^ou-ai'b^\n.;foraegaLleeS,=\n^Mr\/Mbitk-nfdvedtlteseeq^id readhig of\n-InFijT\nhisbill-tP'fuheiid \"ihe\"  Glvil Sdrvitie Act.\n\u201e*f|?lif$ ;bpl^>*irp,y,icfc&tl-iat,all.-disjiiigsed  cjyil\nHJeivvalitfef s*aall1p6-fMi*iii'^.ieil\u00b0 jvifcli ,a cerMfi-\n\u00b0 xtoo^scittjnfeVfo-tth'thecavise of theiv (lis-\nhlissaf, \"coinplaiixts yiade  against Jheln,\n- Vwlioinade JlrdinjihyeBtigatioii ljiadcand\n\u2022procftjodjugsof samp. -   \u2122\" \u201e - \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   -\nSii! Wilfrid \"ttiuu'ifei' sai(l tliat if Mr.\nMalik's .bill xy&rp accejjfced oiir wJiote sys-\nteiir of fespoiisiblcj governnieht Afouhl be*-\ncbiiiq iijbsdhitely ITil. He ttgi'eed tliat\ncivil feei.'V!ii;n:ts should have as ))iany rights\n:,amvan ordiinU'y cjitizen, but no more. He\naskeil Avliy a ^OA-eruiiient sli,oukl be subjected to eonditioiis with respect to eiu-\npldyes that no one AVOuld dare impose oii\nprivate citizens.\n^Sir Cliai'les Tupper attacked the premier's attitude fiercely, and approved- of\ntlie bill.\nPremier Laurier's motion for\" a six\nmonths' hoist was carried by a Arote of 64\nto 39\u2014a goA'erhment majority qf 25.\nMessrs. McCarthy^ Stubbs and liod^gers\nvoted with the. opposition.\nThe house adjourned at 9.55 p. m.\nAntiquated Steamer Replaced a Modern One.\nSpecial to The Tribune.\nVictouia, Apl-il 27,\u2014Travel to Kootenay, Ada Seattle and Tacoma, remains\nparalyzed for want of a steamer to replace the City of Kingston. No pretense\nof a regular service is made by the\nGeorge E. Starr, though that antiquated\ncraft makes as many trips as possible.\nIan Maclaren had to cancel a lecture here\ntonight, for Avhicli a large house had\nbeen sold, because he could not get\nacross from Seattle.\nG: \u00abR(4 Col 1 i*\\veT,l'slia^ bfeeni'hqiuiuat'eA^by.\n\u25a0(qpj\\s|r>a1bi*Men*ifr\" 'ybpy cd,ii\"fcest. \u2022(\" .<Squjbjf.'\n^raiidpli:: '\"\"'\u00ab \u00b0^\u00b0 n\"v* \/ .. v *\"\"-- -f \".\" \"! .\n^MiK^inie-L^\nAA'as dugagtid1 in , putting- in ;a speejei^\nwhen a. skpiji Avliicli .^hphelds \u201eph\u00bbheivaritt\ncaught\" Aiid \"drew l\/qrilitq* iha^ciiinerif\/.\nShp Wi'll die .front th'e eff'ects qfiihe in-\njuriQS rec(jiAred,\njVlayor Stephen, qf Halifax. AVas defeat-\n?ed for re-election \"by JtinlesT. ITamiltqii,\navIio had a iiiajdritjr^'f ,702;     .   .\n\u25a0jjlie; i-eeorder of i>ipntf'ea.l, Div Mpinoivr\niigii*y hits signified \"his liitputipn di resigning\"in May the position- he1 has lield\nfpr iniihy years. \"  *   \u00b0     \" .   . .\nTlie Toroistp World, adinm^ntjng oix\nthe rise in Canadian ]?ttcinc shares, say.s:\nThe idea is tliat European capitalists are\nimpressed Avith the extent and eertluiljby\nof the railway's monopoly and are tumbling over one anqthei* to increase theif\nlioldings of gtoek.\nDr. Lacknor, Conservative,:' Avas nominated yesterday at Berlin, Ontario, as\na candidate for tlie approaching bye-election in West Waterloo.\nA. 0. Eichards, Q: C, of Winnipeg, has\nbeen appointed judge of the Manitoba\ncourt of queen's bdnch.\nBought a Charter for Half a Million.\nSpecial to Tlie Tribunn.\nOTTaWA, April 27.\u2014Shauglrnessy and\nAngus, representing the Canadian Pacific;\nhave purchased the Nortlrwest Central\ncharter from Delap for $550,000, Delap\nto settle all outstanding claims. An &p-\nplication booked, by the C. C. R. will be\npressed this session for an extension of\ntime in AArhich to build the line or any\nportion of it.\nStill Fighting Over Deadman's Island,\nSpecial to tlio Tribune.\nVancouver, April27,\u2014Citizens opposed\nto the grant of Deadman's Island for\nsaAvmill purposes have broken out in a\nneAV spot and intend to send a deputation\nYflUR, April 27.\u2014liain fell steadily all\nlast night accompanied by suoav, but the\nlatter Avill only tend to soften  the suoav\nnow   lying in   the  hills.    The   ball   last\nnight under the auspices of the Foresters\nand'those Freemasons (there is no  lodge\nat present) residing in Ymir was a financial success.   A large number attended in\nspite of the inclemency  of  the   weather,\nand the  fail1  sex   were   more   numerous\nthan on any previous occasion of the kind\n.in Ymir.    A most recherche  supper Avas\nserved at  the  McLeod  House,   presided\nover   by   Mr. , and Mrs.  John   Philbert.\nNeedless to say all  enjoyed  themselves\nimmensely  and  Avish  for a repitition at\nno distant date, for the young ladies of\nYmir are daisies at the shrine of Terpsichore.    The proceeds Avere  highly satisfactory, and   Avere   for   charitable   purposes.\nIn\" conversation Avith a prominent\nmember of the Miners Union ho remarked:\n\"What a time Fred Hume will haA'e if it\nbe correct that he ingoing to visit Nelson\nthis AAreek\u20141 suppose he Avill not come on\nto Ymir?\" A reply has been received\nfrom the honorable the minister of mines\naeknoAvledging the receipt of the resolutions passed by tho committee appointed\nfor that purpose and stating that he had\nlaid the matter before the executive.\nThe Miners' Union intend giving a ball\nin the Miners' hall ou the evening of the\n24th of May.\n- Ed.'Ray, one of Yinir's barbers, leaves\nfor Rossland next week to start business\nthere, as he has disposed of his establishment hero.\nc New Denver.\nNew Dknvbr, April 27.\u2014Toronto capitalists are seoking a bond on the Iron\nHorse claim, on Ten Mile, owned by\nAngus McLean and the estate of the late\n\"Black Dan\" McDonald. Giving to the\ndeath of the latter the bond cannot be\naccepted, as the necessary steps have not\nas yet been taken for the administration\nof his estate. The Iron Horse is situated\nbetweeii * the creek and the Enterprise\n\"gjtoup^q-which property it would afford\n:iqAA-er*ie\\'els. ' It \u25a0 AA'as;, under bond three\n(ypkrykgo for $10,000 to James Gilhooley,\nsifqtin&^fbi' Evans,- Coleman '& Eaumis of\nVancoiufer. A good camp AA*as erected\niancl'.a long drift drhren almost to the end\nIhiQiipf^the' property. . The Enterprise\nsveiii! is-.\"exposed in the tunnel, ** with a\n'small shpwing-'of ore. A Avinze aa*us com-\nSmeiieecl \"pn this, but was only sunk a feAV\nffdbt|V\"t0n\":the creek level'a short tunnel\n'lias 4?epii.\"driAreii, and a small streak of ore\nHwis'pblaiiied. The Iron Horse is in a\n\"mo\u00a7t!'favorable location and should not\n!p;\u201eb^ners a tidy sum.'\nJ\u00abmBjid\u00abiBads luive sadly reduced ore sliii*)-\n*nifeiits:qf.\"late, especially from tlie Idaho\n:Hasin.*J;h\"3oth the Idaho and Queen Bess\nj\/ave\"lal|ge ore resexwes at present, the\ndatfei;!b*eing credited with eight feet tof\n^iiii^rai|in the IoA\\-er AA'orkings. ^\n\"\"^jlD.^Mero is doing sonie Avork on the\n.'claini^npAy OAvned byhim across Carpen-,\n^tef'l'crfek-, .on the east side of Union\n:sibi-eet,\"arid AA'hich has,been staked aiid\njTeitlikfclJsince 1892. He lias secured senne\n*goocljloqkjng quartz, shoAving galena and\n'Cqppei\"\u00bbs1;aiiis.    It is iiia slate formation:\nthe Neglected- is in about\nHicks and Welch of Slocan City are\nagain Avorking the Mary Durham, adjoining the Mollie Hughes group. They claim\nto have a continuation of the Pinto lead\nfrom the latter property and expect to\nmake a mine out of it.- The ore in sight\ngives satisfactory values in silver and\ngold.\nThe tunnel on\nforty Feet, three feet per day being the\naverage advance made. Zinc is uoav appearing iu the breast,' with more or less\nencouraging signs of a chute of ore being\napproached.\nG. DaAvson, manager of the Essex\ngroup, ou Four Mile, \"has returned from\nthe Coast, Avhere he spent the winter. He\nis surprised at the lateness of .the spring.\nThe Essex Avill be started up as soon as\npracticable. \u00b0\nFour hundred tons of;ore has been\nshipped by the Bosun since the first of\nthe year. . \"'\nThe Payne sent out 200 tons of ore last\nAveek.\n,More maps of the Slocan are being sold\nthis season than at any time during the\npast three years. DroAvry's maps of the\nSandon camp and Tomlinson's of the lake\ndistrict are to be amalgamated by the\npatentees, giAdng a comprehensive-and\naccurate idea of the geography of the\nSlocan,\"with its myriad, locations.\nGoat mountain is receiA'ing much attention this spring and' several locations\nhaAre been made.  .\nTho \u25a0 toAvn scavenger has removed to\nthe Boundary country, and efforts are being made to prevent a successor being\nappointed. A petition-Avas foiwarded to\nthe provincial health authorities protesting against the present system, aud asking for a return to the\/old tank method.\nThe department has taken the matter into its \"earnest consideration.\"\nThe clerks. of various business houses\nare agitating for early \u2022'closing.\nSeveral amateur oarsmen of Nelson are\ndesirous of competing against all Avinners\nat NeAV Denver on Maj(24th,' provided no\nmoney is offered for 'prizes. Nelson is\nearning an enA'iable reputation for good\nclean sport.      , ..'\u2022'.       ']       ''\u2022\u25a0\non Sunday last, the main tunnel running\ninto the oro shuto.\nThe committee having in charge the\npreparations of the queen's birthday\ncelebration are working hard to ensure\nits success. A synopsis of their program\nwill be found iu another column of The\nTuniUNii. Already entries for the Caledonian sports by outside athletes are being booked. It is reported that a match\nrace between Gusty of Sandon and Dill\nof Kaslo is being arranged for $50 a side,\nto which it is expected the committee\nwill add. AVork on the ball grounds is\ngoing steadily on.\nTwo feet of ore is showing in the face\nof the tunnel being driven oil'the Hum-\nbolt claim, situated betAveen the Vancouver and Lorna Doone. The property\nis OAvned in Brandon, Man., and the Avork\nALL THE NEWS CONTAINED IN AN\nOFFICIAL   NEWSPAPER.\nSilverton.-, -\u25a0\nSilverton, April .27.\u2014The backAvard\nspring is having, a depressing effect on\nthe .mining -interests   of this   locality.\nW. H. DaAvsoii, OAvner* of the Essex\"\n-group, adjoining, the Wakefield mines,\nreturned from Montrea on Sunday. He\nremained .here, one day only, deciding to\nvisit the Coast for at least'three AA^eeks,\ntliero being at yet. six feet of suoav on\nhis property. He expectsLto Avorka considerable force this summer.\nT.TJ. Byron, half-oAA-ner-of the Congo\ngroup, on -Red-mountain,  is back. from+\nCalifornia to resume  operations.   -He is\ndoubtful if anything can bo done by him.\nbefore the middle of May.\nAnother early bird is_L. H. Briggs of\nRiverside, California, half owner- bf the\nSurprise group. He also Avill leaA'e to retinal AAdien the suoav has gone.\nAt the Noonday .claim the men are\nbusy' sacking the second carload taken\nout in their dcA'Clopment Avork.. Au important strike Avas made at that property\nis  being done under contract  by local\nparties.       '' -\u201e   ,\nOn the Hamilton group, a good Twelve\nMile property,the tunnel lias been driven\n100 feet. A horse Avas encountered in\nthis tunnel Avhieh has been Avorked\nthrough and the ore re-discovered in\nplace. The Hamilton adjoirns the\nBatchelor group, of AAdiich many good reports are in circulation.\nKaslo.\nKaslo, April 27.\u2014The managing directors  of the  Excelsior Mining Company,\navIio propose to spend so much money on\nSouth Fork creek, are shoAving their faith\nin the country,  and  particularly Kaslo,\nby purchasing Kaslo realty.   They have\nbought the house OAvned by J. A. Whit-\ntier of Goodenough mine fame, and also\nthe residence of  C. W. McAnn, built last\nsummer. - The prices  are  said   to \u2022 have\nbeen '  $3000   and   $5500    respectively;\nThese two houses are among the inost desirable   residential   property   in   Kaslo.\nThese   gentlemen   are still   looking  for\nmore property in the toAA'n, and  it is evident they mean business in the  country,\nand, if successful, Avill  probably bo  the\nmeans of diverting considerable  French\nand English capital * into this district. <\u201e   -;.\nr,Hyde   GoAvan,   the -sold, ban joist\/- -i%\ngoing to gi\\re a concert,.'assisted-by.local;\ntalent, under the auspices-of the Presbyterian church, on Monday evening  next.\nA movement is on foot to organize a\nstrong local compa.uy to  operate a telephone system throughout the Slocan.\"    It\nis the intention  to. install  a thoroughly\ngood system in Kaslo aiid have ' a  trunk\nline through to Sandon, thereby putting\nboth  Kaslo  and  Sandon\\in touch. Avibh\neach other, aud also * with* the. principal\nmines  at Whitewater,a McGuigan, Cody\nand intermediate points.    Later  the line\nAvould'probably be  extended to' Slocan\nlake \"points, and another  line run up to\nLardo, giving -Kaslo easy communication\nAvith all the adjacent  district. . The\" Vernon & Nelson Telephone.Company have a,\nlocal system in the toAvn, but itssubscri-\nbers are  limited, to  fiVe' or six, so that\nthere are no inducements to\" its  patrons.\nThe  company Avill also  endeavor to secure connection with- the trunk  line at\nNelson, and so have communication AAith\nSpokane and other outside points.\nto Victoria on the subject, but attorney-\ngeneral Martin is acting as solicitor for\nLudgate- in the matter. Their point is\nthat the. island has been assumed by a\npast provincial goArerment to be provincial property, \u2022 and tliat the attorney-\ngpnqral should \"p$hold\u201e thik Qolitpntipu;,\ninstead of devxitiirj^ his talents tti securing\nLudgate's pos\"sess*iqu,\n..His (Gallantry Overshadows. His Jndiscretiori,\n-. \u25a0 . -      .   \u2022\u2022   - A\u00ab^ociatcd,PrcKii, .\nPiffliADEianirA, April 27.\u2014^u authentic\nstatement wits,'nujlde thi$ afternoohj after\nhis arrival iii ihe eity> tjnit pr^sideiit\nMcKinley had nio intention of ronioyiiig\ncaptain ddghlan from the; conniiand of\nthe United States cruiser Raleigh. It\nAvas al$olearned by the same authentic\nSource that the adiinratioii: held by the\npresident for captain Coghlaii's participation in the destruction of the Spanish\nfleet at Manila completely pvershadoAVS\nany desire on his part to administer a\nrebuke to the Raleigh's gallant com\nmander for his German criticisms.\nTHE C.P.R. ANDG.N.R. STRIVING\nFOR   POSITION   IN   THE   LAEDO.\nAdmiral Admonished to be More Careful.\nAssociated Press.\nWashington, April 27.\u2014It has been\nfelt proper to admonish admiral Kautz\ntd be more careful in Avriting such letters\nas that published yesterday from Cincinnati, or in guarding his letters from publicity, and a letter of that character AAras\naddressed to him.\nThe Price of the Metals.\nAssociated Press.\nNeav York, ApriL 27.\u2014Bar sihrer 63 jc.\nMexican dollars 48\u00a3 @ 50c. Silver certificates 63| @ 64c. Copper, steady ; broker's 19|c @ 19fc. exchange 19}c. Lead,\nsteady; broker's $4.10, exclmuge $1.30 @\n$4.35.\nThe Canadian Pacific and Great Northern railways are -making :a race to secure\nfilie best locatipii \"for a rtljhvay* in the\nLrtrdo district, to the north Of Jiootenay\nlake, If'qr tlfe past twb weeks\" the Can-\na\"diiliiJ?upifipoliap had ii forpp. p| .eiigi-\nne<jr$.-\u00bb\u2022\u00a7 work loc-ttiiig \u201e a IJijp froni the\nold\"tdwiisite of Luixlb to tlie 'lower, end qf\nTrout lake. It was generally untlei'stpod\ntliat work wpuld be commenced op the\nloAvpr pud of tlie branch Spiiie tinie this\nSuinmer, but during tlie past Aveek the\nCanadian Pacific officials began to fear\nthat the Great Northern. .might get into\nthe district ahead of them, aiid it AAras\ndecided,to throAV a gang of men upon the\nLardo end of the branch at oiice.\nJ. E. Poupore, of the contracting firm\nof Poupore & McVeigh, accordingly left\nNelson yesterday with a creAv of thirty\nmen. So far, but fourteen miles of the\nline have been located and no cross-sectioning has been done. There is said\ntb be considerable suoav upon the ground,\nso that the Avork Avhieh can be done at\npresent Avill be restricted to slashing out\na portion of the right-of-AATay.\nSo far as the Canadian Pacific intentions could be learned yesterday, the first\nthirty-five miles of the Avork will be got\nready as soon as ' possible. Engineer\nWalkem of Vancouver Avill probably\nreach Lardo next Aveek and begin cross-\nsectioning, aud as soon as they can place\n300 men upon the grade to good advantage Poupore & McVeigh will engage that\nnumber.    They   have   a   transportation\narrangement Avith'the Canadian Pacific\nA\\iiich Avill enable them to dnuv men\nfrom any point in Kootenay south of\nRevelstoke and east of Rossland. The\nscale of Avages upon the Avork Avill be $2\nper day.\nShould tlie CapadiaU Paeifip ihake gqpd\nits bliirf ajiid buiTd the\" entire $rirty-li.v;e\nmiles of tfre voatt tpvis suhimer, it will\ncorisidpi-ittiiy SAveil the^ volume of biisir\njftjss of'tliemerchants of aSrelsdn, its'prac-\ntically all the supplies Avill- be-purchased\nlierpj Avhicli will result! iii clpariiig out\nthe.stocksiyhieh have accumulated during the past .year. \u00a3t appears to lie geii-\neritliy undferstood that nothing Avill be\ndque for some time oil tho upper end of\nthe road. It will be a much more expensive piece of AVork than the Kootenay\nlake end,and its tlie Canadian Pacific can\nhave no fear of competition oii tlie upper\nend, there is nothing to fear from  delay.\nAssociated   l'r''\u00ab\u00ab. _\nVictoria, April 27.\u2014The Official Gazette\n\/of this Aveek contains notice of the fol-\nloAving provincial appointments: Bobert\nM. Smith of Vancovver, to be notary\npublic for the Mainland ; James Maitland\nDougall of Duncans, to be a .collector of\nvotes in Cowichan, vice II. O. Wellburu ;\nJ. S. T. Alexander of Kaslo, to be a notary public for the Mainland; Thomas T.\nA. Boys of Ladner, to be a notary public\nfor Westminster and Vancom-er counties;\nC. A. Holland and R. \"L. Drury, to be\ndirectors of the Royal Jubilee hospital ofv\n.Victoria, vice George Byrnes, deceased,,\nand John Braden, resigned; Mark SAveaton\nWade, M. D., of Kamloops, to be a coroner for the province; Alexander E. Gar-\nrat of Vancouver, to be a notary public\nfor the Mainland; Charles Ernest Coster-\nton of Vernon, to.be a clerk in the office\nof the government agent in that city.\nThe minister of mines gives notice tliat\nthe extension of time during Avhicli all\nplacer mining claims legally held in the\nAtlin Lake .and Bennett Lake mining\ndivisions are laid over has been\" granted\nto the-first of July, 1899.\nNotice is given that the John Irving\nNavigation Company, Limited, proposes\nto build and operate a tranrway from\nTaku City, thence to the Avestern shore\nof Atlin lake, thence to the eastern shore\nof Atlin lake at or near Atlin City, thence\nalong Pine Creek to the Avest end of Surprise lake.\nThe undermentioned parcel of land in\nOmineca has been reserved for goA'ernment uses: Commencing at a point situated near the junction of the Hazle-\ntoii, Manson and Findlay river trails,\non the north bank of Slate creek,\nthence Avesterly up the creek 100\nchains, thence north 100 chains,\nthence east 100 chains, thence south 100\nchains to the point of commencement;\ncontaining 1000 acres, more or less.\nSealed proposals AArill be received by\nthe commissioner of lands and Avorks\u00b0up\"\nto noon on May 20th, from persons desiring to* operate ferries across Bridge\nriver at Jack's landing, and across, the\nsame river at the mouth of Sucker creek:\n-The'privilege;-to-be.for-a term of five*\nyears.\nThe minister  of agriculture  has   an- *\nthorized  the organization-of a farmer's\ninstitute in the Langley diA-ision of Westminster district; and also, for the Mission\ndivision of the same district.\n\"< An-examination for certificates of\ncompetency as managers of Amines, under\nthe Coal Mines Regulation-\"Act, Avill be\nheld at Nanaimo on June (5th. Candidates must be tAventy-three years of ago,\nand must file ' notice of their\nintention of competing in , Avriting\n\\A*itii Thomas Morgan, chairman ,*of the\nboard of. examiners, at Nanaimo,\" before\nMay 26th. They must also present certi-\n\"ficates of at least two years' serAice underground from tlieir employers. The\ncurriculum includes the mining act and\nrules, mine gases, general Avork, A'entila-\ntipn, mining machinery, and surveying\naiid levelling.\nSpecial to Tho Tribune.\nVictoria, April 27.\u2014Claim owners in\nAtlin will Avelcomo the announcement\n-made-in --the-Official- Gazette- this-weck-\nthat the time to Avhieh holdings are laid\noverhas been further extended to .July 1st.\nThis will enable ordinary disputes arising\nout of the unsettled conditions of administration of aliens in tho country to bo\nsettled before hold.eiS Avill be dOmivelled\",\nto commence operatipifa \u00b0y\nThe mining epiiipanieS i;iLieorpohited=\nthis week include,:.\nMajestic! of Wliifc's Ofijjnp; capital $i,--.\n.5.oo;opo.    y\u201e\u25a0.._\u201e.... -.;\".   .. \u201e\u25a0   .\"t;\nBlack Opal ^yi\/(iicateof'TlosHlandrc'ipi-*\ntal $00,0.00\/ .\/\nGold Dollar Of Rossland;, crtplM 1 $fe-\n000,000, .V\nMacdonald, Mines: of Rossland; capitals\n$250,000.\nWallace-Miller Company, Limited, pf\"\nNelson; capital $500,000.\nThe Pity ne Mining Company ad ver fee}\na generalnieetiSig at Sandon on May 29th\".\u00bb\nTHE PUBLIC WORKS COMMITTEE\nAWARD   A   CONTRACT.\nAt the meeting of the public works\ncommittee held yesterday afternoon,\nJosias Thompson Avas aAvarded the contract for seAver construction, his tender\nbeing the loAvest. His figure for the Avork\nAvas $085. and the nearest tender to his\nAvas that of Campbell & Deacon at $1135.\nTlie tender Avas accompanied by a sum of\n$250 as security.\nWhen the request of John Hastie and\nothers in the Hume Addition, for permission to connect Avith the city's Avater-\nAvorks system, Avas brought up alderman\nThomson said he did not see Avhat ob-'\njection could be raised against the granting of the request if three of the petitioners Avere Avilling to become-responsible to\n, the city for -oayiiient for all the Avater\nuse^d.\nMayor Neelands asked AAiiat the object\nAvas in dealing Avith three ofthe petitioners on behalf of all the others, and in reply alderman Fletcher said that the city\nhad no poAver to collect rates in the\naddition.\nOn motion of alderman Thomson, seconded by mayor Neelands, it A\\*as decided\nto extend the city main to.'the eastern\nlimit of the city and permit the petitioners to- make connection, upon the condition that they pay the ordinary house\nrate until a Avater meter is secured.\nThe communication of Messrs. Fell &\nGregory, solicitors for the Nelson Land &\nImprovement Company, Avas then taken\nup. In this the solicitors asked for a\nsettlement of the difficulty in connection\nAvith the' expropriation by the' city of the\nland used for the city reservoir. They\ntermed the city's offer, of-$750 for the\nland as ridiculous. . - '\nAlderman Fletcher said that he considered the offer of $750 - as more than\nthe lots iu question ^-Avere AArdrth. The\nreservoir encroached upon six lots, and in\nhis opinion they Avere not AArorth more\nthan $300. At his suggestion the committee decided to report in favor of going to arbitration OArer. the .question of\nthe, value ofthe lots and that the Nelson\nLand & ImproA-ement- Company name\nits arbitrator as soon as - possible. * The\ncommittee further decided that,.with respect-to the lots claimed to be - damaged\n.by the water AA**orks flume, the council\nshould agree to moAre the flume upoiiithe\nstreet as soon as any of the-lots Avere oe- _\n.cupied.    <   . ...      ;\/,, VV'  '\u25a0 *' .\nrTJpon the request of Alfred Bunker.and\nAugust Thompson for seAver, connections,\nand the petition of the residents:pf ,Ver-\njion   street for,  a   sideAvidi^onr-^VerhbnfS^j\nstreet from Stanley.,to , Imilway-'street, \"\"^j\"^\u2022\n.action avos deferred. ..\/   :ikZ<.^^aJ^:j:^j\u00a3M&\nThe\" committee\" decided' to give ThedftvF\"\n! Madson Avater connection for lots  18,-'19\u201e-gfe-\nand  20  iu  block  100, at a cost of: $100,. ',\nprovided the applicant contributed' $25.' '\nThe city engineer Avas instructed to re-,\nport upon tho cost  of  giA'ing the  samp-'  v-\n. ling AA'orks water connection.\nThe committee decided to proceed at\nonce with the laying of the* water mains,\nin Addition A, in the section recommended by tlie medical health officer.\nThis AArork consists\" of two blocks on Gore,\nstreet, from Kootenay to.Ward street,\nand on Stanley street from,Gore north to\na point \"above Houston street.\nThe city  engineer  explained   that tho'\nformer   council   dug   the\" trenches    for\nAvater pipes byday labor at a cost of seA'en\ncents per foot, and that the  pipe  laying\nand back filling cost seA'en cents more He\nthought  that  the city  could not secure    .    L\nsuch favorable terms  by tender, and \"recommended that  the  Avork  be  done by =\nday  labor, and   that  John Muuroe, who\nperformed the work before, should again\nhave charge of it. y\t\n\"This\"\"-\n'SS\\& -\nNot Dead,\nSpecial to The Tribune.\nToronto, April 27,\u2014The Globe says :\n\" We are assured the Kettlp River Rail-\nAvay bill will not be abandoned* but it\nseemed better\" Vrto leave it oArer until\nanother session, when\" Mr. Corbin Avould\nhave more time to attend to the matter:,\nthan go ahead with it in his absence. It\nis expected the bill Avill come up next\nsession, and it is the confident belief of\nits promoters that the feeling in favor of\nthe measure Avill then be stronger even\nthan it is at present.\"\nOrganized Under the Laws of New Jersey.\nAssociated Press.\nNew York, April 27.\u2014The Amalgamated Copper Company, a combine of a\nnumber of the principal copper concerns\nin the United States, effected an organization in Jersey City today.\nA Caucus of Conservatives.\nAssociated PreSsf.\nOttaava, April 27.r\u2014The Conservative\nmembers from Ontario* to the number.of-\nabout thirty, gathered in caucus this*.\nmorning. The meeting Avas called for organization purposes. Robert Birmingham Avas present, and this goes to shew\nthat the attempt to oust him from the\nposition as the organizer has so fair failed. Nothing Avas seen of A. W. Wright,\nthe candidate of Clarke Wallace . and Sir\nMackenzie Bowell, for the position of\norganizer. The political prospects of the\nparty Avere discussed and considerable\nArariety of opinion expressed as to Avhat\nshould be done to rehabilitate the party\nin the province of Ontario. It is a pretty\ngeneral feeling that Mr. Haggart can not\nbe regarded as a leader alul that Dr.\nMontague must not bo so regarded.\nThere does not at present seem to be any\none in the way of Clarke Wallace.\n\"the committee agreejl lo.\nit Avas decided to nut in a   catch basin   *\nat the coruei' of Stanley and Mill streets,\nand also to call i'or tenders for  the sup-1\nplying of one ton of lead   to   be   used  in.\nlaying the water pipe. \u201e.\nt R&beiQwsiipnflma^nAay School Oohyen-|ibi!\/-f.*I\n\u00bb,   \"\".'.'\"'\".   \"\"\"^Vjtsodliitril j'rcusv - \u201e   .\u201e-. V&W*\".\n\u25a0 ^J>A^V5s.4'P,!'b^\u00ab^~'^lW 1,;u:u H\"^^\"^\n\u2022w^a.\/fjXtfH^j'n^ TjL*f.vnlfi,\\i;o, of\" ,'tlie .Tvi.O'r.rffn-k^l\nrse^siqi\/,oCthe... .JiVleri'at'i.'mul.\u25a0 .Suiiday.\"-,\n^^lH#\"Ct\u00bbnVehti;(m-j ' J| made its api^*f>\u00a3\niuVceVhi tA^OAxJi'tys'i (\u00abi)\\By the inideaftprpf^'\ntlie-GeOi'gia hud' South Carolina  nogfobs^-C\nto\" place, colored i*ti1el-iOu the comiilit'tfidi oji>  ;\nhpiiiiiiUjfiioinH with  the whites : and (3t)' by   .;\nthe rolvson'.' ofitlio* fact that (.lie coliA*eu> \"*\",\ntiOn. in iierinittiiig negro delegates  to IA-.\nseated AVitlf  tlie Vvhites is   violating  hot\"   \u201e\"\nonly a city oi'dijiancej  but :;\u25a0 stafe la>w,\nwhich   requires   that   the    whites   aud\nbhicksbe separated   in all   public gatherings..   The.police called tlie attention  of\ncolonel Asa G. Candlei*, chairman   of  the\nentertainment committee, to the matter,\nbut after a discussion   it Was  decided to\nlet the delegates sit as tliey wished.\nGissie Was Granted a Divorce.\nAssociated Press*.\nNeav Yori<, April 27.\u2014Mrs. Justin\nHuntley McCarthy, better known by her\nstage name of Cissie Lof'tus, was today\ngranted a decree of absolute divorce\nfrom her husband, tlie former member of\nparliament and the son of the famous\nIrish leader..\t\nA Well Known Actor-Manager Dead.\nAssociated Press.\nNeav York, April 27.-- Sheridan Shook\ndied today at Red Hook, New York. He\nAVas seA'cnty-soA-en years old, aud for\nmany years was the proprietor of the\nUnion Square theatre in this city.\n)   ( .-~v-\nTHE TRIBUNE:  NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 28,  1899.\nRAILWAY  TIME - TABLES.\nCANADIAN*   I'AClVIC.\n(ni'i'OT foot ov kau.wav stkrkt)\n31-and mail (daily). for Nakusp    Li-uvi'.\nivolstokennd main linoj)Oin!s.CIU p.m.\nPassenKor ..\nand llovolstokennd main hnojKmi's,\nPassenger and mail (daily), for Slocan\nCity,Silverton, New ljonver. Tnree\nAnive.\n10 30 p.m.\n2.30 p.m.\nForks and Sandon \u2022 \u25a0 9 0.) a.m.\nPassenger and mail (daily) for Kobson,\nTrail and RosMand 6.10 p.m. 10..W p.m.\nNKLSON AND FOUT SHEPPARD.\n(Dri'OT KAS'l' KND AVATKll STKKI'T,  HOC. US' TOWN)\npSeBCr.':n:'.mi\"! ^!\\Sor.spo:.a}^z-W?:\nPassenger and mail (daily), for Ymir, .\nSalmS. Want-la and ltossland U.-I0 a.m    o..!fl p.m.\n(Trains leave Mountain Siting, -*.'ii*t cud liouson stieci,\nforty minutes later than from Nelson wtalion.)\t\nKASLO AND SLOGAN.\n'Passenger and mail (daily except Sun-    Leave.    Arrive.\ndays), from lvaslo for \\\\ hitewater,\nMcGuigan,  Tliree   Forks,   Sandon ,.-\u201e,\u201e\nand Cody ......S.f!0 a.m.   A:n p.m.\nPiusseiiKor and mail (ilailvoxoept Sun-\nday), from Sandon for JCaslo l.l^p.ni. HU'ia.m.\nSTEAMBOAT TIME-TABLES.\nCANADIAN   I'A'IKK!.\n(llO.VTfi l.K.WK ll.\\M,-STItr.l--T WIIAUI'1)\nSteamer Kokaiioc (iliiily o'-.-oiipt Sun-    Leave,     .\\inve.\ndays', for Kokanee Creek, liulfmir.\nPilot IJay. Ainsw<)illi:nd Kasl.\u00bb.....-l.(Kip.in. II .W**.i'i.\nSteamer -Movie (leaven .Mondays,\nWednesdays. Kriil\u00bby\u00ab and nrnv(s\nTuesdays, Tliursday--, Saturdays),\nfor Kootenay Landing, whuru connection Is made with Crow's N<i*'-- ...-\u201e\u201e,\u201e\nPass railway '...-\u25a0\u25a0 S-W \"\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0'\u2022   ''\u25a0\u25a0*\" P'1\"'\nKOOTKNAY RAILWAY AND NAVIGATION CO.\n(HOATS 1.1CAVK ilAI.I.-S'l'I'KKTAVIIAliK)\nSteamer'lidernalioniil (daily except   Leave.    Arrive.\nSundays), for Kokanee Creek, Balfour,  Pilot. Buy,  Ainsworth   and    \"\nICaslo \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 4-:i0 p.m. 10.30 a.m.\nTo clear a few lines at half the usual price, all in\ndress lengths of 7 yards each, no two pieces alike\n8 pieces figured dress goods at 40 cents, regular price, 75 cents\n7 pieces figured dress goods at 65 cents, regular price, $1.25\n10 pieces figured dress goods at $1, regular price, $1.75\nThe balance of our spring capes and jackets at wholesale price\nBaker Street,\nNELSON\nA.  FERLAND & CO\nA COMPLETE LINE JUST ARRIVED\nFROM EASTERN MARKETS\nMAILS:WILL   CLOSE   AT\nNELSON\n24 th,   Vim,\n.\u2022.*\u25a0\u25a0-.\u201e.\/.\u25a0'  :>\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*   AS   FOLLOVi'S\nFor  Kuskonook\"; Creston,    Moyie, Cranbrook.\nFort Steele, Fernie, nnd all points,on Crows\n: Nest Pass railway on Sundays, Tuesdays and\nThursdays at  .....S:Wta.ni,\nFor \"Slocan City, Silverton, Now Denver, Rosebery, Alamo,Tliree Forks and Sandon, at.... .8:,*'l a.m.\nFor all points- on Nelson &. Fort Sliejipard rail-\nor all points on Nelson K fort snoppam railway; Rosslan'.l. Spokane, Victoria, Vancouver,\n\u25a0Winnipeg,- and all points in the United States\nson\nware\nBaker Street\/ Nelson.\naidsoii and Oliver. Theminister of the\ninterior had to accept in silence a rebuke\nfrom two of the tliree outspoken and\nfearless Liberals west of lake Superior.\nThe strength of their convictions Avas\nillustrated iu the speeches of Messrs.\nRichardson and 01iArer. The pressure of\nparty discipline, not to say tyranny, was\nrevealed in their Azotes.\nUPS   AND   DOWNS.\narid Eastern Canada, at.\n...8:45 a.m.\nFor Kokanee, Balfoiir, Pilot  Ray, Ainsworth,\nand Kaslo at\nFor Robson,  Trail, flossland\n.stoke, Vancouver,\nNakusp, Revcl-\nand all points\n1:00 p.m.\n\u201e\u201e\u201e,    ,  Winnipeg. .\neast and west on the Canadian Pacific rail\nway at. :-...., \u2014 ....;......\n6:00 p.m.\nOFFICE   HOURS.\nThe postolliee is open from 7 a.m. till 10 p.m. every day.\nThe general delivery -wickelsorc open from 8 a.m. till 8\np.m. every day except Sundays. The registration wicket\n: is open from S:*10 a.m. till 7 p.m. The money order and\nsavings b\u00bbnk wicketis open from 9 a.m. until I p.m.    .;\n\u25a0<.>-.;:\u25a0<\u2022;\u25a0\u25a0. J. A. GILKER. Postmaster.\nSttte tritew+\n\\M$yyy\nV Daily -Edition.\t\nkWkekly Edition....... .....\n;.:'.\"\u2022\u25a0 First Year,' No. \"S8\n. Seventh Year, No. 23\ni-^v^\n''.'r\\\\\\ ,'-:-\u2022\n\u25a0;.*-'*;;V-.\n?\u00a3(\/'.y\n$**&*\u2022<\n-yyy\ny'yyy\"\n\u25a0VViv-y.-\n\u25a0yyyyy.y.\n\u25a0(y-:~M-i\nmw-r\n'\u25a0'\"\u25a0'.'\u25a0,' '(.:\u25a0'\ny.'i-::'yrs\n.',\u25a0-: :\u25a0-,-::\u25a0\"\nyi-T^y\n*:\u2022-.'-'\u25a0''*.;\n?i>'\/\\';:\n-y.yyy \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.!\u25a0\n'fefer'\n^\u25a0'H^\":\"\n:t^y{[.y.l\n>\u25a0 -ii', KT;,\u2022\u00bb.!\u25a0\u25a0:.' \" *';\".\u25a0\n*-y.-.-:i'f\ni\/'j-v v--*'.'i\n<-\u20ac*\". *i'Jri**\n^WV\/Jjt.?-\n-\u2022 y^yit w\nv^-'.'Vi \u25a0--\u00a3;\n*&M&\n;?J \u25a0.\u25a0\u2022\u00a3:-\nY~ \u2022,-$\u2022'\u2022$;\n\u25a0**&Y-y\n']?0\\l-ZL-'>\n?*4->iz*\nva,'i'->i''\n$Kr**W\n-'\u25a0\u25a0Sl'-SIt.\n^&-\nufev\n-i'Ji^*-'*\n->.\"f \u2022J-\\li \u2014*\njf?:yy:\n'V-;.y\\-.:\u00ab ?\u2022\n*\u2022--'*\u25a0\u25a0 r;3^ j.-\n'-'<-.'\u2022..\u25a0-.-\".\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0.\"***\niti'jf'ii'\ny^ \u25a0.\u25a0~-:y\n.,:.;C,--'~'--\nTHE DAILY TRIBUNE is published  every morning\n\u25a0.-\"\u00bb.\u2022\u2022\u25a0 (except Monday), and will be mailed to subscribers\nin Canada or the United States for ?5 a year, and to\n.-;\u25a0\u2022 subscribers in Great '-Britain for \u00a78 ayear; or if: will,\nbe delivered to subscribers, in Nelson for 25 cents a\nweek. SI a month, \u00a72.50 for three months, So for six\n\u25a0 V;nioiiths,- or \u00a710 for one year.   Payable in advance.\n. THE AVEEKLY TRIBUNE is published every Wednesday and Saturday, and- will be mailed to subscribers\nV-anywhere for; \u00a72 a year,payable in advance.    .\nREGULAR-ADVERTISEMENTS, printed in both the\ndaily1 and weekly editions for \u00a74 per inch per month.\n,LOCAL OR 'READING- MATTER NOTICES 25 cents a\n;:linefor,each insertion. \u25a0-,\":;:   'i-'.J:';--'.\/;,.-^.'\u2022.*:\u25a0;.:;\u25a0.:'.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0'\u25a0 :,:ft\"\u201eV\"-\n\u25a0-. JOB .pRINTIN&.at fairlrates.   Accounts for job print *\n' \u2022 \u00b0. ing and advertising aro\\payable on the first of every\nflS.-montb.-:-,-'Aadro.?s\u2014\u00bb--'\u00b0-\"''\"\u25a0\"\u2022*\u25a0-\u00bb A-.\"\u2022 s;\"\"*-'V-.,i^;.m ^;.,-.ysk^.;\n'^;:^y^^s,yy;:,y:yi^\n\u25a0^^\"p^THE\"^ilNBft;S\u00a3vy^\ntofj\u00b0i1ort\"bn the^ AA'ater- suioply ofV^he^city^is\nft'i>\u201e#&l-*&&.^^\n:'--.-'\u00ab'2\u00bb\u00bb-':\"j!fi\n.\u25a0l.p-l.-^.l.flj,   ?g,\u00b0   p   0n\u00b0\nXi j?' yytflfl yy'fl.y\u00ae\nyiyy.fiy,\nIK\".\nr.sf.\"* yyyy yj.\na\njiu^-man^wJio:^\n\"^isAvithout^SvaTerV^-tb^nS\n\u25a0\u2022ny \u00bb \"j\u25a0\">-'\"\u25a0 '.ya:-h-is..\" -.--'i'.'\"-\"---; -S\"^.\/\"\u00bbHVri\u2122.-'\u00bb   \u00ab*'* \">f\u00bba ^\"-\"\"Si\n\u25a0sH, fflacMnelvtheira^\n.\u25a0*\u00bb *\"\" .y.y?\u00ab\"\u2022.<,\u25a0!J.-\u25a0\u00a3$&:\u2022&&*\"\".'.'-..yyy.p ^ys\/...\"\u00bb:\u2022.y m,.s,.\u00b0*y'uy\"\n^^heTnti^^\n*> \u25a0fleithei^Jbhe^piae ^nor^theftpthei^Jcno)**.'^\n*>\",4vrli^t.-.'tj-tq^j-are '-.talkui^^aj-ipiitjfwAe^.'PAejji'\n\/f\u00bbjtisc}iinsj:iip^\n;;%*thafe they consult, that .eimxiept authority -\non',   D-n-fl^Wj-  -     \u2022'cPSiHo-n 1L| nn\" **-   'a, o-i* -'  -\u25a0-*--   n\" dUjiJ,     \u00abtf \u25a0 \u25a0 u-d u \"^   - -^ft- tiP\"n    Vn\u2014^'*V   n-a    aD m'* ^_ ttJ\"- fl\nl^ *;J^B;nofcT^f4\u201ec|o^\n\u00abs\". n; \u25a0 \\lli&p^v^EL^DS and'Md4rm\"fen!rjflet^\n.; 1 elie'^ltHfl^AQ^OD-' tire  of \"opinion; \"Mat;\n\/;\";'*tyi4SitK*sh^iir^pK0 OjitsjclerS, into pdrM\no n\u25a0 n^rsliii^n^o^e^ilbuig  *0ie   A*?ateJwdr%\n\u25a0=^i|y-s (ieiifeo^'fclieieit^\ntlb  this  ^ej|nchrsijpu   because    aldorinan\n^Iefc6]tei^\u00a7af:sifchat\"'the city AA'oukibe uur\n-        \" \u00b0 atiyS\u00b0n-   }   * n n   -D   \"^\nable tq ColleetAvatoi,1 rates froin parties\n'o,iufei'cle'*EHe\u2122citl'*vj:;|uuits. Iii Asrliat xvay do\nthey iilteiid*\"to^collect iilie AAriit,Qi* rates\nfi'6hi tlie\u2122 nieii \"wjioin they intend to*\nSupply AV;i\u201etJi\u201eAfater on a pilrfcuer$hip basis?\nThe (jity.Jialf'i'lia'if.'aiiiilo, of \"water nlaiiis\nOiitsiflethe'ciuy liniits noAV, and AVhait is\nt]ierelfcVpr-|A?|i|t tlie city laying, an.6t1ioi?\nJialf iiiflef?i \"^Suppose soifle ohe Shopld\nJja\\*e 'tlVecQiiftiVge to crofcfc & residence on\ntlio eorner.Of iLiiitiiiiel: tVid Park streets,\nvyliatjaw isff^liere to prevent the city\nalloA^ing a c\u00bbQii]dieetion to be made with\nthe niain o&iCatinier street? \"What l:uv\nis t]iere td 'pEeveJit the city shutting off\ntlie water, af teethe connection is made$.\nif tlie party Avho made tJie eonneCtiou\nreliises to pay* tlio city's Avater rate?\nj^onei imless, aldci'liiiiu .Fletcher has\npassed such a:--'Jaw in his mind.\nIf the Canadian Pacific, is so patriotic\nas to AArisli to shiit out American railways\nfrom Canada, and from the Boundary\nCreek country in particular, Avhy do\nthey not practice patriotism? If the\ncompany Avere really patriotic, Avould\nnot the cqntract foi' building the Columbia& Western raihv*ay liave been given\nto Canadian contractors, instead of to a\nfirm of contractors, one of the members\nof AvliicJi lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, and\nthe other in Helena, .Montana? These\ncontractors do not purchase supplies in\nCanada; do not employ Canadian labor;\nWe   have succeeded'this  season in getting the  FRENCH  HEALTH -TJN-'\nDERWEAR for spring, and summer Avjear.  ; This is the finest and best.made\nori.\"\u25a0'the\/market.    JLJaJbiiggaiis at all  price.*-*.    Our silk  and wool   sweaters are\nadmired   by'.-all-.'aiid-.acknowledged, to^be  the   finest   yet   shoAvn in   Nelson.\n\"See these goods and get prices.\n. Toronto Telegram.\nLa Patrie declares that Mr. Siftou shall\nnot go. As La Patrie usually says Avhat\ntho C. P. 11. thinks, its opinion stands for\nthe Arerdict of the corporate powor be-\nliind the throne of the Laurier goA'ernment.\nSupposing that W. IT. Comstock\nof Brockville did say once that\neighty cents a day was plenty for AArork-\ningnien. He did not mean election day,\nand Avorkingmeii Avith Azotes will be able\nto get a trifle more than tliat in Brockville this a.m.\n\"TraA'el is the best educator in the\nAA'orld\" is a proverb that did not originate Avith the audience Avhieh heard that\nTravelled Thane, Aulay Morrison, M.P. of\nNeAV Westminster, confessing his ignorance .of everything that ever happened in\nDaAvson City.\nNoav that the Conservati\\**e party is in\nopposition, Hon. John Costigan cannot\nsee anything but its faults. When that\nsame party AA'as in office, Mr. Costigan\ncould hot see any thing biit'the virtues of\nits allotment of a portfolio and salary to\nhis account. .yy-y'y\\.\nw\nw\n' c5y *S>- *z^* cS^ tfS^ &y\n\u2022 \u00abS^^-*5S- ^^\"S^\nm\n.(Z>.0.p3.c3.C3.\nMEN'S\nCHILDREN'S\nAND LADIES'\nBOOTS\nAND SlfOES\nB\nhats  I s DU   li \u00a5ISIC   QL   u0.\nHAVE JUST RECEIVED THEIR SPRING IMPORTATION OP\nPortieres and Lace Curtains\nWhite Muslin Curtains with frilled edge; Aplique Curtains in cream\nand white, whieh for richness and durability cannot be equalled; Nottingham Lace Curtains in pretty designs and colorings of ecru and\nwhite; Colored Coin Spot Muslins for door, sash and window curtains;\nWhite Coin Spot Muslins in all sizes of spots.\nfa\nPftNY.\nSiptipf the Big* Reef Hat\n! P; bi'Bbi lp3i Neispii, B.\n:mW\u00a3m\u00aeB$R\ndoVnpt eyen;; get; the'; tinie^jliecks Avith\nwhich^h^yVpay; theirV men printed; in\nCanadav^    :T^\nalien contractors ,Tike Foley ^Brothers &\nLiirsen is of ho great benefit to Canada.\nSub-cphtractors ;under ithem' are   hot\nallpAved to ^\ndealers,Veyen:when they can; ^ave;5ftipei'i\ncent: by, doing so \u2022 -tliey must buy .-'all; tlieir\nsupplies; v?frpm Vtlie Vc^tr^ctprs, ; even \u25a0 if;\nthey V bankrupt \"thenis\nApart; from its patriotic side,; iihef systenr;\nis\u00b0;pi^Vtliat; should\"^hd; put# ; stop tpi even,\nbyViegislatioii-if^it\u201ecannbtVibe ^stopped n^\niiidnY:>pihe^\n'-.n'..'.,-^-6'--^-.--?.'^.\u00b0y, - \"'**\"'fl6yiy.&&y.aa'y.\\v?i'fyay.&i''$.fl ;^ *\u00b0c. \u00ae'y-pya.y.y\nv ;Wii^^l^eity^e^ on|the;\nquaMitytSijva^\nSmitH;,^^\n,,\u00b0pp.s^sS;.to.\"aiye>fc^\nifortt^emse'sof^fie^\n^e|te.Sjifpr;tiieiuses^.bJ[\n'jtem'i:.where;''is\u00b0qtne;.\"^at'e^\nJniii jtheVcitj^s ^lect^c.ihght\"vpltot^||^ki\u00b0:a*\n|n*iJi$tei^p^-fJ*^\"Ka\u00a5\niiiade :any \u201e&celK\n\"flow.^o\u00a3*':waterSm^\n:.-:S,As\\ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0::\u25a0 ---\"<-i'-\u25a0\"\".(,\u2022\"\u00ab\u00ab. '\u25a0S.fl-g'.y i y.ev.-h.-y-'l.;\".i-.t?\"'',t:*-li, -S\" >\u201e' ij \"A\ncreeki^and.if Sp: at'^\n\u00a5 faei^wiafftlie ;ditp efeineeivnas notjpre*\n\"pared any plans*for;;the\u00bbB proposed KAvater^\nn   X*^.\"^,. \u25a0;:.':--aii   \\\"^liMau:.    ^'0.       o     aoU-aV0\\H\"^riBn'.n\":?''-nfln\u00b0     an\"-\u00b0-''J' '\"'\" no'l'*r *'  \u25a0   n~% n  ^*  n*^9\nl\"*>yorks'textensibns^\ne&stf 3(M)0(f \u00a5 ^Isa\"p^^ialte#o1pa^\n^Ali:-:..'.,v^.-;i-...V^^''- is  VJ*. }-'%\"\u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'% &\"&'\u25a0 'ly^ii'J \u25a0 = \"*\u25a0.- \"-y:\n\\that;*'aVnewr^^^^\n^pne-third^o|d;he \u25a0,ampunJ*ti\"th^t'i'i^*pro*^se<d^\n;:\"*ijS|;,l)B\u00b0J*'fipr^b\u201ewe^\n:\"tow\u00b0?bf \u00b0eyen^\n^l^il'V'.uV'o-'J- J V>\u00b0% -5$   \u00b0p^*pl:\"*H*U.'I-g>      \u00b0b'bP'  nV\"   \"^\"\u25a0\"\"'Zn PP    'r'**    'ii'\"P*\u00bb     \"   ^S' O    &\u25a0'?\"\"-\n%6tl*its\">ivaterAVorKsv ;syste*m;^includ^.f a\"\nfrefeWofr^\n* WQek'sisi*ipply= foifthe tOAvi* ?' \"TKeseVare\niiotfcaptiousiqufestipns, but afef^ifestipns;.\nPa-  \u25a0b,n-.B-\u00a5nn,'tiin-Pali\"n^i'- \u00b0 SuiD nb '' \u2022     n'     ill     \"nDr   *-o    **\u00b0D ^    g   a il ^   *^f\u00b0\nthiit.a priaetical council wbiild.. have; the -\ncity! enlKi*de\"er'ansAver before\", they wpuld1\n\u201e^- -^npnnp^-*  \"\"^y\"      \"n    \"       \"   '       \u201e \" V    '      ,     ? \"O        r\"n      Pfl\"- -^ n-\n\u201eas]c^theipepi3l6 %: borrow a dollar.. --Wli^t,\nis\"%nt^e*p|rt\u00a3ie\u00abwatei:AVorkS systemsis. itrxie\npf:*fciie^fsew\u201eer\u00b0..and eiectriclight^y|teitfs,\n.^iJSopi*ro\u00bb;ih^      ,$5000 Avith Avliieli\"ptov;\nnifike^aclclitionsto the present city -bffices\n..P $b.P.P--Pp-bn:---Hifh A'a   n.   ^ n    S      Q     .      *.*        .   n ciw   \u25a0     s- n - nn\"        aW - \u25a0     S-    -n\nis |ipp^abs^i|itd..tp even discuss. *    \",,\nfyy^0^c\\ fSiftdii iMust;Gd.\" \";\niV.*\"V\u00ab\u00b0\"\"-!S \u201e \"Hiimlltoh'HcErald, \u2022\u25a0\u201e.\u201e\nThatlsjthc headline bf aii eclitprial^r-.\nticleinithe Tpl'phtb Mail and ISmpjre of-\ntpda^*.\".* \"Ilb^is tb be feared that in-these\nfour.^wSi'^ 4s set forth the motive*which\nis .b'eKind\" inp^t of the OttaAva .oratory\nagain^st; tlie Yukon administration. JSx-\"\ntreiSe.Tbries in parliament and extreme\nTofy\u00bb journals are not elamoring for judicialIiivestigation \u25a0 because they feel- that\nthe\/libhbr and interests of thd country\nhave been injured by corruption and\nmaladministration in. the Yukon. It is:\nnot even because they desire to see\" the\nguilty Yukon officials punished and a\nbettei* order of things established at\nDawson. It's Sifton they're after. And\nthey are after Sifton becaiise they knoAV\nthat if Sifton is discredited the whole\ngoyernment Avill be discredited. In a\nAvord, milch of the clamor against the\nYukon administration conies from mere\npartisanship, not patriotism. The Mail,\nand Empire deserves credit for frankly\nconfessing the true character of much of\nthe agitation in connection Avith the\nYukon business. But that is not to say\ntliat the government can safely ignore\ntho clamor.. To do so Avmild be interpreted as a sign of weakness.   Probably\nthe opposition is hoping that the 'government;\"' Avill ignore the agitation .and do\nnothing. That Avould be a good subject\nfor stump oratory. If the government\nis.;conscious that it has;;nothing tp fear\nfroin an impartial ahi thprpugh judicial\ninyestigatipn, it cAYpuld strengthen its\nown position and put Hs enemies to cpn-\nfusipn\/by. ordering such anVinyestigatioii.\n\"0(]yyyii^\nV\u2022;;..; V;   ;V^ ;' : ;NTorontoTelegraniv; V;;,'.;:;;-      -yy.i.:\n\u25a0 ^Liberalsy like VGR.:VL.V Richardson ;bf\n{Winnipeg J! juid ^Munlc vOHyer ^Edmbii^\nton ;destrOTedvb^\nputfp^ard ^\"U;bel^\nthe. *in^e^ior^\"wh[c^I;t^ epii-jj\n^mp^tp'disgui'le^^\nf affaii-Sy'had :been*^^^\n\"the-biihgiing!^\n((xpr\".; ^\u25a0\u25a0T'he^Md.i^npt Jsay: sb^i*u^c*^d^bui|:\n.%&kV0Hver#spok^\n\u25a0^sia'ndei^d^^^\ndid\"hdi^i-Hesitate^Sd^ctell.^he^ministei*J-efe\n',-x-ii,--ji.-.-\"\u00bb#\"\"\u2022 *\u25a0\u00ab.i\u00bb..'\"-=-;-*\"'\u2022,\".\u00bb\".\"J- yk'XX -*- -^ V-.\"W\u00absi'\u00bbaic*'T,'*i'\u00bb*\ntne*: mteribr - ayhat * Jxe; ^thought: \"of 4\/his.\ntf.-v'-.,-.'-'..-;;.: \"\u201e'\u201e\u00ab-.\u25a0,\"\":\u25a0\u00bb.\"-...- '\u00ab\"-,,-\u00bb\u201e..-$M-^.-.i?.',..,\\'i,y,i.i.'-A\n: policy ^of;$noAving\/;\u201ethe; pffic*ials.\u201etp*a\u201ecce*pt\".\n;\u00abtlieugp^sitibpsjasSgh^^^^\nih: cpi*n^etitibK\njppsitipn'sfi^ttacp^\npBtelyfby-thet lpe^cHes\/of1;*MesVrs1vliichsS\n.p\\.  \u25a0\u25a0\u201e: 'fl,;.-\"-* m. pf    ^.-rt^.,-d-^. .>;\u25a0.-.:.\u25a0.-        . pfl,p,-\u00b0...,-\\..fl,fl. ;. . 1^, fl^-p'fl^o '-^\nB.yj.. \u25a0.v-^- \"i- .* ..j\u00ab^^ ,, ., .0~$fl^ i. ijflp'pflfl-. ^# a fl- -.?\u25a0.' UD-o.K-0* *Ipp  . * *\u00bb..,\nTHOMSONS\nINCORPORATED 1670.\nScroll designs in Tapestry and Chenille, also \"irj plain colorings, goods tl]at are\nmoderate in price, an,d something tliat will give the best of satisfacti\nSpniethihg* very  rich  arid  handsome in  g-reen  and  blue bopdeped; iir\nsei?6ll patterns of vgold and red; art velvets for eushipnis arid draperies.\nCKenille Table G^\n^:]ffy^\nSomething special in Oak Inch and half poles, wood tpimmings, all complete, for 50 cents. VMAYDELINEATOR NOW IN;\n(B\nM\nfay\n.-<sfv;l\n^ER^^RiM^SlE^IES\ny.j.:\nCHOICE AND FRESH\nEEAL ESTATE and GENERAL AGENTS\n\u25a0^EIRsfe DppR'^ES^^Mc^^C.^\nr26do;*w:ar ?bioua\" > 'p-j\u00bb '.w^sR^Kri^.^^'\n\"lOOd;Bryarf and{Sewelh:.500\"'Athabasca;\u2022>\u2022\u00a3$& *\" \u201e:\nio;ooO\"\"Li^le\\CaM'6o6*sV:\". 'lOdbi^cfoled'TEtoara^^^\n^feV*Pooled;P=\u00abri^ee!;\"s; [^\"y^^^y^y^Xi\n\\>vilFsoU\u00bbat;Brca|ly;rcduccd;pricc^ni ordor^|o introduce\n' our^siipcrio^stj^\n,'saHsffiT3Uo\\^g1jiirn.ii t^\n\"\u00ab\u25a0'*\u25a0:\u25a0\u2022*--%\"V.:-^:^'.^\"V|>j^\nMmmiMSuWs\nfBusjifieetslall-lfmini^aS^-S\n6\u00b0o*w.'\"'\u2022*\u00bb!v:\u00bb:7i\u00bbaV\"<;\".'u-;\"s\"- -,'\u2022\u00bb-.'%yiy->\":fl?,^\"\\^y'-y-..yy%rny\niSpecial'|attentiOn.Vffiven?th'd^\"trans^\u00bbfc-:\nter; o$lMg\"g$ge.t$^\u201eQffi\u00b0cetf:aiVa?stables:^*\n#\"'\u25a0\u25a0 .wsx'r.\u2022 .-. ^.y.^y\u00ab.?**,\"\u25a0 o yi-.v-!i\u00bb\u00ab..-i-,\u00abra,'Ba.\u00ab\"-.\n^ENERtS^^^lglEl^\ni^\u00b0''y-,-syfl,*fin.y*yyy\\.p.ip'hp*p ^^-..... --..,,-^<..\nk ,\u00bb>v o :liavo:a;\u00ablluc. agsoi'lmonfc ofn\\:oolons:ral\\vays\";\n.\"\\on; h\"a\"nd..,sGodds\".nfado lip4at*tlio:,sh6rhtcstu;pnos->'*1\n'\" Kiblb 'notice\"? \u25a0!l!A|,6VerythiiigW Jcepfc; and; niado.'!*\n;<Sn.\"Hidipi'C)iiTs>ds, iatisfaccionVis]assured;*,\"\"\/..\"\",.\u00ab\u2022\n*|Uf\"ner & ^dW^ib^i^afen\/BrdtV-.\nPIANO\nORC3-AN\nVIOLIN \"J\nGITITAR-\nMANDOi^N\nBANJO\nAUTOHAR]?\nACOORDEON\nVIOLIN BOW\nSTRINGS\nor MUSIC\nCall at our Store and we \"will do the rest.'\nA. 7^00M 'HOJJSBf TaO XET\nA 14-fejrioM ,E PUSH; TO\" jtBT*\nE0K S^E\nA,'3-lot corner;:. n.\n\"A. S-rbojH\" h'6u\"\u00bbe..\n. ifloo\n,    Hojtses and lots in nil parts of the city.\nmp^kV Td;i>0Aivr iNsanlNeR\nf\"2iGENTSi,FLOR\"*\n\u2022y. \u00bb .\nB'AKERVSiiREjEJ.-:WESTs .NELSON\nThey fa^e all the rage\nthis summer\nand we are geiiijig ready\nfor the rush\nCanada Drug and Book Co..\nLIMITED.\nCorner Baker and Stanley Streets, Nolson.\nOOM33  AND SBB' OUB LINES\n1TOW  ON DISFLAIT\nTtipso dcsiriiig rosidcjitial lots should purchase\nthem at.once before, the advaricd which will follow the comraencomen't of work upon the tramway\nAddition A and Hume Addition Property\non, easy ternts. \/    -\nCarrible 4 O'Reilly, Agents\nIfijolj wSnt aiiiattys \"Btylish'suit qtcldth^ij for\nspriiii? aiid;^mrimer, 1 havorovor.'')00.;difl'6r- \u25a0\neiit'pattoi'iiSf.o'f Scotch^arid ,Knglish;\u00b0st\\voedH}'\nwliicli\" I, will'ihako to youY order at the\" low\npricb>b'f= \u201e..\u00bb..,.. ;...'i ,..\" .-.V..;,\"..\"..,. .\u201e.,?.,? $25'\nJiliick veii(Stiaim\"ii)ak6' a- nice \"suit\" for 'sum- \u25a0\n\u25a0 iheiv\u00bb\\vuai'.atw ,,\u00bb.-. $.,.,.,.....\u00bb:-. *.\"\u00ab.,.,.. >\u2022*\u00ab\".,,.\u2022 82i \u25a0.\nBlack sorg.o.Buils i\"uV\"sa6k \"orSn^riiliig coat.. $21,\nAj, heavy\" Scotch twced.i nice ;pattoriis\u00bb for\n'buslne.sij, suit-\".,.. ,*... \u201e,...:..... *\". ?,..\u00ab..\".,..;..-. i.M&\nTroliscrsa'tcqiiiUly low prices\": \u201e Kt'and.finish\nil6\" Jjottcrii) Canada.\" .Iiadics'finplail6fii)K,;a\nspecialty.  ClchiMt bloJik, Baker street.\nThe H. W. McNiell Co., Ltd., Canadian An.th.ra-\n\u25a0    \u25a0:\u25a0\". ^'!\"cit^.ifi()ai^Harsd^:f;:r\" ^.v': ^\nr, -        -- m'        - D-00D        .n.^D-Q nn,   n,.'  \u201e   -   \u00b0  J   \u201e     > .\"1 '\u2022'_   ll   _    \u00bb *   rfJ       h\u201e- if-       J       .- ;     \u201e.   A     DI. q n  D\nDealers^Iir\nh\ne\nR REISTEFIER &. GO\nBURWiCHS Am) BOTTIiEKS OF\nFine Lag^p Beep,\nAle arid Sorter\n<feetCtr*D\u00bb Will btiy 24 horses, 12 wasons^ 2\n\u00a3pt*dV\/*U* wagonettesj 1 buggy, 10 sets of\nsleighs, and a complete outfit of harness, saddles, blankets, etc., and a going business of\n$80,000 a year.  Terms.\n<feQr4r*r* Will buy two lots and improve-\ni\u00abpol\/UU ments on north side of Vernon\nstreet, between Ward and Josephine streets.\nTerms.\n\u00abbA* Kf\\f\\ Will buy 80 by 120 feet on the\nqJrBOW south side of Baker street, between Stanley and Kootenay streets.  Cash.\n&4f\\ f\\f\\f\\ Will buy 60 by 120 feet on the\n$1U,UW  northeast \t\nJosephine streets.\nP.O. Box 67'\ncorner of Baker and\nCasn-   JOHN HOUSTON,\nVernon* street, Nelson\nA Business\nThe undersigned will soil the folio-wing real estato\nand personal property at a bargain:\nNine-room house and ten lots set'out in orchard\n'Four-room cottage and five lots.\n;Two lots and improvements.\nSFifty-two. head of cows.\nrFifty millc cans.        \u2022.\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0 ;\n\u25a0Two horses. .'\u2022-.\u25a0   ..\nWagons, sleighs, harness, and everything in\nconnection with Hurry's milK ranch.\nWABBBBOS.\nREAL ESTATE AGKNTS, West Baker St., Nelson    | street. Nelson, B. C.\nPrompt and regular\ndelivery to the trade.\nBrewery at Nelson.\nTENDERS   WANTED\nFOR   REAL   ESTATE.\nTenders will bo received by the undersigned until-12\nO'clock noon oii Monday, May lst,-1899, for tho purchase\nof the following described real estate situate in Nelson:\nLots 7 and 8 Block 10 and improvements (the Silver\nKing Hotel), together with furniture and fixtures in the\nbuilding. \u25a0     '\u2022\nTerms cash. The highest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted. CAROLINE THELIN,\n\u2022 ' Administratrix estate John Johnson, deceased.\nNclBon, B. C\u201e April 10th. 1899. ; .\n%'OTJdiKlX? ;'(Bip<Slfyy :\"\"\u201e\"V\nM.ANyP^CuTUilERS OF \"\u25a0    . n\niUtiCSSED\" Bliicks\"    FIREBRICKS-   \"FIRE CiifiY\"\n\u2022- \"\u2022\u25a0viTuiafr3KD.s.ALajQi^rZKD,',sK\\'\\pjirattpKS.''''.'^\n.All kiiidsj)t fidiftiiry flttings.'ligrjciiltni'nl,drain tilo,\nflo\\ver p'ots, terra^cottutvchiiiirioyVpinefaiid .flue lining,\nchiiniTOy topsf, llrb,\"brick; \"flro Hay;5all\u00b0kiftd'i\"of \"flro\" clay\ngoods, ossaye^'.furnaccH.etc., mado itotordcr, .    \u00b0\nOrnamental- Carden Border Tiles,  Vases,   Etc.\nCement, plaster of paris,\"\"limd, and all \"Kinds, of\n.ornamental;'planter work?\nINSPECTION OF STOCK INVITED\nMrs.   E,   MaLaughlin\nJOSEPHINE STBEET, NELSON\nFOR   SALE,\nTJiOR, SALE\nJ-    wagon and\nA teaming outlit consisting of. ono team,\n1 harness.   Will bo sold clj\nihcap fpr cash.\n\u25a0Reason for selling, owner lias mineral claims to look\nafter.   Apply to J, F. Jacobson, food merchant, vornon\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal Co.\nPAYMENT MUST ACCOMPANY\nALL ORDERS\nCharles   St.   Barbe,   Agent.\nNelson Iron Woj?ks\nMANUFACTURERS OF\n\u25a0BNCUNES, BOILERS, SHAFTING, IRON AND\nBRASS CASTINGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION\nRepairs promptly attended to.      P. O. Box 173.\n\u25a0A\ny THE  TRIBUNE:  KELSON, B.C., FRIDAY, APRIL 28,  1899.\nAM OF IONTBEAL\nCapital,\nRest,\nall paid\nup,     \u25a0\n$12,000,000\n6,000,000\nijilil) STRATUCONA AND  MT. ROYAL, l^esident\n'Son. GKO. A. DRUMMOND Vice-President\n:\u2022'.   y. CLOUSTON '. General Managor\nTHE BANK OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nNELSON\nTST-HIXjSOTT   beanoh\nti. W. Cor. Baker and Stanley Streets.\n      :\u00abl{\\NI'Hf.-'  IN\t\nLONDON   (H-nwlanl).    r*tl*i\\V   VOR.K.   O\nuri'l in liic iirmiMpal I'ir.ii!- in Cumuli\nMTOAOO\nIs qow prepared to issue Drafts and Letters\nof Credit on Skaguay, U. S., Atlin., B. C, and\nDawson City, Yuloon, District. \u00bb\nlli:>  .UKi\n-ell m.T'lrm  (;\u00aboh:i'njc\u00bb   \u25a0.\u00ab\u25a0! ''.ililo 'rni!isf\u00abr-\n,;i(,VST ODMI'.'IKdMI. .1NM   I'lt XV WM.BXSI   OH^DI'lM,\navailable ii! any part- ot tho world.\nDKAVTS  [RJIUKD    COLMfCTlONS MADE; ''TO.\nSAVINGS BANK BRANCH.\nCURRENT RATK OK INTKRKST PAID\nA   PLAZA   MINER.\nIJocanse ho was down to his last peso ifc\nby no menus followed tliat he was looking\nI'or work.    J to was looking at the passers-\nby  in the Plaza.    it was easier, unci in\nMexico the easiest xvay is the best.    lie\nlounged back  on one of the benches, under an orange-tree in full flower, and listened to   the birds singing in among the\nroses and jasmine back of him.     Women\nshuffled   by\u2014filLhy old hags and young\nones with big eyes and features of bronze\nstatues\u2014carrying  on their heads wafcer-\n,   jars or baskets   full of vegetables  and\nflowers, meat and lard.    Peons, in skintight pantaloons and bright \/.arapes, all\nwearing the inevitable sombrero, jauntily   tipped   up   behind,   loitered   along,\ndragging  their sandaled   feet,   or sank\ndown to do\/.e upon the benches.    Ladies\nwent by   occasionally.    Gwin   surveyed\nthem from tho tops  of their ill-arranged\nheads   to  the soles of their wide shoes,\nwondering   what   particular   untidiness\nthe  black shawl might cover  for  each,\nand searching still, as  he had been doing\nsince ho had come  to the country a year\nbefore,  for a beauty among tho upper\nclasses.    He quite longed for the sight of\nthe genuine thing\u2014of some gringo who\nwould step like a queen, in whose figure\nthere would be. grace, and in whose face\nintelligence.\nAnd presently the longing was satisfied. She came toward him, crossing the\n_ cobbles of tho street, lifting her skirt and\nshowing afoot that outdid, if not the\ntraditions, at least the facts of tho arched\ninstep of the sen ori ta. She was certainly beautiful. Her hair shone in-the sunlight, and her eyes, when she raised thorn\nto look up  at tlio cathedral  towers\u2014her\n- eyes!\u2014but Gwin*thought he had'never\nseen the like of them. He sat up with\nthe ' most energetic movement he had\nknown iu many weeks, and watched her.-\nJn Mexico it is civil to stare.    And Gwin\n- made the nipst of the license.    ,\n-    She came on_ directly past him iioav\u2014\nthe beautiful   American\u2014and tho won-\nv derfnl eyes  rested on him with a-glance\n-. of   recognition   of   a' countryman. - She\nAvas talking tc> a man who Gwin hoped-i-\nfor no * particular reason beyond  an  in-,.\n, natclove  ofthe  eternally lit\u2014might be\nher father.    And chiefly because'he had\nuothing^to do just then, had had nothing\nto do for the past half-year, and had no\nprospects   of   anything ' to do for some\nmonths ahead, he set about iiudhfg  out.\nThe gringo has not yet ceased to bo an\nobject o*f interest and comment in Mexi-\nco.    Gwin walked down .to the station ;\nancL'a compatriot, between expressions in\nprofane    manner    co-accruing    Mexican\n^b^sin^slTicytirod^iTi^noral andTai 1 roueI\nemployees in particular, gave hiiu tho information he wanted\n\"Those people? \" Oh, that's a Mr. Merc\ned his frank, boyish brow to suggest a\nbrown study, a preoccupation so deep\nthat he had almost run into the plutocrat\nbefore he saw him. Then he raised his\nhat with a cheerful recognition, cut somewhat, short by other concerns.\n\"Has a man named Storms [jcm-u here\nyet?\" lie asked of tho (hiu German who\nwas putting aside Times and Heralds and\nSuns for regular subscribers.\nThe tone had a ring of business which\nstartled the German and made Mr. Meredith prick up his oars the while ho read\nheadlines. Next to tho strains of his\nnational anthem, no sound so stirs the\nsoul of the American in foreign parts as\nthat Oi a sharp, decided Yankee voice.\nThe German said that, \u00bbo far as he\nknew, no man named Storms had been in.\nGwin wondered if the fellow expected\nhim to do things on Greaser principles,\nand to wait half a day, losing time and\nmoney. And then he went back to the\ndoor. There was another American\nthere, besides the owner of the private\ncar. Gwin knew him. A little furitive\na.s to the eyes, a little seedy as to tho\nclothes, a little ragged as to tho beard;\nbut benign and guileless withal.\nI \"I say,\" said Gwin; \"do you know a\nI fellow named Storms, Bennett?\"\nBennett shook his head and answered,\n\"Nit,\" indifferently.\n\"He has come dowu here,\" Gwin went\non, \"to see about my report on the mine.\"\nBennett looked up and met Gwin's\neyes, and recognized a neophyte\u2014one\nwho, driven perhaps by need, perhaps by\nnatural tastes, was about to join, the\nbrotherhood.\n\"If I report favorably, his people will\nbuy,\" Gwin continued; \"that is, they will\nif my company consents to sell at a\nquarter of a million\u2014which  I  shall not\nadvise.    Tliat  El  Rico lode \" he had\nnot hesitated for the name, and he began\nto enjoy liis own iirvcution.    Ho wont on\nrecklessly,  for  he  could    feel  that  the\nowner  of  the private  car had stopped\nturning over the sheets of his newspaper\naud Avas listening.    And his speech blossomed forth in stopes,\" Hako rock, running\nground, stulls, dips and cribs\u2014all'the vocabulary     of.  his ..theoretical    mining\ncourse. * But over and anon he  recurred\nto the richness of tho El Rico vein.   -\n-    \"T  shall advise  against a sale,\" ho, repeated.    \"Iii my opinion,* my  company\ncan,  by a small  expenditure,- realize a\nlargo,amount; timbering will not be  expensive\u2014drift-gravel   ground\/ largely\u2014\nand it  is  my  belief it.  will   prove  the\nrichest mine in Mexico.\"\n,, The plaza miner, was- good   natured.\nlie  a greed,, and* helped along tlio effect\nby references toGwiu's unusual experience\nand honesty.    Then  he -.withdrew,  and\n'Gwin pulled'out his watch aud \u2022 frowned.'\nHe tapped his  foot  impatiently on tho\npavement, and his nice boyish face  grew\nblack.    The plutocrat read* his paper and\ncast glances at Gavui between  the paragraphs.    Then he approached.\nIt began with the question as to Iioav\nlong you have been hero, aud ended with\nan invitation to lunch in the private car.\nGwin considered and counted his minutes,\nancl decided that he might spare the\ntime.\" He accepted.\n~~ It A\\-as\"ainuririacseent~dream\nthe laud is most beautiful, and least visited. Tliey broke their Avay- through\nfloAvers, pink, Avhite, purple, blue, scarlet,\nand yelloAA1*; the blossoms brushed against\ntheir hands and met across the pommels.\nThe trees wore gay with blue morning-\nglory and great tufts of orange and scarlet parasite. After that they began to\nclimb mountains, and Gwiir began to\nwish himself Avell out of it. \u2022 He had\nstarted without knowing-just.-why, half\nrecklessly, half to see what would happen.    He A\\ras seeing now.\nIn rather less than a week he Avas\nthinking all day of a girl\u2014it-might even\nbo that she was thinking of him; he had\ntaken in a kindly disposed man\u2014lied to\nhim Avhile he broke his bread; he himself\nwas a fraud, and if he carried it out to\nthe end would be a criminal; if he did\nnot, she would knoAV. She would know\nin any case,sooner or latter. He groaned as he grabbed his horse's mane v\\lnle\nthey  scrambled up the mountain side.\nThey  came  to the mine at length,  as\nmany another plaza  miner and  his prey\nhad done before them.    There Avas a timbered entrance and some yards of tunnel.\nGwin  had  lost his taste for the thing.\nBut   the   impossibility   of turning   and\nsquarely \"facing Avith the truth this man\nAvhom he had brought thirty-odd leagues\non horseback Avas manifest.   He enlarged\nconvincingly on   the  wealth in  beyond\nthat black hole.    He  dug out a handful\nof soft rock with his  knife, and  pointed\nto silver where none was.    His face was\nmore scarlet than sunburn.    lie lied Avith\nthat   glibness   which   arises   from   not\nknowing Avhere your next inspiration is\ncoming from.    And he  was  immensely\nconvincing.\n\"But, of course, I shall have to have\nmy own experts,\" Mr. Meredith said, half-\napologetically.\n\"Of course,\" agreed GAvin, briskly,\nAvith a sinking heart.\nAncl then they rode back. Gwin Avas\nsomewhat silent. Ho Avas figuring upou\nhow a man who has nine silver dollars in\nthe world can best get out of a country.\nBut. he ceased to calculate wheu Miss\nMeredith Avelcomed him with tears in her\neyes\u2014tears of thankfulness for his having kept her father in safety. Gavui\nrather encouraged her belief that they\nhad ridden into the open jaws of danger,\nancl accepted an invitation to run up to\nMexico on the private car.\nA day aud a half took them to tho city;\nand a day.took Gwin and  Miss Meredith\nfar along the rose-strewn path  of fancy.\nGwin had no such intention in the morning, ' and  by   night   he had   told   Miss\nMeredith that he loA'cd her.    It AA'as  all\npart of the chance game.   -\n,    They sat in the moonlight upon the\nback'steps of  the  car, rushing along a\nlevellieight\u2014a plateau from  Avhieh they\nseemed to look down on mountain ranges\nand up to only the vapory white smoke,\nfrom the, wood-fed engine, ancl  the stars'.\nFor  two  hours  GAvin forgot all  things\nsave that a beautiful girl loved*:him ; a\ngirl who AA-as to him not only herself but\nthe embodiment of all.he had left behind\n\u2014of college, of companionship, of hope\nfor the future, of honest work, of homo\nand  civilization.    For those more than\nfor the great, soft eyes she raised to him ;\u25a0\nmore\/than. for  tho \"cold\" little hand she'\nslipped iuto \u00a3iis, he loved- her.    Aud he\nthrust aside memory\u2014the memory, which\nwhispered steadily, like, tho, roar of the\nwind in his ears\u2014that life AA'as not all tonight; that tomorrow must come\u2014witli\nthe experts. -\nThe exports sat in their, oflicc, Avaiting.\nThejr had already waited an hour and'a\nhalf, and making every allowance for the\ncustom ofthe 'country, tlie time seemed\nto them too long. '.'Mr.-Meredith-drew\nout his watch ancl frowned, very much\nas GAA-in had done in front of the American news agency ten days before. Miss\nMeredith alternated between a map\nwhich, hung against the .-whiteAvashed\nAvail and the: window. '   y\n\"Mr. -?\" began one of the experts.\n\"Mr. Gwin,\" the plurocrat supplied ungraciously.\n\"Mr. Gwin may have been detained, or\nthere may have been some misunderstanding as to the place of meeting.\"\nMr. Meredith resented the flicker of a\nsmile that played in the expert's eyes.\nIt made him vaguely uneasy. He did\nnot answer.\nAnother half hour lagged by. Expansion, the \"open door,\" the future of\nChina, the Americanizing of Mexico, had\nrisen for discussion, together with lesser\ntopich-, aud'had been laid aAvay. There\nAvas a long pause.\n\"May 1 ask\"\u2014suggested the expert,\nsuavely, balancing a pencil judiciously\nbetAveen his fingers\u2014\"may I ask if Mr.\nGAArin Avas recommended to you by responsible parties.\nThe situation AA'as not so new to the\nexperts as it appeared, from tho deepening purple of his face, to be to Mr. Meredith. He explained majestically. The\nflickering smile greAv into a steady\ntAvinkle.\n\"And you say Mr. GAvin took you to\nsee the mine. Do you knoAV Avhere it\nwas situated and what was its appearance?\"\nMr. Meredith explained that also\u2014\nrather less majestically\u2014for the smile\nhad spread to the lips of both experts.\nThey looked at one another, ancl then one\nspoke.\n\"Well, Mr. Meredith,\" he began, leaning\nback in his chair and reaching out for a\npaper-cutter wherewith to tap the desk,\n\"1 do not Avant to do the young gentleman any injustice, of course, but if I\nAvero you I shouldn't set my heart upon\nseeing him again.\"\nHo was a practical man, but, he knew\nthat the girl had turned from the study,\nof the map and that her face was A\\rhite.\nHe hesitated.\n\"Well?\" asked Mr. Meredith, sharply.\n\"Well, my dear sir, the mine you describe is not entirely unknoA\\rn to us.      It\nhas gone by various names\u2014as many as\nthere arc miners who conduct their operations and observations from the benches\nof the plazas in that part of Mexico. The\nright name is 'La Couchita'\u2014or A\\ras before  the  misguided  men 'avIio  tried  to\nwork it abandoned it as abaci job.    I.am\nsorry, Mr. -Meredith, I am very sorry, but\nI fear Ave must add Mr:' Gwin's  name to\nthe already fat'list of plaza miners.\"\n.  And  in  the silence that folloAved he\nglanced-toward. the - window,  where a*\nshaking hand AA'as playing a tattoo unevenly upon the pane.\nEARLY   CLOSING   NOTICE.\nAVe. the undersigned retail, merchants of lie city of\nNelson, hereby agree to close our rci-poclive places of\nbusiness at seven o'clock each evening, except Saturday\nniirhts and the nights proceeding statutory and civic\nholiday s. and also to keep our places of business closed\non \"\u2022 undays and on a'l legal holidays. This agreement\nto tako effect from May 1st, 1899.\nP. BURNS & CO\nWKST KOOTKNAY  BUTCHER CO\nJ. A. GILKER\nG. O. ROSS\nH. N. HENDRICKSON\nJ. V. WEIR\nD. McARTHUR & CO\nJ. J. WAMCKR\nFRED J. SQUIRE\nA. FERLAND & CO\nNKLSON FURNITURE CO\n'-EC F. MOTION\nF. H. I.OVKRING\nt'ATFNAUOK HROS\nA. G. S'lAW\nHYDF. TITSAVORTU & CO\nT FT ICO. MADSON\nFRED IRVINE & CO\nMARTIN O'ilKILLY & CO .\nEMORY & WALLEY\nAV,\\ LLACE & MILLER\nH. At. VINCENT\n.1. A. IRVING & CO\nKIRKPATRICK & WILSON\nM. DESBRISAY & CO\nMORRISON & CALDWELL\nLILLIE BROS\nTHOMSON STATIONERY CO. Ltd\nNEELANDS SHOE EMPORIUM\nJ. R. WRAY\nT. J. SCAN LAN\nHUDSON'S BAY CO\nJACOB DOVER\nB\nfa\nSPECIAL VAL\n-\u25a0a*******-^\niSN\nWe have just placed in stock a splendid assortment of ladies' Whitewear,\n\u25a0 , which we are selling at prices that defy competition.\nB\nB\nThe Tremont Hotel\n\u00a9 LADIES' NIGHT DRESSES\n** LADIES' NICKT DRESSES\nUWEnB0HJJ!HB5B\n| LADIES' UNDERSKIRTS\n| LADIES' UNDERSKIRTS\n.'. LADIES' CHEMISE\nNicely\neach.\ntrimmed, at 90 cent.*. .$1, and $1.25\nKinitroidcry trimmed, cxifti  line cambric,\nnt $1.50 and $2 each.\nLace  trimmed, finest quality of cambric,\nextra special at $1.75 and $2 each.\ntimbre idery\neach.\ntrimmed,    all    .sizes,   at    $1.50\nTrimmed\n$2 each.\nwith   lorchon   luce,  at   $1.\nr.\u00bb\nand\nExtra  quality  cambric, nicely  trimmed Avith embroidery and insertion at $J.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2\nMARTIN  O'REILLY & CO.\nu&\nBANK  OF  B. C.  BUILDING,  NELSON.\n'.(=>. p3. (=3. c3. c\nmm\n>m\nW|AL(p & TREGILLUS\nPROPRIETORS\n'?.m\nT0B3*R3S\/:s\n\\m\noa.s:h:\nHeadquarters for Miners and Prospectors\nTHE BEST BRANDS OF\nLiquors and Cigars\nP. Burns\nWIIOLKSALK   AND   RETAIL\nALWAYS ON HAND\nOne of the best and most popular hotels in Nelson.\nQUEER'S HOTEL\nBAKER STREET, NELSON.\nHeated with Hot Air and\nLighted by ..Electricity\"\":\nLUMBER\nLargo comfortiiblo bedrooms and \"first-class dining\nroom.   Sample rooms for commercial men. -      _ ,-\nRATES   {$2   PER   IDJ^^C     \"    -\nMeat Merchants\nWholesale Markets at \/ielson, Rossland, Sandon and Greenwood.\nRETAIL,STORES AT\nNelson,   Trail,  Ymir, Kaslo,  New. Denver,  Sandon,' Silverton, Cascade\nCity,  Grand Forks,   Midway, Greenwood and Sirdar.\nPROMPTLY FORWARDED          1^(1    OfflCe,   NelSOfi,   B,C\u00ab\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nALL KINDS OF FRESH AND SALTED MEATS\nWHOLESALE; AND RETAIL\nFISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON\n^L*ET*isr\"cr-A.\"t,\nditli. Big gun of some sorb on some rowl\nin the States. Lots of stiilf. JLJoro in a\nprivate car. Wants to buy mines and\ntilings--another darn fool tliat thinks\nthe Land of the Monte\/.iinias is Koing to\nmakeliis eternal fortune. I'll bet some\nplaza miner socks ' it to him\u2014and I hope\n\\he does.\"\nThe oft-repeated quien sabe--device of\nbhc-lancl\u2014had rasped his Lemper against\nall mankind.\n\"Got a party with him?\"\n\"Daughter, I believe.\" And then tlio\ndisgruntled one launched into tlio details\nof his owu woe.\nGwin listened. Ho had nothing else to\ndo, and no farther interest in tho tourists. That -wasi what liethought thoii,as\nhe agreed amiably with all that tho fertile tongue of \"his iufOriiianfc c*o\\dd say\nabout the Greaser, and figured icily tlnvt'\noiie last silver piece ill his sido pocket.\nB\\*it upon the day* \"following ho though*\u00a3,\notherwise. For the silver pieco luul\ndwindled to oiie mucli smaller, and he did\nriot fancy tho sort of dinner that dos\nreales will buy. Therefore, Whell he\nwandered up to the American wows^agoii*\ncy\u2014which, was also . bar-room and ex-\ncliange-^with the purpose of finding out\nif there was anything new, and when he\nsaw Mr. Meredith, evidently urged by\na like purpose, standing in the doorway,\na thought flashed upon Mm. The owner\nOf a private car, a stranger to the land\nand to the manifold ways of making an\nhonest living therein of his own countrymen, a would-be disposer of much earthly\n\u2022 treasure, the, father of a'* beautiful\ndaughter.\nGwin made his step brisk, and pucker-\nHe sat\nback in the upholstered seats, and held\nhis mouth open. The plums fell into it.\nMiss-Meredith was as amiable as she was\nbeautiful. The plutocrat evinced a\nmarked interest in miues. -The Chinaman cook's hot biscuits breathed of home\nancl fche past in their odorous steam. And\nMr. Meredith asked him to come again.\n\"Wo shall be here a week, possibly.\nAnd if your man Storms don't come ,to\nLime, I might like to tako a look at the\nRico myself,\" he said. _\nHfcorms did not come to time, and Gwin\ntook Mr. Meredith to the mine. He raised\nten dollars and engaged the horses aud\ndressed himself in the charro suit tliat he\nhad bought in the first days,Avhon he had\nbeen flush and all things had been new\nand picturesque. Tho suit was picturesque still. The short jacket set off his\nbi'Oild slioulderS and the skin-tight pantaloons Iijs height; the sombrero added\nstern daring to his open countenance,\nwhile tlieknife in its leather case* -hanging from his' belt, and.the revolver showing from his hip-pocket wrought the\neffect to its highest, pitch. ''y\nMiisa Meredith\u2014who was to stay with\nli'iends tit the hotel during her father's\nabserico<\u2014showed her admiration. She\nlet Gwin hold her hand rather long and\nhard; and undor the influence of the\nbowie-knife and revolver, she trembled a\nlittle and raised her beautiful eyes to his.\n\"You won't let anything happen to\nfather?\" she begged. Gwin reassured\nher. He wondered how much of the\nanxiety might reasonably be portioned off\nto \"father.\" And he found himself\nwondering that pretty steadily as he\nrode with the man of Pullman cars beside him, sitting uneasily the scrawny\nlittle horse.\nIt was the season  of tho  rains,  when\nWILL BE HELD AT\nSILV\nMAY 24th, 1899\n$1750\nAll\nkinds\nin\nstock; -\nD00B\nMOLDINGS\nMrs.  E.  C.   CLARKE,  Prop.\nLate of tho Royal Hotel, Calgary, \"   \u2022 \u25a0\nHotel\nHume\nIN   PRIZES\n$1750\nABIUDGED PROGRAMME\nRACES\nHOpSE\n1st Prize 2nd Prize\nFree-for-all $206\nSlocan race      75\nPony race..............    50\nYou cat] save money\nby purchasing your\nlumber froti] me\nH- D. ((UME, Manager.\nBaKer street, fieison E.G. TRAVES, Manager\n\\\" ORDERS BY MAIL RECEIVE CAREFUL AND rROill'T A'J'l'ENTlON.\nand\nWhen Advertised\ny    At;\"Auction  Prices\"   should  be\n.      auction   price means tho  highest\n' \"purchaser can be induced to pay.\nNew Spring Designs\n.rt\nleft  alone,\nprice wliich\nAn\ntlio\n$IOO\n25\n25\nCaledonian \u00bbSports\nPURSES   AMOUNT   TO\u00b0 $1300\nGold Medal for Best AU-Eoiind Athelete\nDRILLING CONTEST FOR $300\nMATCH GAME OF BASE BALL\nHOSE REEL RACE\nGRAND    BALL\nJ. A. Sayward\nHALL AND LAKE STREETS. NELSON\nContraetors and Builders\n Tlio-flncrtl hoteHn-the-iiilcrior.\t\nLarge sample rooms.   Steam heat and electric light.\nCORNER OF WARD AND VERXON STS., NELSON\nMadden House\nRAKER AND WARD STREETS, NELSON\nThe only hotel in Nelson that has remained under one\nmanagement since 1890.\nThe bed-rooma are  well furnished' and   lighted by\nelectricity.\nTho dining-room is not second to any in Kootenay.\nTho bar Is ahvays stocked by tho best domestic and\nimported liquorc and cigars.\n THOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor.\nFLORENCE PARK HOTEL\nTwo and a half miles up the Outlet from Nelson.\nTHESE GOODS we are\n\u25a0   , bound to sell whjlc\nthey remain the patients\nof the season,.   We prefer -to mark them down,\nrjow, aqd let our regular\ncustomers  have the ad-\n_vantage_of_tlie_cuts rath,-^\ner th,ai*( have a slaughter\nsale some months later\nto m,af<e room for n,ew\ngoods.    Our display   of\nRugs and Art  Squares\nis the finest  ever seen\nin  Kootenay.   Th,ey. are\nreceived direct from the\neastern importers so that\nin buying from  us you'\nare    virtually   reaching\nheadquarters.\nIn Axminsters of the best quality\/with or without\nborders. British ancl  Canadian inake-J. *\nBrussels and Velvet Pile\nSuitable for drawing-rooms, dinin\/r-rooii!.-\nstairs, with or without- border*.\n!**ll\nor\nTapestry and Patent Tapestry,\nUnion   art   squares,  Japnncsc\nSmyrna and Tecuniseh rugs.\nsquares   and   rucr.-\n40 Different Styles\nOf   baby carriages   and   go-cai\nIiallan chairs and rockers.\n(\u2022\u2022   to   .-; Iccl.   from.\nWILL DO WELL TO\nAT\nG. 0. BUCHANAN'S\nFor Further Particulars Apply to Secretary, Silverton, B.C.\nBOARD AND ROOM\nFirst-class board and room. Todd's old stand, corner\nWard and Carbonate streets, in rear of English church.\nHeated by steam. Tablo board S4, room and board \u00a75\nand ?5.'50.\nA collection of flue Belgium Canaries for sale.\nJ. V. O'LAUGHLIN.\nA largo stock of first-class dry material on hand, also\na frill line of sash, doors; mouldings, turned work, etc.\nFACTORY WORK A SPECIALTY\nODUfT A T HHTUC \u2022     Spring Chickens, Fresh. Cream,\nOrJGiUlALllir'O.     Pure Milk, Fresh-Lafd Eggs.\nAllof which saro 'from tho ranch belonging tosthe hotel\nA pleasant place to spend aEternoons, evenings and\ncnjby delicacies that cannot be obtained in *   * \"\nrestaurants at Nelson,\nniglit.   Oan bo roachedb;\nGood stabling.\njy either road\nWILLIAM ROBERTS,\nhotels or\nQpen day and\nor water.\nProprietor..\nYard:   Foot of Hendryx street, Nelson\nTelephone, 91\nJohn Rae, Agent\nLODGE   MEETINGS,\nKNIOHT3  OF PYTHIAS-Nolson   Lodge,  No,  25,\nKnights of Pythias, meets in I. O. O. F. Hall.cornor\nKootenay streets, overy Tuesday evening at\n-'     '\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0*     .(1fa.-   \u2022    \u2022' \u2022 \u25a0     -\u2022\u00bb   -\nBaker anc .... .\n8 o'clock.   Visiting Knights cordially invited to attend.\nC. FRENCH, C. O. G. ROSS, K. of R. & 3.\nNKL80N LODGK, NO. 23, A. F. & A. M. Meets\nBecond Wednesday in each month. Sojourning\nbrethren invited.\nLargo and well lighted Heated by hot air\nReasonable* ratb6  '   \u25a0 Sample rooms\nElectric bells and light in every room\nRenovated aiid refurnished throughout\nHOTEL  VICTORIA\nJ. V. PERKS, Proprietor\nRevelstoke, B. C.\nFurniture of all Kinds\nIs advancing, and   notice to   this\nsent   Lo   tho   trade   by   all   large:\nHaving a largo stock on hand avo\ncontinue to <|iiolo   botU-t\ncompetitors.      Wo   Imve\nfurniture on tho way.\ncfi'ivl   has been\nmamd'ai'ltireis.\nwill  be able to\nfigures than any of our\naiso    thru-   carloads   of\nD,\nCorner Baker and ,'Wfard Streets, NeJ&bn.\nJust\nBig Carload\nOF   .A.L0-, v^-xnST3DS\nFreo bus meets all trains\nHourly street car to station\nNelson Saw & Planing Mills\n&\nAll  accounts owing  the Nelson  Pining Mills, contracted since the 17th day of Soptombor, 1898, aro due\nand payable to tho undersigned, payment of which is re\nquired at once.        HARRY HOUSTON, Secretary,   *\nNolson Saw & Planing Mills.\nNelson, B. C, April 25th, 1899.\nAlso New Picture aqd Room Mouldings, New Curtain NJateriais in Silk, Dsnjask, etc*.\nflew Upfjolstry Coverings-a Large, Variety, jlew Carpets, 'Oilelo^s, etc.\nSPECIALTIES: \u2122lstering,\nINSPECTION INVITED\nPICTURE\nAiiL. B*y;\nFRAMING,   AND\nSKILLED   LABOR.\nrepair mm\nPOPULAR PRICES\nOnly Address, Applewhaite Block, Baker Street West. Corner Kootenay\nNelson  Furniture   Co\nFor Undertaking and Enbainyng the Leading Establishment in Kootenay. THE TRIBUNE:  NELSON, B. C,  FRIDAY, APRIL 28,' 1899.\nDye?\nIf so, remember we can supply you\nwith the necessary \u25a0material and full\ninstructions how to make a clean job\nof.it.-, We carry a full line of Diamond   Dyes   and  Maypole Soap   Dyes\nLOCAL   NEWS   AND   GOSSII>.\nCORNER RAKER ANT) JOSEPHIN'B STRRETS. NKLSON\nJ &$?&rMy'&yyyyy.\nI ?B*$s^yyyyyy y\nAre the most important] part of man's spring* \"get up.\"\nHis whole attire depcndkiupon beauty and quality of his\nMEGKWEAR\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022'i\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0' '..        ' ''\u25a0\u25a0 ' 9' \u25a0\u25a0\nOur [line   of    Puff>  Knots,    Four-in-\n(. :'i.:'..\/ \u25a0: \u25a0 , i \u25a0 \u25a0\/..-!- \u25a0' '\u2022\u2022*.\"'    \u25a0\nHand arid Bows velicited; a vfull measure\nof praise\"\"from all who have seen them.\ny--::'\u25a0::.yi\u25a0' -y:yy.-:y  y:~y \u25a0'.-''' '\u25a0'-       '\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   V   o .\nThe desig-nsVai-e remarkably beautiful,\nrich, ''-ancl*- sov varied that ho man is\nlikely to:vmeet his duplicate.\nFine;;|Shirts, ; white  and  colored,  and\nallv ; oth|:r|ffixing\"s;  at  moderate  prices at\n\"' V:^THE^UP-TO-DATEl;: v:- fe:S\nIfFimNISHER; NEIiSO^\nvForvio^^\nof fresh fisK\n\u2022\u25a0\". y(y '\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -.\".;.*-\u25a0\u25a0 '',,-\u25a0.\u25a0'-.\u25a0. ..-\u25a0*.-(- \u25a0- \u00b0 n^s \u25a0 \u25a0[?' -.' ~-'s- \u25a0\u25a1\"', \" pV \"-' \u25a0.\u25a0'\u2022- \u25a0 \u25a0'- --'\u25a0'*    a... rXyy-''-.n-\u25a0\u25a0.'''y.i-(- \u25a0\"*\"\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0',\"\u2022\"..' ~.\\y y -''-'\/-\u201e '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\/.'\"('' \u25a0 -'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.*\u25a0- \"-j- ^5 *>'5*si'ap1p** ** n.\u201e.m * ^j\nspinachi^radisheSjIettuM, rhubarb^\n\u25a0 p^r,.i .^... X: ..\u201e..: \u2022\"&ii>J?',.^\u201e\u00aeittiy,y.'i?'<ifl.fl.^j^ikfl'flfl-flv:ri^ *.\"-'\u25a0=\u25a0. i\u00bbif-.\n\u25a0;-:West\"-Block,\"'DBa;ker,Street^\n*^fMORSEj\nWork upon tlie Exchequer is progressing favorably. The appearance in the\nface of the drift, from the main tunnel,\nhas very much improved and it is evident\nthat the drift is approaching the ore\nchute whieh is disclosed in the shaft.\nThe funeral of Walter J. Ashpitel, who\ndied Wednesday evening, took place yesterday afternoon and was largely\nattended. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Mr. Akehurst.\nA. G. Hupinstall, who was formerly\nemployed on the Canadian division of the\nMichigan Central railway and on the\nToronto, Hamilton <fc Buffalo railway as\ninspector of watches, has accepted a position witli Jacob Dover of Nelson, and is\nnow in charge of the watch repairing department of tliat energetic and rustling\nbusiness man's big jewelry house.\nE. H. T. Simpkins is confined to his\nhouse with an attack of la grippe. During his illness the duties of the registrar'.^ office are being discharged by\nHarry Wright of the gold commissioner's\noffice.\nW.J. Thompson has succeeded in securing the required number of names to\nthe petition> \u2022, requisite before the city\ncouncil could submit the four money by-\n; laws to the ratepayers for tlieir consideration. .\nSince the members of the present city\ncouncil began'transacting the business of\nthe corporation the record of tlieir proceedings has covered 75 pages of the minute book.\nThe members of Kootenay lodge, No.\n1(5, I.O.O.F., will commemorate the eightieth anniversary of the organization of\nthe order; by attending service in the\nBaptist church on Sunday. The anniversary sermon will be preached by Rev.\nMiv Rose. Any visiting members of\nthe order are invited to attend.\n: The wife of R. J. Graham died yesterday afternoon from the effects of blood\npoisoning.- About a week ago the deceased was operated upon for the- removal of a growth from the nose, and death\nwas due' to a complication which followed the operation. The funeral will\ntake place today at 2 o'clock.\nInjured by a Premature Explosion.\ni While at work on the railroad grade\nnear Kuskonook yesterday, Charles Sals-\nburg; 'receivedV serious injuries from a1*\npremature explosion. He was charging a\nhole, and believingv*that the dynamite\nhad hot.got as far dowii as it should go,\nlieattemi*)*ted.to rain it\ntod^*ther eX^\nbrought\" it6%eis6n*oh tlie\" Moyie ancl takei>\np.,H$.pp-    *-*'.\u201e  \u00b0   p-flpfl.Pp--   ,   \u25a0    . . > . \u201e :E   :r   P      o .        \".. * - .\u00b0 \"   -   -   \u25a0   \u25a0 fl.    fl..\u201e w \u00b0\u00b0 ...fl a \u25a0 .fi\nto the Klondyke hotel. Dr. Hall Avas\ncalled, and he found both eyes injured, as\nwell as the face and hfiyds. Salsburg\nAvill be taken to the general hospital\ntoday.\nOne Eesult of Home Industry.\nKamloops Sentinel.\nFour years ago last January, George\nBorthwick and his brother-in-law, M. P.\nGordon, started a. small cigar factory,\nrenting quarters in the Masonic building.\nAt that time the active staff consisted of\nMr. Borthwick, one hired man and a boy.\nToday the Inland cigar factory employs\nthirty-five hands, men ancl boys, occupies\na fine brick block of its own, ancl has all\nit can do working day and night to fill\nits orders. The monthly pay roll of the\nfactory exceeds $2100, and upAvards of\n$750 are paid monthly into the Dominion\ntreasury in the shape of inland reA-enue\nancl customs duties. The daily output of\nthe factory is now 0000 cigars.\nBaseball Game Scores.\nPhiladelphia 20, Boston 3.\nChicago 4, Cincinnati 3. \u00b0\nWashington 2, Ncav York 7.\nBaltimore 2, Brooklyn 0.\nISV\/^'\n&\u00a3*\u25a0 y$*'\n\u25a0-\u25a0Ns*\"**?**;-;-.....\nCT-A.-*-*J\nWANTED.\nS.^'\"^    n'&\u2122U#\n:-*Gt;:';..-:*.\"-'^,??\"d\n. V^ASCEjSIZ^aiOF'dTENT^N STOpKi\" \u201e \u201e\nmmm^(m%mm^^^!!Bmi\nW.jPSDiOKSON'\nB. H. H. APPLBWHAITE\nVhb.        ..    ...    .-\nJ. McPHBH\n    ''\"    '.\"C ;^;\"f>i\n':(y^(y\\\nmm\n.E'LE'O^RiO-'SXJPBlil'Eg\nOompletavBlectrfcjEquipments for Electric Power Transmission and \"Lighting for Mines, Towns\n\u201e \"\u201e;;.'*\u00bb Electric Fto \"n ^\nP. O>Box*60i3l \"\".\u201e  \u2022\u25a0 V     iiy'.rflf,!^^ '\n..\u25a0^nTTANTEDt-Geiieral servant and %mall\" girlto card for\n\/\u25a0fYKchlld.i Apply\u00abMrs.\"F\u201eerguson, Silica street?*\" \u2022 ! V\n-' \u2022*' . \" \u25a0\" :,..\u25a0\u25a0 , ,\u2014~ ';\u2022' , \u2022 .\u2014 y: .:,\",\" y.yy \"1 v\n^ANTED\u201e^A servant girlK \"\u00bb\"Apply\u00bbto.MrsA C.\u00bbh: Ink?I\n^nprfchwest;corner. Viptoria and'Ward StrdotS^fcT ;\u00bb\n'siy-pi. yfry\"i^^r.*\u00bb'\u25a0 'TrtCiP'iV.'-'\/ V\"-5>\"\" *>tr V\u2122\nif. pp-yZ^\"'.\u25a0*.- ?\u00bb!jLOST.%,s.^^j.,|. o%i^ flp.\"fy:y;\n^T\u00bb OSTj-A'stepladder. ?The\"flnder;!*will*bcjsuitably\u00abrtf-*\n\"\u00b04J^;TiMu$dei\"ipn returin'ngit^tp^wy'Jj'Herriiig\/!j,y\"n.-| f,Vy\nyyfl y\\$.. .b \"jT^pAn'.H c\u00b0o*a t r* \u00b0. .y\u00b0 a.y? y \u25a0 ^\" y\u00b0y\nHWSRJaridI\"threoUot8lNVs.:5;6;\u00aban'd\/7^B\n,     ^\"streotftNelsonS-Brc, \u00bbnForn,full\"\"*particu!ars apply to,\n\u00a3A?Manson; Grove Hotel.aiear Fort Sheppard station.* j?*^\n^*mOR\" SALE-An old \".stof^ehremit? sAppiy.ito V\"Theod6re\\\n;*V.->MadsonfBaIier..stroct,\"Nelson.*i>jy.\\.yy \/'~,[ ^ \" \"\"-\"\n1 .\"JC \",Mi-'\" HbLMOHTTAnalyiica^Cheinistan^ * AoHayer.\nIs**1?;*n.yiptoria_8tr|et,\u00abnN|lsdp,;\u00bb \"c\"i;;:.\"'\u00b0iD*H\u00b0y \"yTi\"'\"\"'^\".''\nEAVA^T-'&VCARRIE^Aichitects?- jRooms-raVdS.AiJ'-1\n,\u201e j^.^.erdeen^blockjq^Balcerjj street,tf*fc|elspn: '\"I'^^'i^^Mi,\n'\u25a0sFT iQ^l^E-fArehiiteeti\" alhd^artiW.\u00b0;\u00b0Brotenliiilf:.Block,*\n* ^z', SPey^yp-^9r(,Po ^??8\u00b0n'Jj^^ryr^\"*\"^%:v\"\"*\u00b0\"'**fc'^^*\u00b0\nTa the People\nUp tp -May'rist I Vwill sell the\nfbllowino-:lines, in watches:\nContractors\nand Others\nNELSON, B. C.\nKASLO, B. C.\nSANDON, B. C.\nDEALERS IN\nWho use picks, shovels, etc.,\nshould not fail to look at our line\nof goods, which for qualities and\nmaterial cannot be beat.\n17-Jeweh Nickel: ^Cres^\nsJt.Cent\u00abStree;t'?:1a*Qa; '3-^\n^f;Silver^Walth\"ani ;Ciisel\n^f^feProqf '^yjyi(^ _\ny\u00b0y p'ffy^.^yyy^yy^^yf\"^\n\u201e ^ewel^ffij^gpSrlf \u2022\n\u25a0f 'V \"^\u25a0irstledfc]\"*in^an'ie^\nAJ^iii^alsp;ys|*Jll'i|\u00a3e^h\nsfor^tiie^skin'e\" 'pl'ices^in^propbrtioit.\"5 \"*,\"'\u00b0 -\"\"*' \"'\u25a0\"\"\nVaneoiivei1 Hardware Co., L^\nImporters of Shelf and Heavy Hardware.\nMARA & BARNARD HLOOK. 15AKER ST.. NKLSON\n1TORSALE\nSNAPS IN HOUSES AND LOTS\nIN A Ll\/PARTS OF THE OITY    \u2022\nMoney %o Loan\nJ, L VAN3T0NE,      R. H. WILLIAMS,\nMines and Mining Stocks Customs Broker\nREAL ESTATE AND G1CNK!'AL AGENTS;\nARE YOU GOING TO ATli\nOR DAWSON CITY?\nShelf and Heavy Hardware\nSOLE AGENTS FOR\nGiant Powder\nTRUAX\nORE\nCARS\nCanton Drill Steel\nCARRY IN STOCK;\nJessop's Steel, Iron, Coal\nPipes, and Fittings\nGiant, Caps and Fuse\nTools, Cutlery, Tin\nand Woodenware\nStoves, Ranges-\nIron, Steel,  Sheet\nIron, T-Rails\nPaints, Oils, Glass\nIf you are, call and get posted\non the White Pass and Yukon\nroute, which is the best, safest\nand cheapest possible.\n.... Raker streei; AVcst. Nelson,; II. C.     :\nNELSON STORE AND OFFICE:  Corner Baker and Josephine Sts.\nNELSON WAREHOUSE:   Corner Hall Street and City Wharf\nGO.\nWill  be found  in  their new  premises on  Baker Street\nwith  a complete stock of\nSh^lf and\nHeavy:\nHeavy\nand Shelf\nALL KINDS OF MINING SUPPI-IES\nYou will v; find it to (your iklvidiUgd toVconsiiit lis\n'-' Vg,':; bofpi*ciVplaciiisMHir'<ii'floi'Hi\u00bb~r ,; '\" :*-*-\n%aflp. ifl,flp.\u00aefi fl\u00b0\n\u25a0 \u2022\n\u25a0VD>;\n^iffet%EliF  '\u25a0\nHORSESHOEING\n;Cl^ment|^'\u00b0S^yher*mq^\nSEWER AND WATER CONNECTIONS\n^f\/^r&\"*\u00a5*3^^\n^iy?r.^-\u00b0y.&\u00bb'-y. \"iyy^y''^\u2022\"L:\u00b0y:i\u00b0^y'^\\mi\"yy\n.y-jg, A\"\u201e\"\u00ab inQDI'UP if\u00ab V'CDCPI'fl'l'TV**)1'--!-'''**\n^EiumVcrs,ae(ic.7 Operas T\u00a3ourio\/Blobk,D^cls6iOo\n*llt^EK\u00bblSHE\u00a7iRUBillB\npJYyc,^tfiesundeiVg\niarj5Jflio\".D6iiiy\u00b0perVonsVclding*bu.siiiess asinerclianfeUailorsf,\n,\u00bb.'\u201e!i't\u00bb'.;:\"..\"'m=\"?i. *. ' \u00b0^'|S.\u00b0y.'K*\u00bb J\"\"*V\"'\u00ab-S-'\"\"*\"\"\" \u2022u.Y,:.1flflfl* .u \u2022fl\"-..*\"..\n;in -Nelson; having all'.puc ^vp^K\";alone\u201eol^,^^p,\u25a0^pureln^ses,.\n1 n *yrlj,inn-iT it\\\"rr    \\\\'*i<Si-rii*t\\ D***it\u00bbifirtnciL\"ffiiVl Oft mrO   B    \"A lirf3 i tin i: \u25a0 wa   nfn0\n^*^cl^n,fA|riI^tli?l^\n!tGyojyiiQP\u00a3,\n'V?X lii'VAVRAY:\"\n.\u2022\"'%,\u00ab.?. s?\nCOLUMBIA COLDFIELDS, Ltd.\n,   .    n'UnD  n ^  on W \u00b0^\ny   '\"'\u25a0yyy\nAil comrnUpicatioris relating to British Columbia business to be addressed to P. O. Drawer\n; V\u201e 505, Nelson, British Columbia\nt. RbDERICK ROBERTSON, General Managfer t \u25a0-., _,,   c\u00b1r\\kt     a   r\\\nyiS P0\\rVLER, EM,, Mining Engineer     \u25a0#\u25a0?.* r NELSON,   B. Cv\nm- ^on,ropairiug!0.promptl}l'''attendcd to by a flrst-class\n\"wheelvirriglit.   \"\u201e\"\"\u201e\u201e\"     .'\u201e,.' , \",\n\"   Special \"attenfcioir.giveri tojall, kinds of repairing'and'\ncuBDpm'\u201ework:strom;outside 'points. \"',\"..  y\"', \",\nSh.op:   Half Street, between Baker and Vernon, Nelson\nOPEN MY AND NIGHT\nTinsmithmgVancI P\\utnb\\t\\g aiSpiecialty*\ni,. y Estiitjates !,CheerfulI*y;* Furnisf-jedy(yyy]'(\n.ohV.islfe^ifc\"^*^\ni^i^ss^^-^a^iK*^^\n_.    \u25a0 yr.t\"^s,\\'\u201ey\\\"p.\"'y,\u2022\"\",\u2022.\"'\u2022.\u2022'\u2022 * i\u00bb\u00bb ..\\\u201e*3\"\u201e?i\u00b0!,\u201e\u00ab \u25a0 f?>v \u25a0 \u2022\"\u2022\"'   =\u00b0;-.*-\"j. \u25a0*n^,\u00bb.,*,'.J\nMarmaIades,*:.Ja.ms^\n--DD DM Dn   \u00b0- \u201e%\"  nnS>n (?\/\u201e** n    i'fV\u2122     D'\u00b0Ift.1'tlDSA>il.''ll''i\u00b0    fi-onn-*a       \u00b0  DinnnVfFn-'!,DftP'DrJ.   *   uS'i:DDE\u00b0D\ny^Dandieol^e-& Gandinvl^\n'MushKooms.^|;i%^i'f^\n;T^o^ar^pf!Groeke^\n^\"''t'Piar\"fe!der&diieI*ted\\:%\nOUft l^l^iyiMOTH STOQK OF\n%y\u00b0 n\"   \"^.n0\".- \"tf\"   \u25a0\"\nSee pat your Royal Seal Cigars\nARE NOT EASTERN MIRATIONS\nBUT AUR MADE BY\nTHE EOOTfflAY CIGAR MANUFAOTUBIM COMPANY\nOF   IsTEJLSOISr,   B. O.\nTBE BfiACKIAI k IEB MILLIN& CO., Ltd.\n\"WKCOLElS^a.L-EI   J&.1STX)   KlElT^ft-IL\nJE31^r5r3   GrJRj^TJZT^  ^bed,   etc.\nWrite \/or quotations on car lots.\nasTBLsoasr, as. o.\nThfe only restaurant in the city\nemploying Only vifhite cooks.\nMerchants'lunch from 1(2, to 2\no'clock, 25 cents. Dinner* from 5\nto 8.    Short orders at  all   hours.\nVienna Restaurant\nBaker street, between Josephine and\nHall streets, Nelson.\nMBA1.S AT AtL HOUBS, DAY OR NIGHT\nBAKERY IN CONNECTION\nFAMILY AND PASTRY COOKING A SPECIALTY\nONLY WHITE HELP EMPLOYED\nJR.  * \u2022gTTjRKTr,     FBO-E^-RI-EI'X'OB\nGOAT RIVER LUMBER GO.\nCRESTON, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n; All sizes of dimension timber and all kinds of lumber\nout to order, and shipped to Nelson in carload lots.\nWrite for prices.\nTO CONTRACTORS.\nTendOrs tvill be received by tho undersigned for tho\nvarious works requisite in the erection of a bank at Nelson, in pressed brick and terra cotta, for tho Bank of\nMontreal.\nPlans and specifications by F. M. Rattenbury, architect, Victoria, can bo seen at my office.\nTenders to be sent in on or before April 30th. Tho\nlowest or any tender not necossarily accepted.\nA. E. HODGINS, Architect.\nOfllce: West Baker street, Nelson, B. C.\nEVERYTHING (N THE SH.0E LINE\n,       ... ..\"\nTelejJhpiie'idi   P. O. Box K 8c W.      Baker street West-, Nelson\n26 ANDV28 WE\u00a7T BAKKPt STREE\u00a5, NELS0N\nBuilders and contractors can now secure\nthe best lime on the market at\n70\npep\nBSTABt-ISHBD  1879.\nTv^erity years old and still growing.\nWHOLESALE\nPROVISION\nMERCHANTS\nCOLD STORAGE WAREHOUSEMEN\nAND JOBBERS OF GREEN FRUITS *\nWorth of Grilt Eclge Soap gpe\"s\/\"\u00a3ifr-\nthef, lasts longer*,- aM dttes its woffe\neasier ancl better that! any.other soap.\noil the nwpket\"today';; \"at  least  thenvasher*s \"all \"sfyf- s6D*ahd:'thf laclifes\nire del'igihted with it.\nIn its favor, when you ,get through\nwith ydur washing you can go\nstraight to the bread pan and turn out a beautiful batch df nice, clean,\nsweet, light bread, but you must remeniber and have by your side\nbefore you corriirtence, a sack of the celebrated\nAnother Thing\nOALL   AND   INSPECT\nThe West ^ootenay Brick & Lime Co., Ltd.\nBaker Street.        T. G. PROOTOR, Manager\nSTEINWAY\nThe Standard   Piano\nof the World.\nN0RDHEIMER\nThe Artistic Piano of\nCanada.\nHEAD OFFICE, WINNIPEG\nJ. A. ROGERS, General Manager \u2022\nManager for \"Western British Columbia,\nJOHN PARSONS, Vancouver\nManager for Yukon District,\nOHAS. MILNE, Dawson\nManager for Southern British Columbia,\nP. J. RUSSELL, Nelson\nABEBDEEN BLOCK\nNELSON, B. C.\nesprrs\nABT AND MUSIC CO., Nelson, Agents.\nVANCOUVER\u2014A, F. Ralph, Manager.\nDAWSON OITV\u2014A. \u00ab. Cuiniiiighan, Manager.\nATLIN CITY\u2014J. A. Fraser, Manager.\nNKLSON\u2014P. J. ltussell, Manager.\nStocks carried at Victoria, Kossland, Cranbrook, Greenwood and Revelstoke.\nThe largest handlers of Butter and Eggs in\nthe Canadian Northwest.\nWE HAVE JUST RECEIVED\nA fresh consignment of Maple Leaf Cream Sodas received\ndirect from tho factory, put up in 3-pound boxes. Also\na full lino of the Toronto Biscuit aiid Confectionery\nCompany's Sweet? Biscuits. Don't forgot that wo hatldlo\n\"        Ten.\nBlue .Ribbon.\nJOHN A. IHMg & CO.\nBaiter Street West, Nelson, B. C\nHavo just received a consignment of Harris home\nmade tweeds from Talbot Harris, Scotland.\nPECIAL ATTENTION \u25a0 FBED j. squibe, nk* a \u00bbon\nTho supply Is limited, so call early and examine this stock.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Tribune_1899_04_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0188589","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.5000000","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.2832999","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"No paper 1895-1896, 1897-1905<br><br>Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled The Tribune from 1892-12-01 to 1901-08-14. Titled The Nelson Tribune from 1901-08-15 to 1903-12-19.<br><br>Published by John Houston & Co. from 1892-12-01 to 1894-12-29; The Tribune Publishing Company from 1897-01-02 to 1898-12-31; an unidentified party from 1899-01-07 to 1901-08-31 and from 1902-08-30 to 1903-02-07; The Tribune Association from 1901-09-02 to 1902-02-25; and The Tribune Company from 1903-02-14 to 1903-12-19.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : Tribune Publishing Company","@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":"1899-04-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1899-04-28 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Tribune","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0188589"}