"c934855b-4d6f-4329-afb5-a2a809e8d520"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "[The Miner]"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-30"@en . "1898-07-09"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/gfminer/items/1.0081695/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " % ^^t-^w\nj\u00C2\u00A3\nClM~~^\nGRAND\nTHIRD YEAR. XO. 113\nU11A\"ND FOKKS, 1$. C, SATURDAY, JULY J), 1898.\nPUKE FIVE CENTS.\nLITTLE GUNBOATS' VICTOEY.\nLADRONE ISLANDS TAKEN.\nIhiTslmitiuM'il by (he -Nreiit Siu'itkh\nbut ii Uood Fifth t lUelf.\nI-'Irnt Relief Expedition Arlved Lunt\nTliurmliij\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cuo (tired dluuhuii nu\nthe U'a.v Wi (li on I It e* In I no < \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsiiiy PrlNOnerr* iiii.iii-<.niiin>ni\nSurrendered.\nWashington, July 4.-A cablegram from\nAdmiral Dewey was received at the navy\ndepartment shortly after 5 o'clock this\nmorning announcing the safe arrival of\nthe first fleet of transports.. The message\nis given . tllasu\t\n.1. T. English\t\n.(. C. Knglish\t\nj. N. Scearce\t\nj. iJ. SheUd\t\n\V. \V. Coe\t\nL. R William*\t\n.1. M. Armstrong\t\nD. W. Henley\t\nV. Peyton\t\nThe following blocks not in the pool\nhave also been transferred to the British\nAmerica Corporation: W. J. C. Wakefield, 3100; J W. Binkley, 3200; II. B.\nBlake, 3000; \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Casey, 40)10; Holland\nBank, 7500; and several blocks aggregating 10,000 shares held by the Danville\npeople. There may have been other small\nblocks taken over, llie British America\nCorporation is said to have paid $500,000\ndown on these blocks, the balance to follow as soon as the pool is broken.\nThc next step to bc taken is the break\ning of the pool, so that the purchasing\nsyndicate mny have stock certificates instead of pool certificates.\nThe Wnr Booms Conner.\nOwners of copper mines, producing or\ngiving promise of profitable development,\ncan view the war und industrial situation with complacency, suys the Mining\nand Scientific Press. Next lo reliable\nwar news nothing is iu more active present demand than copper. As with gold and\nother metals, this west half of America\nis of prime importance to t'he nation in\nthis regard. A New York broker saysi\n\"During the past three years no shares\nof any kind of enterprise have shown the\nremarkable und steady incrcaso in values\nthat, the copper shares huve. During the\npast yenr und a hull eight of\nthe leading copper stocks have Increased over |50j000,000, and they\nhnve increased over $20,000,000\nduring the past six months. The total\npar value of their capitalization is only\n$10,000,000. The Rothschilds uud other\nbig capitalists of Kurope have agents exploring the entire western continent for\ncopper properties und a large number ol\nEnglish bankers and operators have tlieir\nAmerican correspondents looking up copper mines or large blocks of stocks in such\nproperties fer investment purposes. The\nownership of all the American copper\nmines is in the hands of a very few people, and less than 100 American copper\n'mine owners control the world's market\nfor copper. The demand for the metal is\ngreater thun the supply, the total visible\nslock on hand was never so low as now.\nand would bc exhausted entirely In two\nor three months if the supply was stopped\nin any way.'* As things are at present,\nit looks as though the world needed copper more than gold. It is predicted that\ncopper will sell for 1.1 cents before January 1, lNOfl. lt is being produced at a\ntotal cost of less thnn one-half that figure.\nlu the Coeur d'Alene Mine.*.\nThe Atlantic Mining Company of Wallace has let n contract to run its tunnel\n150 feet further in, the work to be completed In 100 days. There is considerable\nore in the face, and it is expected that\nby the time the new contract is finished\nthe Ors chute will be fairly opened up.\n 70,00(i\n 21,524\n 19,500\n 12,841\n 4,000\n 2,ISH\n 2,1%\n 2.J00\n 1,000\n J00\n 12,000\n 17,000\n 20,000\n Tl.osc\nPeter Albinola. president of the Lom-\nbardy .Mining Company, reports that ore\nhus been found iu their crosscut, tunnel.\nThc lead wns cut some time ago and they\nhave been running for the hanging wall.\nT. II; McGraW, agent of the Wallace\nMining Company, the owners of the Black\n(.'loud, says the new concentrator will be\nready to run ubout the lotli inst. As soon\nas everything is running smoothly this\nmill should increase the output of lhe\nCoeur d'Alenes by from one to two carloads of concentrates per dny. It will I.e\nthe first, regular shipments tu come down\nNine .Mile for six years.\nThe trail from Wallace to Steven-, peak\nis now completed, and a number of parties owning claims iu that vicinity will\nUtilize it for taking in supplies while they\ndo development work.\nJohn Thiard bus located tihe Lion lode\nclaim ucur the head of Trail gulch, near\nDelta, and thinks in it he hus one of ilu;\nmain sources of the gold with which ihe\ngravel of that gulch was filled. The ledge\nwhere discovered is but half an inch thick,\nbin is full of gold. He will develop the\nproperty us fust as possible and learn just\nwhat it is. Some of the small veins of\nthe gold belt have been very rich, bul it\nis believed to be the smallest one on which\nu location lins ever been made iu the\ncamp, und Mr. Thiard believes it is the\nrichest. It is located Up about the head\nof the creek which runs down the gulch.\nAnother Cariboo Dividend.\nThe Cariboo, Mining. Milling .& Smelting Coinpnny, operating claims in Camp\n.McKinley, B. C, paid its 10th dividend\nlust week. The payment was the usual\namount, 2 cents per share, or a total of\n$10,000. A dividend for a similar amount\nwus pnid early in May. This payment\nswells the total dividends paid by the\ncoinjmny close to the quarter million\nmark, the exact figure being $2fTt,0fl5,\nl.like Chelun Mine*.\n\"There is considerable mining activity\naround Luke Chelan. A great deal of work\nis in progress on Railroad creek, which\nis called the new Klondike, and which\nis producing much high grade free gold\nni'C Two outfits have recently gone into\nthe Bridge Creek district, one from Walla\nWalla and the other backed by Connecticut capital.\nThere ore busy times at Lakeside\nWhere one steamer u year ago run on the\nlake when it found business enough to\nwarrant a trip, two Bteamers now ply\nregularly, with plenty of business. Judge\nI. A. Navarre of Lakeside has just uncovered a vein of free milling ore. nenr\n(hat place that is snid to assay $51 per\nton. Thc fruit crop around the lake is\nsimply Immense. Orchards and mines\nmake Lakeside a prosperous town.\nt)n the Methow a great deal of assess\nment work is in progress, bin little development work is going on aside from\nUnit Thnt section, like all tlie rest.\niwails capital to make it profitable. 'l'he\ndistrict just now suffers on account of the\nRepublic boom, which occupies the public\nmind to the exclusion of ull other mining\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0amps iu this part of the state, and which\niwes its prominence largely to the fact\nhm it te cheaper to develop than is the\nOkanogan countiy. Willi us much attention given to Okanogan mines that part\nof the stale would doubtless become as\nfamous as the Colville reservation.\ni-i oo t e u ti i ii u m i u es h G ro wl ii k.\nAs an evidence of the growth of lhe\nbusiness of the Kootenay country in the\npast few years, the figures showing the\nincrease of the government revenue from\nthe New Denver, B. C. distiict since 1887,\nmight be of interest, taken from a government document: 1887-88, $20,425;\n1888-80, $22,005; 1880*00, $48,030; 1800-\n01, $43,086; 1801-02, $07,405; 1802-03,\n$01,050; 1803-04, $67,023; 1804*05, $82,-\nlOli; 1805-06, .*)40,S42; lSflti-07, $384,804,\nDivided the Minnie Claim.\nDr. G. W. Averill. nf Grand Forks, R.\nC. and Isaac Kvans. who huve both\nclaimed the well-known Minnie eluim, a\nfew days ago settled the matter out of\ncourt by each taking half of the property.\nThe .Minnie has ovcr $1000 worth .'if\ndevelopment work done on it, and has a\npay-streak that assays $80 iu all values.\nIt is situated iu Brown's camp, aboiil 12\nmiles from Grand Korks.\nNote* of Mines.\nll is reported thnt recent work on the\nIdaho iu Greenwood camp, B. C, disclose*\na large body of fine ore. It lies between\nthe Brooklyn and Knob Hill. Q, Rom-\nherger owns it.\nA center of attraction for prospector\nis lhe upper main Kettle river. Several\nparties havo gone into that almost un\nknown district and some encouraging re.\nports of locations have come out.\nII i-i reported that so iuueh freight Is\npiled up ul. Republic lading waiting to\nlie hauled to the camp tlmt 7\"> wagons\ncould not transport it. (hie Republic\nlinn hud 35 tons at the landing last week.\nIt is said thnl one of the contemplated\nI'hnnges in the working of the I.e Roi\nmini' nfter thc present difllcultles ure settled i^ the sinking of u vertical shaft to\nthe southeast of the present skip way,\nWhile deepening un old shaft on thc\nBig Four in Kiinherly cninp. Boundary\nCreek distiict, a rich strike of good ore\nwas mnde. Tlie bottom of the shaft is\nsnid to he in solid ore assaying about $20\niu gold and 5 per cent eoppor.\nDowney brothers are working on nnother contract on the B. & B. mine near\nTroy, Mont. The fourth level is in 508\nfeet and is to be driven 150 feet farther.\nThe ore is clean galena and the property\nis reported looking better than ever.\nMINOR NEWS OF THE WORLD.\nThe llusliieBB I'murfii-linli for\n(he Curlouti\u00E2\u0080\u0094Accident* and Crime\n-.\otei uf I'eriuni-Churches* aud\nItclliclnuK Netv\u00C2\u00BB.\nMixed Cclchralfnn nt Ouiiihn.\nOmaha, July 5.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In ull the 122 years\nthat intervened between the declaration\nof independence and thi1 triumph of the\nAmerican navy over Cervera's fleet the\nnational holiday wus never more stiTk-\ningly sigTiallzed than at the exposition\ngrounds yesterday. Not only the vast\nthrong of American men, women and\nchildren, but the Turks and Algerians,\nArabs, Moors and Chinese participated in\nthe mighty salutation to thc Stars and\nStripes. The big celebration was witnessed by a multitude thnt far outnumbered\nany previous day's exposition crowds. The\nnumber of visitors at the grounds was\nestimated at 100,000.\nRevised estimates on the losses of the\nLetter wheal, deal place the net sum nt\nt -*\"i..*>(H),(J00.\nDullness in the flour trade in Mihvau\n. kee, Wis., has led bo the closing of four\nj large mills.\nThe government internal revenue eol-\n| lections for Muy increased $3,281,225 over\nj May last year.\nMrs. John P. Sawyer of Mobile, Kan.,\nj was shot and killed by her husband, who\nsuys he mistook her for a burglar.\n.Many prominent army officers think\nthat 100,000 more men will be needed to\nmake the war against Spain short uud\ndecisive.\nThe wur department is making arrangements to send a 600 bed field hospital to the Philippines under charge of\nI Ihe United States navy as needed.\nEx-Queen Natalie of Servia is reported\nI to be organizing an expedition to Cuba\nl to nurse sick und wounded Americans and\nI Spaniards.\nIt is reported thut thc people of Japan\nure strongly iu favor of a triple alliance\nconsisting of Qreat Britain, the United\nstates and Japan.\nMr. Gladstone at the lime of his death\nwas a member of the Royal Academy of\n(\".treat Britain, holding the sinecure office of professor of ancient history.\nFor the third time in six months the\nShidelcv postoffice, eight miles north of\nMuncie, Indiana, was robbed last Monday\nduy night. Tin- booty amounted to $50.\nGen. Weyler says t lin t instead of sending Cervera's squadron to Cuba to be\nhot iled up at Santiago, it should huve\nbeen sent lo destroy eastern const, cities\nof the l'nited States.\nTwo hundred girls belonging to local\nXo. M. of ihe L'nited Garment workers,\nat Wappinger Palls, New York, have contributed several truck loads of provisions\nto starving Cubans.\nDavid Ferris, a retired Xew York grocer, driven to frenzy by the constant\nnagging of his mother-in-law, shot und\nkilled her and then turned the weapon\non himself ivith fatal results.\nMinneapolis tailors ure taking steps to\nabolish sweat shops und to organize the\nwomen and girls engaged in the tailoring\nbusiness so that they can obtain fair\nwages for their labor.\nFrank Shafter, a railroad man of Nor-\nwalk,\"O., hus recovered a verdict of $5,-\n000 against, (he Nickel Piute Railroad,\nby which he was formerly employed, for\nhaving black-listed him.\nSixteen-year-old Jessie Low, of Dayton,\n0., was awakened from a nap on a couch\ndown stall's in her home by a dream thut.\na certain upstairs room wus on tire. She\nrun up stairs und found it just as it appeared in the dream, and she put out\nthe fire.\nPatrick Fay, a Boston waiter, 80 years\nold, who died at a hospital recently 111\nsupposed poverty, left $.'10,000 to Boston\nchiiritit^s. The money wus saved from\nlips received from guests at hotels where\nhe worked from 1860 to 1S(H>.\nThe special committee of the l'nited\nStates Semite on the Nicaragua canal has\nagreed to report a bill providing for its\nconstruction, thc stock lo bo held exclusively hy the governments of the United States, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.\nA, G. Waite, of Waverly, Lafayette\ncounty, Mo., is the tallest man iu the\nstate. Jle is six feet eight inches in his\nsocks, und is one of a family of ten, the\ntallest of whom was seven feet eight\ninches. His smallest sister is six feet\neight inches lull. Thc Waites are relatives of the late Chief Justice Waite.\nDrouth has made sheep fodder so scarce\nin Australia that thousands of men are\nbeing employed in the various districts\ncutting the boughs of oak, apple and\nother trees for food for the starving animals, and in skinning thc sheep that perish in the mud at thc failing wuter holes.\nCount Cassini, new Russian ambassador\nnt Washington, says thut events of the\nwnr cun not nfl'eet the longstanding\nfriendship between Russia and the l'nited\nStates\nTlio rudder frame for thc battleship\nIllinois hns arrived at the Newport News\nship yard from the Cleveland Iron Forge\nWorks. The weight of this frame is 32,-\n000 pounds.\nA. J. nnd W. J, Bryant of Tippecanoe\ncounly, Ind.. have just completed this season'- wool clip, yielding nearly 3500\npounds from !M)0 sheep, an average of\nnearly l pounds to the fleece.\nLieut. \V, W. Harris, who was injured\nrecently by an accidental explosion while\nplacing subinarine mines for harbor defense near Jacksonville, Fla., is totally\nblind and denf in consequence.\n! Among the bills just passed by congress\nlis one providing severe penalties for nm-\nllclous injury or destruction of suluna-\n; line mines, torpedoes, fortifications or\n| other military or naval defenses.\nln an harangue on the battleship Pelayo before the departure of the Spanish\n| fleet from Cadiz, Spain, Admiral Camara\nsaid to his ollicers: \"Wc shall not return\nto Cadiz till our flag is wet with Amer-\ni (can blood.\"\nThe Madrid story that the South and\n1 Central American republics are about to\n| form an alliance against the United States\nis pronounced absolutely false by diplomatic representatives of these countries\nin Washington\nPeace or wnr is thc all-absorbing topic\nat Madrid, and the desire for peace on\n[any terms seems to be unanimous among\nthe masses of the people, as continuation\nof the war will practically result in national destruction.\nMajor X. A. Brodie. who was wounded\nin Friday's battle near Santiago, is a\ngraduate of West Point and a noted Indian fighter. Corporal J. I). Rhodes, who\nwas also wounded, is a noted Indian scout\nand trailer nf Arizona. rifonn^ir^Brigade, INext Wednesday Evenings\nTHE MINER.\nyilic M1NKU is printed on Saturdays, ami will\nbe nin.U-.-d to any address in Canada or tho\nUnited .stutcs tot one yoar on receipt of two\ndollars. Single copies fire cents.\nCONTRACT ADVKUTlSKMKNTri luseited at the\nratp of |2 percolumu Inch per month.\n'-TUAN.yir.NT ADVERTIBEMiMiTS inserted nt\nIhi'-rati'of l.') cents jtcr noopgrjdl Une tint\nlusertlou. AilveriisiMiienLs running f\u00C2\u00AB>r s\nsiiorur period than throe mouths arechiHsed\ntrue i-i-'-.-I.\npOUttRSHwOEN'CK from overy part Of the\nYale ftislrlcl nii'l communications upon live\ntopics always acceptable. Send in your\nuews while it is fresh, and we will do the\nrest.\nJOB PRINTING turned out iu flrst-class style\nat Ul* shortest notice.\nAddress F. II. UcCARTERA BOSS,\ngrand Forks, b. o.\nIp yoa want to advance the bent Interests\npf the distrlot, put in the assembly a man\nwho will hare somo Influence with the gov\nmmt and tain concessions which will TreaSurer of the City of Grand Forks From\nQUARTERLY STATEMENT\n-OK TH E-\ngreatly benefit ull parts ol tho riding,\nstead of working for uny particular section:\nif you Want the mining industry encouraged\nand cheap transportation furnished the district, vote for the Independent government\ncandidate, John McKane. If you don't want\nanything at all go out and lose yourself in\nthu woods on election duy.\nAs an example of the broad-mindedness of\nthe oppositionists, may he cited the fact that\ntho proprietors of the Boundary Creek,\nTimes, St Greenwood, refused to print for\nMr. McKane hills calling meetings at that\nplaco and Midway, hoping, UO doubt, by this\ncourse to cut down the attendance, but, fortunately, Mr. McKane was prepared for just\n. , . gli ,v i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 v - I *-'ch an action und had taken bills over from\nCarson L-odge I. O. O. I-. no. 37. , thojr MtloiiavftUed theiu nothing.\n1 n r\ 17 MBKTS KVHKY BATURDAY \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1. U. U. Pf oveuing '^V^lV^oVj,^'!' i There was a meeting called at Trail lust\n\$a PoaWur\u00C2\u00B0nin2 tSSlSftk.1\" ^ week for the purpose of having Mr. Martin\nl\ B.NELSON, N.G I tell the voters of that town what u had lot\nWM. M. CtAHK, B. B. ^ f tho government were, and how good he\nf. 11. HcCartkr. 8b...\nFrank n McCartrr,\n Business MatniRcr.\n Eilltor.\nIr Bcorcturjr.\nSATURDAY\nJULY 9. i\u00C2\u00BBo3.\nThe opposition cuuwe must ho in a bad\nway when the Rosslander, which hus been in\nsympathy with opposition, takes a very up.\nfavorable view of Ur. Martin's chances und\nsays thut the labor vote is not even under\nany moral obligation to i?o to Mr. Martin,\nand can be secured for tho government candidate if there te any Indication thut the\nreasonable wishes of the labor uiiIqus will\nleceive consideration.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aud there certainly\nTHE CRITICAL MOMENT.\nThe moment Is now not far distant when\nour eleetors tjiilst gOjtO the polls and decide\nIseuos of the greatest moment to this district not only but to'all^rlttsli Columbia as\nwell. Upon fjHjir decision depends In a measure (he future <\u00C2\u00BB' the entire province. This\nIs a most critical point in our history, und\nUpon the people theniHelvetj depends tho de-\neldillg of the issue. If our future is to be\nouo of progress and prosperity we must\nhave in power a government composed of\nenergetic and progressive men, who. have\nfaith In the province and will see that every\nthing possible Is done for Us development\nuud the furtherance of its best interests.\nV-VV have just entered upou an era of prosperity vyhicb has been wisely fostered and\nencouraged'by those In power. The program as dfhfled Uy the gave foment party Is\na most commendable and^nergeflg une and\nanything which will fend to prevent or hinder its immediate carrying out will be u direct blow to tho futuretrogress and pros*\nerlty of both district and province\nThe question t\ninto that of whloh candidate te the S*cst iit-\nted to assist iu the carrying out or the reforms necessary for tho prosperity and advancement of this district, and thut is the\nonly nUBBtlon which should he considered by\nour electors iu deciding for whom they will\ncast their ballot when the critical moment\narrives. Politics and party should be cast\nto the winds and the voters of this section\npolled for u man who will us our representative command thejutteutiou and respect of\nthe government, who can have a voice in the\nmalting of our laws and whose every effort\nwill he for the advancement \"' any measure,\n110 matter by whom advanced, which will\ntend to the development and prosperity of\nthe constituency which he represents. Not\na man who. even if he were electod would he\nono of a hopelessly small minority, wljo\nwould curry no weight, either with tho government or his own party, a man who has\nno decided ideas or opinion*-, who knows\nnothing of parliamentary usage and who\nwould be nothing better than u mere figurehead without power to obtain for us no legislation whatever, either good or bad; lu\nfact one whoso office would be merely un\nCmpty honor.\nIl is betweeu such men that our voters\nmust decide, and ut once. The critical morn ent is ut hand.\nwould bc if elected; but Jim didn't show up.\nI He was at Orand Porks waiting for a free\nride to Cascade, and If a frleud of his from\nI Rossland had uot come along with a team,\nI on tlie way home from Kepublle, he would\nbave been here yet.\nApril ist to June 30th,\nRECEIPTS.\nApril 1, To hai. on hand.... ?l,9ll OO\nJune80, To bul. nt Hank of\nMontreal ifiot !'0\nCash rect ived liiclmliug hotel licenses I-ICOOO\nJuno21, Loau of Hank of\nMontreal 2,ouo_oo\nTotal\t\nKXrEM'ITURES.\nApril 1, W. II. Davey 17,200 00\ndo Salaries of officio Is . 288 00\nJune 80, Current expenses,\nincluding two trips to\nRossland ofex-Treas....\nWork oa governmeul road\nWork on bridge during\nhigh water..\t\nAuditing ex-Treasurer's\nbooks \t\nOverdraft nt hank and fu-\ntetvM on Name . ..\nCost of transfer of inl. of\ndebentures -v telegrams\nre transfer\t\nKent of Kind for April and\nMay\t\nExpert reporting on water\nand light plant\t\nBeard for expert...,. . ..\nPublishing ex-Treasurer's\nstatement\t\nFreight on hose cart\t\nKobe and lanterns\t\nInt. on debentures\t\nCasli on hand\t\n?9,93S HO\nC'2 2fi\n17 30\nGS 25\n50 U0\n07 10\nG 45\n4 110\n51) 00\n8 59\n0 00\n50 00\n3 1)5\n1,069 06\n1,030 34\n\" i'u\nTotal.\nTnOS. R. McINNES.\nVICTORIA, by the Grace Of God, of the United\nKingdom of Great Britian and Ireland,\nQueen, Defender of the Faith, Ac, Ac, &C.\nTo the Returning Officer of the Kossland Hiding of Went Kootenay Electoral District;\nREA6 JI ia Honour the Lieutenant-\nivernor of British Columbia lias, by h\n. ,-oclamatlon bearing date the 7th day\nOf June 1898, been pleased to dissolve the Legislative Assembly of the said Province; and\nwhereas It is necessary to ho.d Elections\nthroughout lhe said Province to (HI Iho vacancies caused bv such dissolution, We command\nvou that, notice of the time and place of Election being duly given, vou do cause Election to\nbo made, according to law, of one Member to\nserve in thc Legislative Assembly of the Province of British oolumbia for the Rossland Biding of West Kootenay Electoral District, and\nthat you do cause tlie nomination of Candidates hi such Election to be held on the 25th\ndav of June, 1886 and do cause the name of\nsuch Member, when so elected, whether he be\npresent or absent, to be cert Ijied to Our Supremo\nCourt, at thc City of Victoria, on or before the\n31st dav of August next, the Election so made,\ndistinctly and openly under Our Seal duly indorsed upon this Our -A rit.\nJn Testimony Whereof, We have caused\nthese Our Letters to be made Patent under\nthe Great s^eal of Our Bald Province of British Columbia: Witness, thc Honourable\nThomas R. McJnnbs, at Our Government\nHouse, at Victoria, this seventh duy of June,\nIn the year of Our Lord one thousand eight\nhundred and ninety-eight.!\ndreil and ninety-eight, and in the sixty-first\nyear of Our Reign.\nBy Command.\nii. H. TvawiiiTT Drake,\nRegistrar of the Supreme Court.\nTit ft disturbance created by tho oppositionists at the meeting held by the Independent government candidate in (ireenwood\nis a fair sample of the tactics pursued by\nthe opposition party all through their campaign. And it is such peoplo as theso who\naik the voters of this district to pluee il-em\niu power on Saturday next.\nIt was rather a peculiar thing for Mr.\nMartin to devote so much of his time while\nou tho platform here, to roasting the C. P.\nEC. as a soulless corporation, tind Us ollicers\nas a pack of swindlers aud thieves, while ut\ntho same time ho was travelling through\nthe district fri-e of charge with the fight of\nway men, for this same dirty, rotten, soulless corporation.\nof soreheads and otliee seekers who have\nbeen kicked out ofthe other parties, think--;\nvery llttlo of his country and less of hlimelf.\nH\"\nProvincial Secretary's Office,\n8th June, 1898.\n18 HONOUR the Lieutenant-Governor has\nheen pleased lo appoint William B. Town-\nsend Esquire, J. P., to he Returning Officer for the Rossland Biding of the West Kootenay Electoral District; and\nHis Honour the Lieutenant-Governor has\nbeen pleased to appoint and declare the government office, Rossland to be the place for the\nnomination of candidates for election to the\nLegislative Assembly in the Rossland Biding\nof tiie West Kootenay Electoral District.\nVote for \"Liberal Jim\" Martin,'1\nthe \"Chinee\" man. \ *\n. i.. i u i\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSale of Land for Taxes*\nR.B. STANLEY SMITH, M..1). CM..\n(HoQUI Univ.)\nPHYSIOIAN.SUKGEONAND.'.OCOUC'HEUH.\nCoroner (or Grand Fork. Mining Division\nol Yale Di.trict.\nOFFICE*--Jubilee Hospital, Grand Forks, B. C.\nCORPORATION\n-OF T11K-\nCity of Grand Forks.\nBYLAW NO. 16.\nWHEREAS IT IS DEEMED EXPEDIENT\nto Impose a tax upon the owners, possesion, or barboreraof dogs, and also a road\ni lax. and nlxo to provide for the impounding,\nselling and killing of dogs 011 the non-payment\nof Flich lax by the owners, possesion or linr-\nI borers thereof.\n| 1. Therefore the Municipal Incorporation of\nthe ('ity of (irand Forks euueti an follows:\nI From and after the time this Bylaw comes In-\nI to edict all mole ponons betweeu the age of 21\n! and .'>u residing within tlie cily of Grand Forks,\nexcepting twenty-four active members of the\n! Grand ForkB Volunteer Fire brigade. Bhall on\n1 demand pay to the citv tax collector an annual\ni tax of (|2) tWO dollars by way nf mud tax.\n2. Everv owner, possessor or barborer of a\ndog iu the (itv of (irand Forks, sliall annually\npay io the di'lef ef Police, or persons acting as\nsnch for the time being of the said City of Qrand\nForks, for the general purpose of lhe said efty,\na tax or a fee of |1 for each dog owned by him,\nor in his possession or Buffered to remain about\nhia premises, and (fci) two dollars for each hitch\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -,,-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . .1 and upon payment of such dog tux shall he eu-\nThk man who votes for Jan. Martin and tho U(kl|1 *to rt,,cejVt. -roin ,j,(. Hai(1 rjhief of Police, a\niverthrow of the existing government to metallic plate, having raised or stamped thereon\nbe decided resolves Itself ,et up one which in untried, has no definite j the letter* (G. F. T P.)i Grand Forks Tax Paid,\n' ' ., , . , . , , - . ami the figures Indicating tho year for which the\npolicy and is composed of nobody but a lot Uftid tax has boen paid* together with a number\ni corresponding with the number under which\n: the said dog is registered iu lhe book kept for\nthat purpose by the said Chief of Police. It\nall be the dut) of the Chief of Police or per*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HORBES M. KERBY,\nProvincial Laud Surveyor\nAnd Civil Engineer,\nOrncE, Midway, n. c.\nAssociate Member Canadian\nSociety of Civil Englneen.\nPROVINCIAL SECRETARY8 OFFICE, (\n20*11 Mav, 18U8. (\nHIH HONOUR the Lieutenant-Oovcrnnr hns\nbeen pleased to appoint the undermentioned persons to be Colleetoritof Votes, under\nthe provisions of section Iti as the \"Ri-dlstrluu-\ntloti Act, 1WK,\" namely;\nJohn 1) sihhamj, of Kevelstoke, for the Revelstoke Rliliug. West Kootenay Electoral District.\nAl.KXANOKIl l.t'CAN, of Kaslo, for thC Slocan\nRiding, West Kootenay Electoral District.\nRopKiticK F. Toi.mik, ot Nelson, for the Nelson Riding, West Kootenay Electoral District.\n.i-iiiN K niiiii'. of HoBsIand, for the Rossland\nRiding, West Kootenay Electoral District.\nLeoNAitn Nonius, of Vernon, for the East Riding, Yale Electoral District.\nAnd Mis HnnoipMhe Lieutenant-Governor has\nbeeu pleased to appoint the undermentioned\nponons Kibe Distributing Collectors, under the\nprovision! of section 17 of the aaid Act, name-\nIn the former Electoral District of West Kootenay. OaoanxA. MoPahland, of Nelson.\nlu the former East Riding of Yale Electoral\nDistrict, IIuuii Ht. O.. Cavlky, of Grand Fork*.\nTT 8. CAYLEY,\nBARRISTER AT LAW;\nSolicitor, Etc.,\nOm<*0, Mnin Strcol, - GRAND FORKS, B. t\nRemaining Unpaid in the Rock Creek Division of Yale District, B. C, December 31st, 1897.\nNothing more is needed to show that Editor Boss of the Boundary Groek Times is n\ngentleman aud a g*qod politician than the\nactive part ho took in the government meet-\ntiutf at Greenwood, aud the eloquence, with\nwhich such expressions as \"liar,\" \"dammed\nliar,\" etc., ad lib., flowed from hiu lips.\nThe Opposition enn advance not one single\niswue or principle upon whieh the government should be overturned. There is nothing better upon whieh to huso their campaign than a great deal of harsh and unfounded criticism, and au ovor-poweriug desire for office.\nIt ia said that the reason Jas. Martin\nWOUld not go to Greenwood to speak against\nMr. McKane, was that there was no,-; enough\nroom for him in McKane's wagon aud he\nwas too hard up to hire one o f his owu.\nA votb for Jim Martin is\nprogress and prosperity.\na vote against\nUncle Sam is alright. When he was only a\nlittle boy ho twisted the liritish lion's tall,\nniid>ow he is giving the nations of the\nworld an example of the advantage of careful naval training over mere frantic, fanatic\noourare. The feats of destroying the Spanish squadrons nn Muuilla and Santiago de\nCuba without the loss of a single American\nship, andjilmost wlthout-llos* of life, ftre, two\nwhich have never before been eiiuulled in\nthe history of the world, no matter how\ngreat the odds way have been. The United\nStates has never hud a lurge navy but with\nsuch gunnery as has heen displayed) during\nits present wur It seems entirely unnecessary. The gallant actions of the Americun\narmy und navy;lu thls>ontest may well be\nwatched with interest and lauded hy every\nloyal Briton, as after all the United States is\nonly, as was aptly remarked hy au American\nstatesman, \"a BrJthjh oolpny which wouldn't\nlet its mother spank it,\" and Americans uud\nBi-itotm ure really of one blood. With an\noffensive and defensive alliance these two\ngreat Anglo Saxon nations peed fear nothing from the rest of tho entice; we-rld; und\neventually there will he such un alliance.\nMINING _RECORDS.\nGrand Forks Mining Division.\nJune 24\u00E2\u0080\u0094Modock, English Point, James Daroey.\nMohawk aud Nftvahog, Christina lake, James\nDaroey et al.\nTli rum Cap and Express, Pass creek, 0 A Dein-\npsey\nI key, Pathfinder camp, C. S. Shnvson.\nOlympia, brown's camp, II A Henderson.\nHard Tack, Summit camp; Maryland, Pass\ncreek, J W cheer.\nJune 25\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Burlington, Wellington camp, A A\nMcintosh.\nCougar, Mcltae ereek, U L Wood ct at.\nFauuy-Helen, Christina lake, Q s Summers.\nDewey, North Fork, W E Htoche etal.\n1'aruiclla, fract., and lloosler, Summit camp,\nC Ileitis,\nl.uella, Hardy mountain, Geo Young.\nJune27\u00E2\u0080\u0094May Hell, It M Mclniyre et al.\nCity of Vancouver. Central camp, A FGlre.\nDewey, North Fork, F C Jones ct al.\nMiiumcc. Ed Couture et al,\nConcord, fract., Brown's camp, S F Ralston,\nUomestakc. Haker ercck, II SJardon.\nJuno28\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wayside, Urown'soamp, li Hoffman,\nTwo friends, Pass praps), VV B Fisher et al.\nMassive, Pass ereek, ,1 Golluaset al.\nButte. Brown's camp, J H Fox,\nVesuvius, iireenwood camp, J Mulligan.\nJune 29\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pauper's Dream, Burnt Basin, T f\nKane et nl.\nHoodoo McRae Creek, RobtTOWlee,\nJune 110-Fleur Spar, No.2, Bear creek, OS Green\nlug\nFleur Spar, No ti, Hear ereek, John A M-UllJ'-\nFleur Spar, No. 4, Bear creek, VV. B. Davey.\nCEaTmCATK OF WOKK.\nJune23\u00E2\u0080\u0094Heaver, J J Far'cll etal.\nMullie Pritehard, P H Nelson et al.\nTHOS. R. McINNES.\nCANADA.\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nVICTORIA, by the Grace of Gad. of tha United\nKingdom of Groat Britain and Ireland,\nQukkn. Defender of the Faith, Ac, Ac, Ac.\nTo all to whom these Presents shall come.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGllEETINO.\nA PROCLAMATION.\nP. M. Khekts, }\nAttorney-General. J\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0p WOLLASTON,\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nCivil Engineer, Etc-\nQRAND FORKS, B. C.\nn BAND FORKS HOTEL\nBarber Shop.\nCentrally 1/ooated. All Wiirk Oauriinteed to be\nKIrst-Clau in every Ke.pect.\nPETER A. I PARE, - - PROPRIETOR.\nName of person\nassessed.\nName of supposcil\nowner.\nDescription.\nDescription of\nparcels.\nAmount due\n1\n(Irand Korks Townsite\nKeal property. Graud\nBjornberjr, J. A\nCompany,\ndo \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nForka 'iownslte.\nLot li Blk C\nf .80\nBrook, C. and VV.\ndo\n10,30 2\n2.40\nBuron, J.\ndo\ndo\nU 14\n.40\nCannon, II. B.\ndo\ndo\nIB 2\n2.00\nCorvell. J. A.\ndo\ndo\n3 4\n1.20\nOlemmlne, Fred\ndo\ndo\n1 20\n2.80\nDickerson, Wm.\ndo\ndo\n9 10\n.80\nOee, Loni\ndo\ndo\n3,4 1\n2.00\nHunt, F. 8.\ndo\ndo\n10 7\n1.20\nHutclitnson, Mrs. C.\ndo\ndo\n0 9\n3.20\nHutchinson, 8. J.\ndo\ndo\nIB 11\njl 31\n2.19\nJrnes, J. W.\ndo\ndo\n2 80\n4.40\nKane, W. H.\ndo\ndo\n13 8\n100\nKnight, F. H.\nLind and Bjorkland.\ndo\ndo\n10 311\n4.HO\ndo\ndo\n9 30\n1.20\nMader, Wm,\ndo\ndo\n14 1\n2.80\nMoKwen. II.\nNo.vby, Jus.\ndo\n(lo\n7 t\n.80\ndo\ndo\n10, 11 7\n2.40\nNelson, Cha.\ndo\ndo\n0 \u00C2\u00AB\n,80\nOliver, R. J\ndo\ndo\n6 3C\n.80\nPerry. Edwin\ndo\ndo\nis e\n.60\nPearson, Alhert\ndo\ndo\n2.40\nPenrose, Wm. J.\ndo\ndo\n8 I\n.80\nPhaueui, T.\ndo\ndo\n4 3(\n2.00\nKecil, i'tin.\ndo\ndo\n4 2C\n.40\nHetiRer, Caroline\ndo\ndo\n1 1,\n1.40\nSnnpson, 0, K.\ndo\ndo\n16 11\n2.00\nSpinks, V* in. Ward\ndo\ndo\n8,9 7\n1,00\nAnd, ln accordance with tho law, I hereby give notice that I shall orTcr for dale, by public\nauction, tho lands and go^ls and chattels of persons lumessod by me on which taxsK, Including;\npersonal nrnitcrty tax, together with thc cost of advertUluganu other expenses, remaining unpaid on the day of the sale, iu the above named dlvhrioii of Yale District.\nI' inter the atatute, persons liable to pay Taxed Imposed hy thc Assessment Act are personally\nliable for thc amount thereof, aud all lamia, goods and chattels of such persons within the Province are also Halite therefor. Tlie taxes are a charge ou such lands, having preference over any\nclaim. Hen, privilege, or incumbrance of any party, except the Crown, aud does not require Registration to preserve It.\nThe above sale will take plaec on Wednesday, the Iflth day of Julv, 1898, at the Government\nOflice, Osoyoos, at 11 o'clock a- in. C. A. R. LAMBLY, Assessor aud Collector.\nOsoyoos, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E June 1st, 1808.\ntn establish thc foi*\nsons acting as suoh to Impound any dog\u00E2\u0080\u0094fouud\nrunning ac large within ihe city of Grand Forks\nwhich is owned or in the possession of, or suffered to remain about the premises Of any resident of said cltV* and for which such owner,\npossessor nr harborer'has not paid the tax nr\nfee required of him by ''Clause one\" of this Hy-\nlaw, then thc Chief (if Police or the authorized\nperson Bhall Impound said dog in tho city\nPound or ether place suitable for the confinement of dogs, and the said Poundkeepor shall\nkeep any such dog bo impounded for seventy-\ntwo hours, and if the said owner produces UHhe\nsaid Poundkeepor the receipt of the aaid Chief\nof Police or poison acting as such for the time\nbeing, showing that la* payable no account of\nthe said dog has been paid, or a metallic plate,\nIn accordance with \"Clause One\" of this Bylaw,\nhas been procured, nnd shall also pay tu the\nsaid Pound Keeper the i-tura ot one dollar for Ills\nfee for bo impounding said dog, aud twenty-five\ncents per day for the expense for keeping and\nfeedlug of tlio said dog, otherwise the said dog\nat the expiration of the said suveiity-iwo hours\nshall bo soj.l or destroyed by the said Chief of\nPolice or Poundkecpef.\n'A. Tho owner of any bitch in heat who shall\nBuffer or permit the same to run at large, while in\nthat condition, shall be subject to thu penalties\n4. The said Chief of Police or person acting,\nof this Bylaw.\nas sueh lor the time being, shall, in the months\nof January and July In each year post up notices fn at lerst six public places in the city,\nwarning persons of the provisions of this Bylaw.\n\u00C2\u00ABr>. Tho Chief of Police or person acting as\nsuch, shall once lu every month make a report\nor return in writing to lhe Municipal Corporation of the City of Grand Forks, showing the\nnames of all persons who have during the pre-\nceedlng mouth paid the tax Imposed by this Ity\nlaw together with thc date of such payment, and\nthe amount received from ench snch person,\nand also onee in every gioiith t\" pay over to the\nCity Clerk all monies received by him during\nthe preceding mouth, under the provisions of\nthis Bvlaw.\nC Any person being guilty of apy of the Infractions of this Bylaw shall UpORconviction,\nbefore a Police Magistrate or any two Justices uf\nthe Peace, incur a penalty not to exceed (?Jf\u00C2\u00BB)\ntwenty-dollars for each offence, exclusive of\npost, and In default ui payment theieof forthwith it .shall be lawful for the Police Magistrate\nor any two Justices of the Peace to issue a warrant under their hands ami seals to levy thc suid\npenalty ami costg, or penalty or cost only by\ndistress and sale of the offenders goods and\nchattels, and iu case of insufficient distress to\nsatisfy ihe suid penalty, then it shall be lawful\nfor the aforesgld magistrates to commit the offender io the coniniou goal for any period not\nexceeding one calendar mouth unless, the penalty and costs, or penalty or costs, be sooner\npaid.\nThis Bjiaw may be cited for all purposes as\nthe Dog and Road Tax Bylaw, No. Hi, vm.\nRead Uie lirst, second and thltd time ou the\n21thday of Junuisus\nReconsidered aiu! tnuilly adopted this 2nd dny\nJuly. lays.\nIt, 8,1 jekp DAV18, Mayor.\nJ. K, JoHNBOtf, City Clerk.\nlowing polling places lu the several and respective Electoral Districts hereinafter named.\nNOW KNOW YK that, by virtue Of the authority contained In the \"Provincial Elections\nAct,\" the Lieutenant-Governor In Council declares that the following polling places shall\nbe, and tbey are hereby, established for the.several Electoral Distracts, the names of which are\nset opposite such polling places, respectively,\nthat is to say;\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nKLKCTOIIAI. DISTRICT.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A21\n. I West Kootenay\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n. f Rosslaud Riding.\n. I\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 J\nPolling Places.\nRossland\t\nTrail\t\nGreenwood\t\nGrand Forks\t\nMidway\t\nCascade Cily\t\nIn Testimony Whereof We have caused these\nOnr Letters to be made Patent and the\nGreat tieal of British Columbia to he hereunto affixed: Witness, tbe Honourable\nThos. R, McInnks, Lieutenant-Governor of\nOur said Province of British Columbia,-in\nOur City of Victoilu. In Our said Province,\nthis fifteenth day of June, Inthe year of {Our\nLord one thousand eight hundred and\nninety-eight, and in thc sixty-first year of\nOurltelgu,\nBy Command.\nA. Cami-rem, Reoiue,\nDeputy Provincial Secretary.\nII. A. SHEADS,\n- AS5AYER-\nGRANC FORKS, B. C,\nSAMPLESCIVEN PROMPT ANDCAREFULTTENTION\nUT E. STACHB,\nBath Rooms,\nAND TONSOPlAL PARLORS.\nRIVERSIDE, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - - GRAND FORKS\na l. Mcdonald,\nContractor and Builder,\nGRAND FOUKS, B, C,\nI'lin. and specllioatioiiB drawu, estimates(ur-\niilshml tn all M'idsof building. Work; strictly\nflnt-olas,.\nIN tlio last ls.no of the Ilonndary Croek\nTimes appear, the assert Um that Ur. liu... rs,\n\u00E2\u0080\u009Ef pj-ssland, and John McKane, independent Jn,g^?W \u00E2\u0096\u00A0SrR*?*SSfc,ofSll\ngovernment candidate for the legislative assembly from tbis district, were responsible\nfor Boundary district having been tacked\nonto the newly created electondVlintrict In-\nttead of being made a riding hy itself, they\nhaving first suggested the matten to tho gOV\"\neminent. This wus only nnother of the\nmany deliberate mis-statements to which\nthe opposition has resorted lu theii.\u00C2\u00BBwild attempt to defeat the government by fair\nmeans or foul; hut lu this particular case\nthe neat little campaign lie was immediately\n\"nailed to the erow,\" Mr. McKane himself\nbeing In Greenwood to address a meeting\nonly two days after its publication and forcing Editor Ross to retract the stutement and\napologize for its utterance in a public meeting, at which Mr. Ross, with a number of his\nIlk, wa\u00C2\u00AB attempting to create a disturbance.\nONE of the strongest points which the\noppositionists have bepp attempting to\nuiuke lu the present compaign Is the manner In whieh the government has been ex*\npending the money in the various \"districts.\nIt is stated that they have wasted It, uud\neven worse Is hinted ut. Such statements\nure rather extraordinary in view ofthe fact\nthut in ten yeurs of scrupulous und exuctlug\ncriticism thc opposition Ims fulled to point\nOUt one single important instance In which\ntheir claims bnve been established. It Is\nstrange that In ull this tlipejthe rocords of\nthe house do nut show a single Investigation\nor a proof to establish these statements.\nThey dure to m;ike nothing more thun vague\nnisertloiis. A speclflcchurge hus uever been\nlaid or a specific wrong alleged. Sijrely In\nthe face of these facts the^op()ositlou should\nblush to insinuate what they huve never hud\ntbe courage to nt tempt to prove.\nAs an instance'of the udvautage to be\ngained by this district being represented iu\nthe next provincial assembly by u muu who\nIs In sympathy with the government may be\ncited the fact that Kootenay, represented by\nn government roan J has In the last ten years\npaid the province u revenue of 1980,000 und\nhas lu the same time had expended in improvements ubout |040,000, or over two-thlyds\nof the revenue received; while Bast Yale\nwith an opposition representative, bv- in\nthe same time paid hundreds of thousands\nof dollars In revenue and hatjfecelved In return less than one-tenth that amount in improvements. Under these circumstances, can\nany man whjO has the infarcts of the dfs-\ntrlct at'heart think it adviseable tg send as\nour representative a man who is opposed to\nthe government tooth and nail, and who can\nof courseexpect no concessions from it whnt-\nKtJf\nSuperior, Willett et al.\nlIiKhiund:Chlef,IdahoTriuketaud lIoineKtake,\ncheer et. al.\nJune25\u00E2\u0080\u0094Twins and Lillie K, Manly \u00E2\u0080\u009Et al.\nTurn, Archibald et al.\nJune 27\u00E2\u0080\u0094Went Superior, Austin etal.\nEscort, Pure Gold and Trilby, Purg Gold Mining company,\nYellow Jacket tiud Copper Queen, J Mulligan.\nDiamond, .1 Cuiinlnghum.\nCrescent. J II Ashfield et al.\nJune 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094New Jack of Sp-'des, Giro ct ul.\nJune20\u00E2\u0080\u0094Guclph. M W Burr.\nCopper Farm, J llammll.\nHarrow, Taylor ct al.\nr Christina, Kettle River M and P company.\nJune 80\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Viola and BowOB, W F Tye et al.\nTIlANHFKKfl.\nJune 8\u00E2\u0080\u0094Marigold, all interest, J Christie to K\nTWIckweir.\nJune 11- Meeklenberg,-M2 Interest, C H W'allis\nto HIM A M Brown.\nJuno 18-flig Six, % interest, A Wallace to s p\nMclntyre.\nAluminum, % interest, 0 H Summers et al to\nW M Wolverton.\nJune lit\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Duly, % Interest; Marshall, K Interest, and Jackson, - , Interest, II P Jackson to\nM Hhick.\nMother Lode.!\u00C2\u00BB Int.. M Bhlclc to M Jackson,\nDaly, U int., fit, Bhiok tu. T Mayne Daly.\nJune 10\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Waterloo. Wur (.'loud fraction, Coronet\nfraction and Manitoba fraction, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0, Interest,\n0 M Crouse to K M Klrby et al.\nNabob fraction, :,i int., CM Crouse to J Rogers.\nHumming Bird, 8-20 Interest, J Khrllch to SIg\nDllshclmer.\nJune 17\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tiger. Ciismnlon, Jubilee. Norbcrt,\nKlb.a and Three Jolly Boys, Alex Bunds to\nEmery Brown.\nJolly, U Interest. J W Jones to II Sweeney.\nMooullgbt, \i Int., M K Willis to II A Huntley.\nRabbet Paw, % interest; Atlanta, y3 interest\nRertltlug to J Hamilton.\nIron King, Kupper Queen and Columbia, ]2\nInterest, ,i K Gibson to N g Brown.\nJunelH\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mollic Pritehard, all iut.,0 11 ta P 11\nNelson.\nJuno 20\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tin tic, }4 interest, T Dartsmouth to G\nHicken.\nGolden Cord, Interest; Stella, % Interest, J\nHanchett to P Johnson.\nJune 21 Copper Wonder, all Interest, P II Beach\nto It 0 Cramer.\nMary B, all iut., G Hicken tn G Cunningham.\nJune 22\u00E2\u0080\u0094 famarac, all Interest, A Lemay to W B\nFuton.\nYellow Kli and Tammanv, % Interest, A J\nStuart low 11 Greer etui.\nJune 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094Iron Clad, lA Interest. E E Parker to J\nJ Farrell.\nAlaska and Moonlight, all Interest, fl A Huntley to Mrs. k Bent ley.\nJune 24\u00E2\u0080\u0094Caiedon, Acme and Topper* all Inter-\nterest, Golden EraProspcctiiigand Development to A C Gait.\nGiant Prince, all Int., T M Daly to A C Gait.\nRosebud, Moonlight aud Canyon, all Interest,\nJ Founder to Mrs. E Bentley.\nJune 27\u00E2\u0080\u0094Helena, topper Mountain, Champion.\nVictoria, Evening Star and M iule Ball fraction, 1-9 Int., J M F Kurrell to J C Speilmnu.\nMfule Ball fract., Helena, Champion, Evening star, Copper Mountnin and Victoria, 1-0\nint., J M F Farrell to J W O'Brien.\nJune 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094Golden Eagle, all interest, J Brandt to\nw C Boewcher etal.\nDewey, )i Int., \V E Btache et ul to J Brandt\nVtelvet, l,k int.. R O'Cramer toll K Flnlttison,\nExelslor, % interest, M Giro to C Gire.\nVote For John McKane mi Progress.\nNotice.\nThe above is a true copy of a bylaw passed by\nthe municipal corporation ofthe City of Grand\nPorks ou the 2nd day of July 1898 and all persons are hereby required to take notice that any\none desirous of applying to have sueh bylaw or\nany part thereof quashed, must make his application for tlmt purpose to the supreme court\nWllhltl one month next after thc publication of\nthis bylaw In the British Columbia Gazette, or\nhe will bc too late to be heard lu tliat behalf.\nJ, Ki Johnson, City Clerk.\nNOTICE.\nNOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT SIXTY\n(till) days after date I intend to apply to the\nHon; The Chief-Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks, for permission to purchase three hundred nnd twenty t\u00C2\u00BB20) ncres of land op Kettle\nriver. \u00C2\u00BB\nCommencing from thc Northeast corner of\nLot 831, group I, thence north -lOchalns, thence\ncast 80 chains, thence couth 40 chains, thence\nwcBtM) chains to point of commencement.\nR. B. QUiFIN.\nGrand rorks, B. C , June2.\">th, 1898.\nDate or first publication. July 2nd. 1898.\nDate of last publication, August 27th, 1898.\nCERTIFICATES OF IMPROVEMENT.\nATIIEL3TOX FRACTIONAL MINERAL CLAIM-\nSituate iu the Grand Porks Mining Division of\nYale District. Where located:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wellington\ncamp.\n-TAKE NOTICE that I Forbes M. Kerby, P. L. S.,\nI acting as agent for Johu Mack, freo miner's\ncertilicate N*o. I4107\"A\", Intend, sixty days from\nthe date hereof, to apply to thc Mining Recorder for a certilicate of improvements, for thc\npurpose of obtaining a Oroivn Granjof the above\nclaim. And further take notice that action, under section 87, must be commenced before the\nIssuance of such certitieate of improvements.\nDated this 2nd day of July. 1897.\nIJyO-SlO] FORBES Al. KERBY, P. L. 8.\nBYLAW NO 17,\nEntitled \"Grand Forks Rate\nBylaw, J 898.\nWHEREAS.IT IS NECESSARY AND Expedient that a Bylaw be passed for levying a rate ou nil thc lands and linprov-\nincuts nn the revised assessment roll of the Corporation oi thcCRy of Grand Forks to provide\nfor the genera) and ordinary expenses of the\nsaid Corporation during the year l.v.is.\nTiiKiiKPOitR the municipal Council of the\nCorporation of tbc City ot Grand Forks enacts\nas follows:\n1. Thero Is hereby settled, Imposed andlevjeq\nupon all the lauds iiieiitloned nnd described In\nthe revised assessment roll ofthe said City of\nGrand Perks for the year 1698 an equal rate or\ntax of fifteen mills on thc dollar upon the full\nassessed value of the Bald lands as appears ou\nthe mi id revised assessment roll.\n2. There is hereby settled, Imposed and levied\nami there shall be raised and collected upon all\nthe Improvements mentioned and dci-crlhcd In\nthe revised assessment roll of thc said City oft\nGrand rorks for the year 1898 an equal rate or\ntax of fifteen mills un fifty per cent of their value\nas appears on said revised assessment roll.\nJl. Thc said run sor luxe*-, shall become due\nand payable by the person or persons liable to\npay the same to tlie Collector of the said City uf\nUraud Forks, at Ids otllce In the said city, on\nand after the l(>ih day of August, 18l)H.\n-I. A rebate of one-sixth shall hi; allowed on\nall taxes hereby Imposed which shall be paid on\nor before the 3Ut duV of August, 1898.\n5. Thc rates and taxes ou land aud improvements which arc unpaid on thc 31st day of Dec-\ncembcr, 1898, shall hear Interest from said last\nmentioned date until paid In full at the rate of\nsix per cent per annum thereon.\n6. If the rates ortaxes hereby Imposed nrauy\npart thereof shall not be paid on or before the\nHist dav of December, 1808, the same may (te collected In the manner provided bv the ''Municipal Clauses Act, 1896\" and amendments then to..\n7. This Bylaw may be cited as \"Graud Forks\nRate Bvlaw, 1898.\"\nRead first and socoud time the 30th of June,\n1898-\nRead third time, the 2nd day of July. 1898,\nReconsidered, adopted und finally passed the\nCouncil this 8lh dw of .Inly. 1898.\n'* JEFF. DAVIS, AfAYOtt.\nJ, K. Johnson, City Clerk.\nNOTICE.\nThe above Is a true copy of a Hyla\y passed by\nthe Municipal Council at the City of Grand\nForks on the 8th day of July, 1898, and all peril red to take notice that\nanyone desirous ot applying to have such By\nlaw or any part thereof quashed\napplication for that purpose to the supreme\n' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 th \t\nsons are hereby required to take notice\nanyone desirous ot upplylug to have sue!\nlaw or any part thereof quashed must make bis\napplication for that purpose to the supreme\ncourt within one month next after the publlca\nlion ofyhli Bvlaw in the British Columbia Gazette or he will be too late to be heard In that\nbehalf. ' J. K. Johns-jH, City -Ulersj.\nCURLEW MINERAL CLAIM.\nSituate in the Grand Porks Mining Division of\nYalo District, Where Located\u00E2\u0080\u0094In Greenwood\n('amp.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Robert Denzlcr Free\nMiner's Certificate No, U025A, intend, sixty\ndays from tne date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a certificate of improvements, for the purposo of obtaining u Crown\nGrunt of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nsection 37, must be commenced before thc issuance of such certificate of improvements.\nDated this 20th day of May, 1898.\nDate of tirst publication, May 28,1898.\nDate of last publication. Julv .\, Intend, sixty days from\ntlie date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a certificate of improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown\nGrant of the a hove olaim.\nAud further take notice that nction, under section 87, must be commenced before the issu\nance of such certificate of improvements-\nDated this 20th day of Alay, 1807.\nDate of first publication, May 28, 189a..\nDate of last publication, July 30, 1898,\t\np RAND FORKS BLACKSMITH\n AND\t\nCarriage Factory\nBKIDGE 8TBB4T.\nD, M. FEENEY, Proprietor,\nThe care ol horses feet and up-to-date\nshoeing made a special study. Tbeie is\nnothing in my line of business 'hat T\ndon't do and will make you anything\nfrom a wbeelborrow to six-horse coach.\nBicycles\nNEW '98 MODELS FROM $50 UP.\nFreight extra. Buy one and we guarantee\nyou will never regret it. We hove proved them\nund know what ive are talking about when we\nsay they ure the best wheels fur lite mouey ever\nproduced |\nORANGES AND LEMONS\nHave a standing order for weekly shipments,\nand will handle the best fruit money will buy.\nDO YOU SMOKE GOOD CIGARS?\nGive us a call\t\nJOHN DONALDSON,\nRiverside Ave. south oi jclinonico.\nThe Grand Forks\nMercantile Company\nHaving Decided to retire from thc DryGoods\nBusiness. Every Article in this Department\nwill be Gosed Out\nAT COST\nBe sure and do not miss this great opportunity for Dry Goods bargains.\nJ. W- JONES,\nManufacturer of\nSpring Beds. Mattresses,\nLOUNGES, ETC.\nDEALER IN HOUSEHOLD GOODS OF ALL KINDS.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\n\u00C2\u00A3>|^>Saw Filing and all Kinds of Repairing.\nSKI MINERAL. CLAIM.\n\"Ski1' mineral claim, situate In Ihe (irand\nForka Mining Division of Osoyoos division of Vale District.\nWhere located: On Slummock mountain\nabout tlifoe miles eaiit af Christina hake.\nTAKK NOTICE that I J'-hn Drummond An\nderson, l\ L. B.< ot Trail,B.C., acting as agent for It. A. Williams, Free Miner's Certificate No. 8170A and R. fl. Gay, Free Miner's\nCertificate No, HI008, Intend, sixty days from\ntlio date hereof, to apply to thc Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining a Crown Grunt of thc\nabove eluim.\nAnd further take notice thut action, under\nscctlnu B7, must bo commenced belore the Issuance of sueh Certllleate of improvements.\nJOHfl D. ANUEHBON.\nDated thin BOth day of April, I8C8,\nDute of first publication, April BOth, 18!\u00C2\u00BB8.\nDuteul last publication, July Kith, 1HW.\nBEECH MINERAL CLAIM\nt'Recch\" mineral claim Minnie lu the\nGrand Forks mining Divison of Osoyoos division of Yale distrlot.\nWhere located:\u00E2\u0080\u0094on Sim nt rock mountain\nabout three miles cost of Christina lake.\nTAKK NOTICE thatl Johu Drummond Anderson, 1* b. S., of Trail, B. C, acting ns Agent\nfor W. II. Morrison, free miner's certilicate No\n8I!iriA. Robert O. Cramer, free miner's certificate\nNo. 7TO3A, U. C. Beech, free miner's certificate\nNo, 9887A and E. Lavalley, free miner's certificate -No. 7U',!M7, intend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, tp apply to the Mining Recorder for it certitieate of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining aCroWn grant of the above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice thnt actlou, under\nsection K7, must be oommenced before tho issuance of such certificate of improvements.\nJ. D. Anderson.\nDated this 29th day oT April, 1\u00C2\u00ABIH.\nDale oi tirst publication, April 3th, lHfl.S.\nDate of last pqblicat j\u00C2\u00ABP* W)' W, 1\u00C2\u00AB1$.\nPRICES REDUCED\n-Al The-\nChicago Meat Market,\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nTwo pound, of Steak 25 cents\nBoil. ,,.,., H to meant.\nPrime Ribs 13^ cent.\nFancy Cut. 16 cent.\nFRESH EGOS, HAM AND BACON ALWAYS\nON HAND.\nGivou.ac.ii, JEFF HAMMER, Prop.\nGrand Forks Mercantile Company\nGRAND FORKS, B. C\nGrand Forks Brewery*\nG. A. FRASER & CO., Proprietors.\nLager Beer, Porter 1 Soft Drinks\nParticular Attention Given Orders From Private Familie .\npETER HANNAN,\nCarpenter and Builder,\nMAIN STRBKT, ORANU FORKS, I). 0.\nKMliimti-H Inrnl.Iieil on Application. Store\nFrontH und Fl mires a Specliilty.\nSpokane Falls &\nNorthern,\nNelson & Ft. Sheppard,\nRed Mountain Railways.\nThe Only All-rail Route, without ch **'**-*;\nof cars, between Spokahe, Rossland and Nelson.\nDAILY KXCKPT BUMDAY.\n(lol iir Nortli. Going South\n12:27 a. ra,,.,, MAKCl'S 11:13n. m.\nTrain leavln**: Marcus at 11.13 ft. m. makes\ncloBe connections at Spokane for all\nPACIFIC COAST POINTS.\nClose Connections at Nelpon with steamboats\nfor Kaslo and all Koutcnay J.akc Points.\nPassengers for Keltic Hl**er and Boundary\npreo|i poi-ngct lit fl(*r\u00C2\u00B0*.5 W'lfi *t\u00C2\u00BB?f ^SWi\nMWWWWWWWWWiWW&WWWW&WWWWWW^WWW&vrWWWWWWw^wWWWWWwWW^\nMINE SUPPLIES\nWe curry one of the moat complete stock a of Drill Steel,\nPowder, Gapa, Fuae, and all other Mlner'a Supplies to be\nfound in the district. .Everything' i% of the best quality\nand our prices give our competitors a shock.\nGRANITEWARE\nWe have a splendid line of (hi? elegant, cleanly and durable kitchen ware; induding a novelty In this sectloji\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ngraniteware fry puns. You should try these, M they will\ne sure to pleuse you.\nBINDER TWINE\nIn demand and w\ndomauds of the tr\nW.K.C Manly,\nIi again In demand and we nre, as usual, prepared to\nsupply the domuuds of the t-rndo with Ihe best to be had.\nTin and Repair Shop in\nConnection \u00E2\u0080\u0094,\nBridge Street, Qrand Forks, B. C.\n***THE MIDWAY HOTEU-t\nMIDWAY, KETTLE RIVER.\nFirst-Class Accommodations, Good Stab'ing, Termius of\nStage Line From Marcus, Washington.\nMcAuley & Keightley,\nProprietors.\nCOSMOS HOTEL\n>a^Grand Forks, B. C.-s/v\nEverything New and Best Furnished\nHouse, and is in everyway prepared to\nwelcome Guests and provide Good Accommodation\nHeadquarters for Miring Men. Bett\nof Wines. 'Jqtiors and Cigars. Special\nattentio \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 paid to Transcicnt trade.\nggRA INiQPY\nPropriftpr, InVictoriaHall. The Best of Music Will Be in Attendance. Admission: Gentlemen $1; Ladies Free. Everybody is Invited.\nJI 8ff ONE\nJoint Debate of the Candidates.\nWAS WELL ATTENDED\nAnd the Urge Crowd Listened With\nInterest to an Exposition of\nthe Oovernment's Policy.\nThe meeting called lost Saturday night In\nVictoria hall, for the purpose of hearing\nfrom Mr. McKane. the independent government candidate, an exposition of hU views\nnnd tbe platform on which he asks the mif -\nferage of the voters of the Boundary country, was a marked contrast to that held tho\nevening before by his opponent, Mr. Jas.\nMartin, there being present a large majority of the voters uf this sectlott and a great\ndeal of enthusiasm being manifested.\nTho meet ing was called to order by Mayor\nDavis who was placed In the chair nud after\na short speech setting forth the objects of\nthe meeting Introduced Judge W.J. Nelson,\nof Rossland, who expressed greut pleasure\nat Ixung able to speak In McKane's behalf in\nGrand Forks, and he WM more pleased to\nhave the opportunity of nu eting lu Joint debate Mr. Martin, who like the Spanish Ileet\nbefore belug bottled up lu Santiago harbor,\nhad so far succeeded in eluding the government speakers.\nHe appeared, he said, in behalf of a mau\nwho, if elected, would place tbe Interests of\nhis constituency first and that of the government seeoud. After reading a portion\nof the manifesto Issued by Premier Turner,\nshowing the amount of revenue received by\nthe government from the Kootenay district\nduring the last ten years to have been $980,-\n000 while In the \u00C2\u00BBamo time over 1600,000, or\nover two-thirds of the revenue, had been expended in Improvements whloh had so greatly opened up the district that almost half of\nthe $930,000 revenue had been received during the last two years. This was the kind of\na government the opposition wanted to\noverthrow.\nSuch a policy aB that of the Turner government wuh what was wanted to open up the\nvast mineral resources of the Boundary\ncountry. The general policy of the government had always been one of progresi and\nadvancement they had faith In the province\nand bad always worked for tho best interests of every pari of It, not for any particular sectiou.\nHe then proceeded to examine the policy\nof the opposition, showing that they could\nnot-of era single reason for the overthrow\nof the present government, that they promised nothing whatever If they were placed\nIn power, and that their whole campaign\nwas confined, not to dfcbate and argument\nbut to a continual round of abuse and criticism of the government and Its leaders.\nTaking up the matter of the tax on working miners, about which the opposition has\nmade such a howl, he said that Mr. McKar.e\nwould favor the removal of the tax from\nminers employed in the mines under ground\nbut that he thought it should be maintained\non prospectors. As to the tax on mortgages\nus administered at present it was a tax paid\nby the poor man who was forced to mortgage his property, and Mr. McKane would\nfavor Its abolutlon, as soon as possible without Injuring too severely the revenues of the\nprovince. (\nThe government, everyone conceded was\ncertain to be returned, and eveu it an oppositionist was elected from this district he\nwould have uo Influence with the government and could not gain for u<.tlje concessions which oould be obtained by a man iu\nsympathy with the government. And this\nmatter should not be a question of party or\npersonal feeling but of the best Interests of\nthe district/-.* a whole.\nHe then took up Mr. McKane's platform\nand showed the advantages to be gained by\nsuch a policy as outlined. He closed by predicting a sure victory for Mr. McKane on the\nC(h.\nJas. Martin was then Introduced and he\nscolded and fumed for some time, roasted\nthe government, Mr* McKane, the G. P. R.\nand everybody else, but did not advance any\narguments in his jiwn favor or produce any\nproof of his rather wild aqd rumbling statements.\nAfter Martin hud'finished his tirade, Mr.\nMcKane was introduced and explained that\nhis candidacy as an independent government supporter meant tliat he would not\nfollow the erack of the government whip in\neVery thing, but would support any measure, no matter by whom brought forward,\nwhich would be for the best interests of the\ndistrict.\nThe opposition claimed that the government had no platform. He claimed that the\ngovernment bad a policy and It was oue which\nmeant progress and prosperity for the entire province. On the other hand the policy\nof the opposition seemed to be confined to\ncriticism of the government, they had maligned the government at every turn.\nTaking up tbe railway question he showed\nthat the charter asked for by Mr. Corbin allowed him seven years iu whioh to complete\nhis road and two In which to begin operations, while the 0. P. R. had agreed that If\nCorbin's charter was not allowed they would\nbuild their line at onee, and they were now\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-. at work. So that in reality the railway\n''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 question, which had been a sore spot with\nthe voters of this district was not so bad as\nIt had seemed.\nThe opposition had raised a great bowl\nabout the province being gerrymandered,\nbut It waff not. Iu 1894, when the last election\ntook place, the government had polled 17,-\n(167 votes-against the opposition's 18,518, or a\nmajority of 4,000. He could not see much of\na gerrymander about that.\nThey had also howled that the government\nwas running us Into debt. \"True there was\nan excess of 948,000 expenditure over the revenue, but tbe government had built over\n8PQ miles of railway and had more building.\nAnd any government which would not go\nahead and develop the province would be recreant to Its duty.\nIu conclusion he said that he was not here\nto discuss matters at length, but to ask the\nelectors to vote for whoever tbey considered\ncould best represent their interests In the\nassembly.\nMr. Hay, of Upper Grand Forks wns then\nintroduced and talked at some length\non all kinds of subjects. We have all heard\none of Mr. Hay's speeches so it Is unnecessary to give a synopsis of what he said. It\nwas simply a repetition ofthe tirade of Mr.\nMartin, only a little more drawn out, and a\nlittle more abusive.\nMr. McKane again took the floor and\nurged tbe people of (iii; Boundary country\nto cast politics to the winds and work for\nj he best interests of the district. There bad\nbeen too much coust legislation, Victoria\nand Vancouver had fought each other too\nlong. They must be made to recognise that\nwe huve here the greatest district in the\nprovince, if not In all Canada.\nMayor Davis, the chairman, then made a\nshort speech, expressing his pleasure at the\nsuccess of the meeting. A vote of thanks\nwas then tendered i\\\\y for the mauuer in\nwhich he had fulfilled the duties of his position, and thp meeting adjourned.\nA meeting, was held in Reudelt's, hall at\nGrpRiiwood.^last Monday evening for the\npurpose of allowing Mr. McKane to state his\nposition and platform to the elector* of the\nI Boundary Creek country, and a large num-\nI ber of the voters were in attendance.\nI Duncan Ross, editor of the Boundury\nj Creek Times, Lawyer Black uud a number of\n| others organized a crowd of rowdies and attempted to break up the meeting and hiss\nthe speakers from the hall; but in this they\nwere not successful, Messrs, McKane aud\nNelson winning the attention aud sympathy\nof the more orderly portion of the audience,\naud pouring hot shot into the ranks of the\ndisturbers until they were glad to give lt up\nas a bad job. It Is safe to say the action of\ntho parties who (attempted to break up\nthis meeting will do the opposition cause no\ngood and undoubtedly will do harm, but It\nis by just such manouvers as this that the\nopposition expects tn achieve success so they\nare doubtless well satisfied with the result\nof their actions.\nAfter tho disturbing element had quieted\ndown the government candidate and his coworker guve the electors a comprehensive\nexposition of the government's policy and\nthe Intentions of the candidate if elected.\nMcKANE'S . PLATFORM\nto thk electorfi ov the bophlaud riding,\nWebt Kootknay Electoral District:\nGentlemen: Having received thc unanimous nomination of the late convention oi In*\npendent Government Supporters* I bog to pub-\nllcly announce myself as a candidate for election, to represent you lu tbe next legislative\nAssembly ol tlie Province.\nIf elected, I shull lu the main support the gen*\nera! policy of the Turner administration, which\nbas been characterized by h faith in the 1'ro*\nvlnce, its resources and capabilities.\nll- pulley bOS done much Lo advance thc crc-\nditot the Province and to develop Its mineral\nwealth uud otlier resources. This Government\nhas, by llbernl grants for Ihe construction of\nrailways, roads, bridges ami public improvements, made mining lu tbla district possible. It\nhas ever held, as Its cardinal principle, tho progress uud development ol all parts of our youug\nbut rich Provinco.\nBut, while supporting Its general policy, I feci\nthat it la of the greatest Importance tliat the representative of this riding, isolated as it ls from\nthe rest of the Province, and as a mlulng district having needs aud requirements peculiar to\nltselt, should be allowed to the fullest extent to\nexercise his own Independent Judgment with\nregard to all measures coining before the Lcgls-\nKe\u00C2\u00AB\nKeCe(\u00C2\u00BBC\u00C2\u00BB>r*><\nTom Twobellies Favors\nHim.\nREAD PLANK FIVE.\nMartin Favors Discouragement of\nImmigration, and Employment\nof Chinese Labor.\nWe sat in our sanctum the other evening- trying vainly to devise some means whereby tho\nback-biting association could be killed otl', und\nJohn Manly and Chas. Hay could be induced\nto bury the hatchet and work in harmony; tho\ncity council and Contractor Davey settle tbeir\ndifferences, etc., etc., when therosuddenlycame\nto our cars a familiar caterwaul aud as wc turned expectantly around, there burst lu upon us\nIn all the glory of a red necktie, checkered pantaloons and sateen vest, our old friend Tom\nTwobellies, tlie olllco eat, whom wchad not seen\nsince the flood and hail given up for dead, sup-\npowlug hiin to have been drowned, as were the\nnineteen other cats who had becn making their\ndomicile under the printing olllcc floor.\n\"Why, hello, Tom!\" weeded in surprise as wc\ngive him the \"glad-hand,\" \"thought that you\nwas dead sure.\"\n\"Noton your ferrotype.\" he replied proudly.\n\"Catch me monkeying with water! Its alright\nln its place, but it wouldn't stay there so 1 left,''\n\"Where have I been all thiB time? Oh, I've\nbecn over to llosshiud with the politicians, f\ntell you there's the place. Talk about your poll-\ntics here, It's nothing to what wc have In Borland. Why, I've seen men ovof there take\nmoney from two or three different men and\nwork for all of them. Here you've got to stick\ntmt\nTo Worklngmen.\nWe have just received from Rossland most authentic information that Jim Martin, the \"workingman's friend,\" the man\nwith the Chinese plank in his platform, EMPLOYS A\nCHINESE COOK AND LAUNDRYMAN. He recently\noffered $2 per day for assessment work, and $2.50 for a\nblacksmith, One of the best and most experienced men in\nMartin Bros, establishment, at Rossland, receives the munificent renumeratlon of $15 per week, and the reputation of the\nfirm regarding wages is by nc means good. Talking of double-\ndyed hypocrits! What's the matter with Jim Martin, the\nworkingman's Jonah.\nlature, which might tend to assist In develop-\nin? Its mineral resources, advancing its material\nInterests or improving tlie conditions and lessening the burdens of the miner and prospector.\n1 believe that I shall, by adopting this principle, be In a better position to further the Interest Of this Riding, and to advocate measures for\nIts benefit, than If I had been elected as a strict\nGovernment supporter. In fact, iu assuming\nthis position I am carrying out the advice of\nPremier Turner, who. in his letter to tho electors of Kootenay, adviset* them to send to the\nLegislature \"Good men. who will make 'KOOTENAY' not'PARTY' their first consideration.\"\nBeing fully convinced that this is the proper\ncour.se for your representative to pursue, I shall.\nIf elected, frequently consult you with regard\nto the Legislative or other requirements, of tlio\nHiding, so that I may carry out your withes to\nthe fullest extent, untrammelled by strict party\nties.\nIt Is impossible for me in Ihe limits of this address to fully outline thc reforms which I will\nadvocate In the Legislature as tending to benefit thc electors of the District. All my interests\nare here; 1 am the owner of mining property In\nall parts of the District. It therefore follows\nthat our Interests arc Identical.\nBorne of the reforms to which I will give my\nattention are:\n1. I peldge myself to work to the best of my\nability to secure the local expenditure of public\nmoneys In proportion to the revenue collected In\nthe District, and to Insure sueh expenditure being laid out to Ihe best possible advantage.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2l. The mining Interests of liritish Columbia\nhave now reached proportions that it fa desirable they should be administered by a separate\ndepartment under thc charge of u minister who\nwould devote his undlvded attention to the sub*\n|eci. I shall use my i-tloi is to have such a Portfolio created, with a Minister of Mines at its\nhead.\n3, I shall ulso advocate the removal from the\nSta'uc Book.of the discriminatory tax of Five\nDollars per annum on mechanics, miners and\nothers employed In our metalliferous mines.\n4. Also a change Iti the Mineral Act to compel all partners iu a mining claim to bear their\nshare of the assessment work or forfeit their Interest.\nCi. I shall endeavor to rescind the legislation\nof '06 by whicli mining units were taken out of\nthe Jurisdiction of thc County Court and rele-\ngatcd to the Supreme Court, thereby entailing\nIncreased costs und great delay.\n6. I favortheabotltfonof the so-culled \"Mortgage Tax\" at the earliest practicable date, having regard to the revenue requirements of the\nProvince.\n7. I am in sympathy with the principle enunciated In tho \"Truck Act\" und shall ever advo\ncato every other like measure, which may have\nfor Its obiect the amelioration of the condition\nof the miners, meehanies and workmen of the\nDistrict, also all measures which will tend to\nsimplify and make less pnerops on prospectors\naud locators, the mining laws and regulations.\n8. I shnll advocate increased representation\nfor this Riding, keeping prominently before me\nthe great needs of tho lioundary district.\nIt Is now generally conceded tbat the Government led by the Hon. J. II. Turner, will bo returned to power by a majority even larger thau\nexisted heretofore. It Is therefore to the Interest ol the electors, and the progress and development of the Province, that a representative should be sent to the legislature, who is ln\ntouch with that Government.\nIf elected, JI shall endeavor to faithfully and\nImpartially perform the onerous duties which\nwill necessary be required of tho representative\nof a District rich In mineral resources, and which\nrequires, more than any other part of thc Province, liberal grants, to aid iu its devclonment.\nI recommend every elector, more especially\nthe eleetors of thc Boundary country, to read\nPremier Turner's le ter to the Rossland Convention of Independent Government Supporters,\nut which convention I received my nomination,\nI would thut I could Include It lu thc limits of\nthis address. The facts therein stated ure of\nvital Interest to every elector.\nIn conclusion I respectfully solicit vour votes\nand influence. Yours sincerely,\nJOHN McKANE.\nRossland. June 27th, IM)8.\nAnglican Church.\nThc Archdeacon of Columbia visited officially\nthis city last week, and at a meeting appointed\nGrand Porks as Trinity Parish and district, tho\nCommitted In chargu being R. It. Gilpin, E.\nSpraggett, and I. A Dinsmore, lu whoso hands\nthc allalrs of tho church of England are planed.\nIt Is satisfactory to know that through thp\nkindness of the citizens there ls every prospect\nof there being at no distant date a resident\nclergyman In the city, so that those who arrive\n\"on the eats\" wil! lind themselves quite at home,\nand not, as generally sin-posed, at tho Jumping\noil place of a wool ley western camp.\nThe hearty response among the members\nproved the long felt need hereof a church, and\nthe mc lion taken at ouce has given no uncertain\nsound.\nServices will be held in the school house, by\nkind permission of thc trustees, uu Sunday\nmorning at 11 o'clock a. in.\nWjifre to Vote\nThe polling plijcc tomorrow for tbo generally\nprovincial election, will bc at tlie otlico of H. A,\nSheads, Urldgc street. The polls will be opened\nat 8 o'clock a. m. and will close at 4 p. m. Jas.\nAddison i.s the returning olllcer; Fred Wollaston, clerk. Ills Worship, Peter T. McCallum, J,\nP., will l\u00C2\u00ABplf (font as Jim Martin's interesisus\nscrutineer, while Richard McCarren aud George\nFraser will represent Johu McKane.\nBe Sure to Come.\nA moeting df the Grand Forks board of trade\nwill beheld next Monday afternoon at3p'p|qck\nin the mihbr oflice, at which matters of great\nimportance will be dismissed. Every property\nownep of the city Is earnestly requested to bc\npresenj, \"\nto one iimn, and thou you get soup half the\ntime. Yes, Rosslands Is more my style.\n\"Didn't sec mc when you was over? 1 saw\nyou, but you wasn't travelling in my class.\nAnd, by the way, that's what I came to seo you\nabout. I hear you're out for that fellow, McKane.\nNow, see here what do you waut to support him\nfor?\n\"Cause he's the best man?\n\"Now, don't you never think It. Martin's the\nman for the Boundary country. Why, there's\none plank in his platform that ought to be\nenough to elect two or tlxttic men like him.\"\n\"Whicli one is that?\"\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Well, you area lulu. Just take his platform\nand read plunk five, where he pledges to work\nfor\n\"The Discouragement of Immigration, and\nEmployment of Orientals,\"\n\"Now. there's a plunk for you. Jim's an old\nCaribooite himself and can appreciate the terrible agony which it causes a 'squaw man'\nto have to live ln a country as overcrowded as\nthis section Is, where the towns aro only about\nten or twelve mllcsa part, and one can't go a\nmile In any direction without seuing a man aud\nsometimes two or three. It Is getting fearful\nand a man can't get any privacy at nil any\nmore; but Jim, our Liberal Jim, is going to fix\nthings up for usi When bo gets Into the legislature he's going to discourage immigration,\nand chut the blooming foreigners out of the\ncountry.\n\"McKane wouldn't put such a thing In his\nplatform, Not he, What does he care for the\npoor old timers who aro being crowded out by\ncompetition? Nothing! Why, he even has the\ngall to say that If he is elected he will do everything he cau to open up tbe country and bring\npeoplo in. Are we going to vote for a man who\nwill do that? Not wllh a Oppositionist! We dou't\nwaut the country overcrowded.\n\"Theu there's that Chinese question. McKane\nwould let the whites do;thc work, while Martin\njs straight out for the 'employment of Orientals.'\nThat's the way it ought to be. The heathens\nain't good for anything else but work, and a\nwhite man wasn't never meant to have work\nanyhow; leastwise It there's Chinese to bo had\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand then thc Chinese are cheaper. I say hire\nall you can of 'em and then there'll \><\ that\nmany )ess whites that will have to work, and\nthat's the way Jim looks at lt too.\n\"Another thing yoa want to look after, that\nfellow McKane's too awful extravagant. Just\nthink of (ilm hiring a rig, at his owu expense,\nand coming through the country, when he could\njust as well as not have bummed a ride oil' of\nsomebody. That's thc way Liberal Jim did.\nYou dou't catch htm westing his good money\non rigs, not much! Why, he walked from Greenwood to Greenwood camp to ride hero with thc\nC. P. R. right of way party\u00E2\u0080\u0094and say, hut didn't\nhe give it to the 0. P. R. In his speeches. McKane wouldn't have the gall to do such a thing.\nBut Liberal Jim's not afraid of them, tic's just\nthe kind to give 'cm fits one night and ride free\nwith Ilium next day.\n\"Oh, we're going to have a regular walk-over\nand if you kuow what's gopd for you'd better\ncome Iu onto! the wet. Talk of them electing\nJohn McKane! Why, they can't even havo a\nmeeting without some of our boys getting iu\nami malting such a racket they can't let thc\npeople know what a good thing they are oilor-\niim thein. What do wo (Jo it for? i)aug tt all,\nman, we've got to do it. If wo let thu people\nlind out onee what tho government has really\ndone fur ihem we wouldn't get a dozen votes in\nthis district; but you can Just bet that wu ain't\ngoing to let |ii|ii lind out If bowing 'lubber,'\n'thief and 'outraged innoconcc' will do anything toward stopping them.\n\"Well, bo long. I've just got time to catch\nthe Strict & Walker stage for Midway, and I've\npiomised sure I'd bc ovcr there to-morrow ulght\nto help Ross aud Hiack and the rest of the gang\nto break up a government meeting, that some\nof thc blamed idots are going to get up.\"\nAud ho hurried away, humming to himself:\n\"We'll hang Johu McKane to a Bull Pino Tree,\"\nwhich, we understand, is now thc lptast popular spiigat Qrcenwood.\nFpr the Fire Boys.\nThe Associated Charities held its regular\nmeeting last Wednesbny afternoon with Mrs.\nMcCarter, and it was decided to give a\ndance on Wednesday evening next, the proceeds of which should be donated to the flre\nbrigade As the object Is such a worthy\nune there is no doubt but the attendance\nwill bo very lurge and a goodly sum will be\nnetted for the benefit of tbe flre hoys.\nThe dance will take place ln Victoria hall\nand the very beat of music w|ll be lu attendance. Wilson Lucian will call. Ice cream\nand cake will be ojj sijle in the hall so refreshments may be Qntajfted ut any time desired, and no regular lunch will be served.\nThe price of admission is \u00C2\u00A31 for gentlemen;\nladles admitted, free,\n{LOCAL NOTES.|\n^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>>D^*>3\u00C2\u00BB>>>)*>^*)*)*)*3*>3*)e)\u00C2\u00BB>)*^e>\u00C2\u00A3\nPbinglesSa per thousand at W. K. C. Manly.s.\nJohn McAuIifle, of Dululh- Minn., was in the\ncity on Tuesday last.\nChas. Van Ness is putting it veranda in front\nof tlie Grand Forks hotel.\nW C. McDougall returned tlds week from a\nbusiness trip to Rosslaud.\nJ. G. Muddix, of Spokane, was a visitor In\nour city ou luesduy last.\nA. li. Thompson was up from Cascade City\nthe lirsl of the week on busi ness.\nJ. W. Ant ley was a visitor during thc week\nfrom the flourishing Rossland camp.\nJohn Cheer, a well-known prospector of this\nsection, wus dowu from Summit camp ou Monday.\nErick Siburg, Oscar Willis, and E. Wheeler\nwero over from Greenwood the lirst of the\nweek.\nGeo. R. Naden, one uf Greenwood's prominent merchants, was in tiie city last Tuesday\nevening.\nL. M. Drake and Howard IJ. Dennis were\namong the arrivals ou Monday's stage from\nSpokano.\nChas. Spong cumc down this week from the\nBonanza, iu Knight's cui,ip, where he hus been\nemployed.\nPatrick Clark, of Republic tame, was in the\noity last Tuesday evening aooompanled by bis\nthree sous.\nD. Holsraan, the prominent Spokane liquor\ndealer, was iu the city this week doing business\nwith our Miiouu men.\nD. A. Holbrook,a well known mining muu of\nIbis distrlot and a prominent olttsen oi Greenwood, was a visitor this week.\nT7TPT?! INSURE .vour property with\nruVCI Frank Sears, representing tome of\nthe best companies lu the World.\nArthur Movvatt, a citizen of Toronto, was\namong the ninny pilgrims who visited our lively little eity during the past week,\nFrankSearS, Real Estate and Mining Broker.\nRents aud other collections promptly attended\nto. Oflice Bridge St.. with II. A. Sheads, ussayer.\nM. F. Biittmer was In the city ou Tuesday en\nroute to Spokane from Republic where he has\nheen looking after his mining interests in the\ngreat camp.\nMrs, Pril ilsky will have lu a nice line of ribbons, floviors and the very latest millinery\nnovelties iu a few days and invites the ladles to\ncome iu and inspect them and see (ho latest\nstyles iu millinery,\nJ. M. O'Toole of Rossland, who has eharpe of\nthe work being done by tbe Rathmullen company on their Passoreek proporties, was down\nirom the claims on Monday und reports excellent progress being made.\nGeo. Cumings ha\u00C2\u00AB leased the dining room of\nthe Alberta lintel. George is quite acatcrer himself and with thc advantage of having tho best\narranged dining room and kitchen, will uo\ndoubt cut a big swath when it comes to feeding\ntbe traveling public.\nElsewhere iu this issue will be found the advertisement of Alex. Ma-mi, .Merchant Tailor,\nwho bus opened a shop at Cascade (itv. Mr.\nMason Is welt known to many of our citizens,\nbehaving beeu lu business at Rossland, who\nspeak of him us au up-to-date artist in overy respect.\nAlderman Jones left via Wednesday morning's\nstage iu search ot nn expert competent to tell\nthe eity council what is the matter with the\nwater and lfght plant. Contractor pavey has\nannounced that he Is wilting to make nuy alterations that a competent engineer may Bay that\nIs necessary to perfect the plant.\nMr. Rolt, a prominent mining broker of Rossland, camo in Saturday evening in a private\nrig ou bis way home from a trip to Republic,\nmade a speech at Martin's rally Friday evening, and left Sunday morning for home, taking\nwith hlm Mr. Martin, who had beon waiting\nhere three days for a chance to get u free ride\nto Bos&hurg.\nThe brewery Is becoming quite a favorite re.\nsort these hot days, und It is really n great relief\nto get away from the heat and drink the excellent beer put up by Fraser & Co., the proprietors, TlmTowuend,'the brewer, is unexcelled\nin any country, The brewery bus nlso added a\ncomplete Hue of soft drinks for theaocoinoda*\ntion of those who prefer that class of liquid refreshments.\nJudge J. W. Nelson and John McKane, of\nRossland, the latter the government candidate\nfor the legislature from this riding were in the\ncity last Saturday, parsing through to Greenwood on Suuday and returning hero Tuesday\nevening. Thc Judge left on Wednesday morning for Ills home at Rowland, but Mr. McKane\nSpoilt coveral days in town, looking after his\npoliticul interests.\n, NEW GOODS.\nNEW GOODS.\nOutlook for Our Mines in\nEngland.\nMr. WOODHOUSE TALKS\nSays we Will Oet a Good Deal of\nEnglish Capital.-Victoria\nMakes a Strike.\nGLORIOUS FOURTH.\nCelebrated in Fitting Style by Our Yankee\nFriends at Nelson-, Wash,\nTho Fourth of July celebration at Nelson-\nWash., was a great success In every particular,\nthe races being of especial Interest and developing some of the most hotly contested and hard\nfought contests ever put up In this section.\nFestivities were began on Sunday, the third,\nby a game of baseball between Grand Forks and\nGreenwood, played at Nelson, as part of a series\nfor tlieehampionsliipof tno Boundary country,\nIn which thc Grand Forks boys got decidedly {\nthe worst of lt. They weio amply avenged,\nhowever, on Mo. day whon the Nelson team\nwiped the earth with the Greenwoods to the\ntune of 21 to 7 In live Innings, at the end of\nwhich the game was stopped by rain. The massacre, In both instance, was too fearful to dwell\nupon so no detailed account of either game will\nbe given.\nTno horse races wero rather a surprise tn tlm\nsports, none of the favorites winning and the\nprizes being carried away by hitherto unknown\nhorses; but for tlie size of the purBes and the\ncondition of the track there was some very\ncreditable races, every rider boing out for blood\nand every horse doing all their was in hlm.\nThe footraces, sack races, tug of war, etc.,\nwere all hotly contested aud caused a great deal\nof interest and amusement among the spectators.\n|?A grand open nlr bnll ln the evening ended\nthe sports and oue of tho most exciting and enjoyable celebrations ever bold in this suutlop of\nthe country,\n\"PLAY BALL.\"\nA Team Is to Be Put ia the Field on\nBusiness Principles\nA mooting of the base boll enthusiasts of the\ncity was held in Victoria hall lust Wednesday\nevening for the purpose of organising n base\nbull associoilon to be run on business principles, with a view to giving Gran 1 Forks a creditable representation on thu diamond during\nthe rest of thc season.\nThc meeting was attended by the most representative citizens of the town and was called to\norder by Fred Wollaston who stated tho object\nof the meeting, and ollicers were then elected\nas follows*\nHonorary president, II, Sweeney; president,\nFred Wollaston; vlec-nresldents, Geo. Chaiipcll,\nII. A. Sheads and A. W. Fraser; manager, L. A.\nManly; mascot, Peter A. Z. Pare; treasurer.\nThus. Hihburd and secretary, J. A, Keough. It\nwas decided to leave tlio mattor of selecting\nand preparing grounds lu tho hands nf a COPP\nmlttoe of three, to consist or the president and\ntwo Others, and Mr. Wollaston chose to act with\nhlm J. Rulstou, and Fred Russell.\nIt was then moved bv Mr. Ralston, seconded\nby the mascot (Peter A. Z Pare) that a vote of\nthanks be given I,. A. Manly for the use of bis\nhall and to the peoplo of Grand Forks for their\nliberal donations, uud the minutes of the meet- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ning together with thc subscription list be plven\nto tho Grand Fouki m in Kit for publication.\nThe meeting was then adjourned subject to\nlliecallof tliuclmlr,\nTelephone Getting Close\nThe force of men engaged lu stringing tbe\nwire for the telephone line from Bossburg '\u00C2\u00B0\nGrand Forks, aro now at work between Cascade City and this place, and are pushing the\nwork so rapidly that it will be only a matter of\nu few days now beforo the Hue will bc completed atul communication with the outside\nworld established.\nWork will be continued from here on the line\nuntil it Is run on np to Vernon, and also a\nbranch line to Republic, so it will only be it\nshort il mo now before this city wil) have telephone connection with the outside world and\nnil the other towns of this section as wull.\nFhe Brigade Meeting.\nA meeting of the Grand Forks Volunteer\nFire llrlgude wus held in Victoria hall lust\nTuesday evening, ut which a constitution\nnud by-laws wero adopted cnlllng for the\nbrigade to consist of a chief, assistunt chief,\nforeman, assistant foremun and twenty-six\nactive members. The-rp will also be un honorary list which will include all those who\nwish to join. The regular meetings of the\nbrigade will be held on the first Monday In\neach month and the first annual elect i-m of\nofficers will take place the first Mpudtiy it)\nAugust. A proposition is on foot to af-\ntaeh to the brigade nn athletjc club, with a\ngymnasium whieh will be opened to ull members of the brigade.\n$500 Tg fyt oq McKane.\nGeorge A. Fraser of the Grand Forks Browery,\nhas IfiOO that he Is willing to bet that John Mo-\nKane Is elected. Any person having any Martin money pan be accommodated by calling pn\nGeorge. .\t\nCourt in Session.\njudge Spinks arrived in tho oity yesterday\nand Is holding a sitting of the county court today. The docket Is not a very long one and -i-\n(JXpOttS to eoniplel;) It t)ds ijttefumiir*. I\nMr, Alfred Woodhouse, M. I, M., who has been\nIn England on mining business for some time\npast, arrived In thc City last Tuesday evening\nfrom Rossland and left the next day for Greenwood and other points on the other Bide of the\nrange. During his stay lu the city Mr. Woodhouse was seen by Minkk representative In regard to the feeling lu England as to Investing\nIii the mines of this district, aud the prospects\nof English development of our mining properties, nnd in reply said:\n\"Tiie attention given to British Columbia\nIs dally increasing and tho Boundary country\nis recognised as one of the coming centers.\nThe Incoming of railways and smelters will at'\ntract capital, attor completion, tuitls not English capital's way to takeehances; they deal only\non a practical basis, and they will not\nbuy mines iu a nuw country and develop them\non the chance of railways coming in. If thoy\nput tlieir money iu they want lo bo sure of railway mid smelter facilities.\n\"Some prominent English capitalists had becn\ncarrying on negotiations with a. view to attracting the attention of tlie investing public to\nBritish Columbia, but this Unfortunate war hns\nstopped all proceedings and tho coin plications\nthat are likely to arise as tbe outcome of tbc\nwar have anything but a beneficial eil'ecl.\n\"Mining engineors of the highest standing\nhave returned to England confirming the reports of their predecessors, and there is u growing feeling that the western liritish colonial possessions of British. Columbia will, by u\njudicious outlay of capital, confirm these favorable reports. At the same time it is recognised\nthat owing to the mountaiuous nature of thc\ncountry, tbe hardness of the rock and the present lack of transportation facilities tho cost of\ndevelopment will bo very great.\n\"Witli a return of peace and a better under-\netandlugbetween European nations it is probable that British Columbia, uud certainly the\nlioundary country, will receive substantial\nfinancial support from the mother country.\"\nMr. Woodhouse Is making a flying trip\nthrough thu Boundary country and will, In all\nprobabilty, shortly return to England, where he\nhas been doing good work in advertising the\nmineral resources of British Columbia\nVictoria Strikes It.\nJJ, ll, Broton was dowu on Wednesday from\nhis Victoria claim, up tlie North Fork, and\nshowed us some line samples from a strike just\nmnde on thc property atiidistaucootouly about\neighteen Inches below the surface. As far as\ncau bo determined the lead Is In the neighborhood of forty leet wtdo and the rock shown in\nreally remarkable for so close to the surface. It\nIs almost solid Iron and copper pyrites with a\ngangue of gray quarts, green tUorlto ind spar,\nand should, from all appearance, assay high iu\nboth gold and copper. The banging wall of thy\nlead has been found and consists of granite with\na layer of porphyry between it and the ledge,\nAs yet the foot wiili is uot uncovered but thc\nwork now being done on thu property will no\ndoubt soon result lu Its discovery, and if tlpj\npresent conditions hold ou the property with\ndepth |t will doubtless be a mine.\nThe Palace Hotel.\nThe Palace hotel is tbe name of the hostelry\nwhich has just been opened Up lu Upper Grand\nForks. Mr. Douglass, well and favorably\nknown lu tills section, is iu charge of thc bar\nwhere a supply of the very best liquors and cigars may always bc found aud I). 11. Monroe is\nin charge of thc hotel proper. Here the weary\ntraveller can always find a pleasant room and\nget n first-class meal. BUOCOBB to the Palace.\nAt Megaw s Store-\nWe have now received those long expected New Goods, and will\nj be pleased to show you a nice assortment in fancy Colored and White\nLawns. Dotted Swiss. Organdies, Dimities, Sateens, etc. Also light)\n(colors in Heriettas, Silk and Wool Mixtures, Tweed effects. Tartan'\nPlaids, etc. j\nCome and see our new lines of Gloves and Silk'Mitts, and Collars ]\n5 and Cuffs. Also new lines in other departments which we will be!\npleased to have you inspect; Yours Respectfully\nI H. SWEENEY, Manager.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^.^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^.^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>.^.^*^*>..>..-a..^>.^.-s..-\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB..*^..-av.a..*x. k\n$ \t P ir_ tr \u00C2\u00AB i i Ijlf\nAm of New Arrivals!\nw\n/i\ We have just received a shipment of Men's fine straw hats In the\nyjv latest styles. A few Cases of the celebrated Stetson hats in all\niTc shapes. Also a nice line of men's tan shoes and prospectors nailed -a*.\n;tP shoes Don't forget to get a pair of thc Indianola self-adjusting, all M-f\n'|j leather suspenders, \|f\nJ GROCERIES.\n/A\ We aro sole A cents for the following lines: \"The Big can\" Lilly Brand cream\nI 'I.' Towle's Log Cabin Maple Syrup. New Orleans molasses from ttie Mutiny Houtb, Al\ni /Ai Imiiihru Colleo In L*0-pOUUd tins, also White Hquadron Mocha uud JflVA Coffee\nI \u00E2\u0096\u00A0VW St. Mulo Creamery butler ill two-pound tins\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 /|V am the above lines specially adapted for prospectors' uso and guaranteed tirst\n?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*; class or money refunded.\nS Everything Sold at Lowest Prices.\n\u00C2\u00A7\ns^Jeff Davis & Co.^ I\nGOODS DELIVERED TO THE CAMPS FBEE OF CHARGE.\n>^\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC^\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\u00E2\u0082\u00AC^\nThe Alberta Hotel\nTraunweiser S Fraser,\nrUOI'KIETOKS.\nQrand Forks, B. C.\nIS a new House, with new Furniture and everything comfortable for the\ntraveling public, and has accommotions for a large number,of people. The\nDining Room is provided wiih everything In the market.\nThe bar is repleted with the best Wines, Liquors and Cigars A good sample room for Commercial^Trsvellers.\nFRESH GROCERIES\nCan always be had at our store as we keep our stock right np tothe market and have no\nold. slielfivorn goods to work off on our customers. Wc make a.specialty of always having\non baud\nFresh Eggs and Creamery Butter.\nWe get In a new supply every week and can guarantee our stock to be always fresh. New\npotatoes arc another thing which can ouly be found at our store. Will lmve in a nice linn\nnf fishing tnekle In a few days.\nH. A. HUNTLEY : \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 : : GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nPROCLAMATIONS.\nTHOS. R. McINKEB.\nCANADA.\nPROVINCE OK BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nVICTORIA, by the Grace of God, of thc l'nited\nKingdom of Great Britiun and Ireland\nQUBEH, Cofonderof the Faith, Ac , Ac , Ac.\nTo Our faithful the Members elected to serve\nin the Legislative Assembly of Our Province of British Columbia) and to all whom\nIt may concern,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ggrumsa,\nA PROCLAMATION.\nD. M. KiiKltTs. | VmiEREAS We have\nAttorney-General,I *\" thought tit. by and\nwith the advice and consent ot our Executive\nCouncil of Our Province of British Columbia\ntn dissolve the present Legislative Assembly of\nOur .said Province, whieh stands prorogued un -\ntil summoned for dispatch of business,\nNOW UNOW YE thut We do, for this end,\npublish this Our Itoyal Proclamation, and do\nhereby dissolve the Legislative Assembly accordingly, and thc members thereof are discharged from further attendance on same,\niff Testimony whereof Wo have caused\nthese our Letters to be mode Patent, and\nthe Qreat Seal of Jfnii-,h Columbia to bc\nhereunto atll.\ed: Witness, the Honourable Thos, K, McInnks. Lieutenant-Governor of Our said Province of British Columbia, iu Our City of Victoria, In Our .said\nProvince, this seventh dsy of June, tn the\nyear of Our Lord one thousand eight huu-\n]!y Command.\nb. ii. tykwhitt Drake,\nRegistrar of the Supreme Court.\nTenders Wanted.\nSealed tenders will be received by the\nundersigned, up to ibe loth of July\nnext, for tbe rate per yard of dirt to be\ndeposited in the sloughs on Bridge\nstreet and Riverside avenue.\nFor further information see chairman\nboard of public works, Grand Forke, B.\nB. The lowest tenders not necessarily\naccepted.\nCertified check for one third the\namount must accompany the bid.\nFred Knight,\nActing Chairman IJ. of JJ. W.\nType writing done on the shortest no\ntice at the Minkr officer,\nVote For John flcKane.\nQUEENS' HOTEL.\nUPPER UKANI) FOUKS, B. \nX All orders will rocelve Prompt $\n* attention, |\nI E. Spraggett, |\nGrand Foiks. B. C.\n8\nVi\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2s\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABe*6*ge*6-ti*66\u00E2\u0082\u00AC6ee\u00C2\u00ABe*6e\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB<\nII. II. Tykwhitt Dhaka,\nRctflitrnr \u00C2\u00BBI tin* supmiu. Ci\nirt.\n:r. therien,\nCounty Court Notice.\nThp sitting of Ills Counly Court of Yalo will\nbe liol.li'i) nl\nFqlrvlew, Friday, (the 15UI day of\nJuly, 1898,\nul the hour of 11 In tiio forenoon.\nBy Co-iiiiimiiml l*. A. it Lamki.y\nQovprntnentonice.Osoy&qs,* p. \t, 0. c.\njujic l}lh, (-t'JS, j *V\nBlacksmith and\nWagonmaker: t\ncamaok fiixv, Boundary, B.C.\nWe hep to announce th\t we have\nopened our uew general store in the\nabove town. We shall carry a complete stock of miner's supplies, tools,\npowder, etc., hard-varf, gtocenes, dry\ngoods and clothing. lUiners and general public will be able u> ou:(it here and\nHnd all they tequire.\nQuaiity Good and\nPrices Low,\nCascade Cily is the headquarters foe\n\"\"hristina Lake, MrRte Crei k, liurnj\nBasin, Cattle Mountain and other minr\ning ttistricts.\nBRIDGE ST\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nGRAND FROKS.\nAll kni-lH of 3lAoknmltli and Itepulriny- D^uic\n011 short notice. Drill BhnrpentlJR mid Horse\nshog'lojf (i .pi-i-hlltf,\nWe beg also to inform all those inter\nres'ed in mining that our assay rflice ir**\nthe above town is now open under tho\nsuperintendence of an exerienced as-\ns-iyer and we sliall be able to undertake\niall kinds of assav work. Personal,\nprompt and careful attention will be\ngiven to all work entrusted to us.\nBritish Columbia Mercantile & Mining\nSyndicate, Ud.\nlAf-TAPl: RKV- BBITISH COIX'Mpi^ A Total Disability Glum of $1,650 Paid to a\nMan Who Was Afterward Cured.\nThe Monitor, a newspaper published ut\nMc;tl.mi, Out., ('lunula, tir*t discovered\nthis case two yeura ago, and published It at\nlength, which now seems, owing to the\ncure of it. to l>e a miracle. The tacts were\n80 remarkable that many people doubted\ntlte truth of them. They said: \"It te too\nremarkable; it cannot possibly be true;\nthe paper te mistaken, uml the man.\niikiiou^li he may think himself cured, will\nBoon relapse info his former condition,\"\netc., etc, Tlie accuracy of Its report called\nInto question, the Monitor determined to\nhud out denmtely whether tbe facts were\nu.s stated and whether tlie man would really uttiu cured. They accordingly kept u\nclose watch on the case for two yean alter\nthe find article appeared, and have just\nvented him from opening his mouth sufficiently wide to take solid food. The doc-\nton called the disease spinal sclerosis, aud\null saiil he could not live.\nPor three years he lingered in this condition. Then by some friends he was advised\nintake Dr. Williams\" Pink PillBfor Pale People, lie took them and there was a slight\nchange. The tirst thing noted was u tendency io sweat freelv. This showed there was\nsome HIV left In his helpless body. Next\ncame a little feeling in his limbs. This\nextended, followed hy pricking sensations,\nuntil at last blood began to course freely,\nnaturally and vigorously through his body,\nami the helplessness gave way -\" ret urn ing\nstrength, the ability to walk returned, and\nhe was restored to his old time health.\nITEMS FROM THREE STATES\nInileed I am in even better health than when I\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I'll' you the first interview.'1\n\"Do vou still attribute your cure to the\nuse of*Dr. Williams' Pink rills?\" asked\nthe Monitor.\n\"Unquestionably I do,\" was the reply.,\n\"Doctors had failed, as had also the nutii- j\neruus remedies recommended bv my\nfriends. Nothing I took had the slightest\neffect Upou me UlitU I began the use of !>r.\nWilliams' Pink Pills To thi* wonderful [\nmedi tue I oue my reteixe. from the living\ndeath. I hnve since recommended these\npills to muny of my friends, Mid the verdict Is always in their favor. I shall always\nbless the day 1 was induced Intake them.\"\nSuch is the history of nue ofthe must remarkable cases of modem times. Can any\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 or thc 'dominion bahh\n^mmaama^m*s*Mmmmimm*mxw\\\w'\ m*a\mmmhWa\mWmmk%*\nominionJBaxk*\n f~Do//ars\nU\u00C2\u00A3~\n^.M+J&&&^ Tr\nnow published another article about it in!\nwhich t'ie original r*poitsa t completely pert-\nJiil, the cure s permitne.\u00C2\u00BBt, nnd th*y publish\nu t'ac simile of the cheek given by the i und ion\nMutual Life Association for #/ 660,00 amount ,\nuf total disability c aim paid by them to Mr. j\nThe lirsl account stated that the patient j\n(see address beluw) had heen a paralytic'\nfor live years, that there was sm h a total '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nlack of feeling in his limbs and body that \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\na pin run full length could not be felt;\nUnit he could ihh walk or help himself at j\nall; for two years he was not dressed; furthermore that he was bloated, was for that\nreason almost unrecognizable, und could t\nnut get his clothes on, The paralysis was j\nso complete as to affect the face and pro-1\nThe ah\narticle pul\nlow some\npaper two\nthe slighte\nthis testtti\npermnuou.\nOn bolui\nsaid: \u00C2\u00BBYo\nnow tiatur\nhard and\npierce then\nted it, and\nof the rest\nobserved tl\nuse a cane,\nperfectly w\ntute n no do\nive is the substance of thc lirst I one say, in the face of such testimony that\nilished by the Monitor, Now ful-1 Dr. Will lams' rink Pills are not entitled to\nclippings, taken Irom the same tlte careful consideration of any suSeing\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I > *l.\u00C2\u00BB*.\u00C2\u00BBt t \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,,, urnmnti MM? In lint the ease ill\n ... >g\n. i , \u00E2\u0080\u009E ,.r child? Is not the case in\n, .ti truth a miracle of modern medicine?\ne is ! To make the evidence complete we publish above a fac simile cut of the check received hy Mr. lVtch from the Canadian\nMutual Life Association, being the amount\ndue him for total disability. It is unnecessary to add that this life Insurance association did Hot pay this large amount of\nnoney to Mr. Fetch, except after the most\n.... afterward, and tl\nst shmlow of a doubt, iu view\nlonv, that Mr, Petch's cu\nHere follows the account\nagain questioned, Mr. Petch\ni see those bands\u00E2\u0080\u0094-the skin Is\nil and elastie. Once they were\nwithout sensation. Voti could\nu with u pin and I would not\nwhat is true of my hands is true ninn---. i..,.-.,. i --,,..,, i-.*. .*--,,, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*.,.\u00C2\u00AB.. *..^ ...\u00E2\u0080\u009E..-\njf my body, Perhaps you have careful examination of his condition by\ntat f have now even ceased to iheir medical experts. They must have round can get about my business j garded him as forever Incurable,\nell. You may say the>e isobso-\ Mr. Petch's address is its follows: Reu-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0iibt as to my cure being permanent. I hen Petch, Orlers ville, Out., Canada.\nAre to Go to Philippines.\nWashington, July 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Should a fifth\nexpedition he sent tn tlm Philippines, as\nnow seems almost certain, tho Washing*\nton troops are slated to \u00C2\u00A3o. Thc Seventh\nOhio has been ordered to be in readinc-;-\nto ^o to the Pacilic const to occupy the\nstations where tlie Washington troops\nnow are. It is said at the war department these orders are due to the fact thai\nrepresentations have been made to Secretary Alger tliat political capital is being\nmade by tlie populists out nf the retention\nof the Washington troops on the coast.\nNewspaper comments showing this were\npresented to tho president. As a result\nthe chances now seem good for the hoys\nto havo tlieir wishes.\nHn IlitllltliK It eeoriliH Ilruk.ru.\nSan Francisco, .July 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the swimming tournament at the Pacific Athletic\nAssociation today one American ami two\ncoast records were broken, ii. A. Wide-\nman won the 100-yard race in 1:06. II.\nA. Brewer won the 220-yard race iu 2:51,\nbreaking Reader's American record of\n2:57, and K. 11. Stalle won the mile race\niu 28:30, heating Howard's coast recoi'd\nby nine seconds.\nNAVY AND ARMY BOTH BUSY.\nMorro Castle Suffered\u00E2\u0080\u0094Span inniH\nLoae six TiiniiNfimi Men\u00E2\u0080\u0094Foot by\nFoot Americans Win Cttlinn Soil\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAnxiety In WiiHhltiKtoii.\nRevolution ln 1'rnicnny.\nMontevideo, Uruguay, July 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A revolution has broken out in tlie capital. The\nFourth regiment of light artillery, headed\nhy General Estevan, has mutinied. Firing began early today, and continues as\nthis dispatch is sent, close to Uie city.\nThe government has declared tlie city in\nu state of siege and has called out the\nnational guard. A detachment of British blue jackets has beeu landed here to\ndefend the liritish consulate.\nTRY ALLEN'S FOOT-EASH.\nA powder to be shaken Into the shoes.\nAt this season your feet feel swollen, nervous, and hot, and get tired easily. If you\nhnve smarting feet or light shoes, try\nAllen's Foot-Ease, It cools the feet and\nmakes walking easy. Cures swollen and\nsweating feet, blisters and cal I OUI spots,\nRelieves corns and bunions of all pain and\ngives reat and comfort Ten thousand testimonials of cures. Try it today. Sold by\nall druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Bent\nbv mail for 26c in stamps. Trial package\nI'KEIC. Address Allen S. Olmsted, tc\nRoy, New York.\nA servant girl on a farm near Oambrui,\nin Northern France, has lived seventy-two\nyears with llie same family. She is now\nH4 years of age and still does her work.\nDEWABE OF OINTMENTS FOn CA-\nTAHHH THAT CONTAIN MERCURY,\nAh mercury win surely destroy tne senss of\nsmell and completely derange the whole Ryu-\ntern when entering it through the mucous aur*\nfnrp-4. Hurh articles should never be in-iud except on prescriptions front reputable physicians, riH the lUmiiKP they will do Ih ten-ToM\nto thi good you cun possibly derive from them.\nHall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by f. j\nCheney & Co., Toledo. O., contains no mer-\ntnry and Ih token Internally, acting directly\nupon the blood, und Rtucoui lurfacei of the ny-H-\nt\u00C2\u00ABm. in buying Hall's Catarrh cure be sure\nyou get the genuine, it ih taken Internally,\nnnd made lO Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &\nt*o. Testimonials free.\nBold i'y Druggists, price TOe per bottle,\nlltili'H Family t iMm are the be\u00C2\u00BBL\nThe trees in the streets of Paris nre\nlooked after by a public official appointed just for that purpose, and therefore\nthc Parisian streets alwavs look beautiful.\nriTO permanently Cured. No Ota or nprvotii-ineR\nMl 9 after tirst day's use or Iir. Kline's tlrem\nNervr .Ipfilorer. Bend for Kin K Sn^.no trial\nbottle and treatise, UR. Jt. II. KLdK, Ltd., w.n\nArch Btreet, Philadelphia, Pn.\nGrapblte, of which lead pencils arc\nmade, was first discovered in Siberia in\n1842, whero one mine has Bince 185(1\nyielded 33,000 hundredweight of graphite.\nPIso's Cure for Consumption has saved\nme large doctor hills.\u00E2\u0080\u0094C. L. Baker, -l/'-S\nRegent Sq., Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 8, '95.\nOne firm in Austria uses ten tons of\nphosphorus a year and turns out 25,000,-\n000 matches.\nBOITT'S SCHOOL FOR HOYS.\nAt Burlingame, San Mateo county, Cal..\nis one of the most thorough, careful ana\nfiractical \"Home School\" to be found on\nhe Pacilic Coast. Accredited at State and\nStanford Universities. Thorough preparation for business. Send for catalogue, Ira\nU. Hoitt, Ph. D, Principal. Re-opens\nAug. 9th.\nSiboTiey, via Playa del Kste, July 2,\n12 noon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At this hour the firing is light.\nWork on entrenchments is being pressed\nand the soldiers are allowed to rest. The\nfleet did some firing hut did not ongngO\nthe batteries generally.\nGuantanamo, July 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The lighting In\nfront of Santiago was resumed at daylight\nthis morning. An advance was ordered\nalong the entire line.\nllomlmrdmeiit of die BntterlCM,\nSiboney, July 2, 2:15 p. m., via Playa\ndel Kste and Guantanamo, July 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\nbombardment of the forts at tlie entrance\nof Santiago harbor was resumed early\n, this morning and lasted over an hour.\nI The east comer of Morro eastle was\nknocked to pieces and the flng shot down.\ni The shore batteries to the west of thc\nentrance and to tlie east of Mono castle\ni were also damaged. The return lire was\nlight, except from Cayo Smith, inside of\nthe harbor. No damage was done to tlie\nships. The batteries fired at the ships as\nthey retired.\nWild Willi Anxiety.\nWashington, July 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094This has been a\nday of almost unparalleled suspense and\nanxiety. From President McKinley down.\nall through official Washington, evory-\nI body has heen under a tremendous strain.\n1 Just at the close of the day the first\nbit of information coming directly to of*\n| lleials reached the president and Secretary\nAlger. It was a private dispatch, not pii-\nj inarily intended for them, although it\ncame through official channels. Briefly\nland expressively it told the story of a day\nof terrific fighting. It was direct from the\n1 field of action, as late as 4 p. m. It stated\n| that the engagement had been In progress\nthroughout the day; that the dead and\nwounded were being carried to the rear,\nand that the American losses were heavy.\nXo ('hunfre of Generals.\nDuring the afternoon a sensational rumor gained currency that radical changes\nin the plans for the occupation of Cuba\nwere likely to be adopted by President\nMcKlnley. It can be said upon the highest\nauthority, however, that nothing of the\nkind is in contemplation.\nSecretary Alger Informed lho Associated\nPress emphatically that absolutely no\nchange was to be made in the Cuban\nplans, or was even in contemplation.\nSnooesses on Frhluy,\nHeadquarters on the Field, outside San\ntiflgo de Cuba, duly 2, via (\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uautanamn.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094The army drove lho Spaniards hack at\nevery point iu every engagement yesler-\nday. General Shafter expects to capture\nSantiago today nr tomorrow, Caney will\nhe takeu with 2000 prisoners, it is now\nsure. One part of llie line of the American forces sleep on the captured ground\n'and will renew Che. fight at sunrise. A hot\n'day is expected. Captain Grimes' battery\nyesterday shelled the east suburban fortifications for half an hour before any\ni reply was made. The Spanish shells over-\n, shot the battery nnd killed four nnd\n. wounded 25 infantrymen in lhe rear of it.\ni General Wheeler*! cavalry, commanded\nj by (Jeneral Sumner, and (Jeneral Kent's\nj division, advanced at noon and carried the\nSan Juan battery by storm before sunset.\n(Jeneral Lawton'a division nnd Captain\nCapron's battery drove the Spaniards\nfrom Caney. Tlie enemy was shut up by\ni an American cross fire while retreating\nj in tho direction uf Santiago. The Sixth\n[and Sixteenth infantry stormed the eastern rifle pits and after a bitter fight drove\nthe enemy into Santiago. The Sixth cavalry captured the first Spanish flag.\nCaptain Par khu rat's batteries commanded tlie east side of Santiago from n\nhilt. The eastern line of defense is practically wrecked.\nThe fighting yesterday was steady\nthough thc Americans were embarrassed'\nby tho heavy brush. Tlie Spaniards made j\na brave but spasmodic defense. Most of\ntlio Spanish firing was by volley, while\npurs was mostly at will, each bullet being aimed at a target. It is impossible\nto estimate the Spanish loss. 'Hie hospital service is admirable, though lacking\nsufficient accommodations.\nSimultaneously with the land attack\nthe Meet bombarded the fortifications.\nI\nKcli'i-nt Heen.me fl Hour.\n\ At this time our fleet was also at work,\nj Shortly before this dispatch was written\npur line again moved forward, and tlie\n] Spanish began to retreat into the town,\ni The retreat, soon became a rout, and at 5\no'clock an ollicer just frnm the front says\nthe enemy are. hopelessly beaten and the\ncity will fall tomorrow.\n(Jeneral Shafter, at his headquarters at\nthe second crossing of the Rio (Jumna, is\nin constant communication with the front.\nOur Mont Critical Time.\nI Our most critical time was after the\ni trenches had been taken, when the am-\n: munition ran low. Two pack (rains loaded\nwith shells were gotten to the front by\n. Lieutenant Brooks shortly after 3 o'clock.\nj The wounded arc streaming in. (Jeneral\nj Shafter estimates that the loss in killed\nand wounded is not more than 500.\n' At General Shafter's Headquarters, Friday, July 1, (1 p. m.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 (By the Associated\n\ Press Dispatch nltat Cynthia to Port An-\n! tonio, July 2, 8 p. m., via Kingston, July\n2, 12 p. m.)\u00E2\u0080\u0094(Jeneral Shafter's army has\nhad its baptism of fire. With desperate\nj courage und the mad dash of veterans, it\n1 hus conquered the Spanish works before\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Santiago and his force is driving tlie enemy into the streets of the eity. The victory wns won at a heavy cost in killed\nand wounded. It Ls impossible to estimate\nj the losses at this writing, but it is believed they approach 500. Tlie proportion\nof ollicers is large.\nHeavy Losses nn llotli Sid \u00C2\u00AB**-*.\nThe Spanish loss must have been heavy.\nThe Spaniards opposing (Jeneral Law ton's\ndivision lost in killed, wounded or taken\nprisoners 2000 men, and the loss on the\ncenter and left must be double that number. Most of our troops took possession\nduring the night, although (Jeneral aBtes'\nreserves did not come up until morning.\n\"My Pretty Jane\" was written by\nHenry Rowly Bishop\u00E2\u0080\u0094afterward Sir Henry Rowly Bishop\u00E2\u0080\u0094who composed also\nI over 50 operas for performance at Covent\n| Garden.\nCOULD NOT SLEEP.\nMrs. Pinkham Rolieved Her of AU\nHer Troubles.\nMra. Maiwu TUhcock, 178 Second\nSt.. (iruiiil Kupicls. Mich., lnnl ovarian\ntrouble with its attendant aches\nand pains, now she is well. Here\n^\u00E2\u0080\u0094^- are her own words:\nMr^k\ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Your Vegetable Compound lias\nade me feel like\na new person.\nHefore I begun taking it\nI was all run\ndown, fcltti red\nand sleepy most\nof the time,\nhad pains in\nmy back and\nside, and such\nterrible\nheadaches\nall the time,\nandcouldnot\nsleep well\nnights. I also had ovarian\ntrouble. Through\nthe advice of a\nfriend I began\nthe use of Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound,\n~ and since taking\n:t all troubleshave gone. My monthly\nlicknessuscd to be so painful, but have\naot had the slightest pain since taking\npour medicine. I cannot praise your\nVegetable Compound too much. My\nhusband and friends see such a change\ntn me. I look so much better and have\nlome color in my face.\"\nMrs. Pinkham invites women who an\ndl to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0dvice, which is freely offered.\nA MI.-iiunur> Drowned\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sever*\nFront. Around Itloneow\u00E2\u0080\u0094A My\u00C2\u00BB-\ntcrlouM Harder In Snoknu**\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\nll..u,ul Houae Burned\u00E2\u0080\u0094Huelcle1\u00C2\u00BBer-\nry Crop Good TIiIh Yt-ur.\nA waterspout struck the vicinity of\nMission, in Kittitas county, a few dnys\nii(,'o, striking near tlie residence of A. S.\nBurlmnks. The p-itii visited hy the storm\nwas torn up badly, and boulders weighing\nas much aa a ton and a hall' were tossed\nabout as if they were mere pebbles.\nA large colony of Dunkards has just\nreai-hed the Yakima valley. The people\nare from Pennsylvania, Nebraska and Dakota, where there are strong settlements\nuf Dunkards, and they lire going to the\nYakima valley with the plan to build up\na strong settlement there.\nl-'ire destroyed the round house of the\nCentral Washington railway at Coulee\nCity lust week, together with engine No.\nH07*. When discovered it had gained suoh\nheadway that all effort* to extinguish the\nflames were unavailing. There luiviiiL'\nbeen no liro around tho building, the\nopinion is that it was of im-eniliary origin.\nThe stockholders of the First National\nbunk of Waitsburg lane resolved lo go\ninto voluntary liquidation, and tho local\nstockholder! with Levi Ankcny of Walla\nWalla havo organized the Merchants'\nllank of Waitsburg, with a capital of\n$25,000, all subscribed and paid In, This\nchange was made for Ihe reason that the\nNational bank with it.s capital of $50,000,\nanil thereby heavy taxes and other expenses, has been an unprofitable institution. Tho officers of the new bank will\nprobably remain the same ns in the old\norganization.\nThe last issue of I lie Colfax Gazette contained an interview with Sheriff Kilns in\nwhich tho hitter slates lie has discovered\npositive evidence against \"Dakota Slim\"\nwhich would prove hiin guilty of the minder of Orville Hayden. Two of the witnesses who would (,'ive this evidence, the\nsheriff' says, are in the Philippine islands\nand two more in Alaska. A. M. Graven,\nwho defended \"Slim,\" says he has equally\npositive evidence that \"Slim\" wos in another part of tlie world when the murder\nwas committed, but three of his witnesses\nare, unfortunately, with Andree in his\nballoon excursion to the north pole and\ntwo others arc in Cuba, but he will try\nand have them here by thc time the sheriff* secures his witnesses from Manila and\nKlondike.\nCheney is not famous for fish stories,\nbut here is one related by 11. 11. Hubbard\nI-ast Friday he, iu company with Clarence\n.Martin, F, 1- .Fellows and others, tried a\nnovel method of catching lish in a small\npond near Tyler. The outlet had dried\nup, leaving a great many pickerel entrapped in tlie pond, which was on acre or\ntwo in extent ami perhaps three feet deep\nat the deepest point. They were poling a\nsmall ittft along. The water being muddy,\nthe lish were unable to see, ond in endeavoring to escape from the noise made hy\nthe raft would jump out of tlie water,\nlight on the raft and become an easy prey\nto the fishermen, in this manner one hundred or more pickerel about a foot in\nlength were caught in a few moments.\nThc object of State Fish Commissioner\nLittle's visit to Dayton was to look up the\nfeasibility of establishing a fish hatchery\nin Columbia County, probably on the up*\nper Tukanon. On the lower Columbia it\nhas been found difficult to bundle the\nearly run of Chinook salmon, and it :s\nthought much could be gained by the establishment of a hatchery near the natural hatching grounds. It is now tlie\npractice to get thc fish into pond nets ond\nhold them until ripe for spown. Althougli\nfairly successful, uiis plon is not sotisfac\nfcory. A hatchery is needed at the natural spawning grounds, and if a sufficient\nnumber of lish can be obtained a hatchery-\nwill be established on the Tukanon this\nseason. The cost of sueli an enterprise\nwill be between five and six thousand dollars. Quite a force of men will be em\nployed, twelve men being required to\nhandle 1,200,000 spawn.\nThe almost nude body of a young man\nwas found in the loft of a small barn in\nthc eastern part of Spokane lost Wednesday. It wos in un advanced stage of decomposition. The body plainly indicated\nthat murder hod been committed, the\nhead having been crushed in with an iron\npin thnt ky near the body. From the\nstory told by Mrs. H. F. Mitchell, upon\nwhose premises the born stood, it would\noppeor that, two unknown men committed\nthc deed a week hefore. The dead mon\nhas not yet been identified.\nIdaho.\nTlio Nezpercc Xews has suspended pub\nIlea tion.\nThe Moscow section of the country was\nvisited by severe frosts two nights last\nweek. The nights were clear but very\ncold, and some damage was done to grow,\ning products. Garden truck of nil kind\nsuffered tbe worst, but it is not thought\nthnt Wheat or fruit has been damaged\nenough to retard growth.\nK. P. Harris, postmaster of Harrison,\nbus tendered his resignnlion, to tuke effect July 1. After that time Essler\nWheeler will serve thc people in that capacity. Mr. Harris has becn postmaster\nfor four years, and now retires to take\nchorge of the new saloon, \"The Senate.'\nHe has purchased thc Argo hotel prop\nerty, leased llie upstairs for hotel pur\nposes nnd prepared the lower slory for hit\nsaloon.\nMajor Ilroilie nnd Lieutenant Knox, the\ngallant Americans who were wounded in\nthc attack on the Spnninrds nt Suiitingo\nFriday, ore well known by a number of\nthe older residents of Lewiston. Hrodie,\nas a li utennnt, was in Howard's command\nduring the Nez Perce Indian war, and\nKnox wns quartermaster at Camp Howard\nfollowing the hostilities.\nFive townships on the Nez Perce reservation were formally opened for filing last\nweek. The rush at the land office wus al-\nmo t equal to the first rush for homesteads\non the Nez Perce ceded lands. Thc in-\ncreased value, owing to the established\nproductiveness of thc reservation lands,\nhas caused much land jumping this\nspring. Contest cuse hearing* ore almost\nc.ntiiiuousat the land office.\nlb*. P. Dunforth of Sondpoint has the\nhonor of having two sons, Clyde L. and\nWilliam H. Danforth, in Troop C, Koosc*\nvelt's Rough Killers, which made such a\ngallant fight near Santiago de Cuba last\nFriday. Thc boys were enlisted from Arizona.\nThe new wur revenue measure struck\nWallace, the past week, when an agreement wos reached by the 5-eent beer\nhouses to raise the price to 1-2.J cents. It\nis evident in tbis cu-ie who pays tlie tax.\nP. G. Gates, expert timber estimator\nand appraiser employed by the state to\nestimate and appraise the timber on the\nwhite pine lands in the northern part of I\nthe stote, hos arrived in Boise from Arkansas. -Mrs. Gates accompanies him.\nThey ore guests of Secretory of Stote\nLewis. \"Mr. Gates will go north in a few\ndays t\" proceed with the work. He will\nbe accompanied by some members of the\nstate land board.\n\ letter (rom Oamp Merritt, San Francisco to the Boise Statesman contains the\nfollowing paragraph: \"Our beautiful Hag\narrived on the 13th and Mrs. A. 11.\nBoomer curried it through ciimp amid\nthe cheers of all the boys. And right here\nwe wanl to say that there bus been no one\nthat bus equaled Mrs. Boomer's attention\nand work for the regiment. She hus been\nleservedly named the \"Mother of the Regiment.\" Today Major Figgins is culling\non the hoys for tt small donation with\nwhicli he intends to get a remembrance\nfor Mrs. Boomer, and it is with joy that\nthe boys respond.\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 On the lower hills near Wallace, thero\nis nn occasional ripe huckleberry found,\nand it. will not be Inn*;' until there will\nbe plenty of them. Higher up the mountains they ure later and ripe ones can bc\nfound ut nny time from now until hunl\nfrosts come next fall. The crop promises\nto Iw nn abundant one, tho bushes everywhere being loaded with green berries.\nIt is only once in two or three years tluit\nthere is a full crop, the frost usually killing them except in favored localities,\nlu good seasons they ure found almost\nall over the mountains, and they may be\ngathered for so long a time that, the crop\nis ono possessing considerable value.\nThere is little likelihood of any weathei\nto injure them after they ore as far along\nas mm.\nMolilalia.\nA Cascade county company in Montana\nlias just sold its clip of wool nt 1.1 cents.\nAt the Episcopal convention at Helena, Bishop Brewer said that contributions for parochial objects during the year\nwere aliout $0000 more than for the previous yenr.\nFor the first time in thc history of\ntho eity of Butte, the eity council bus\nappropriated money for a Fourth of July\ncelebration, voting $300 from the emergency fund for this purpose.\nClork Bros, have filed their bill of damages against the Northwestern Nationol\nbank at Great Falls. The total is $181,-\n055.50. This amount makes the suit the\nlargest ever tried in this county.\nW. H. Cochran, on his return trip from\nthe Big Hole basin, encountered n grizzly\nneur Dixon's plnce, nenr Dillon. He took\nthe animal to bc u cnlf nt first, but upon\ncloser inspection he discovered his mis-\ntake, and concluded not to linger unnecessarily in that immediate neighborhood.\nRev. F. A. Biggin of Great Falls, Mont.,\nwill open the Beaver City camp meeting,\nin Fergus county, on June 30. He will\nhnve charge of the meeting nnd will be\nassisted by a number of men from the\nMontana mission. Tlie season will continue until July 5.\nAnother promising young man of ap-\nparently good habits, of previous good\ncharacter and holding a good position\nwhich he might have retained indefinitely,\nhas gone wrong and lust night he slept\nbehind the burs of the Deer Lodge penitentiary, suys the Anuconda Standard.\nHe is Alfred L. Duffy, cashier for tho\nAnaconda Copper Mining Company, lumber department. He lias confessed to em\nbezzling $050 of the company's funds.\nBen Dun-ell and Henry Shufclt of\nNashua have lost over a dozen head of\nyoung cuttle from blackleg this spring,\nsays the Glasgow Gazette. The animals\nthey say arc affected by a swelling which\nis usually confined to one leg of the animal and never extending over the body.\nTlie member so affected becomes bard as\nstone, almost bursting the skin. Several\nof Kd. Stevens' cattle have died of the\nsome disease. They nre now vneeinating\ntheir young stock as a preventive.\nFather Pernio, for many years a mis-\nsionury among thc Crow Indians, was\ndrowned in the Big Horn river the other\nduy. He hud been to Prior creek mission\nand wns on his wny home in a light rig\nand had reached the slough on the west\nside of the river, opposite St. Xavier. Two\nIndian children, a boy und a girl, were\nwith him. In attempting to ford the\nriver the wagon was upset and all three\noccupants were thrown into thc water.\nThe priest sank almost immediately and\nwas seen no more. Tlie boy was an excel\nlent swimmer and clung to the lines and\nwith the horses reached tho shore in\nsafety. The girl was carried by the current against a free that wns lying in the\nwater. She clutched at the branches and\ncalled for help. Without a moment's\nhesitation the boy jumped back into tlie\nriver and swam to where the girl was,\nand with considerable difficulty managed\nto get her out ond onto the land.\nThe. Montana state school of mines\nbuilding, for the past three years in course\nuf construction, west of Butte, is nenring\ncompletion. Tlie building was contracted\nfor at $02,000, nnd is designed in the\nItalian rcniiissnncc school of architecture,\nand is constructed of sandstone, pressed\nbrick nnd terra cntta. Iron und steel\nbeams nnd lintels were used entirely\nthroughout, The walls arc of solid brick\nand hollow tile, and mnke the building\nns near fireproof as is |x>ssible. The Uro\ninsurance rote on this account is the lowest of nny building in the state, being\n75 cents per thousand.\nIHE BATTLE OF MM\nSAVAGE FIGHTING TWO DAYS.\nVA Cu iit-y Held the l'lrsl Duy\u00E2\u0080\u0094San\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Juan HelnJitn. Conquered tlie Sec-\ntiml Day\u00E2\u0080\u0094Heavy Lohm uf I.i ft- but\n.Anierletiur* w Inning Step by Step.\nCfiiniirti ('nn Not Coal There.\nCairo. Egypt, June 30,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Auiniml Camara hns asked permission to coiil his fleet\nat Port Suid, but tho Kpyptian govern\nment believing thc Spanish fillips have\nsufficient coul to sti'iim to the nearest\nport of their own country, has definitely\nrefused his request in accordance with\nthe neutrality laws.\nMny Extern! to Cnrollnes.\nVancouver, B. C, June 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mail advices from Hong Kong my that it is reported tliat the revolt against Spanish\nrule has extended to the Caroline islands.\nTlie Spanish have only a small garrison\nthere] and as they are unable to send\nrelief it is likely that the rebels will soon\nhave control.\nOldeMt Man In Peiinnylvanlu.\nScranton, Pa., June 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Patrick Higgins, said to be the oldest man in Pennsylvania, died here Tuesday night, aged\n117. His age is authenticated by a record nnd certificates which show that he\nwis born in County Londonderry, Ireland, 1781.\nWashington, July I.\u00E2\u0080\u0094'Hie war department has received the following from\nGeneral Bhafter, dated at Siboney*.\n\"Had a very heavy engagement today,\nwhich lasted from S a. m. until sundown.\nWe have carried their outworks and arc\nnow in possession of them. There is now\nabout three-quarters of a mile of open\nbetween my lines and the city, liy morning the troops will be entrenched, and a\nconsiderable augmentation of forces will\nbe there. General Lawton's division and\nGeneral Hates' brigade have been engaged\nall duy carrying Kl Caney, which wns\naccomplished. At 4 p. m. the army was\nwell in line and will camp in front of\nSantiago during the night. 1 regret to\nsay that our casualties will be about 400.\nOf these not many arc killed.\n\"SHAFriCU.\"\nThe Fi rut Attack.\nPlaya del Kste, July 1.-11:20 a. m.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA general assault on the city of Santiago\nby the land and sea forces of the United\nStates begun at 7 o'clock this morning.\n(jeneral Law ton advanced and took DOS'\nsession of Cabona, a suburb of Santiago.\nMorro castle and the other forts at the\nentrance of thc harbor were bombarded\nby our fleet; The Vesuvius used her dynamite guns with good effect. The Span'\nish fleet in tlie harbor fired on tho American troops, vho were very close to the\ncity.\nHard fighting all along the American\nline was in progress at 11 o'clock. Nine\nwounded Cubans have been brought in,\nEvening\u00E2\u0080\u0094The fighting continued until\ndark. Our forces carried tho enemy's outer\nworks and have occupied them this even\ning. The battle will probably be resumed at daybreak. The American loss\nin heavy. Some estimates place it at 500\nkilled and wounded.\nThe TroojiH Kn-rnKed.\nAccording to Shafter's report thc attack on Santiago was begun by the Second division of the Fifth army corps,\ncommanded by Brigadier (Jeneral Lawton.\nThis division consists of three brigades\nmade up as follows: First brigade, commanded by Colonel Vanhorn, Eightieth\nUnited States infantry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Twenty-second\ninfantry and Second Massachusetts infantry.\nSecond brigade, commanding officer un\nknown, but supposed to be Colonel Bates,\nFirst United States infantry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fortieth\nUnited States infantry and Twenty-fifth\nUnited States infantry.\nThird brigade, commanded by Brigadier\nGeneral Chaffee\u00E2\u0080\u0094Seventh United States\ninfantry, Twelfth United States infantry\nand Seventeenth United States infantry.\nIn preparation for tho assault on Santiago 00 tried men from each brigade,\nnon-commissioned ollicers and privates,\nhave been promoted to be wire clippers,\nand they will precede the first firing line\nabout 200 or 300 yards for the purpose of\ncutting the barbed wire fences of obstruction to the way to the city. Their\nmission te a most hazardous one, as they\nwill be exposed to the fire of our own men,\nas well as that of the enemy.\nWas Prostrated\nA Victim of Distressing Sick Headaches Finds Relief.\nFor nearly SO years I was subjeqttosiek\nheadaches which at times completely prostrated me. I was induced to try Hood's\nSarsaparilla, and alter taking a few bottles\nI was entirely free from sick headaches\nand I bave bad no recurrence of them\nsince.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs, 11. A. Smith, Box 558, Walla\nAValla, Wa-h. Remember\nHood's Sarsaparilla\nIs America's Greatest Medicine, fl; six torts.\nHood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25 centi.\nI.OMM'M Firs! I ndi-iM'st iiiiiitr.l.\nWashington, July 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The president\nand secretary of war, through a private\ndispatch from the battlefield, learn thut\nthe engagement was resumed this morning and lias continued ull duy.\nTlie wounded ure coming in rapidly and\nthe indications point to heavy losses. The\ndispatch docs not indicate a decisive result in any direction.\nThe profoundest concern throughout military aud official circles marked the open*\n; of the second day upon 'which the\nbattle of Santiago is being fought. The\ndesperate character of thc fighting is now\nfully known to the war department. The\ninformation is in addition to thc report\nmade by (jeneral Shafter lust midnight\nwhen he roughly estimated the casualties\nat about 400. Latest reports, direct from\ntho field, indicate this estimate is fnr too\ntow.\nOwing to the muny conflicting reports\nof tho losses of the American troops iu\nyosterduy's engagement, it has beeu\ntmnight best by the wur department olli-\neiuls to make public the text of General\nShafter's lust dispatch received this morning at 4 o'clock It is as follows:\n\"Siboney, via Playa del Este, July 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAdjutant General, Washington: I fear I\nhave under-estimated today's casualties.\nA large and thoroughly equipped hospital\nship should be sent here at once to caro\nfor the wounded. Chief surgeon says he\nhas use for 40 more medical officers. Ship\nmust bring launch and boats for conveying wounded. (Signed) RHAPTBR.\"\nSecretary Alger und the adjutant general held a conference us soon ns the sec-\nrotary arrived. Then Surgeon General\nSternberg was Rent for, and joined the\nconference. It is understood that the surgeon general will send 40 or 50 medical\nollicers in addition to those already with\n(Jeneral Shafter's men. All suitable appliances will be provided.\nALL ABOUND HABKET KEP0BT\nWheat Quotation., Wool Figure,\nand the Price of Prodaee.\nFollowing are the Spokane quotations.\nWholesale prices are given unless otherwise quoted:\nWheat at the warehouse\u00E2\u0080\u0094Country\npoints: Club, bulk 45c, sacked 40e;\nbluestem, bulk 47c, sacked flOc. At Spo-\nkane: Club, bulk 50c, sacked 53c; blue-\nstein, bulk 53c, sacked 55c.\nBarley\u00E2\u0080\u0094Country points f. o. b., 75\u00C2\u00AE\n80c per cwt.\nOats\u00E2\u0080\u0094At Spokane, f. o. b., $21@22.\nRye\u00E2\u0080\u0094Country points, f. o. b., $1 per\ncwt.\nFlour\u00E2\u0080\u0094Per barrel\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gold Drop, $4.25:\nllig Loaf, $4.05; Banner, $4.00; Plan\nsifter, $4.50; Superb, $4.25; Spokane, $4;\nSnoH'llake, $4.25; whole wheat, $4.25;\nrye, $5; graham, $4.\nFeed\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bran and shorts, $11 per ton\nshorts, $12; bran, $10; rolled barley, $20\nchicken feed, $18@19.\nHay\u00E2\u0080\u0094Timothy, $8.50 per ton; baled\ntimothy, $10.50; wheat hay, $8; oat hay,\n$7; alfalfa, $10.\nEggs\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ranch, $fi.25@5.50.\nCorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whole, $23; cracked, $24.\nWool\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fine medium, 6@7c per lb; me\ndium, 5@8c. per lb.\nProduce\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fancy creamery butter, 40\nand 00-lb tubs, 21c per lb; 5, 10 and 20-11,\ntubs, 22c; prints, 22c; California butter,\n25@2(ic lb; country butter in rolls, 2'\n23c per lb; cooking butter, 16c; eastern\ncreamery, prints, 23c; cheese, twin, full\ncream, 13@14c; cheese, twin, skim milk,\n9 l-2@10c.\nVegetables\u00E2\u0080\u0094Potatoes, 40(g50c per cwt;\ncabbage, $2.50 per cwt; turnips, $2.50 pel\ncwt; cucumbers, $1.50 per doz; beets,\n$1.50@3 per cwt; onions, $2@2.50 per\nPoultry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chickens, live weight 10@\nlie per lb, dressed 12@1.1c; spring broil\ncrs, $3.60@4; turkeys, live ll@12c,\ndressed 12@13c; spring ducks, dressed\n$4@4.50 per doz,; geese, live 10@llc,\ndressed 12@12 l-2c.\nMeats\u00E2\u0080\u0094Beef cows, live $2.85\u00C2\u00AE3.10 per\ncwt; dressed $0(8>7; steers, live $2.85@\n3.S0, dressed $8@8.50; hogs, live $4.50(3\n4.75, dressed $0@0.50; mutton, live 4@\n4 l-2c, dressed 8@8 l-2c per lb; dressed\nveal, 7f/;He per lb; lamb, 121-2 whole\nBale.\nWheat.\nPortland, July 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wliejit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Unchanged; Walla Walia, 00@01c; valley and\nbluestcm, 03c.\nTacoma, July 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Xo change in wheat\nmarket; no quotations.\nMetal..\nSun Francisco, June 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver bars,\n58 l*4o; Mexican dollars, 40 l-4@40 3-4.\nLake copper\u00E2\u0080\u0094Quiet; brokers', $11.75.\nLead\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dull: brokers', $3.60.\nDr. Nanscn's profit* from his book,\n\"Farthest North,\" are said to amount to\n$190,000. The profits of his lectures have\nadded largely fo this sum.\nFor simplicity and coolness the mode\nof dress in the Philippines is all that\ncould be desired. The ordinary costume\nconsists of a coat and trousers of white\nsheeting, made lo order at a cost of aboul.\n$2; a thick felt hat with a broad brim, a\npair of white cam-as shoes, a light under\nvest and socks. Hie average well-to-do\ncitizen wears and soils two of these suit\na duy, and an outfit of 18 or 20 is none\ntoo many.\nTlio British army rifle has 82 component parts, in the production of which\n925 machines are employed, as well as\nvarious processes which do not require\nmachinery.\nTlie state dress of a trumpeter of the\nRoyal Horse Cluards, \"the Blues,\" costs\nover $500.\nTHE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF HOS\nis due not only to the originality and\nsimplicity of the combination, but also\nto the care and skill with which it is\nmanufactured by scientific processes\nknown to the California Fio Syrup\nCo. only, and we wish to impress upon\nall the importance of purchasing the\ntrue and original remedy. As the\ngenuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured\nby the California Fio Syrup Co.\nonly, a knowledge of that fact will\nassist one in avoiding the worthless\nimitations manufactured by other parties. The high standing of the California Fig Syrup Co. with the medical profession,- and the satisfaction\nwhich the genuine Syrup of Figs has\ngiven to millions of families, makes\nthe name of the Company a guaranty\nof the excellence of its remedy. It is\nfar in advance of all other laxatives,\nas it acts on the kidneys, liver and\nbowels without irritating or weakening thom, and it docs not gripe nor\nnauseate. In order to get its beneficial\neffects, please remember the name of\nthe Company \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.\nSAN FltANClSCI). O.I,\nLOUISVILLE. Ky. KI'.W YORK, N. Y.\n2iufgepa\u00C2\u00A7t!\nUm imitr n, tt, en tWaSnimitn\",\nIn ioldjf 'irciic fllljiiflllirni, iit brisen co bio-\n!)tr nod) iiicl,11 eiiSflniti Default! turn*, iriibeii\nrolv to o)u ictit i n bio sunt l, Jatiuar 18H0\nfrei an alle ti |tnl(jctl, uxlcl'i' fill ka8 nadjfte\n^.al;r itu'cit 3i Diinciitcn tocibtii nub ben\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2J-ctinii bujiii, J2.00, ju*t eiirnibni. BRait\nlof'e (it) 'I'vol'e Dtufluntin jdjirfcu.\nGet mm Pnt.li hlng Co,, Portlai ,1, Or.\nIs 1; Wrong?\nGet it Right\nKec*. it Right\nYOUR LIVER\nMoore's Revealed Remedy will do It. Three\ndotel will make you feel better. Get lt from\nyour druggist or any wholesale drug houie, of\ntrom Stewart *k Holmei Drug Co., Seattle.\nOPIUM\nhoiu'Iii.mi\n(OOJlMi\nLAUDAM 11\n^^^^^^^^^^ I Stopped aton-\n.1.0, ll.irFKAN. 4B4 IsabellallldB, Chlrni\" '\nPISO'S CURE FOR\n\"KfflESWHtRTALL ELSE FAILS. _ .\nt Cough Syrup. Tastf* Good. Die |\nIn Mine. Po'rt by anigglstB. ."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Grand Forks (B.C.)"@en . "Grand Forks"@en . "Grand_Forks_Miner_1898-07-09"@en . "10.14288/1.0081695"@en . "English"@en . "49.0311110"@en . "-118.4391670"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Grand Forks, B.C. : F.H. McCarter and Son."@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 Grand Forks Miner"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .