"289c7666-6e63-4522-ae99-27acdf3373d4"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "[The Nelson Canadian]"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-26"@en . "1907-02-25"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/dcanadi/items/1.0079835/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " '.ME I. NO. 225.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDgktil# Canadian\nNELSON, B. C. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, *907.\nFlPTT CBNT8 A MoHTM\nIE INDIAN LANDS\nrerr.ment Takes Firm\nSteps to Reserve\nhLUKENS* AID REPORT\non Recommending Establishment\nof Juvenile Courts Unanimously Passed.\nppeclal tu The Dally Canadian.)\nuver, Feb. 2j.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAi the annual\nof the Children's Aid society\n|vt.tli Sir Chark-s Hibbert Tnpper In\nchair, demonstrated very clearly\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD x eel ten I is the work uf this or-\nlatlon. . Tbe report ol the build\nommlttee was eminently mittsfac-\nand showed that at the end of\ntin* children will be moved into\nnew borne, a fine modern building\nBearing completion; standiug iu\n. flve acres of land. The general\nBl report gave details of much good\nppliahed. The report gave warm-\nlii.iiikh for assistance from cities\np.* Vancouver. A summary is as\n.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*,\npresenting the reiiort of the fifth\nwork of llie Children's Aid Boat Vancouver, your directors de-\n, r,-cisrd their appreciation or ihe\ncal sympathy extended to the\n|:rsi[ii all parts of the province of\nsilumlila. Tbe Increase in the\nI from ihe city of Vancouver, muk\n500 In all. and of Lhe provincial\n::,* i.t maul, inaknm- It $300 ln all.\nnost timely and relieved the so-\nIrssiii an otheiwise serious flnan-\ns-sUissii. The society still requires\n-iil>[iort as its res-ponstbililles\neadlly increasing.\nHns the year 28 children have\nsiniiiltted to the care of the t\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo-\nTliis cuvers only part of lhe\nloni Families representing 86\nhlldren have been visited and\nUss- advice and efforts of our\ntendent and secretary the con-\nol family life have been vastly\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD1.\nyear's reiiort showed tliat the\n'siiiiinltted to our control was\nthis year 2S have been added,\n.s issial of 122 (12 of whom are\ntlie home).\ni.cssuie tor the year was $5301.Al,\nHis- i xp.'iiiliture, $5363.56, leaving a\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn.y ssr $344.91.\nbuilding committee has begun\netinn of our out home on Powell\n|t. Hustings townsite, Ihe land hav.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD in secured by Mrs. T. E. Atkins.\ncu the building is complete we\n|)>.ive one of the most useful und\nsilissus Institutions In the prov-\nWe win own a large area of land.\nJnfortable building with Improved\narrangements und an Isolated\nollowlng resolution anent a\n\"Is- courl was siioken to and pro-\nI l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mr. !\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'. C. Wade Is worthy ot\n'-nl support ll was supported by\nMeU. Itussell*. \"In tlle opinion of\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"iity the time Is ripe for Ihe In-\nlon of Juvenile courla throughout\n||is>Mui'i sst' llrltlsh Columbia and\nsuch legislation bb thnt outlined\nlull entitled An Act Respecting\nI'stle Dslliiiiuluts and whicli lhe Do-\npiiillanieut Is now considering\n(M be adopted.\"\nMorrison has banded down\n|iii' ut In an Important cnBe. He\nthat the advertisement ot t^e\n\"' company offering Amerinn\nfs- '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDuipliiymenl in llrlllsh Columbia\ntransportation thrown in Is a\n|lilon of the Allen Labor Act. The\nnlsement brought, Slack, of Brad-\n, I'u., and half a dozen unskilled\nIfers to Die company's mills at\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIstuke. As a result, Richard Nlchol,\nplaintiff In the action, wus oUBted\nhis job und brought suit against\n\"Mipany. Under Iho act the penal-\n* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDP to $1000. Mr. Justice Morrison\nlhal from the nature of the ad\n(iBOment he was not satisfied lhat\ndy knew of the existence of the\nn Labor law and the placed thu\nilly at $200 and costs.\ni'i* King, a prominent Chinaman\neying from Nelson lo Victoria,\n|peil off here to visit frlonds and sud-\n\"It sick and died in the city on\n|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDy morning,\nview of the agitation about Indian\nreserve lands In the vicinity of Prince\nRupert the following notice appearing In\nIhe Government Gazette, by Hon. R.\nG. Tallow, acting chief commissioner of\nlands and works, Is timely:\n\"Notice Is given lhal In all cases ln\nwhich, In the past. Indians have surrendered their rights to, the lands which\nhave from time to tlm'e been set aside\nfor their use anil benefit, either In order\nthat the said lands may be leased, or\nthat they may be granted or otherwise\nalii nated to other persons, the lands\nwhich have been so surrendered, or\nwhich shall hereafter lie so surrendered,\nare hereby, for the purposes of the\npiovlnce of British Columbia, reserved\nfrom pre-emption sale or other alienation until otherwise ordered by the lien\ntenant governor In council.\nPaid Death Penalty.\nOsslng, N. Y., Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGeorge\nGianuer, agted 25, was put to death In\nthe electric chair at Sing Sing prison\nthis morning. His crime was the murder of a farmer, Charles Lutz, In Ducth-\nosb county ln 1905. The electrlct current was applied three times before\nCranger was declared dead.\nKEEP itiis\" CLEAN\nOrder Issued by T. Cunningham, Fruit\nPest Inspector\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSpring is Time\nfor Cleaning.\nThomas Cunningham, provincial fruit\npest Inspector, has Issued the following\norder under the uuthorlty ot the board\nof horticulture:\n\"Notice Is hereby given to owners of\norchards and fruit trees and all whum\nll may concern:\n\"Tbrt ln order to prevent the spread\nof InBect pests and diseases Injurious\nlo frull trees and fruit it is fouud imperatively necessary to prune and thoroughly Bpray all orchards lu this neighborhood with such mixtures as must be\napplied when trees are durmant.\nFor lhe destruction of all scale Insects, wooly aphis, bud moth, the eggs\nof green aphlB, and olher pests, the\nnumber one solution, vis., llnie sulphur-\nsalt solution, Is iouud to be the most ef-\nlecilve. Full particulars of the best\nmethod and applying this solution are\nuow published in a bulletin which may\nbe had ou application at the horticultural offlce, Vancouver; and from J. R. Anderson, secretary of the board of horti-\ncultuie. and R. M. Palmber, Victoria;\na,so W. E. Scott, Gauges Harbor, Salt\nSprings I .-..rn,I. Martin Uurrell, Grand\nFoiks, and tbe secretaries of the various Farmers' Institutes throughout Uie\nprovince.\n\"The necessity of maintaining lhe ex-\ncellcut reputation of Hritish Columbia\nIruit whicn is now rated higher lhau\nthat of any other district or province\nin lhe Hritish Umpire, is ot such paramount importance that ir tlie owners or\npersous lu [Kisscssiou of infected and\ndiseased Iruit trees further neglecl to\napply the necessary measures for\ncleansing the same the trees must be\ndestroyed al the expense of the owners,\nas provided by the UrlliBtt Columbia\nHorticultural Act aud amendments\nthereto.\n\"All primings, debris und other rubbish musl be burned up al the time of\npruning.\"\nANOTHER MYSTERIOUS DEATH.\nSami Pasha Expires Under Suspicious\nCircumstances.\nCoustanllnuple, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDVice Admlr.\nal Sami Pasbi, another of the commissioners engaged lu drawing up a plan\nfur the reform of the ministry and murine and invesiigatlng llle accounts oon.\nlucts'ti witli ihe ministry died suddenly yesterday under suspicious ciicuui-\nsiunc.s. His death, following closely\non the mysterious demise of llalrl\nPasha, the vice admiral, whose death\nwas announced Feb. 11, after he bud\nrefused to comply wllh the order can-\nceiling his appointment on the naval\ncommission, has caused a semi-panic\namong tlie naval officers here. Sami\nPesha was prefect of the port of Constantinople and enjoyed good health. He\nwas Been at the Rtldlz palace on thu\ndav of his death, looking nulls' well, nnil\nwaa seized with a falling sickness two\nhours afler dinner.\nPope Appeals to Hague.\nParis, Feb. 26.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA despatch to tho\nEclalre from Rome published loday affirms, apparently on the nuthorlty of the\nVatican, lhat It Is the intention of tbe\npope lo sent a communication!! lo The\nHague peace conference regarding Ihe\nexpulsion from France of Msr. Montagninl, the secretary of the Papal\nnuclnture at Paris anil lhe rupture of\nthe concordat.\nAlmust any man has a Job lol of experience on hand that he would gladly\ndispose of at 90 per cent, below cost.\nNEW SUNDAY LAW\nForcible Apai for a Fair\nRecognition\nSERMON IN ST. PAUL'S\nRev. T.J. Ferguson Outlines Movements Leading to Enactment\nof Lord's Day Act.\n.There was a good sized audience at St.\nPaul's Presbyterian church last evening\nto hear Rev. J. T. Ferguson discuss tbe\nLord's Hay Act which comes Inlo force\non the 1st of March. After reading\nselected portions of scripture both as\nlessons and texts upon which to show\nauthority for his remarks Rev. Mr. F'er.\nguBon introduced tlie subject of the evening by tracing briefly the history of\nllie movement which has led to the enactment of the present law. He\nshowed how it had been discovered that\nencroachment upon the rights and liberties of the people had not been suf-\nlicleutsy proieced by laws at preaent in\ntorce as they were antiquated. The\nmovement had originated with representative merchants, manufacturers\nand publicists. Out of this movement\narose an appeal to the premier of parliament for a new law which would be\nworthy of the twentieth century. Mr.\nFerguson deprecated the idea that the\nlaw is a sort of \"Trades Union*' move-\nment among ministers to force people\nto go to c.niieh. . He argued concluB-\nibely thai neither by direct reference\nor by implication can such interpretation be placed upon the act.\nHe ciied the case of France, reference\nlo which had been made by the premier\nin his reply to the committee which\nwailed upon him to press for the enactment of the law, showing how that\nnation bad been forced to take steps\nto enact measures winch stall stem the\ntide of Sabbath immorality. The force\nol the speakers argument lay in the\ntact that Canada is ouly doing what\nFrance haa found il necessary or imperative to do late. Following up this\nline the status of England was referred\nto and briefly described. It was shown\nthat the present social condtion iu England upon the Sabbath were recognized\nto be deplorable. Extracts from a pastoral letter written by the Archbishop\nof Canterbury, the (Catholic) Archbishop ol\" Westminister and tbe president of Uie council of free Evangelical\nchurches were read as well as the sarcastic ciillclsm of England's Sunday\nSocially by Marie Correli. He showed\nalso how the house of parliament in\nEngland bad appointed a committee to\nreport upon the question of Sabbath observance there and quoted from their\nreporl to show tliat the spirit of ma\nterialism and commercialism were\nIrreateuing the life of the nation socially, morally and religiously by the\ngrowing laxuess of lhe people upon tile\nquestion.\nln making Ihese citations the speaker\nsaid that his poiut was to show that In\ntlle eiincmen of he present law Canada\nhas done only what lhe leading and\nmost enlightened nations of Ihe world\nare doing to preserve the rights of the\npeople to one day of Felt In seven.\nIn pointing out what the Cuuadluu\nacl Ib not the Rev. preacher was em\nphatlc in his statement that It Is nol\nan act to make people become nominally Christians and secondly tt ls uot an\nact to compel people to go to church.\nIn slightly sarcastic tones ht said: \"lf\nll. were the latter I do not know that I\nshould have a word to say ln Its favor,\"\nand he showed the Bcriptttral method of\nappeal In Ihese matters.\nIn answer to Ihe question as to the\naim and spirit of the act he said: \" It\nIs an act to Interfere with those who\nwould abuse their liberty to the Injury\nof Ihe common weal;\" and he cited instances In which the interference with\nIndividual rights are In constant practice because the common weal demands\nII. A few of the instances cited were\nthe marriage laws and sanitation.\nClause 2 of the Act (which tlle speaker\nhad before rim) was read, and while Its\nprohibition wns sweeping, he went on to\nshow that there followed 24 exceptions\ndefining works of necessity and mercy\nwhich may be performed on Sunday.\nThe very number of theso showed that\nthe legislators had tried to frame a\nlaw which, while conserving the common good, -sought to make it broad\nenough to cover all the necessities and\neven frailitles of human nature. He\nplead for an tqually broad appreciation\nof the Act and said It simply meant to\nshow that If things went swinging along\nat the present gait the result will be\nthat multitudes will be deprived of their\ninalienable rights.\nHe dealt with some criticisms of the\nAct, among them one by a much respected local authority, who had characterized; it as \"grandmotherly and\npharisaiual.\" Afeain In slightly sarcastic tones he Bald: \".With all due\nrespect to the critic, he would lie sorry\nto admit this criticism as just.\" Denning the terms grandmotherly and\nPharisaical he showed how this, if true,\nmeiuit \"that the government had com\ninltted an act of incredible folly, and\nhe was not prepared to admit that such\nwas tre case.\" He said, also, that if\nthese criticisms were right it meant\n\"that it would be wrong and foolish for\nthe government to protect the rights\nof laboring men,\" and it meant further,\n\"that the government had spent a greal\namount of time In an attempt to ac-\ncomplish something that was impos-\nsslble.\"\nAfter some further reference to the\nminor details of the Act, such as Its\nprohibition of Sunday games, boating\nand the like, all of which, he aald, were\nprsiliibiu 1 only when practised for gain.\nHe acknowledged the debtiof the people\nto great corporations, but said he was\n\"glad the government had put lt into\nthe hands of the people to protect themselves from what might seem to these\ncorporations a necessity to exact from\nIheir employees more than they were\nentitled to.\" This with special reference to their power to compel employees to work seven daya or lose their\nplaces.\nIn conclusion he made an eloquent\nplea that the act might be interpreted\nin the higher light of what civilisation\nmeans. In judging the Act consideration should be sincerely and cordially\ngiven to what was the aim of the act.\nHe quoted a very ancient maxim of\nstatesman ship: \"The strength of thc\nlaw lies In the consent of the people,\"\nand he earnestly asked his hearers to\nrecognize this ln their estimate of the\nAct. Instead ot looking for faults and\nimperfections they should rise to an ap-\npreciation of its aim and what it must\nultimately mean to our civllzation as\nwell as our moral safety.. He pointed\nout tbe educational value of the Act.\ninasmuch as it had already set people\nthinking and asking themselves the\nquestion \"Am I doing right, by myself,\nby my family, by society and by my\ncommunity?\" In his peroration he set\nforth the words of the Creator in which\nit was claimed that the Sabbath law\nIs a great gift and IU observance a\ngreat privilege and he asked that In all\ncriticism or appreciation .of it be interpreted acoordlng to the spirit in which\nthe Sabbath day as a benflcient institution was conferred upon humanity.\nGUNTER IS DEAD.\nAuthor, Playwright and Publisher\nPasses Away Suddenly.\nNew York, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDArchibald Clav-\neriug Gunter, publisher, novelist and\nplaywright, died suddenly Saturday\nnight from apoplexy in his home in\nWest 3rd street. He had not been ill\nand waB engaged In writing the last\npageB of the manuscript of a play when\nhe was fatally stricken.\nMr. Gunter was born in Liverpool 59\nyears ago. Mrs. Gunter, who waB Esther\nliurnes, survives him. They had no\ncbildren. Mr. Guntelr used the immense profits from the sale of his first\nsuccessful novel, Mr. Barnes of New\nYork,\" which went through edition after\nedition, asd of which more than 1,000,-\n000 copies have been sold here and in\nEngland, to establish - a publishing\nhouse und had published his own recent\nworks, . He was proprietor of the Home\nPublishing company on East 14th street.\nHoping for Peace.\nRome, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDKing Victor Emmanuel today received Professor de\nMartens, Russian imperial councillor of\nstate, tn most cordial private audience.\nDuring the course ot their conversation\nHis Majesty expressed the hope that\nall tbe powers would arrive at an agreement on the programme which would\ncontribute to the success of the approaching peace conference at The\nHague.\nKing Haakon's Opinion.\nTrondhjem, Norway, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDKing\nHaakon, at his after-dinner discussion\nof thc coming conference at Tbe Hague,\nsaid he recognised that there would bo\nextreme difficulty ln arriving at any International agreement of armaments,\nbut thought the conference should seek\nto reach an agreement prohibiting the\nemployment of airships and submarine\nvessels in war.\nHOW IT WILL WORK\nLord's Day Act When\nProperly Enforced\nPROSPECTUS OF DETAILS\nSecretary Rochester Answers Questions Affecting Minor Sunday Privileges.\nVictoria, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe Sunday Act,\nwhich will come into force on March\n1st will affect many residents. The\nwestern secretary ol the Lord's Day\nalliance, Hev. W. M. Rochester, who is\nat present In Victoria in -company with\na number of the members of tbe local\norganization, waited upon the attorney\ngeneral with a view to obtaining bis assent to prosecutions under the act provided a reasonable case is laid.\nCigar stands, confectionery stores\nand groceries all come under this act,\nbut in order to prevent prosecution the\nassent of the attorney general must first -\nbe obtained before a charge may be\nlaid or a case followed up.\nTne^e has never been a Sunday observance law enforced on the Island.\nWhen British Columbia was elected\ninto a colony by the Imperial government in 1852, the governor, Sir James\nDouglass, by proclamation, brought into\nforce the English Sunday act. When\nBritish Columbia became a province of\nthe Dominion the law was continued in\nforce, but the law was never enforced\non the island.\nA meeting ot the Lord's Day alliance\nwas held in Victoria yesterday when\nIt was shown that, hereafter, if the act\nbe strictly enforced It will be Illegal\nfor the Sunday school children to receive their little paper on the Lord's\nday. This somewhat startling discovery\naiose out of a question asked by one\nof the audience. Rev. Dr. Rochester,\nthe travelling secretary of the alliance,\nwho was the speaker of the evening,\nhad been explaining the regulations of\nihe act to govern the publication of\nnewspapers on Sunday. Not only was\nit forbidden to issue a journal on the\nLord's Day, but he also pointed out the\nsale or distribution on the Sabbath of\npapers published in any foreign country was prohibited, it was then that\none oi those present asked Mr. Rochester how the law would apply to\nthe Sunday school papers. Mr. Rochester appeared somewhat puzzled, and remarked that this was a matter which\nhad been overlooked in drawing out the\nact\nWhere are the papers published,\"\nhe asked.\n\"On the American side.\"\n\"Well, if that's the case, I'm afraid\nihat lt will be illegal to distribute them\noa Sunday,\" replied Dr. Rochester, and\na buzz of excited whispering rose from\nthe audience. The prospect of little\nJohnny getting his Sunday school Bheet\nthrough the post was a distinctly novel\none and opened up a long vista of\npossibilities.\nSunday excursions were to be strictly prohibited. \"I dou't know whether\nyou have had Sunday excursions in this\npiovlnce or not,\" said Dr. Rochester,\nbut in Winnipeg, steamboat excursions\non the Red River have been taking\nplace every Sabbath during the summer\ntime. When the act is enforced there\nwill be no more of this.\"\nSome member cf the audience was\nmoved to ask how this would effect\n\"tram companies running cars to a park\nwhere there are Sunday band concerts.\"\n\"Such csncits would bj forbidden\nunder the act,\" replied Dr. Rochester.\n\"But mere ia no admission charged,\"\nchorused several voiceB.\n\"No matter, the bandsmen would\nhave to be paid. They would be following their cuitouiary avoc.tion on\nthe Sabbath,\" explained Dr. Rochester,\n\"and tliat Is prohibited.\"\nSunday newspapers, * the doctor\nBtated, would become a thing of lhe\npast. Victorians would have to read\ntheir Sunday paper on Mends;, \"I\nknow lhat it ls claimed,\" said he, \"that\nmore work ls done for a Monday paper\non Sunday, than for the Sunday paper\non Sunday.\" This, however, he explained, was one of those cases where\nthe interest of the few must give way\nbefore the intest of the many; and he\nfelt sure that those who might be Inconvenienced by the act would show\ntheir magnanimity by standing in with\nthe movement for Sunday observances.\nComing down to Victoria, Dr. Rochester suggested that It would be in the\nbest Interests of the city to have the\nbootblack stands, the confectionery and\ntobacco stores and the newsstands\nclosed on the Sabbath. As to the sale\nof liquor on Sunday, he was sure that\nsufficient attention was already paid\nto that.\nConfers Grand Cordon.\nRome, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDKing Victor Emmanuel has signed a decree bestowing on\nGeorge Von Lengerke Meyer, the newly-\nappointed postmaster general In President Roosevelt's cabinet, the grand -cordon of the order of St. Maurlc and St\nLasarus as an expression ot appreciation for his work when United States\nambassador to Italy.\nPhilippine Cyclone. '\nMadrid, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA telegram from\nManila announces tbat the southern\nPhilippines have been ravaged by a cyclone and that 200 persons were killed\nand thousands of others rendered\nhomeless.\nTHAW \m RESUMED\nAttorney Jerome Again Places Evelyn\nNesbitt on the Rack\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRevelations\nof High Life Continue.\nNew York, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWhen the trial\nof Haery K. Thaw for the murder of\nStanford White was resumed this\nmorning before Justice Fitsgerald ln\nthe supreme court, Distriet Attorney\nJerome continued with his cross-examination of Evelyn Nesbitt Thaw. She\nwas immediately called to the stand\nand without any preliminary statement\nthe attorney started into his work. Mrs.\nThaw looked recovered after her three\nday's rest and answered the first questions put to her confidentially.\nThaw brought with him from the\nTombs several packages of letters and\npapers. Mr. Jerome, as on thc previous\ndays of his cross-examination, continued\nto jump about from place to place In\nthe witnesses' Btory. He asked first of\nall today if she had not had trouble\nwith her mother tn Alleghany, Pa, before going to Philadelphia to live. If\nshe had not run away with another girl.\nThis Mrs. Thaw denied.\n\"How long after the drugging in the\n24th street house was It that the account was opened up for you ln the\nAmsterdam Bank by Stanford White?\"\n\"I can't tell how long, it might hare\nbeen a month.\"\n\"When did you first meet Frances\nBelmont?\"\n\"When I was In Florodora.\"\n\"Before ycu met Stanford White!\"\n\"I think so.\"\n\"Had you gone to supper with Fran\ncis Belmont before you met White.\"\nMr. Jerome continued to hold the\nmenace of documentary evidence before\nthe witness, basing all his questions\nevidently upon affidavits made by the\nglrl'B mother and brother.\n\"No.\" She had gone to several suppers with Frances Belmont afterwards\nbut White was not present at all, except one. Mr. Jerome asked the witness it she had not often gone to suppers with two men, whose names he\nwhispered to her.\n\"I never went with them, but they\nwere present.'*\n\"Did they not on occasions take yon\nhome?\"\n\"One took me home twice, and the\nothe once, but there was always another\ngirl with me.' ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"Miss Belmont?\"\n\"No.\"\n\"These suppers were after the\ntheatre?\"\n\"On Feb. 22nd, 1902, were you on\ngood terms with Frances Belmont?\"\n\"I think so.\"\n\"After you left Florodora what was\nyour next employment?* *\n\"With the Wild Rose in Phil*\nile'phia.\"\n\"Who was there with you \"\n\"My mother.\"\n\"Do you know Angella Vincent?\"\n\"Yes.\"\nA letter and env lope was shown Mrs.\nThaw, who identified ihe writing as\nt^at of While. The e-ivelope was postmarked Boston. Jan. 20th. 1902. and was\nn.lilr-'sse] to Charles Hartnett, while\np-lvate secretary. It read: \"Dear\nHa-tnett\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPlease telephone Mrs. Net-\nb'tt to let you know whenever Miss\nEvelyn decid's to go on her vacation.\nThen hand this note to tbe Mercantile\nTru\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt company.. Please n'tlfv Miss\nNe-hltt that on receiving word that she\nIs to start en her vacation you will\nBeand her the weekly checks for $25 and\nan odlltioURl che-k for 1200.\"\nBy this letter and the Introduction\ncf checks sl-rn'd both hy Evelyn Ne*\nbti and her mothT, Mr. Jerome refreshed Mrs. Thaw's memory eo that\nsh? said she hsd lived at the Auditorium apartments from Feb. 1 to April 1,\n1902. Th? checks were given In payment of hotel bills and were drawn\nagainst a deposit made In the New Am-\nst'-rilnm bank by Stanford White to\nIhe joint credit of Mrs. Nesbitt and her\ndaughter. By producing exhibit 23, a\ncheck. Mr. Jerome brought out the fact\nthat between April 1, 1902. and April\n17, 1902. Mrs. Thaw and her mother\nwent to live at tho Hotel Arlington.\nMrs. Thaw was confronted by Dr.\nCatlUon nnd Dr. Flint, but denied po\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ntlvely that Bhe had ever seen htm be\nfore Bhe had gone out with Jack Bar-\nrymore. Justice Fitzgerald ruled out\nthe question when Mr. Jerome asked\nMrs. Thaw lf White had not urged her\nhave Barrymore arrested for seduction\nMADE GREAT HAUL\nTreasury Loses Nearly\nQuarter Million\nENVELOPED IN MYSTERY\nUnited States Vaults Looted of Vast\nSun by Clever Employees\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nDetectives Disclosures.\nChicago, Feb. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe Tribune today\nsajns:\nSomewhere between 1175,000 and\n1200,000 were stolen from the local sub-\ntreasures* laat week.. Chief Wllkle of\nthe United States secret service, has\nbeen keeping informed by telephone\nand telegraph of every dedelopment ln\nthe case and will leave Washington today to take personal charge of the investigation made by the authorities\nSecretary Shaw of the treasury department was told of the theft when he\nreached here laat week and conferred\nwith Sub-Treasurer Wm. Bolden\nWelcks and the secret service officers.\nThe money was stolen either a week\nago Saturday, th next day or laat Monday. The chances are it was abstracted\non Monday. Tbe loss waa discovered\non Tuesday. All the money taken was\ntn bills of the denomination of 11000,\nfSOOO and $10,000.\nAt first It was beUs-vat that there waa\nsome error in the bookkeeping. It wu\nthought to be Impossible that audi a\nlarge sum of money ecsM have been abstracted in face ot an th* safeguards\naround Uncle Sam's strong boxes. The\nledger men strenuously deny any error\nand an invesigatlon showed that there\nwas no possible clerical message to account for the disappearance Mt the caah.\nThis brought the inevitable conclusion that robbery waa the only explanation.. Just as certain was the deduction that the thievea wero employees of the sub-treasury and were at\nthat moment pursuing tseir dally tasks.\nEvery man who could have had anything to do with the case waa called Into Treasurer Bolden Weick's office and\nput through an exhaustive examination\nand a still more rigid cross-examination\nby Captain Hotter, of the secret service. They stood the ordeal. All denied knowledge of the theft and protested their innocence. But it waa obvious that some one was lying.\nThe chances are 10,000 to 1 tbat one\nor more of the employeea actually had\npurloined the cash or had connived at\nthe theft by some outsider. Day by day\nthe investigation haa been kept op. Saturday there came a glimmer of light. A\nfaint clue pointed ln the direction of a\ncertain clerk, and that followed up, directed the fires of suspicion to another,\nemployee, a cloae associate of the flrat\nman. The men were summoned separately. The suspicious circumstances\nwere the certalnity of detection and\npunishment was impressed upon them\nand they were advised to make a clean\nbreast of whatever part they had played\nin the conspiracy.\nOne, thought to be the moving spirit\ncame down through the ordeal calm and\nself-posessed.. The officers put him\ndown as Innocent or a master hand ot\ncriminality. The other, younger,\nshowed signs of breaking down. Just\nwhat he admitted the secret service\nmen refuse to disclose, but It Is believed\nlo be tantamount to a confession. The\nadmission he made started the lavesti-\ngatlon Into renewed activity.\nHalf a dosen officers started out and\nresults are predicted soon. Every employee of the office Is under surveillance\nday and night, aa dshould one of them\nprove to the thieves, escape will be Impossible.\n*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"_\" Italy and The Hague.\nRome, Feb. IS.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFrom the work of\nProfessor de Ma-tens, Russian Imperial\ncouncillor of state, which already has\nbegun here ln connection with the forthcoming -session of The Hague tribunal,\nlt appears that Italy, recognising th*\nnecessity for peace, will singly cooperate In auy movement leading to peace\nor lo the simultaneous dlsarment of na\ntlons to avert the disasters of war.\ni I\n*' ' I\nW\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n1\nPrice af Metals.\nNew Tort, Feb. JB.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSilver, (Sc; copper 24-Hs; lead, ft.\nLondon, Feb. SS.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSilver, 81 M-Ild;\n\"aad, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD11, 10s. ,._t IR\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nii - *\nThe Daily Canadian\nHUDSON'S BAY\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD STORES ===\nJUST ARRIVED\nTWO CARLOADS FIRST\nCLASS TIMOTHY HAY\nONK CAR LOAD OF OATS\nONE CARLOAD WHEAT\nHUDSON'S BAY STORES\nNELSON, B. C.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHead Office: Toronto.\nCAPITAL PAID UP... .fl.OOO.OOO REST \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD4,500,000.\nD. B. WILi-lE, President. HON. ROBERT JAFFRAY, Vice-President ~\nARROWHEAD,\nBranches in British Colombia:\nHOLDEN, NELSON, REVELSTOKE, CRANBROOK.\nVANCOUVER, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDeposits received and interest allowed current rates from date of opening of\naccount, and compounded half yearly.\nNELSON BRANCH\nJ. M. LAY, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE: HALIFAX, N. S.\nCapltsl\n $3,734,310 Reserve S-4,-207,741\nTotal Assets $41,860,393\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nAccounts of firms and individuals opened on the most favorable terms.\nThirteen branches In British Columbia.\nSpecial attention to out of town business.\nT. E. KENNY, Pres., Halifax. E. L. PEASE, General Manager, Montreal.\nG. A. SPINK, Manager Nelson Branch.\nTHE DAILY CANADIAN\nPublished six days a week b7 the\nCANADIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY, Lti.\nBnker St., Nelsou. B, 0.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDrfptlon rates, BO centl a month delivered\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDolnr, or \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtf.uu H year ll sent by mull, when\nm advance.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDertlclne rates on application.\n\"All monies paid In settlement of The Dally\nCaoadlun accounts, either Inr MibucjripUons or\naitrerUitns. muit be receipted fer on tho printed\nformi of the Company. Other receipts are not\nFEBRUAHV 2\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. 1907.\n\"By one word we nre sometimes nidfpd lo te\nwiie and by one word sometimes Judged to be\nfc.ollsb. Let un therefore be careful what we\ntay.-\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDC'oMToitrt.\nMORAL REFORM.\nIt is doubtless the duly of sill journals\nhaving the welfare of the public at\nheart to give Home prominence to the\nQuestion of foral reflrm bul It ta dls,\ntirictively the duty of religious journals.\nThe Western MethoHat Recorder, pub,\nllshed at Victoria, evidently recognises\nthis und in a well written, though father\nambtgtous editorial in its February\nnumber makes some comparisons be,\ntween tbe attitude of ihe present k<>v\nernment and that of the opposition on\nthe question of local option. After\npointing out that the government is\nequipped to grant good legislation and\nwhile \"there is reason to doubt thai it\nwili do so,\" the Reoorder kocb on to\nsay:\n\"Moral reformers can hardly bs ex.\npeeled to forget that in the last house\nit was the Conservatives who opposed\nlocai option and the Liberals who\nnearly all supported it. There were,\nprobably, special circumstances which\npartly account for this, but it is nol\ncreditable to the predominant party and\nthough their Interests were notaffecttd\nby it in the recent election ll will not\nbe safe for any party or politician in\nfuture to trifle with the growing\nstrength of moral sentiment On the\nother hand, the Uberal party lusl many\nadherents in the recent contest because,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwhile always posing \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDs the party of true\nreforms, thep hadn't the courage to\ninclude a single moral rtform plank\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nnot even temperance\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIntheir platform.\nThere is little organisation of moral\ntientlmenl at present, but there are\nmany Indications that tlie public Is\nbeginning to look for moral principle\nin public affairs.\"\nWe do not know what the Recorder\ncun mean in stating that were special\ncircumstances which induced the mem\nbers of the Conservative party to vote\nagainst local option but we are of the\nopinion that the commendation of the\nLiberals in the local house is easily understood. The implied compliment is,\nwe fear, entirely undeserved. If the\nLiberals of Hritish Columbia are any\nmore in favor of moral and temperance\nreform than the Conservatives they are\nof a different stamp from those of other\nprovinces.\nEvery one will remember the humiliating treatment of these questions by\nthe late Koss government In Ontario.\nForced by years of agitation and the\ninsistent demands of a large and influential body of temperance reformers,\nwell organized, they granted a vote on\na prohibitory measure which was overwhelmingly carried by the country.\nHacked thus, apparently at least, by\npublic sentiment, and perfectly safe in\ndoing so, what would naturally be expected of the Koss government would be\ntbe enactment of prohibitory legislation.\nDid they do this? Not at all.. They suddenly made the discovery that there\nwere doubts as to whether such legislation lay within the prerogative of provincial assemblies or was exclusively\nlhe privilege of the Dominion parliament.\nOn carrying the case to the privy\ncouncil they found, with a feeling of relief, that the function was beyond them.\nWhen Parliament Hill at Ottawa was\nattacked by the temperances forces\nbacked by largely signed petitions It\nat last reluctabtly consented to submit\na prohibition plebiscite, but in doing\nso the government made the conditions\nso onerous thut to carry the plebiscite\nwith the required majority proved to\nbe an impossibility and again the ques-\nton was conveniently shelved. We do\nnot know how long it will remain on the\nshelf but it Will not be taken off by the\nUberal party until extreme pressure\nproves the expediency of doing so.\nWe state these things, not at all for\nthe sake of arguing against any special\nmethod of moral reform but to show\nwhat has been the attitude of Liberals\nIn other provinces and in the Dominion.\nIn seeking reasons for the reluctance\nof parliament to deal drastically with\nrecognized snd soccalletl moral evils\nThe Recorder states one of them succinctly when it says:\n\"However, we moral reformers ourselves, are not free from reproach.\nThere must be agreement as to what\nwe want and such united effort to secure it that when the authorities are\napproached they will be convinced the\ndemand comes from not a few but formidable multitude of the people.\"\nSince the admission is so frankly\nmade by the journal in question it is\nunecessary to enlarge further upon it.\nThe other feature of the situation which\nmust not be overlooked Is that there Is\nno general concensus of opinion on\nquestions of moral reform as there Is\nupon political and economic questions.\nIt is not difficult to get together enough\nmen who agree on political questions to\nform a strong party and to raise and\nprosecute issues more or less Important. On moral reform issues, while\nthere is a general agreement that moral\nri'form is good, there is an equally\ngeneral feeling that It Is good for the\nother fellow.There is a morbid dread\nof interference by legislation\nwith what people are pleased to call\ntheir individual liberties and this is\nespecially the case ln matters of temperance. It goes to show tliat such\nmeasures of reform as are deslrel by\nthose who are in advance of general\nsentiment upon the subject can only\nbe secured by reforming men from within, which is to say, by converting men\nto the same thought upon the question\nas the wouldbe reformer. The greatest\neras in temperance advance were wren\nmen used their persuasive eloquence to\ncreate a healthy deprecation of the\ntraffic in aud use of strong drinks.\nWhile we are in no sense opposed to\nmore advanced temperance legislation\nwe are of the opinion that it cannot be\nsecured by using the big stick to legislatures and parliaments. A more general recognition of this theory by reform workers and a reversion to old\ntime methods will create the sentiment\ndesired and better laws will come\nnaturally if they be needed at all.\nLORD'S DAY ACT.\nThe Lord's Day Act, an act to secure\nthe better observance of the day com.\nmonly called Sunday, comes into efftct\non Friday next and next Sunday people\nwho desire to obey the letter of the law\nwill find their liberties considerably\ncurtailed. Those people who have no\nrespect for the law will continue to do\nus they please and perhaps take the\nconsequences.\nIn many respects the act is a desirable\nand commendable one. In so far us it\nsecures men their natural right to a\nday of rest\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDor we may say the day of\nrest\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIt is good. The tendency of cor'\nporations is to regard every day alike\nand to exact for their employees\nunremitting toil. That this is an evil\nno one will deny and any measure\nwhich will protect a man who labors\nfrom being compelled to labor seven\ndays a week or lose his employment is\ngood. Doubtless the absence of such a\nlaw has had a tendency to encourage\ncorporations to increase the earning\npowers of their plants by forcing meu\nto labor unnecessarily and its proper\nenforcement will work for the good of\nail concerned by reducing this leniency\nto a minimum. There are other\nfeatures of the law which are not to be\ncommended. We refer to these features\nwhich interfere in what men have\nlearned to regard as their natural\nliberties in the pleasuarable enjoyment\nof Sunday. A large majority of Canadian\npeople have outgrown the Puritanical\nideas of the manner in which Sunday\nshould be kept. It is doubtful if the\npeople of any Canadian city running\nstreet cars on Sunday would vote for\nthe abolition of the service. Yet the\nlaw\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDin spirit at least\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmeans that\nthese should be stopped. Its compromises on the question is a catering to public opinion which shows the difficulty the\nCramers of the law have had to meet\nin securing what they desired aud yet\nkeeping far awuy enough from the\nprecipice to evade being plunged over.\nThat it will be geserally obeyed ln\nthe west we reluctantly disbelieve. We\nfear the industries of the country are\nsuch that, while the evils of Suiilay\nlabor may be reduced, they cannot be\nabolished though we heartily wish it\nwere otherwise. In bo far as boating,\nfishing, shooting aud the generally\nindulged sports we fear it will be utterly\nIneffective.\nAs the question of Sunday newspapers\ndoes not concern The Dally Canadian\nas yet we shall not discuss than fealuru\nof the law.\nEDITORIAL COMMENT,\nWe may frankly say that we ure\nmuch mistaken In Premier Meilride if\nhe allowH the Grand Trunk Pacific\nrailway to appropriate those Indian\nlands north without just compensation.\nParty politics are ine thing, but provincial rights are another.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGrcenwool\nTimes.\nTh \"Old Man\" of he Cranbrook\nHeraldd is not without a knowledge of\nhow to hit below the belt. As the Joke\nIs on \"Dad,\" howeber, we do not mind.\nThe Fernie Ledger has passed into\nthe handB of the United Mine Workers\nof America, who now exclusively con\ntrol its policy and business aZairs, D.\nV. Motl continues to wield tho editorial\npen, and in a lengthy article, setting\nforth the announcement of the change,\npltlly states the policy to be pursued by\nth. paper. It says:\n\"Those engaged in the directing of\nthe capital which is legitimately engaged in aiding the production nf all\nnecessary commodities which enter into\nthe industrial und economic life of the\ncountry, will find a friend In the\nLedger.\nOnly the abuses of ilm powers ere-\nated by laws made by ilie representatives of lhe people need tear attack\nfrom us.\nSuch a paper is urgently need in the\nWest, and we wish tie* Ledger every\nsuccess under its new ownership.\nfJlPo\"$1.50\nUPWARDS\nA collection of all tlie Latest\nShapesand Sizes. A free\nsmoking and most satisfactory pipe.\nW. cA. THURMAN,\nTobacconist. Baker Street.\nTIMBER NOTICES.\nTake notloe that I intend, thirty dayi tiricr\ndate to apply to the Bonorable ihe Chief Com-\nminloner of Landa mtd Works for a ipeclal\nlicence tocuvand carry hwhv timber from the\nfollowing described lands, -limit.*d mi Sati.lv\nOreek, In West Kootenay district: Commencing\nat a poel planted on tbe wi t\ il le, of tald creek,\nand marke*! --j. p, sv northwest corner; thenoe\nrunning mth eighty chains; tnence eaat eighty\nchains, thenca north eighty chalus; thenoe west\neighty ohaini to plaoe oi commencement.\nt. P, bWBOBIttG,\nDated this IStfa d\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDy ol February. 1907.\nTake notloe that thirty days aft-r date i intend to apply to tlie Chlel Commiasioner ut\nLanda anaTrorVg at Victoria lor permission to\nout and oaky away timber from ibe following\ndeaorlbed Lands In West Kootenay;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nNo L\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCommencing at a post planted at ih<-\nsouthwest oorner oi timber licence No. 7821;\nth\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnce east lorty ohalns; thence nurth eight;\nchains; thena* etiU liQ chain*, thenee south to\nnorthern boundary ot timber license BM8; thenoe\nwest along said northern boundary to\nthe north-west comer of said lieen se;\nthen son tii to the northern boundary\nOi timber '.Icense 7U18; thein-e went to\na poln| due south of the point of coin rae ru-mont;\ntheuee north to the point oi eommeneement\nJanuary 16th, litUT\nNo. 2 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Commencing at the northweal corner\nOl timber license 7821; thence sonth tothf northern boundary oi timber license7018; ihence wes)\nto tbe north-west oorner of said timber license\nthenoe SOUth to the northern boundary of I-ot\nBIS] thenee lollowlng said boundary of-aid\nlot west to the right of way of the B.C pouth-\nera Railway; thence following said right of way\nIn a norlh Utterly direction to the place of com\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nmeneement*\nJanuary IMh. 1907.\nNo. 3 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Commencing at a southeast Rorner of\ntimber license Ko. \"sil, about fifty chnin- south\nof the right ol way nl the B C. Southern Ball-\nwaytthanoaeast 180 chatna:thenoe nonh forty\nohalna; thence west its- cbaina; thence south\nforty ehulns to plane of eommeucement.\nJanuary 15th. 191)7,\nr-'o. 4 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCommencing at a posi punted at the\nIntersection of the hou I hem boundary ofthe\nright ol way of the IJ. ('. Southern Hull wny, and\ntlie eastern boundary of Lot -ilST; thence nouth\nto the northern bonndary otllcenee application\nKoS; thence tast 160ohalns; them e n< nh to the\nsouthern boundary of timber license ho 7196;\ntheuce following tlie southern boundary of said\nlicense westerly about sixty chain*, more or les*\nlo an eastern boundarv of said Uoenie; thenca\nsouth fortv eliains; thenee west eighty chalna;\nthen north to the rkht of wav of tio* II C\nSouthern Railway, theme following laid right\nof way in a southwesterly direction to tlie place\nof beftiuulug.\nJanuary 15th, 1001\nNo 5.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' ommencliiH at a post planted at the\nsouthwest corner of Piinbf r license fiWi: theme\nwast sixty chains more or le-js to a point doe\nsouth of the southeast oornar oi license application No. 3; theuce north sixtv chains in r\nless tn the sontb bouudary of ll'ilisf application\nNo 4; Ihenee east to the southeast corner\nof said license application of No 4; tin u.e\nnorth lo the nortlieast corner of said license\napplication No 4; theuce eatt to lhe southeast corner of timber llcei.se 7186; tbenee\nuorth forty chains more or less to a point due\nwest nf the uorth-west corner of timber license\nO&i.; thence east to the northwest corner of said\ntimber license No.tK>3o; theme south lfiu chains\nto the point of commencement\nJanuary IMh, 1807.\nMo. 6\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCommencing at a poal planted ai the\nsoutheast oornar of timber licenae 8685; ihence\nweat to ihe south we*i comer of licenae appltea>\nUon Mp ft; tbeQcenortfa tO southern boundary\nof license npplicnlion Ko.Bj thenoe west to the\niiorthcaHt comer of license application No. 1;\nthence south to the northern boundary of\ntimber llceuse VAH\", Ihcnce easl to thc northeast\neorner of tlmher license Hiiin; Lhence south\nthirty chains; thencecast to the weal boundary\nof timber license BMS; thenee north to the place\nof beginning.\nJanuary lftth, 1W7.\nNo. 7.- Commencing at'atKMl planted at the\nnortheaat comer of timber licenae BftH; Lbence\nsouth forty .bains imm* or leaa to No- north\nboundary of timber license Villi; tbenoe cast Ihi\nChains; (bO&Ce north forty chains moreor less to\nu point due-east of the southeast corner ol Ilm\nber licenae SMS; thence west 160 chaini to lha\nplace of beginning.\nJanuary IMh. 1807.\nNo. Bt\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOommenelng at a post planted at the\nnortheaat corner of timber license No. 8W6;\niloner south eighty chains; thonoe east eighty\nchains; thence north eighty chalna; thence west\neighty chain* to place of commencement.\nJanuary lftth, 1007.\nNo II, Commencing at a posl plauied al the\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDontheaatcorner oi umber license BM7; thence\nnorth eightv chains; thonoe eaal eighty chains;\nIhence nortii 120obaina more or leM l<> lhe north\neast i orner oi license application Ko 7; (bunco\nwest to southeast oorner ol timber license No.\nB548; thence Uorth to the southern boundarv of\nlicense application BO. ftl thenee east ta\ntin* west boundary of limber license Mo.\n8M2| theliee south to the south went i orner of timber license 8M2; tbence west\nto tii northwest comer of timber licenae No\nKM'-;; thenoe south to the northeast comer of\ntimber 1100088 No. 864*1 iheime wesl eighty\n(\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDhams; theuce south lo a poitlt due easl of Do*\naoutbeaat corner of ilmbor license Bft47j Ihenco\nwest to place of commencement\nJanuary lftth, 1801\nNo io. Commenclngat a post planted at iho\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDontheaat aorner of Umber licence BBtoj lbence\nsouih eighty chains; ihenc,- west to lhe oaal\nboundary ol Lot 813) tlu-nce north to tbe south\nera boundary of tlmbor license No.701fi; ihence\neast Io the soiillirast corner of timber license\n701S; thence north lo the south boundary nl Mm\nber license BMtf; ihence east to place of com\nntenoemenU\nJanuary IMh, 1907.\nI'. I,hmi, Lociiior,\nDill MrliortMM.. Agenl\nLAND NOTICES.\nNotiee Is hereby ghen that 60 days afler date I\nIntend toapply to the Hon, (he ('blef Commissioner of Lands and Works Victoria, lit', for\npermlaalon topurobaaotba following deaeribed\nlauds In West Kooteuay district! Commencing\nat a post planted ar the lonth weit corner Of'ol\n7701, group 1. tuul runtili) 20chnlni to ihe south-\neaat corner of lot 77-02, group I, then lu an ensto-\nly direction 90 chains, ihen north 20 chains,\nthen weat 10 ehalni io point of commencementi\ncontaining 10 acres more or loss.\nLocated Fubruiry lllh, 11W7.\nI'htup Wade, Locator.\nBUty days after date 1 Intend to apply to the\nchief Commlaaioner of Land* and \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmm rar\npermission i.i purchase lhe following dntcriue\nland: HI uaiedouihe east side of Arrow UU\nIn the Wesi Kooteuay district, about 6 miwo\nabove Burton City, commencing si\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD pom pi**\"*\"\ned at the northwest comer of i Bather s purehaae, thence easl 3B chains, the e north 4\nehalns thence weal 30 chains, tbenn Boutnac\nchains to poim ol commencement and containing no acres more or less.\nJanuary IB, 1W7. ,. ,.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n3 Wluhx Mi.i.ikr-\nBlxty days afterdate! Intend to apply tp the\nHon.OhlefCommissioner of Land- and Works\nto purebaae 187 acres of land, commencing \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD *\npost marked H. B's N B corner posl planted al\nthe N. w.ronoT ol -.. w. Bteele*s claim mi the\nwesi ndeof Arrow lak*.. iiImuii four miles abon\nMorion city, theme west 10chaini thenoeaoutn\n48Ji3 chalna, thence east 40 chains, tbence north\nKV,6_ clonus io place oi beginning, containing in\nacrea, more or leas.\nDated Mth da*, ol Nov., 1808, BTMH BOITOB.\nJ. K. ANNAHLK, Agenl\nNotice la hereby given mat two months aftoi\ndale we Intend to applj lo the chiel Cm?mlistener ol Undaand works foraleaaeol all that\nland being the toreshon adjoining the Canadian\nIVillc luilwav Shipyard on the west, part ol\nLot ftBA, group 1, anu being on tbo south shore\nof llo* west ann of Koohuay Uke, in the dl*-\nrlct ot Kootena); Commencing at the southerly eorner of lot 7064, group I; tbence along the\nsouth westerly boundary oflot 7084 and the extension thereof, In a norlh westerly direction,a\ndistance of 458 feoti thene,* hi rlghl angles hi\nMild boundarv In a-Mill, we-lerly direction, a\ndlatance of 81ft feet, more or less, to lha norih\neasterly boundary ol tha City i'ark. continued!\nthence parallel to said westerly bounder] of lot\n7064, In a south easterly direction, a disunoe of\nBOO feet, mora or lesa, to tbe northerly bouncer?\nnf lot MAj ihence followm-: the northerlj boundary of lot fi88 in a north easterly direction tothe\npoint of oommencement, tbe area being tM\nacrea, more or leas\nCANADA ZINC COMPANY. LIMITKD.\nDated this Tth dav ol January, A.D., 1907.\n80dayi after dat.* I Intend in appiv to the Hon,\nchid Commlaaioner of Urnis and works to purohaae 830 acrea of and located in Plre Valley being part of BcoUonj9 and 10 Township 89, and\ndescribed as follows: Commencing at a posl\nmarked F. W. J.a jr. corner and planted ai the\nnorthweal corner of Wm, Williams' put chase;\nIhence west 40 chains; thence norih -so chains;\nthence east 40 ehalna; tbence south so chains to\nplace of beginning,\nNovember28rd luofi.\nK. W. Jordan,\nJ. K. Annahi.k, Agent.\nB0days alter date I inieml lo apply to lhe Honorable ihe Chlel Commlaaioner ol Lands and\nWorks, to purchase 87U acres of land: Commeueiiig at a post marked U, W. B. N. B. oornei\npost and planted on the we-t ahore ol Arrow-\nlake adjoining Lot 878 on the aOUtb Side of \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDahl\nLot,thence west80 ihains along the southern\nboundary of I/.t 878; tbenee south 48 88 chains;\nthenee easl So chains more or less to lake shore;\nthence north along lake shore to place of beginning.\nDated \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtb day of Nov. 1908.\non, W.Stnt,\nJ. R. Annabj.i. Agent.\nBlXty davs niter date I intend lo apply tn the\nHon. chiel Commissioner of UmU ai.d Works,\nVictoria, to purchase 160 aorea ot land located In\nKire Valley, being part of -Sections three and\nKnur, Township \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi and described as follows:\nCommeneing at a post planted at WUUam\nWilliams'NT W. corner, and marked *K. K. W'i\nN. E. corner,\" and mooing 40 chains west,\nthenee 'in cbHins south, theuce in cliaina east,\nthence 40 chains south, thence 'JO chains east,\nth<*ncc 80 chains noith to piaiv of beginning.\nNovember 28rd, 1906. Rosa K .Williams,\nJ. K. Ansabi.b. Ageut,\nNotice Is beieby given that fiO davs alter date I\nintend toapply tO lhe Honorable the Culet Commissioner of bauds and Works tor permission to\npurchase ihe following described lauds: Com-\ntut m nig at a post piaeed hi chains west of the\nsoutheast eorner of Lot 8648, marked \"K. A Bell's\nnorthwest corner,\" theuce south *t ehalni,\nthencecast 'JO < hains, thenoe north _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD chalus,\nthence wesi Mchalns to polntof commencement,\ncontaining 4'i acres, more or less.\nlocated Mils'd li dayof Nov . JWjfi, R. A.BKLL.\nHlxly days after data 1 Intend to applv to the\nHoi., chuf Com mlssloner id binds and W'orks,\nVictoria, to pun base 4h0 acres of land, in Fire\nValley, Weat Kootonay: Commencing nt a poel\nplauied \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD chains went of the ri. W corner of J,\nKobinsnti's pre emption, and marked W. W's N.\nk. corner, and running west 60 chains, thenoe\nsouth s*i ehalus. ihem-e east fiO chains, theuce\nnorth K0 ehalus to placu of beginning\nNov, 18th, 1908. William Williams,\n J. K. An:.-ahlk, Agent,\nSixty days afler dite I intend to apply to the\nHon. the Chief Commlaaioner ol Umls aud Works\nto purchase 160 acres of land: Commencing at a\npost planted on tbe west side of Hlx mile creea,\nOU WHOO road, abom iwo and one half miles\nfrom Kooteuay lake, and marked '*Nei! Mc-\nEechnle'i B,Weat corner post,\" thenca east w\nChaini, thenee nnrth 40 chains, thence west 40\nchains, thence south 40 chains, to place of eommeucement\nLocated this loth day of November, 1W6.\n Mm KoKicnra\nHlxty days after date I purpose making application to the Honorable the Chief Commtsaiuner\nof Lands Htid Works b,r permission to purthase\nthe following deaorlbed land: Commencing at\na po-t placed it IbeS. W corner of l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDyoo and\nmarked \"K (!. K.V N. \\. comer, thence follow-\nIng the houthern boundarv Lot fi900, TA chains\nmoreorless east to the ureal boundary of Lot\n6801,thenca following name south Bo chains to\ntha nortii boundary Ot Lot 8908] thence about 70\nchains wesl along aald houndary to lhe Uke\nshore; thence north 80 chains more or u-ss following lhe lake shore lo point of commence-\nment, containing 817 acres more or less.\nDated December 17th, 1907.\n, K fi PaDQOHK.\nNotice in hereby given that ilxty days arter\ndale I iniend lo apply to tbe Ef on. the Chlel\nCommissioner of Lands nnd Works for permlaslon to purchase no; following deaorlbed laud\nsituated In the Weat Kootenav district: Commeneing at a post planted at ihe \"N.B corner\nof l Portem'i pre-emption,\" and running\ntheme east 4') chains; thence south 10 chains;\ntbence weat40 chalna; thence north 40 chnins,\nto piaee oi commencement,! talnlng LOO acrea,\nnmre or leaa.\nDecember x>, 1908,\nQabbv I'k'f.ri*, Locator,\nM It MctU'AKKIE. Agent.\nNotice Is hereby given Hint sixty days aller\n,|\"1'* I Wtend to apply to the Honorable the\nCli lei Commisaloner of Lnnds and Works for\npermission to purchase the follow mg described\nlands situated In lhe West Kootenay district*\nCommenolng ai a post marked \"ii u pouth\nffwtcorner,\" and north of a h. Lucbtb, pnr\niihaaecMm, on Hand Creeai theuee north 40\nchain*; thence easl 30 chain-; theOCO south 40\nchains; theme-o ohalna weat, lo polntof oommencement, containing Ju acres, more or less\nDecember m, 1906,\nIlKVIIY HaYI.KN,\nM K. Mi-.Tahiuk. Agent.\nBlxty days after date I Intend to appiv to the\nChief Commlaaioner ol Lands nmi Works to nar\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nohuo 640 acres of land located m Lower Arrow\nLane, west Kootenay: Commencing at a twjt\nplanted at the -.vw. corner of Arrow daki\nIndian Reserve' ; tbence soutb 88 chains] theneo\nwast ro chains; thence north w> chalna; thenoe\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ast BOcbalns, in place of beginning\nLocated 98th dayof December, 190B\nC HkWKI.L.\nLocator.\nHlxty days alter date I .litend tn apply to the\nHon the Chief Commissioner of Landi and worka\nCommenciug al a\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"ll comer t-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnst -orner of Qm,\naboul (wo miles\n'\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD weal to ehains,\nurel\nid p.,\n(:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD aeres of land\nriea \"N.t B's sonth\nt b- ing ut the north\nuson-s pre-emption claim,\ntheasl of Hurton City, thei\nIth20 chains, weal 40 chalt\n! 88 ehalns, south _Jl eh.il\nment, oontainlng th\nLocate.] Bth davof Nov li\nmen\narp-\nNKTMKT. Hkkr.\nBlxty days after d.le | Irilciu) loapply to the\nHou. Chief Commlnloner oi Unds IU Works,\nVictoria, 0 pnrohMe 10 acres of land, situated\non the wesl l|de Of Arrow Lake, about :i',, mill's\nbelow Hurton, and described an followa:' Com\n5S!52?AT*i*SJRbiJ J'1\"\"\"\"1 ,u \">\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD northeut\nthence west _i chains, thtnoe aouth 80 chains\nNs.s. mis, ia*. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD K.-|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDUi\n'. K A.'.n,isi.k, AKOnt.\nN.sllsSi' I. tl- r.-l,;. civ, is ll.ssl ,., ,!,,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,r ,|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. ,\nIss in, ItOI im,lyl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ll\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. |, .,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.-,!,. ,/\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. clll(.f (\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\nolMlonMo u,,i. tnd Vorlii lm pumlulon lo\n, hi, ''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"'\"\"'**'!\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -1. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD rl!,.-.I l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi,e\n.mills Ikon, ..I ll,,. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,..t Arm s,I Ks.ols-iniy Inks',\nmnth o.S.0\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.Co,fih \" ,*\"\"' '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD''\"\":', \"'\"\"\" \"0\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDM1\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\n\"sti, ,>'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD;;' ''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\"'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\"' 1-\"' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, marked\nmens'imeni'.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Wttt '\"' 0h,U\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!*SS\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDoPST\nDtted thu tth di, ol Nor., lm. 8. Ihoiui.\nANHEUSER -AND THE owg\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDj\nBUSCH... Budweiser\nCALEDONIAN LIQUEUR.\nDISTILLERS, 12 and 20 years old.\nR. P. RITHET & CO., LlfflTI\nNELSON\nMolu AkciiIm In ItrltlMh\nCi iHiitiltiM .\nThe HaU Mining and Smelt\nCompany, Limited.\nNEUSOIN, B. C.\nPurchases Lead, Copper and Dry Orej\nFull Stocks\nB. C. Salmon\nAtlantic Haddies\nManitoba Whitefish\nBEEF, PORK and MUTTON of Finest Quality.\nP. Burns & Co., Ltd,\nOrdem hy mull tu nuy I ranch will hare\nout prompt nnt; thence M eliains\nnorth, to the mint of commencement, containing \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo acrea of land, more or lens.\nDated the 17th November li**\nMm Hattie Dn 1,\nJohn K TlTlAR, Alient\nHixtv davs alter date I Inteml toapplj '<> the\nHon Chief ('ommlf\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlon.-r ol 1-himI** ami Works,\nVictoria, lo purchase U0 *.< res of Inml ahout two\nmiles i). low Barton City, Weat Kootenai**, oom*\nDentins at a post marked \"J A Irvinn- net\ncomer pobL\" said posi balnf *'U the eaiterly end\nof au [aland west Ol UOt8847,aod elaliiuiiK all the\nland Contained in snld Mand, balni hIs-oiii one\nmile 111 all easterly mid wcslerly ilitcellori and\nahout 30 < hains from north to south.\nNovember llth, 1808. J. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*. Irving,\nJ E. aknahlk. Aitent,\nHlxljr rlayt afler'late I intend tp applr to tht\nBon. Chlel Commissioner nt Lnnds ami Works,\nVictoria, to purchase Ll) acres ol laml looatM\nOU the WOat aide Ol Arrow lake ami |\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*1iik 'iirectly\nnorth of I-ut 7878: t'ouuuenciiiR at a po\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt planted\nat the N K. corner of I/ot \"V.', aiol nmrked \"H. H\nfl. E jorn-pr,\" and ruunlim mirth J) chalnn,\nthence mat 'iu chains, thence north 31 chains,\nthence west 'JJ ihains, theme south 4o chains,\ntheuce aaat tt chains, to place ol twinning,\nNov. Mth, l'J06.\niiK*Tiu BunutTi\nJ. K. ANNAUI.E. Audit.\nNotice is hereby Riven that Wdajs attar data, I\nInland to applj to lhe Hon. chief Doumiaalonor\nof Lands taa work*, [or pennlanon to porobaaa\ntha following deacrlbed land In Weat Itootaoaj\ndistrict: ConimeneliiK at a post marked Mn V\nA Wilson's lorner post, planlcd at trie northeast\ncoruerof Section II, lownsiu- 7, runnltitt honlh\n40 ohalna, thenc* mat H) ohalna, ihence north 40\nchains, Um-iicc Baal *0 ehulns to p]ue ,,( (,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,.\nmeneement, coiitaluliiR 100 acres, more or less\nHated Nov. '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, 1906. MR*. V. A. Wiiaon\nj. wnjiori, Agant,\nNotice is lu-rvny Riven that 80 dari alter ilale I\nintend loapplj to the Bonorable the Chief Con*\nmisslouer ol Lnnds ami Works for iH-rmUMoti\nto purohaae 880 aerea of land.altuateoo thei.itiiu\nMoyle river about I mile from IiiteHmtlonitl\nBoundary and t'joui 1 mile from hp .lane lm. r\nnatlotiiil Ky.: Cominein Iiik at a po-l innrked\nI> Qfmnti B. B, comer poat( thonoe \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'**t 10\nchains; th.-nce north *tu chnins; tbenoe enst W)\nOl .ilns; Ihence norlh 30 chains; thence .-mi IUI\nChlliu; thence soutli Wj chnins to plug ol mm-\nill- ti'cnient, coiita'ulnR'iHl) acres ot Intnl.\nLocated Ocl. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDth 1'JOC.\nDaJrm eliains, thenca\nwest J) ehitlus to plaee of beii mn Iur\nNov. Uth. WOO. TJm, It. McMm.I.an,\nJ. K. Aw-um.R, Agent.\nHlxly da\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD alter (late 1 llilemt to nppty lo lhe\nHonorable the ( hief Commlulonei nl Undi and\nWorks ui porobaaa M0 aorea of land, located in\nrtra Valley, on watt aide of Arrow inke Cora*\nmenolni al a poll planted 4UehalliM ue 1 nf Hie\nlouthwwt corner of J. Hohiusoii's preemption\nnnd marked J W's H. K corner, nnd ruiinliiR\nnorth ni 1 halus. thenc,.- west mi chalm ihence\nsouih Wl cluilns, theuce BM1 m chains lo plaiw o|\neommencemen)\nNov. mill, 1000, 3xtt win.UK*\nJ. K. amhaiu.k. Agent,\nHiily days afler dale I intend to annlv lo Lha\nChief Commluloner of Unds and korks for\npermlMion toporohue the following dt-ioribed\nlands In Kooieiuiy Dlsirlct, nhoul throo iiunrlers\nol mile from Thruui's HldliiR : Comtnoni mil- ut \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nposl placed at Ihe H.W. corner <*l L 8808 iTroun\nI, West Kootenay Dlitrlel; thenee nVu\", V\nfollowing the north boundarv oi 1, L808 -ai>\nchnins; theuee north 10 chnin-; tbenoe cum in\nchains, moreor l\"*ss, tothe N W corner of\nI/Wfc'l; thenee south followlni; lhe we8tboand-4n\nof IA\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDy:i in chnins. more or h-ss, 1., p|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,_,.,,!_{\nineiici'inenl, contiilnltiR lo ueres more or Imm\nDated this Gth day ofWccmber 1808,\nn. H. Pitti,IxjcAtor,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlily days after date 1 Iniend to m;|\nHonorable the Chief Cuminlsslnarr 0 \"\nWtirks lor i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDL-rmlsslon lo pun-hut ll\nilesc-lU-d lauds in Kootetuy 4iili-, ,\nnifh. 1; t- nt a post marked J li AddiU.m\nea*l (oriii-r Jh-sI, Mid l---t Usiti <:. tit \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nside of the Lower Arrow lake, a). '..:*tt_\nbelow Hurton city; theme -w-oUI-i.\nthence weal JO chains; thenre ionlil*K\nthence west Jf) chains; theuee unrtltH\nsnd 'JU links, more or less to, Ik Ufi\ntheuce -'N-ieriT ah iuk |nkt>4-i< i,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:i.t mi I\nto (he plaee of tx-RllJOlUK. \"'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD- '-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-! ta\nmore >.r less.\nHaled this Mh dayof November,!!*\nJ ft. IMI\nper K L Brant, *%\nNotice .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD hereby given that UXirlU\ndate I Intend tn make ippHrstlen biMf\nable ('hiel 1 ommlssloner of Uiidmili\"\nVictoria B.t ., forparmlfeioD to pardML\nlowing deacrlMd land, situate in r\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDim\nWeil Koolenay distriet. I'l.iiirottH-iaiR-l\nplanted ai the aouth weal roraei ol hieT\nInion'i pre-emption, marked K. 1 K'tSli\npost, thenoe m < hains west, tbrnrt *a)*8j\nnorth, theuce te t-halnseast mJusbuib\"\nnorlhweat corner, thence south WrhiiiiiJ\nof \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'oiumehcemrnl, coniainuig 16\"irm,a\nloaa,\nUatwl ihis .3rd day of Nov., 1*4\nK.I.CW\nGo days ntirr dale I intend lOlpM jtfl\nChief Commissioner o( Unds |M ^^M\ntorm. to iion 240 acres of sn1 1\nFire \\\Uj niidl.elHRa portion sl \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nand I'i In Towii-hipfiVaii'l deicrlW 1\nCommeocing atapost piauu*dittbt\nOorner of the southeast oiinrnri'i*\nTownship W and marked I.Q.IM\nthanee north tt ebalna | thenee wi* *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nthence south vt chains; thence ru( No\nplnee of bcRluulup\nJ wlrt 5\"\nJ. E. AXSiii-'>ta\_\nplnee of hcRlnulllR\nNovember sSrtl Ii\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD06.\nNotice !\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD hereby given lhat rt)-livi l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa-_\nIntend to npplv i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ilie Bonorabli (ie ___\\ntolaaionar of Unda and Works a___*__\\\\naorei of land described as follows h-db*\nai h ;m.-i plnnl.-d on the north bank mttm\nMoyle river, about a\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD yard** ma o-s-*l\nmnrked -K. Mel^an'a B \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nthenee east \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDu chains, thence nnrili *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nib.-uee west 80ohalna, thenoe iwta ar\nplace ol com meiii'ement, and i*niitsiiiic(\nRon **\nmon-... \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nLooatedioth day Ootn 1008\nSlit; days after date 1 inlcnd to in,piv to thu\nHonV'hlel commissioner oi Lendi and Worflr\nVietoria, to purchase IGi) \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,-res ol land 1. enV, 11 ,.'\nthe west side of Arrow \*,\jq, aboul ilv. ., V, , \"\nlow Hurton City, nnd described ns f.dhm-s- Coin\"\nmenolni at a iK)st marked \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD P g R'nou'thiiaat\ncorner, ,Tnnd being X) chnins enst of the nortl u'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt\ncoruerof Ut '2119; thenei; northttehalni' tl -or-\nwest 40 ehalns; thence souih W chains'11 ' '\neast -rn c-bnlns to the place of beglnnino ' e\n.-sixtv dnvs nfier date I intend la \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDrp'l'l\nHum. ruble iheihief Conunlulooertu \*aw\nWorks, Victoria, to purchase ^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDm\"'\nlocated and deM-ribcd ns followi: t\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nitapoet planted tit ihu somiiwcfiw\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nKobinson*, pre-emption In Fire Vallejja\nlive miles from Edward Undmit- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nArrow lake, ana marked F 01 ll i*'0\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ1\nruntiiiiR west 00 eliains, ihe'iivsimiD-M\nthence eaal x> chnins, thonce \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.nnn *.\ntbenoe en\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt 40 chains, then, i* norl\nplaee of beRimiing\nNov IHth, 1008. ttk\nJ K, ASNs\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLt.-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDP\"*|\nNot is herehv \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDriven lhal \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMajii\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD4\nlut.-hd i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD npplv t.i the Hon ( hi-l' ffli'^J\nLandiand Works, Victoria,loi i-ri:'\"'..\"J\nchaae the following deaorlbed u\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-i. \"\"\nthe Weal Kootenai dlsirlct, on U'\nDuhamel (or six iff(a) era I \"\"\nabout three miles from Kootena! .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,.1\nmencing al a |.ostmtirhed ' JameiJ >m*!2\nposi,\" runntiiR DO chains aait. ^\"nrf\nnorth, th. uee 80 chains Veil, tatta\nsouih, to ihe potnt of oommoneanni\ntuts M acres of land, mnre or less\nDHl.d l.ih NovemlH-r, IH* , _,,.\nUn*alcdliyJ*RnJ*\nperJOHD I TATUB.WJ\nNovember Uth, lis;,\ni'-'i 1'KlR\nPerJ.K.AHHABU.\nHlxly dnys after dale 1 niteini i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtPjJ\nUonorahle ihe Chief Comnimlon\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '-fja\nWoikn for permission to purrbaialH '\ndenerlbed liilids in Koolenay disir rl. ' JJ\n1 Iur hi a post, murked \"A \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"' \",;,,.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n(\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDorner post,\" said post Im mn 011 ui \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'J\nerly shoreof Ilie Lower Arrow\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDInki***'1 wl\ndue ensi, on the norlhcnsl totttta'm\n'iroupi; ihence north (0 chains; \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" T^,\nsouth 40 chains, more or l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtolH,K|\nthenoe following snie settled for, otherwise delivery will\nnot he made.\nDated February 18, 1907.\nYale-Kootenay Ice, Fruit, Fuel and Poultry\nCompany, Limited.\nI We Carry a\nILarge\nSted d Fine Eiderdown Quilts\nFrom $6.00 to $35.00.\nBaa Our Vurlttty of ,tOO IMcturew I'runted lit tho\nLutwet Mt> l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf*.\n[Standard Ft**nitrite Company\nlAQBNTSi\nHaaon A i.i- b I'Uiioh.\nOiiermooi MattrauM\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .1 , -Minfiir*. Mattresses.\nComplete House Furnishers\nUndertakers, Emhalmers\nate* Bottle Sale\n2 Quart Water Bottle $1.00\n3 Quart Water Bottle |1.25\n2 Quart Water Bottle and Syringe $1.25\n3 Quart Water Bottle and Syringe 11.50\nCanada Drug: \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD& Book Co.\nUMBER NOTICES.\n- by Kiven that 3\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD dan nfter dale 1\npi) tn the lln tin* ' til--*! ' \" nun. i-\nm. them - .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD igbt)\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOUth eighty clultii to point ol\nv. '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiiii'tii.\nI -Jan 18th. l'XJ7 U A. Lit'Rii, Locator.\nworm in Iiik ut i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi>ont plauted enit of and\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD a i4iiiru-> location post So. 1, aud\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \ Laurie'i lOQthiireet ooroerpoat oi\nihence eaat eighty cuatUi thi-nco\nubalUl, lbence west \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*:kIi1> chains.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmi Ub eighty chnlni to point oi eoinmeii-\nI -Ian Hth. 1907. Q. A. Lairik, Locator.\nI0| at a pMI planted about eighty\n*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* utb <>f honka etatk where it Howh mho\nk Ud marked (J A. Laurie'**-* Knlllh\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD poit, on location vo 8, thenoe nut\n* im :n*. ihenoe north cuhi y chain*-, them*\nibtj cbalni, thence south eighty nutlna\ni \"i ram menoement,\ni Jen, .-.iiu. im\".. ti. A. L*i rii. Locator.\nommenoing at a pom planted sotuh of\nJololl a Q \ Lanri.*'-- |iH*allotl So. 8, and\n1 '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD A, anrie'n nortbweit corner post,\ncattso ciminx, tbence Miutb 80 chain*.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmi wi ehalna, Unnoa nonh 10 chaiua\n' \"f commencement.\n1 Jan. 25th, lwj\", ii. a. Lavmi, locator.\n-mmeQclnj Kt a poit planted ciKhty\ncan and (-.riv chain* south oi looatlon\n< nud marked w u. i-age'i southwest\nI\" -i \"i li\" niton So. 6, thenee vast eighty\ntbenn norlh i Itjlity chains, Ihence well\n: uni, ibenee aoath t*_hXf cbains to\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD < uinmenoentent\nUm Mth, iwl, Vi ll. I'aoe, Locator\n\"-\"i.H'tii'iiiK at a post planted south of\n, 'luiug location hu, 8, and marked W M.\nnorthweal corner poatoi location No fi,\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' eighty cIihIiih, ihclice i-outb tlabty\nibenee weal eighty rbalna, thence north\n.ns i > point ol eommenoement.\n1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDui. -iiili, iw7. w. h. I'jii.k, Looator.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmmenolng at a poit planted eighty\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt nmi iwenty ohalna aonth olloealtou\n\" (.andmarked U,A.l*urle'aeoutbweei\ni'-tot looatlon No, l, thanee eaat eighty\nlbence notiii eluhly chalnn, thenca wesl\n' 1'iiltis. Ihcnce si,mh client) chains to\n* ' I MCII..,.||n)t|t.\n-\". .-iih, M\"07 ti A. l.AX'itlK. Locator.\n\"nineni Iiik al h pout phuileil cltthty\n' \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD> md eigbty ohe*n* K'nitii of Ioch.Iou\n1 ..uud marked U A Lhiim* '- -\"itl.ui -i\nl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>-t ol location No. H, thenee east\n1 isiitns, tln\"iceiioi lb club ly cbalni, iht-uce\n*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDti ohalna, thenoe south eighty chains\nM mil ueuiuunt.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'in Mth, 1909, tit A. Laiumk, Locator.\n\" it at a post planted eigbty\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"-il and eighty chaliiH south ol lOMtlou\nid mar It Hi <1 A. l.ami, - Miuthwest\nlocation No, i>, theme eusl IUI chnins,\nTiti m obalnil tbenoe woat 180 ohalna)\nith40c|niiuH to point oil uni'11cement\nBdJan Mth,1901, u A. Ui-hir. Locator.\n'''niiiiieuciiin nl ii |himI pUlitcd almtil six\n'\" Uartics creek Iroin lhe inoiilb (if\ncbalm, thence muth eighty ohalna, th**nce west\neight* chalnii, thence Uorth eighty clialm to\npolut of commencement\nPated Jan Bth, 1WI7. G A. La ran, I^ocalor.\nIL\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCommencing at a poit planted north of\nand adjoining locution No. 13, and being marked\ni.. A, lAiirlc's loutbwcst eoriier poll of location\nNo 14, lbence oast eighty ebalns, ihence north\neighty cbalni. thence weit elghtv chaini, thence\nsouth eighty ihains to pointed commencement.\nPated Jan. 28th, ltfu\". li. A. Lai all, Locator.\nIS -Commencing al a i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>it planted eighty\nrhaim uorth ol location Nu. 11 and marked w.\nH. 1'see's southwest corner poet Ot looatlon No\nl.'i, thenee l eighty chaini, theneo north\neiithtv - iinlli-, thenoe Weet elthty -halus, thence\nsouth eighty chalm to point ol commencement.\nHated Jan. M_, 19 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD: Vi, I! Piuk, Locator.\nlfi-rommeneing at a post planted eighty\ni-i. Ins east of location No tt, ml marked O. A.\nLaurle'v south wet corner p'it of li\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDation No.\n16, tbence cast eighty chains, thence norlh\nelghtv chains, Ihenee west elehty OhalOl thence\nsouth' eighty ehalna to point ol commencement.\nI-oca ted Jau. 0,1007. 0. A. Lu mv, Locator.\n17.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCommeneing it a poat planted With ol\nand adjoining location No. (ft, and marked '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD A,\nLaurie a nonbwo*t comer post of lorn too * 0,\n17, lbence east eighty ch\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDinn, thonce aouth\neighty ohalna, tbenoe weel eighty ohalna, thenee\nuorth eighty chaini 10 polut of commencement.\nDated Jan. 89th, i'-1-* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD fl. A. LaUKia, Locator.\nek where it Hows inio imm\ncreek\ndbeaiterly direction, ihd marked!\niioutbweit corner post of location No\n\" oaal eight) ehalna, ihence north eight]\nthuuoo im -.i eighty chains, thenoe south\nhalm io point of coiiiinenccint-iu.\nI Jan. 38th, l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn. d. A. LAi'ltlR.I-ocator.\n'\"umeiielng at a mnl planted eighty\ni Mt 0 loeatiou No in, and marked nnins to point 01 cominonceinent.\n',l J\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn. 88lh, 1807. W. H. |-aub, Lj ator.\nI '.'I'.,n,,;\"!'11,,r, nt n po\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt planted iighty\n. .si nnd.igh yehalns aouth of loeatiou\nn!)_?nMltk!? ()* *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD yWnri nortbweit\npun ol toeatlOQ No. 18, tlience cast eighty\nHi -Commencing it a post planted eighty\nohalna aonth ol location No. in, and marked O,\nA. Laurie's northwest comer post of location No.\nIU, thence easl eluhly chains thence south\nelghtv chains, thence wesl eighty chains, Ihelica\nnortii 8 ghty chains to poini of ( unenooment,\nDated Jan. 98th, 1W7- 0. A Lil'kiR, Looator.\n80, t'oiimieiicing at h post planlcd abonl\neighty cba:us cast ol the mouth of Klght Mile\ncreek where n emptlti lato tnonoakin oreek,\nand on the soulb hank of liiom>*klu creek, and\nnarked Q. A Laurie'i northeaal comer post of\nlocation No JNl, Iheliec south IUI chain', ihcme\nwest 80 ebalna, thenee north 180 ehalni, ibenee\n8Ul K> chnins lo |Hilnt ol commencement.\nDated tth 9ndi WW. O. A. Lairie, Uicator.\nm, Commeneing \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD poal planted forty\nchains wesl aui eight] chains suut'i ol location\nNo. x ind marked w, H.Page*i northeaat corner i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDisi oi location Ko.fl, thenoe vteei eighty\nrlmluH, tbence soutb eighty .-hnlns, ihence eaal\neighty obaina, thence nonh eighty ohaini to\npolo tot omiiieiiccuiciil.\nDated I'd. 2ii.l, IB0T.\nw. ii, i'aur, Locator.\nU oommenolni nt n noil plented east of end\nadjoining locution No.90, nud marked Q. A,\nLaurie'i northweal enrner poatoi looatlon No,\nt: llienee south 180 chains, thence en t 40 chains,\nthenoe norih iBOebelni. thenoe wesi tu chains to\npoint of oommeneement\nDnted Nh. 3nd, 1W7. '*. A. Lavhir, Locator.\nJI. (\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDomiiiencing ni b postplatilcd fortyclulni\neasl 0' location No.'?.' nnd nmrked Vi. If. I age's\nnorth weit comer post ol locniion No. 38, tbenoe\nsoulb 108 chains, 1 lu-n. e cn.-t forty chains, lbence\nnorth 100 chnin**. Ihence wesl (orly ehulns to\npoim of oommenoement.\nDated Keb. and. i%\". W H, I'aur, tacalor.\nM loii.mcueiiigat upostplHiiicd toriy Hiiu us\neast nnd eighty cbullls - Ii Dl location No J.I,\n...i .1....1 .. i l-iiii.-'ti iiiitii.mM curlier\nmarked .. A, L-unc's nortl\nposl of lo'iillon No _l. t\n-huh\n. ith eighty\n Hutolgbty chnins. M 0 north\nilgbty ohalna, ihcnce nroitelght) chnins io point\nbToommenoement.\nDaied Feb. tth 1W7. (La. Lairik, Locator.\n-jft-Uommenolug at \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD post idaiiteu ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ|hty\nehaiiia east of location No. M, apd narked <\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD A.\nLaurie'i northwest oorner poatoi location No.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ-, tboiipe soulb eighty chnins, thSDOe cast\ni-fehiy, thenco north elgh')* chains, ihcnce wesl\neighty chalm lo point ol oommenoement.\nDated Feb. 4th, WOT. fl. A Lairik, Locator.\n2fl.-Commencing ai a poll planted about four\nand one-hall mllei down InottOMln eretii n >\nthe mouth of Klght Mile '\"reck wbeM II IlOWB f -\nto Inouoaklu creek, and on the ensi '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'!\nIiionoaklii creek, and marked I. A. WUT I\nnorthweal corner post. Ihclice \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD nill ctgliti\nchains, lbence eul ftghly cha IM.Ihttat n6th\neighty rluiltli. theneo wesl eighty chaini tO point\nol commencement.\nDated Feb. 4th, 1807. 0. A. UOTttti Locator.\nThe Daily Canadian\nOUR OTTAWA LETTER.\nInteresting Queations Asked and Answered in the House.\n(Prom Our Own Correspondent.)\nOttawa, Fob. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCol. Samm Hughes\nhau proposed a resolution declaring that\na full partnership union of the Empire\nwas desirable. The motion was brought\nIn for the purpose of obtaining an expression of opinion from members who\ncared to discuss it, and was not pressed\nto a vote. Cesidis the mover who elo-\npuently supportd his motion, Mr, Smith\nof Wentworth, and Mr. Lake of Qu-Ap-\npelle, sj.-oke strongly In favor of the\nproposition. Mr. Horden also supportotd\nthe principle, though he held that (he\ncloser union would be reached by gradual development rather Ihan by ony\nImmediate process. Sir Wilfrid Laurler\ndeclared that there was no occasion for\naction or change, as there was no grievance to be remedied. He contended\nfurther that no close organization was\npesslble without free trade within the\nEmpire, which view was opposed both\nby Mr. Borden and Col. Hughes. It Is\nin fact opposed to previous utterances\nof Sir Wilfrid himself. The only opposition speaker besides tlie premier\nwas Mr. Dssvlin, member for Nicolet,\nlately Home Rule member for Oalway\nin the Imperial parliament. He of\ncourse vigorously opposed Imperialism\nin any form.\nThe minister of public workB is still\na man of mystery. A newspaper reporter\nhas visited him in his health resort, and\nfound Mr. Hyman actively enjoying himseir, riding, walking, swimming, attending horst; races and other entertainments. This has been going on while\nthe premier has been Informing the\nhouse that Mr. Ilyman was not allowed\neven to read a telegram, lt comes out\nrurther that the formal resignation of\nthe London seat received last week by\nthe speaker purported to be witnessed\nby two men who live in London and\nhave not left Canada since Mr. Hyman\nwent away. Still further it aopears that\nwlille Sir Wilfrid has been unable to get\nany word from Mr. Hyman, the machine\nIn l.cnodon has had sufficient Information to prepare for election.\nMr. Lavergne, the Liberal member\nwho has been read out of the party,\ngives notice of a question. He wants lo\nknow what method the government will\npursue to carry out the promise of Sen-\nate reform, and whether the measure\nwill be Introduced this session.\nThe postmaster general's bill (o prevent strikts by Investigation has passed\nIts second reading. The minister him-\nse'.f has showed that the measure ls Inadequate by giving statistics to the effect that only one-fifth of the strikes of\nrecent years had taken place In the\nclasses cf Industries affected by the\nmeasure.\nThe following appointments have\nbeen made:\nMr. Druneau, M. P., lo be judge.\nA defeated Liberal member of the\nBritish Columbia legislature to be fair\nwoge officer.\nJohn A. Chesley, former Conservative M. P.. who turned Liberal when he\nfailed to obtain the party nomination,\nto be commercial agent In South Africa.\nWANTED\nContractor to Undertake\nLogging Contract, Delivering\n2,000,000 Feet per Month.\nAlso First-class Mill Superintendent\nAPPLY TO\nGEO. P. WELLS,\nSec. Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' Association\nNELSON, B. C.\nWaterproof Paints\nCoal Tar, Pitch,\nCreosote, Oils for\nPreserving Timber,\nRoofing Pitch and\nPaints,\nBoat Builders will And it to their iwj-\nvantuKO to use our Pitch.\nNelson Coke & Gas Co.\nLimited.\n25 Feet Frontage\non Baker Street\nHis 50th Birthday.\nSir Robert Bond, who has been pre-\npler and colonial secretary of Newfoundland since 1900, was born February 25, 1848. He ls the descendant\nof an old Devonshire family, his\nfather, the late John Bond, a native of\nTorquay, having conducted an extensive\nmercantile business lu St. John's for\nmore than half a century. Sir Robert\nwas educated for the bar, but entered\npolitics anl -distinguished himself in\na very short time. He was speaker of\nthe house of assembly ln 1884 and executive councillor, with the portfolio of\ncolonial secretary, 1889-97. He has been\non all Important committees for the\nconsideration of the French shore and\nthe Newfoundland fisheries questions,\nbesides having negotiated the famous\nBond-Blaine convention with the United\nStates. He waa knighted ln 1901 on the\noccasslon of the visit of the Duke and\nDuchess of Cornwall and York to New-\nfounland. \t\n5 Roomed Building\nPrice ROOO.OO\nH. E, froadsdaile & Si\nNext Door to Bank ot Commerce.\nCoal! Ice! Wood!\nPhone 265\nYale-Kootenay Ice, Frait,\nFuel & Poultry Co., Ltd.\nOFFICE:\nN. E. cor. Baker end Ward Sta.\nYMIR LICENSE DISfRICT.\nNotice Is hereby given that t*t tt meetlnf ol the\nBoard of Ittoente CominluiotierK, to be held Alter\nthe fxplr-Hion of:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD dayi, I Intend toappiy for a\ntratiMer of my hotel HnceiiM for the Grove boieU\nat F*irvU*w, loK. U Borden\nCHAS. F1 WALMSLEY.\nLICENCE TO AN EXTRA-PROVmOAL\nCOMPANY.\n\"Companies Act, 1897.\"\nOANADA; j\nProyisce of British Columbia, $\nMo. ITS.\nTHIS IS TO CERTIFY that the \"Nakusp Fruit\nLauds, Limited,\" is author \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.-d and lJcenaed to\nea>ry ot) buslnena wlthtn the province of British\nColumbia, t, n,i to carry \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"t ur effect all or auy of\nthe objects of the comp-ny to which the legislative authority of the Leglilatureot uritlsh Columbia extenas.\nThe lie >'l office of tbe comi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDny ia situate at the\nCity of Winnipeg, Province of Manitoba.\nTne amount ol the capital _i the company ls five\nhundred thousand uo lari, divided Into two\nthousand five hundred shares of ten per cent\npreference stock of the par value of one hundred\ndollars each, and twenty-five hundred shares of\ncommon stock of tbe par value of one hundred\ndollars each-\nThe bead ofllce of the company ln this province\nis -niiHit at the C ly of Nelson, and Robert Wet-\nmore HaunitigUju, barrister, who e address li\nthe same, is the attorney for the company.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD riven under my hand and seal of office, Victoria, Province ol British Columbia, this 16th\nday of February, one thousand nine hundred\nand (.even.\n[L.s.] 8. Y. WOOTTON,\nRegistrar of Joint Mock t om pan it***.\nTbe objects for which the company has been\nestablished aud licensed are:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n(a.) Buying, selling, leasing or disposing < f\ncoal mines, coal and wood lands, farming, grazing\naud fruit Iniiii*-. and timber limits, and to work\nand develop the same;\n(b.) To carry on tbe business of immigration\nand colonisation agents, make advances to\nassist settlers on lands purchased from the\ncompany and to secure tbe repayment tif such\nadvances wltb interest on sucn terms and lu\nsuoh manner by way of mortgsge or agreement\nas may be mutually agreed upon.\n(c.) To tarry on the business of ranching,\nbreeding, selling aud dealing in cattle, hoises,\nsheep and other livestock;\n(il.) To purchase, sell and deal in lumber,\nwood, coal, minerals, grain, provisions, Clothing\nand general supplies;\n(e.) To carry on trade as general merchants\nand forwarders;\n(f.) To issue ln payment of any property\nacquired by the compauv, shares of tbe capital\nstock of the company as fully paid up and nou-\nauaMtabla or otberwt.e:\n(g.) To carry on the buMneas of manufacturers\nand dealers in power generators and motors of\nevery description, to construct and operate all\nclasses of vehicles, agricultural implements,\nmachinery, boats, steamers, barges and ferrys\nin which ihe|-aiii motor-- arj used; to construct\nand operate boat lines and to carry on the business of carriers, cartage and parcel deliveries,\nto own uud operate omnibus lines and vehicles\nand boats for hire; to sell, louse and supply\nelectricity; t*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD own and operate electric plants,\nand general ly lo carry on any of the business\nincideutal to the aforesaid purposes and objects\nof thecompanv;\n(h.) To purchase, take on lease, exchange or\notherwise acquire OI dispose of any real or\npamnal propertTi and any rifhti or privilege*\nwhich the compauv may eonolder necessary\nfor the purposes oi their operations;\nand to sell ami .1 i-p,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD of any lands or otber real\nMtate -*11'1 personal property at any time owned\nor controlled by the company or any part'hereof,\nor any control therein, or claim thereon, and generally io do all such thlogs asare incidental to\nor conducive tothe carrying out of the objects\nof the company;\n(I) To become shareholders lu any existing or\npro|*o*cd company, aim to promote and assist in\npromoting anv company carrylug ou a business\npertaining to the otueotitorwnlu this oompany\nIs IncoriKirated, ami which may prove useful to\nthis company, aud to acquire, take over aud operate the busluess of any such company or companies, un<'aU-'l i>n Porcupine creek.\nTake Notice tbat I, Frank Fletcher, ugent for\nIheAc'lve liold Mining Compauv, Free Miner's\nCertificate No. liKiAW intend, 00 days from daU.\nhereof, to apply to tbe Mining Recorder for a\nCertificate of Improvements for the purpose of\nobiAtuing a Crown Grant of the above claims.\nAnd further take uoUcc tbat action, under\nSection HT, must !\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' commenced before Ibe Issuance of such Certltieato of Improvements.\n ~ .. wfo\nTenders Wanted for tbe Purchase of a\nMineral Claim.\nTenders addre-sed to the undersigned, at hla\nofflce In tne court bouse. In the City of Nelson,\nwill be received np tlii the hour of 5 o'clock ln\nthe afternoon of Morday, March Utb, 1907, for\nthe purchase of the \"Garfield\" Mineral claim.\nLot 49S9. '--roup 1, Kootenay District, which wm\ndeclared to be forfeited to tb* Crows at tha\ntax sale held In tbe City of Nelson on tho tth day\nof November, IM6, for delinquent taxes up till\nJune 80th, 1906. and costs.\nThe upset price upon tha aald mineral claim,\nwhich includes the amount of delinquent taxes\nand costs at the time of forfeiture, with Interest,\ntaxes whl*h have since accrued, costs cfadvar-\ntlsing, and fee for crown grant (93R.no ) is m* 70.\nwhich Is the least amount that will be considered\naa a tender.\nEach t*nder must be accompanied by an accepted cheque for the full amount of the tender,\npa vablf to the order of the Depnty Commissioner\nof Lands and Works, at Victoria, B C . at par.\nDated at Nelaon, B C, thi<; Hth day ol February , 1KTL\nROBERT A. RENWICK,\nGovernment Agent, Nelson, B. C,\nTenders Wanted for the Purchase of a\nMineral Gafan*\nTenders addressed to the undersigned, at hie\nofflce in the Court House, ln tbe City of Nelson,\nwitl be received np till the hour of five o'clock\nin the afternoon 0/ Monday. March Uth, 1107, foi\nthe purchue of the \"No. 2\" mineral elalm, Lot\n8140, Group 1, Kootenay District, which wu declared to be forfeited to the Crown at tbe tax aale\nheld in the City of Nelson on the 6th day of November, 1906, for delinquent taxei up tlu June\n30th, 1906, and costs.\nThe upset price upon the said mineral claim,\nwblch includes the amount of delinquent taxes\nand costs at the time of forfeiture, with interest\nlaves which have since accrued, cost* of advertising, and fee for Crown Grant (925 00.) is 91*4.40,\nwhich is tbe least amount that will be considered\nas a tender,\nEacn tender must be accompanied by an accepted cheque for thc full smount of tbe tender,\npayable to the order ol the Deputy Commiasioner\n<>f Land and Works, at Victoria, B C , at par.\nDated at Nelson, B C, this Uth day of February, 1907.\nROBERTA RENWICK.\nGovernor nt Agent, Nelson, B. C.\n-ass\nCertificate of Improvements*\nNOTICE!\n\"May,\" * B.C.,\" \"Strathroy,\" \"J01\nDated Nelson, l.ith Dec..\nKlUIMt FIKTRHIR.\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICB\n\"Ann\" mineral claim, situated ln the Blocan\nCity Mining Division of West Kootenay\nDistrict.\nWhere lo ated: Ou Sprloger Creek near the\nArlington Sawmill\nTake Notice tbat I, Frank C, Green, actlux as\nnyetit for the Arlington Mines, Limited' Free\nMiner's Certificate No. H4fl0fl, Intend, slity davs\nfrom date hereof, toapply tot' v Mining Recorder\nfor a Certificate of Improvemenu, lor the pur-\npoxeof obtaining a Grown Grant of the above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nsection 37, must be common ed before the\niBMnincc of such Certificate of Improvements.\nDated Hiis mm nay of December, 190C.\nF. C. Grun, Neleon. B. C.\nNOTICB\nPRUNING AND GRAFTING carefully attended to. Apply\nHARRY WILLIAMS,\n Wlver King Hotel.\nF.C GREEN F. P. BURDEN A. H. GREEK\nGREEN BROTHERS AND BURDEN\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and British\nColumbia Land Surveyors\nCOR.VICTORIA k KOOTENAY STS.. NELSON. B.C\nr.O.BoxU5 theme U\l\\nMay,\" * B.C.,\" \"Strathroy,\" \"Jot,\" \"Jot Fractional.\" and \"John D.Mablev\" Mineral Claims.\nsituated In the Slocan Citv Mining Division ol\ntbe West Kootonay District.\nWhere located:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNorth of Twelve Mile Oreek\nabout oue and a half miles up.\nTake notie i that I, II. ft. Jorand of Blocat. h.o.\nFree Miner's certificate No. B7MQ0, as ear nt for\nHorace G Van Tuyl, Free Miner s certificate Nh.\nBI621, intend, alxty days from the dato bcraof,\nto apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate\nof Improvements, for the purnoae of ootainlng a\nCrown Grant of the said mineral elalma.\nAnd further take notice that action under\nflection in, must t>e commenced before the Issuance of auch Certificates of Improvements.\nDatod thla Ird Day of January. 1101.\nH.S. JORAND.\nC*rtlfltisate\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD of Improvementi\nNOTICB\nRio T\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBta, Orinoco, Queen Victoria Fractional\nand Ornoco Fractional Mineral Claims, situate\nin the Nelson Mining DlvUlon of Woat Kootonay\nDistrict\nLocated on Queen Victoria Mountain, near\nBeasley Biding.\nTake Notloe that 1. Frank C Oreen, acting aa\nagent for Michael Igan, Free Miner's Certificate\nNo. BMA.iutend, slity days from the date hereof,\nto apply to the Mining Recorder for Certificates\nof Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\nCrown Grants of the above elalma.\nAnd further take notice tbat action, under\naectlon 87, must be commenced before tha\nIssuance of such Certificates of Improramaam.\nDated thu 31th day of January, IWT.\nF. c. oim, Niukm. B c.\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICB\n\"Portia,\" \"Amos.\" \"Cut Slda No. *\" and \"Bet-\ntlna Fractional\" mineral claims, situated la\ntbe Slocan City Mining Division of Wett Kootenay District\nWhere located: At head ot Springer Creek, near\ntha Arlington mine.\nTake Notloe teat I, Frank C. Green, acting aa\ni7m\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nagent for tha Arlington mines, Limited,\nMiner's Certificate No. B4M6, Intend, sixty aava\nfrom the data hereof, to apply to tha Mining la\ncorder for a Certificate of improvement*, for the\npurpose ot obtaining a Crown Grant of tha above\nAnd< urther taka notice that action, under\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDeettonir, muit he commenced before tha Im\nanaa ot suoh Certificate of Improvementi.\nDatod thll mh day \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>' December, IlS,\nF. c. Garni*. Nelenn, l.C.\ns! f.'\nml\nm\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD J*:.\nI:\ni'i\n12\nThe Daily Canadian\nt^ \ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\_**\_f C_ Alarm Clocks, each $1.50 and $2.50\n*OAVVli*sd \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mission Clocks, each $6.00\n Oak Clocks, each $12.00\nSec Our Fine Display of Bedroom Clocks, each $4.00\nClockr.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAll Nm. All thc Best Chime Clocks, each ...$20.00 to $35.00\nthe Market Offers.\nNow is list- lime when 3 ssss Deed ft Itonii UMBRELLA, Our stock is new and sip-to-\ndata and every Umbrella is Quataateed.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nWAT-TUMAkKK. JUNCKAl'TlTRWa JKWKLLKR. OPTICIAN.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ\nSTOP! j\nTHINKIi\nOf tbs- difference ths-rc is }\nbetween isi end Sxra in J\nCanned Goods \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nWe rum- only *\nFIRSTS \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nOne trial of onr \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nTartan Brand!\nwill convince yon that wc\ncarry a full stock\nTable Fruit\nVegetiibles\ni Pie Fruit\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Maple Syrup\n[Same Price as Inferior\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nf Qoods f\nIBellTradingCoJ\n_ *\n***************************\nOld Curiosity Shop\nIf yon want lo buy or sell anything,\ngo to the Old Curiosity Shop. A new\nline of Japanese Goods now on sale.\nAll kinds of Dinnerware lu stock. Patterns.\n\During Lent]\nSome People Eat Fish.\nSome Do. Some Don't.\nFor those who don't\nJOY\ncan sell them some of\nIStoift's Bacon and\\nHams\nAnd JOY Will Meet You\nAt the Door.\n)Joy's Cash Grocery\nCor. Josephine and Mill BU. I'hono 19\nCHINA HALL\nWe Hnve a Spew; lully\nSulctlcil \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD%toi:k \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>f\nGLASSWARE AND CHINAWARE\nfor XniHN Ii fiUu.\nStoneware, Crocks. Bean Pots, Ta Pots, Etc.\nMunroe & Nelson\nWANTED\nGeneral Job Work, Chimney Sweeping, Carpet Cleaning, Fixing and Cleaning Stoves, tte.\nJACKSON RADCLIFTE,\n121 Eatt Baker St. Phone No. A114\nDROP IN AT\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nFor Hot Tomato\nBouillon.\nTea and Coffee.\nBeef Tea.\nBAKER ST., NELSON, B. C.\nHOTEL ARRIVALS.\nWf_~\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmSM-\nCor. Vernon ,.nU Ward Strewt**-.,\nrSBUSON. B. C.\nFRED J. HUME. Proprietor.\nR J. McPhee, Slocan; W. H. Brandon,\nSilverton; N. McCalluui, Grand Forks;\nJ. E. McNanRhton, Butte; J B. Coffery,\nB. E Partersou, Winnipeg; J. E. Stepis-\nens, C. V. Jones, H. Wright, Vancouver;\nC. E. Hutchinson, C. C. Swodou, Calgary; B. G. Wells. Anaconda; J. Walsh,\nFort Steele; J.JRvau, Cranbrook; A. A.\nWard, Marysville; H. F. W. Behnsseu,\nVictoria.\nSTRATHCONA.\nR.C.Gage, Hillyard; E. C. Schultz,\nMars'us; 0. H Q-anta, R. V. Gibbons, J.\nE. Kuight, Vancouver; C. F. Armat-aad,\nW. C. Bowles, W. Bain, T. L. Peters, F.\nW. Peters and wife, Winnipeg; J S.\nClute, New Westminister; A. J. Tell,\nKokimee, R. S. P. Smyth, Procter.\nQUEEN'S.\nV. J. Hnndley, Ymir; S. Wilkinson,\nAshlansl; J. C. Herdman, Calgary.\nBARTLETT.\nW. A. Bensou, T. Harris, Fernie.\nTREMONT.\nJ. A. Edwards, Rs-velstoke; G. Fisher,\nPortland, J. Gordon, Nakusp; C. E.\nDjneaii nnd wife, Creston ; T. J Rock,\nEureka; J. McDonald. Grand Forks.\nGRAND CENTRAL.\nW. Burke, A. Fraser. N. Booth, Butte;\nH. S. Honing. Chicago; Mrs. J. E. Finn,\nKoch Siding;T Mc-Arthnr, Salmo; W.\nBeaver, Moyie; T. P. Harris, Winnipeg.\nLA REVIEW.\nG. A Davis, Cranbrook ; T. E. Hunter,\nCreston.\nSILVER KING.\nW. Beandu, N. O. Booth, Butte; J.\nChambers, Seattle; W. Rushtou, R.\nliuhhtou, Creston.\nROYAL.\nC. Curtis, Kansas Citv.\nFLOUR\nWe have _u6t unloaded a car of\nPurity Fllotir\nMade from high grade Manitoba Hard Wheat. Without a\ndoubt It ls the best flour on\nthe market. Money refunded\nif not satisfactory.\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nTelephone 161.\nHOUSTON BLOCK.\nNotice of Sale\nUnder and by virtue of the powers\nof sale contained in a certain mort-\ngaga, which will, be produced at the\ntime of the sale, there will be offered\nfor sale by public auction on Friday\nlhe 1st day of March, 1907, at the hour\nof |;80 o'clock in the afternoon, at the\noffice of the undersigned, by C. A. Waterman & Co., Auctioneers, the equity\nof redemption in the followinK property, namely: \^Mr 2',\ and 24, Work 44A,\nNelson City, and the frame residence\nthereon situate.\nTERMS; Ten por cent, of the purchase money to be paid down at the\nlime of sale, balance to be paid in 20\ndays.\nFor information as to prior Incumbrance, and for further particulars and\nconditions apply to\nMACDONALD & HALL,\nllaker St., Nelson, B. C.\nSolicitors for the Mortgagee.\nDated at Nelson, B. C\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD this.7th day\nof February. 1907\nWANTED.\nWOMAN HE(*0*vp COOK, M0.00 WnltruHfi %XiX*it\nAt o&ce. Vi. Pnrk-r.\nTO LET\nTWO FIKHT-CLAS9 ROOMS, Meara beatefl. Ar*\nplv lioiUKkcentT. 3rd (Ut. K. W. C. block J\nLOST\nA BOY'H H KIQH, ij.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt rorner Cedar ami Front\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtru\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD(n, hn,nM. hy \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD( k Friday evening The\nl*e \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnon wlio picked jt up will please telephone\n{ LOCAL AND PROVINCIAL \\n\mjy^Mt**^Mm*^*m^k^**A^\nBoru, this morning to the wife of T L.\nMarquis, Fairview, a daughter.\nToday was chamber duy at the court\nhouse but no applications were mado.\nThe Nelson Choral Society will meet\ntonight for reheaisal at the usual hour\nand place.\nJ. Dancy, contractor, is adding a veranda to the old McNab residence, corner\nFalls and Vernon Streets.\nThe Canada Lumberman, of Feb, Kith,\nestimates the log cut of British Columbia\nfor Inst year at hot) million feet.\nF. W. Peters O. P. P. freight depart*\nmeut manager for the West, arrived in\nthe city last night and is at the Strathcona.\nThe adjourned meeting of St. Patrick's\nsociety will be held in the city hall tomorrow night at 9 o'clock A full attendance\nis requested.\nJ. E. Annable received a wire from\nWinnipeg this morning of^the acceptance\nby a land syndicate formed there of a\ntract of fruit laud near Burton City.\nThe purchase price is $20,000.\nThe death occurred last night of Hugh\nOrr Riugrose, aged four months and four\ndays, son of Mr. and Mrs. Riugrose. The\nfuneral will take place at 2 p.m toniorrow\nfrom their residence, Fairview.\nChief Jarvis says that never in the\nhistory of Nelson have the months of\nJauunry and February been bo quiet in\npolice circles. There have been very few\narrests and none for anything more serious than drunkenness.\nInvitations are out for the smoker in\nthe armoury Wednesday evening under\nthe auspices of the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of No. 2 company,\nR. M R , to commemorate the auniver-\nsa y of the battle of Paardeberg.\nThe regular fortnightly meeting of the\ncity council will be held in the coudcU\nchamber tonight fat 8 o'clock. The fin.\nauoe committee is in session this afternoon and will probably present the estimates lor the year tonight. Another\nmatter to come up is the request of the\nboard of Bchool trustees for the submission of a loan bylaw to the property\nowners.\nConsumers of city light current may\nhave wondered why the lights flickered\nand went out briefly for refreshments\nabout fi.HO. Tne reason as explained by\nEngineer McCmllock was that a breakdown had taken place in the line of the\nW. K. P. & L. Co. and by an agreement\nwith the city such emergencies the city\nplaut was shut down for a few moments\nto allow for connection being made with\nthe city current. The occurance was in\nno way owning to defect in the machinery.\nThe Store of Quality\nIf you like nice, clean, crisp\nBiscuits we recommend you to\ntry the\n20th Century Package\nPack\nPer\nage.\n10c\nmc\nVanilla Wafera \t\n10c\n1flr\n10c\n10c\n10r\nMilk Toast \t\ninr\nSaratoga Flakes (Salted) ...\nthus\ne to\nthey\n15c\n15c\nPut up In packages and\never fresh. It costs litL\ngive them a trial, aud\nprove themselves worlh lt.\nRob.M.Hood&Co.\nK. W. C. Block Phone 10\nA, McDonald & Co,\nWHOLESALE\nMERCHANTS\nDealers in staple and fancy Gro-3-arisss\nButter, Eggs.\nGamp and Miners' Supplies.\nSAMUEL A. WYE\nHEATING ENGINEER,\n22 ur Wili\nAll Kinds or Heating Plants In Stock.\nSANITARY PLUMBING.\nVictoria St., Nr. Opera House. Tel. 181,\nLenten\nSuggestions\nFINNAN HADDIE\nSALT HERRINGS\nSALT MACKEREL\nWHALE CODFISH\nBRICK CODFISH\nKIPPERED HERRINGS\nKIPPERED HERRING IN TINS.\nSARDINES\nSALMON\nHERRING IN TOMATO SAUCE\nLOBSTER\nHADDIE\nSHRIMPS, ETC.\nALL FRESH GOODS OF THE BEST\nQUALITY.\nC* A* Benedict\nCorner Silica and Josephine Sts.\n PHONE 7- \t\nWM. S. DREWRY\nA. M. Can. Soc. C. K.\nDOMINION AND PROVINCIAL LAND\n8URVEYOR.\nMining Work a Specialty.\nOffice: Healey Building. P. O. Box\nBaker St., NELSON, B. C.\nTHE\nBIGGEST\nAND\nBEST...\nSONG BOOK of its kind is the \"Scot-\nWEST KOOTENAY\nBUTCHER CO.\nHis- ansl Kt-lHll Dm\nFresh and Salted Meats\nCamps BUppUed OU shortest notice and\nlowest price. Nothing t\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"t t'n-sh and\nwholesome meats and supples kept in Mitck\nMail orders receive careful tittention.\nE. C. TRAVES. Manager.\ntish Students' Song Book.\" it contains\na very \ur_\e collection of the very best\nand most popular college songs, including all the old favorites.\nPrice $2.25\nW. G. Thomson\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf^SSSS*\"\" Nflson, b. c.\nPhunu 34.\nTi,mblyn's Venture.\nThe Spokane Review of yesterday\nsays:\nA marriage license was obtained at\n\"Cupid\" Heywood's window at the num.\n,ty auditor's office yesterday by Francis\nArthur Tambiyn, aged 54. to Mrs. Laura\nC. Stowe, aged 47. Chief of Police he-\nroy Waller was a witness to the fact\nthat the couple was of lei^al age. It\ncould not he learned yesterday whether\nthey had been married.\nThe Great Northern Railway Company,\nns well as its competitors the N.P.R., and\nO.K. and N., hns had its sen-ice badly\nintempted by floods, washouts and slides.\nA variety company wns delnyed several\nduys in reachinir Spokane last week.\nConsequently one of the-end men's jokes\nwas: \"Yun'd better take this train.\nYou don't know when there will be another on the Grejit-Now-and-Then.\"\nFINE TAILORED GARMENTS FOR MEN\nThe Full Measure\n OF\t\nStyle and Value!\nYou have a perfect right to insist\nupon a perfect fit and perfect gyle\nwhen you are paying from $15 to\n$-.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD for a suit.\n20th Century Brand\nGarments\nwill fulfill yssm* highest expiTtatlons\nand your nuibi exacting tis nistiisls.\nThey are the nearest approach to\nperfection lhat we find in lhe lailor-\nlng world. We can prove these\nfacts to yssu if you will but give ub\nthe opportunity.\nPrices for This Month :\n$18.00 Style and value for $13.00\n$20.00 Style and value for $15.00\nBoys' Suits at $2, $3, $4 and $5\nImportant Sale of Mens'\nand Boys' Shoes\nMens' regular $4.00 Box Calf\nShoes for $3.00\nBoys' regular $2.50 Box Calf\nShoes for. $2.00\nClearance Sale of Mens' Under-\nwear jt $1, $1.50 and $2 per Suit.\nMen's Cashmere and Wool Socks\nat 25c a pair or 5 pairs for $1.00.\nNELSON, B. C.\nCALL AT THE\nRed Cross Dftig Store\nfor your Prescriptions, Family Recipes,\nHair Tonics, and all kinds of\nDrugs.\nNote the Address:\nllaker St., near .Josephine, Nelson, It. C.\nFURNH URE I\nWE SELL\nThe Marshall Sanitary Mattress $24.00\nThe Ostermoor Sanitary Mattress 15.00\nThe Elastic Felt Sanitary Mattress 13.00\nThe Ostermoor, fitted two sides, 8.00\nThe Jumbo, a good two side Mattress 6.00\nThe Common Wool Top Mattress 4.00\nCheap Mattresses 3,00\nV. J. \"Robertson & Co.\nBAKER STREET.\nNELSON, B. C.\n...COLLARS...\n2S9 do/.. Linen -Collars To Ue Mold at\n$1.50 per doz.\nJ. A. GILKER\nBAKKR SIRI.ET. INfHUSOlN.\nHAVE A LOOK AT OUR\nFifty Cent Hand Ba\nThey are beauties at the price.\nJ. J. WALKER\nWatchmaker\nJeweler\nTelephone .1.1.1.\n&Co., Esui\nWlioiuMiui- I'rovlalona,\nProduce,\nPruit.\nDominion (jovs-rniiii'M I'rs-ntssiry One-Pound Bncba rwcivwi w%UTI\nfrom the s-hurn. For side by all lending Krncurs. \"r\nOffloe and wambonis: Houston Mock, PbooafS,\nJosephine Street.\nNelson, B.C\nBohemian Beei\nNOW IS THK TIME TO SEND IN\nYOUR ORDER FOR BOTTLES OR\nKEGS. QUANTITY LIMITED\nThe Nelson Brewing Co., Lti\nORE SACKS\nWe unjust in Btioeipt uf a Carload of\nCALCUTTA ORE SI\nThese are 11j\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD - tiie-Ft grade of on' Hwkti in tht*\nnmrk\"l and cur prices an* right. If yon uxe in\nUftil li-t ut* hear fnnn jon.\nJ. H. Ashdown Harchra\nCompany, Limited.\nNELSON IRON WOI\nENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS\nFOUNDURS AIND\nMACHINISTS\nB. A. ISAAC\nR. W. HINTON'\nK\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDpf*lrlrig and .l.sl.l.ii.u exwusutetl with [)es.nauh. ShMrtMB\nWork. Mining ..nd Mill Mn_l,,,._,-. . Mf.nufa.cturars.tsi I\nOrs. Curat. I,. I.. Cotstriictiira' C*.rsa.\nNELSON, B. C.\nf*UMln\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD9MM 1.11.-11,\nWorking men,\nMen in dr\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDM itttlrw.\nSporting mtn,\nHmiJnomw trtun.\nMen that'fl full of fire\nUNITE and sinn that the iiiijinrtatwl\nJohn T. Pierre an- ihe jiniptt wM\nMy hint fall shipment has jnpt amTriJ\nthem anil place .vour order early f\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDrXn>*<\nJOHN T. PIERRE, Artistic Tailofl\nSubject to Confirmation!\nWe Will Buy\n\V*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Will Se\"\n10,000 Hiiiiibler-r.irlbisn 27-T4\nS.000 Sullivan 07\n10,000 n. c. Amtlnnntoj Coal..Otter\nI'm Sullivan Hnmis \t\nIs.DUO AmrTicnn Ussy \t\n1.000 InliTiiallisnal Coal .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nB. B. Mighton 6z\nDrawer 1082\nNEL80N, B. C.\npHMl\nA.Q. LAMBERT & C<\nSfS Lumber, Shingles,\nMANUFACTURERS\nAND\nLath, Mouldings, Doors, Window*\nTurned Work und Bracket*. Mail Ordorii prnniully nil\"'\nVBRNOM STRBBT - . . NHUSON. B. c.\nOur Hock of Skates it complete ano \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDrl\"i\nIncluding the popular\nBOKER'S BEAUTY and CHARM (Ladl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD)\nBOKER'S PERFECT HOCKEY.\nSTARR HOCKEY and GENUINE ACME.\nALSO HOCKEY STICKS and PUCKS.\nWood-VaHance Hardware Ci\n,-vhotaMU* NELSON *\"\"\"@en . "Titled \"The Nelson Canadian\" from 1960-06-04 to 1906-06-27

Titled \"The Daily Canadian\" from 1906-06-28 to 1908-05-02."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Nelson (B.C.)"@en . "Nelson"@en . "Nelson_Canadian_1907-02-25"@en . "10.14288/1.0079835"@en . "English"@en . "49.4933330"@en . "-117.2958330"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Nelson, B.C. : Canadian Publishing Company, Ltd."@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Daily Canadian"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .