"edb1897c-331f-47e9-974e-68f003c96072"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-12-10"@en . "1901-10-11"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/evewoross/items/1.0226668/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " V\nVol. I, No.*?* vC\".\n*r\nROSSLAND, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nRtfit\n20 Per Gent j\n^^. _. /\u00C2\u00BB<_%\u00C2\u00A3_*.! C?mml*ma^\nmm\n* Discount eftSH Sale!\nat\nCM LL Leather Footwear in our largo Block\nC>are now Belling at 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT FOR CASH ONLY. This sale is to\nmake room for our large stock of RUBBER\nSHOES which are now on the road.\n3\n3\nICO. LALONDE\n...The,,. ^\nShoeman. ^\nQUICK WORK-\nPROMPT DELIVERY.\nRed Star Storage & Transfer Co_ *\nMoves or Stores Any Old Thing.\nDoes All Kinds of Team Work.\nSells Seasoned Fir and Tamarac Wood Any Length.\nFour Foot $4,60. If you want wood that will hum\nor split give us a call at the old stand. Terms cash.\nfo\nfo\ni\\nPhone 8.\nW. H. FRY, Manager. T\n| DO YOU WANT |\nI SHOES at COST? 1\nWe have some lines of Women's Oxford Ties in black\nand tan, also Misses and Children's tan shoes, which\nwe are offering at and below cost in order to clear\nout the entire lot before winter.\n3\nw. f. mcneill\niJUiUJttl\n3\nNext to the Postoffice. 3\n.ittiUJUiUiiUUiUiUiUiUiUiiimiUR\nfo\nfo\nr9-&9\nNew\nFall Coats j\n..In the Very.. \u00C2\u00A7\nLatest Styles\nMgARTHUR & HARPER'S I\nThe Leading Dry Goods Store.\nti\nti\nti\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER n, 1901.\nGot Five Yean.\nO.M.F0X&CO\nTeas and Coffees.\nCrockery and Glassware\nHEADQUARTERS\nSALOON.\nCor. Washington St. and First Ave.\nWE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE\nGood Cigars and Case\nGoods a Specialty:::::::\nC. 0. TALBERT\nWall Papor and Palnta.\nBee Daniels and Chambers for the\na test designs in wall paper and the\nbelt quality ot paints. Phone V. & N\n18*. It\nChatham, Ont., Oct. II.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Harry\nCameron was sentenced to five\nyears in the Kingston penitentiary\nfor passing counterfeit money.\n(lottlni Hotter\ni:-l\nKingston, Ont., Oot. ll- - ' *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ncipal Grant is steadily imp\ning.\nA \"Bee\" Suit.\nHamilton, Oct. 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094W, B. Brock\nof Lynden hag entered an action\nagainst hit neighbor, R. L. Patterson, to restrain the latter from\nkeeping an unlimited number of\nbees, which he declares have made\nlife for his family and live stock a\nmisery the pait year.\nHot Boast Beef served with every\nglass ot beer at the Alhambra\nNORTHPORT\nSMELTER\nRALPH SMITH,M.P.\nThe Dominion Trades and\nLabor Congress.\nIARGEST EVER HELD IN CANADA\nhat Has Been Accomplished\u00E2\u0080\u0094Why\nI He Accepted the Presidency-\nCanadian Federation.\nj\nCompany Sued by a Scab\nGatherer-Did His\nBest.\nSpokane, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u00948. H. Doyle\nsays the Northport Smelting and\nRefining company engaged him\nto hire men to work in theimellcr,\nagreed to pay him a reasonable\ncompensation therefor and then\ndid not keep the agreement. He\nsues for $508.50.\nDoyle says' he was engaged as\nagent on July 11 last. He was instructed to hire men in St. Paul,\nMinneapolis and Duluth and to\nship them to the smelter. He\nsays the agreement included his\nboard at hotels, railway fare and\nnecessary expenses. Doyle figures\nhis July expenses at $142 and August at $328.50. He only worked\ntwo months. He considers $180\nreasonable compensation.\nHot Weinernurst served with every\nglass of beer at the Alhambra,\nGARMENT\nWORKERS\nOperatives Win at Boston\nVest Makers to Go\nOut.\nBoston.Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The backbone of\nthe garment workers' strike in this\ncity was apparently broken today,\nwhen 21 contractors adopted the\nnew bill of prices and filed their\nbonds to put it into effect, while 21\nothers signed and will file their\nbonds tomorrow.\nThis will send 2150 operatives\nback to work in the morning. The\nstate board of arbitration had declined to interfere.\nThe vest makers employed by\nfive contractors voted tonight to\nstrike tomorrow owing to the failure\nto secure an advance of two cents\nper garment for operatives and\npressmen and one cent for basters.\nRalph Smith, M. P., has just relumed to Nanaimo from\nresiding over the Dominion Trades\n?md Labor congress at Brandford.\nSpeaking of the results of the\n' :ongress, Mr. Smith said to the\nlerald that perhaps the most im-\nlortant work was the proposal to\nnaugurate a Canadian Federation\n. >f Labor. A special committee was\nippoinled to inquire thoroughly\n. nto the feasibility of the proposition and will report it at the next\nannual meeting of the Congress,\n%hen no doubt the matter will be\nlaken up enthusiastically, and\nwhilst it is not intended at the\npresent time to interfere with the\ninternational unions having connections with the A. P. of L. arrangements will doubtless be made\nto make it advantageous for all\nCanadian unions to be affiliated\nSitli the Canadian Federation as\nell.\nA great many other general resolutions were paseed suggesting\nlegislation for the benefit of the\nlaboring men of Canada which will\nwithout doubt receive the careful\nconsideration of parliament at its\nnext session.\nIn general it was the largest\nLabor Congress ever held in Canada, seventy delegates being present, five of these being from British\nColumbia which was more than\ndouble ever sent from the province\nbefore, two from Nelson, one from\nRossland.oue from Phoenix undone\nfrom Nanaimo. Fourteen unions\naffiliated with the Congress during\nthe past year, an increase of nearly\ndonble the per capita tax of former\nyears.\nAsked abouthis re-election to the\npresidency, which was received in\nNanaimo with some surprise aB it\nwas understood he was not tostand\nfor the position again, Mr. Smith\nexplained that he expressed himself at the Congress as greatly in\nfavor of the selection of a man from\nCentral Canada, aB he would then\nbe moro in touch with the general\nsecretary, which was most important. In spite of this, however, the\nCongress was persistent in urging\nthe position on him, and as it\nseemed unanimously satisfactory to\nthe delegates ho accepted their decision, as he was perfectly willing\nto act in any oapacity in the interests of labor.\nRARE STAMPS.\n111(1. Price Paid For Old Bit. of SUmp-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2d Paper.\nLondon, Oct. 11,\u00E2\u0080\u0094At a sale of\nrare postage stamps here a Canadian 12-penny black, issued in\n1851, sold for \u00C2\u00A361, a new Brunswick shilling mauve, for \u00C2\u00A336, a\nNova Scotia shilling, purple, for\nJE36, and a Newfoundland two-\npeny, scarlet, for \u00C2\u00A349.\nROSSLAND\nLIBERALS\nThe Alien Labor Act Wi 1\nCome Up on Tuesday-\nOther Business.\nThe RoBsland Liberal association\nheld its annual meeting laBt evening and elected ils officers for the\nyear. Important resolutions iu\nfavor of conducting the provincial\ncampaign on strictly party lines\nand on the immediate necessity\nof holding a provincial convention\nwere also carried.\nThe position of the party in\nRossland at the present time and\nthe alien labor act and its enforcement by the government now occupied the attention of the meeting to a great extent.\nIt ih said, that the position of the\nassociation on tho enforcement of\nthe law in question would be finally decided at a special meeting lo\nbe held on Tuesday evening next\nwhen a warm debate may be expected.\nThe following officers were elected.\nRt. Hon. Sir Wilfrid Laurier,\nhonorary president.\nW. A. Galliher, Hon. vice-preBi-\ndent.\nJ. A, Macdonald, president.\nR. W. Grigor,|first vice-president.\nA. H. Dutton, second vice president.\nJ. H. Young, third vice-president.\nThomas Parker, secretary-treasurer.\nExecutive committee\u00E2\u0080\u0094W. Hart-\nMcHarg, D. N. McTavish, Dr.\nKerr, W.J. Whiteside, Dr. Kenning, C. O. Lalonde, Dr. Sinclair\nand J. M. Martin.\nCLARKE WALLACE\nTribute to the Late Member at Vancouver.\nAN ORANGE DEMONSTRATION\nThe Funeral at Woodbridge\u00E2\u0080\u0094Special\nService at Vancouver on Next\nSunday.\nToronto, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The funeral\nof the Hon. Clarke Wallace takes\nplace at Woodbridge at 2 oclock\nSaturday afternoon. It will be\nentirely under the direction of the\nOrange Grand Lodge of Ontario.\nIt is expected that it will be .the\nlargest ever seen in Canada, and\nwill be attended by friends and\nrepresentatives of the order from\nall parts of the Dominion. The\nexecutive of the grand lodge of\nOntario west has ordered all grand\ncounty and district lodge officers\nto appear in official regalia and\nthat all other brethern wear mourning.\nVancouver, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094On receipt\nof news of the death of N. Clarke\nWallace,the executive for the grand\nlodge for British Columbia of the\nL. O. L., met and decided to hold\na memorial service at the city hall\non Sunday afternoon. A handsome floral tribute from the grand\nlodge will be placed on the casket. \t\nTHE COTTON\nSTRIKERS\nHinges on Majority or\nUnanimous Vote in Ordering Strike.\nFall River, Mass., Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\nquestion as to whether or not there\nwill be a strike in the cotton mills\nin this city on account of the refusal of manufacturers to grant a\nfive per cent increase in wages,\nwas re-opened tonight. A misunderstanding in regard to tho unanimous or majority vote existing\namong the unions was the reason\nassigned by the textile council for\npostponing the strike for two weeks\nfrom last Monday.\nThe spinners tonight voted that\ntheir delegate to the council shall\ninsist that only a unanimous vote\nshall bring about a strike.\nPrice Five Cents..\n* \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094T*\nPOOR MISS STONE\n\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nGreat Anxiety as to the\nLady's Fate.\nA FORMER TRAGEDY RECALLED\nHow the Brigands Killed Four Cap-\n'. tives in 70 When Pursued !.\nby Troops.\nLondon, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Withr\t\nto the announcement tbat Turkish\nand Bulgarian troops are surround1-\ning the abductors of Miss Stone\nthe Globe says it considers that\nunless the movement is suspended\nuntil she is safe out of the bands\nof the brigands it will infallibly\nend in a repetition of the tragedy\nof Greece during the year 1870,\nwhen Lord Muncaster and a party\nwere captured.\nLord Muncaster was released in\norder to negotiate for a ransom o!\n\u00C2\u00A325,000. Then, as now, an attempt was made to surround the\nbrigands, with the result that four\ngentlemen of the party were\nmurdered.\nLord and Lady Muncaster and a\nparty of English travelers were\nseized by Greek brigands April\n11th, 1870, at Oropas, near Marathon. Lord Muncaster and the\nladiee of the party were sent to\ntreat for the \u00C2\u00A325,000 demanded as\nransom, with a free pardon for the\nbrigands. The latter were surrounded by titoops and in retreating, April 21st,' killed M*: Vyner,\"\nMr. Lloyd, Mr. Herbert, and Count\nDeboyl.\nThe incident caused great excitement, especially as influential\npersons were charged with con-\nnix ii nee at brigandage. Several of\nthe- brigands were killed and aeven\nwere captured, tried and condemned May .23rd, of the same year.\nOn June 20th, 1870, five of the\nbrigands were executed.\nClam Chowder free day and night at\nthe Alhambra.\nFISHERMEN\nON TRIAL\nThe Marooning Case at\nVancouver-Hard to\nGet a Jury.\nVancouver, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Japanese marooning case in which Rogers and Desplain are charged with\nbeing two of apartyof30or40white\nliBhermen who kidnapped nine\nJapanese fishermen during the\nstrike on the Fraser river and marooned them on Bowen island, proceeded all day yesterday before Mr.\nJustice Druke. An hour was taken\nup in impanelling the jury and the\nentire list of available jurymen\nwas gone over twice before this was\ndone.\nTlie crown feared that if union\nmen sat on the . jury their well-\nknown dislike of Japanese as\nlaborers might prejudice them.\nIt seemed impossiblle for theorown\nto secure any but workingmen on\nthe jury, however.\nDuring the day the defence did\nnot attempt to prove that the Jap-\nenese were not marooned, but tried\nto break down the evidence of the\nnine Japanese as to the identity of\nthe prisoners. All nine Japs\nswore positively, that they recognized Rogers and- Desplain as the\nmen who boBBcd the marooning\nparty. THE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E OCTOBER , r, 1901\ni\nThe Evening World\nBy the World Publishing Company.\npublished du ily in Miners' Union hall, Roaaland, in the Intercut of organized labor in Britiah\nColumbia.\nr_ta_ned at the Rosaland, B. C. postoffice for\ntransmission through the mails, May l.lgoi, aa\niccond clau reading matter.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES-Fllly centa per\nMonth or Js>oo year, invariable iu advance, Ad-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ftlalng ratna made known on application.\nAddreaa 'all communications to Jamea H.\nFletcher, Manager, P. O. box 558, Rossland, B. C\nidea of the lot, ia roughly, Judge\nMcMahon's estimate as given to\nto the London jury in the Sifton\nmurder trial.\nJapan is willing to go a great\ndeal of trouble to prevent the emigration of her people to British\nColumbia. Give British Columbia\na free hand, and the dusky islanders will need no large amount of\npersuasion to remain at home.\nTHE EXPERT.\nThe testimony of expert witnesses in either civil or criminal\nproceedings has called forth a great\ndeal of adverse criticism.\nIn the Sifton murder case at\nLondon last week the presiding\njudge told the jurors in his summing up, that the expert evidence\nof some twenty doctors who had\ntestified during the trial was of no\nconsequence, and that they could\nsafely eliminate it altogether in\ntheir consideration of the case.\nIt is rarely that a judge speaks\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2o plainly and, as the jury subsequently disagreed, standing eight\nfor and four against conviction,\nthey evidently were not unanimous\nin following the judge's, expressed\nviews.\nThere is little doubt that the\nflat contradiction in the medical\ntestimony during the trial in\nquestion caused at least four, of the\ntwelve \"good men and true,\" to\ngive the accused the benefit of the\ndoubt created in their minds by the\nconflicting views of the doctors and\nconsequently the whole case will\nhave to be gone over again at the\nnext London assizes.\nIn commenting on the Sifton\ntrial and expert testimony generally, the Toronto Globe gays editor-\nally.\n\"The subject, has been much discussed in the United States, both\nAmong the lawyers and doctors,\nand various remedies proposed.\nPerhaps the only effectual remedy\nwill be an amendment of the law\nof evidence excluding expert evidence altogether in criminal cases,\nexcept when called upon by the\noourt and paid out of public\nfunds.\"\nDoctors, of course, are by no\nmeans the only experts who differ\nin, and out of the witness box. In\ntke Centre Star-Iron Mask suit\nhere in Rossland, two years ago,\nwe had the beginning of a fine object lesson showing how easily and\nconclusively eminent mining experts could differ on a given state\nof facts, the facts being the geological formation of Red mountain.\nThe experts of only one side were\nbeard, the case being adjourned\nand, finally setled out of court before the Iron Mask experts testified,\nbut those who followed the case\nhad at least a fair idea what\nwould probably be sworn to.\nIn theory expert witnesses are\nsupposed to be impartial, and to\nbe called in to assist the court in\nunravelling diffioultquestions. In\npractice, however, eaoh side produces ita own experts, whose views\nare perfectly well known to the\nlearned gentlemen of the long\nrobe beforehand and the true i_-\nlue at stake is not unfrevuently\nsmothered as a result.\nExperts are invariably costly\nwitnesses and the poor litigant is of*\nten at a great disadvantage in not\nbeing able to employ learned gentlemen to support his contention\nas againBt a wealthy opponent.\nPossibly the suggestion of the\nGlobe might be made to apply to\ncivil as well a criminal actions\nwith good results.\nPremier Dunsmuir has given another interview in which he says\nhe is not tired of politics nor will he\nresign. He adds that every one of\nhis pledges have been carried out\nexcept that of taking Helmoken into the cabinet. Portfolios were\noffered to Vancouverites but were\nrefused for good reasons. Brown\nwas taken into tbe cabinet as a disinterested supporter of legislation\nfor tho good of the country, not as\na Martinite.\nA London broker, writing at the\nclose of last month, says the mining market has been depressed tbis\nweek by the news of renewed\nactivity of the Boers and by tbe\nseries of small reverses experienced\nby the British. Nobody had expected a general surrender of the\nBoers on September 15, but no one\nsupposed that their forces would\nexhibit such practical proofs of\ntheir disinclination to surrender.\nThe South African section has\nquite lost the strong tone it was\nbeginning to exhibit and operations in the market seem to be\nsuspended again for a time. Other\nsections of the market have been\ndepressed in sympathy. A very\nunexpected fall in copper shares\nhas also occurred. The fall was\nchiefly in Rio Tintos, but Anacondas were also affected. The selling\nis mostly from France and the\ncause is not very clearly understood here.\nLOOK HERE!\nYour credit is good for New\nand Second-Hand Goods on\nTHE INSTALLMENT PLAN\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AT\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGlazan's\nFurniture Store\nBedroom Sets from $12 to $15,\nYum Ynm Springs, $2.65.\nWoven Wire Springs, $1.75.\nSport Springs, copper wire, :f_:00.\nWove Toy Mattress, $2.60.\nSatin top all wove mattresses.\nJumbo Mattresses, lulled, double-top,\nall wove.\nOne Spring and Mattress from $1,00\nto $2.00.\nNew Beds $2.00.\nRocking Chairs from .1.1)0 to $3.00.\nDinner Pails 25c.\nGranite Pails 60c.\nCandle SiickH, plain, 25c; .Improved\nIdeal, 50c; Montana, 50c; Solid Steel,\n50 c to 75c.\nThese prices will last only 30 days.\nTHE.\nHOFFMALHOUSE\nBest 25c Meal\nin town.\nMiners Checks Cashed Free\nof Charge at All Hours.\nHARRY MclNTOSH, Proprietor.\nV.&N. Tel.\nin. F.O. box\n\u00C2\u00AB9i. Office\t\nand Yards\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nffhlrd Ave-\ninicandWaah\ningtou street\nOp. Ked lit.\nDepot ,...\nPORTO RICO\nLUMBER CO.\nXaX-UI.XTaZ.a-I ^^^^^^^^\nRough and Dressed\nLumber,Shingles,\nMouldings and A-l\nWhite Pine Lumber Always in Stoek\nMill at Porto Rico Biding, Yards at\nRossland and Nelson, Head office ut Nelson, B. C. We carry n complete stock of\nCoast Flooring, Ceiling, Inside Finish,\nTurned Work, Sashttf and Ijoors. Special\norder work will receive prompt attention\nSpokane Falls & Northern\nNELSON & FT. SHEPPARD RY.\nRed Mountain Ry,\nThe only all-rail route between all points east\nweat and aouth to Roaaland, Nelson, and all Intermediate points, connecting at Spokane with\nthe Great Northern, Northern pacific aud O. K.\n&N. Co.\nConnects at Ros\u00C2\u00B0land v. '.Hi the Canadian Pacific Ry. for Boundary C . k points.\nConnects at Mcvert P. . . with stage dally tin\nRepublic.\nBunet service on trains between Spokane and\nNorthport.\nEFFECTIVE MAY ?\nLeave. Arrive.\n9:00 a. m. Spokane 7:35 p. ni.\n12:25 a, m. Rossland. 4:10 p. m.\n10:10 a; m. Nelson. 6:05 p. m.\nH. A. JACKSON,\nGeneral Passenger Agt,\nSpokane, Wash.\nH. P. BROWN,\nAirent, Rosaland. B. C\nNOTICE!\nFashionable Dressmaking.\nLadies who desire a perf.ct fit and\nfinish in the latest styles should call at\nMrs. Pippy's Dressmaking Parlors,\nQueen St, First house north of Columbia avenue.\nRussian influence in Manchuria\nis said to be working in opposition\nto American interests, particularly\nin regard to petroleum. A press\ndispatch states that the Russian\nadministrator at Lalien-VVah has\nrefused tp permit Americans to\nbuild warehouse, for the storage of\nkerosene produced in this country,\nhis idea being to exclude American\noil irom Manchuria.\n*******'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0**\nSt. Charles Hotel\nis being renovated from\ntop to bottom and as soon\nas this is accomplished\nwill be again open to tho\npublic\t\nCharles Ehlers, Prop.\ntrf***********************.1\nTO any customers who* patronized us\nall the time while they have been\nat work, and especially to those with\ntamilies, we beg-to announce that we will\ntrust them to all the goods they may\nneed during the strikejand will wait for the- payi *\nuntil they start to work again and be ablo to\npay. To those who need other stuff, such as\nGroceries, etc., whioh we do not carry, and 'cannot get credit elsewhere, we will give them orders, on which they can get all they want on\npur account until the trouble is all settled.\nThis is a bona fide offer, which fact can bo readily proven when occasion makes it necessary.\nTHE PEOPLES' STORE\nCLIFTON CORNER.\nB. BANNETT,\nALL KINDS OF DRY\nW. F. LINGLE\nOffice at City Bakery\nPhone 149.\nSUBSCRIBE FOR THE\nEVENING WORLD\n50 CENTS PER MONTH.\nTHE:\nA test of American coal is to be\nused on the French Cruiser D'Es-\ntrees, which escorted the Duke and\nDuchess of York to Quebec. The\ncruiser has filled her bunkers at\nat the port of New York, and goes\nfrom there to the French West\nIndies. The D'Estrees is a steel-\nsheathed cruiser of the third class,\nand has a speed of twenty knots.\nThe Shortest, Quickest\nand Best.\nReal Situation.\nNOTES AND COMMENTS.\nTbe Chinese court is returning to\nPekin, They will probably find\nthat two or three things were mislaid during their absence.\nThe lawyer, the liar, and the\nexpert witness, arranged in arithmetical progression as tho layman's\nThe London correspondent of the\nEngineering and Mining Journal\nof New York, writing to his paper\nunder date of Sept. 24 says. I\nmentioned a week or two ago that\nthe new controllers of the Le Roi\ncompany had decided not to elect a\nnew board of directors until the\ngeneral meeting to be held after\nthe receipt of Mr, R. J. Frecheville's repprt, in the meantime\nelectiagonly Mr.. Frecheville to\nthe board. There were thus only\nthree directors\u00E2\u0080\u0094M\nCeatreBUr 46 40\nCrows Nest Pass Coal J80 00 J72 00\nDeer Trail No. a 3 2%\nDuaulee\t\nlivening Star (Assess, paid) 5\nSlant 3). 2a\nGolden Crown Mini a, Lira 3H a\nHomestake (Assess, paid) 2 A l\nIron Mask (Assess, paid) 16 ntf\nITO Colt 1\nIX L ao\nJumbo 10\nling (Oro Denoro)\t\nKnob Ul\t\nLonePne 5 3K\nMonte Christo ] l}_\n1 Montreal Gold Pielda\t\n, Morning Glory itl\nMorrlaon 4 i%\nMountain Lion 30 20\nHoblePive 10 8)4\nNorth Slar (Enst Kootenay) 33 aj\nNovelty 2 a\nOld Ironsides 85 73\nPayne. 17\nPeoriaMinea X\nPrincess M Mid lK\nClip 33 \u00C2\u00BB\nmbler-Carlboo 31 49M\nBepubllc 3\nRoaaland Bonanza G. M. 8t S. Oo. ]\nSt. Slmo Consolidated 2%\nSullivan toy. 9\nBpltzee Gold Mlnea f 5 00 | 4 50\nTamarac (Kenneth) Asaesa. paid. 3 1\nTom Thumb 13K \"H\nVan Anda 3 iii\nVirginia j i)_\nWar Eagle Consolidated 13\nWaterloo 1 A\nWhite Bear 3 ix\nWinnipeg a% 7*\nWonderful 4 a\nToday's Sales:\nCentre Star, 1000, 43c; Winnipeg, 2000, 9c; Black Tail, 1500,\nrljc. Total Bales, 4500 shares.\nYesterday was pay day in\nPhoenix camp.\nThirteen of Kitchener's scouts\nhave been captured in a Boer ambush.\nThe Arlington mine, near Slocan\nCity, is now the largest shipper in\nSlocan district.\nNelson will have an association'\nrifle match next week. Good\nprizes are offered.\nSmith Curtis, M. P. P., is expected here from the coast tonight\nor tomorrow.\nKdward Finch, a former resident\nof Rossland and very well known\nhere, is in town on a short visit.\nJ. Roderick Robertson of Nelson,\nand Walter Aldridge of the Trail\nsmelter, were on Columbia avenue\nthis morning.\nThe I. O. G. T. grand lodge at\nVancouver yesterday passed resolutions favoring the proper enforcement of the liquor laws of the province.\nW. H. Simpson & Co., grocers,\nare moving from their old stand on\nSecond avenue to the premises on\nthe south side of Columbia avenue\nwest, regently vacated by Linton\nBr 38,\nAccording tQ the morning paper\none of tbe Le Roi farmers named\nWells fell in the shaft at the 800-\nfoot level yesterday, and was injured, but not very seriously.\nThe Trackman's Advance Advocate for October published at St.\nLouis by the Brotherhood of Railway Trackmen of America has\nbeen received,\nVancouver Liberals elected their\nofficers last night and will meet\nagain on October 24th, when resolutions favoring Federal party\nlines will be introduced and\npassed upon.\nKf.Xi* T* ROSSLAND LODGE I\n. \JP L . K. ol P., meets every ]\nForty-pound boxes of pears $1.50\nper box at Paulson Bros. tf.\nGot a Decision.\nKansas City, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094George\nQreen of San Francisco got the decision over Tommy Ryan in the\nsixth ronnd in a bout at a local\nclub last night.\nDobell Better,\nQuebec, Oct. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hon. R. R.\nDobell has about recovered from\nhis illness and is able to be about\nagain.\nNOTICE.\nTenders will be received by the\nundersigned on or before October\n18th, 1901, for the following:\nOne New Parker Shot Gun.\nOne New Savage Rifle.\nOne New Camera, manufactured\nby the Rochester Optical company\nThe above are now at the Customs House.\nB. R. McDonald,\nCollector of Customs\nJ L. Whitney & Co.\nMINING BROKERS.\nB. 0. and Washington Stocks \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 specialty\n47 Colombia avenue.\nRichard Plewman\nStock Broker\nBank of.Montreal Building\nV.&N. Phone la\nORDE &CO..\nMining Stocks, Real\nEstate, Tire Life and\nAccident Insurance.....\n\u00C2\u00AB60o_. An. Opal block. Telephoned\nAll our fanoy biscuits to be closed\nout at 15o per pound. Paulson\nBros,\nThe Supreme Court.\nThe case of Manly vs. Mackintosh, continued from yesterday\noccupied the attention of Mr. Justice Walkem almost all today.\nThe evidence was finished at\nthe lunch hour today and at 4 p.\nm. this afternoon, Mr. Macdonald was just concluding the final\naddress of counsel to the court.\nKeaolutloas of Condolence.\nPhoenix, B. C, Oct. 8th, 1901.\nAt the regular meeting of the\nPhoenix Miners, Union No. 8, held\non Oct. 5th, 1901, the following\nresolutions were adopted.\nWhereas, on the morning of\nSept. 30th, 1901, it was the will of\nAlmighty God to remove from our\nmidst Brother J. W. Wheateley.\nResolved\u00E2\u0080\u0094That by the death of\nBrother Wheateley, Phoenix Miners' union has lost an old and\ntrusted member and his parents\nan affectionate son. Be it fur.\nther\nResolved\u00E2\u0080\u0094That we extend to\nhis parents our heartfelt sympathy\nin this their sad bereavement and\ngreat lost,\nThat our oharter be draped for a\nperiod of thirty days and that a\ncopy of these resolusions be published in the Miners magazine, the\nEvkning Would and Labor Journal, and spread upon the minutes\nof our union.\nJohn Riokdan, Sec.\nPhoenix Miners' Union No. 8.\nDon't forget the prunes. A few\ndays more and the price will ad\nvance. Paulson Bros.\nNOTICE.\nNOTICE li herebv given that 6o days\nafter date I shsll apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for\npermission to purchase 640 acres of land,\nmore or less, in the Yale district, and\ndescribed as follows: Commencing at a\npost about one-quarter of a mile northerly from Iron creek, thence westerly\n80 chains, thenoe northerly 80 chains,\nthence easterly 80 chains, thence southerly 80 chains to point of commencement\nC. A. COFFIN.\nWitness: A.G.Ckiklmam.\nRowland, B. C, 4th September, A. D.\niqoi. 9-9 2m\nThe Shortest, Quickest\nand Best.\nSt. Paul, Minneapolis,\nChicago, Toronto,\nMontreal, New York,\nand all Eastern points.\nSeattle, Tacoma,\nVancouver, Victoria,\nand all Pacific Coast points.\nEAST BOUND.\nLeave Spokane si :16 a. m,\nWEST BOUND.\nLeave Spokane. .7:15 a.m. am. 8:00 p.m,\nAll connections made in Union depot\nNO ai,\n every Friday\nnight at 8 o'clock In Odd HellOw's hall. Queen\netreet. Waiting brothers nre always welcome.\nHarry Martin, c. C.\nProctkr Joinkr. K. ol R. and S\nIF f\ TTI FRATERNAI, ORDER OF\n* . V t. Pa. _\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 AOI.EB, Kossluud Aerie,\nNo, io, Regular meetings tviry Thursday eveu-\nngs, t p. m, Eagles Hall. Miners' Union Bldg.\nThos. Fitzmaurice, W. P.\nH, Daniel. W. Secretary.\nIf\ IT* HP Independent Order; ol Good\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 t_..VT.X. Templars meets every\nThursday Evening in the Lecture Room or the\nBaptist church Members or the order visiting\nthe city will be cordially welcomed.\nO. J. B, I.ANE, W.H. CREITZ,\nC. I. Secretary,\nIf* (\ 1? sleets in Odd Fellows Hnll\n.\J.\J.F . on Queen Street, between\nFirst and Second avenues. Regular meetings\neach Monday night. Visiting brothers nre cordially invited to attend aud register within 30\ndays.\nW.8, Murphy, Sec, M. B Bridglord, N. G\nRutland Cigar Factory.\nFor full particulars, (olders, ef. \u00E2\u0080\u009E\ncall on or address\nH. BRANDT, C.P.A.,\n701 W. River, id., Spokane\nH. P. Brown, Agent,\nRossland, B. C.\nCanadians^\n^Pacific \u00C2\u00ABy.\nDIRECT ROUTE.\nEAST WEST\nTORONTO VANCOUVER\nBUFFALO VICTORIA\nOTTAWA SEATTLE\nMONTREAL PORTLAND\nNEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO\nIMPERIAL LIMITED\n100 HOURS\nVANCOUVER TO MONTREAL\nSteamship service from Vancou<-\nver, Skagway, Uuwaii, Australia,\nChina anil Japan.\nFor Fursther Particulars npply'to\nA. C. McArthur, Depot Agt.\nA. B. MACKENZIE, City Agt\nKossland, It. C.\nJ. S. CARTER, D. P A.\nNels.n B.C.\nE.J.;Cojle A'G. P. A\nVancover. B. C*\n..ROSSLAND..\nCONFECTIONERY STORE\nNext to the Grand Union hotel,\nreceives consignments of Cut\nFlowers every day. For the\nchoicest of hot house b!os.oms\ncall and see them. Orders for\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2weddinge, banquets, etc., a\nspecialty. Charges reasonable.\nBATH & FOX. Proprietors.\nLe Roi\nLIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLES\nJohn F. Unburn, Prop,\nWashington St., Op. Hoffman House\nBest Turnouts-Only Cab in City\nPhone\u00E2\u0080\u0094V. & N. 39, Columbia 38.\nPostoffice Box ISO\nAlhambra Hotel\n$1 a day and up.\nFree Lunch from 11 a.m.to 2 p.m.\nBILL op fare:\nHot Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes\nPork and Beans, Clam Chowder\nHot Clam Chowder served day or night\nBEER 5c A GLASS.\nThe GRAND UNION HOTEL it is easily seen,\nIs splendidly run by Proprietor Green;\n,Buy one glass of beer and a\nfree lunch you'll get,\nSuch as sometimes you've\nheard of but not often met.\nNeat and clean furnished\nrooms can always be had\nAt such low prices as will make\nthe workingman _jlad.\nGeo. H< Green Prop,\nWhy not patronize a home in-\ndutsry? It will assist Union lahor\nand keep the money at homo. Ask\nfor a Crown Grant or W. B. Cigai\nwhen you buy.\nCollis & Co.,for fine commercial piim\ningfl Coll up 'phone 88. tf\nFob Rent\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three-room furnished houBe with city water. Apply\nto J. L. Whitney & Co.\nGat Your Papers\nnnd magazines at the Pcftcffice New\nStand. A full line of statiooeiv alway\non hand. Agency for the Evening\nWorld\n00000000****0*000000000000.\nI Underwear! I\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0-\n0\n0\n0\nWE HAVE JUST RECEIVED AND\nPLACED IN STOCK OUR NEW\nFALL LINE OF MEN'S AND BOYS'\nUNDERWEAR\nSEE OUR WINDOW\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n* Hunter Brothers *\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWHOLESALE MARKETS\nRossland, Nelson, Trail,Sandon,Revelstoke,Green-\nwood, Grand Forks and Vancouver.\nRETAIL MARKETS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Ymir, Kaslo\nSandon, New Denver, Silverton, Cascade City, Grand Forks,\nGreenwood, Phoenix, Midway, Camp McKinney,\nRevelstoke, Ferguson and Vancouver.\nFish. Game and Poultry in Season, Sausages of All Kinds.\nWM. DONALD, Manager Rossland Branch\naaCoL An.\nKeep Your\nEye on Meteor\n!lj^l!IB{l|gj!I!M@|gH\nMETEOR\nis the hew high-grade mining\noamp in the sonth half of the Col-\nville Reservation, seven miles west of the Columbia river, eight miles southwest of Daisy and 28\nmiles by good road from Meyers Falls. The town-\nsite is in the centre of tne rich aggregation of\nmines comprising the Meteor, Stray Dog, White\nSwan and Given groups, all of which are working\nin high-grade shipping ore. A great number of\nvery promising properties are opening up in the\nvicinity. It is surrounded by a splendid agricultural, fruit growing and stock raising country,\nunequalled in the northwest, and has a splendid\nsupply of timber for building and mining purposes, together with unlimited water power near\nIt has already, besides a store, a number of buildings in course of erection, and a telephone service,\nsaw mill, etc., will be in operation within a short\ntime. Meteor is a high grade camp of the real\nLeadville type, the ores mined being gold, silver,\nlead and copper. Picked assays have given as high\nas $140,000 to the ton, the average of the oamp\nbeing about $35. You can't afford to forget Meteor.\nNow is your time to get in at bed-rock prices.\nMeteor is Sure to be e Rich Camp\nLOTS\nFROM \u00C2\u00A5 |g%fO\n$25 to $150 L*V/ 1 O\nm\nfill nm^DIV/rG One-half cash and the balance in two equal pay- j^fjjjj\nJj|?| X JjiiilTXeO\"\"ments at three and sixmo nths, without interest UxS\nFor full particulars oall on or address *\" M\nG. W. HERRON.\nMeteor, Washington.\nI"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Rossland (B.C.)"@en . "Rossland"@en . "The_Evening_World_1901_10_11"@en . "10.14288/1.0226668"@en . "English"@en . "49.076944"@en . "-117.802222"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Rossland, B.C. : World Publishing Company"@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 Evening World"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .