"7cf6093a-889d-4513-b350-a39fc32ddf0a"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-12-10"@en . "1903-07-21"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/evewoross/items/1.0226782/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " r\n/^PS^C^6mm^(mmmrm\n7 - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n^%3r^^^*^\nTHE EVENING WORLD.\nSTTTiy\nVol. Ill, No. 67\nROSSLAND, B. C, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1903\nComfort! Style! Durability!\nThese are tbe chief features of our FOOTWEAR and we\nstand behind every pair of SHOES we sell. You oan't\nafford to take any chances on unreliable footwear. Go\nstraight to our store where you are guaranteed fair treatment and best value.\nNEWS IN A\nNUTSHELL\nItems of Interest Round\nthe World.\n\"W.F.McNEILL For Fashionable Footyear\nI For Lunches and Picnics Z 3\nE Libby, MoNeill & Libby's and Armour's\nI CANNED MEATS\np Try MELROSE PATE.\n| O. M. FOX & CO., GroceFs\ng: COLUMBIA AVENUE TELEPHONE 65\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ^mr9W99M\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"Vl*t m9^WmWl^mm9WWW^rWW^mFW^mk^9WWW^^^mt4\W9*\m^WW9AW\nim* Tired Feet I\nUse RUSSELL'S FOOT POWDER\nfor sore, tired, tender, aohing, sweating or swollen feet. PRICE 25c.\n-For sale only at-\nMorrow's Drug Store\nLATEST TELEGRAPH BULLETINS\nThe Doings of Conspicuous Persons\nAffecting Canadian Interests.\nP|\"*y ft a?*\, Purveyors of\n. DUrnS QC OO., Fine Meats\nSpecial for Tomorrow:\nfresh Dressed Spring Chickens\nG. W. KERR,\nWW\nMANAGER\nHave you ypg^onjour |\ngot\nPour.Tit y ?\n-If so use-\nIf\nRex Lice Killer %\n For sale by W\n% The Brackman-Ker MiliingCompany |\nAU KINDS OF DRY\nWOOD\nW. F. LINGLE\nOffice apposite Great\nNorthern ticket offlff\nnext to Bed tor\nHarry Mcintosh\nDIRECT IMPORTER OF\n'PERFECTION'\nSCOTCH\nVintage of 1878\nGuaranteed Absolutely Pure\nBass' Burton Ale on Tap\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094at\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHHHoffman House\nNOTICE\nJ.E. Sorbin bus sold out his business\nknown as Mie Palace cigar and candy store\nto Jerry Bonnenn. All indebtedness\nagainst said store will l>e paidby him, and\nall accounts due said store are payable to\nhim.\nJERRY BONNEAU\nJ.E. SORBIN.\nDated Rossland, 18 June, 1003.\nREMOVED\nTO WASHINGTON ST.\nBetween First and Second Ave.\nWANTED\nA YOUNG MAN\nTO DRIVE TEAM\nColumbia Transfer Co.\nN. Naccaratoi\nDealer in Confectionery, Tobaccos,\nFruits and Groceries.\n4\nLUMBER |\nI Mine Timber \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Specialty %\n\ GOOD WOOD in large or X\n~ small quantities. X\nmmmmm9mamaaan9amaaa9*99m\nCholera is raging in Manila.\nLead is quoted in London at ,\u00C2\u00A311\n7s 5d.\nNo traps will be allowed on the\nFraser thia year.\nPope Leo breathed his last yesterday evening at 4:04 o'olock,\n' Professor Langley '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 new airship\nwill shortly be tested in Milwaukee.\nBailey's broom faotory of Kingston, Ont., has been destroyed by\nfire. Loss $30,000.\nTbe Cunard company is carefully\nproviding against foreigners gel't'ng\nupon its directorate.\nThe King and Queen arrived in\nDublin this morning on a royal\ntour through Ireland.\nThe warrant for tbe surrender to\nBritish authorities of\nWright, has been signed\nTbe Dominion government\nclaims control over the provincial,\nPrice Flve.Cents\nTha Moonlight\nRecent development work on tbe\nMoonlight group, twelve miles\nfrom Beaverdell, west fork of Kettle river, was of a very satisfactory\nand encouraging oharactor. It\nconsists of five olaims which adjoin the iron deposits controlled by\nChas. Matheson, of Beaverdell.\nThe showing iB a wonderful one.\nThe lead has been stripped for a\ndistance of 600 feet and proved to\nbe high grade ore with values in\ncopper, gold and silver in the order named. The width of the ore\nbody is 32 feet.\nJudging by the programme of\nPaul Kauffmann'* musioal, the\nooncert will be a treat and certainly worth the admission.\nWANT CONCENTRATION\nElmore Oil Process Forced\nto Install Special Assay Office.\nTho Iron Mask.\nSubject to examination by tbeir\nexpert, the Ashanti LandB, Ltd.,\ncompany,will furnish from \u00C2\u00A320,000\nto \u00C2\u00A340,000 oash to install a large\nplant at Kamloops for the treatment of Iron Mask ore. The Iron\nMask is so thoroughly developed\nand tested that there seems no\ndoubt of a favorable report on the\nproperty. The Ashanti oompany\ntake stock to the amount required\nfor the treatment plant.\nA sooial hop will be given after\ntbe concert at the Miners Union\nhall, Tuesday evening July 21th.\nand music will be furnished by\nPaul Kaffmann's orchestra.\nSoecial'sale of Whisks and Clothes\nBrushes at Goodeve Bros.\nMULHOLLAND ESCAPES\nOwing to the estensive desire on\nthe part of various mining men to\nhave their ore assayed with a view\nto its treatment by the Elmore Oil\nProcess, that company has installed a very perfect assay office in\nconjunction with its main offices at\nWhitaker 118 Columbia avenue E.\nThis has just been completed and\nhas been placed in charge ef L. C.\n^^^^-___ .. Wynne, a provincial assayer and a\nin the matter of foreshore \u00C2\u00BBl^fBttldent of the Cornish Mining and\nfor fiKhino- nrivilfioaa I\nfor fishing privileges.\nThe peasants of the Russian\nprovince of Riazan are in arms\nagainst resident members of the\nRussian bureauooraoy.\nA. Aylesworth has been offered\nthe post on the Alaskan boundary\ncommission, made vacant by the\ndeath of Judge Armour.\nJapan considers tbat Russia is\ntrying to placate Great Britain and\nthe United States, so as to isolate\nitself in caBe of hostilities.\nA Wyoming mob has stormed\nthe gaol at Basin, and killed two\ncondemned murderers.\" Law and\norder seems to have been abolished.\nUnited States capitalists in the\nPhilippines are agitating for the\nfree introduction of Chinese labor\ninto those islands, saying that native labor is incompetent.\nA high ecclesiastic of the Greek\nchurch does not entertain any\nhopes of a union with the Roman\nbranch of the Catholic ohuroh.\nUnion is more probable with the\nAnglicans in a general synod. An\noecumenical oouncil is looked upon\nas chimerical.\nBefore you purohase a new suit\nof olothes oome and let us show you\nour new line that we have just received. EMPBY BROS.\nWantkd\u00E2\u0080\u0094300 sacks of charcoal\nat once. Apply at the Palace.\nThe Votara Liat\nGet yonr name on the voters\nista otherwise you can't vote this\nyear. All former lists are destroyed. \t\nDon't forget the hot lunoh at tbe\nPalaoe tonight.\nThe Palace has the only first\nclaBS bowling alley in the oity.\nIi you want to bowl try the Alhambra,\nBest alley in the city.\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094A situation as watchman\nby an elderly man, Salary not considered. Address this office.\nMetallurgical Collage. Mr. Wynne\ndeclares that he is up to bis eyes\nin work but is occasionally able to\nhandle custom assays.\nBesides the usual appurtenances\nof an assay offioe, a gold balance of\ngreat fineness of adjustment and a\nCary gasoline combination furnace\nof wind and muffle of the largest\nsize with special pressure tank and\nburner has been installed so aB to\nensure the greatest accuracy possible in the work undertaken.\nHighway Robber Breaks\nGaol While Awaiting\nTrial.\nI. ROBLIN\nMMPS.IN\nGets Substantial Majority\nin Manitoba.\nCONSERVATIVES ARE WINNERS\nLabor Candidates at Winnipeg Lose\n\" Elections\u00E2\u0080\u0094Straight Party\nMen Only Wanted.\nThe Palace has the only first-\nclass bowling alley in the city.\nTha Porto Reco.\nG. H. Barnhart, late superin\ntendent of the Ymir mine, was up\nexamining the Porto Reco mine\nthe other day. It is rumored that\na deal is on by which this well\nknown property will again be\nactively worked.\nThe orchestra numbers in the\nconcert given at the Miners Union\nhall to-morrow night, are well selected and the orchestra itself is\ncomposed of twelve pieces.\nTha Pilot.\nIt is reported that a stamp mill\nhas been ordered for the Pilot,\nYmir, and that within a couple\nof weeks it will be working full\nblast.\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Saturday night, bunch cf\nkeys. Return to this office.\nTho Noma Fraction.\nHerb Poter has leaped the Nome\nFraction, Ymir, from the Atlin\ncompany. It is from this fraction\nthat the recent shipment of $29\nore waa made.\nbusiness. Apply to Goodeve Bros.\nNelson, July 21.--James Mulhol-\nland, accused of highway robbery\nat Rossland, who was awaiting his\ntrial at the Nelson gaol, climbed\nthe wall of the exercise yard yesterday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock,\nand is still at large.\nThe escape was a wonderful one,\nas Mulholland has only one arm,\nand the wall of the yard is 12 feet\nhigh. At the time of the occurrence Mulholland and three other\nprisoners were in the exercise yard,\nand the warden with another prisoner, was in the garden just outside\nthe gate completing some work\nthere. When the latter two went\ninside Mulholland was missing,\nand although a search was instantly instituted, no signs of him oould\nbe found.\nPresumably the way he esoaped\nwas with the connivance of the\nother prisoners in the yard.\nThe esoaped prisoner is reputed\nto be a desperate character. He is\nfive feet ton inohes tall dark complexion, and has lost one arm. A\nreward of $50 haB been offered for\nhis apprehension and steps have\nbeen taken to prevent him escaping across the boundary.\nGoodeve Bros.' bug poison destroys\nbugs of all descriptions on one application,\nEagloa Convention. July 27 to 29\nFor the above occasion the Spokane Falls A Northern railway will\nmake a one fare rate for the round\ntrip to Victoria, B. C, if fifty delegates are in attendance and one fare\nand a third rate if only fifteen\ndelegates.\nFor further particulars and sleeping oar reservations call at City\nTicket offioe.\nH. A. Jackson, G. P. A., Spokane.\nH. P. Brown, Agt., Rossland.\nMoraghan oysters any style at\nthe Palace grill rooms.\nTho Wakafleld\nWinnipeg, July 21.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Roblin\ngovernment is safe withian estimated majority of 10 to 18. The\noharges made by tbe Free Press do\nnot seem to have influenced the\nelections, the trial having been\nwisely postponed. It will probably be near the end of the week\nbefore all the outlying places had\nbeen heard from. The following -\nseats are conceded to the Conservatives with the majorities indicated.\nSouth Winnipeg, J. T. Gordon,\n260; North Winnipeg, S. Walker,\n52; Centre Winnipeg, T. W. Taylor, 110; Brandon, Dr. S. W. Mclnnis, 110; Dufferin, Hon.\nR. P. Roblin, 63; Norfolk, R.\nF. Lyons, 169. The following\nplaces are also conceded to\nthe Conservatives, although sev-\nf eral polls, which are not thought\nlikely to alter the result are yet to\nfie added: .St. Andrews anu K Mo-\nnan, Dr. Grain,Manitou, R.Rogers;\nCypress, George Steele; Arthur, A.\nE. Thompson; Virden, J.\nH. Agnew; Turtle Mountain\nJ. Johnston; Morden, J. H,\nRussell; Killarney, G. Law\nrence, Morris, Hon. C. Campbell;\nLansdowne, Dr. Hicks, Portage la\nPrairie, Hugh Armstrong; Spring*\nfield, W. H. Corbett; Carillon, A.\nPrefontaine; Dauphin, Dr. Gunn.\nThe Liberals have won the follow*\ning seats: Mountain, T. Greeuway;\nSt. Boniface, H. Chevrier; Birtle,\nA J.Miokle; Russell, W. J. Doig;\nMinnedosa, Neil Cameron; Rock-\nwood, A. R. Leonard; South Brandon, John Watson; Saskatchewan,\nD. Jackson.\nAvondale, Assiniboia, Beautiful\nPlains, Deloraine, Emerson, Gilbert\nPlains, Gladstone, Lakeside, La\nVerandrye and Rhineland are all\ndoubtful.\nThe Gimli and Swan River elections take place later on.\nLabor candidates were placed in\nthe field in Centre and North Winnipeg, W. Soott and R. Thorns respectively, but lost the elections.\nSimilarly Independents ran in\nDeloraine and Rhineland,\nwhere the issues seem to be\ndoubtful, although claimed by the\nLiberals, Mountain and Springfield.\nProhibitionists were placed in\nthe field at Emerson, Killarney and\nTurtle Mountain, but stood no\nchance against the straight party\nmen, exoept possibly in the first\nmentioned.\nThe Wakefield concentrator,\nSlocan is being overhauled and put\nin shape to handle 150 tons of ore\nper day.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Make your own selection and set yonr\nBOY WANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094To learn the drug own price on Wall Paper at Daniel &\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00ABn.CC ImJu .n fAtLtttmm. tt*n. I A..k.. -a f--l..\u00E2\u0080\u0094.Ut- -..\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ..-\nArthu, 38 Columbia avenue,\nTho A. T.\nWhile doing assessment on the\nA. T, on Lemon oreek, Slocan. Al\nTeeter uncovered a new and\npromising ledge. It is three feet\nwide and with two feet of healthy\ngold-bearing quarts. 1\nTHE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND, B. C, JULY 21 1933\nThe Evening World\nBr'.the World.Pnblishlng!Company.\nErtered at Ihe Rossland, B.C postoffice for\ntransmission through the mails.Majr i, .1901 as\nsecond class reading matter.\ncents per\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2SUBSCRIPTION RATKS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fiftr cenu pe.\nmonth or Ss 00 year, invariably In advance, Ad-\n.filiini rates made known on application.\nLONDONIRATES-E1.15 par annum\nJAMES H. FLETCHER.\n^~~ [QENEBAL\".IMAN*QEB\npTo. Box 902 Rosaland, B. C.\nLIBERAL MANAGEMENT.\nThe announcement, Bays tbe\nNelaon News, a partizan paper,\nthat the Minister of Finanoe will\nbe enabled, thanks to the (act that\nthe prosperity of Canada is now enjoying has made the revenue even\ngreater than the estimates, to reduce the publio debt even more\nthan he bad anticipated, will be\nreceived with intense satisfaction.\nIt is not often that the prediction\nof a government are realized, perhaps because the tendency is to be\ntoo optimistic in making estimates\nof what the revenues will be. Seldom are suoh predictions exceeded,\nand that this is the case this year\nredounds greatly to the credit of\nthe administration. The prosperity which Canada is enjoying\nat the present time may not be and\nno one claims it is, due to the government alone, but that the efforts\nof the liberal government to administer the affairs of the country\nin a manner best calculated to promote prosperity and to enhance ite\nbeneficial effects have been suceBB-\nful no one questions. The policy\nof the government in its relation to\nBritish and foreign trade and to\nthe fostering of home industries\nhas been attended with the most\nsatisfactory results, and though\nCanada would have still enjoyed,\nunder other guidance, some of the\ncommon prosperity, thero is not\nthe shadow of a doubt but that the\nwise immigration policy, and the\ngeneral administration of effairs\nhas been suoh as to carry the country along on the crest of the wave.\nAt any rate the effect is seen in the\nwonderful increase in the revenue\nand the surplus exceeding the most\nsanguine expectations of. the Minister of Finance.\nThe people have every reason to\nbe satisfied with the administration in whose hands the management of the country is at present.\nWith the country filling up more\nrapidly than it ever did before and\nwith a class of immigrants concerning whioh there oan be no question\nas to fitness or capability to benefit the land of their adoption, every\nline of business enjoying unstinted\nprosperity, industries encouraged\nand fostered so as to enable home\nmanufacturers to carry on operations with a reasonable chance of\nsuocess without increasing the prioe\nof commodities to home consumers,\nthe revenue exceeding the large\nand increasing expenditures with'\nout increase of taxation and with\na tariff less than the Conservatives\never thought possible, and with the\npublio debt being reduced year by\nyear, and the credit of the Domin\nion standing higher in the markets\nof the world than it has j et done,\nthe people of Canada have every\nreason to be willing to entrust the\naffairs of the Dominion to the\nsame oare for many years to come\nAN APOLOGY DUE.\nA Mr. Machin recently published\na lengthy interview in our morning\ncontemporary, with regard to Agent\nGeneral Tamer, which called him\nto account for lack of ability, and\ninstanced as a proof, that his offices\niu London were situated in an out\nof way portion of London, and tbat\nMr. Turner was unknown to Lord\nStrathcona.\nTo this Mr. Turner thought fit\nto reply that the instances adduced\not his unfitness for his position,\nwere absurd aud moreover untrue.\nHe was well known to that eminent Canadian, Lord Strathcona,\nand furthermore the offices complained of were in the heart of the\nCity, as the business portion of\nLondon is termed, and were filled\nby prominent companies, notably\ncolonial, and furthermore were the\nheadquarters of some of the most\nprominent of Kootenay mining\ncompanies, notably the Le Roi\nand the Roesland Kootenay. The\nMiner returns to the charge, on\nSunday morning last by ignoring\nthe Strathcona incident, and by\ndeclaring that the Salisbury House\nquestion has nothing to do with\nthe matter, going on to point out\nthe lack of immigration from Great\nBritain into this province and\ncharging it to the fault of the\nAgent General. Now thi? is, to say\nthe least, disingenuous. To prove\nthe case against the Agent General,\nit oited two specific instances. Both\nof these have been branded as malicious falsehoods. Ignoring these\nthe Miner proceeds to make a general oharge, wisely refraining from\nmore specific instances.\nThis conduct is merely that of a\ndisappointed office seeker, seeking\nte gratify malice, and would be unworthy of serious comment, were it\nnot for the truth of the statement\nthat immigration is not flocking\ninto this province, although its advantages, with its wealth of mineral, of timber, of agricultural land,\nits fisheries, its mild climate, far\nexcel those of any other provinoe in\nthe vast Dominion of Canada.\nNow is this state of things asoriba-\nble to the supineness of the Agent\nGeneral, or is it from other causes?\nA glance at the Bluebook on the\nreport of the Royal Commission on\nthe Immigration of Orientals will\nshow that settler after settler swore\nbefore the Commission that they\nwere in the habit of Writing to their\nhomes and warning their relatives\nand friends to keep away, assigning\nas cause the competition of the\nOriental. Just as long as this cause\nexists, it is impossible for any\nAgent General, no matter his natural abilities, to do good work in\nassisting immigration. For the\nbest he can do is to represent the\nprovinoe in a favorable light, and\nany intending settler will naturally\nmake enquiry of those already settled out here in his proposed line\nof life, if it be possible. To get\nsuch replies as iz evident, by the\nreport referred to a bee, are certainly being sent back, will undo\nany work any agent could possibly\naccomplish, It is true that Sir\nWilfrid Laurier haB accomplished\nmuch by the prohibitive head tax\non the Chinese, but as the Jap is\neven a cheaper worker, with reputedly far less commercial honesty,\nthe conditions are hardly ameliorated. Merely the Japanese is\nfavored at the expense of the Chinaman, but the white settler still suffers aud still declares that he suffers.\nFurthermore, the iniquitous sys-\nstem of granting reserves and huge\nacreage to railway companies haB\ntied up the best of the land of the\nprovinoe, and muoh of the remainder, mostly inaccessible, is unsurveyed. The proposing settler oan\nget little hope and less information.\nLace Curtains\nand delicate\nfabrics are best\nwashed with\nSunlight Soap.\nNo injury from\nscrubbing or\nimpurities. \u00C2\u00ABb\nWhen washing greasy dishes or pots anc\npuis, Lever's Dry Soap (a powder), will\nremove the greaso v/itli tho greatest ease.\nOO Ticket for $4.0 II\nMeal\nTicket for\nSTRICTLY CASH\n AT THE\t\nSaddle Rock Restaurant\nW. WALTON. Prop.\nThis again ties the hands of the\nAgent General.\nAgain the constant labor disputes,\nwhich the government carefully refrains from seeing adjudicated, iB\nprejudicial to settlers from a highly\nunionized country like Great Britain. Moreover it deters greatly the\nadvent of capital, which is ohary of\nenterprise where conditions are so\nunsettled.\nFurther, the frightful burden of\ntaxation which is piled upon the\ninhabitants of this province, known\nto be many times the rate per\nCapita in any other portion of Can\nada, taxation whioh extracts the\nlast cent possible out of the various\nindustries of British Columbia, no\ntably mining, not only deters the\ninvestment of capital, but is no\nlure to the intending settler.\nUnder suoh circumstances as\nthese the labor of an agent general\nare as tbe labors of Sisyphus, bis\nwork is being continually\nundone. Better no agent general\nat all than to install one whose\nhands are tied and whose ntcessar\nily futile efforts are made\nthe mark of every disappointed\noffice seeker in this province.\nOur $8 to $10 suits in black are\nwonders. EMPEY BROS.\nPrivate dining rooms for ladies\nat the Palace.\nCome and pick out a nice suit of\nblack olothes for $8 at Empey Bros\nYET FURTHER DETAILS\nHow the Philippines Are\nWorked on the Open\nPlan.\nHongkong, July 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. ShuB\nter, collector of customs at Manila,\nhas deoided, by virtue of the provisions of the United States immigration law, that no foreigner\nunder written or implied contract\noan be allowed in the Philippines\nThe decision arose on the arrival of\na British clerk for a ohartered\nbank.\nThe interpretation of the law\nmenaces all foreign business and\nbanking houses, chiefly the British,\nand will prevent them importing\nassistants under contract. British\nfirms construe the application of\nthe law as an attempt to drive\nthem out of the. islands and to en\nable Americans to secure the trade.\nWe have just received a consignment of over $3000 worth of new\nsuits for men and boys.\nEMPEY BROS.\nThe Palace has the only first\nclass grill rooms in the city.\nThe best bargains in men's and\nboys' olotheB oan be had at Empey\nBros.\nYou may be in need of some groceries.\nYou may need a new grocer. If so, we\nwill appreciate your account and treat\nyou right. O. M. FOX & CO.\nMrs. Alex Trembly has just opened\nher new Dyeing and Cleaning Store in\nthe Ottawa House on Washington street\nand wishes all her old customers to call.\nWork done promptly.\nJUST RECEIVED\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Another ship\nment of Wall Paper. Prices lower than\nat any other place in the city.\nDANIEL A ARTHUR\nNelson & Fort Sheppard Railway\nRed Mountain Railway\nWashington & Great Northern R'y\nVancouver,Victoria di Eastern R'y ti\nNav. Co.\nI Job Printing,\u00C2\u00BB\nBook and\nCommercial\nOffice\nPrintinq\nThe only all rail between points east\nwest and south to Rossland, Nelson,\nGrand Forks and Republic. Connects\nat Spokane with the Great Northern,\nNorthern Pacific and O. R. & N. Co.\nfor points east, west and south; connects\nat Rossland and Nelson with the Canadian Pacific R'y.\nConnects at Nelson with K. R. A N.\nCo. for Kaslo and K' & S. points.\nConnects at Curlsw with stage for\nGreenwood and Midway, B. C.\nBuffet cars run between Spokane and\nNorthport.\nEffective June 14, 1903\nNORTHBOUND.\nLeave Spokane 8:45 a.m.\nArrive Rossland. 4:35 p.m.\nArrive Nelson 7:20 p.m,\nArrive Grand Forks.... 4:00 pjn\nArrive Republic 6:15 p.m\nSOUTHBOUND,\nLeave Republic 8:30 a.m.\nLeave Grand Forks 10:3s a-m\nLeave Nelson 7:20 a. 111\nLeave Rossland io:4o a.m\nArrive Spokane 6:15 p.m\nFor further information regarding\nreservation of berths or 1 price of tickets,\napply to any agent of the above companies, or to\nH. A. JACKSON,\nGeneral Passenger Af\nepokau, Wuh\nH. t. BROWN,\naunt. Bsisiud a r\nTI6KETS\nTO ALL POINTS\nEAST and WEST\nVIA\nSHORT LINE\nTO\nSt,Paul,Duluth,li1inneapo|is)Chicjgo\nand all points east\nSeattle,'Tacoma, Victoria, Portland\nand all Pacific Coast points\nThrough Palace and Tourist Sleepsrs\nDining & Buffet Smoking Library Oars\n2-FastTrains Through Daily-2\nFor rates, folders anc^full [information\nregarding trips, call on or address any\nagent 8. F. & N. Railway.\nH.BRANDT, C PAT A,\n701 W Riverside, Spokane\nABC DENNISTON, G W P A,\nSeattle,'. Wash.\nH. P. BROWN, Rossland Agent\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nProm Montreal.\nAllan Une, \"Bavarian\" July IS\nAllan Une, 'Ionian,\" Junea5\nAllan Une, \"Tunisian\" Aug,\nC.P.R- Atlantic S.8., \"Lake Krle,\" July 16\nC P,R. Atlantic S.B , \"Lake Manitoba,\" .. July 19\nDominion Line \"Cauad\" Ju y 18\nDominion Line, \"Kensington,\" July as\nFrom boston.\nCunard Line \"Ivernla\" Jul/ 14\nCunard Line \"Saxonia\". July as\nDominion Une \"Columbus\" July 13\nProm New York.\nWhite B)ar Line \"Germanic\" July 15\nWhite Star Line \"Cedrlc' July 17\nWhite Star Une \"Majestic\" Julyaa\nCunard UneT'Etrurla\" Inly 18\nCunard Line1,Campanla\" July as\nAmerican Line 'Bt. Paul\" July as\nAmerican Une \"8t Urals\" julyar\nRed SUr Une, \"Finland\" \u00E2\u0080\u009E..July ll\nBed Btar Une \" Vadertand\" July as\nContinental sailings ol French, North airman\nTlovd Hamburg-American, Hollard-American\n-' .' ' . T.-U... T !\u00C2\u00AB_\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ...nll...ln-\nPrlnce and Italian Lines on application.\nBATB8\u00E2\u0080\u0094Baloon fares. $50.00 ud upwards\nSecond, 115 and upwards, according to steamer\nand location of berth. Steerage quoted 0-* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"-\nplication. Prepaid Passagea from Hnglst\n\u00E2\u0080\u009EsyBSstt;\u00C2\u00A3X\nTicket oflln CefcasMa\nA. 0. MCABTHO\" tftm\nDone With Neatness and Despatch. Mail\nOrders will Receive Prompt Attention\nra World Job Office m\nTHE INTERNATIONAL JA\nLiquor Store\nWe have a large and well seleoted assortment of\nWines, Liquors, Etc., for\nFAMILY TRADE\nThe best goods at right prices. Open every day until 9 p.\n^IJlIlfilJlJllfilJlMMMIl^ ii^iiigiBililllMllllllS\na\ni\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\nEVENING\nWorld\n50c Per Month\nI By Mail or Carrier.\ni\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\ni\na\na\na\nSubcribe\nHt Once.\nI And keep posted on\non the news of\nthe camp.\nENTERPRISE BUILDING,\nColumbia Ave., Rossland/ THE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND B. C, JULY 21, 1903.\nCAUSE OF\nACCIDENTS\nWhy so Frequent on This\nContinent.\nBLOCK SYSTEM IS PREFERABLE\nAutomatic Signalling a Labor Saver\nand Not Sufficient to Prevent\nCollisions-\nThe system of railroad signalling in England is muoh more per-\nfeot and complete than anything to\nbe lound in the United States or\nCanada. Signalling in the United\nStates ie in a very chaotic condition, there being no uniformity of\npraotioe throughout the country.\nSome portions of the prinoipal\nrailroads are fully provided, but on\nmany others hardly any signals\nare used. Even where in use, the\nsignals are of various shapes, colors\nand meanings, those on one line\ndiffering from those on another.\nThe various olasaee of signals include tbe automatic signals, the\ninterlocking signals, telegraph\nblock signals and train-order\nsignals. Neither the Grand Trunk\nnor the Canadian Pacific use automatic signalling, but employ a\ncombination of the other three systems under what are known as\n\"standard rules.\"\nOnly 25,000 miles out of 200,000\nmiles of single traok in the United\nStates are operated under the block\nsystem, though its use is being extended. Block working is not bo\nstrictly interpreted as it is in England; two or more trains are constantly permitted to be in the same\nsection at the same time, and\ntrains are allowed under certain\nconditions to travel in either direction on either track,even where\nthe lines are doubled or quadrupled.\nIn referring to this condition,\nLieutenant Colonel Yorke, who\nmade an exhaustive enquiry for\nthe Britiah government, observes:\n\"On two occasions it ooourred to\na train in which I was traveling to travel on the wrong\ntraok, without any halt, and without any formalities other than the\nhanding to the driver or conduotor\nof a train order giving instructions\nto travel on the wrong traok regardless of opposing trains. On\nboth occasions we traveled in this\nway several miles at a high rate\nof speed, there being, of course, no\nsignals for the guidance or con\ntrol of the train. Such a mode of\nworking must be dangerous, as the\nleast misunderstanding between the\nmen who give and received the\ntrain order, or any negligenoe\ntheir part must lead to an accident.\"\nSingle lines, whioh form the bulk\nof the railroads of America, are\noperated almost entirely on tbe\n\"train order\" system, no train staff\nor tablet being used as in England,\nthere being no less than 13 standard forms of \"train orders\" in use.\nThe train order system has been\ntried in England, and has long ago\nbeen abandoned as troublesome\nand dangerous. The American\nservice would probably be conducted with greater punctuality and\neconomy and certainly with greater\nsafety, if the electric staff or tablet\nsystem were introduced on single\nlines.\nFor some time past Amerioan\nrailroads have been using automatic signalling, about whioh a\ngreat deal baa recently been said in\nEngland. The main four-track\nlines of the Pennsylvania railroad,\nbetween New York and Pittsburg,\nare furnished in this fashion, and\nso are parts of several other railroads. The New York Central\ncompany is also about to adopt it\nin the neighborhood of New York\nand its use will doubtless extend.\nRecently in England, the London\n& Southwestern railway oompany\nhave equipped a section of their\nlines between Qrately and Andover\nwith the automatic signals and\npreparations are also being made\non the Northeastern railway for\ntesting the system.\nThe greatest dangers to automatic signalling are snow, frost and\nlightning, either of which may,\nunder certain conditions, cause the\nsignal to remain at, \"all right\"\nwhen it ought to be \"danger.\" The\nresult in such cases might be disastrous. In America, so far, the\nthe trouble haB chiefly been in signals remaining at \"danger\" when\nthey shall be \"all right,\" and as a\nresult, drivers are instructed to\nbring their trains to a stand when\na danger signal is seen, and then to\nproceed cautiously without further\nnotice. As two trains may be in\nthat section at the same time, this\nsystem has its dangers.\nm\nInsect Powders and Fly Poisons of all\nkinds at Goodeve Bros.\nA swell dress suit in black can\nbe had at Empey Bros, for $16.\nTwo prizes will be given at the Alhambra Bowling alley every two weeks for\nthe largest score made,\nPrivate dining rooms for\nat the Palace.\nladies\nHE HAD A ROUGH TIME\nWaa In Grant Danger of Losing Hia\nLife\nThe Times correspondent; Mr.\nHarris,' who was lately held\nin captivity amonng the Aujera\ntribe of Morocco had some curious experiences. He spent nine\ndays at Zinat, Buffering considerable hardship, during which\nhe wae unable to wash and\ncould not remove his clothes, the\nresult being he was smothered with\nvermin. Once he was left foodless\nfor thirty-six hours. It was a trying time. Four thousand tribesmen\nwere present, but there was no discipline. Hia only ohance was to\npretend to plaoe implicit confidence in them, so as to gain time\nfor negotiations. Tbe only time\nhe left his quarters for more than\na few minutes was when he was\ntaken to see tbe corpse of a cavalry\nsoldier, whose body was hotribly\nmutilated. Mr. Harris was jokingly informed that he would look like\ntbat in a few dayB. After nine\ndays at Zinat his friends of the\nAujera tribe surrounded Raisuli's\nvillage and demanded that Mr.\nHarris be handed over, which wae\ndone, and he was carried to the\nAnjera Mountains. He wae now\namong friends, and treated kindly,\nbut still detained till negotiations\nwere conoluded. Meanwhile he\nwas treated as one cf' the tribe,\nwore their dress, shaved bis head\nand conformed to all their customs.\nAt last, after twelve days, through\nthe tact and energy of the British\nMinister and the Sherif of Wazan,\nhis release wae obtained in exchange for sixteen prisoners.\nSIMILKAMEEN CITY, ,\nNow Is the Time to Buy Lots\nin Similkameen City, B. \u00C2\u00A9.\nCAMP HEDLEY is the most talked of camp in the provinoe, and situated in the centre is Similkameen City, surrounded by\nrich mines whioh will shortly have large payrolls. Over 200 lots have been sold to business people who realize tbat Similkameen will become the metropolis of this district. The Nickel Plate mines have expended (300,000 in development and are at\npresent building tramways and a 40-stamp mill. Arrangements are being made for the ereotion of a large smelter at Similkameen City which will cost about a million dollars. Besides the Niokel Plate group of claims being developed by one of the richest\nmining companies in North America, there are several other groups and properties whioh will shortly be developed, among them\nbeing the Kingston Mines, Rollo, Wellington, Winnipeg, Red Chief and Pollock. Situated as it is in the beautiful Similkameen\nvalley, midway between Prinoeton and Keremeos, and protected from all opposition in the valley by adjoining a large Indian\nreservation, this townsite will become one of the principal mining camps of the Pacifio Northwest. It was only a short time ago\nthat lots in Rossland, Nelson, Greenwood and other mining centres were selling for the same prioe that they are today being sold\nfor in Similkameen, Come in before tbe boom and double your money.\nSimilkameen City to Have Two Railways.\nThe Viotoria, Vanoouver & Eastern and the Canadian Pacific railways are starting immediate oonstruotion for the Similkameen,\nwhich will make this town a railroad centre and divisional poiut, and when these competing lines are completed through to the\nPacific coast they will become the main through lines, being the shortest route from the interior to the ooast. A large sawmill is\nrunning steadily on the west addition, the only available timber for miles around. The main street is 90 feet wide, being all\ncleared and ready for building purposes. All railways, roads, telegraph and telephone lines will have to come through this\n- townsite, whioh is located in the centre of the whole Similkameen valley and will become the largest distributing point and\nmining centre in British Columbia.\nSimilkameen City Lots Will Make You Rich.\nA large agricultural area to draw from. Pure water, fine climate, rich mines, big payrolls.\nLots for Sale $2 to $ 10 Per Front Foot. ttBin *\"Towns in'B'c-\n^ For further particulars apply to\nFRANK BAILEY & CO., Greenwood and Similkameen\nJ.;H. YATES, Empire State Building, Spokane.\nJAMES H. FLETCHER, 120Columbia Ave., ROSSLAND\nLABOR UNIOtH)IREGTORYl*ElITSsFiDEHRA\u00E2\u0084\u00A2'!\nOfficers and Meetings.\nNELSON MINERS UNION\nNo. gb, W. F. M. Meets\nevery Saturday evening at\n7:30 o'clock. Thos. Roynon,\nPres., Frank Philips, Sec.\nVisiting brothers cordially\ninvited.\nMINERS' UNION No. *8,\nWestern Federation ol\nminers\u00E2\u0080\u0094meets every Wed\nnesday evening at 7.30, x-\nm. in Miners' Union Hall.,\nM. Villeneuve, Secretary\nHarry Seaman,} President\nPHOENIX MINERS UN-\nIon No. 8, W. F. M. Meets\nevery Saturday evening at\n7:30 o'clock in Miners' hall\nGeo. McMullen, Pres., Jno\nRiordan, Sec.\nYMIR MINERS UNION\nNo. 85, W. F. M., meets\nevery Wednesday evening\nat 8 o'clock in Miners' Un\nIon hall. Robert Elliott,\nPres., W. B. Mclsaac, Sec.\npresident.Denver.Coloradc\nEdward Hughes, vice-president, Butte. Mont.; Wm.C.\nHaywood, secretary-treasurer, Denver, Col.; Executive Board: J. T. Lewis,\nGlobe,Ariz.; L. J. Simpkins,\nWardner, Idaho; Phillip\nBowden,Butte, Mont,; D. C.\nCopley, Independence, Col.;\nO. A. Peterson, Tarraville,\nS. D.; James A. Baker, Slo-\nc?n City, B. C.\nPAINTERS' UNION, No\n123, painters and decorators\nof America.meets inBeatty's\nHall, on second and foprth\nTuesday of each month. R\nC. Arthur, Pres.: W. S.\nMurphv, Sec.\nTYPOGRAPHICAL UN\nION No. 335,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meets on the\nlast Sunday of each month\nat the Miners' Union Hall\nJ Barkdoll, Sec; Morgan\nO'Connell. President.\nexplosives:\nThe Cotton Powder Comoenv. Ltd.\n32 Queen Victoria St., LONDON) E. C.\n-MANUFACTURE\nFaversham Powder\nOn the SPECIAL LIST of Permitted {Explosives.; October,' 1901-\nTONITE\nthe best explosive for underground\" work ex\nolueively used in Severn and Mersey tnnnel\nCordite, Gelignite, Gelatine Dynamite, Blasting Gelatine, Detonators for all classes of Explosives, Electric Applianoes,\nSubmarine Charges for the removal of Wrecks, Etc., Ete.\nGREENWOOD MINERS UNION\nNo. 22, W. F. M., meets everv\nSaturday evening in Union hall.\nH. R. ParsonB, Pres., Geo. F.\nDougherty, Sec-Treas,\nBugs cannot live where Goodeve's bed\nbag poison is used.\nThe programme of the Paul\nKauffmann soiree musicale iB well\narranged and full of variety.\nThe merchants' lunoh at the\nPalaoe tomorrow will be a dandy.\nDISTRICT UNION no. 6,\nW.F.M.\u00E2\u0080\u0094P. R. McDonaid,\nPres., Rossland; Howard\nThompson, vice-president,\nSandon; Geo. F.Dougherty,\nSecretary, Greenwood.\nGRAND FORKS FEDERAL Labor Union No. 231,\nA.L.U.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meets every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock\nin Federal Union hall.\nThos.Foulston,Pres., Jno.^T.\nLawrence, Sec.\nNEW DENVER MINFFS\nUnion No. 07. W. J . M.\nMeets every Saturda\" evening at 7:30 o'clock in Union\nhall. Hugh Williams, Pres.,\nW. C. Lawrence, Sec.\nCARPENTERS & JOIN;\nERS \". UNION\u00E2\u0080\u0094meets every\nFriday of each week at 7.\nfo p. m. In Miners' Union\nlall. W.R. Baker, Pres.;\nJohn McLaren, Sec,\nTRADES AND LABOR\nCOUNCIL\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meets every second and fourth Tuesday in\neach month at 7.30 P. M, ln\nMiners' Union Hall. President, W.L.McDonald. Ad[\ndress all communications to\nSecretary-Treasurer, P, O.\nbox 784.\nWorks: Faversham, Kent and Melling, near Liverpool\nESTABLISHED i84Q.\nGEORGE GREEN.\nTHE FOUNDRY.\nABERYSTWYTH,\nENGLAND.\nManufacturer of Concentrating Machinery.\nMEDALS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Royal Cornwall Polytechnic; Gold medal International IMiniog Exhibition, Crystal Palace, 1800. Unly award for Concentrates.\nSPECIALTIES:\nStamps with latest improvements, of up-to-date design, and with wearing parts '01\nHadfield's steel,.from 2 cwts, to 10 cwts. per head, Stonebraakers, Crushers, Jigs,\nTrommels,.Vanners, etc., all constructed in sections (or facility of transport if desired. Patent Portable Crushing and Amalgamating Pans for Prospecting, A\nsmall concentrating plant to treat up to five tons erected at the works by which\ncommercial results.can be seen by intending purchasers^for a ^merely nominal cc*\nEstimates for complete plants on application. Special attention given to saialag\n engineer's specifications. Telegrams\u00E2\u0080\u0094-JIGGER.\" Aberystwyth. THE EVENING WORLD, ROSSLAND, B C, JULY 21, 1903.\nTHE LOCAL\nEXCHANGE\nMarket Is Firm Though\nDull.\nRAMBLER-CARIBOO IS RISING\nThe Latest Quotations and Sales\nLocally Upon the\nMarket.\nr\nMerely\n1\nLocal\nStocks were not so brisk today,\nbut the market is firm a trifle seasonably dull. Rambler-Cariboo is\ngaining strength and another improvement is again recorded.\nToday's Local Quotations:\nAaked Bid\nAmerican Bar *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0% *a\nBen Bar sii 4%\nBlack Ts.ll 41. 3'A\nCanadian OoW Weld* s 4\i\nCsriboo (Camp McKinney)ex-di\u00C2\u00BB 12X ny.\nCentre SUr 2, 35\nCrowe Neat Pass Coal f S\nKali-view S 4\nFisher Maiden 3 '\nBlent 3 iv,\nOranby Consolidated $5.\"\u00C2\u00B0 14-5\u00C2\u00B0\nlonePine '% 1\nmorning Olory 2 \"it\nMountain Uon *i 11\nNorth SUr (Bast Kootenay) ijK \"\nPayne 17 '3Y,\nQnllp 3\u00C2\u00BB Si\nasmbler-Cariboo 43 4''A\nKepnblic 3\nSan Poll S 2\nSnlliran sH 4Y,\nTom Thumb 5 4\nWar Basle Conaolidated 12 10\nWaterloo (Assess, paid) 7 t,\nWhit* Bear (Wsseas. paid) 4'A 3'A\nTodays Local Bales.\nAmerican Boy, 1000, 3000, 4$o;\nCentre Star, 500, 26c; Rambler-\nCariboo, 1000, 44o. Total, 5500.\nIN PRAISE OF B. C\nHibernian's Impresslona of Britiah\nColumbia Quaintly Told.\nR.LWright.A.R.S.M.!:\n(Assayer for Le Roi No. 2,)\nWILL TAKE\nCustom-Assays j j\nTrade Marks\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac.\nAnyone Bending a sketch snd deaeriptlon may\nquickly njcertain our opinion free whether an\ninvention ie probably patentable. Communlca-\nlioriHHtrlctlyconHdontlal. Handbook on Patent!\nlent free. Oldest attoncy for Becurlng patents.\n1'atenta taken through Munn & Co. receive\ntpecial notice, without charge, tn the\nScientific Jlmericati.\nA handsomely Illustrated weekly. Lamest circulation of any scientific Journal. Terms, $8 a\nyear: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers.\nMUNN iCo.3B-B\u00C2\u00AB^r. New York\nBranch Offloe. 126 F BU Washington. D. 0.\n5PECIAL..,.\nRound trip rates to all Eastern\npoints via\nSookane Falls &\nNorthern Railway\nAND CONNECTIONS\nto St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth,\nSuperior.Siouz City .Council Bluffs,\nOmaha, St. Joseph, Kansas City,\nAtkinson and Leavenworth, $55.00\nAshland, Wis $ 56.90\nChicago, 111 66.50\nSt Louia, Mo 62 50\nPeoria, 111 64.25\nToronto, Ont 91.60\nMontreal 102.50\nMemphis, Tenn 68.50\nNew Orleans, La 80.55\nDetroit, Mich 74.75\nBaltimore, Md 84.50\nBoston, Mass 87.50\nNew York 102.50\nFor selling dates, limits, birth\nreservations, etc., apply at oity\nticket office, Bank of Montreal\nbuilding.\nH. P. Brown, Agent,\nRoBsland B. C.\nH.A. Jackson, G. P. A.,\nSpokane, Wash\n$b Ticket for $4. DU\nSTRICTLY CASH\n AT THE\t\nSaddle Rock Restaurant\nW. WALTON, Prop.\nBernard Macdonald is very much\nin oamp.\nThe Miner is again flattering\nMcBride.\nRev. J. W. Wood is takiDg a trip\nto Spokane.\nStanley Johnson left for Spokane\nthis morning.\nThe musicale tonight has evidently many friends.\nA. C. Oalt is off on a business\ntrip to the Boundary.\nRegistrar Schofield has returned\nfrom bis visit to the coast.\nA. B. MpArthur leaves for the\neast over the C. P. R. tonight.\nNelson will play Rossland at lacrosse here on Thursday week.\nDr. Sinclair is fixing up his\npolitical fences in the Okanagan.\nThe Parade oommittee hold a\nmeeting this evening at 8 o'clock.\nAndy Revsback leaves this evening for Vanoouver to join his family.\nJ. L. Mclsaac, of the Bell Telephone oompany, has left for Montreal.\nThe Finanoe committee for the\nSummer Carnival are out on the\nwarpath today.\nThere will be a special meeting\nof the Liberals tomorrow evening\nat their oommittee rooms.\nThe burial of the infant daughter, Grace, of Mr. and Mrs. Edward\nBaillie, took place last evening.\nAn enjoyable hop is expected\nthis evening after the olose of the\nsoiree at the Miners Union hall.\nThe Velvet has closed down for\ntwo weeks pending the arrival of\none of the directorate from London.\nThe case of the Josie boarding\nhouse for illicit sale of liquors has\nbeen adjourned for a week for the\ndecision.\nDr. Kenning won the drawing\nlast night at the Hoffman for the\nlottery for Harry Mcintosh's pony,\n\"General.\"\nThe oity council will meet this\nevening. It is just possible that\nsomething might be made of the\nAssessment bylaw.\nH. B. Ames of Montreal, arranging the western itinerary for the\nBritish delegates of the Chambers\nof Commerce, is expeoted in oamp.\nA J, McMillan offers to repre-\nset Rossland at Montreal in August next at the Imperial Conven<\ntion of the Chambers of Commerce\nThe minor sports recommend the\nHighland fling, sword dance and\npipes at the Carnival on a platform to be erected at the corner of\nColumbia avenue and Washington\nstreet.\nRaaaena Why.\nAmong the commissioners on the\nspecial train to the Presbyterian\nGeneral Assembly at Vanoouver,\nwas one who hailed from the Emerald Isle, and who had visited\nBritish Columbia a few years before. The party was passing\nthrough the prairie seotion, ahd\nwas admiring the magnificent extent of the country. \"Oh gintle-\nmen,\" said he, \"wait till ye see\nBritish Columbia. It's the biggest\ncounthry in the wurruld. Bedad\nav it was all sphroad out flat like\nManytoba and the Territories, it\nwould have filled the whole of the\nPayceefic ocean. To find room for\nBritish Columbia it had to be all\nrowled up and humped up into\ngreat big mountains raohin' up to\nthe sky. And sors the mountains\nhad to be made mighty big to\nmake room for all the gold\nand the silver, and the lead,\nand the coal, and the copper,\nthat they're fairly craoken' and\nbursten'wid. And rivers! Wait\ntill ye see the rivers. And the rivers had to be made in the most\nginirous scale to make room for the\nmillions av salmon that are crowd-\nin' up and wanting to settle in the\nintayriur av the countbry. And\ntrees! Honld an till ye see the\ntrees. Bedad its a nice morning\nwalk around the trees. And they\nhave to olimb up the trees wid\nUdders to cut them down. < Did ye\nsay fish? Well gentlemen I heard\nsome mighty big fish yarns, and\nI'm a bit av a western mah raeself,\nbut on me banner, I couldn't lie\nabout the fish av I tried. Sure\nthey have the purtiest gurls in tne\nwurruld, and the roses and the\nstrawberries, and the hearts av the\npeople are all built on the same\nginirous scale. No, sir. There's\nnothing small about British Columbia.\nA correspondence has been taking place in an exchange with regard to the reasons why men don't\ngo to ohuroh and, as we know something about it, we beg to offer the\nfollowing additional reasons:\nBecause the ohureh won't come\nto them.\nBecause the missus goes there.\nBecause they want to smoke.\nBecause they are not allowed to\nshow their new hats.\nBeoause they cannot stand a man\nhaving all tbe conversation to himself.\nBecause tbey want exercise.\nBecause they want rest.\nBecause it reminds them of their\nwedding day.\nTODAY\nThe Palace has the only first\nolass grill rooms in the city.\nThe best bargains in men's and\nboys' olothes can be had at Empey\nBroe.\nEOR SA.LE\u00E2\u0080\u0094A comfortab'e plastered\ncottage with two lots, all fenced, close to\nmines. Price f7oo; favorable terms.\nORDE & CO\nHOTEL ARRIVALS\nHOFFMAN HOUSI\nJ W Grier, Portland\nJohn Iseman, Tanana, Alaska\nJohn Jones, Cow Hollow\nJ A Densmore.Grand Forks\nF McFarlin, Grand Forks.\nMoraghan oysters any style at\nbe Palace grill rooms.\nScarcity of Mon\nSince eight furnaces have been\nin blast in Boundary smelters, requiring more men at the mines\ngenerally, there has been a scaroity\nof men for mine work. The quota\nare gradually being made up, how-\nTho Canadian Kino.\nThe Canadian King, near Erie,\nhas resumed work. The mine was\nclosed down some months ago in\nconsequence ol trouble with water,\nbut it is now all right.\nJim Hill Group.\nT. Downing and A. D. McKay\nare working on the Jim Hill group\nup Lexington oreek, Lardeau. This\ns a galena vein carrying 90 onnce\nin silver. Crosscuts show tbe vein\nto vary in width from 6 to 10 feet;\nthe contact is slate and lime.\nThe E PU\nFrom the laBt oar of ore from the\nE. P. U. mine D. W. MoVioar received $2211 net, or an average of\n$110 per top. After paying all\ncosts he had $1200 clear. There\nare ten men employed on this\nproperty.\nThe Wilcox\nThe Wilcox mine, Ymir, ie making wopderful progress. The stamp\nmill is working like a cbarm and\nthere is an abundanoe of ore in\nreserve.\nDon't forget the hot lunoh at the\nPalace tonight.\nTha Gold Cup.\nWork has been started on the\nGold Cup, Ymir, and indications\nare that it will prove a great mine.\nTho Payna\nLaBt week the Payne reoeived\nfive cars of machinery for its zinc\nplant.\nThe programme of the Paul\nKauffmann soiree musicale is well\narranged and full of variety.\nThe merchants' lunch at tha\nPalaoe tomorrow will be a dandy.\nYou may bu in need of some groceries\nYou may need a new grocer. If so, we\nwill appreciate your account and treat\nyou right. O. M. FOX & CO.\nMrs. Alex Trembly has just opened\nher new Dyeing and Cleaning Store in\ntbe Ottawa House on Washington street\nand wishes all her old customers to call.\nWork done promptly.\nWe have just received a consignment of over $3000 worth of new\nsuits for men and boys.\nEMPEY BROS.\nj The Shur-on\nRimless Eyeglass fits all features; never falls off; improves\nyour appearance. .\nTHE SHUR-ON combines\nthe convenience ot the modern\neyeglass with stability of the spec?\ntacle. Fitted by the only\nResident\n..Graduate Optician..\nin the city. Graduate of The\nToronto College of Optics, at\nCity Drug Store\nOptical Goode a specialty. We\ncan fit any sight.\n-AT-\nTHE QUEEN\nTHE ALLAN\n(Biqar Stores\nAre where you oan get the best the market affords in CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES, ETC.\nCROW & MORRIS. -:- PROPRIETORS \u00C2\u00BB-\nSoiree Musicale\n-GIVEN BY-\nMr. Paul Kauffmann's\nPupils and Orchestra\nTuesday Eve., July 21, 1903\nAt Miners Union Hall\n8 O'clock*Sharp\nSousa\nPART i\n/. March\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Charlatan\"\t\nOrchestra and Piano, Four Hands\n-. Piano, Miss Olga Murchison and Ira McNaughton\n2. Morning Prayer ....... Gobbaerfs\nMiss Grace Stewart\n}, Piano Duetts\n(\u00C2\u00AB) Waltz Streabbog\nMiss Sylvia Doell and Miss Olga Murchison\n(b) Mazurka Streabbog\nMiss Helene Burritt and Kenneth McDonald\nft. Heather Rose Lange\nMiss Alice Braden\nVocal Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"O Schoene Zeit\" .... Goetze\nMrs. Anna Baxter\nViolin Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Fifth Air Varie\" .... Dancla\nRobert Kenning\nAccompanist, Miss Olga Murchison\nRecitation-\"What the Night Wind Says\"\nMiss Helene Burritt\nViolin Duetts\nla) Andante from Symphony\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Paukenschlag\" . Haydn\nPiano, Miss Alice Fox and Ira McNaughton\n(b) Carnival of Venice with Variations . . Weiss\nPiano, Miss Nettie Lingle\nViolins, Mrs. A. Baxter, Misses Kate McDougall, Margaret McCraney, Gladys Stewart, and George Dunn, Robert Kenning\nPART II\no. On the Beautiful Rhine ..... Keler Bela\nOrchestra and Piano, Four Hands\nPiano, Mrs, A. W. Kenning and Mrs. H. P. McCraney\nto. Piano Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"La Fontaine\" Bohm\nMiss Nettie Lingle\nIt, Vocal Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Day Dream,\" with Violin Obligato . Slrclezki\nMiss Ina Urquhart\nAccompanist, Mrs. A. W.Kenning\nViolin, Miss Margaret McCraney\n12. Piano Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Loose Btaetter\" .... Kcelling\nMiss Olga Murchison\n13. Quartuor Melody in F Rubinstein\nSolo Violin, Miss Margaret McCraney\nViolino Secondo, Robert Kenning; Cello, Paul Kauffmann\nPiano, Miss Blanche Raymer\n14. Piano Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"CavalryRide\" .... Spindler\nIra McNaughton\ntj, Vocal Solo\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"For All Eternity,\"-with Violin Obligato\n-'.'.. Mascheroni\n'-.-'.-- Miss Reita Anderson\n; K \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Accompanist, Miss*Blanche Raymer\nViolin, Miss Margaret McCraney\n16. Violin Duett\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Fruehlingsempfindungen\" , , Solle\nViolins, Miss Margaret McCraney, Paul Kauffmann\nPiano, Mrs. H. P. McCraney\n17. Wedding March Mendelssohn\nOrchestra and Pit-no, Four Hands\nPiano, Miss Blanche Raymer and Ira McNaugMtm\nPaulson Bros.\nTHE GROCERS.\nLarge. Red and Ripe\nLuscious\nStrawberries!\nCalifornia New Cabbage\nVictoria Hot House\nLettuce\nWalla Walla Radishes,\nSpinach, Green Onions,\nAsparagus, Rhubarb\n.25 Columbia Avenue...\nCartlfleata of Improvement*,\nNOTICE.\n\"Idaho Fraction\" Mineral Claim, situated in tbe Trail Creek Mining Division\nof West Kootenay DiBtrict. and adjoining the \"Enterprise,\" \"Idaho\" and \"Virginia\" Mineral Claims.\nTake notice that I, T. P. O'Farrell of\nRossland, B. C, acting an agent lor\nMary Kraus. free miner's certificate No,\nB54770, and William Kellem, free miner's certificate No. B54891, intend, sixty\ndays from the data hereof, to apoly to the\nmining recorder for a certificate\nof improvements, for the purpose oi 00-\ntainingja crown grant of the above claim\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 37, muet be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such certificate of\nImprovements.\nDated at Rossland, B. C, this 7th day\nof February, A. L. 1003.\nT. P. O'FARRELL\nNOTICE.\nRe John Y. Cole Addition to Rossland.\nRegistered Plan No. 719.\nNotice is hereby given to all pergonal\ninterested in said plan that application\non behalf of the Consolidated White Bear\nMining Company, Limited, Non-Personl\nal Liability, will be made to a Judge of\nthe .Supreme Court in Chambers, at the\nCourt House, Victoria, B, C, at 10:30\no'clock in the forenoon.on the 28th dayof\nJuly, 1903, for an order changing said plan\nso as to close Montreal street and substitute a new etreet to be called Montreal\nstreet ninety feet to the west thereof; also\nto cloBe a portion of Kootenay Avenue between the westerly boundary of Lot 12 in\nBlock 2 and the westsily boundary of\nLot 16, Block 3 and to open In lieu thereof a street running south through Lots 15\nand i6,Block 3,thence westerly parallel to\nthe old street to the new Montreal street\nabove mentioned, including the lane between said Lot 15 and said new Montreal street, also the westerly end of the\nlane in Block 10 is to be closed, also the\nwesterly half of the lane in Block 6.\nAnd further take notice that the plan\nof said Addition as proposed to be\namended may be seen at the law office of\nthe undersigned, Columbia avenue,Rossland, B. C.\nJ. A. MACDONALD,\nSolicitor for Applicants,\nDated 26th June 1903.\nCartlfleata of Improvamant.\nNOTIOE.\nThe Brothers and Jungle Fraction\nMineral Claims, situate in tbe Trail\nCreek Mining Division of West Kootenay District,\nWhere' located: Near the international boundary line on Sophie mountain\nTake notice that I, Kenneth L. Burnet, Prov. Land Surveyor of Rossland,\nagent for E. B. Sentell, Esq., of Van-\ncouver.B.C. free miner's certificate* No.\nB57520, intend, sixty daye from\ntbe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\na Crown Grant of the above olaim,\nAnd further take notice tbat action,\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore tbe issuance of such Certificate of\nImprovement,\nDated this 4th day of June.A.D. 1003.\nKENNETH L. BURNET\nSOCIETY CARDS.\nFf\ T? FRATKRNAI. ORDHR OF\n. KJ. JCi.SAOI.K8, Rouland Aerie,\nNo, io,Regnlai;meetingi every Monday even-\nInn, f|p. (m, Ragles. Hall, Carpenters' Ouioa\nat\u00E2\u0080\u0094*.\nH\nI. Levy, Wl \u00C2\u00BB\n' Daniel W,\nlOOr? Heetala Odd Fellows Bail\nft*. .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^iE? on B1\"\" *****-. between\nFirst and Becond avenues. Regular meetings\n5?$ fiSfflHMr'' Visiting brothers are cordially UiTlted to attend and register within sa\nW.B.' Murphy, Sec. ;\u00C2\u00AB. Qoldsworthy. tt. a\nAlhambra'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Hotel\niol^R8l$6i0lper week\nthe only hotel la the city having a d\nroom foifmlneis. FreeiBath Rocm."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Rossland (B.C.)"@en . "Rossland"@en . "The_Evening_World_1903_07_21"@en . "10.14288/1.0226782"@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 .