{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0373264":{"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\/contributor":[{"value":"Howse, A.E.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2018-10-31","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1904-12-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/similkameen\/items\/1.0373264\/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":" y-i\nNature has Endowed Similkameen with Vast Riches.\nNone So Blind to Reason as those who Stubbornly Resist It.\nHaving all the Natural Resources for Making: the People Prosperous it is almost Criminal for Governments  to Passively Witness the Similkameen Made the Plaything: of Rival and Procrastinating: Railway Corporations\u2014United Effort of the People and Legislators Can End it.\nVol. v.   No. 35.\nPRINCETON, B.C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER JO, J904.\n$2 a Year, in Advance.\nMINING PARAGRAPHS\nWater Shortage in Twenty-\nMile Curtails Mine and\nMill Output.\nThe Boundary is Prosperous and the\nMining Industry in Flourishing Condition.\nOwing to the shortage of water in\nTwenty-Mile creek, the Daly Reduction\nCo. of Hedley, may be obliged to tempo-\n\u25a0rarily stop the stamp mill and cease work\nin the Nickel Plate mine. It would be a\nmisfortune if the stoppage were prolonged as this company gives employment to a lot of men and is today the\nbackbone of the Similkameen.\nThe Mountain Lion, Republic, is send-*\ning out 90 tons daily.\nThe capacity of the lead refinery at\nTrail has been doubled.\nA new era in mining in the Boundary\nhas begun by the digging out of the\nground from.the grass roots sufficient product to meet the payroll. That is what\nis happening in a dozen high grade properties around Greenwood today. Immense capital was necessary to put the\nGranby and B.C. Copper Co. and Montreal & Boston in their present paying\npositions, but nerve, faith and good management are a kind of capital which\nbring success.\nThe new vein on the Providence in the\nBoundary is growing into a wonder. The\nlead has been exposed for 400 feet. The\nvein in one place reached a width of 7\nfeet.   It runs about $80.\nGood reports are continually coming\nfrom the Strathmore property in the\nGreenwood high grade belt.\nThe Lucille Dreyfus mine near Danville has resumed operations with a force\nof some twelve men and is now shipping\nore to the Granby smelter.\nProf. R. D. Brock, of the Dominion\ngeological survey, who has already spent\nseveral weeks examining and sampling\nthe Snowshoe will shortly proceed to\nRossland to examine the Le Roi, War\nEagle and Centre Star mines.\nIt is reported that the Maggie mineral\nclaim near Ashcroft owned by Messrs.\nSmith, Bryson, Hocking and Henderson\nresidents of that place, has been sold to\nM. K. Rodgers, of the Daly Reduction\nCo., Hedley, for the sum of $75,000.\nFor the week ending Nov. 30 the mines\nin Rossland camp shipped 5.985 tons of\nore. Bad roads around Rossland affect\nthe ore output of the camp. :\nSkylark camp, Greenwood, though long\nneglected, gives evidence of becoming\nthe banner one of the district. The Bay\nis the finest producer of gold specimens\nyet exposed. The E.P.U. is a producing\nmine and the Skylark and Silver Cloud\nhave been yielding some high grade ore.\nLarger smelters on Boundary creek are\nthe order of the day. The Montreal &\nBoston will have their second furnace\nrunning shortly and the B.C. Copper Co.\nwill soon install two more furnaces.\nWork is progressing on the prospect\ntunnel of tbe Spallumcheen coal deposits near Enderby. The contiactors,\nMessrs. Swallow and Johnston, have a\n6x7 drift in about 35 feet and at present\nare working through a stratum of sandstone overlying a sort of fire clay with a\nwell defined seam of coal in the face of\nthe tunnel. lv$4-   ^\nThe Revelstoke Liberal association has\nsent a resolution to Ottawa urging the\nappointment of W. A. Galliher, M.P. for,\nKootenay, to the portfolio of minister of\nmines. Mr. Galliher has given proof of\nhis ability in behalf of the mining indus\ntry by having a lead bounty established.!\nNo better appointment could be made.\nA bunk house is being erected for miners on the Granite Creek Gold Group\ntunnel. Supplies for the winter's work\nare being packed to it.\nMisplaced Confidence.\nJetson W. Beaver, prospector, and a\nformer resident near Princeton, whose\nwife died over a year ago and was buried\nnear his cabin on the Diamond B mineral\nclaim, has gone crazy. His first wife had\nonly fairly set out on her eternal journey when Beaver began courtship with a\nbusinesslike woman in Spokane. By the\nway, Spokane is said to have a lot of\nwomen whose capacity for business is\nexceptionally well developed. Beaver\nrepresented to the woman that he had\nmineral claims near Princeton which\nwould make him a millionaire as soon as\nJim Hill had his railway running up the\nSimilkameen\u2014all of which is correct\nenough\u2014whereupon she fell deeply in\nlove with him. They were married.\nMrs. Beaver, with that womanly instinct\nfor self preservation which takes no\nchances, persuaded the 'old. man' to give\nher an interest in his mines and ranch.\nWhile his ranch would scarcely grow\nbananas it is favorably situated for the\ngoat industry, and the rock on it contains the right proportion of grit for\n\"billy\" to sharpen his toe nails with.\nThe Diamond B is good property. With\nMr. Beaver there was associated as co-\nowner one Winkler who disappeared\nfrom here in the summer of '03. The\ncharge of insanity now resting against,\nBeaver while he is a prisoner in SpoKane\ncould hardly be substantiated by his con-<\nduct here. His temper was irascible and\non one occasion is said to have levelled a\nWinchester at someone, but that is neither here nor there as the sanest of men\ndo that sometimes. The only thing in\nBeaver's conduct that looks like insanity\nis his giving anything to his wife, for she\nhad no sooner got her clutches on his valuable mine than she told him to go to a\nplace where snow cannot exist.\nLOCAL AND GENERAL\nTopics in  Brief of Local and\nGeneral Interest   to  the\nMoving Throng.\nThe Telephone Line Receiving Finishing Touches\u2014Wire is Now\nBeing Strung.\nTom Hunter, superintendent of telephone line construction, was'in town last\nSaturday and reports everything on his\ndivision as well on towards completion.\nThe wiremen are making good time and\nit is believed that they will be in Princeton for their turkey dinner on Christmas\nday.\nBorn\u2014On the 7th inst., the wife of\nErnest Waterman of a daughter.\nF. W. Groves, P.L.S., surveyed Tom\nArnold's ranch on the west side of China\ncreek this week. Mr. Arnold has got a\ngood location with plenty of water which\nwith its proximity to Princeton will make\nit a valuable homestead.\nAn interesting event to some particular friends of the happy pair in Princeton occurred at Silverton, B. C, on November 24, when J. W. M. Tinl.ing was\nunited in marriage to Miss Jennie A.\nBrandon. Both are very popular in\nsocial and musical circles and enjoyed\nthe good will of everybody. The Star\njoins with other friends here in wishing\nthem an unruffled passage over the sea\nof life and good-anchorage in;the harbor\nbeyojid.\n\"*Rev. A. J. Fowlie will conduct divine\nservice Sunday in the court house at\n7 p.m., to which everybody is welcome. Mr. Fowlie made a trip extending to Fairview recently as the result of\nwhich he will likely locate at Princeton.\nHe will visit surrounding camps occasionally and endeavor to establish public\nworship in as many places as possible.\nService will be held tomorrow at 3 p.m.\nin Cook & Co's store, Granite creek.\nThe deal for the Ellis ranch at Penticton has been so far advanced as to be\ntpractically a bargain. The amount to be\n'paid for the land is $300,000 and $100,-\n000 for the stock. The company organized to acquire the property has a capitalization of $500,000. The shareholders\nare made up of men in all parts of the\njDominion. It will be one of the greatest blessings that ever happened the\nlower Okanagan valley when this estate\nis subdivided into small fruit holdings\nand cultivated by progressive owners.\nThe deal is being promoted by L. W.\n)Shatford, M.P.P.\nIt sends a shiver up one's spinal column to read of the rigorous weather they\nare having in the east. In the Similkameen no storms, nor stress of weather of\nany kind has been felt; only balmy at\nmosphere and Italian skies the whole\nlivelong autumn. Ah ! the blessings of\na glorious climate; how it rejuvenates\nas one takes in a lungful of the circumambient air. Only the peaks and the\nhigher divides are clothed in winter\narray. Mo witch, sheep and goat are all\nin the higher altitudes and are pot likely\nto descend until the snow deepens.\nOver at Summerland they have-'a* saw\nmill which has baffled the ingenuity of\nmill experts. As a last resort the owners\nsent to the makers in Alabama, U.S., for\nhelp to set it aright. On examination it*\nwas found the mill had been set up backwards and was throwing sawdust in the\neyes of workmen so bad that they had to\nwear specially constructed goggles.\n' Mrs. Arthur Reith and daughter were\nguests of Mrs. Gordon Murdock this\nweek.\nBilly Summers sailed into town the 1\nother evening on shank's mare from Hed- ;\nley to take an important position in the I\nsausage department of his brother Kit's \/\nbutchery. Billy and Tommy Day have\nquite abandoned the idea of going to the )\nassistance of the Japs since Port Arthur I\nseems likely to fall most any day.\nDr. Whillans of Hedley was in town\nthis week.\nBorn\u2014On the 3rd inst., at Hedley, the\nwife of Rev. Mr. Docksteader, of a son.\nAs will be observed by the recherche\nprogramme printed in this column the\nChristmas tree entertainment by the\n\u2022children is varied and well arranged. It\nwill be presented in the court house\nthus affording comfort to the large audience sure to be present. A wireless message from Father Christmas states that he\nis anxious to have all the children of this\nsection present on the occasion. He will\nhave a lot of nice things to give them\nand will have a cheery word for all.\nJack Way came up from Hedley on j\nWednesday's stage to take in the sights I\nand size up the town. Mr. Wjsy isama-\nchinst by trade but recently was running\na drug store and now has a paperhanging\njob on hand after which he will go trapping and prospect in the spring. .\nXmas Entertainment.\nThe children of Princeton invite one\nand all to their Xmas entertainment at\nthe Court House on the evening of Friday, Dec. 23rd, 1904, at 7 o'clock. The\nprogramme is as follows:\n1. Carol\u2014The Starry Portals.\n2. Drill and Tableau\u2014Joan of Arc.\n3. Carol\u2014Oh So Sweetly they are Ringing.\n4. Baby Polka\u2014The Wee 'Uns.\n5. Motion Song\u2014Rock-a-Bye Babv.\n6. Tableau.\nINTERMISSION.\n7. Carol\u2014What Do They Say, Those Bells\nto Me.\n8. Recitation.\n9. Christmas Cantata.\n10 Tableau. [\u25a0<#\nii Song\u2014Kris Kringle.\n12 Distribution of presents from Tree.\n13 Chorus\u2014Hark the Herald Angels Sing.\n\u2014Com.\n\u00a3sl\n yC\nTHE    SIMILKAMEEN    STAR\nDecember io, 1904\nThe Similkameen Star\nPublished Weekly at\nPRINCETON,  B.C.\n\u2014BV\u2014\nThe Princeton Publishing Co.\nA. E.  Howse, Manager.\nOne Year,\n:SUBSCRIPTION RATE:\nPayable in' Advance.\n$2.00\nSubscribers will confer'a favor on this office by\npromptly reporting any change in address or\nirregularity ip. receipt of their paper. ~\nAdvertising-rates furnished on application.\nLegal notices io^ands cents per line.\nFour weekly'fnsertions constitute one month\nadvertisiaar\nAll cheques to be made-payable to     .\nA. E. HOWSE.\nHEART BREAKING DELAY.\nThe application for extension of\ntime wherein to build the Vancouver & Coast Kootenay railway\naddsanother to an already long list\not legal notices regarding railways\nto .the Siinilkameen and the Kootenay; Why all this sparring for\ntime is required or granted is a\nquestion no fellow seems able to\nanswer and how long this temporizing with the fortunes of the people\nwill be permitted to continue depends entirely on the attitude of\nthe governments. Certain it is\nthat there is no justification for the\ndelay when the dire need for a railway is so painfully manifest to all\nacquainted with the unlimited mineral and other resources of the Similkameen and Kootenay.\nIf the  Vancouverites  were  sincere in  their  alleged  desire  for a\ncoast  to   Kootenay   railway   they\n-should apply the: leverage necessary\nto boost it.    With  five representatives in the local legislature, two of\nwhom have all the rank and authority of cabinet ministers, the citizens\nof that  unambitious city could accentuate  railway   building with, an\nirresistible roar.    But they are callous  to  the   importunities   of   the\npeople here and they halt arid stammer at a proposition  that will add\nfifty per  cent, to  the wealth and\npopulation of their city.    The province is loser by  so much revenue\nand  development  from   the delay.\nThe  prospector,   miner, merchant,\ninvestor,    capitalist,    farmer    and\nwage earner are all on tenter-hooks\nas   to the  probability of construction.    It is  the  duty, therefore, of\nthe  governments  and    representa^\ntives  of this   district   to   allay all\nanxiety  by  breaking the deadlock\nand building this road as a government enterprise if not  immediately\nundertaken by  those having charters for it. . ,.,-   r.-iri\nDr. George T. Moore has been\nconducting- experiments for the\nU.S. government with a view to\ndiscovery of a preventative of typhoid in water. Boiling of water\nis a well known safeguard but impracticable in reservoirs. It is now\nknown that the sulphides of copper\nwill destroy the fever germs as demonstrated by the. experiments.\nThere is abundance of copper sulphides on. Roche river\".:\nNOTES AND COMMENTS.\nJohn Morley, the \"great English\nwriter and publicist, in a speech at\na New York club applied the newly\ninvented name \"Usonia\" to the\nUnited States. The people Jdo not\ntake kindly to the invention, claiming they.have a distinctive right to\nbe called Americans. Their argument,; however, lacks confirmation\nfrom the fact .that the Patagonians\nor the Eskimo are as much American as the citizen of New York.\n\" America\" is continental, not provincial. Single names are much\nto be preferred for the names of\ncountries, cities and districts both\nfor ease of expression, and brevity,\nto say nothing of the tedium and\nwaste of time which the printer\nexperiences in setting a long name\nin type. How much handier it\nwould be if this province had but\none name, \"Columbia.\"\nThe trade journal, Hardware and\nMetal, publishes an important article by Jos. Warton, the millionaire\nmetallurgist of Philadelphia, reporting tbe discovery of palladium,\na product that is more valuable\nthan gold, in the nickel ores at Sudbury, Ontario. He says that out\nof 300,000 -tons of nickel copper\nore treated he obtained 3,000 ounces\nof palladium. '\".The \"color of palladium is steel gray, inclining to\nsilver white. It occurs in Brazil\nwith gold, and is distinguished\nfrom platinum, with which it is associated, by the divergent structure\nof its' grains. As there is platinum\nin the Similkameen it follows there\nis also;palladium-.\"\"\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 --r&tt %? W^s^M\nThe demand for copper is extraordinary. There has been no attempt made to corner copper for the\nsimple reason that there is no copper to cofner. Stocks on hand\namount to practically nothing and\nthe price is rising. All the copper\ntaken out of the ground now is\nbeing rapidly put.onto market.\nNOTICED\nShamrock and Billy'Goat''nKn'eaal claims, situate iu the Osoyoos mining division of Yale\ndistrict.   Where located : On Riordan mountain! '\nTake notice that I, R. H. Rogers, as agent for\nRobert Gaede, free.miller's certificate No. B78828,\nar.d James Riordan, free miner's certificate No.\nB78824, intend sixty days from the date hereof, to\napply  to -the Mining Recorder for   certificates\nof improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\nCrown grants of the above claims. . ,\n.And.further take notice that' action,, under section 37J rr\/list be commenced bj[|ore the issuance\nof such oestificates of improvements.\nDated-this 1st day. of December, 1904,\nReginald H. Rogbrs.\nNOTICE of FORFEITURE\nTo STEVE\" MANj5p.T or whomsoever he may\nhave transferred his .interest in.the Gold-\nPlaUaufii,mineral claim, situate on Champion\ncieek^Sr tributary of the Tuiameen ~river,\nin the Similkameen mining division ofJYjale\ndistrict. --\nTake n6tic\u00ae\u00a3hatjafter the publication hereof\nonce^Jeach-week-for .ninety days, j pu fail or refuse to contribute your portion of the expenditure required by section 24 of the \".Mineral Act,\"\nbeing ehat>ter\\ i3S^Levised Statutes of-British\nColumbia,-1897,- in.'respect of fire Gold-Platinum\nminerat\/jB^^g^git^tg on Champion creek, in\nthe Similkameen Mining Division of Yale District, British-iG&umbia', together with all costs of\nadvertising, your interest iri said, cl.ajm. shall become vested in -your co-owner,1 Daniel Coute-\nnay, free miner, who has made the r^gjiired expenditure. .\nThe amount due by you\" in respep\u00a3j>9rohe\nsaid mineral claim, not including,.costs, is\n$33-33- I ''\"\"\"     \u201e        ----- ; '-'\u2022  '\n\u2022  Dated this 24th day of October., 1904        \u2022; ..' \u2022\nDANIEL COUTENAY.'\nNOTICE.\nI.XX. mineral claim, situate in the Similkameen\nmining division of Yale district. Where located:  On Copper mountain.\nTake notice ihat I, H,H. Thomas, free miner's\ncertificate No. B72190, for myself and as agent for\nW. H. Thomas, free miner's certificate No.\nB72189and S. h- Allison, free miner's certificate\nNo. B79914, intend, sixty days from the date\nhereof to apply to the Mining Recorder for a\ncertificate of improvements, for the purpose of\nobtaining  a crown grant of the above claim.    .\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\nof such certificate of improvements.\nDated this 28th day of November, A.D. 1904.\nNOTICE.\nPrinceton mineral claim, situate in the Similkameen mining division of Yale district.\nWhere located : Kennedy mountain.\nTake notice that I, Ernest Waterman, agent for\nthe Vermilion Forks Mining and Development\nCompany, Limited, free miner's certificaie\nNo. B72174, intend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, to apply - to - the mining recorder for\na certificate of improvements, for the'purpose of\nobtaining crown grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take 1 otice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\nof such Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this 21st day of November, A.D. 1904.\nNOTICE.\nTPHIRTY days after date I intend to apply to the\n* ;Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a license to prospect for coal on the follow-,\ning described lands:\nCommencing at a.point on the west line of lot\n300, 20 chains south of the north-west corner of\nlot 300. \u25a0\u25a0'.\nAnd running north 80 chains, west 80 chains,\nsouth 80 chains, east 80 chains to poiut of commencement, containing 640 acres.\nF. W. GROVES, Locator.\nPrinceton, 7th Nov. 1004.\nCommencing at a point on the west line of lot\n300, 20 chains south of the north-west corner of\nlot 300,\nAnd running south 80 chains, west -8o chains,\nnorth 80 chains, east 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres.\n:   . T. H. PARR, Locator,'- \\\nPer F. W. Grovef.\nPrinceton, 7th Nov. 1904.   ^S-i?\nNOTICE.\nSt. Lawrence, St. George and St. Helen mineral\nclaims, situate in'the Similkameen mining\ndivision of Yale district. Wnere located :\nOn Bear creek.\nTake notice that I, F. W. Groves. Acting as\nagent for William: Henry Armstrong, free miner's certificate No. B78498, and.Charles F. Law,\nfree miner's certificate No. B72rig' intend\nsixty days from the date, hereof, to apply to\nthe mining recorder for certificates of improvements, for- the purpose of obtaining crown\ngrants of the above claimsCX^\nAnd further take uotifpSsthat action, under-see-\ntion 37 must be .comttiencjed before trie issuance\nof such certificates of improvements.\nDated this 29th day of August^. 1004.\nNOTICE.\nTAKE NOTICE that sixty days after date I\nintend to apply to the Hon. the Chief Commissioner, of Lands and Works for permission to\npurchase 100 acres of Crown lands for pasturing purposes : Bounded on the north by lot No(\n969, on the west by lot No. 257. on south by Chas,\nAsp's preemption on east by China creek',, in all\n100 acres more or less.\n'       E. E.TlURR, Locator.\nDated this 25th day of September,igo4.\nNOTICE.\nNc\nOTICE is hereby given that sixty days after\ndate I intend to apply to the Chief Commis-\nsioner.ofi-Xands and Works for permission to\njSuficjiiKe 160 acres .-.of. mountain pasture land\nsituated in the Nicola division of Yale district,\nnorth of and adjoining Boulter's preemption;\nlot No. 1155, starting from his N.E; corner, the'ne'e\nwest 80 chains, north 20'chains, east 80 chains-,\nsouth 20 chains to point of commencement,, and\ncontaining 160 aeres. '\u25a0*Siat;-i*f<i i5f&S3K'?,t,T^\nLUKE GIBSON.  :\nDated.this 17th day of September, 1904.   -.'   '\nNOTICE;\nSilvei sides and Ironsides mineral claims,'situate\nin the Osoyoos mitting: division of Yale dis-\n. .;. trict. , Where located : Camp Hedley. [   ijg\u00bbj3\nTake notice that I, j. Eraser Campbell, agent\nfdrSydney M. JdhfiSorJ; 'free miner's certificate\nNo B4i75i;H. W. Yates free miner's certificate\"\nNo. B78808 and J.. Fraser Campbell, free miner's\ncertificate ..No. .\u2022'378807,:' 4ntend$rtSixty ,'\u25a0 days\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to the Mining\nrecorder for a certificate of improvements for the\npurpose of obtaining a crown grant of the-^b_6ye;\nclaim.     \u2022\nAud further, take notice.that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\n;of such Certificate of Improvements.\nbated this first day of November. A.D. 1904.\nNOTICE,\nNOTICE.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Vancouver and Coast-Kootenay Railway Company\nwill apply to the parliament oi Canada, at its\nnext session, for an Acf to increase its capital\nstock, build branch lines, and to extend thetime\nin which it may construct its works.\nD. G. MACDONELL,\nSolicitor for Applicants.\nDated at Vancouver, B.C , this 19th day of November, 1904.\nNOTICE.\nHpHIRTY days after date I intend to apply to the\n*     Chief Commissioner of Lands and ' Works\nfor a license to prospect for coal on the following\ndescribed lands:\nCommencing at a point south of B. White's\nclaim, -\nAnd running north 80 chains, west 80 chains,\nsouth 80 chains, east 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres.\nW. J. WILSON, Locator.\nPrinceton, 28th Nov., 1904.\nCommencing at a post near W. J. Wilson's\ncliim,\nAnd funning 80 chains south, 80 chains west, 80\nchains north, 80 chains east, to point of commencement, containing 640 acres.\nP. BURNS, Locator.\nW. j. Wilson, Agent.\nPrinceton, 28th Nov., 1904.\nCommencing at a point near west end of Wilson's claim.\nAnd running 80 chains north, 80 chains west,\n80 chains souffi78o chains east, to point of commencement, containing 040 acres. \u2014\nGEORGE URQUHART, Locator.\nW..J. Wilson, Agent.\nPrinceton, 28th Nov,, 1904.\n' NOTICE is hereby given that sixty days after\ndate I intend to apply, to the Chief Comraissioner\nof Lands and Works for permissiajutoej<fuirchase\n8o'acres 'of mourifein pasture land, 'described as\nfollows \u25a0 Commencing at a post marked W. D.\nY. and running 20 chains north. 40 chains east\n20 chains sbufhi,. 40' chains, west,\"back to point of\n:Conjmencement,cpjitainiiig8o a.cres,n:oreor less\nSrraated about St-rffires dTroffi^P'rihcetSri'bii Wolf\ncreek. \u25a0\u25a0}*\u2022\u25a0.:'?X.'-r-H   ..\"  :. W; D..YOUNG.\nPrinceton, Nov. ir,:Tqd4.\nCommencing at a point near George Urqu-\nhart's claim, .\nAnd running 80 chains south, 80 chains west,\n80 chains north, 80 chains east, to point of commencement, containing 640 acres.\nALEX; SHARP, Locator,\nW. J. Wilson, Agent.\nPrinceton, 28th Nov., 1504.\nNOTICE.\nTHIRTY days from date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Wcrks\nfor. a^icense to prospect for coal on the following\ndescribed lands :\u2014 ., .   \u2022\n'. Commencing, at  the S.W. corner  of lot   300,\nthence.east 40;chains, so.uth 80 chains, west 2.0\nchains   north 40 chains, west no chains along\nthe. north line lot 230, north 52 chains along the\neast line lot 71, west 20. chains to the S.E- corner\nof lot 75, north 125chains along the east line of\nJots 75 and 74, east 19 chains along south line of\nlot 246, south 160, Chains along the west line of F.\nW. Groves' and T. H. Parr's coal claims, east 80\nchains along the south line of T. H. Parr's coal\nclaim,  north-2o chains to'\"point of commencement and containing 640 acres i \u25a0-\u2022-\u25a0fr'^fS'^iSi\nC. H. TY3, Locator.\nSZZiffi  per F.-.W. Groves,- -\n.- 7th November, 1904.\nNOTICE.\nTHIRTY days after date I \"iiitend to apply, fo\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a license to prospect for coal on the following\ndescribed lands :\u2014      .-;' *,'C' \u25a0 \u2022 .-.\nCommencing at. a pp'sPmarked E.SVN's southwest Qorn-ef;.;-.       '   : \u25a0 'IzZsj&jUBSi S^SfHJfe\nAnd running 80 chains north, So chains east,\n80; chains  south, 80  chains west,- -to.point .'of\ncommencement, containing .640  acres, and ad-\nJdirfiag J. Lang's locations ou the \"east boundary.\nE- S. NEAVE, Locator.\nErnest Waterman, Agent.\nPrinceton, October 10,1904.\nNOTICE.\nCousin Jack, Ymir, Morning, Oshkosh, Winnebago, Blacklird and,Berlin.mineral claims,\nsituate in the Similkameen mining division\nof Yale   district.    Where located:   Boulder\ncreek Mountain.\nTake notice that Alexander Gailinger,.acting\nas agent for the Boulder Mining'C6   Limited,\nfree miner's certificate No. B72141, intend 60 days\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for Certificates of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of the above\nclaims.: '  \"\u2022,' - - -\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\nof such-,Gertiflcates of Improvements. \u2022\u00a3$    \u25a0    1\nDated this 3rd day of October, A.D. 1904.\nNOTICE.\nTake notice, that sixty days after date I intend\nto apply'fe the Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks- for permission to purchase 320 acres of\ncrown lands for pasturing purposes : Commencing at a-post marked F.L-H's S.W. corner:\nThence running 80 chains west, 40 chains north,\n80 chains east 40 chains south, back to point of\ncommencement, in all 320 acres. Situate about\n12-miles west of Princeton and is boundedt>n the\nsouth side by the meandering line of the Tuiameen river. \u25a0?\u2022'\u00a3&. '\u25a0 I'\", s\u00a3(?fcJ2\n\u2022'. \u2022 ' F. L.HAMMOND,\n$0h-v{'\u2022'.\u2022\u25a0 c- 9- FRENCH. Agent.\nDated 7th September, 1964.\nNOTICE.\nNorthern mineral claim, situate in the Similkameen mining division of Yale district.\nWhere located : On Copper rnountain.\nTake notice that I, F. W. Groves acting as\nagent for J. S. C. Fraser, free miner's certificate\nNo. B42433. Joseph.Wright, free. miner's oertifi-\n.cate^Nb. 875373, and L. G. Barron, free miner's\n.certificate No. 657500, intend sixty days\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to the mining^r'er..\ncofder for a certificate of improvements, fo\u00a3-jtr&.:\npurpose of obtaining a crown grant of the atioye^\nclaim.-\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\nof such certificate cf improvements.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1904.\nv\nA\nI\nw.\nDecember io 1904\nTHE    SIMILKAMEEN   STAR\nA prominent English clergyman orce\ncongratulated an old lady on her bravery\nin fighting her way to church against a\nterrible tempest, but received the disconcerting reply: \"My husband gets so\ncross grained after meals that I have to\nget out of his way, so I might as well go\nto church.\"\nThe weekly shooting matches on Thursdays\" are well attended. Try your aim\n-for a turkey.\nBaled Hay For Sale\u2014Apply at Central\nstables. *\nA General Banking Business\nA general banking business transacted\nby the Bank of Hamilton. Capital\nall paid up, $2,229,280.00. Reserve fund\nand surplus profits, $2,067,080.95. Interest allowed on Savings bank deposits of\none dollar and'upwards from date of deposit to date of withdrawal. A. H.\nSKEY, Agent, Kamloops, B.C.\nSTRAYED.\nCame to my ranch on the Similkameen river\nin the winter of 1903 4,\nOne Soan Yearling Steer, no brand.\nThe owner of the above anVmal may obtain the\nsame by paying expense of keep and cost of advertisement. If not claimed within 30 days from\nthis date and charges paid, the animal will be\nsold. E. BULLOCK-WEBSTER, J.P.\nKeremeos, 1st Dec., 1904.\nNOTICE.\nWilliam A. McLean, of the Commercial Hotel,\nHedley, intends to apply to the License Commis\nsigners for the Nicola district for permission to\ntransfer his hotel license to William J. Henderson. Signed,\nWILLIAM A. MCLEAN.\nDated at Hedley, Dec. 6th, 1904.\nNOTICE.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty days after\ndate I intend to apply to the Chief Commissioner\nof Lands and Works for permission to purchase\n80 acres of mountain pastuiieTiand, situated and\ncommencing at the southwest corner of lot number 1937 and running south 40 chains, tast 20\nchains to lot No. 1037, thence north 40 chains,\nwest 20 chains to point of commencement.\nTHOS. J. MCALPIN.\nDecember 6,1904.\nNOTICE.\nA Sitting of the Board of License Commis-\nsioners for the Nicola district will be held at the\nGovernment office, PrincetSn, on\nTHTOSDAY, DECEMBER 15th, 1904, AT\n1 o'clock, p.m.\nto consider the following applications for renewal of hotel licenses:\nJames Wallace, Princeton hotel, Princeton.\nJohn H Jackson, hotel Jaxon.\nGoldsbrough & Worgan, Similkameen hotel,\nAllison.\nMrs. Alice James, Granite creek hotel, Granite\ncreek.\nCharles Debarro, Otter Flat hotel, Tuiameen.\nH. S. Cleasby of the Coutlee house, Nicola valley.\nW. a. McLean, Commercial hotel, Hedley.\nThos. Bradshaw, of the Bradshaw hotel, 16-\nmile creek, Similkameen.! j     \u00a3}+!\u00a3\u00a3\nAmbrose McDermott, Similkameen hotel, Hedley.\nDavid Hackney. Hotel Hedley, Hedley.\nHerring & Winkler, Grand Union hotel, Hedley.\nHUGH HU3STER,\nChief License Inspector.\nNicola Distncjir?j\nPrinceton, Dec. 1st, 1904.\nCourt of Revision and\ng AppeaMorth Yale\n-NOTICE is hereby given that Courts of Revision and Appeal for North Yale will be held at\nthe\nCourt House, Kamloops, on Thursday, December 15th, 1904, at 11 a.m.;\nCourt.House, Nicola Lake, on Monday, December 19th, 1904. at 11 a.m.;\nCourt House, Princeton, on Wednesday, December 21st, 1904, at 2 p.m.\nDated at Kamloops, this 19th day of November,\n1904.    '\nALEC. D. MACINTYRE,\nJudge of said Court.\nF. W. GROVES\nA. R. COLL., SC. D.,\nCivil and Mining Engineer\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR.\nMap of Surveyed Claims on Copper\nand Kennedy Mts.: Price, $2.\nPRINCETON.     -   -     B. C.\n17. Ha ROGERS\nM.A., B.C.L.\nSOLICITOR\nCONVEYANCER\nNOTARY PUBLIC, Etc.\nOLALLA P.O.\nSimikameen, B.C.\nf\nfcWf\n>W    1\nJOHN LOVE\nDruggist and Stationer\n!\u00a7    HEDLEY, B.C.     ;\nDrugs, Medicittes,\nBooks,\nStationery and\nFancy Goods,\nCigars, Pipes and\nConfectionery.\nMail Orders Promptly Attended to.\nAlso at FAIRVIEW, B.C\nPELLEW-HARVEY,\nBRYANT   &    GILMAN,\nPROVINCIAL\nASSAYERS ^\nTIC VANCOUVER  ASSAY   OFFICE,\nESTABLISHED 1890.\nAnalysis of Coal and Fireclay a Specialty*\nComplete Coking Quality Tests.\nReliable PLATINUM Assays.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nROCBUSSEN & COLLIS\nYates St., Victoria, B.C.\nMANUFACTURER'S agents for\nMining Machinery\nand supplies\nTenders on Engineering Contracts\nMINING BROKERS\nQuotations on all kinds of machinery\nWRITE US FOR PRICES\nThe Vancouver Breweries, ul\nBREWERS OF THE FAMOUS\nCascade Beer    M Alexandra Stout\nQueen Beer      *& Alexandra Ale\nFor sale throughout British Columbia in all the first-\nclass Hotels, Liquor Stores and Saloons.\nThe Amalgamated\nDOERING & MARSTRAND & RED CROSS BREWERIES,\nVANCOUVEP, B. C\nWood|\nVallance &\nLeggat,!\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nSherwin-Williams'\nPaints\nLimited.\nMURALO'S 1st quality\nCold Water Sanitary Calcimo\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nEC COOPER\nHarness, Saddles, ^^^B\nMANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF\nHarness of any Description and any Price Made to Order\u2014Send for Prices.\n[Established 12 years in Vernon.]\nKELOWNA, B.C.    |     M\n^aW Freight Prepaid to Penticton on all Orders from\nPrinceton and Vicinity.\nNICOLA\nis situated at the\nfoot of Nicola Lake,\nwhich is one of the most beautiful lakes in the\nProvince, and from which flows the Nicola\nRiver, which is noted for its excellent trout\nfishing. NICOLA is also the key to the great\nSimilkameen, Granite Creek, and Aspen Grove\nMining Camps, and is the nearest point to\n1~I1G       ^aSa ML    m        *V*      *^     fS^     6^     tfi*     ftp*     t5*     t^*     'V*     6^*     fi\u00a3*     fi5*     tfi&\n50  YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac.\nAnyone sending a sketch and description may\nquickly ascertain our opinion free whether an\ninvention is probably patentable. Communications strictly conudential. HANDBOOK on Patents\nsent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.\nPatents taken through Munn & Co. receive\nspecial notice, without charge, in the \u25a0\u2022-'\u25a0;\nScientific American.\nA handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any snientlHc jonrnal.\u00abpTerms, $3 a\nyear; four months, tU Sold by all newsdealers.\nMUNN & Co.36lBwadway\u00ab New York\nI Branch Office. 625. F St.. Washington, D. C.\nFive\nf|t Flour^\nWhitest\nStrongest\nLAKE OF TBE WOODS Milling Company\nJAS. I. L0TJTIT. Agent.\nBox IBB Vancouver, B.C.\nP.O.\nPRINCETON BOARD OF TRADE\u2014Rooms\n* centrally located. Membership solicited;\nI F. W. Groves, E. Waterman,\nPresident. Secretary.\nH. Cowan, Treasurer.\n THE    SIMILKAMEEN    STAR,\nDecember io, 1904\nDecember io 1904\nTHE    SIMILKAMEEN    STAR\nHumorous.\nOne day in Shanghai, when feeling ill,\nI called a Chinaman to me and said:\n\"John, do you have good doctors in\nChina?\" \"Good doctels!\" he exclaimed, China hab best doctels in the\nwo'ld!\" \"Mr. Eudon, over there,\" I\nsaid, pointing to a house covered with\ndoctor signs, \"do you call him a good\ndoctor?\" \"Eudon good doctel!\" he exclaimed. \"He great! He best:aoctel in\nChina. He save my life lonce.\" \"You\ndon't say so,\" I said. \"How was it?\"\n\"Me tellee,\" he said, very confidentially.\n\"Me velly'Uck. Me callee Doctel Han\nKour He givee me some medicine. Me\nget velly, velly sick ! Thenjae.cajl Doctel Sam'Sing. He givee more medicine.\nThen me get worse. Me go die ! Bime-\nby me call Doctel Eudon\u2014an' he no got\ntime an' no come.   He savee my life !\"\nCharitable Old Lady\u2014But why do you\ngo tramping through the counrry like\nthis, my poor man ? The Vagrant\u2014Well,\nmum, the truth is, I've heard that these\n'ere Pullman cars is rather stuffy.\nMiss Greatheart\u2014I gave you that quarter because you said you hadn't had anything to eat since yesterday morning, and\nhere I catch you going into a saloon.\nWeary Willie\u2014Lady, I said I h'adn't'had\nanything to eat, but I didn't say I wanted\nanything to eat, did I?\nBinks\u2014The Russian fleet hasn't scored\na victory for a good while. Jinks\u2014No,\nthe weatherJbas_been so bad j lately that\nall the fishing fleets have had to stay in\nthe-harbor.\nTom Fogarty, the illustrato:, was talking about modern fashions in dress. \"It\nis hard to keep up with the fashions, he\nsaid. \"They are certainly confusing. I\nremember one night in my.boyhood at\nthe theatre a man in a rear seat all of a\nsudden jumped up excitedly. \" 'Down\nwith that red umbrella in front!' \" \"But\nhis wife pulled him back into his chair.\"\n\" 'For mercy's sake, hush !' she whispered. 'That isn't an umbrella; it's a\nnew winter hat!' \"\nEdith\u2014The idea of calling marriage a\n\"lottery!\" Olivia\u2014What's the matter\nwith that ? Edith\u2014There's a law against\nusing the males for a lotteijyr*'\n'Squire Terwilliger, the village oracle,\nhad returned from his first trip abroad.\n\"How did you like London ?\" they asked\nhim. as he sat on his old seat, the vinegar barrel, in the corner grocery store.\n\"It's a mighty fine town,\" he said, \"but\nhang it, the people over there can't talk\ntheir own language so's an ejjicated man\nkirr understand it.\"\nJaspar^-I often wonder why Jenkins is\nnot more popular, for he is the most polite\nman I know. Jumpuppe\u2014THat* is just\nthe trouble. He is so confoundfiettg?\npolite he leaves the impression that he\nwants to borrow money.\nSusan B. Anthony, on her return from\nEurope, talked in an engaging way about\nthe things she had seen over there. Of a\ncertain slum she said : \"The children in\nthis slum are dirty, xe,ry. d.i|jty\\ I hardly\nknow how I may make clear- to you the\nsuperlative degree of dirtines&that marks\nthem. I was told, for one thing, that a\nmother in this slum often goes ont on the\nstreet and washes half a dozen Siildren's\nfaces before she is able to find her own\nchild.\"\nLittle Johnnie\u2014When Miss Nextdoor\ngot married^ her mother threw an old\nslipper after her. What, was that for?\nLittle Ethel\u2014Oh, they always do that.\nThat means that her mamma isnVt never\ngoing to spank her any more.\n\"You cannot eat your cake,\"\nThey say. \"and have it, too,\"\nAnd since I took an ocean trip\nI believe the saying's true.\nJust Opened\nCOMMERCIAL\n\"5    HOTEL *\nFirst Class Dining Room\nNewlj HIM\nHedley\nCity\nGood Beds\nV\n No Chinese Employed.\t\nBEST BRANDS LIQUORS AND CIGARS ALWAYS IN STOCK\n* SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO TRAVELLERS.^!\nHUSTON & McLEAN, Proprietors\nFor  CONNOISSEURS Only. |\nCan be had at all first-class hotels throughout the province.\nR. P. RITHET & CO., L'fl!\nVICTORIA, B. M\nSole Agents*\nStraight\nParty\nLines\n\t\nWE ARE EXCLUSIVELY I\nSHOEMAKERS\nAND CAN GUARANTEE\nStyle, Comfort and Durability |\nIN FOOTWEAR\nMANUFACTURED\nBY US.\n \u2014I  I\n|\u00a7| HOLD EM\nJl   Company\nOF MONTREAL, LTD.\nVANCOUVER   B.C.\nTDCMTFS\npiyrfie j\ntNavg i\nITODOCCO\nLargest Sale in Canada\nDRfARD HOTEL\nSI NICOLA LAKE\n&\"3flr\nThe Hotel has been thoroughly renovated and refitted.\nEverything First Class.\nNo pains spared to please the public.\nTable supplied with best the market affords;\nFine Wilies, Liquors and Cigars.\n* Y^jHJ TELEPHONE- BATH. ||\nHeadquarters for Princeton, Spence's Bridge and Kamloops\n,.\u2022\u2022..\u2022-..:& Stage Lines.\nItems of Interest.\n' A good boiler coal. should not contain\n% \u25a0 more than from 8 to io per cent, of ash.\n^ An increase  in the amount of ash areans\n\u2022fh'at the fireman has to more frequently\n\"\"^f* handle the fire to break up clink.ers,\nthereby letting in a large volume of cold\nair and throwing more unburned coal\n^m into the ash pit. Princeton coal \u25a0 gives\noff from 3 to 5 per cent, ash aud therefore has little clinker.\n-' One thousand feet, board measure, of\n.well seasoned mountain lumber - will\nweigh from 1,200 to i,8oo pounds, according to the proportion of resin in it. The''\nyellower and browner the pine, the more\ni;esin it contains.    Freshly cut green lum-\n\u25a0j:ber from the hills will weigh nearly twice\nas much. -The whiter the pine boardrs\nwhen produced, the more water it will\ngive off during the process of seasoning.\nThe timber in the Similkameen is a deep\n\u2022 yellow*\n\/ Most productive nickel mines are located on New Caledonia,'an \"island in the\nSouthern Pacific ocean situated about\nr,20o miles from Australia. It is roughly\n250 miles in length by thirty in width,\nit was : discovered in 1774 and appropriated by the French, who still hold it as a\npenal colony. The' island is mountainous with peaks rising 5,000 feet above\nsea level. The nickel deposits' are near\nthe coast and extend along'^t^pme. fifty\nor sixty miles.\n'Linseed oil, when of A-i quality, has\na pale yellow color, with1 no brown or\ngfreen tints in it; is clear and litnpiSj'has\na pleasant, nutty taste without any bitterness, dries well, and when dried shows\na rich lustre. For good work, better buy\nthe raw oil and boil ic yourself, stopping\nwhen the oil is hot enough to scorch a\nfeather.\n\u2022fe:'\nSubscribe For the STAR\nFor  tfe STAR\nEiilul\n%>\n^\nSSs\n\u00a9J\nnHK\n^HlRSCHSoMsiO\nTo keep iron piper from rusting it is\nrecommended tq coat them, with coal tar.\nand then fill them with light wood shav.\nings, then set the latter on fire Provided\nthe heat is not^too intense or prolonged,\nthe tar will be \"absorbed hy the pores of\nthe iron and rusting will be prevented\nfor a long time.\nAlthough the total mileage of the railroads of the United States exceeds, 200,-\n000 miles, the building of new roads\nshows no signs of abatement. The total j\nlength of new road constructed last year\nwas 4,774 miles. The cost of the rail-1\nroads- and equipment amounted to |\nfri,000,000,000. On this huge system\nthere were carried over 696,000,000. passengers and about 1,300,000,000 tons of\nfreight. Passenger earnings were $429,-\n000,000, while freight brought in revenue of 11,338,000,000. The operation\nrequired the services of 44.529 locomotives, 28,648 passenger cars, 10,000 baggage and mail cars, and no less than\n1,524,154 freight cars.\nNOTICE.\nThe O.I.C. fractional and Crackerjack mineral\nrdaims situated in the Osoyoos mining division of Yale district. Where located: Camp\nHedley.\nTake notice that I, Louis O. HedluiiJl,.F.M.C,\nNo. 878963, for myself and agent for John Green-\nhill, F M.C. No. B78964 and H. P. Nelson, F.M.C.\nNo. B62074, intend, sixty days from date hereof\nto apply to the mjLniiiJf'(recorder for certificates of improvements,, for the purpose of obtaining crown grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance\nof such certificate of improvements.\nLouis O. Hedlund, Hedley. B.C.\ne ficicni Hccnon is over m H\nEverybody is satisfied mi\nWill Supply them with the\nsamejhigh class goods  in\nthe future as in the past at prices\nsimply\nsrile the Purchaser\n|f   But   they   see   the  cause\u2014good ||\n\u00bb\\    times\u2014plenty of ready money and buy- fj\\\n_.,'.   ing in large quantities fr      .-Ifo   '-\u00a7\u2022\u25a0\nSmiwes the Problem\n-:o:-\nNOTICE.\nNOTICS is hereby given that thirty days after\ndate'I intend to apply to the Chief Commissioner\nof- Lands and Works for a license to cut and carry\nawa-y timber from the following described lands,\nsituated on the east side'of^tfreTiiram^fegygKgtn\ncommencing at a post by the Nfw. corner post\nof lot 252, running- east 20 chains, north 126\nchains, west 140 chains more or less, to a point\non river, thence following the line of river to\npoint of commencement.\nANGUS STEWART.\nPrinceton, Nov. 19,1904.\nutt in now and get your winter's supply*    We guair-\ntv^^Ai     antee prices and quality   *:jfp|. -, jf||\u00a7\nT H E:\nNICOLA LAKE, & PRINCETON,\nLIMITED\n MMa%- sM&&M$\u00a3M$lk WaW^\nDecbubbr io, 1904\n\u2022<* CJIiJ* \u00ab^!>'<**>'t>'<JI<*<*<* ^^J^JM^^J^^^^X^^OCJ'*^*^*^^^\n*^>sfiief\nc\n'St\n&msr\nis\u00abaa\n\u00ab,     x  :  ;  ..\u201e.., British Columbia*\nTT^AM^h'^\nR*ir-\nLots for\n\u2022'\u2022\u2022\nPRESENT PRICES OF\n8Hpii\nFrom $2.00 to $10.\nPer Front 1*00^^^\nSize of Lots 50x100\nFt. and 33x100 Ft*\n\/Tej$ri&,, m ^-G^gbgS\nBaL3 and 6 montniSj\nwith interest at 6 per\ncent* per annum* pi\nI\nIt\nIII\nln\n&.j&fa&*&-i%*\nparters jor ie Jiiiiiiieen^isfrlct\nBEAUTIFULLY SITUATED at the Forfe^ the' Simii-\nJameen and Tuiameen Rivers. ^^befBUSINESS^ CEN-\n|;fI>ffi|B?kJie t^I^^gif^|!^ng;.Ca&&^ Cbpper 'Mountain\nKennedy Mountain, Friday, Boulder' and Granite \"Creeks,\nSummit, Roche River,  Upper Tuiameen ;|^d As^ei^^^e^\nFINE CLIMATE\nMrWkE WATER\nENdSRJlte^g^GRICULTURAL\nAREA-\u00abfTO---DRA'W - FROM^\n1 ti.-.\nm\\\u00a5\nSend tor Map and Price List to d^*& *& <&-&*p\nI^siden^anager VERMILICpC^P^\n^INEf^AND DEVELOPRffi^TP^pO^\n\" Agents for the %*&\nCANADIAN ORE ^^C^IpATION, LIMITiBT\"\n(ElinWe Oil Process.)%&\u00a3L\n\\\n\\\n1 vg\u00a7\n$m\nV\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Title changes in chronological order: Similkameen Star (1900-03-31 to 1900-07-28), The Similkameen Star (1900-08-04 to 1900-10-20), Similkameen Star (1900-10-27 to 1918-05-10), Princeton Star (1918-05-17 to 1918-10-25).","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Princeton (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Princeton","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Similkameen_Star_1904_12_10","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0373264","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":"49.460278","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-120.507778","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":"Princeton : The Princeton 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: Princeton and District Museum and Archives","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Similkameen Star","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"}]}}