{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0188267":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"f482abc9-9ce0-4d43-9c8b-11f38140da07","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 Collection","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2012-12-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1900-10-30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"The Tribune was published in Nelson, in the Central Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, and ran from November 1892 to November 1905. The Tribune was published and edited by John Houston, an outspoken journalist who would later embark on a successful political career, which included four terms as the mayor of Nelson and two terms in the provincial legislature. Houston had established the Miner in Nelson in 1890, and, after leaving the Miner in the summer of 1892, he established the Tribune to compete with his former paper. In August 1901, the title of the paper was changed to the Nelson Tribune.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xtribune\/items\/1.0188267\/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":" -.-?-*v3?l  DAILY EDITION   BY MAIL  FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR  WEEKLY EDITION BY MAIL  TWO DOLLARS A YEAR  EIGHTH YEAR.  NELSON:  TUESDAY MORNING OCTOBER 30  1900  PRICE FIVE CENTS  What Is Being Done in the Champion Creek Section in  Developing Its Resources.  MINING   STOCK  QUOTATIONS.  The following were the quotations of British Columbia mining  stocks on the Toronto Stock Exchange yesterday:  INTERESTING DETAILS OF PROGRESS AND POSSIBILITIES  During the approaching winter  the Champion creek section of the  N'elson mining division will enter  tlu- producing stage unless some-  thing altogetherunforeseenarisesto  interfere with the' plans of the  Onondaga Mining Company \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of  Syracuse, New York.' The company  has purchased the Yellow Jacket  group, ordered a 10-stamp mill  with steam plant and has a considerable force - of men on \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  ground at the present moment.  Their intention is to erect the mill  without delay and to enlarge it  next spring by the addition of  twenty stamps.  The Champion creek country  came into prominence last spring  sifter an era..of <|uietness covering  several years. The district was  prospected and staked about the  time of the boom in the Rossland  camp, but the prospectors iii most  instances permitted their locations  to lapse. Last spring, however,  tho Syracuse syndicate, of  which Louis Will, the millionaire  wax dealer, is the head, entered the  field. They took up the Yellow  .Jacket group, comprising the Maud  S., Standard, Toueh-Me-Not and  Yellow. Jacket claims. Thomas  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd James, who had been identified  with Mr. Will in various mining  properties in California and elsewhere, took charge of the proposition and commenced work in May.  His report wa.s satisfactory and on  August 4tli \"the first payment of  $10'000 was made on the purchase  price of $05,000 through a Nelson  hauk. The company? has during-  fiie summer and fall ' expended  $30,000 in demonstrating the  claims.  The battery of stamps was ordered in Sherbrooke, Ontario, some  time since, and Mr. James is in Nelson today sending tracers after the  plant and arranging transportation  matters with local C. P. R. officials.  The method of reaching , the property heretofore has been via Waterloo, on the Columbia, between Robson and Trail. Ho proposes, in order to facilitate handling the machinery, to put - a ferry at the  mouth of' the Kootenay river with  a siding from the railroad. ; This  will then., be the point\/of transshipment, and the. change, is of .im-.  portance to Nelson inasraucli as supplies will be forwarded from here  rather than from Rosslaud. Application has been made for a trail to  -the-propert3vand_W.=A.=McLeau,=  district superintendent of roads,  will go over the ground next week  Tt is thought that a practicable  route will be found along the ridge  to connect with the Whitewater  trail which runs within six or seven  miles of the Yellow Jacket. This  will give transportation facilities  direct from Nelson.  At the present time a crew of 27  men is employed on the Yellow  Jacket, and 25 men will be worked  all winter. Ten men are excavating on the mill site, two shifts are  workiug in the lower tunnel, six  men are building a road from the  camp to the government road on  the hill and five are engaged in  widening the government trail  from Waterloo to five feet so that  the machinery can be hauled in.  The camp is well situated and the  cabins are comfortable. The property is a free milling proposition  with two principal leads. One  ledge is on the Maud S and has IK)  inches of-ore carrying $22.50 in  gold all across. The second ledge  on the Yellow Jacket is IS inches  wide and averages $35. A sawmill  plant is now being taken up from  Waterloo to cut lumber for the  stamp mill. Mr. James speaks with  confidence of the future of the property. \"Before the winter is over,\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd he says, \"yon will see the Yellow  Jacket turning out $10,000 bricks  every month.\"  Building a Trail.  A trail is to be built this fall to  re*ach properties oh the divide between Forty-nine and Eagle creeks  which cannot be served by the  wagon road now being constructed  along the bed of the creek to the  May and Jennie and other groups.  W. A. McLean is going over the  ground today to determine the  most advantageous line to take.  Two routes are under consideration,  one via the Granite wagon road, to  the Star group from where the new  trail will be extended as far as  necessary, while the alternative is  to extend the old wildcat trail.  Either line would serve the section  well. Among the properties which  will benefit by the work are the  Pingree, Royal Arthur, and King of  Forty-nine groups. In connection  with the Forty-nine wagon road,  foreman William Waldie notified  John A. Turner, government agent,  yesterday that almost 2_ miles of  the road was completed. * W. A.  McLean has expressed the opinion  that the work is. the. best piece of  road building he has seen in the  Nelson'district.-! A team of horses  was sent'out yesterday. Twenty-  one men are employed on the road.  Boston Syndicjite Buys Stock.  Tlie Broken Hill Mining Company of Ymir has made arrangements to place a large block of  stock with a Boston,-Massachusetts,  syndicate and will start work  shortly on the Wilcox group. A  strike of high grade sulphide ore  was made last week on the upper  level, and the vein will be worked  during the winter. The company  expect to ship several cars of ore to  the Trail or Nelson smelter, and are  figuring on net returns close to $50  per ton. In handling the ore from  the upper level it is interesting to  note that the grade is too heavy  for a horse to ascend, and the ore is  brought down the first 400. feet by  fastening the sacks in rawhides  and shooting them down over the  snow to a-point where horses can  be taken. In the spring tlie erection of a ten stamp mill to handle  the free milling ores from the  lower   levels is contemplated.  A favorable report is to hand  from the Robin Hood group on the  east fork of Cottonwood creek. It  is stated that as development continues the lead is widening and the  class of ore encountered is improving consistently. The group is  under bond to a coast syndicate,  represented by Bruno Thomas, and  they are well satisfied with the  showing. The characteristic of the  section is harrow leads on the surface cwith much fiee gold. If the  veins prove continuous and reasonably wide with depth the section  _will go- ahead _wi tli aboom ,^i [ ___  stock. A\ufffd\ufffdked.  AUiaboscu  S 5 Su  B. C. Gold Fields.        . :.  Black Tail         13.'.  Brandon & Guidon Crown         10  Butte & BokLoii  :<  Canadian Goldfields Syndicate... 8  Cariboo (McKinney)         \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd75  Cariboo Hydraulic      1 40  Centre Star      1 SO  Crow's Nest Pass Coal    48 00  Jack McVeigh has returned from  Crawford Bay, whither he went  last week to arrange for the construction of stables at the terminals  of the new wagon road. .Stables  80 by 30 will be erected at once to  accommodate the horses required  to handle their contract with the  London Consolidated and Richelieu  people. The old hotel at the lake  will lie utilized as aboardinghou.se.  The special meeting of tho shareholders of the flxehequer Mining  Company has been called for November 27tli. ..   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Tho ore on tho May and Jennie  property is said to aA'orage $15 in  gold per ton, not $150 as Monday's  Tr-uuni-; stated.  Took Away Their Breath.  London, October 20.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSir Charles  Wilson, president of the Grand  Trunk railway of Canada, and other  officials of that line have not yet  recovered from their surprise at  the resignation of Mr. Charles M.  Hays, general manager of the Grand  Trunk, and his acceptance of the  position of president of tho Southern Pacific railway. Sir Charles  said this evening that tlie three  days of London holiday since the  announcement of Mr. Hays' resignation had'hot given the directors  a chance to consider the future.  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSo far,\" he added, \"no definite action has been taken:\"  It is reported that there is a  strong current running in favor of  vice president E. St. John of the  Seaboard Airline. This movement  is believed to have originated  among the Canadian stockholders.  0  :*  8  2i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB  38  9  G  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl.i  10  3  3  0  8  A  45  \" .I.1  ..in\"  :i  no  15  f:  .  2fi  m  r.t  1 05  :'i  n  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtil  Bid.  $ 5 00  i!'j  10  i;  u  OP  120  ri 4i-  45 00  :t  jjj  fii  U  CASES ON CIVIL-CALENDAR  California    Deer Trail Consolidated   Kvening Star   Colden Star .'.   Giant.   Hammond Reef.   Iron Musk.    Jim Blaine.....    King...   Knob Hill ;...-...-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Lone Pine-SurprtaeCoDSoIldated.  Monte CbriBto Consolidated   Montreal Gold Fields   Montreal & London   Morning Glory. .-.''...  Morrison   Mountain Lion   Noble Five   North Star \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Novelty   Old Ironsides  .....  Olive..... '.;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .;..,  Payne...    Princess Maud.   Rambler-Cariboo Consolidated...  Republic...'..- ;..'....'   Slocan Sovereign   Virtue .,  War Ragle Consolidated   Waterloo...'..   White Bear......   Winnipeg   'Sales-British Columbia Goia Fields, 300 at 3;  Hammond Reef, 3,500 at 2J: North Star, 500 at  M'; 500 at '3; Payne, 30 days, nOO at 90; Winnipeg,  fiOHal 2J; 500 at ii: I. X. L., 2,500 at 20.  2i  28  5  4  33  5  1  2J  0  5'  o  25 '  oi  92J  *r  10  87  9  21  70  5  31)  1 02i  oj  2.1  CITY   OP GREENWOOD MULCTED  \" POR $3000.  Other Matters of Interest Now Being  . Adjudicated Before Judge Walkem  in the Assizes.  is   now  Betting   in   New  Xork  three to one on McKinley.  GHAUNCEY HADA HARDTIME  SENATOR DEPEW HOWLED DOWN  BY AN ILLINOIS MOB.  A Democratic Crowd Refuses to  ten to the Great New  York Orator.  Lis-  Cobelsk, Illinois, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Five hundred men undertook to  break up senator Depew's meeting  here this evening and. partially  succeeded. Mr.j Bryan had spoken  here in the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd morning \"at. the fair  grounds. When senatoi Depew  arrived he .was conducted to a platform in the main street and faced  six thousand people. The disturbing element manifested its intentions before the meeting began.  One drunken man was hustled, out  of the crowd. Others iu like condition resented this. Then there  was a fight. Senator Krum, whose  home is in this district, tried to  speak and was howled down. Then  he appealed to the disturbers to  respect senator Depew personally  if they did not respect his party.  The ugly element jeered at this.  Senator Depew started tq;talk, but  hundreds of men hurrahed for  Bryan, hissed McKinley's name and  cat-called senator Depew. Three  .clergymen^of^the^towniStoocLbefore.  the crowd and begged and asked for  fair play. Senator Depew got started  again and at last, made himself  heard. His voice was so distinct  that, tlie crowd became quiet for a  moment. \"Did Bryan leave orders  today to break up this meeting?\"  he asked. Following this he continued: \"No Republican would ever  break up a Democratic meeting; no  Republican is afraid of free speech.  Are the Democrats who are engaged in this effort to break up  this meeting afraid of the truth?  Ts your leader, Bryan, afraid of free  speech?\" c. i  This was followed by a renewal  of the disturbance. There were  hurrahs for Bryan and cat calls for  McKinley. Senator Depew began  his speech on the acquisition of the  Philippines, but the uproar continued. \"You remind me,\" said the  speaker, \"of copperheads who used  to come to the Union meetings during the civil war.\"  More noise and.hur'rahs for Bryan  greeted \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd this statement. Senator  Depew cut his speech short and  walked from the platform to his  train, followed by nearly 1000  people.  Bryan Feels Well.  New York, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"And I  am feeling tolerably well, I thank  you,\" was Colonel Bryan's response  when told tonight that he had  made thirty speeches during the  day and thus broken his own record  for speech making. As a rule the  speeches were not so long on most  occasions, but they exceeded in  number by nine or ten those of  any previous day during the present campaign.  The long drawn' out case of  Waterland ats. City of Greenwood  was concluded yesterday afternoon  when the jury returned a verdict  awarding plaintiff #3000 damages  and costs of action.,-. The suit is  the lengthest one on \"the records  of the court for tlie present sitting  and was notable for the amount of  expert evidence submitted by engineers, architects .and builders. A.  Leamy, city solicitor of Greenwood,  and W. A. .Galliher- conducted the  defence, Macdonald & .Johnson appearing for plaintiff.  Tho action of Stamford vs. ITed-  dle did not occupy the court long  yesterday, a verdict? being given in  favor of defendant\/ The suit was  instituted . to recover $'i00 and  12,500 shares of stock in the Venus  Gold Mining Company which plaintiff alleged was due him as conimis-  'sioh on the sale of the Venus group  to the Toronto.-* people who now  j hold tlie property. The defendant-  maintained that his interest in the-'  Venus was obtained by. him for his  services in connection with the deal,  and as the matter.- resolved into a  question of deciding between the  oaths of the litigants, the suit was  thrown out. -R.rM. Macdonald appeared for the'defence and W. A.  Galliher represented the plaintiff.  When court > opened yesterday  morning two\\ prisoners were arraigned to elect as to their trials.  One was William Harris, the wealthy Slocan City;man who attempted  to kill'himself.-.nie was very weak,  and his. counsels'W._-A. Macdonald,  requested time ^6\"*cou9ide\/his plea.  This was granted.: The.^ bullet  which passed through Harris' body  one inch over his heart is in the  possession of the court officials. It  is a 38-caliber ball and a small piece  of the shoulder blade \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is imbedded  in the tip. Mrs. Harris .was in the  cityon Sunday, but \"left yesterday  for her old home in England.  The second prisoner was Esrner  Wallace alias J. A. Sheets charged  with theft from the C. P. R. He  was represented by W. A. Galliher  and choose a speedy trial, requesting a brief delay before the date of  the trial should be set, which was  granted. --'  The action of Jenuings vs. Van  Arsdale et al. will be withdrawn  from the civillist; for this court, a  settlement having been reached.  Taylor & Hannington have arranged  tlfalftlunf^1 i en f\"^  ceive the property claimed in the  action, each party to pay its own  costs. The suit involved the ownership of the Little Greenhorn fractional adjoining the North Star  group and was notable because the  litigants had gone through the entire list of pleadings down to a re-  lenter, thus constituting a record  for British Columbia.  WORK OF THE CITY COUNCIL  At Last Night's, Meeting.  The city council is making a record in the direction of brief meetings. Last night's session occupied  only about half an hour and considerable business was transacted.  The members present were mayor  Houston, aldermen Arthur, Irvine,  Morrison, Hall and Wilson.  The board of works presented a  lengthy report, which was adopted  as follows, That electric light connection be made as early as possible with the residences of Mrs. E.  C. B. Cabe, W. H. Bullock-Webster,  .T. Fraser and H. A. Stewart. That  tlie sidewalk on Water street in  front of block 75 be laid to grade.  That a handrail be placed on each  side of the sidewalk on the south  side of Robson street between Hall  and Josephine streets. That the  water main be extended to the residence of AlbertBenson lot 8, block 51  addition A. That the six-foot sidewalk on the north side of Latimer  street be extended from Ward to  Stanley street. That the matter of  the sidewalk on the north side of  Front street be referred to the city  engineer to remedy any cause of  complaint. That a catch basin be  constructed on Latimer street in  front of block 4S. .That a four-  inch main be laid along Railway  street from Baker to Silica street.  That the tin roof on tlie fire hall  addition be painted. That the  sewer on Latimer street be extended one block easterly from Hen-  dryx to Cedar street and a catch  basin constructed - on Cedar street.  That the planked roadway on Front  street and the macadamized portion  of Josephine street be cleaned. That  tlie present walk on Water street  be extended to connect with High  street at the city limits.  F. W. Swannell, deputy collector  of inland revenue, forwarded a  lettor from J. E. Miller, of Victoria,  stating that he-would be in Nelson  shortly to inspect the electric light  meters.  F. J. Deane of Kamloops, secretary of the royal commission into  Chinese and Japanese immigration,  forwarded a list of questions relating to orientals in Nelson. The  city clerk was instructed to furnish  the desired information.  A bylaw relating to the debenture issue was read three times and  laid over to the next meeting.  Council adjourned to Wednesday  night when the board of works will  probably report on the street  lighting matter.  YANKEES WILL EAT TURKEY  TERBfflC EXPLOSION OF CHEMICALS  A  New  York  Patent  Medicine  Fire and Creates  Establishment Catches  Havoc.  SEVERAL IMMENSE BUILDINGS RAZED TO THE GROUND  \"NOVEMBER 29 SET FOR THANKSGIVING  DAY.  Text of McKinley's  Proclamation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA  Prosperous Year Has Been the Portion of Our Neighbors.  Washington, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe  state department today issued the  following: \"By the president of  the United States of America (a  proclamation.) It has pleased Almighty God to bring'our nation an  safety and honor through another  year. The works of religioh and  charity have everywhere been  manifest. Our country through all  its   extent   has been blessed with  abundant harvests. Labor and the  great industries of the people have  prospered beyond all precedent.  Our country has spread over the  world. Our power and influence in  the cause of freedom and enlightenment have extended over distant  seas and lands.  \"Tho lives of our official representatives aud many of our people  in- China have been marvellously  preserved. AVo have been generally exempt from pestilence and  other great calamities and even the  tragedy which overwhelmed the  city of Galveston made evident the  sentiment of sympathy and Chris-  tia1rclaaxitjrb\"y_virtue_of_whiclrwe\"  are an united people. Now, therefore, 1, William McKinley, president  of tlie United States, hereby appoint and set apart Thursday, the  29th of November next, to be observed by all the people of the  United States at home and abroad  as a day of thanksgiving and praise  to Him who holds tho nations in  the hollow of His hand.  \"I .recommend that they gather  at their several places of worship  and clovoutly give Him thanks for  the prosperity wherewith He has  endowed us for seed time and liar-  vest, for the valor, devotion and  humanity of onr armies and navies  and for all His benefits to us as individuals and as a nation, and that  they humbly pray for the continuance of His divine favor, for concord and amity with other nations  and for righteousness and peace in  all our ways.\"  A Lively Shake-Up.  Caracas; Venezuela, October 29.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt -l:15 p. in, today Caracas was  visited by a severe earthquake.  Fifteen persons were killed and  many others injured. Great damage was done to buildings, including  the Pantheon and churches. Tho  United States legation was badly  damaged, but all the occupants  escaped unhurt. President Castro,  who leaped from a balcony on the  second floor of the government  house, had one of his legs broken.  William Henry Dovoton Haggart,  the British minister, had a miraculous escape, the ceiling of tho first  story of the British legations having  fallen upon him and buried him in  the debris.  New York. October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe big  building of Tarrant  & Company,  makers   of   medicinal    specialties,  standing at the northwest corner  of Greenwich and Warren streets  and filled with chemicals, took fire  in some way that may never be  known at about 12:15 this afternoon.   It was sixteen minutes after  noon that a citizen rushed into the  house of fire engine 20 on Chambers  street near Greenwich, and shouted  that Tarrant's drug house was on  fire.  ' He   had  seen   a  volume  of  black smoke coming from the third  story   window.    . An   alarm   was  turned in.    Soon afterward second  and third alarms were turned in.  One lire  company from  station  00  had just arrived Avhen a terrific explosion occurred and threw the entire engine  crew down  the  stairway.   The   firemen,  realizing   the  danger   of   their position,   rushed  from   the building  to tlie street.  The explosion had filled the street  in front rwith a shower of falling  glass and small debris, which sent  the crowd which was already gathered on the opposite sidewalk fleeing for safety and caused the horses  hitched to the engines -to rear and  try to get away.  The second explosion, occurred  about five minutes after the first.  From tlie accounts of witnesses the  building seemed to leap into the air  and in a moment masses \"of. brick  wall, timbers and stone were falling,  into the streets. The force of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tlie  explosion tore away the walls of  the big commission store houses  fronting on Washington^ street and  caused them'to collapse, falling all  atonce.in.'a mass of timbers, boxes  and barrels from which the flames  burst out from the Tarrant building  like the belching of a cannon.  Across Warren street to the opposite buildings the flames leaped  setting them all afire also, the force  of the explosion demolishing windows and all wooden structures  about the houses. In a moment  Warren street was choked up with  a mass of debris and the whole  place was aflame. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The great explosion was followed by half a  dozen scarcely less intense aud by  a countless number of smaller ones.  Half an hour after the explosion  the streets for blocks around the  vicinity were crowded with fire apparatus and a score of ambulances, while hundreds of police  were being rushed from all the  lower precincts of the city to form  lines aud many priests from near-  by parishes were going here and  there in the smoke-obscured thoroughfares seeking for injured who  might need their aid. From the  buring district a column of smoke  was rising high in the air, mingled  witli llames that could not be controlled by the hundreds of streams  thrown upon them.  The second explosion  carried de  struction in every direction.   That;,  it did not cause a wholesale loss of t;  life was due to the fact that almost ;-.  ten,minutes'  warning came aftei'V  the first cry of fire\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda cry that wast\/v  a real warning to the people .who;,:  knew the character of the chem- -'.,  icals in the^burning buildings, and ^'|  fully five minutes occurred between\"-;'  the first and minor explosion, whichy  warned everybody within . hearing,%\ufffd\ufffd\\  and   the   second   one.      ImmenseY;,  masses of masonry, pieces of cor- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  nice, great beams, windowj casings f1.':!  and an indescribable mass of wreck-\"^'  age of every description tumbled-'-  suddenly into the street in front\" bt'S'  the building. ' '-\/ *-j_  4 The wreckage was thrown across^  through the windows of the build-jv  ing where the Irving National Bank',-  is located.   The offices of the Irvin\"g?r7.|  Bank and of Maclem Bros., bankers ?(  and brokers, were nearly wrecked.\";;  At the first explosion an -attempt\/'  was made to gather all the monejr>><|  and papers that were lying on- the!  counters   together and to   thrbw\",,k|  them into the safes and it was sup'.\/-*' 1  posed that this had been done when\"*_J  the second explosion brought flying'*';!  glass and plastering from the sky-^'\"  lighted   ceilings   down about\" theu^  heads   of   everybody .and'  caused':jj  them to flee in a hurry. ; Captain^  McCIuskey, of the detective b^xreau;\"';?|  who hurried every'available'marr'^  of his staff to the fire, was appealed^,  to to protect\"the funds of the bankV;\ufffd\ufffd1  he being told that they Yferein theiSl  Ivault, the door of'Avhich was_sup%\"i.F  'posed   to , be locked.     \"When^.tKei^  captain and his men went in',.h'ow-;>{l  ever,- tliey   found   about'  $10,000;i'  scattere\"d'T_in i confusion'   oyer ' the'.\"f  counters and floor.       -.  ,- -'-, ~ ,_    ;.J!  \/, -This_ was hastily thrownJntcj thejrl  vault\" and \"line\"' doorTlocke'd.^Dbwh\" *  iu Mecklera Brothers'- office in' the  basement were H. C. Mecklem and\";  his brother William, with Frank-d  Heckenberry,     a     boy,     Thomas^'l  Hacket,     a   cleric,   another   man^j  named Bruce and some girls.1* Whea'-5|  the fire broke out $90,000 in moneys  lay upon the counters.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hecken-';  berry was  stationed at the doorr  while  this   was gathered together'-.-  for putting in the vault.    The,ex-'\",  plosion completely demolished win-\/  dows   along   Greenwich  street; on ,M|  both sides for three blocks  in botb.-  directions.   The immense buildings  of .T. H. Mohlman & Company front-1 I  ing on\"'Washington' street simply\/1  collapsed, a deluge of barrels ;'and.'  boxes  filled-with fruit rolling, out \\.\\  and   forming  a  pile that  reached -  half way across the street.    At' the \\  time of the explosion barrels were..']  hurled~iTT-tlie~7iir  across^WasKirig-\"  ton street and set fire to the build--  ings to the west, threatening an extension of the conflagration in that  direction.  The loss of life is not known, but  from all sources of information it is  gathered that there are, perhaps,  the bodies of thirty persons in the  ruins.  Rossland Mines.  Ross i, a NO, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"White  Bear workings are now clear of  water down to the 170 foot level.  It is anticipated that the workings  will be completely clear of water  to the '}r>0 foot level by next Sunday  night. From this level diamond  drill borings will be made for the  purpose of locating the extension of  the south ledge of the Le Roi, which  is supposed to run through the  northern portion of the White Beat-  property.  The Velvet mine, on Sophie  mountain, has let a contract for the  hauling of 2fi tons of ore a day from  the mine to Velvet siding, about  two miles below Sheep Creek  station. This ore will be shipped  from there to the Northport smelter. Fred Lindburg has been  awarded the contract for hauling  tho ore, and shipping will commence just as soon as sleighing is  possible. He has returned from  Myers Falls and Chewelah, where  he purchased a number of horses,  which will be engaged in hauling  the ore over tho new wagon road.  Five four-horse teams will be in use  and the hauling will bo continued  all winter. There is more ore on  the dump at present than can be  hauled out this winter without  going into the mine for.it. This  will add a new shipper to the list.  Thoie are 120,000 tons of ore iu  sight in the Velvet.  Train Wreck.  HrcuiNA,  Montana, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Northern Pacific train No. 9, east-  bound, was partly wrecked at Dear-  hart,  Montana, last night by-:the  breaking of a switch rod.    Several  passengers were killed and several  injured.    The dead are: C. Reinfen-  rath of Helena; Dr. L. Pendleton of-j  Mount Hope,  Wisconsin; Ed  Eastman  of  Raymond, South  Dakota;!  Dr. C.'C. Hartschoru of Livingstone, j  Montana; Miss M. S. Tracy of.Boze-  man, Montana, and two  unknown I  women. . ;  Boy Killed in an Elevator:  Chicago, October 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPaul;'Hul-  bert, 5-year-old son of captain Hul-  bert of Fort Collins, Colorado; was]  instantly killed in an elevator at the|  Manadnock block today.    The, b  was thrown to the floor by a jerkl  which the car gave in starting.  \/Hel  released his hold on his mother's!  hand and fell backward.    His skullf  was  crushed between , the floor of  tlie elevator and tlie second floor oi  the building.  **\ufffd\ufffd;.   ...  ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdScKSl 8  THE TRIBUNE: NELSON B. C  TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 1900  HUDSON'S BAY  COMPANY. *  INCORPORATED 1670.  The Newest Thing for  Bedroom Floors is  Sanitary  Bedroom  Carpet  We have it in a number of  designs and colors, 2 yds.  wide at 65c per square yd.  ART  SQUARES  Axminsters, Wiltoo, Velvet, Brussels, Wool and  Union.  Special for this week only:  We will sell best quality  wool squares in all sizes  and a large number to  choose from, at 90c per  square yard; 2nd quality wool at 70c, union  at 55c.  We carry the largest and  best stock of Housefurnish-  ingsin Nelson.  s  \ufffd\ufffdte f&vx\\mm*  IT.THIIirTTrTTtHIIIITTIITIIimilTmillilllmTT  NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS.  From and after October 1st, all  subscribers to the Daily Tribune  who, are served by carrier will  .be required to pay their subscriptions weekly to the. carrier.  SUBSCRIPTION RATES.  .Weekly, by carrier .      .      .  Monthly, by carrier  Three Months, by carrier  Six Months, by carrier  ,    .. u   ,  One Year, by carrier      .       .  rrT-rmriilllYTTTTtTmTTTTr  .$  85  1 00  2 50  S 00  10 00  The public Avorks committee of  -the city-council\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis-considering-^the-  street lighting question.   The committee   had    a   conference    with  representatives of the Bonnington  Falls   Power   Company    and    the  tramway company yesterday, and  tlie result of the conference  is a  proposition   from   these   two corporations   (through  the   tramway  company) to sell the city power to  operate SO arc lamps for tho sum of  $00 per annum per lamp, and if the  city is not in  a position to put in  the plant and  pole  lines  that the  tramway company \"will bear that  . burden on condition that the city  purchases   it   at the end of   tAVo  years at cost, plus the amount expended   in   keeping   it   iii   repair.  The cost of   the  plant is put at  $5300, approximately; and the cost  of trimming the lamps is placed at  $2 per.lamp per month.    Summed  up, the proposition  is: If the city-  bears the expense of installing the  street electric lighting   plant the  tramway company will furnish the  power to operate the plant at: $8  per lamp per month, and charge  .another $2 per lamp per month to  keep them  trimmed.      Or, if  the  city does not wish to install the  plant  tlie tramway company will  do it on  condition that the  city  takes  it off   their hands   in   two  years at cost, plus the amount expended iu keeping it in repair.  \/k. proposal also came from the  gas company. It estimated the  cost of operating a 50-horse-ppAver  gas engine for seven hours a day  for 805 days in the j-ear at $193.05  a month. The city would be required to purchase the engine and  install all the>plant.  The Nelson Saw & Planing Mills,  Limited, offered to deliver the city  power at the company's sawmill on  Hall street wharf for .$5 per horsepower per month ; or furnish them  an engine and boiler of from 50 to  00 horse-poAver capacity for $4 per  day.   The Kootenay Electric Supply &  Construction Company offered to  furnish and operate fifty 2000 c.p.  arc lamps for $10 per month on a  two-years' contract. The only expense that the city Avould incur  under this proposal would be for  erection of the pole lines and hanging the lamps.which would be about  $1500.    The aboAre is a fair presentation  of the several proposals. The tramway company Avants $S per horsepower per month\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat is, if the  current required to keep each 2000  candle-power arc lamp burning  efficiently is equal to one horsepower; the sawmill company Avill  furnish steam for $5 per horsepower per month; the gas company  will furnish the gas to operate a 50  horse-power engine for $103.05 a  month, and the Kootenay Electric  Construction \ufffd\ufffdfc Supply Company  will bear all the expense, except  erecting pole lines, and operate fifty  2000 candle-power lamps for a term  of tAvo years for $10 per lamp per  month. The tramway company  seem to be unwilling to sell the city  power at so much per horse-power  per month. They evidently want  to be in a position to say to the  people: \"We are in partnership  with the city in the' 'street-lighting  business, Avith the hope that aato  Avill in time be a partner in that  far-better paying business, incandescent lighting.\" Another point:  It sells electric power \"to P. Burns  & Co. for $5 a horse-power per  month; but if the city wants poAver.  it must' pay $8. This is'hardly a  fair Avay of doing business, seeing  that the tramway company is asking the city to help it out on a  losing proposition.  If the tramway company has  power to sell, and has offered to  sell it to private firms for five  dollars per horse-power per month,  why cannot it sell power to the  city at the same price ? The city  pays its bills as promptly as any  private firm. The city is not in  need of a partner to help it operate  the public utilities it now owns, and  the sooner the . tramway company  people realize this the better it will  be for the tramway company.  educated, class. The doing away  with the senate is. also a weak  point, but Mr. Foley did not take  that plank up Avhile here. Perhaps  it Avould be Avell to lower the Liberal party's prices. There are very  few labor candidates ; in the field,  and if all were to succeed they  would still have to cling to the  party in control of affairs in order  to pass any bills through tlie house.  I have heard a great deal about  their finding Mr. Foley underground. Where would they expect .to find him during working  hours? If they had come around  earlier they might have found him  at his boarding house.  Joseph Irwin.  WRITTEN  BY  LIBERALS.  Tiif. Trihusk has placed n part of one column  al the disposal of the liberals, whose views  will be ovpres'wd therein from time lo time during the oampu'Kn. A Hke privilege te accorded  tlie la.iliur part.y and the Connervaiivos.  As statements of intelligent and  unbiased, observers the following  citations will be of interest: \"I have  always avoided introducing politics  into the pulpit, and I will not do  so now; but I cannot help instancing as one of tlie reasons for  thanksgiving the fact that we have  a premier Avho has proven himself  so statesmanlike in the administration of the high functions of his  office; avIio is so stainless in his  character; who is so jnst and conciliatory in his public utterances;  Avho is so broadly and unselfishly  patriotic that, although a Catholic  in his religious,faith, he commands  tho confidence and loyalty of Protestants as no other man in political  life at the present time could.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Rev. Dr. Thomas of Jarvis Street  Baptist Church, Toronto.  Labor Candidate Criticized.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNrw-DENVERr-October\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd29.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo  The Editor of The Tribune:     I believe there is going to be a Dominion election next month, although  political matters are very quiet as  yet in our town.     We have only  had   one   of   the   candidates\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMr.  Foley\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto give an  address, though  the other two may do so before  polling day.    It is usually admitted  that   the    labor    unions   will go  pretty strong in favor of Mr. Foley,  but they, did the same for It.  F.  Green.last summer.    There is still  a large vote to be counted for the  others if they get around arid show  themselves.       I   fancy   that   the  majority of those in this town who  supported J. Keen last election will  support A.    H.   MaeNeill for the  Dominion.   There are many weak  points in Mr. Foley's address, the  opinion of his friends to the contrary notAvitlistanding.   If both the  old    federal    parties   are  as poor  legislators as he states they are,  Avhy    would . he   have the Labor  party make itself a sort.of cats paw  for either one?   He states that his  party does not want to be iu a position to take control of affairs and  yet he would like them to be in  such a position as to say to the  premier:     \"You    must    legislate  along  our   line   or   off goes your  political head.\"   In such-a case why  should they not step in and make  the   laAvs   themselves ?      He also  seems    to    boast      that     he     is  not educated, and yet he says he  has common sense (?).    Surely common   sense  would advise him   to  leave these matters for the public  to find out.   Of all classes to bo deliberately chosen as our-lawmakers  the worst, in .my opinion, is the un-  \"The steamer Manchester  Commerce  brought  to   Manchester  on  Monday  1,000 -eases   of Canadian  pears   (Bartlett,   Flemish   Beauty,  Duchess, Howell, Clargcau and An-  jou), tAventy-five cases  of peaches  and one  hundred, and twenty-five  cases  of dessert apples.   This is a  special consignment, shipped under  the   auspices   of the lion. Sydney  Fisher, minister  of agriculture for  Canada. \"Hitherto  Canadian  fruit  has suffered a little in transit.    It  is noAV  thought, however,  that a  perfect   system   of    packing,  and  refrigeration has been devised, and  the condition in whicli the present  consignment    reached   Manchester  bear's   this   out.   The    fruit    was  grown and packed at Grimsby, in  the   province   of   Ontario.     From  Grimsby it Avas sent to Montreal in  refrigerator cars, and it has crossed  tlie   sea   in   the   mechanically refrigerated chamber   of   the   Manchester      Commerce.     Mechanical  refrigeration on steamers running  from Canada to British ports Avas  introduced   by   the   Hon.  Sydney  Fisher during the. season of 1897.  The system Avas not perfect-at first,  but experience has shown Avhat are  the best methods of grading and  packing,  and the temperatures at  which the different classes of fruit  should be carried.   The  result,  as  Ave have said, is that the most delicate   Canadian   fruits   can be delivered  in this country in perfect  condition.     The   present   consignment   is   to be followed by shipments of choice . Canadian grapes:\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNorwich (F'ngland) Daily Press,  October 4th, 1900.  FOR FALL-PLANTING  Kome-growu Fruit and Ornamental   Trees,  Roses,   Shrubs,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vines and Rnlbs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSO.ftOO to select from.    Address  M. J. HENRY, Vancouver, B. 0.  Wilson'  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  IRVINE & CO.  to  to  -V~;  Dress Goods, Millinery  Carpets and Men's Furnishings  L,adies9   Department,  Special s.ile of Ladies' and children's wool vests, drawers,  and combination suits, flannelette night dresses,  drawers and skirls.  Ladies' flannelette, cashmere, alpacia, silk, satin, and  French flannel blouse waists.  Ladies' mantles, jackets, and tailor-made suits from best  makers at exceedingly low prices.  Ladies'   ready-made dress skirts, from $2.00 each up.  Ladies' \"R & G,\"P D,\" and \"D A\" corsets from 75  cents up.  Children's coats, reefers, and jackets, from 1 to 10 years  of age.  Ladies' golf capes, at all prices.  Millinery   Department.  We are' now showing the balance of our imported pattern  hats at cost prices; also a large stock of ladies'  ready-to-wear hats at low prices.  Men's   Department.  4  We are offering men's fleece-lined underwear, in sizes  to 44, from 65 cents each up.  Men's Cartrighl & Warner's national wool and cashmere  shirts and drawers, from $.\".50 each up.  Men's flannel, cotton flannelette, cashmere arid silk night  shirts. Men's pajamas in all wights. Black cashmere sox 25 cents per pair.  Latest novelties in neckwear, collars, cuffs, regatta negligee and fllanncl shirts.  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  House   Furnishing   Department,  White lace curtains, from 75c per pair; chenile and tapestry portieres, from $3.50 per pair; chenile and  tapestry table covers from 75 cents.  Tapestry carpets, from 45c per yard up ; Brussel carpets,  from $1.00 per yard up; Wiltons from $r.25 per  yard up ; Axminsters, from $1.25 per yard up.  Floor oilcloth, from 35 cents per yard up.  White bed spreads in all qualities ; Wool comfortables  from $1.25 up ; Wool blankets (grey) from $2.50 up;  wool blanket (white) from $3.50 up.  All    Carpets    Sewn    nnd    Ltiici    Pree   of   Charge.  FRED   IRVINE <&  ^^*'^>W   *   ^\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV    \"^aaaaaaK     *    ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdW    # ^-V   *   ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK    # ^Hak     *   ^-t^    * ^hat    %   ^>V    # ^_____* ^^aaa^    * ^.l^^*    ^iaaa-V    * ^aaa^T*    \"^^    ' \"    0^   '   ^^ %    4^   #   ^^ \"    aaaaa^^    \"   ^^ \"    _^B^   *   0^ *' ^^   ^ 0^ ^    ^^    \"   ^^ \"    ^__^   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ^__^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffdg0   *   0K0 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^f  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  to  M  321 to 3.11 Raker Street, Nelson;  American and European Plans.  MEALS  CENTS  KOOMS LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY  AND HEATED BY STEAM  25 CENTS TO .1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPoilT AviNfe  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdABfG ^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"RACING ,.*\ufffd\ufffd,  Specially recommended  for dyspepsia,   loss of  appetite,   sleeplessness,  indigestion,    weakness  from  whatever   cause,  nervousness,       fevers,  consumption,    malaria  and general debility.  Women  complain   of   a  tired feeling.   Wilson's Invalid's Port is immediate  nnd efficacious, leaving no  Harmful effects.  Men will find it particularly valuable as a restorative and a strenRtlierier of  the body and ncrvs system  We recommend this tonic  CANADA DRUG  AND BOOK  COMPANY  Nelson, D, C.  QUEEN'S HOTEL  BAKER STREET. NELSON.  ed with Hot Air.  Large comfortable bedrooms and  first-class  dining-room. Sample rooms for commercial men.  RATES $2 PER DAY  N|rs. E. C. Clarice, Prop.  LATE OF THE ROYAL HOTEL, OATJBASfg  VOTE  FOR . . . .-.,  AH.  MacNEILL  of Rossland  Candidate of the Liberal-Conservative Party for Member  of the House of Commons for Yale-Cariboo.  PLATFORM  Adopted by the Liberal-Conservative Party in Convention  at Revelstoke^ September 15th, 1900  We, the delegates of the Liberal-Conservative party of Yale-Cariboo  constituency, in convention assembled, reaffirm the principles of the  party, and more particularly that cardinal principle, protection to home  industries, and that that principle.be carried out so that all sections of  the country shall equally, share its benefits.  The one industry -on which the prosperity of this constituency is  almost wholly dependent is-raining ; and we believe that our mining industries are as fairly entitled to protection as the manufacturing industries of Eastern Canada ; therefore, we advocate that the duties on lead  aud leadproducts.be increased, so that they shall be as high as those now  iiapose\"d\"by\"the\"Uriited\"States\"on\"the\"same\"articles; ~-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-^ ^   That tlie output of the precious metal mines is largely increasing,  therefore we favor the establishment of a mint, so that the specie in circulation shall be that of our own instead of that of a foreign country. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  We advocate the restriction of the immigration of Chinese and Jap-  Lighted by EJectricityj and Heat-    anese, and all classes who cannot become good citizens of the Dominion  of Canada, and suggest the adoption of the principles of the Natai Act.  British Columbia has not now the representation in the federal parliament that she is entitled to: therefore we advocate that when the  redistribution of seats is made that this constituency shall be given representation according to its population.  That it. augurs well for the success of tho party that Hugh John  Macdonald has decided to leave the field of provincial politicsto take  part in the larger one that affects the people of the whole of Canada.  EVERY   DAY  AT .THB  Club Hotel.  BIG   SCHOONER  Beer or. Half-and-half only -  FRESH   XtlG   C00L  The only good Beer In Nelaon  E.  J. CURRAN, Prop.  Comer Stanley and Silica Streets.  NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.  Sealed tenders will lie received by tho undersigned, until 12 o'clock noon, on Friday,  November '-'nd, for the erection of a t wo-Btory  frame oottaKO for tlie ICootenay Lake General  Hospital,  Lowest or any tender not necessarily accented.  EWA.IIT & CARRIE,  Archloctta.  H|adden House  Baker and Ward  Streets, Nelaon  WHOLESALE TRADE    rr  DERATED AND MINERAL WATERS.  aTlHORPK & CO., LIMITED.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Vernon  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and Cedar streets, Nelson,. manufacturers  of and wholesale dealers in asrated waters and  fruit syrups. Sole agents for Halcyon Springs  mineral water.   Telephone GO.'  ASSAYERS'   SUPPLIES.  WF. TEETZEL & CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCornor Bakor and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Josephine streets, Nelson, wholesale deal- -  ers in  assayers supplies. Agents for Denver  Fire Clay Co. of Denver. Colorado.  COMMISSION MERCHANTS.  HJ. EVANS & CO.-Baker street, Nelson  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wholesale dealers iu liquors, cigars  cement, Are brick and Are clay, water pipe .and  steel rails, and general commission merchants.  ELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES.  KOOTENAY ELECTRTC SUPPLY & CONSTRUCTION COMPANY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWholesaledeal.  ers in telephones, annunciators, bells,- batteries,  fixtures, etc., Houston block. Nelson.  FLOUR AND FEED.  BRACKMAN - KBR MILLING COMPANY  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCereals, Flour, Grain, Hay. Straight or  mixed cars shipped to all Kootenay Points.  Grain elevators at all principal points on Calgary-  Edmonton R. R. Mills at Victoria, New Wost-  u>in8ter,-and-Edmoiiton,-Alberta.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '   .     CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE ROOMS .IN NELSON  .   Houston Block, Corhei? of Baker and Josephine Streets.  P; ISiiriis & Go.  Wholesale and Retail  HM\ufffd\ufffdS;B, a Dealers in Meats  The.only hotel In Nelson thai) has remained  under one management since 1890.  Tho bod-rooms .are well furnished and lighted  by electriolty.- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd >. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The bar is always stocked by the best dom b-  lio and Imported liquors and olgars.         THOMAS MADDEN. Proprietor,  SLOCAN JUNCTION HOTEL  J. H. MoMANUS, Manager  Bar stocked with best brands of wines, liquors, '  and Cigars.   Beer on draught).   Jjirgo oouiforti-  iible rotniB.  llrad-blasa table board.  Markets at  Nelson,  Rossland,   Trail,  Kaslo, Ymir,  Sandon,  Silverton, Nev  Denver, Revelstoke, Ferguson Grand ForkSj Greenwood, Cascade City, Mid  way, and Vancouver.  .  Mail Orders Promptly Forwarded  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd^a\ufffd\ufffdaM!^,_.___,M.M,i.l_; _, | \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ,|l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   HI        i.      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIII!   ll m\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   l \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT^  West; Kootenay Butcher Go,  ALL KINDS OF  FRESH AND SALTED MEATS  WHOLKSALK AND RETAIL  FISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON  Baker Street, Nelson &   C.   TRAVES,   Manager  OKDHB8 BY ISJtiif, RECBIVB OARKVUL AMD POOUPT ATtmiTSOii  rpAYLOR FEED & PRODUCE CO.-Baker  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*- street, Nelson (George F. Motion's old  stand), Flour, Feed, Grain, Hay and Produce.  Car lota a specialty. Correspondence solicited.  Phone 2G.  FRESH AND SALT MEATS.  P    BURNS ft   CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRaker  street,   Nelson,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  wholesale dealers in frosh and cured meats.  Cold storage.  GROCERIES.  A MACDONALD & CO.-Corner Front and  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hall streets, wholesale grocers and  4ohbers in blankets, gloves, mitts, boots, rubbers,  inacltinaws and miners' sundries.   KOOTENAY SUPPLY   COMPANY,   LIMITED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVernon   streot. Nelson,   wholesale  grocers. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_   TOHN CHOLDITCH & CO.-Front streeb, Nel-  \"J   son, wholesale grocers.  Y. GRIFFIN & CO.-Front street, Nelson.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   wholesale   dealers   in  provisions,   cured  meats, butter and eggs.  HARDWARE AND MINING SUPPLIES.  HBYERS & CO.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Baker and Josephine  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -streets, Nelson, wholesale dealers in hardware and mining-supplios. Agents for Giant  Powder Co.        -          LAWRENCE   HARDWARE    COMPANY  Baker St., Nelson,  wholesale ' dealers In  hardware and uilnlng .supplies, < and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwater aud  plumbers'supplies.  LIQUORS AND DRY GOODS.  rpuRNER; BEETON & CO.-Corner Vernon  *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and Josephine streets, Nelson, wholesale  dealers in liquors, cigars and di'y goods. Agents  for Patut Brewing Co. of Milwaukee and Calgary Brewing Co. of Calgary.  POWDER, CAPS AND FUSE.  HAMILTON  POWDER  COMPANY-Baker  street, Nelson, manufacturers of dynamite,  sporting, stumping and black blasting powders, .  wholesale dealers in caps.and fuse, and eloctrlo  blasting apparatus.  SASH AND DOORS.  NELSON SAW AND PLANING MILLS,  LIMITED-Corner Front and Hall streets,  Nelson, manufacturers of and wholesale dealers  in sash and doors; all kinds of factory work made  to order. .  WINES AND CIGARS.'  CALIFORNIA   WINE   COMPANY,    LIMI-  TED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner Front.and Hall streets, Nel-   '  son, wholesale dealers in wines (case and bulk,  and dOHusUo and imported cigars.  f\ufffd\ufffd  Ifc:- THE TRIBUNE:  OTLSOtf B.C   TUESDAY; OCTOBER 30 1900\nfSSIl\n1\nBANK OP lONTBEAt\nCAPITAL, all paid up....$12,000,000.00\nREST      ..000.000.00\nUNDIVIDED PROFITS       427,180.80\nLord Strathcona and Mount Royal ...President\nHon. George A. Drummond ...... Vice-President\nE. 3. Cloustou'  .General Manager\nNELSON BRANCH\nCorner Baker and Kootenay Streets.\nA. H. BUCHANAN, Manager.\nBranches in London- (England) New York,\n, Chicago, and all tho principal cities in Canada.\nBuy and sell Sterling Exchange and Cable\nTransfers.\nGrant Commercial and Travelers' Credits,\navailable in any part of the world.\nDrafts Issued, Collections Made, Eto.\nSaving's Bank Branch\nCURRKNT RATK OK INTKRKST PAID.\nPARAGRAPHS  OP  INTEREST.\nThe Natal subscribers to a testimonial to major-general Baden-\n1' iwell, in recognition of his gallant\nil.-l'ense of Mafeking, have decided\nin present him with a shield made\n\u25a0 ul' Transvaal sovereigns.\nAlexander .Ramsey, first territorial governor of Minnesota and\nsecond state governor, reached his\n\u00abighty-fifth birthday recently. His\nfirst office was as mayor of St. Paul,\nthen as governor of Minnesota\nTerritory; he was second governor\n. of tho state, served as United States\nsenator',', and was secretary of war\ntwenty years ago.\nAt the close of a performance\ngiven as a benefit to John Brougham, the'actor and dramatist, one\nof the audience threw upon the\nstage a purse of gold. Brougham\npicked it i.ip, and, after examining\nit, said: \"Ladies and gentlemen,\ncircumstances compel me to pocket\nthe insult: but\" (looking grim) \"I\nshould like to see the man who\n- would dare to repeat it!\"\nStanding on tho banks of the\nPotomac, lord Coleridge one day\nasked William M. Evarts : \"Is it\ntrue that Washington threw a silver\ndollar across the Potomac?\" \"It is\nfinite possible,\" replied Mr. Evarts,\nthoughtfully, \"for a dollar in those\ndays, my lord, went farther than it\ndoes now. But, indeed, Washington did better than that\u2014-he threw\na sovereign across the Atlantic !\"\nOne day, while Millais was painting his famous picture, \"Chill October,\" among tho reeds and rushes\non-the banks of the Tay, a man\ncame up behind him and stood looking first at the picture, then at the\nsurrounding landscape. Finally he\nasked ..in. broad .Scotch dialect:\n\" \"MVn, tfid ye\" never try\" photography?\" \"No, never;\" replied Millaip,\npainting slowly. A pause. \"It's a\nhantle quicke,\" said the man. \"Yes,\nI suppose so.\" Another pause;\nthen the Scotchman added.thoughtfully: \"An' it's mair like the place!\"\nQueen dowager Margherita of\nItaly has just completed the distribution of her . personal effects and\nhas finally retired from the world.\nJfer three hundred superb costumes\nhave been apportioned among her\nfriends. Immediately after king\nHumbert's funeral she sent to the\nmuseum at Florence tho, exquisite\nembroideries which made so fino an\nexhibit at the Chicago exposition,\n. and all her jewelry lias been given\n- to relatives. Young. queen Helena\nhas received- Margherita's royal*\ndiadem, valued at nearly two hundred thousand dollars.\n Sir\u2014Francis-Plunkettr_the\u2014new\"\nembassador from Great Britain to\n'Vienna, will be the more pleasing\nto the Austrian court because of\n'' the fact that he is a Roman Catholic\nand the first diplomat of that faith\nto be accredited to Vienna for a\nlong time. Sir Francis entered the\nservice iu 1855, and his record -as a\ndiplomat covers secretaryships to\nthe legations at Yeddo (1873-70)\nand Washington (1S70-77), the\nmission plenipotentiary to Japan\n(1883-87), .and the Swedish mission,\nwhich he filled from 1888 to 1893.\nSince the last named year he has\nbeen minister to Brussels. Sir\nFrancis is the youngest son of the\nninth earl of Kiogall. Lady Plim-\nkett, his wife, was a Miss Morgan\nof Philadelphia.\nA crowd of United States surveyors and allotting agents were recently working in the reservation\nof the Comanche Indians, surveying, establishing corner-stones and\ngetting everything ready to divide\nthe land into quarter sections. The\nIndians did not take very kindly\nto the division and allotment, of\ntheir land, arid, seeing that the\nwhites were scared, they decided\nto act. Tho surveyors were all\ntenderfeet from Washington, Suddenly, without warning, their camp\nwas invaded by a yelling, hooting\nband pf 500 Indians in war paint\nand feathers. The surveying party\ncould not stand the pressure, and\nstarted out for the settlements\nalong the Texas line and kept up\ntheir flight, pursued by the Indians,\nuntil they crossed the state line.\nThen they telegraphed to Fort Sill\nand the commander there sent out\n\u00bb Jarge eavfilry force to protect the\nTHE BANK OF\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nNELSON\nIs now prepared to issue Drafts and\nLetters of Credit.on Skaguay, XT. S.,\nAtlin, B. 0., and Dawson City, IT. W. T.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD  OFFICE. TORONTO.\nCapital Authorized $2,500,000\nCapital Paid up $2,458,603\nRest  $1,700,000\nD. It. Wilkie, General Manager.\nE. Hay, Inspector.\nNelson Branch\u2014Burns Block, 221 Bakor Street\nJ. M. LAY, Manager.\nsurveyors. The general supposition'\nis that a lot of cowboys and young\nbucks played a practical -joke.\nConfirmation has been received\nin Washington of the execution on\nJuly 20th of Chang Yen Hoon, the\nformer Chinese minister to the\nUnited States. Chang was a loyal\nadherent of the emperor and a\nwarm supporter of the latter's reform movements. When the empress dowager supplanted the emperor two years ago Chang was ordered to be beheaded, but through\nthe intervention of the American\nand British ministers his punishment was commuted to banishment\nin the district and province of\nKashgaria. It now appears that\nthe empress dowager, taking advantage of the late reign of terror\nat Pekin and knowing Chang's influence with the emperor, ordered\nhis execution by decapitation.\nChang was (Considered by those\nfamiliar with his affairs as one of\nthe ablest men in China.\nThe mantle of W. G. Grace lias\nfallen upon worthy shoulders, for\nprince Raivjitsinhjiihasagain proved\nhimself the \"champion batsman of\nthe year in England and, by compiling an aggregato of 3005 runs,\nhas once more exceeded the 3000-\nmark, a feat never accomplished by\nany other batsman in a season's\nfirst-class cricket. Han.jitsinh.ji is\n28 years old and is the second son\nof Jiwan Sinhji, who is' connected\nwith the family of Jam (or sovereign) of JsTawanger, the largest state\nunder British protection, in Kathi-\nwar. Ranjitsinhji's remarkable average of 87.57'for 40 innings will-be\nbetter understood by a comparison\nwith the figures of some of the\nother first-class players in England\nthis season. After Ranjitsinhji tlie\n.next man on the list is C. B. Fry,\nwhose average is 30 runs per inning\nlower than that of the prince, and\nthese two are away ahead of any\nother batsmen in England this year.\nEmpress .of the British Empire.\nSydney, New South Wales, October 20.\u2014William JohnLyne, premier\nand treasurer of New South Wales,\nduring a speech at the opening of a\nGerman fete here today said: \"The\ntemper of the Australian people\nwas never so, affectionate toward\nthe mother country as it is now.\nThe Avar in South Africa has procured a patriotic bond which\nshould last' eternally. It has\nbeen suggested locally that\nher' majesty.; should assume tho\ntitle of queen of Australia. To me\nit seems a good proposal. Indeed\nI think her majesty might well be\napproaclied-witlra-view\"to_her_as;_\nsuming the title\".of empress of the\nBritish empire; thus embracing all\ntlie colonies and dependencies.\nNelson Opera House\nTONIGHT\n\u00b0  Tuesday, Oct 30th.\nFITZ  & WEBSTER'S\nUnrivaled Company\nof Comedians in that\nMusical Comedy\nSurprise\nA Breezy Time\nEntirely  Rewritten  and  Turned\nUp-to-Date.\nIntroducing Our Distinct  Novelties\nEverything New, Novel ami Original\nEnjoy two hours and a half of Clean, Fun\nPRICES,   50c,   75c   and    $1.00\nENGINEERS.\nCHARLES PARKER-Mlnlng and mllllnflr engineer, TiuuerBooiikUflkjck.niikersU'cet.\nNOlHOlla\nGoods thM  Sell  Must  be  Up-to-Date\nSUPERIOR   IN   QUALITY,   AND   REASONABLE   IN   PRICE.\n\/ HAVE THE GOODS AND WILL\nGUARANTEE THEM FOR QUALITY, STYLE AND PRICE.\nSTERLING   NOVELTIES,   Manicure\nSets, Bisque Toilet Sets.\nLAMPS, Piano and Table, in Metal\nEnameled.\nVASES, Metal Hand-Painted, in Different Colors.\nCANDELABRAS, in Silver, Brass and\nEnameled.\nFERN POTS and JARDINIERES, -in\nClay, Brass, Bisque, etc.\nJACOB\nTHE NOVELTIES YOU FIND AT M?\nSTORE CANNOT BE PROCURED\n.    ELSEWHERE.    ' . - \\\",\/\nSIZE \\BM X 12^. t\nDOVER,\n\"N\nThe\nONYX TABLES and JARDINIERE\nStands.\nCUT GLASS, in White and Colors.,,.\nTEA SETS, in Sterling and Plate.\nTOAST RACKS, Water Pitchers, Car-\nving Sets, etc.\nCLOCKS, a Most Complete Assortment.\nDIAMONDS, Loose and Set, 25 per\ncent Saved on their Cost: ''\nJeweler\n,,<&\nSurpassing*\nDisplay in\nFall Suitings\nAll the fashionable creations\nin Fall and Winter wear are\nincluded, in my last consignment of Scotch and Irish\nSerges, ,Tweeds and Worsteds, and Fancy Trouserings\nE. Skinner\nNeelands' Building, Baker Streot.\n.   FRED J. SQUIRE, Manager.\nARTHUR   GEE\nMERCHANT  TAILOR.\n' OPPOSITE .THE.:.. QUEEN'S   HOTEL.\nLarge stock of high-class imported goods. A\nspecialty of Hie square shoulder\u2014tho latest\nfashion in coats..  \u25a0      \u2022\u25a0 - -\nSpecial Sale\nFor   balance\" of week.     Millinery and Millinery Novelties,\nCorsets, Gloves, Lace   Veiling\nand-Children's Head wear.\nTrimmings free of charge.\nMRS.  MCLAUGHLIN,   Josephine   St.\nMRS.  ENFIELDJS\n'. .'...for fine . . .'\nMillinery\n HALI^BLOCK\u2014NELSON.\t\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\nNOTICE.\nNot'ce is hereby given that under the provisions of Hy-law No. SO, \"Pound and Dog Tax Bylaw,\" it is unlawful for any person to suffer any\nhorse, mulo, bull ox, cow, sheep, goat, pig, or\nother cattle orpoult.ry to run at largo within the\nlimits of tho City of Nelson.\nEvery owner of a dog in the City of Nelson is\nrequited to pay annually a tax of two dollars for\noach dog owned by 'Mm;\nNo person shall sudor or permit, his dog to run\nat largo in the City'of Nolson for \"which\u2022 suoh\nperson has not paid the tax required of him, and\nunless such dog shall havo around his neck a\ncollui or strap to wh'eh Minll be a'tnehod 11\nmetallic plate to lie supplied by the city on payment of tho said tnx, tho said metallic plate having raisod or stamped I hereon the luttors C. T. P.\n(city tax paid.)\nWarning is hereby given thatanyperson guilty\nof an infraction or violation of any of the provisions of the above named By-law is in addition\nto the fees and charges set forth therein, liable\nupon summary conviction to a penalty of One\nHundred .Dollars and tho costfl of prosecution,\nand in default of payment to imprisonment for a\nterm not exceeding two months.   Ry order,\n.1. K. STRACHAN, City Clerk.\nNelson, B. C, October 23rd, MXlO.\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\nMUNICIPAL VOTER'S LIST.\nNotice is hereby given that Section f! of the\nAt u nlcipal Elections Act provide? that only the\nnames of those persons who have paid on or before the FIRST.DAY'OK NOVEMBER, ALL\nMUNICIPAL RATES, TAXES, A.SdKSS-\nMKNTS AND LICENSE FKKS (if any) payable\nby them, shall bo entitled to have their names\nplaced on the voters' list of the Municipality;\nAnd notice is hereby also given that, tho, names\nof all persons who have not paid by tho first day\nof November next, all rates, taxes, assessments\nand license fees (if any) payable by them, will be\nomitted from said voters' lisr,.   Hy order,\nJ. K. STRACHAN, City Clerk.\nNelson, B. C, October 23rd, WOO.\nTOWN LOTS\nFOR SALE\nTwo good business lots in the town of Phoenix,\n50 feet frontage Original cost SJI.OOIJ. Will sell\nfor the same It euro on Uio following terms: Onc-\ntliirdcash; balance in six and twelve months.\nAddrmw, F. a, H..pn.it office box IBS, Nelaon, B.C.\nA FULL LINE OF\nFront Doors\n. .     Inside Doors\nScreen Doors\nWindows\nInside Finish\nlocal and coaeb.\nFlooring\nlocal and coagti.\nNewel Posts\nStair Rail\nMouldings\n.   Shingles\nRoughfand\nDressed dumber\nof all kinds.\nIF WHAT YOU ..WANT IS NOT IN STOCK\nWK.WIIX MAKE IT FOB YOU\nCALL AND-GET PRICES.\nJ. A. Sayward\nHALL AND LAKE STREETS, NELSON\nPorto Rico Lumber Go.\n(LIMITED)\nCORNER OF  \u2022\nHENDRYX AND, VERNON STREETS\nRough and\nDressed\nLumber\nShingles\nMouldings\nA-1 White Pine Lumber Always in\nStocif.\nWe carry a complete stock of\nGcastFlooringrCeilingrI11side~Pm^\nish, Turned Work, Sash and Doors.\nSpecial order work will, receive\nprompt attention.\nPorto Rico Lumber-Co. Ltd.\nGontraetors and Suilders\nWILL DO WEMi TO\nBuy Their Lumber\nG. 0. Buchanan's\nA largo stock of flrsb-olass dry material on\nhand, also a full line of saeh\u201e doors, mouldings,\nburned work, oto.       .-.\nFactory Work a Specialty\nYard i  Food of nundryz atxeoti, Nelson\nTelephone,\" Dl\nJohn Rae, Agent\nNELSON LOTS FOR SALE.\nflood building lots for sale. Corner and one\nadjoining, .lOxir.O; S.'iii. 'Two inside Iota SflxliO,\n$2.t0. All on JIM street,. Titlo dear. Apply to\nStrnolian Brot.hers.ppposito'l.he post; office.\nGOSTELLO'S EXPRESS\nAND TRANSFER\nBaggage and express moved'to any part of tho\ncity.  Special attention given to heavy teaming.\nOfllco corner Victoria and Ward streets. Telephone 192. W. A. COSTELLO. Manaaror.\nMusia\nMrs. 1). II. Murray, graduate in vocnl and instrumental music, is now prepared to receive\npupils for instruction in voice ciiltnro, Italian\nmethod, also piano and organ.\nFor terms and further particulars apply room\n5, A. Macdonald building, corner Josephine and\nYarnon street.\nWard Bros.\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nAgents for J. & J. TAYLOR SAFES\nBogustown)   Fairview   Addition.\nCAIVJBLE & O'REILLY\nBaker Street\nREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE\nAGENTS\nFOR RENT\n(i-roomed house and bath, together with kitchen\nrange, complete with hot and cold water, Observatory street, .magnificent,\" view; rent, in-\n.eluding water rate, $2.5 per month.\n5-roorneiI house, comer* Cedar und  Carbonate\n' streets; \u00a720 per month. .  .\niVroomcd house, Hume Addition ; Slupcr.mont.h.\nI-roomcd cottage, Gore street S12.50 per month.\n'It-roomed house, corner of Mill and JJall streets;\nS30 permonth, from IstNovemoer.\n1 tents collected.   Loans made.\nAgents for British Columbia Permanent Loan\n& Savings Company.\nD. J.Dewap, J. P.\nNotary Public\u2014Conveyancer.\nFOR SALE\nCottage on Mines road. 7 room\", full plumbing.\nbeautiful location, SHJnO,' $500 cash.\n7-room house on Carbonate street, two stories,\ndouble stairway, \u00a72,000, easy terms.\n2 nice building lot-, Latimer street, 100x120, SGOO.\nHouse in Hume addition, 82.100: S2<K)cash, S2S.00\nj_ permonth pays the balancc.interestandprincipal.  This house has full plumbing, stone\nfoundation, and lot 15x130,\nNice house and lot near Ward street, on'the\nsouth side of Silica. \u00a72,2,50; rents for \u00a7H0, and\nonly a' block from the post ofllce.\nTOftErT.\nl-room cottage in rear of my house on Victoria\nstreet, \u00a712.   This cottage.is comfortable and\nmost convenient to town.\n7-room house on Mines road, \u00a72.'.\nOfllco in\nMadden Block\nD. J.DEWAE\nFOR   SALE\nON  EASY TERMS\ntub. PRorrcuTV\nKNOWN AS\nThe Florence Park Hotel\nor Roberts' Ranch\n11.1 acres more or less. A first-class going business, with Xi acres of first-class land under cultivation, 680 fruit trees, a large proportion bearing\nfruit; 1000 small fruits\u2014raspberries, blackberries\nand currants.\nOne mile cast of Uio lerniinous of'the'electric\nIrani way.\nFor part lonlars apply to\nHUGH R. CAMERON\nInsurance Agent\nBAKER STREET NELSON\nIVIINING STOCKS\nBOUGHT AND SOLD\nKlchelioii. 1000\nli'OU RALIfi.\nLargo hotel, furnished complete throughout,\nin a good live town ; reasonable terms,\n\\  A complete tiet of tlnner'e tools,\n\\ CALL ON\nH. A. Prosser\nnaOItRR. WARD STRRKT\n^FSALE--CHEAlT\nSix lots corner Observatory and  Hull streets,\ndrained and cleared for building.\nCharles St. Barbe, Agent\nMONEY TO TOAN\nAT 7 PER CENT\nON BUSINESS PROPERTY\n] Apply (], la, laUNNOX. Holloltor. NftlaOn n. (1\nK-lLeading Scotch Whisky\nR.P.RITHET&CO.,Ltd.\nVICTORIA.\nAgents for British Columbia.\nA. B. GRAY, Box 521, Nelson\nKootenay Representative.\nffnimnmiiniiniinnninrimiiiuiuuiiiiiij)\nJUST   ARRIVED\nA Car Load of\nAllen's Apple Cider.\nTHORPE & CO.\nEixxxuixixxixxrxxixxijzxxxrxxixxxxxxxxixxxxxxxxzxxzxti\nR. REISTERER & CO.\nBKEWERU AND BOTTUCBS Or\nFINE LAGER BEER, ALE\nAND PORTER\n,don?eryntort^liirftaia     Brewery at Nelson\nContracting Painters, Decorators, Paporhanffors.\nFull line of wall paper, mouldings, eto,   Kalso-\nmining aud Tinting.   Strictly first-class  work.\nEstimates furnished.\nResidence Mill 8treob,   WT7T QflW   R   T\nOpposite School Houso   JWH1L1OUIN, D. \\j.\nH. D.  ASHCROFT\nBLACKSMITHING\nAND EXPERT\nHORSESHOEING\nWagon repairing promptly attended to by a\ntirsb-cl&ss wheelwright).\nBpeolal attention givon to all kinds of repairing and custom work from outside points.\nShoDi   Hall St.. bAtrarnnn Bakflr and Vnmnn.\nA\nFRATERNAL   SOCIETIES.\nNKLSON laODGK, NO. 23, A. K. & A. M.\nMeets second Wednesday In each month.\nSojourning brothron Invited. 1\nKNIGHTS OK PYTHIAS- Nelson Lodge, No,\n25, Knights of Pythias, meets In I. O. O. V.\nHall, corner Bakor and Kootenay streets, every\nTuosday oveulng at 8 o'clock. \u2022 Visltlnjr Knights\ncordially invited to attend. R J. llnidloy, O. C;\nJ. A. Paqiiette, K. of R. & S.\nNELSON Ii. O. L., No. 1092, meeU in I. O. O. F.\nHall, cornor Bakor aud Kootenay streets,\n1st aud 3rd Friday of each month. Visiting\nbrot horn cordially invited. R. Robinson, W. M.\nW. Crawford, Recording-Secretary.\nKL80N -\/\"RRIK, Number 22, Fraternal Order\nof Kaglos, meets every second and fourth\nWednesday lnoach month In Fraternity Hall.\nVisiting brethren weloomo. W. Oomell, Proal\niloub,  Olinrlthi Proittaar, fSoomtitu-y,\nE P. Whalley, d.P.\nNOTARY PUBLIC\nOmoo with C. W. West & Co., corner Hall and\n*t*9*|ll|pAM  pf f^AAf O\nCity office of the Nelson Sodawator Factory.\nA.;R. BARROW, A.M.I.C.E.\nPROVINCIAL    .\nLAND SURVEYOR1     -\nCorner Vlotoria and Kootenay Streeta.\nP. O. Box SBa. TELEPHONE NO. fta\nDR.  ALEXANDER  FORIN^,\nOFFrCK AND  RESIDBNC'I\"! '\nSilica   street, between Ward and'\nJosephine streets.        \u2022< \"\u2022 ' .\nTolcpliono YSS. \" ' '-     \\     '- .'   \"\".\nARCHITECTS.\nEWART &  CARRIE-Architects.    Rooms 7\nand 8 Aberdeen block. Baker street. Nelson.\nTRADES  ONIONB.\n\u25a0MTKLS.0N MINERS'.UNION NO. 96, W. .F. o'\nA' M.\u2014Meets in iuihers' union rooms,'northeast corner Victoria and Kootenay streots, every\nSaturday ovouiiig at 8 o'clock. Visiting mem\nbors welcome. M. Ii. Mowatt, President. Jame\nWilkos, Secretary. ; Union Scai.k ok1 Waoks\nkok Nki^o.v DisTmcT\u2014Per : shift, 1'machine\nmen, $.3.60: hammorsnien miners, ?'f.25; muckers,\ncarmen, shovelers and other underground labor-\ners, $3.00.\nTRADES AND LABOR COUNCIL.\u2014The rogn'\nlar mootings of the Nelson Trades and Labor\nCouncil will bo held in the miners' union hall,\ncorner of Victoria and Kootenay streets, on the\nfirst and third Thursday of each month,\" at -\n7.30 p. m. O. J. Thorpo. President J. H,Mathe-\nson, Secretary.\nTHE regular meetings of the Carpenters' Union\nare held on  Wednesday evening of each *\nweek, at 7 o'clock, in tho Miners' Union hall corner Victoria and Kootenay streets.   R.  Robinson, President.   James Colling, Secretary.\nBARBERS' UNION.-Nelson Union, No. 196. ot\nthe International Journeymen Barber's Union of America, meets every first and third Monday of each month in Miner's Union Hall, cornor\nof Victoria and Kootenay streets, at 8:30 p.m.\nsharp. Visiting brothers cordially invited to\nattend. J. H. Alathcson, President. W. 3. Itel-\nvillo, Secrotary.\nBRICKLAYERS AND  MASONS'  UNION.\nTho Bricklayers and Masons' International\n.Union' No. 3_of_Nelson^ nice ts. secondhand,, fourth\u2014\nTuesdays in each month at Miners  Union hall.\nJ. W. Etcher, president; Joseph Clark, recording\nand corresponding secretary.\nLABORERS' UNION.-Nclson Laborers* Pro\nteotive Union, No. 8121, A. F. of L., meets ia\nFraternity Hall, Oddfellow's block, corner of Baker and Kootenay streets, every Monday evening\nat 7:30 p.m. sharp. Visiting members of the American Federation cordially invited to attend. A. W.\nMcFeo, President. Percy Shackelton, Secretary.\nNELSON PAINTERS' UNION-The regular\nmeeting of tho Painters' Union is held\ntho first and third Fridays in each month at Millers' Union liall at 7:30 sharp. J. II. Millward,\nPresident; Will J. Hatch, Secretary.\nPLASTKRF-RS' UNION-Tho O. P. I. A. No.\n172. meets overy Monday evening in the\nElliot block, comer Iiaker and Stanley streets, at\n8 o'clock. J. D, Mover, president: Donald Mo\nl>afin. aaanrfltnrv\nSHERIFF'S SALE.\n^11\n-*P\nA   H^J*.\n'Kit\nN1\nProvince ot UriliKb Columbia, Nelson, in Wcb\nKootenay, to wit:\n\u25a0 Ry virtue of a writ of flcri-facias, issued out of\ntho Supreme Court of Hritith Columbia, at the\nsuit ot the Bank of Montreal, plaintiffs, and to\nme directed, against the goods and chat\ntcls of tho Two Friends Mine, Limited\nLiability, defendants, I have seized and\ntaken in execution all'the right, title and interest)\nof the said defendants. Two Friends Mine Limited Liability, in the mineral claim known as\nand called \"Two Friends,\"situated on the divide\nbetween Lemon and Springer creeks, on the east\nslope of Lemon creek, located on the 31st day of\nJuly, A. D. 1895. and recorded in the office of the\nmining recorder for the Slocan Ciiy Mining Division of the West. Kootenay District, on the 10th\nday of August, A. D. 1S95; and also all the right\ntitle and interest of the snld defendants. Two\nFriends Mine, Limited Liability, In sixty.(60). tons\nof ore, more nr less, mined from the -mineral\nclaim \"Two Friends,\" and now upon the property : To recover the .sum of two thousand and\neighty-nine dollars and eighty-live conts (32.0SJ)-\n.8.i) tofPther with interest on two thousand and\neighty-six dollars and thirty-five cents ($2080 36)\nat six per centum per nninim. from the'2Cth day\nof Soptombor, WOO, until payment, besides sher-\nill's ponndn^c. ofllccr's feus, and all other legal\nincidental expenses: All of which 1 shall expose\nfor sale, or sufficient thereof to satisfy>atd judgment, debt, and costs, at the.front of my offleo\nnext to the court house, in tho city of Nolson, B.\n0., on Friday tho 3'th day ot October, A. 1')., 1900'\nat the hour of cloven o'clock in the forenoon.\nNote.\u2014Intending purchasers will satisfy them>\nsolves as to interest and title of tho said defendants. \u25a0      '\nDated at Slocan City the 12th day ot October.\n11XKI.\nS. P. TUCK, Sheriff of South Kootenay\nThe above sale is postponed until Monday, the\n28th day of November, lltX), at the same place\nand hour. S. P. TUCK,\nSheriff of Pouth Kootenay, THE TPvIBm-TE: NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY OCTOBER 30 1900\nQueen Victoria  Chocolates\nTHE   BEST   OUST   TIKIE   ^.^IRIKIET\nSOLID   03STL\"Sr   B-JT\nW. F. Teetzel & Co.\n3PXTO?   XTJP   I3ST   25   ^.\"N*X5\nso oBnsrT boxes\nCORNER BAKER AND JOSEPHINE STREETS.\nEVERYTHING W|UST GO\nTremendous Sacrifice Prices of i\\\\e FURNITURE and CARPETS purchased by\nThe OLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nFROM THE NELSON FURNITURE COMPANY.\nFive-foot Curtain Poles, complete... '\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022'    35c\nWindow Shades.'......        ......... .*         ..    25c\nLace Curtains, 3 1-2 yards long, per pair  $1.00\nBrussels Carpets, per yard     45c\nTapestry Carpets, per yard        .........;    65c\nBody Brussels, per yard... ..'\u25a0... ......    ,...;;. .$1.00\nVelvet Carpet, per yard  ..... ..  $1.10\nTlie above prices for Carpets innliirlc sewing, laying aiitl.'pap'ering.\nKitchen Chairs.  ..-     50c\nDining-room Chairs  ...75c, $1.00, $1.25\nRocking Chairs       $1.75 to $2.50\nBesides tlie above tlie stock\" includes everything in the fnvnitvire\nand carpet line, (roods on display in the Applewhaito building, corner\nBaker and Kootenay streets.\nSpecial Sales Daily until Stock is Run Off\nHo! -TorTal^\nSee our celebrated Fit Reform Clothing, also our magnificent lines of fancy vests. The. very latest in style\nand- pattern;   Our  stock   is   complete   in  all   lines.\nThe Nelson  Clothing House\n217 AND 219 BAKER STREET. NELSON.\nSTOVES!       STOVES!\nWe are sole agents for the celebrated\nCOLE'S HOT BLAST HEATERS\nWill burn anything.   Results unequalled\nin any line of heaters.\nLAWRENCE HARDWARE COMPANY\n^a'Ss \u00abS\u00bb \u2022\u00bb-.s vSs i\u00bb \u00bbSa \u2022?\u00bb i?a vS> i?a\nfRi\n-m\nw\nTO\n^\nW\nm\nContractors a\nBuilders\nnd\nm\nHaving\" disposed of our business to Mr. Ernest Mansfield, we\nbespeak for him a continuance of that liberal share of patronage\nwhich has been extended us during our career in Nelson. We can\nonly say that those traits' which have built up for us and maintained\nour reputation for reliable dealings will be continued throughout\nby the new firm. We therefore take great pleasure in recommending him to all our old customers, and also to any new ones who\nmay honor him with their patronage.\n#\nThanking you for past favors,\nThe West Kootenay Brick & Lime Co., Ltd.      ^\nT.  G. PROCTER, M\nNelson, B. C, 5th October, 1000.\nLute Managing Director\nm\nTo the Public...\nw\nlim Having taken over tlie business of the West Kootenay Brick &\nj\u2122 Lime Company, Limited, of Nelson, I beg to ask for a continuance\njju; of the patronage which you have heretofore extended them.   My\nW aim will be at all times to supply you with our products at lowest\n\u2022^ possible prices.    Being in a position to manufacture goods in larger %$.\n\/j^ quantities than before, we shall bo able to supply the trade at a 0T\n^ lower figure. 0\n($\\ It is our intention to install machinery to manufacture our 0\njm marble products, and next season we shall be in a position to supply q\njjL these products at reasonable rates. j,\np(h We shall also keep on hand a stock of Fire Brick, Fire Clay, I\njjm Tiles and Cement. (Kf\\\njjn\\ Our Bricks and Lime Rock have taken the First Prizes at the ($\\\n. <Wv' Spokane Industrial Exposition in 1899 and also this year.    We also\n\u25a0 2k secured prizes last year and this year for Ornamental and Building\ngg: Stone. '.\/'\u25a0'\u25a0\n2& We are prepared to offer special rates to Contractors  and\n^Builders.\n% ERNEST MANSFIELD,\n(j(h for The Mansfield Manufacturing Company. I\nWW ...-\u25a0   'Successors to I\n<jm J   : ...' The. West Kootenay Brjck <\u00a3\u2022 Lime Co., Ltd. j\nNelson; B. C, 5th October, 1900. Jfo\nCITY LOCAL NEWS\nTlie Mansfield Manufacturing\nCompany is:figuring' to supply the\nHall mines smelter with 10,000 tons\nof lime rock and 1000 tons of lime\n'annually.\nAt the meeting of the license\ncommissioners for 'the Ainsworth\ndistrict, held at Jiaslo hotel, licenses\nwere; granted to .1. .T. Cameron of\nLardo und W. \\V. Beaton of Rear\nLake.\nThe steamer'Nelson .was. over'.1.5\nhours late in arriving from Kootenay landing last nighc. She was\ndelayed through waiting for trains\nheld .up by. a slide on the Crow's\nNest road. \u25a0\nRev. S. rthodus of tli a Knglish\nchurch will discourse on \"A Deck of\nCards\" at the Baptist mission room,\nHume Addition, on Wednesday\nevening, October 81 st. All are\ncordially invited.\nA. G. Oreelman, the '.-contractor\nwho is to build the C. P. 11. freight\nsheds, expects to start work, \"within\na few days, a shipment of material\nfrom Nakusp being now en route.\nThe building is to be completed by\nDecember 15 and will cost $0000.\nMedhurst Rearrested.\nF. M. Medhurst, charged at Cranbrook last week . with embezzlement and admitted to bail in bonds\nof $1.500, was rearrested yesterday\non a second charge of embezzlement.\nThe C. P. R. officials were dissatisfied with the way in which the\ncase was handled aud swore out a\nnew warrant on Sunday before E.\nA. Crease, stipendiary magistrate.\nW. H. Langridge, chief auditor, and\nA. M. Johnson, local C. P. 11. solicitor, left last, night to attend the\npreliminary examination at Cranbrook on Wednesday. They will\noppose bail.\nRan Into a Slide.\nA bad wreck occurred yesterday\nmorning on the Crow's Nest road:\nThe extra freight westbound ran\ninto a big rock slide four miles east\nof Creston at a point where the\nembankment is 100 feet high.\nWhen the engine struck the slide\nshe left the track and plunged down\nhill taking three ears along. The\ncars were reduced to matchwood\nand the engine was badly wrecked.\nEngineer Hugh Brock was seriously\ncut about the head and his fireman\nhad a narrow escape. The Cranbrook emergency train leached the\nscene of the wreck quickly and\ntrains were delayed only a few\nhours. Tl le steamer Nelson, which\nconnects with the westbound passenger train, was 3i hours late into\nNelson.\nWRITTEN    BY    CONSERVATIVES.\n(Tiie Tribune bus placed a pari, of one column\nat. the disposal of the Conservatives, whose views\nwill be expressed therein from time to timn during thecampaign. Alike privilege is accorded\nthe'llaborparty-and^the^lnerals.l^ =\nThe principles that governed the\nactions of the Conservative party\nunder the able guidance of sir John\nA. Macdonald were not far removed\nfrom those which characterized tlie\nmagnificent diplomacy of the earl\nof Beaeonsfield, to whom sir John\nwas by many compared. The fundamental points of these principles\nare the conservatism of all that has\ninduced to the 'upbuilding of the\nbody .politic at home and a firm\nconviction that active imperialism\nabroad is the I'l-ue solution to the\nproblem of En gland's greatness.\nTlie Conservative is he who lops\nthe mouldering branch away iu\ncontradistinction to tlie axe-leveling propensities of the Liberal,\nnational and socialistic classes. Iu\nCanada, of necessity, politics beget\nlocal coloring; nevertheless, let all\nremember that in voting for the\nConservative party one is best upholding that imperialistic policy\nwhich has within this month received such a splendid endorsement\nat the -hands of the electors of\nGreat Britain and old Ireland.\nr.^.%\n-.$   $^m&<\u00a7'&\nKootenay Electric Supply & Construction Co., Ltd.\nElectric Fixtures Electric Fans\nMedical Batteries\nNelson, B. C.\nCOUnXbAKKR'AND JOSEPHINE SWEETS.\nThose whose minds are still wavering, and who missed hearing\nmayor Goodeve on Friday, lost a\ntreat, for it was one of the ablest\naddresses on the political questions\nof the day ever given in Nelson. So\nmuch so that we hear of masterly\nactivity in the Liberal and Labor\ncamps and a general hustling to get\na sneaker who will offset in some\nmeasure the good effect produced\nby Mr. Goodeve. Even if the\nLiberal ranks contains such an exponent of its principles he will find\nit hard plonghiug through the maze\nof facts presented by the mayor of\nRossland. Of the many unredeemed pledges none stands more\nprominent than the tariff. There\ncan bo no straddling the fence on\nthis issue\u2014it must be free trade or\nprotection. Tlie Conservative platform on this point is clear and unmistakable, that party advocates\nprotection' to infantile industries,\nbut no more. It does not endorse\nthe continuing of the duty on agricultural implements now that the\nCanadian manufacturers can compete in the markets of the world;\nneither does it approve of handing\nthe coal oil business in tho Dominion\nover to the Standard Oil company.\nAt present rate Ave may anticipate\nthe advent of other gigantic trusts\nand schemes to secure a general\nmortgage on us all in favor of\nUncle Sam.    \t\nThe Labor party appeals this\nmorning particularly to the merchants and traders of Nelson on\nthe general ground.\") that without\nthe laboring element they would\nrequire to close their doors. One\nmight.go a step further and say\nthat without, capital they, the' laborers, would be iii the poor house\nand soon. All the parties whose\nplatforms - contain revolutionary\nprinciples are \" more loyal than the\nking\" ; in this instance it is well\nknown that* the Labor party in\nRossland have started a co-operative\nstore and contemplate extending\ntheir operations to this and other\ntowns. One rises to enquire how\nmuch it will profit the merchants of\nNelson to vote for Chris Foley if\nthe laboring element is going to do\nits shopping, on a co-operative\nbasis? And echo answers Jmot\nmuch !\" Beyond a doubt when\nlabor gets too much power it becomes quite as despotic as capital\nand for thafcreason the electors of\nYale-Cariboo, and particularly the\nmerchants, will not be led away\nby such salmon-roe bait as the appeal above referred to.; '\nMining Records.\nYesterday's mining records were:\nTransfers: A three-quarters interest\nin the Yankee girl claim on Bear\ncreek, by J. II. Graham of Ymir to\nDan McLeod,.Orlanda A. Lovell and\nDavid E. Grobe of Ymir; a three-\nquarters iuterest in the Canadian\nGirl on Bear creek to Grobe, Graham and McLeocl by O. A. Lovell; a\nhalf interest in the New York and\nBuffalo claims, half a mile north of\nthe Ymir mine, by E. J. Kelly to N.\nN. Natstead of Ymir.\nLocations: The Winnipeg fraction\non.Toad mountain, by Percy Chapman; the Edith M., one mile northeast of Summit siding, on- the N. &\nF. S., by Thomas A. Weekes; tlie\nGreat Eastern,\\two and one-half\nmiles southwest of Ymir, by Samuel\nThomas; the. Ironside on Quartz\ncreek, one mile from Ymir, by\nMitchell Taite; the Syracuse, seven\nmiles east\" from the Columbia river,\nby Thomas .Tames and Louis Will.\nCertificates of work: To Jesee\nGraham and.W. A. Burpee on the\nJessie B.;. to J. IT. Graham on the\nCanadian Girl and Yankee Girl; to\nE. J. Keeley on the Buffalo and\nNew York; -to .Tolm McLatchie on\nthe .T. A. fraction.\nMeetings at Moyie and Cranbrook.\nCandidate MaeNeill, accompanied\nby mayor Goodeve of Rossland, will\naddress the electors of Moyie. on\nFriday evening, November 2nd, and\n=Cranbrook^fon=Satnrday\u2014evening,-\nthe 3rd. Tlie Conservatives of\nthese progressive towns will give\nthe speakers a cordial reception.\nPERSONAL.\nH. W. D.Armstrong  of Toronto\nis in llie city.\nF. W. Ttolt of Rossland was in\nthe city yesterday. -   -\nE. J. Flahiff and F. Lyon  of the\nAtliahasca mine are at the Tremont.\nJ. Frank Callam, president of tlie\nArlington Mining company, is in the city.\n. W. H^Aldridge, manager .of the\nTrail smell, v',-was at the Hotel Phatr yesterday.\nMrs. D. P., Christie of Slocan is\nin tho city. She is returning from a trip to\nF.nglaml.\nC. R.  Gilbert,' of the Provincial\nlure Underwriters' Association, is in the city today on association business.\nA. B. Buckworth of Ymir,   E. A.\nHill of Ymir, and II. W. I). Armstrong of Toronto\nare registered at the Queen's.      ' \u2022\u25a0\"-,\nMike Curlin of Sandon is at the\nMadden house. He is one of the pioneors'of\nSlocan and is defendant in the suit of Harris vs.\nCurlin, which is now* being heard at the assizes,\nB. S. Jenkins of Winnipeg, general superintendent of the C. P. R. telegraphs,\nand J. Wilson of Vancouver, superintendent of\nthe Pacific division'lelegraots, spent yesterday\nin Nelson. Mr. Jenkins left this morning for the\neast.\nDISSOLUTION OF  COPARTNERSHIP.\n-. The copartnership between the undersigned,\ndoing business under the Arm name of Orossetc\n& Fergusoiiv'at the East End Grocery, in the\nWest building, corner Baker and Hall streets. Is'\ndissolved by mutual consent. The business will\nbe carried on by A. E. Crossett. who will pay all\ndebts contracted by the firm.\n-      \"   \"     B.  C,\nDated at   Nelson,\nOctober, lflOO.\nthis 2fll.li  day  of\nA. E. OROSSETT,\n1). FERGUSON.\nVote for Niekerson\nto repair your watch. He was\nborn in the watch business.\nIf is platform is first-class workmanship. Baker Street, opposite Queen's hotel.\n\u25a0BHT\nHI   ZB^ZEIRS   <fe   CO.\n\"N**E3raSO\"N* bt-A-SLo s-A-^rooiisr\nSTOVES!   STOVES!   STOVES!\nHEATING STOVES, COOKING STOVES, AND STEEL RANGES\nSole Ageqts for the Original Cole's Hot Blast Goal Heaters\nSEE OUR GUNS AND RIFLES\nHEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF AMMUNITION\nTKLKPHONK 27 Store, Corner I taker and .losepliino Slico\nBUSINESS   MENTION.\nCellar to Rent\u2014Apply Merchants\nBank nf Halifax.\nHack   calls left at   tho   Pacific\nTransfer barn on Vernon street. Telephone\ncall as.\nFor     Bent\u2014Store    in   Tremont\nHotel block. Apply, lo Malono & Treirillus,\nTremont hotel.\nWanted\u2014Girl for general housework. Apply Mrs. H. .1. Kvans>, corner ot Carbonate and Hall streets.\nTo Let\u2014Furnished front room at\nreasonable figure; private board next door; fourth\nhouse above city hall, Victoria street.\nFound\u2014A   sum   of    money    on\nSaturday, October 271 Ii.- Owner can have same\nby proving property and paying expenses.\nLarge well furnished rooms to\nlot. Apply rooms 1 aaid 5 Macdonald building,\ncorner Josephine and. Vernon streets.\nTo Let\u2014Furnished room at reas-\nable'ligure; private hoard next door, fourth\nhouse above city hall, Victoria street.\nFor Sale\u2014A well established\nboarding house business. Apply after .1:80 p.m.\nCarbonate street,'two doors east of Josephine.\nFor Rent\u2014Unfurnished six-room\ncottage. Water, electric Might; aud sewerage.\nA pply lo Mrs. Croasdaile, Observatory street.\nFor Rent\u2014Well Furnished rooms,\nbath, electric lights, hot air. Mrs. Ogilvie, north\nside Carbonate street between Josephine and\nWard.\nWanted\u2014Girl wants situation as\nnurse or to do housework\/Understands cook-\nitiK...' Address F. II. - Case, Sentinel otlice,\nKamloops, B. C.\nStolen\u2014A set of carpenter's tools\nfrom tho electric dam. The party is known and\nho will save trouble by returning the articles to\nthisoillce.\nPosition wanted \u2014 By a bookkeeper, double entry or single; 20 years' experience, single, aged :*i. - Highest references.. Address 1''. A. I-'.,Tribune.\nTo Let\u2014From aud after Nov. 1 st,\ncottage at'the corner of Falls and Hoover Sts.\nFour looms and lean-to... Apply 13. P. Whallny,\nbox,818, Nelson, B.C.\nWho Could Sleep?\nIt's a pleasure to sleep when you have one\nof our alarm clocks to get you up at. the right\ntime.   It docs it, that's what.it is built.for.\nWo have the regular standard alarms\u2014SI.fiO\nup\u2014or the new intermittent, \"Must Get Up,\"\ntattoo alarms\u2014$2.75 up\u2014in various sizes and\nc>!ses, all warranted.\nPate naude Bros.\nNELSON TENT AND\n4WNING  FACTORY\nThe best equipped establishment in British Columbia for turning out\nall kinds of canvas goods.\ni|f Something New\nit)\nit\/\n$   MORRELL'S\n$   CELEBRATED\n||j    HAMS and B\/\\C0N\nit\/\nit\/\n;!\u2022 Direct, horn Iowa's world famed Corn Belt.\nMORRELL'S\nCELEBRATED\nHAMS and BACON\nIowa's Pride Bacon, 25c    \\|\/\nit\/    Iowa's Pride Ham, 22c\nit\/ \t\nt KIRKPATRICK & WILSON\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit)\nitf\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit\/\nit)\nit\/\n185 Baker Street   {\u00a3\nJE   Telephone 10\n^S-~S;~*&-a,'a'~a':T>'~a*&''fi-':\".t^'::\u00bb' g-\u00ab^-aa\u00bb\u00bb'.g>.\u00bbag.fg.^.<ag.<j\u00bb.^..aay.f(t.<\n'<\u2014\u2022 aag'\u00ab5'..aa\u00bb'.,a^?ig-<aam'J*<*g.<^\u00bb,<aa\u00bb.<aa>.^ar- g-. g .g.^.^ 'gg'g' *g.g.-g\u00abS*.\n~\"  NUTS\nThe new crop has arrived in time for\no Hallowe'en\nALMONDS, WALNUTS, HICKORY NUTS AND\nFILBERTS0\nWni. Hunter & Co.\nSAW &\nNELSON\nPLANING\nMILLS\nLimited.\nWe are prepared to Furnish\nby Rail, Barge or Teams\nDIMENSION LUMBER\nROUGH and DRESSED LUMBER\nLOCAL and COAST CEILING\nLOCAL and COAST FLOORING\nDOUBLE DRESSED COAST CEDAR\nRUSTIC, SHIPLAP, STEPPING\nPINE and CEDAR CASINGS\nDOOR JAMBS, WINDOW STILES\nTURNED WORK, BAND^SAWING\nBRACKETS} NEWEL POSTS\nTURNED VERANDA POSTS\nSTORE FRONTS\n^ooRsrwimowsnmir&LAss.\u2014\u2014\nGet Our Prices before\npurchasing- elsewhere. \u25a0  \u25a0'    \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\nOEPICE: CORNER HALL AND FRONT STREETS.\nFACTORY : HALL STREET, C. P. R. CROSSING.   MILLS : HALL STREET WHARE;|\nTHEO tyADSOJV Proprietor.\nBaker Street, NoIhou.\nKootenay   Coffee   Co.\nNELSON. B.O.\nCofTee roasters and dealers In Tea and Coffee.\nOffer fresh roasted coffee of beet quality as\nfollows t\nJava and Arabian Macha, per pound..-\nJava and Mocha Illend, 8 pounds\t\nFine Santos, i pounds -\nSantos Blend, 6 pounds.... \u2014\nOur Special Blend. 6 pounds\t\nOur Rio Boast, 6 pounds.........-..-..\u2014\nA tiial order soliolted.  Salesroom 2 doors east\nof OddfellnwH lilonk. Wenti Bakor Rtreeti.\nC.W.West&Oo.\nCOAL. I      WOOD!\nI 10\n1 00\n1 00\n1 00\n1 00\n100\nHard Coal       fljn RC t Crow's Nest      CtR 1R\nAnthracite       WO'IO I Coal t\u00bbD.IO\n\"D\"E3IjI\"V*Ej*E:i\"EIX>\nAGENTS IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY, Ltd.\nNo order can be accepted unions accompanied\nby cash; '   2\t\nOfllco:   Corner of Hall\nand Baker Strcots.\nTELEPHONE 33.\nLethbridge Gait Goal\nThe boBti valuo for the money In tho market\nfor all purposes.\ntkhmb CiiBtt   . W. P. Tibrhet, General Agent\n\u2022J'elepboiM 1 tt.   Omoe with O. D, J. Chrtatia,\nINVITATION\nYou are cordially invited0to attend and become^\na member of classes now being formed by\nMRS. W. D. CRANSTON\nLate graduate of the Ontario School of Decorative .drt\nfor  the advancement  of Fine Art Needlework.\nFree Classes will be formed\ninI(elson on Monday, and following days.\nAll lovers of the art, and those\ndesirous of learning will be made most welcomed\n\u25a0The celebrated, Brainerd \u00a7\u2022 Artnstrong's Asiatic Dyed Silks, hes\nin the world, and Brainerd J' Armstrong's Stamped Linens ivill t{\nused exclusively in this series of lessons.'\nA. FERLAND & CO.\nBAKER STREET.\nand\nMaple Syrup\nHoney\nWe have just received a large consignment of Old Settlers' Maple Syrup, the b'1\non tho rtfarket; also:some pure.Ontario White Clover Honey.. Try rt.        j j\nHouston Block.\nTelephone 161.\nP. O. Box 176.\nJOHN A. IRVING & d\nour Ei^glllT COSTS BUT ONE\"PENTm%S\u00abgl\nTo drop us a post card that wo may call and (five estimates.   It jjavea: w\nNever have any plumbing dono until you have seen our, goods and\nmany dollars.\nOPPOS1TH\nPOBTOnriCB.\noiir prices. VI\nSTRACHAN BROTHERS, Plumber\nE^&>^","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"No paper 1895-1896, 1897-1905<br><br>Frequency: Weekly<br><br>Titled The Tribune from 1892-12-01 to 1901-08-14. Titled The Nelson Tribune from 1901-08-15 to 1903-12-19.<br><br>Published by John Houston & Co. from 1892-12-01 to 1894-12-29; The Tribune Publishing Company from 1897-01-02 to 1898-12-31; an unidentified party from 1899-01-07 to 1901-08-31 and from 1902-08-30 to 1903-02-07; The Tribune Association from 1901-09-02 to 1902-02-25; and The Tribune Company from 1903-02-14 to 1903-12-19.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"The_Tribune_1900_10_30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0188267","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":"49.5000000","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.2832999","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":"Nelson, B.C. : Tribune 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 Nelson Tribune","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}