{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0226783":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"7cf6093a-889d-4513-b350-a39fc32ddf0a","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2015-12-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1903-08-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/evewoross\/items\/1.0226783\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" THE EVENING WORLD\nVol.IH,3No.-y8-\/|(r\\\nROSSLAND, B. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1903\nPrice Five Cents\n=IN=\nGentlemen's Fine Footwear\nSHINY LEATHERS S'JCH AS\nPatent Calf, Patent Kid and Enamels\nare the most popular. We have the largest assortment of there _,:Dds in the cityl Satisfaction\nguaranteed with ev\u00bb*y pair  of  shoes  we  sell.\nW. F. McNEILL\nFOR   FASHIONBLE   FOOTWEAR\nmm  m s______|________|--------1--------I^______i________|_________________|________|________l________|______\u25a0 __U_____i   a a*aaaa^at,ss^a\u00bba\u00bbaaM________i____a\u00ab__________>\u25a0><_^\u00bb_l ass\nI For Lunches and Picnics 2 E*_1\nLibby, MoNeill & Libby's and Armour's __$\nCANNED MEATS   1\nTry MELROSE PATE. 3\nO. M. FOX & CO., gSs I\nCOLUMBIA AVENUE TELEPHONE 65 j3\n'\u25a0^r\u00bbijT?#^*>^Ww^sWijVWW?J1JnslT Vs^WWVWvWHWW9WwmJWm\u2014A\\mtdm^mwWW   .999*999\n-*&* Tired Feet!I\nUse RUSSELL'S FOOT POWDER\nfor sore, tired, tender, aching, sweating or swollen feet.     PRICE 25o.\n For sale only at\t\nMorrow's Drug Store\n\u2022 tVmW^XWX^ **********\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWHOLESALE   MARKET8\nRossland, Nelson, Trail,Sandon,Revelstoke,Green-\nwood, Grand Forks and Vancouver.\nRETAIL MARKETS-Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Ymir, Kaslo\nSandon, New Denver, Silverton, C. sc.-de City, Grand Forks,\nGreenwood, Phoenix, Midway, Camp   McKinney,\nRevelstoke, Ferguson and Vancouver.\nFish,  Came and  Poultry In Season, Sausages of All Kindt.\nWM. DONALD, Manager Rcciland Branch\nHave you T If^T? ..on your   m\ngot JUlVlJ PoULTR Y ?    fL\n If bo use  l*\\\nRex Lice Killer %\n-For sale by\t\nf\nt The Brackman-Ker MillingCompany |\nALL  KINDS   OF   DRY\nWOOD\nNEWS in :.\nNUTSHELL\nItems of Interest  Round\nthe World.\nLATEST TELEGRAPH BULLETINS\nThe Doings of Conspicuous Persons\nAffecting Canadian Interests.\nW. F. LINGLE\nOffice op. jsite Qt'.i\nNorthern  ticket offir*\nnext to Bed Stir\nFIREJ3ALE\nGoods Slightly Damaged\nCome and pick them out at your\nown price. Do not delay, they are\ngoing fast.\nPeoples Store\nB. BANNETT, Prop.\nThe oardinalate has as yet arrived at no decision.\nA Mexican volcano near Colima\nia in aotive eruption.\nKorea will open the port of Wiju\nin deference to Japan.\nSeattle thugs are again making\nthemselves prominent.\nA new government haB been installed in San Domingo.\nTwenty-five thousands workers\nare out on Btrike at Odessa.\nC. M. Schwab has severed his\nconnection with the steel trust.\nThe Irish land bill lias passed\nits second reading in tbe House of\nLords.\nAn important discovery has been\nmade on the Silver King mine,\nNelson.\nArchbishop Walsh is thought to\nbe likely to be appointed to the\nPrivy Counoil.\nA headon collision near Indianapolis has resulted in the death\nand injury of 22 people.\nMore conflicts have taken plaoe\nbetween the strikers and the troops\nnear Tiflis, Transcaucasia.\nThe Filipinos are reported independently as possessing plenty of\narms and ready to go on with the\nwar.\nGeorge Bayne has been badly\ntorn in an encounter with a bear\nin the Lardeau. Mr. Bayne is expected to recover.\nRussia has placed restrictions on\nthe citizens of the United States\ntravelling through that country in\nconsequence of the Kishineff petition.\nThe Folsom convicts have succeeded in getting aWay from the\nVictoria mine,Cal., where they were\nthought to be entrapped by the sheriffs party.\nRussia has notified the Black\nSea volunteer fleet, trading to the\nFar East, that their services may\nbe wanted at any moment by the\ngovernment.\nAn attempt has been made by\nsome miscreants to blow up the\nQreat Northern railway bridge\naorose the Yellowstone, near Livingstone, Mont.\nThe King has returned to England after his visit to Ireland. He\nhas issued an address to the Irish\npeople thanking them for the\nwarmth of their welcome to him.\nANOTHER CAUSE CELEBRE\nHill Boarding Houses Are   on\ni Trial.\nARE ILLICIT LIQUOR DISPENSERS?\nSerious Charge of  Perjury   Brought   Against H.\nOdams-Evidence Tendered for the\nProsecution.\nCome and see us at   the Strand, you\nwill be treated right. Green & Comerford\nLogs In tha Kootenay\nTwo million feet of logs are now\nin the Kootenay river frera points\nnorth of Fort Steele. The boom\nat Wardner is now attaining immense proportions, and contains\nover three million feet of logs.\nThe  merchants'   lunoh  at  the\nPalace tomorrow will be a dandy.\nAll kinds of summer drinks at the\nStrand.   Green Sc Comerford, r.ops.\nThe oase of H. OdaniB of the\nJosie boarding house, occupied the\nattention of the court during the\nwhole of the morning. John Kirkup waa on the benoh, J. S. Clute\nand J. A. Macdonald appearing for\nthe crown and A. H. MaeNeill, K.\nC, for the defence.\nThe oharge was one of perjury\nand arose of recent prosecutions of\nH. Odams for selling illicitly\nliquors at the boarding house\nwhioh he conduots, which fell\nthrough. It seems during that\nprosecution H. Odams, giving evidence in his own defence, swore\nthat he had conducted that boarding house for eighteen months, and\nduring that time had not sold any\nliquor.\nFour witnesses were called today\nto disprove this statement. These\nwere 0. Jackson, C. Williams, J.\nFisher and E. Scott. The first two\nnamed swore to having drinks at\nthe Josie boarding house on the\nsame occasion, one of them only,\nhowever, swearing to having seen\nmoney pass in payment for them.\nThe other two witnesses testified\nthat they had seen liquors bought\nat the Josie boarding house from\nH. Odams on two other occasions\nentirely distinct from tbat sworn\nto by the other witnesses.\nThis, with the exception of the\npurely formal evidence, was the\ncase for the prosecution. The witnesses throughout, except possibly\nFisher, were reluotant and the line\nof examination taken was that of\nhostile witnesses, counsel for the\ndefence vigorously protesting. ThiB\nwas especially evident in the case\nof Ed. Scott, the last witness called.\nThe proteBts of the defence were\noverruled by Magistrate Kirkup,\nwho declared that he would ask the\nvery questions objected to on his\nown part as it seemed to him they\nwere merely efforts to get at the\nreal facta of the ease.\nAt the close of the case for the\nprosecution, counsel for the defence urged that tbe perjured statement made waB made inadvertently\nand that furthermore the law re-\nquiree that a case of perjury must\nbe supported by corroborative evidence, i. e., that more than one\nwitness should depose to the one\nset of facts. Now there were three\noccasions referred to, and there\nwas no corroborative evidence. It\nwaa true that on one of these occasions that there were two witnesses\nto the fact that drinking had occurred, bat the charge of perjury\nwas based on the denying of the\nselling of the liquor, not that it\nhad not been drunk. Now only\none of these witnesses had sworn\nto money being pasted on this occasion. Thus there was no corroborative evidence as to this one occasion. On the other hand of the\nother two occasions alleged, there\nwas not even a pretence of corroborative testimony. Yet the law imperatively demanded corroborative\nevidence in oases of perjury. Hence\nMr. MaeNeill pressed for a dismissal of the case on these grounds.\nOn the other side it is urged that\nin the point made by the defence\nthat corroborative testimony might\nhave been necessary, had the assertion, perjured assertion aB\ncharged, merely deolared that on\nsome one partionlar dato no liquor\nhad been Bold. It would have\nbeen one man's word against another, and a question of credibility.\nThis was why the law had been\nframed as it existed. But the assertion was that during the whole\neighteen months no liquor had\nbeen sold, and tbe prosecution had\nshown that it had been sold on one\noccasion, had corroborated that by\nshowing that it had been sold on a\nsecond,and went further and showed\nthat it had been sold on a third.\nHere was plenty of oorroborative\nevidence within the meaning of\nthe aot.\nMagistrate Kirkup deolared he\nwas quite unable, on bis own responsibility, to settle a point of law\nauch as that made, and consequently adjourned the case until 2\no'clock tomorrow afternoon, so that\nhe might obtain a ruling from tbe\nChief Justice.\nIf that ruling is against the prosecution the case will there and then\nfall to the ground, as far as the\nprosecution is concerned. If not\nthe defence is at liberty to produce\nits evidenoe in rebuttal.\nSUMMER\nCARNIVAL\nNelson Will Join in Cheerfully.\nWELL ADVERTISED EVERYWHERE\nA Great Day Expected by Outside\nPoints\u2014Nelson Is Preparing-\n\"Nazareth Waists\" for Children can\nbe had at THE CRESCENT.\nNelson, Aug., 4.\u2014The members\nof the local branch of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen are\nmaking big preparations for the\nannual excursion of the order\nwhich is to be held on August 25th\nnext to Rossland. The excursion\nis to be one of the cheapest ever\nmn in the Kootenays, fare for the\nround trip being only $2. Besides\nthe members of the trainmen who\nwill go, there will be a large representation from the order of Sail-\nway Conductors, the Brotherhood\nof Locomotive Engineers, the order\nof Railway Telegraphers, the maintenance of way workers, and other\nrailway orders, lodges of which are\nBtattioned at Nelson. A team\nfrom the Nelson fire brigade, the\nlacrosse team and other athletic\norganizations will also accompany\nthe excursion.\nExcursions will be run from all\npoints in the kootenays and the\naffair will be on the largest scale\nyet undertaken by the brotherhood.\nThe excursion is being run on the\nfirst day of the day of the Hossland\nSummer Carnival, and the tickets\nwill be good to stay over till August 27th. On the morning of tbe\nexcursion there will be a grand\nprocession at Rossland, in which it\nis expected that over one thousand\nunion men will be in line, including eight hundred members of the\nMiners Union.\nIn the afternoon the chief event\nwill be the grand lacrosse match between Vancouver and Nelson\nteams. Vancouver now holds the\nlacrosse championship of the Pacific coast, while Nelson possesses\nby far the strongest team in the\ninterior. The firemen's sports\nwhich will be held at Rossland\nthat day will see tbe largest turnout of firemen that has ever been\nseen in the interior,as it is expected\nthat six teamB will compete. Besides the usual hand drilling contests there will also be a machine\ndrilling contest between Le Roi,\nWar Kagle and Centre Star teams.\nThere will also be tugs of war between the representatives of the\ndifferent railway organizations.\nWANTED\u2014A young girl to assist in\nhousework.   Mrs. Smith Curtis.\nOnly a few pair of those Dollar Shoes\nleft at THE CRESCENT.\nCrow's Naat Collieries\nThe output of the Crow's Nest\nPass Coal company's mines for\nJuly totalled 71,463 tons.\nThe Palace has  tbe only  first\nolass bowling alley in the oity.\nIt you want to bowl try the Alhambra\nBest alley in the city.\nDon't forget the hot lunch at the\nPalace tonight.\nWanted  Men\nThe second furnace of the Hall\nMines smelter was to have been\nblown in yesterday morning, but\nowning to a scarcity of men it is still\nidle. The ore is now piling up in\nbins at a great rate, and after\nenough men are eeoured there\nshould be a long run of both furnaces. Number 1 furnace is being\nrun on lead and No. 2 will be run\nod copper for present. THE EVENING'WORLD, ROSSLAND. B. C, AUG, 4   igo3\n________=_==^====T________________________\nThe Evening World\nBt the World;Pnbllshln_|Company.\nKntered at the Rossland, R. C.. poslofflce for\ntransmission through tlie mails,May i.L'9\"' \u00bbs\nsecoud class reading matter.\n(IBCBSCRIPTION RATKB-Fiftr cents per\nmonthor$5ooyear,inTariably in adfance, Ad-\nve'tlsing   rates made known on  application.\nLONDON RATES-\u00a31.15  per annum\nJAMES H. FLETCHER.\nGENERAL.MANAGER\nP. O.'.Box 002 ItosKland, B. 0.\nstriding emigration, when the\nlittle brown men are pouring into\ntbis province in ever increasing\nnumbers. It gives a great handle\nto tbe Conservatives, and a policy\nof reticence as to any possible explanation as certainly hampers his\nfriends,\nCIVIL SERVICE REFORM.\nYou won't harden or shrink\nwoolens with Sunlight Soap.\nThe purity of the oils and fats\nand the absence of free alkali\nprevent that _b\nA GOOD PARTY MAN.\nJust before the outbreak of the\nSouth   African   war,   the London\nTimes, discussing the character of\ntbe parliamentary session just then\nover, deolared, being itself a Con\nservative organ, that the only mem\nber   of   the Salisbury administration who had justified his position\nas a Cabinet minister was Joseph\nChamberlain.    Its   condemnation\nof the shortcomings  of the other\nmembers was closely critical.   Now\nthe peculiar part of this was that\ntbe Ministry was Conservative with\nthe  exception ot Chamberlain,  a\nRadical. Many a politician on this\ncontinent deems that any criticism\nof  shortcoming ot his  party had\nbest come from the other Bide ae\nhome criticism would \"hurt   the\nparty.\" But it is  certain that the\ncriticism   of the   Times,   severe\nand   even     sweeping as   it   was\ndid   not   hurt   the   Conservative\nparty,    It actually   strengthened\nit.   A politician who knows   that\nhis party   papers will defend his\nevery action, right or wrong, has\nlittle scruple in doing   something\nwhich he must know will be looked\nupon askance by the country.   He\ncan   safeiy   leave   the country at\nlarge to discount largely accusations made by the opposition.   The\naccusation made by his own party\nis the accusation that hurts.   He\nhas to pay attention to that. And\nthe attention whioh he is forced to\npay will go a long way to keeping\nhis skirts clean, and to improving\nthe tone of the party and administration   to   which he belongs.   It\nwould be very  bad policy  in   a\nhousewife to oover up the dust instead of brushing it away in her\nparlors.   It would be bad polioy in\na patient, suicidal in fact, to cover\nup a festering sore instead of baring it to the gaze of the physician.\nAnd the only physician   for   the\nills of the body politic   is public\nopinion.\nNow upon this continent Sir\nWilfrid Laurier is a statesman of\nwhom the whole people, Liberal or\nConservative, are proud. More\nthan this he is a statesman of\nwhom the whole Empire is proud,\nand Canada is honored in being\nrepresented by such a man. Labor\npeople are not the least, if the\nfrankest, of his admirers. He baa\ndone much for them. But despite\nthis Sir Wilfrid iB a fallible mortal.\nHe is less open to criticism than\nmany other, than most other, politicians. But he is open. The\nLiberal who will not frankly criticise Laurier is no friend of the premier. And the criticism is chiefly\nlevied at the course adopted in the\nrestriction of Oriental immigration.\nIt is perfeotly true that Sir Wilfrid has done far more than did\nthe Conservatives when in power\nin this regard. He has gone so far\nthat bis friends are puzzled as to\nwhy he has permi'ted the Chinese\nto come in their hundreds into\nCanada for tbe remainder of the\nyear, why he has put forth an assertion that the Mikado was re-\nCivil service reform, says the\nNew Westminster Liberal, is a\nvery important plank in the Liberal platform, or, to put it more\ncorreotly, a very important feature\nof Liberal policy. That it is a pol\nicy very difficult to carry out in\nBritish Columbia may be at once\nadmitted. Conditions here are not\nyet favorable to the proper carry,\ning out of such a policy. But the\nattempt must 1 e made, and will be\nmade as soon as the Liberal gov-\neminent takes office. The main\npoints are: That no persons should\nbe appointed who are not qualified\nto fill the oflice to which they are\nappointed; aud that, of course, im\nplies that there should be some\nfixed .nd defined manner of testing\nthe qualifications of applicants.\nThat properly qualified persons\nshould not be rejtoted on account\nof their political opinions. That\nthe higher offices should be filled\nby promotion from the junior ranks\nof the service, and that in this\nmatter, length of service should\ngovern tbe selection, other things\nbeing equal; where other things\nwere not equal\u2014that is, where\nspecial merit deserved special re\ncognition, or the absenoe of any\nmerit other than the minimum re>\nquired to \"hold down the job\" in'\nvited censure,\u2014the ordinary rou\ntine would be varied. The great\npoint would be to let every official\nfool that his continuance in the\nservice and bis promotion depended upon himself. Again, every\nposition should carry a certain\nsalary, except in the case of junior\nclerks, who should be paid on a\nrising scale for the first few years\nof their service. That is, the salary of a junior or ordinary clerk,\nholding no special position, should\nbegin at a certain fixed figure and\nincrease by a certain fixed percentage each year during such term of\nyears as nvght be fixed. By the\nend of the term it would have\nreached its maximum, and there\nwould be no further increase, except the clerk was promoted to a\nmore responsible position. Men in\nresponsible   positions;   permanent\nreforms. The percentage of increase in the cost of the civil service in this province, for some\ntime back, has been a good deal\nhigher than the percentage of increase in the revenue, That means\nmore taxes and it also means less\npublic works.\nNOTE AND COMMENT\nThe non-advertiser is always in\nas muoh trouble over his business\nas is the woman over a new dress\nthat her husband takes no notice\nof.\u2014Qlace Bay Qazette.\nAn i Italian in New York the\nother day became enraged because\nthe tramway cars would not stop\nfor him in the middle of a block.\nHe swung himself on to the platform of a car and stabbed the mo-\ntorman in the leg. The United\nStates is importing tbat class of\npeople at the rate of over half a\nmillion a year.\u2014Viotoria Colonist.\nheads of departments and branches\nof the departments, and some\nothers, should have fixed salaries.\nTo summarize: Appointment\nshould depend upon fitness; vacancies above the rank of junior olerk\nshould, as far as possible, be filled\nby promotion; promotion Bhould\ndepend upon length of service and\nmerits: salaries should be fixed,\nwhether they remained at the same\namount permanently, or were in\ncreased year by year.\nNo system, of course, can prevent\nfavoritism in the matters of ap\npointment and promotion; but a\ngood system oan mitigate the evil;\nand in the matter of the salary receivable, a proper system oan prevent a good deal of corruption.\nIt is hardly necessary to say that\nthe government which puts a proper civil service system in force\nwill turn against itself a good\nmany votes. That is an aspeot of\nthe matter whioh may be dealt\nwith separately at some other time;\nbut, if the people of the province\nwish to have more efficient service\nat lees coat, they must sustain the\nLiberals in making this and other\nThe Scientific American says it\nis a curious faot that in the selfsame year in which the New York\nClub has adopted a new rule of\nmeasurement, designed to kill the\nracing freak and bring about a\nreturn of the wholesome, seaworthy\nand oomfortable yachts of fifteen\nyears ago, the boat which they\nhave built to defend the oup embodied in the most exaggerated de\ngree all those undesirable features\nat which the new rule is aimed. It\nis also another curious fact that\nthe challenging yaoht conforms so\nmuoh more closely to the new rule\nthat if Reliance and Shamrock III\nwere to be measured under this\nrule for the forthcoming races, the\nohallenger would receive such a\nlarge time allowance tbat the return of the cup to the land of its\nnativity would be a foregone conclusion.   ^^^^^^^^\nThe Palace has the  only   first-\nolass bowling alley in the oity.\nCONSERVATIVE PLATFORM\n[Adopted at Rcrelstoko. September 13th, 1M2.J\n1. That thin convention roa ITlrmH the policy\nof the party in nml 1 its of provincial roads and\ntrails; the ownership and control of railways\nund the development of tho agricultural resources of the province as laid down iu lhe\nplatform adopted in October, 1899. which in m\nfollows;\n\"To actively aid in the construction of trails\nthroughout the undeveloped portions of the\nprovince und tho building of provincial trunk\nroads of public necessity.\n\"To adopt, the principles of government ownership of railways in so far us the circumstances of the province will admit, and tho\nadoption of the principle that no bonus should\nbe granted to any railway company which\ndoes not give the government of the province\ncontrol of rates over lines bonuscd, together\nwith the option of purchase.\n\"To activoly assist by sUito aid in tho development of the agricultural resources of tho\nprovince.\"\n2. That in the meantime and until thc railway policy above set forth can be accomplished, a general railway act be passed, giving\nfreedom to construct railways under certain\napproved regulations, analogous to the system\nthat has rosuited in such extensive railway\nconstruction in tlie United States, with so\nmuch advantage ;o trade and commerce.\n8, That to encourage the miring Industry,\nthe taxation of inotalliferous mines should bo\non the basis of a.Hjrcontago on tho not profits.\ni. That tho govornment ownership of tele\nphone systems should be brought about as a\nlirst step in the acquisition of public utilities.\n6. Th\u00abU a portion of overy coal area hereafter to be disposed of should bo reserved from\nsuli' or lease, so tbat state owned mines may bo\neasily accessible, if their operation becomes\nnecessary or udvfsablo.\n\u00ab. That in the pulp land leases provision\nshould be made for reforest ing and that stops\nshould be taken for the general preservation of\nforests by rcuniding against thc wasteful destruction of timber.\n7. That the legislature and government of\nthe province should persevere in the effort to\nsecure the exclusion of Asiatic labor.\n8. That tho matter of better terms in tho\nway of  subsidy and appropriations for tho\nSrovince should be vigorously pressed upon the\nlominion government..\n0. That the silver-lend industries of thc province be fostered and encouraged by the imposition of increased customs duties on lead and\nlead products imported into Canada, and that\nthe Conservative members of the Dominion\nHouse be urged to support any motion introduced for such a purpose,\nill. That as industrial disputes almost invariably result in great loss and Injury both to the\nparties directly concerned and to the public,\nlegislation should be passed to provide means\nfor an amicable adjustment of such disputes\nbetween employers and employes.\n11, That it Is advisable to foster the manufacture of the raw products of Iho provinco\nwithin the province as fur as practicable by\nmeans of taxat ton ou thosuid raw products.sub-\nject to rebate of the some in whole or part\nwhen manufactured in British Columbia.\nConservative Conventions\nMonkey Brand Soap cleans kitchen utensils, steel, iron and tinware, knives and\nCorks, and all kinds of cutlery. *.\nAt a meeting of the executive of the Provincial Conservative Association, held at Vancouver, the province was divided into live divisions for organisation purposes, The Kooto*\nnay-Boundary division is made up of the following provincial olection districts: itevel-\nstoke, Columbia, Fernie, Cranbrook, Ymir,\nKaslo.'Slocon, Grand Forks, (ircenwood, tho\nCity of Rossland and the City of Nelson. At\nthe same meeting the following resolutions\nwere adopted:\n1. That conventions for nominating candidates for members of the legislative assembly\nbe made up of delegates chosen as follows:\n(a) In city electoral districts, ono dolcgato\nfor every fifty and fraet ion of llfty votes polled\nat the provincial election held In 11)00. and if\nthe citv is divided Into wards, the proportion\nof delegates for each ward shall be bused on\nthe vote polled in each ward at the last muni*\neipal election.\n(b> In other electoral districts, rue delegate\nfor overy fifty or fraction oi H'ty votes pulled\nat the provincial election held in 1!*hi, ihe di-le-\ngates to be apportioned to po\"ing places, or as\nnear thereto us will be fair to ihe voters ot tho\ndifferent neighborhoods.\n2. The elect ion of delegates shall he al public meetings, held at a designated contra' place\nin each polling division, or in each ward In city\nelectoraldlstriclH, If tho city is divided into\nwards. At such public meetings only those\nwho pledge themselves to voto for the candidate or candidates selected at the nominating\nconvention shall be entitled to a vote for delegates\n3. Two weeks notlco shall bo given of tho\npublic meet lugs at which delegates aro to be\nelected, and nominating conventions shall be\nheld in city electoral districts two days after\nlhe day on which delegates are elected, and in\nother electoral districts seven days after. All\nnominations throughout the province to be\nmade at a designated central place in each\nelectoral district, and on the same day,\n4. All notices of the dale of public meetings\nfor the election of delegates to nominating\nconventions, the apportionment of delegates,\nand the place and date of nominating conventions in the several electoral districts shall be\nprepared by tho member of thc oxecutivo of\nthe division in which the electoral districts are\nsituate, and issued over tho names of the president and secretary of the Provincial Conservative Association\ni, ( _        |\n| Job Noting, g\nBook and H\nCommercial 28\nOffice 8\nPrintinq JS\nDone With Neatness and Despatch.     Mail\nOrders will Receive Prompt Attention\nra   World Job Office\nTHE INTERNATIONAL Family\nLiquor Store\nWe bave a large and well seleoted assortment of\nWines, Liquors, Etc., for\nFAMILY TRADE\nA meeting of the provincial executive will\nbe held at Vancouver within a month, and the\ndate for holding district nominating conventions will then be fixed.\nJOHN HOUSTON,\nPresident of tho Provincial\nConservative Association.\nNelson, June 8th, 1903. tf\nSOCIETY   CARDS.\nFA Xi* FRATERNAL ORDKB OP\n. KJ. Hi. 8AGI.H8, Rossland Aerie,\nNo. io, Rtgnlar.meetings CTery Monday eren-\nIr gs, 8 p. m, Bagles Hall, Carpentera' Onion\nBlu'_.\nJ. Levy   Wi r.\na, Daniel W. SeOrstaiy.\nI(. I i V* MeeU ln Odd Fellows Hail\n.KJ.KJ.aV . on Queen Street, between\nFirst snd Becond avenues. Regular meetings\neach Monde, night, visiting brothera an cordially Invited to attend snd register within as\ndsys.\nW.B. Murphy, Bee,      Jos. Goldsworthy, IT. O\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nC.P.R. ATLANTIC S.S. LINE\nfrom Montreal\nL. Champl'n.Aug i. Lake Erie . .Aue 27\nALLAN LINE\nFrom Montreal\nTunisian Aug t Parisian Aug 8\nDOMINION LINE\nFrom Montreal\nDominion \u2014Aug 1 Southwark.. .Aug 8\nFrom Boston\nNew England, *ug 6 Mayflower. .Aue 11\nAMERICAN LINE\nNew York\u2014Augj Philadelphia,Aug 12\nRED STAR LINE\nZeeland Aug8 Finland.... Aug it\nCUNARD LINE\nLucania......Aug8 Etruria Auk k\nALLAN STATE LINE\nMongolian.. .July 30 Laurentian. Auir I.\nWHITE STAR LINE\nTeutonic Aug 5 Arabic Aue 7\nFRENCH LINE\nLa Bretagne.. Aug6 LaTouraine,Augl3\nContinental sailings of North German\nLloyd, H. A. P. and Italian lines on application.   Lowest rates on all lines.\nW. P F CUMMINGS,\nG. S. S, Agt, Winnipeg\nJ. E. PROCTOR. w\nCP. A.. RossUukI.\nTO ALL POINTS\nEAST and WEST\nVIA\n~~ SHORT .LINE Q\nTO\nSt. Paul.Duluth,Minneapolis,Chic9go\nand all points east\nSeattle, Tacoma, Victoria\/Portland\nand all Pacific Coast pjints\nThrough Palace and Tourist Sleepsrs\nDining & Buffet Smoking Library Oars\n2-FastTrains Through Daily-2\nFor rates, folders and.full .information\nregarding trips, call on{ or addrets any\nagent S.F.&N. Railway.\nH. BRANDT, CP4T A,\n701 W Riverside, Spokane\nA B C DENNISTON, G W P A,\nSeattle. Wash.\nH. P. BROWN, RossUnd Aged\nThe best goods at right prices. Open every day until 9 p, 1\n.___^f_l__U__r[i\u00bblflJlIlflJl^ o_!J_____ajiJii__!i___M___Mr___ia_\nEVENING\nWorld\ntickets!   50c Per Month\n1 By Mail or Carrier.\n********\nSubcribe\nAt Once.\nAnd keep posted on\non the news of\nthe camp.\nENTERPRISE BUILDING,\nColumbia Ave., Rossland. THE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND B. C, AUG. 4, 1903.\nCOAST LEAD\nREFINERY\nScheme to Market Slocan\nOre.\nAN EXPERIMENT ON THE COAST\nThinks United States Trade With\nOrient Can Be Easily Cut\nInto.\nAn English mining engineer\nnamed Sherwood, now resident in\nVanoouver, proposes to built a lead\nrefinery and oorroding works to\nhandle the lead product of British\nColumbia and market it in a finished state. Mr. Sherwood has\nbeen studying the lead question\nfrom a Canadian point of view for\nsome time and he is satisfied that\nlead refining and oorroding in Vanoouver can be made a large and\npermanent success.\nMr. Sherwood proposes to incorporate a syndicate of fi ve prominent business men who will put up\n12000 each, or ten with $1000 eaoh,\nwhich they are willing to invest in\na small refinery and corroding\nplant that will handle four or five\ntons a day from matte to finished\nwhite lead. He proposes to buy\nthe matte from the Hall Mines and\nTrail smelters, refine it by the\neleotrolytic process and corrode it\nby tbe Gardner process, the patents\non whioh only ran out last year.\nMr. Sherwood believes that llfj,-\n000 will be sufficient capital to\ndemonstrate that a lead refinery\nand corroding works in Vancouver\noan be made an economic success.\nAfter he has proven this by produoing sufficient lead for looal consumption, and proving a profit\nthereon, he will invite more capital\nand go into the business on a large\nscale. Mr. Sherwood believes that\nthere is more safety and permanence for this industry in Vanoouver than for most oi the industries\nalready established. In support of\nhis contention hs points out that\nthe lead mines of British Columbia\nproduce about 19,000 tons of lead\nannually and that the nonunion of\nCanada consumes 11,000 tons\nannually, but that very little of\nthis lead is refined in Canada and\nnone of it is corroded on this side\nof tho line.\nBut the limit ot possible production in Canada has not by any\nmeans been reached. The Kootenay mines are capable of a production of olose to 100,000 tons per\nannum. Owing lo the bonus of\n$ 15 per ton, the production of lead\nore will be much greater in the\nfuture than in the past. A market\nwill have to be found for this ore,\nbut the question is where? Mr.\nSherwood is opinion that the Trail\nsmelter alone will supply the Canadian market. After that the residue will have to go to the foreign\nmarket, principally to China.\nWhat Mr. Sherwood proposes to do\nis make arrangements that it\nshould go out aB a finished product\ninstead of going to the United\nStates in the form of lead ore, as\nat present Mr. Sherwood points\nthat the Asiatic market for pig, tea\nand sheet lead is largely monopolized by the San Francisco line, to\nHongkong is Canadian lead, imported into the United States and\nmanufactured in bond. There is\nno physical or economic reason\nwhy all this lead should not be refined and manufactured right in\nVanoouver.\nIt may be regarded as a permanent proposition that Canadian\nlead cannot economically be marketed in the United States as the\nduty on lead ore is 1 _ cents a\npound, and the duty on pig lead\n2_oents. At present a good proportion of our lead ore is shipped\nto the United States and as a consequence, while pig lead in New\nYork iB $4.62. a hundred, a raw\nlead in the Slocan brings only\n$1.40 a hundred. This enormous\nprofit should go to the people of\nBritish Columbia instead of to the\nUnited States smelters.\nHave you seen our display of Cromp-\nlon's Corsets?   THE CRESCENT.\nPrivate dining rooms for ladies\nat the Palace.\nHOTEL ARRIVAL*\nROFraUN   BOUSE\nR B Westlake, Spokane\nH Myers, Spokane\nC Roberts, Trail\nL Wilson, Trail\nR 1 Pugh, Revelstoke\nC Burt, Nelson\nM Stewart, Vancou ve\nWantke\u2014300 sacks of charcoa\nat once.   Apply at the Palace.\nFull line of Window Shad's, Curtain\nPoles and all kinds of House Furnishings.   THE CRESCENT.\nMoraghan oysters any  style  at\nhe Palace grill rooms.\n! Paulson ii\nBros.\ntTHE GROCERS t\nNelson Si Fort Sheppard Railway\nRed Mountain Railway\nWashington & Great Northern R'y\nVancouver,Victoria & Eastern R'y St\nNav. Co.\nSIMILKAMEEN CITY, B..C\nNow Is the Time to Buy Lots\nin Similkameen \u00a9ity, B. 6.\nCAMP HEDLEY is the most talked of oamp in the province, and situated in the oentre is Similkameen City, surrounded by\nrioh mines whioh will shortly have large payrolls. Over 200 lots have been sold to business people who realize that Similkameen will become the metropolis of this district. The Nickel Plate mines have expended $300,000 in development and are at\npresent building tramways and a 40-stamp mill. Arrangements are being made for the erection of a large smelter at Similkameen City which will oost about a million dollars. Besides the Nickel Plate group of olaims being developed by one of the richest\nmining companies in North America, there are several other groups and properties whioh will shortly be developed, among them\nbeing the Kingston Mines, Rollo, Wellington, Winnipeg, Red Chief and Pollock. Situated as it is in the beautiful Similkameen\nvalley, midway between Frinoetcn and Keremeos, and protected from all opposition in the valley by adjoining a large Indian\nreservation, this townsite will beoome one of the principal mining camps of the Paoifio Northwest. It was only a short time ago\nthat lota in Roesland, Nelson, Greenwood and other mining centres were selling for the same price that they are today being sold\nfor in Similkameen.   Come in before the boom and double your money.\nSimilkameen City to Have Two Railways.\nThe Viotoria, Vanoouver & Eastern and the Canadian Pacific railways are starting immediate construction for the Similkameen,\nwhioh will make this town a railroad centre and divisional point, and when these competing lines are completed through to the\nPaoific coast they will become the main through lines, being the shortest route from the interior to the coast. A large sawmill is\nrunning steadily on the west addition, the only available timber for milee around. The main street is 90 feet wide, being all\ncleared and ready for building purposes. All railways, roads, telegraph and telephone lines will have to come through this\ntownsite whioh is looated in tbe centre of the whole Similkameen valley and will beoome the largest distributing point and\nmining oentre in British Columbia.\nSimilkameen City Lots Will Make You Rich.\nA large agricultural area to draw from.   Pure water, fine climate, rich mineB, big payrolls.\nLots for Sale $2 to $ 10 Per Front Foot,    teems m \u00abn Towns wl c.\nFor further particulars apply to\nFRANK BAILEY & CO., Greenwood \"and Similkameen\nJ.;H. YATES, Empire StateJBuilding, Spokane.\nJAMES H. FLETCHER, 120 Columbia Ave., ROSSLAND\nLABOR UNNMRECTORY\nOfficers and Meetings.\nNELSON MINERS UNION\nNo. gb, W. F. M. Meets\nevery Saturday evening at\n7:30 o'clock. Thos. Roynon,\nFres., Frank Philips, Sec.\nVisiting brothers cordially\ninvited.\nThe only all rail between taints east\nwest and south to Rossland, Nelson,\nGrand Forks and Republic. Connects\nat Spokane with the Great Northern,\nNorthern Pacific and O. B. & N. Co.\nfor points east, west and south; connects\nat Rossland and Nelson with the Canadian Pacific R'y. .\nConnects at Nelson with K. R. A N.\nCo. for Kaslo and K' & S. points.\nConnects at Curlsw with stage for\nGreenwood and Midway, B. C.\nBuffet cars run between Spokane and\nNorthport.\nEffective June 14, 1903\nNORTHBOUND.\nLeave Spokane 8:45 a.m.\nArrive Rossland 4:35 p.m.\nArrive Nelson 7:20 p.m.\nArrive Grand Forks....   4 :oo p.m.\nArrive Republic 6:15 p.m\nSOUTHBOUND.\nLeave Republic 8130 a.m.\nLeave Grand Forks 10:35 a-m\nLeave Nelson 7:20 a. ro\nLeave  Rossland io:4c a.m\nArrive  Spokane 6:15 pjn\nMINERS' UNION No. 38,\nWestern Federation ol\nminers\u2014meets every Wed\nnesday evenino; at 7.30, 1.\nm. in Miners' Union Hall.,\nM. Villeneuve, Secretary\nHarry Seaman,. President.\nPHOENIX MINERS UN\nIon No. 8, W. F. M. Meets\nevery Saturday evening at\n7:30 o'clock in Miners' nail.\nGeo. McMullen, Pres., Jno.\nRiordan, Sec.\nYMIR MINERS UNION\nNo. 85, W. F. M., meets\nevery Wednesday evening\nat 8 o'clock In Miners' Un\nion hall. Robert Elliott,\nPres., W. B. Mclsaac, Sec.\nWESTERN FEDERATION\nOFMINERS-C. H. Moyer\npresident,Denver,Coloradc\nEdward Hughes, vice-president, Butte, Mont.; Wm.C.\nHaywood, secretary-treasurer, Denver, Col.; Executive Board: J. T. Lewis,\nGlobe.Ariz.; L. J. Simpkins,\nWardner, Idaho; Phillip\nBowden,Butte, Mont,; D. C.\nCopley, Independence, Col.;\nO, A. Peterson, Tarraville,\nS. D.; James A. Baker, Slo-\nc?n City, B. C.\nPAINTERS' UNION, No\n123, painters and decorators\nof Amerlca.meets in Beatty's\nHall, on second and foprth\nTuesday of each month. R\nC. Arthur, Pres.: W. S.\nMurphv, Sec.\nexplosives:\nThe Cotton Powder Gomoanv. Ltd.\n32 Queen Viotoria St., LONDONJ B. C*\n-MANOTAOTDBE\t\nFaversham Powder\nOn the SPECIAL LIST of Permitted ^Explosives, October, 1901.\nT^^ Ml T~ [IT   *^e \"*eBt exPloB've tot nnderground_work ex\nI   \\J I \\l I   I   _____    clusively used in Severn and Mersey tunnel\nCordite, Gelignite, Gelatine Dynamite, Blasting Gelatine, Detonators for all classes of Explosives, Electric ApplianceB,\nSubmarine Charges for the removal of  Wrecks, Etc.,  Etc.\nTYPOGRAPHICAL      UNION No. 335,\u2014Meets on the\n' last Sunday of each month\nat the Miners' Union Hall\nJ   Barkdoll,   Sec; Morgan\nO'Connell, President.\nGREENWOOD MINEBS UNION\nNo. 22, W. F. M., meets every\nSaturday evening in Union hall.\nH. R. Parsons, Pres., Geo. F.\nDougherty, Seo.-Treas,\nDISTRICT UNION no. 6,\nW.F.M.-P. R. McDonaid,\nPres., Rossland; Howard\nThompson, vice-president,\nSandon; Geo. F.Dougherty,\nSecretary, Greenwood.\nFor further information regarding\nreservation of berths or price of tickets,\nipply to any agent of the above companies, or to\nH. A. JACKSON,\ncunt-si PMsengsr At 1\n\u2022_ok\u00bb_t, Wish\nH.   r. BftVN,\n\u2022taal, liM'ua,   C\nGRAND FORKS FEDERAL Labor Union No. 231,\nA.L.U.\u2014Meets every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock\nin Federal Union hall.\nThos.Foulston,Pres., JnoJT.\nLawrence, Sec\nNEW DENVER MINFPS\nUnion No. 97, W. J. M.\nMeets every Saturda v evening at 7:30 o'clock In Union\nhall. Hugh Williams, Pres.,\nW. C. Lawrence, Sec\nCARPENTERS   &    JOIN.\nERS -.UNION\u2014meets every\nQ Friday of each week at 7.\n30 p. m. in   Miners' Union\nHall.   W. R. Baker,  Pres.;\nJohn McLaren, Sec,\nTRADES AND LABOR\nCOUNCIL\u2014Meets every second and fourth Tuesday In\neach month at 7.30 P. M, in\nMiners' Union Hall. President, W.L.McDonald. Ad.\ndress all communications to\nSecretary-Treasurer, P,_0,\nbox 784.\nWorks: Faversham, Kent and Moiling, near Liverpool\nESTABLISHED i.4q.\nGEORGE GREEN.\n!THE FOUNDRY.\nABERYSTWYTH,        -:-       ENGLAND.\nManufacturer of Concentrating Machinery.\nMEDALS\u2014Royal Cornwall Polytechnic; Gold medal International .'Mining Exhibition, Crystal Palace, 1890.    Only award for Concentrators.\nSPECIALTIES:^\nStamps with latest improvements, of up-to-date design, and with wearing parts 01\nHadneld's steel,.from 2 cwts. to 10 cwts. per head, Stoncbreakers, Crushers, Jigs,\nTrommels,.Vanners, etc., all constructed in sections for facility of transport if desired. Patent Portable Crushing and Amalgamating Pans for Prospecting, A\nsmall concentrating plant to treat up to five tons erected at the works by which\ncommercial results.can be seen by intending purchasers_for a .merely nominal cos\nEstimates for complete plants on application.   Special attention given to aUv.g\nengineer's specifications.   Telegrams\u2014\"JIGGER,\" Aberystwyth. THE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND, B C, AUG. 4, 1003.\nTHE LOCAL\nEXCHANGE\nLocal Market Was   Dull\nToday.\nAMERICAN BOY STILL STEADY\nThe Latest Quotations and Sales\nLocally    Upon    the\nMarket.\nMINOR  MENTION\nThe trouble in New York ie having its inevitable effect upon local\nprices. Stocks generally are\nweaker than a week ago. Giant ie\nBuffering, as ia Centre Star, but\nAmerican Boy is holding its own.\nToday's Local Quotationa:\nAsked Bid\nAmerican Boy        5 4iH\nBen Hur        :,'A 4\u00bb\nBlack Tall        4Y, 3X\nCanadian Gold Vields         5 4H\nCariboo (camp McKlunsj)ex-dlr     12a u'A\nCentreStar       26 .3\nCrows Nest Pais Coal $ t\nFairview         5 4\nFisher Maiden        3 2\nGiant         3 2\nGranby Consolidated   $5.00 $4.00\ntonePfne ,         i'A '\nMorning Glory        2 iV\nMountain T.ien        25 23\nNorth Star (Hast Kootenay) ij. oK\nPayna 7 nVi\nSitlp      32 29\nimbler-Csriboo       42\nSan Foil         s 3\nSullivan        3% 4%\nTom Thumb         4% i'A\nWar Kagle Consolidated       ij. 10\nWaterloo (Assess, paid)        7 5M\nWhite Bear MHsess, paid)          4% 3}.\nToday.s Local Halos.\nMountain Lion, 500,23_c; Giant,\n3000, 2_c; Centre Star, 1000, 25_c;\nAmerioan Boy, 2000, 4fo.    Total,\n6500.\ni! R.L. Wright, A. R.S.M.H\n(Assayer for Le Roi No. 2,)\nWILL TAKE\niCustom'Assays;;\nNOTICE.\nRe John Y. Cole Addition  to  Rosslaud.\nRegistered Plan No.   719.\nNotice is hereby given to all personal\nintcrest\u00bbd in said planj that application\non behalf of the Consolidated White Bear\nMining Company, Limited, NonrPersonl\nal Liability, will be made to a Judge of\nthe Supreme Court in Chambers, at the\nCourt House, Victoria, B, C, at 10:30\no'clock in the forenoon.on the 28th dayof\nJuly,I963, for an order changing said plan\nso as to close Montreal street and substitute a new Etreet to be called Montreal\nstreet ninety feet to tbe west thereof; also\nto cloBe a portion of Kootenay Avenue between the westerly boundary of lot 12 in\nBlock 2 and the wtsleily boundary of\nLot 16, Block 3 and to open in lieu thereof a street running south through Lots 15\nand i6,Block 3,thence westerly parallel to\nthe old street to the new Montreal street\nabove mentioned, including the lane between said Lot 15 and said new Montreal street, also the westerly end of the\nlane in Block 10 is to be closed, also the\nwesterly half of the lane in. Block 6.\nAnd further take notice that the plan\nof said Addition as proposed to be\namended may be seen at the law office of\nthe undersigned, Columbia avenue.Ross-\nland, B. C.\nJ. A. MACDONALD,\nSolicitor for Applicants,\nDated 26th June 1903.\nIN THE MATTER OF \"CREDITORS'\nTRUST   DEEDS     ACT,\"     igoi.\nand\nIN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE\nOF JOSEPH   HAMON  AND  OS-\n- WALD   BISSON*;  TRADING  AS\nHAMOM & BISSOi\u25a0'.\nNotice is herebv given that at the fiirst\nmeeting ol the cred'tor of the above\nnamed Hamon & Bisson held on the 13th\nday of July, 1903 a resolulionof the creditors of the said Hamon and Bisson was\nparsed appointingW. J. Robinson assignee in the place of Frederick E. Empey,\nAnd notice is fuither given that a true\ncopy of the said resolution duly verified\nas required by the \"Creditors Trust\nDcod Act\", has been registered in the\ncfiice of tie county court of Kooteiay\nholden at Kossland, and that all the personal property of the said Hamon and\nBisson is now vested in tbe said VV. J.\nRobinson, and that the said W. J Robinson is alone authorized to colli ct debts\nowing to the said Hamon and Bisson and\ndetbs which were assigned by Vaughan\nand Cook to the said Hamon and Bisson,\nand all persons indebted to the said Vaughan and Cook and to the said Hamon\nand Bisson are liereby required to forthwith pay the amount of the said indebtedness to the said VV. J. Robinson.\nWALTER J. ROBINSON, Assignee.\nDated this 24th day of July, 1903.\nPrivate dining rooms for   ladies\nat the Palace.\nDr. Armstrong is in the city.\nC. J. PowerB left today for Toronto.    ' ' .\nFrank Cozzaglio has left for New\nYork.\nR. G. Rankin went to Portland\ntoday.\nC. Q. Tonkin-left lor Pittsburg\ntoday.\nE. J. Tuttle returned today to\nAstoria,\nC. J. Hart left for Portland this\nmorning.\nManager Couldrey left lor the\nsouth today.\nA. E. Rolf left this morning tor\ncoast points.\nT. G. Farrell left for Viotoria\nthis morning.\nA, Q. Lnreon is back from a trip\nto the Boundary.\nJ. S. Macleod left this morning\nlor Walla Walla.\nMrs. Ralph Harron has left for a\nvisit to Portland.\nG. H. Bayne is reported as in the\n\"Lardeau\" hospital.\nThere will be a meeting of the\ncity council this evening.\nThe Le Roi Mining company has\nsubscribed $200 towards the Summer Carnival.\n- T. R. Morrow came back from\ntbe coast last night, after a fortnight's absence.\nH. Cherrington has offered a\nprize for every defeated candidate\nat the baby show..\nThe garden party at the home of\nM.r and Mrs. W. Thompson will\ncome off this evening,\nA. J. McCleary and R. E. Peacock have taken over the Palace\nbilliard room and bowling alley.\nThe ladies of the Church of St.\nGeorge are giving a social on next\nTuesday evening at the Masonic\nHall.\nThe Knights of the Golden\nHorseshoe will give a garden party\non August 14 in the B. A. C. enclosure.\nW. Maodonald has received word\nthat W. Brown of the cuetoms now\nat Victoria hospital is dangerously\nill with tuberculosis.\nPrincipal McTaggart has thrown\nup his position as principal of the\nschools here whioh has been offered\nto A. Love of Kaslo.\nThe question of a city solicitor\nand of the connection of the city\nand the Le Roi water systems will\ncome up at tonight's council.\nConductor Irving says that many\nexcursionists are coming to  Rossland for the Carnival and the rail\nway will have all it can do to handle tbe traffic.\nThe Sunday school children of\nSt. George's church will go on a\npionic to Sheep creek next Thurs\nday leaving   the  Great Northern\nat 10:30 a. m.\nThe children of the Baptist,\nMethodiBt and Presbyterian\nchurches will go on a Sunday Sohool\npionic to China creek on Thursday\nnext, leaving Rossland at 8 in the\nmorning.\nDOMINION\nPARLIAMENT\nTrend   of   Labor   Legislation.\nTRADES AND LABOR CONGRESS\nMoraghan oysters   any style at\nthe Palace grill rooms.\nTrunks and Valises in great variety\nand at popular prices. The CRESCENT\nThe   Brockville   Convention   Will\nClosely Scrutinize Liberal.\nMethods\nLaughlin\nFountain\nPen\nlaTHC PEER OF ALL\nPENS AND MAS NO\nEQUAL  ANYWHERE.\nFINEST GRADE 14K.\nGOLD PEN\nYOUR CHOICE OF THESE\nTWO POPULAR STYLES FOR\nONLY\n$1.00\nc^mmMmwMmiWtw^.\nDAYS\nWANTED-Caretaker for Rossland\nKootenay offices. Must be well recom\nmended.   Apply to General Manager.\nHave you seen our display of Cromp-\nton's Corsets?   THE CRESCENT.\nF.ivate dining rooms for ladies\nat the Palara.\nCall at the Strand for a  fancy drink.\nGreon & Comerford, Props.\nThe Palace has   the   only  first\nolass grill rooms in the city.\nijBLi _ DfflAHFl;\nLUMBER\n<>     Mine Timber a Specialty    ',\n; GOOD1  WOOD  in  large or . ,\nsmall quantities. ] ',\nr*A**mmmtmm\\OlMMMMiUHl' 1\nThe TradeB and Labor Congress\nof Canada, in calling its convention\nat Brockville, Out., on September\n22, has issued a circular in which\nit makes the following significant\nreferences to labor legislation in\nthe Dominion pailiament:\n\"The past session of the Dominion parliament witnessed the\nintroduction of legislation of the\nmost oppressive character, aimed\nat organized labor. The two following bills threaten the very existence of trade unionism and, no\nmatter at whose instance they were\nintroduced, the intent is plain,\nnamely, to administer a quietus to\nthe legitimate aims and efforts of\norganized labor:\n\"Bill H\u2014'An aot to amend the\ncriminal code respecting offences\nconnected with trade and breaches\nof contract.'\n\"The object of this bill ia to kill\ninternational trade unionism.\n\"Bill S\u2014'An act to amend the\ncriminal code, 1892, respecting free\nlabor.'\n\"This bill, if passed, will prevent a trade union discusBing ordinary trade matters.\n'\u2022The above bills originated in\nthe Senate, where scant courtesy\nwas sbown to Bill U\u2014'An aot to\nlegalize union labels.'\n\"Among other bills of interest to\norganized labor dealt with were the\nChinese Exclusion Act, the Conciliation Bill, the Railway Appliances Act, as well as numerous acts\nof the provincial legislatures.\n\"The importance of the deliberations of the approaching session of\nthe Congress oannot be over accentuated. The employing classes\nhave united in active antagonism\nto organized labor, their operations\nare carried on in secret, the funds\nat their command are large and\nconstantly increasing, and only by\na closer union, coupled with careful judgment and action, upon the\npart of organized labor will it be\na ble to cope with them and prevent the destruction of the Canadian International Trades and Labor Union movement. The efforts\nof our opponents are not confined\nto the 'shop' but extend to our\nlegislative halls, and the active opposition to everything favorable to\nus, as shown, for example, in the\nSenate, demonstrates that labor\nmust wake up to the necessity for\naction.\n\"Besides these matters, tbe developments of the year in industrial\ncircles call for consideration, while\nsuggestions for the improvement\not the conditions of the toiling\nmasses will, as usual.be dealt with.\n\"This session of the Congress,\nwhile important in itself, can only\nbe tbe real voioe of organized labor\nby the active sympathy and support of every union in Canada, and\nthat Bupport can best be given by\nthe attendance of your delegates at\nBrockville.\n\"We are, yours fraternally,\n\"John A. Flett, Pres.,\n\"Hamilton, Ont.\n\"J. B. Mack, Vioe-Pres.,\n\"Montreal, P. Q.\n\"P. M. DRAi'Jcn,Seo.-T_ea_.,   -\n\"Ottawa, Ont,\"\nI\nSUPERIOR TO OTHER\nMAKES AT $3\nThe L&ughlin Fountain\nPen Holder is made of finest quality hard rubber, is\nfitted with highest grade,\nlarge size, 14k. gold pen,\nof any desired flexibility,\nand has the only perfect\nfeeding device known.\nBUher style, richly gold\nmounted, for presentation\npurposes, $1.50 extra.\nSurely you will not be\nable to secure anything at\nthree times tbe price that will\ngive such continuous\npleasure and service.\nFor Sale by\nIGOODEVEI\nBROS.\nJUST OPENED\u2014 Fine line of\nCorrespondence Stationery; all the new\nshades and shapes.   S ;e t' ose goods.\nGoodeve Bros.\nRossland\nSummer\nCarnival\n$5000\nIn\nPrizes\nLayton's\nSfcond\t\nHand Store\n$12 Bed Lounges, new $10\n$25 3-piece Set Furniture $15\n50 Cook Stoves CHEAP\nNew Trunks CUT PRICES\nAlhambra Hotel\nioif&U $6.50 per week\nThe only hotel in t-ie rity having  a dry\nroom frti\" miner*      r\"*- Ritfe w vim.\nsocial!\n******\/\u2022 fi-cmf m**fr-\n;; Altar Guild ol St. George's ChurCh < \\\n4 A T -    .\t\nii Masonic Hall\n:! Tuesday Eve., Aug. 11 ;;\nj; HAZLEW00D ICE;;\nCREAM, TEA, COFFEE |\nLadies lOo,      Gentlemen 25c\n; ..DANCING.. ;;\nCei tificate of Improvement.\nNOTICE.\nThe Brothers and Jungle Fraction\nMineral Claims, situate in the Trail\nCreek Mining Division of West Kootenay District,\nWhere located: Near the international boundary line on Sophie mouutain\nTake notice that I, Kenneth L. Burnet, Prov. Land Surveyor of Rossland,\nagent ior E. B. Sentell, Esq., of Van-\ncouver.li.C free miner's certificate, No.\nB57520, intend, sixty days from\nthe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\na Crown Grant of tbe above claim,\nAnd further take notice tbat action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the iesuance of such Certificate of\nImprovement,\nDated this 4th dav of June, A.D. igoi.\nKENNETH L.BURNET\nUnder the auspices of the\nMayor and City Council\nTuesday & Wednesday\nAugust 25-6\nPATRONS: The Brotherhood of\nRailway Trainmen and Rossland\nMiners Union, No. 38, W. P. of M.\nGraud parade, lacrosse and baseball tournamentB, fire-\nrnen'e coinpo itions, tugs of war, horse racing, boxing and\nwrestling contests, athletic sports of all kinds, machine and\ndouble and single band drilling, aud speed exhibition by\nthe guideles* wonder, Dr. M., grand ball, magnificent pyrotechnic display aud performances by the RoBsland Dramatic\nclub.   Railway rate le?s than one fare\" for the round trip\nFurther particulars from\nA. J. DREWRY, Sec.\nTWO DAYS\nIMMMMMMWfMMMMMftW\n3 III ffi eiqar Stores\nAre where you can get the best the .market affords in CIGARS, TOBACCOS,   PIPES,   ETC.\nJROW & MORRIS.     -:-     PROPRIETORS\nSPECIAL SALE?,, LIQUORS\n-AT THE-\nInternational Liquor Store.\nCartlfleata af Improvement*.\n\"Idaho Fraction\" Mineral Claim, situated in the Trail Creek Mining Division\nof WeBt Kootenay District, and adjoining the '\"Enterpiise,\" \"Idaho'' and \"Virginia\" Mineral Claims.\nTake notice that I, T. P. O'Farrell of\nRossland, B. C, acting as agent for\nMary Kraus, free miners certificate No,\nB54770, and William Kellem, free miner's certificate No. B54801, intend, sixty\ndays .'rom tha data hereof, to apply to the\nmining recorder for a certificate\nof improvements, for the purpose of obtaining crown grant of the above claim\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such certificate of\nimprovements.\nDated at Rossland, B. C, this 7th day\nof February,-A. L. 1903.\nT. P. O'FARRELL\nWines and\nLiquors\nRT e\u00a9ST!\nNow is tbe time to buy\nyour family supply as this\nsale w;ll only last for one\nmonth. Come early while\nthe present excellent selection remains.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666<.*\u2022\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nMethodist, Presbyterian, Baptist W\nSduudth Schools!\n\u2014TO  \u2666\nCHINA   CREEK       T\nThursday, Aug. 6 j\nTrain will leave C.P R. depot at 8\na.m. sharp, returning will leave China\nCreek at 4 p.m. Tick- ts\u2014Adults, $1;\nchildren not members of these schools\n50c; scholars of these schools free.\nTickets must be obtained from the\nsuperintendent of each school. Everybody come and have a good time with\nthe children at the iivcr.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666>*#\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nNOTICE\nThe regular meeting of Kossland\nLodge No. 8, A. O. U. VV., will hereafter\nbe held at Carpenters Union hall.Becond\navenue, every Tuesday at 8 p.m.\nJ..C. McMEEKEN, M. W.\nDon't forget the hot lunch at the\nPalace tonight.\nTwo prizes will be given at the Alhambra Bowling alley every two weeks for\nthe largest score made,","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Rossland (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Rossland","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"The_Evening_World_1903_08_04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0226783","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.076944","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.802222","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Rossland, B.C. : World Publishing Company","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Evening World","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}