"f69213a4-74f4-4283-9fc4-4bb5b52c2780"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2015-11-13"@en . "1893-09-23"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/omr/items/1.0311677/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n*\nOKANA\nWING REVIE\nVoL I, No. 5.\nOKANAGAN FALLS, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1893.\n$2.00 per Year.\nAfc,\nBank of British Columbia\nCapital paid up\nReserve Fund\nIncorporated by Royal Charter, 1882.\n\u00C2\u00A3600,000 $3,000,000^1\nWITH FOWEB TO I.NCIIE \KK.\n\u00C2\u00A3260,000 $1,300,000\nHead Office: 60 Lombard Street, LONDON, ENGLAND\nIn Raman CoLi'MiiiA In Tim United States\nVictoria, Vancouver, New Westminster San Francisco, Portland,\nNanalmo, Kamloops, Nelson (Kootenay Lnko.) Seattle nnd Tacoma.\nAgents ami Coiuiehi-ondenth in Canada and the United States :\nBank of Montreal, Canadian Hank of Commerce, Ironorlal Bank of Canada; Hank of\nMontreal, New York and Gnicag-o.\nTelegraphic TratiKfers ami Itomlttanoes to and from all points can bo mndo tbrough this\nRank at. current rates. Collections carefully attended to and ovory deauripUon cf banking biiBi-\nness transacted. Gold Dust purchased.\nit\n^ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n*\nin\n__ *'4^j4\u00C2\u00BBj4Jl4ij4 ilt, ilt__\u00C2\u00A3li\u00C2\u00A3li__ili, ^sil' \u00C2\u00A3'-WT* *l\u00C2\u00A3i,f ilA \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'i-7'i'i\n*I> 1* **\u00C2\u00BB \"t* *S> *S\u00C2\u00BB *\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB 'i\u00C2\u00BB *t* *f> 'i\u00C2\u00BB SS *WW> \u00E2\u0080\u00A2jwf! 'KJivijv^l'i'vjv\nW. T. Thompson\nDealer In.\nGeneral lorchi\nAnd.\nEverything Required in a Mining Camp\n^J?>i??i^\u00C2\u00ABC\u00C2\u00AB'iCVI\u00C2\u00BBvJ??Jvyi?*4vyi>>ivvjC^ *t> 'ivVi* <-i> *av \u00C2\u00ABv\u00C2\u00BB *V ,\u00C2\u00AB,\u00C2\u00BB> \V\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iwis.vwj*\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nDpy Goods\nFurnishings\nGroceries\nBoats an:! Sjobs\nBY m CAMP FIRES\nBird's-Eye Glance at Camp\nFairview\n. ..\nit\nC'liw Prices For Cfutfi\n--\nMain Street\nGkanag'an Falls\n.. j. ..\n! I '\n\mmmm\nGreen, Worlock & Co.,\nSuccessors to GARESGHE, GREEN & CO.,\nBAKTKBBS,\nGoVKKN.MKNT STREET,\nVictoria, B.C.\n[Established 1873.1\nDeposits received In Gold, Silver nnd U.S. currency. Interest paid on tho samo on lime\ndeposits. Bold dust and U.S. currency purchased at highest marital faros.\nSMil drafts ami tole-jnvphic transfers issiiod, pa.ablu at over 10,000 oltlos in ('.Hindu, tho\nUnited States, Kuropo, Mexico and China,.., \u00E2\u0080\u009E...\nBxohangc on London, available in all twrJIH Jfcl*rupi', Knirliind, Ireland and Scotland. Loiters\nof Credit, issued nn tho principal cities of the Uilffecl'states, Canada lend KnTOpo,\nAffonta for 'Wolisi, JFewrato \u00C2\u00ABSe Co.\nTTT\n[ES3^IH.ISriEI) 18S6.\nW& PIONEER,\nWholesale and ItcUi) Jltsiler in, and Importer and Manufacturer of\nFURNITURE\nThe largest establishment of Its kind on the mainland of British Columbia.\nThe loading UAIU'KT H0U8K in the Clly. A full line of Carp is, Square lings. Mats, ole\nAlso Linoleum add Floor Cloths, as well as 11..us \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 furnishings of evi i-y duueripttun.\nL'.viikiitakino in am. its niiANOHES, Stock complete.\nIHC'iKLX'a.-fci.-aa.^\n3SF^Hb:srfc\u00C2\u00B1\u00C2\u00AE,Hi\nShould write for\naccommodation\nat\t\nHotel.\ne\nFine Pishing and\nShooting in the\nvicinity\t\nr^.\n*aafticrt>03Bfc\ni Itinll 0olxa.an.T3i.ei,\n-\\n(.\n(P.O. box 2.)\n21 & 23 Cordova Street, VANCOUVER, B.C.\n-O-.L\nHamiltoh Powder Co'y\nOr Montiikal. iNconronATED 1861.\nManufacturers of Dynamite, masting and Sporting Powder.\nWholesale Dealers in Safety Kuse, Detonators and Electric Blasting Apparatus,\nOkfice: Victokia, B.C.\nWatties: Nanaimo. B.C\nMt- dr. SCOTT\nGeneral Agent for British Columbia.\nWEILER BROS.\niKslahli-hed 1802)\n, \u00C2\u00A9.AJKJF.'JEE'E'S..\nCrockeiy, Glassware, Wall Paper, Lamps, Cutlery, Agate M'nrc nnd\nComplete Bouse furnishings.\nLargest Stock In British Columbia.\nWrite for Prices of anything rcoulred.\nUNI2N IRON W\u00C2\u00B0RK\nManufacturers <>f\ni\nBlaze\nway\nin tho City Dailies and the\nMagazines for city orders,\nbut. you will not got the\ncountry trade through these\nmediums.\nmr Tl. requires the Local\nWeeklies to reach the pocket-\nbooks of those people who\nlive, and live well, too, in\nthe agricultural and mining\ndisl ricts of I lie Province.\nThe\nOkanagan\nMining\nReview\nReported for The Mining Review.\n{Continced)\nIii attempting a .slight description of\nthe position of the camp as regards the\nlocation of the principal properties, we\nwill start with the Stemwtnder or discovery claim as a pivotal point. It\nmight be somewhat clearer to our\nSI readers to begin at one end of each\nMbelt and tako tho claims as they arc\nlaid off, bill, as many of tbe.se claims\ni were Staked out as mere extension\nclaim:, from others upon which mineral\nwas found in place at the lime of location, and upon which a considerable\namount of development work was done\nby tho original locatees, a fairer plan,\nand sufficiently clear to he readily\nunderstood, will he to begin with the\ndiscovery claim, nnd enumerate them\nin order as they lie from the Stein-\nminder.\nThis mother claim is situated on what\nis genet-ally denominated the main\nmineral belt of the camp and it consists\nof not only a single ledge, hut a number >;!' ledges running up the mountain\nin a northwesterly and southeasterly\ndirection and parallel to each other.\nThe uriginal discoverers of the mother\nclaim, .Messrs. Geo. Sheeban and Fred,\nGwarkin, are still its owners. They\nhave done considerable development\nwork, and are satisfied that in it they\nhave a very valuable property that\nwill one day net them a good figure.\nAlongside the Slcmwinder, in a southeasterly direction, and on the way\ndowi the mountain, is the Brown\nHear, located in 1887 by Messrs. Geo.\nWilkison ami Jos. Bromley, The\nBrown Bear was evidently Mr. At-\nwood's choice iu all the camp when he\nexamined all tho claims in behalf of\nthe Stratheyre Co. prior to their purchase of Fairview properties in Sep?\nteuiber of last year, as thia was the\nclaim for which they paid ilie highest\nprice. On it they have since done, a\nftirge amount of ile.valnpnient wyrk-J\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'v .-...--<.-.\u00C2\u00ABv-nr.v>77rrni ttti d-'tic,;;;, I\nilve diifeient ledges running parfcllel,\nsiiine of which have ii width of over 12\nfeet between walls, and there is a\nslight dip to the east. These claims\n| though were located under the old law\nwhich made the claims 180D feet in\nlength and 000 feet in width, but gave\nto tho owners the eight to follow the\nthe.ledge, if the degree of dip should\ncarry il off the claim. On one ledge of\nthe llrown Bear a deep shaft has been\nsunk. ' There is also a cross-cut tunnel\nwhich has been run in for several\nhundred feet and will \"'be carried\nthrough to cut across t.be various\nledges and intersect the shaft, thus\naffording dr.tluage for the shaft as well\nis furnishing the other advantages in\nsold to the Stratheyre Go. last year.\nNext is the Ground Hog, owned by O.\nC. GaiT on which two assessments have\nlieen done, and cornering on the\nGround Hog is the Golden Hill, the\nlocator of wliich.appaienlly had come\nto the conclusion on making his location that tin; lielt here took a slight,\ntwist to the westward.\nThus it will be seen that the Stratheyre Co., in making their original purchases, evinced a belief iu the old\nmaxim of not carrying all their eggs iu\none basket,. On nearly all ledges there\nare generally found good pay shonte\nanl in distributing their properties all\nalong the ledge liiey wanted i\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB come in\nfor any of these thatmighl be going.\nFor the balance of I he claims in cam]'\nwe cannot well obsenyc OJiy particular\norder in this emuueratiorj for i bey are\nstaked off in all directions, Next, however, which we may mention is thai of\nthe Wide West, which lies over on a\nmountain across the gulch from tho\nllrown Bear. The ledge upon which\nthe Wide West is located rims nearly\ndue east and west, and thus would\nintersect the main ledge at an angle of\n(10 degrees. This claim was located by\nJno, Stevens and Matt ilodder, who\nsold it in lH'.YZ to Dexter, Kline, Bowen\nand Sharpneck, and late on in the fall\nof '1)2 it was gathered in for the Stratheyre Mining Co, by Mr; W. T. Thompson, who was acting for the company\nin the absence of Messrs. Reynolds anil\nAtwood, who had gone back to England preparatory to moving into camp.\nIn the Wide West u very long tunnel\nhas been run in on the ledge; a deep\nshaft has lieen sunk from this tuuno!\nwhich goes down about 00 feet lower\nthan the tunnel, which is also aboul\n150 feet under the top of the mountain\nwhere the ledge cropped out. A-ventilating shaft was run up from tile\ntunnel to the top of the mountain. The\nWide West isconsideied by many a very\nvaluable claim, and the vigoj with\nwhich the company are conducting the\nwork upon it would indicate that\nthey are not disappointed in it.\n(TO HE CONTINUED)\nA SPLENDID STAGE LIMB\nIn Connection With the\n-re-io-io'-^n, \"r :i .\n*H\nrag) working the mine)lor which cross-cut\nCW31 tunnels are designed. This tunnel has\ngx?,' already bee\nb-Cv ledges, and from\n(-&> commenced\nm\nm\nand Ihe\nOkanogan district of thefttute of Washington, as connection is made at Penticton with the steamer Aberdeen,\nwhich plips on Okim.'gan Lake and is\na part of [the great ('anadiau Pacific\nRailway system. The Hicviuw recently\nhad the pUvstiro of traveling iron,\nPeniieion to F. i.'vicwTiy i!n% line and\nonly wishes it could draw n pen pic-t&ro\nof the deligbi,ul drive through Ale\ncountry traversed, which is of park-like\nit sloping has been\ncommenced ou one of them.\nFollowing down tho belt the next\nmine reached Is the Si ver Grown which\nwas originrlly located by Jack Simp-\nrfelson aid Jno. H. East, but sold to\np\u00C2\u00A3) nlepfte. who a.'iei ivai'db bonded to An-\n~y~, (fl.ews, Fleming nnd Hi' lliiond. The\nWd ... . , appearance,'miei-spci sod \u00C2\u00BB n b beam l\nlip) nih.i,v,m;'te ri.ceniM.'uei s connected I, v\n(Jj) with this uWUir.e.tiou and theli .igi'tion\n&'i Kv'iirb has s. v.\"'1' woik on this mine\n^fl'lrc too well Icjown to the geneirl\nfj&:|)it'i!ic to l-eqt'.lro pjv e ilrnation at\nbiih time. On II aco/ialdeiMbleamtmnt\nof clevelopmcil work iiis been done\nftp] .'tin' the propr. ,y i., considered a vale-\n^j able one.\nii': ..N,,;;l In Hie IHiii conies liic UllU\" io,\nNEW PLACER DIGGINGS.\nRich Discovery on Kettle River.\nMen Flocking; in.\nXews reached Fairview on Friday,\n15th inst., that verjS^ricb. placer diggings had been struck on Kettle river\nabout, 20 miles froiu Rock creek and\ncreal I'd gre.i:. c.\ctienienl.. Almost.\nevery abie-fxidied n^.bas left for the\ndiggings. HonyMare Belling ai a\npremium, aud some who cannol obtain\nthem have started afoot, Wagons\nloaddd'With supplies and men are leaving until the camp is almost deserted.\nW~jidrods are Hocking hum across Uy\nline to tills fittest goid excitflhieufnSrT\nDel Halt, who Iris arrived from\nGolden, Wash., is on his way there,\nHe states tho road is alive I'-itb excited people. No returns from then\nso far, but packers for supplies\nreports range from 810 par day per\nman to IjllOO per day.\nFAIRVIEW FACTS.\nSubscribe for Thk Revikw.\nAlike Keogan returned to his home\nat Dog Lake on Wednesday.\nMr. Jas, Hislop, of Vancouver has\nbeen spending a few days here,\nMessrs. M. Sharpnock and Wm.\nBurke left on the stage Monday for\n(/Seattle.\nittiners at the Wide West have been\nlaid off for a few days until -contract\non' shaft is completed, then work will\nbe resumed with a full force.\nMr. 0. B, .James, who has been investigating the prospects of this\ncountry for Sound capitalists left for\nSeattle,, where ho will \"a tale unfold\"\nof the many advantages awaiting\ncapital in the Okanagan country.\nThe Stratheyre Mining Co. have let\nthe contract, for ,-i 250-foot shaft on the\nBcown Bear. Contractor Hrys has\njust returned from Looniijfcmi with\nminers and necessary machinery for\nthe v.-e,i'k which will be commenced\nat once.\n\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 -_1 *\n. apt. Act tins unci woo arrived here\n'Vein' 14th. Tbey have been stopping ai, tho Golden Gate hotel until\nMonday the 18th when they left on the\nstage for the north. The Captain has\nlieen looking over his mining claims\nWith the intention of developing them\nin the near 'future,\nTlie days of stage coaching are generally considered as belonging to ancient history, but slich is not the case,\nas up to the present day many a mountain town and mining camp in I iie wide\nwest depend upon stage coach lines as\ntheir chief means of communication\nwith the world at large. Hero ill tho\nheart of the Okanagan district exists a\nmost important one, that of the Penticton, Oro and Loomiston .Stage Bine,\nMr. II. 0. Newman, of Oro, owner a:nl\nmanager. It is the shortest and best\nroute from any point either east or\nwest into the mining, grazing and\nagricultural districts of the soiitherii u,\ninterior of British Columbia, n.ml HwTF Hon. G. F. Vernon and party left, for\nPENTICTON POINTS.\nMr. Thus. GUIs has been at While\nLake this week branding cattle.\nMr. Schubert is making good prepress Willi the load from here to Trout\nCreel;,\n\ lakes anil si.rej'lus; tile -a,\nI places, ro'li.ig here, ri;r, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 c\niv, level in\n' i ,le .'. is\ntree.- i ad\n68\n. Mining and Milling Maehicory\nHoisting and Pumping HiikIiioh Hulls mill r ullni; MiMSllinorj\nCopper and Load Huroacos\nOnly Steel nnd Iron Ship Muiniei-s on tho Pnclfllo Ooiuit,\nMarine Knglncs, Hollers iiml All Clussos 6f Mni'ilio/AVork.\nis ,l!e I\nIng i In\nCI II\niinil.i.i\nFirst and Mission Streets\nNow York (IfOje: 115 Ilroailwuy.\nSAN ?*ANCISG0\nCubic AddroH, \"Union,\"\nNICHOLLES & RENOUF\nTlctoris, ~%.C,\nFapming. Implements. and. Hardware\nALBION IRON WOEKS CO., IU,\nVICTORIA, IB. O.\nManufaoturei's of Hydraulic Pipe, Giants, and\nAll*Kinds of\nMINING MACHINERY\nliter \"Wlieels, 23-fco-\n..I. medium for reach- S-_-'\npeople of I lie Smith- CjjS\nInterior of Drltlsh Col- \_\?_\n|\nI\nI\nI\no? r- r^i ,cr. rj? nn r._~. no 70 iic'l-. He secured 11 number of deer,\nbeer and p'Oti-e. Siwoshes by the\n,./-i e wise ai lb, wharf to s, e his\nKoyitl IfighuOss win u he left on the\n,'.b.-. cleeii. Some ineiu'ji ..- of his\n. parly took airpUrnerof kodak views of\n.lie e.b,.ii:,i!ics j::sl be ihfl IhiiiI\npulled mil;\nequipment of tlu> line, ffljlny^ouris\nhave, during l.lie past fe.i ino.n! .\navailed tliemselvos of iis exci'Heiit service to see this mosi. inagnJH'cciil\nsection of counlr\. and with tin '\nere:: ed alleiiiioii now being glv'CH lo\ngold mining iii ihis district travel 11,\\nthis line will si ill I'm , her ineri \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1 . 'I .\nNew 111,-^1, in addiI ion lo 1 he p 1\nmail and express service, h.is > .|\nthe handling of all freight 1 '\nover the \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'. P, I!, -to points south of\nPent Icton.\nc.,,. 1.\nompos\nDASHES.\ne.d lb\niniiuii\n.1\n,sl SO\n., :i i\u00C2\u00ABi\n,. 2 .VI\n. 4 III\n.. :i.', 1\n. -2 00\nThere are iiunors iu Mc\ngeneral election in the\nimpending.\nA shipment of mixed gold :u\<\ silver\nore, lately soul to Tacoma for iauipluui\ni'roin Round rv Creek showed an average value of .V.27II per ton.\nWalter Sangster, while crazy with\nni|i quai-t/. liquor, shot Siwash Tommy, 11 Stjuam-\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2wards fell into] Indian, al. Vancouver on Ihe 12th inst.\nl!i)U'.;'h( by the At the Coroner's inquest the jury\nbrought, in a verdict of murder,\nTrustees Teinpleton and Collins, of\nthe Vancouver Si hool Hoard had II\nslugging match at n meeting a few\ndays ago ftecause of the former stating\nthat the latter had told a dele ei,il.-\nfalsehood. Collin- got his lefi eye\n, lowed up.\n1 ha \" Last Chance,\"\n1 Mike (jleuiioii. jiiul u crew\nI of Goo, Colllus, l.\"v. Hoi-\niii m iiel Jimmy Howartb ki ile I In\nthe sloop l.asl Chance on Wednesday\nuvnning for Tappen's Siding, 1 hoy\ngu hj way of Okanagan and Hhusi ip\nlikes, and are loaded clown with grub,\nguns and ammunition, The boys\nllreil a royal mlute for them as the\nIcree/.e filled the .sails if their tidy\ncraft, and as a good omen \"Ihe rainbow ;it niL'ht,\" which is supposed to\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 be \"the sailors' delight,\" appeared 111\nthe heavens. That the Las^Chance\nmay have a good voua*gjp and her\ninv, fully realize thwrjt>x| Litions\nis the wish of thos^n-euiaining hi\ncamp.\nOne hardly looks for a suggestion in\npractical polities (<>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -the pages of a religious monthly like the Churchman's\nGazette, lnitsl.-i.sl fijRnber, however,\nit makes a suggestion, the adoption of\nwhich might, help in part, to fill the\nProvincial Treasurer's depleted coffers.\nTho Gazette shrewdly opines that a\n$1000 fee on the registration of 1 map\nI of a \"new townsite\" would limit, nol\naltogether undesirably, tho number of\n11, Ii real estate creations nnd render\nmore numerous Hum 1 Ihe ' :.:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\nviwil ol 1 in- liitest.\n^j_ CAJADA. BY SAMPLES.\nDominion have a plentiful supply of OUB, ANTHEM ON THE NILv wont \"vcr hll leg, there was u prolonged\nexcellent coal. The Province of .Viva\nthe\nDisplays Made by the Dominion at the\nWorld'b Fair-\nA'aiural uiul Developed Besoareea or the\nCountry ArtislIcajly Exhibited.\n(From the Chicago Herald.)\n\"The Map's Leif For Evsr-'\nS11112 !>y tin. I'nnip Flu\nlli'iuititsi'i'iices or a\nFrom Egypt m Chlrn\nT ho Maple J.o.if. o-ir c:nt>'cm deal\nTho Maple Leaf (or over.\nGod Save the Queen, and Heaven\nTho Maple Leaf for ev\n.Scotia makes a poor show of real samples j\ndespite the fact that she has some of the\ngreatest coal areas on the Goi.tincut.\nThe allowing of uiekle and nickie ore\nfrom the Sudbury district of Ontario ia one\nwhich lias attracted universal attention,\nnot 01,ly of mining experts but of naval\nofficers. The quality of these ceres can best\nbe indicated by tho result of the recent\nWith all the enterprise and competitive tests made by the naval departments of\nspirit of her American cousins, Canada haa Great Britain, France, Germany and the I\nmade a display at the World's Fair which United States, in which Canadian nickel I\nadmirably serves its purpose of illustrating was found to have the greatest power of I\nthe natural and developed resources of; resistance, and was by all means the most!\nher vast territory. No department of | suitable fur the purpose of making armour\nthe exposition has Ijeen aligbtecl by Canada. ; plates for improved war vessels.\nThe display which Canada makes in the\nHorticultural building is one of the most\nimportant and attractive in that department\nof the Fair. Thero are three Canadian\ncourts devoted to fruit, vegetables and wine\nexhibits, An interesting feature of this\nEfilflFAflD INTERESTING-\nwail of newspaper anguish that was only : \t\n.equalled when on another occasion a trooper There are 5,003 women printers in Eag-\nI fell and a gun wheel cut through the bushy ; land.\nr^,.V'.!!,i?,l\"^\?^Ir^.?u.re\u00E2\u0084\u00A2c!_1?1!!! ! J'i'ofessor Huxley was formerly a naval\nill till- * metal.\nCavalry H.'ieer\nEach bi^ building contains a comprehensiv\nexhibit, installed according to the best\nmethods that could be employe 1 to make\nJt attractive. Possessed of resources so\nyearly similar to those of this country that\nbut sligh' distinctions can be drawn, Canada has been animated by the spirit of competition r.,ifle keenly, perhaps, than any\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0jthor nation represented at .laekson Park.\ncaused solely by the bid,uneven ground we\nwere compelled to use.\"\n\" And were your explanations not accepted and published?\"\n\"Accepted but not published, orif thoy\nB, distorted to such a\nre beyond recognition.\nThe liquid notes nfjflfeimiliar air, fir!> .&??\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 of 'J,?\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 fell\"''v3 Pasiws understanding, j Ger,i:\nand clear from the !0, sweet toned \" IV\" ?\u00C2\u00B0 i\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u009Er*in,zc'' iL;ul ,un. Baron Albert\nlushed the proem* lluctc was going, monopolize the billiard\nrapturous applause from The gathering ' ll le\"' -ac'1 next morning Rivo 4\ndelighted auditors on the lawn of the\nharder fruits peculiar to a northern country\n.She hae{riven special attention to the dis- ( but her pears, peaches and the small fruits : th,.cc'300rG gentlemen, guests for tl\nn.-,,r nf inr :, cc,e,. i, 11 ,, . ., 1 nrAliii-lfl II mill tn,,,i HclnM luliccinavc CI I let lim 1111 l-V . \" ' =\nplay of her agricultural products, upon\nwhich she ilndes herself most. She has\nnot negleeJ^t'eitTier, 'he treasures hidden\nbeneath !di,7<-.in! domain, as can be seen\nin tho .Mining Building. The same conscientious endeavor to do herself justice has\nbeen manifested everywhere in the exposition ai t tii\" result has been most Balis-\nfactory lo the visitor,\nGreat care ha- been taken by the Dominion otlicial to properly present t' H pla>y\ntli -i\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - Agr.cultural Building. A beautiful\ncourt, covering 7.000 square feet and rising\n2.\") feotfrotr. the door, stands, a model ol its\nkind, <:n the north side ot the centre ai-le.\nIt is surmounted by a handsomo trophy\nand by a large: stuffed deer from the Hooky\nMountains. The curtain which surrounds\ntho court on four sides is made entirely of\ngrain and straw tastefully and artistically\narranged.\nIds, LAYS ISV PEOVIKCES,\nAt the we*t oorner of the court, Ontario,\nthe banner Province of the Dominion, has\na large and tastefully arranged display. A\nhandsome pavilion, made entirely of cereals\nand grasses from the Ontario Government\nAgricultural College, at Guelph, ia admired\nby all Visitors, Samples of grain, in glass\njars, constitute a beautiful trophy which\nrises to a height of fully .'i.\"i feet. The dil\nruin \\ estern Ontario are 01 that inn juicy \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n. ... i ,i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,i\u00E2\u0080\u009Eis,i:in ol the otlicers connected with th.\ncharacter which at ence places them m the n ... , \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB,,!,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E .,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,... . , \u00E2\u0080\u009E.\n_. . , . r . . .... . .. bntinh .Military loir.'nui.ient, airl .vnnt\nfirst grade of fine fruits. Although the\ndestruction of the cold storage warehouse\nhas greatly impaired the exhibit Canada\nhad in fruits of last year, even yet her display is tin largest shown by any smglostate\nor loreign country and occupies about one-\nsixth of tho entire fruit space. Canada\nlost through the tire all the fresh fruit\nwhlih was stored for examination by the\njurors id awards,\nThe Province of Ontario has a large exhibit of over live bundled plates, embracing\nthirty eight varieties of apples in a fresh\nslate and 1,400 bottles of various kinds of\npreserved fruits. In the centre of the court\nis a display of fruits from the Government\nCentral Experimental Farm at Ottawa, The\nProvince ol Quebec lias been more buccoss-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tiiiiier a spacious marquee, were enjoying\nthe bounteous hospitality of the gallant\nvisitors.\n\" I presume your introduction to what we\nrecognize as one of our distinguishing national airs was effected al this visit,';\" T\nTho question was addressed to that dash\ning beau sabrenr, magnificent rider and . \u00C2\u00AB\npert lancer, Lieut. [tawaou-Turner, who fl\nthe moment was skillfully \"pegging '-^\nBection of cold chicken.\nIN I'AH AW IV KIIVI'T.\ndear no,\" replied he, thoughtfully\nlis knife and fork in the \" stand iy,\npapers. . One night they hrouglr\nwho was introduced to us\nsmarlesL newspaper men in Ameri\nthe\nfriend,\nc of the\nplay of grain and cereals from the Province have all cred\nIII! HAD SEEN Till: TOURNAMENT,\nand pooh-liond'd the whole thing. Nothing\nthere but what ordinary men could do with\na week's practice. Even the tent pegging\nwas child's play for a man with a good eved\ngoing horse. All he wanted was the anima\nand the rest was easy enough. 1 otleres\nhim his ed >ieo and he accepted, selecting\nmy own. His ability to sit a iiorse was\nbeyond doubt. To lift a peg was another\nthing. After ho had satisfied himself that\nthe mount was all right ho picked a lance\nand an orderly drove the peg in, Now the\ntl,inring of the stock building where the\ntournament w.is held is constructed of wood\nMSTbtooks over whioh tan hark was thickly\nspread to render il noiseless and easy for\nthe burses. In the interstices between tho\nblocks the peg had to find a resting place,\n\M' it ItKQflRED\n. . even more care to touch and lift it than it\nease,\" position, and gazing in a far-ofl way the or,ii\u00E2\u0080\u009Eary turf was the arena. A crowd\nat the snowy canvas above him. \" Lot mo | of admiring and confiding friends were on\nsee. It was either at Suakim or Berber I [ hana to ]mil thcil. chanipion. Twice be\nfui than any of the other provinces in keep- first heard the ' Maple Leaf. I forget now ; cantered towards the pec and each time re-\ning up a display of fresh winter apples, of which. I know it was ono night we wST*i-ceive(jguiding hints from myself ando there.\nwhich there are over seventy varieties, halted waiting for orders, or tidings of.the Then he settled himself for the gallop, and\nNova Scotia's display of the different varie- enemy. One of my troop knew the song as he poised the lance I knew there would\nties of apples from the famous Annapolis apparently, and gave it to the men as they j,B a Ofttastrophe, but my ureal fear was foi\nvalley is beyond criticism. The exhibit from sat around the camp tire. It caught their my horse\u00E2\u0080\u0094yet he rode well. In pouting he\nBritish Columbia attracts much attention j taste, owing to the catchy chorus, and it * -\nbecause of the immense size of the apples was in demand ever afterwards, It made an\nand pears, There is also a great variety of j impression on myself too, because of a\nthe smaller fruits. Prince ivhvaril Island, fancied resemblance to ' When We Were\nthe North-West Territories and Manitoba j Boys Together,' a favorite sorr with the\n\"Oh\nplacing\nof Quebec ia one of the most beautiful in the\nsection. There is also a pretty showing of\nmaple su;;ar and syrup, which are two staple products of this province. The display\nof grants and cereals from the great grain\ngrowing areas of the North'West, show the\nsplendid quality and extensive variety of\nthose staples from the storehouse of the\nHonunion. There r-: also a splendid exhibit\nof furs and stuffed birds, which adds largely\nto the attractiveness of the display. The\nMaritime Provinces of the Dominion show\nsplendid exhibits of cerealsund grains. The\nmammoth Canadian cheese attracts general\nattention. There is also a display of biscuits, cheese, mineral and aerated waters,\nbacon and hams. In the annex of the Agricultural Building, Canada has a large display of agricultural machinery.\nWllKlU'. OITTON IS KINO.\nCanada has outdone her mother country\nin the neat and pretty curtains she has\nerected around her section in the Manufactures Building. The section is on tho\nwest side of Columbia avenue, with Great\nBritain on her north, Denmark on the south\nand Belgium on the east across tho avenue.\nEvery foot of 10,000 square feet of space is\ncrowded with manufactured goods from all\nt pans of Canada, anere are a great many\nlines of manufacture!1, products in *he\nCanadian court which will comrare faV .}\nably with those of the older, more populous'\nand more pretentious manufacturing countries. The cotton king has lieen at work in\nthe Dominion, and in two long, well-finished native wood eases are most tastefully\narranged many of the products of the Canadian cotton mills. Cotton fabrics of all\nkinds are shown, and textile goods occupy\na prominent place. Tweeds, meltons,\nbraids, silk thread and carpets aro also extensively exhibit\".!. Gloves, hosiery,\nundertvear and ready-made clothing are\ntastefully arranged in glazed eases made\nof Canadian elm, birch and cherry. Two\nvery pretty cases are filled with specimens\nof women's wo-k from different parts ot\nthe Dominion. There is also a creditable\nexhibit of sole and harness leather. Scales,\nstoves and hollow ware, water heaters,\nhorseshoes, atovo polish, screens, rivets,\nspades, shovels and an immense array of\nlike articles meet tho eye in every direction.\nAn exhibit, of circular and band saws of almost every pattern has attracted much attention, and it is doubtful whether in this\ndepartment Canada is surpassed. A creditable display of hoots and shoes occupies a\nprominent position.\nINDIAN I.XIIIIIITS BY INDIANS.\nfruits. In th\nest Territories and Manitoba i Boys Together,' a favorite\nitable displays of the smaller j 42nd, and popular indeed with every oorpi,\nI recollect that when your Col. tied Deui-\nrpi .\nctable court in the north\npavilion is a display of last year's vegetables\ncontributed by all the Canadian provinces\nand the Government Experimental Farms\nof the Dominion. This is the only exhibit campaigners at any rate it is not unfamiliar\nson came up witli his voyageura the boys\nwore able to cheer them with * Tho Maple\nLeaf.' So you see that to us . Kgyptian\nAt the west side of Canada's\nspace is a\nof vegetables in the Department of Hurti\nculture at the Exposition.\nIN THE TRANSPORTATION BriI.DINii.\nCanada's exhibit in Machinery Hall is\nlocated at the east end of the centre floor,\nimmediately opposite that of Great Britain.\nWhile this exhibit has many features of\npeculiar interest lo visitors,many important\nlines are absent,and a number of the largest\nmanufacturers arc not represented at all,\nThere is a good display of automatic and\ntraction engines, compound marine engines,\nsteam injectors and exhausters, high speed\nengines, lire engines, water wheels and\nworking machinery of all descriptions. The\ndisplay of woodworking machinery is one\nof tho finest at the fair. The exhibit of\nbriokmaking machines has attracted special\nattention.\nThe Canadian exhibit in 'Transportation\nBuilding is ou the main centre floor annex\nand in the west gallery. A feature of the\nexhibit consists of car couplers aud chilled\ncar wheels, for which Canada is note I.\nTSe^ arc also seihaphore3 and hen/llii-jln.B\nfor yaohto anil vessels.\nParticular interest is manifested in the\nsplendid exhibit of sleighs. In one of the\ncourts is a beautiful model of the sleigh\npresented by the women of Canada as a\nwedding present to the Duke of York and\nthe Princess May. It is a magnificent\nspecimen of Canadian workmanship. The\ndisplay also includes a lar\u00C2\u00A3,e exhibit of\nsporting and pleasure canoes, folding boats,\nsnow shoes, toboggans, etc., for which\nCanada, as the home of the sportsman, has\na world-wide reputation, In the annex of\nthe-Transportation Building is a full standard vestibulod train of the Canadian Pacific Railway, entirely of Canadian Maim\nfacture, the cars being made from native\nCanadian woods. Ono peculiarity about\nthis exhibit is that the train was not built\nfor exhibition purposes, but is an exact\ntype of the regular trains on the Canadian\nPacific Railway.\nWiiNDUKTrr, wood DISPLAYS.\nIn the Forestry Building Canada occupies\n.3,000 square feet, situated on the main aisle\nand south of the central exhibit. 'The space\nis divided between the provinces of Ontario,\n(Jnebec, British Columbia and the North-\nWest Territories. Tile Dominion hasa large\ncollectionof photographs of living trees, contributed by the geological survey museum\nat Ottawa. The photographs are shown in\nvery interesting and instructive exhibit! frames made of the woul represented in the\nm.,.ln I.,, ll... 11 , . _( T.. Jl__ . 3t st3p of\ncourse lit to accurately locate its position. A.\nconduct ;r such as a cable oilers a cartain\namount'-5 V struct ion or \"resistance\" to the\npassage 01 an electrio current. Apparatus\nhas been devised for the measuring of this I\n\"resistance.\" The unit of resistance is\ncalled r.';i ohm. The resistance of the average\ncable is, roughly speaking, three ohms per\nnautical mile. Resistance practically ceases\nat the p.-iat where the oonuuoterr make con-\nsideralro 5*n tact with the water. Therefore\nif when measuring to locate a break it be\nfound thatthemeasurintc apparatus indicates\na resistance of BOO ohms, the position of the\nlault will be known to be 300 miles from\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2bore.\nWith this information the captain of the\nrepairing -hip is able to determine by bis\ncharts ot 1 lie course of the cable the latitude\nand longiTudf* of the spot where the break\noccurred, and can proceed with certainty\nto effect the repair. When the approximate neighborhood of the break is reached a\ngrapnel in dropped overboard and the vessel sreiui'f i/iu'wly in a course at right angles\nto the run of tho cable, On the deck of the\nship then: is a machine called a dy no meter,\nwhich, as its name Implies, is used to measure resistance. The rope securing the\ngrapnel passes under this. If the dyno-\nmetor records a steady increase of strain it\nindicates 'hat the grapnel has caught the\ncable. If, on the other band, the resistance\nvaries from nothing to tons and from tons\nto noth'.ng again, it is known that the grapnel is only engaging racks or other projections of an uneven bottom. It is frequently necessiry to drag over such ground several tinifn wforo the cable can bo secured.\nHaving secured one end of a parted cable\nthe vessel moors it to a buoy and proceeds\nto search for the other end. When both\nends are brought together on deck the elec-\ntrician holds communication with the shore\non both tides to make pure that there are\nno other -V/activc places and that the cable\nis perfect in both directions. This having\nbeen satisfactorily determined all that remains is to Hpliee the ends together and\ndrop the cable once more hack into the sea.\nalloyed. Those that remain in their hives\nare killed in the old-fashioned way\u00E2\u0080\u0094by\nputting into all the entrances pieces of\nburning oioth that have been dipped in molted sulphur. When the bees are all silent\nVhe hollow l'mb is cut apen and the honey\ntaken out. Somuiiities Jimmie gets quite\na number of pounds; hut, as a rule, the\nwild bees do not lay up a very large stock\nof Winter food.\nOf coursi, it would be much cheaper for\nJimmie to earn money and buy his honey ;\nbut then he would not have the enjoyment\nof hunting and the glory ol finding bee-\ntrees. Neither would ho have the excitement of robbing them, a task which lie\nalways superintends himself, looking after\neachdetail with as much care and assump\ntion of importance as a general about to\n-take by stoim a great city. *\nrods to the spot where they had obtained\nmost of tiieir firewood. Lying on his face\non the ground, with arms still clasped\nabout a bundle of limbs, was a dead man.\nSitting down, with his hack to a small tree\nand hands over his face, was another,\nwhile an ax lay beside him. There was no\nodor, noghastliness. Asyoulookedat them\nthey seemed to be sleeping-\n\"Thar's another\u00E2\u0080\u0094and another '.\" said tho\nguide as he pointed up the valley. \"It's\neasy to see how it came about.\"\nIn the wagons they found twenty-eight\ndead. The four we found made thirty-two.\nFive of the men had left the camp, perhaps\nin midwinter, and had started up or down\nthe valley in hopes to find a way out or\nbring relief. When they perished no man\nbus ever found out. It may have been on\nthe very day they started that the blizzard\ncame. The horses must have found a\nsheltered nook somewhere and huddled together. A gale had screamed up and down\nthat valley two or three days, its breath as\ncruel as the edge of a knife, and bringing\nwith it such a fall of snow that it still lay\nsolid as ice in the shady spots. The men\nhad made a brave ellort to keep the fires\n;oing, but human flesh and blood could not\ntand against an enemy which drove its\nfrosty breath deep into flinty rocks and\nplit them in twain. Some lay under their\nblankets\u00E2\u0080\u0094some sat with bowed heads and\narms folded across their breasts. The cold\nhad not tortured them, Death had come\nas sleep comes to us at night\u00E2\u0080\u0094quietly and\nracefuUy. Side by side in one long trench\nwe laid them and covered them iu, and\nthere they rest to-day, forgotten to the\nworld as if they had never existed.\nAI. Quad.\n*- im** ' 0):r tiiu z&i\ih-\nGllfUJtlr Work ofa llllz/iml In Hip Moiiii-\ntaliuonVovfirln,\n\"By and by we came out on a bluff from\nInch we could look down into the long\nIBni. narrow valley. Two miles to the north\nami on the far side of the valley we caught\nsight of three or four white topped waggons,\nwhile a number of horses were grazing on\nthe the rich pa? Mirage.\nDayton's wagon train bad got off tho\noverland trail and bsen lost among the\nmountains of Nevada\u00E2\u0080\u0094tight wagons and\nthirty-seven men, women, and children. It\nwas September when they were last seen on\nthe trail ; it was now June of the following\nyear. Every valley and pass in t he eastern\nportion of the wild territory was being\ninspected by men sent out to solve the\nmystery. One day they had turned oil\" the\ntrail to find a shorter and better route. No\nword had come from them since. It had\nbeen a terribly hard winter, but there was\nhope of finding at least a part of them alive.\nWe made our way along the bluffs until\na spot was found where we could descend\ninto the valley. We were hardly down lie-\nfore the horses came running up, and their\nevery action showed that they were overjoyed at sight of human beings. They\nwere hollow eyed and poor in flesh, as tho\ngrass had only just begun to furnish pasturage. We lired off our guns as a signal to\nthe people in camp that help was at band,\nbut no ono appeared in sight. We had\nlooked for -he smoke ot camp fires from the\nbluff, but not the faintest trace could bo\nseen. As wc advanced upon the wagons\nthe horses kept us company, following at\nour heels like dogs, and their action pro-\npared us in a measure for what was to\ncome.\nWhen within half a mile of tho camp we\ncould count the wagons-\u00E2\u0080\u0094eight. The covers\nstill remained, but faded and mildewed.\nEach was backed up against the steep hillside aud the fronts of all were closed. In\nfront < the wagons were four blackened\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0pots On which the grass would not grotv.\nThese had been the campfires of tho emigrant-. At a distance of 200 feet we halted and raised a cheer and two of the men\ndischarged their rifles, but not a sound\n.came from the grim-looking wagons. We\nstood there for three or four minutes, hop-\nIig that some one would appear, and yet\nfeeling that wc had come loo late, when\nthe old hunter who had acted as our guide\nsolemnly observed.\n*'If that'I any thin1 Hvin' in this cam]) it's\ntoo siek and feeble to move ! Some of you\nhad better take a look into the wagons.\nFor a time everyone hung back. There\nwere the horses and wagons, but where\nweie the thirty-seven men, women and\nchildren ? Between the wagons, which\nwere about ten feet apart, the grass was\nrtfTekcst and greenest, but the horses had\nnot fed there. As we started forward after\nour last halt they did not follow us, but\nstood with heads up and curs pointed forward and seemed inclined to run away,\n\"It's got to 1)0 done,\" said the lieutenant,\n\"but I hope they all got away. Now, then,\neach man to a wagon. You needn't stop at\nthe covers, but take your knives and cut\nthe fronts away aud lot the sunlight and\ndaylight in.\"\nI sprang up on the front of a wagon\nand cut and tore the cover away, but did\nnot look in A cry from the man on my\nleft warned km of the sight I should behold. The guide beckon' I to me, and to-\ngetKev V*j rwt up tJie valley about twenty\nLost in the J tingle-\nA surgeon ol the Bengal army, Doctor\nPaske, had gone out toward sunset with\nfour or five English ofSoera in search of\njungle fowl, whioh they had heard crowing\nduring the day. The possibility of encountering any larger game, Doctor 1'aBko says,\nhad never occurred to any of them. The\ndoctor soon became separated from the rest\nf the company, but hail with him a\nBurmese lad to carry his ammunition. By\nand by it occurred to him that it was time\nto be going back to camp.\nHe started with a feeling of confidence,\nbut soon perceived that he was lost. The\nboy could give him no comfort ; the sun\nwas going down. Somehow he must get\nout of the forest. He turned squarely about,\nand sure enough, within ten minutes he\ncame out upon a greensward of considerable extent. Hut his troubles were barely\nbegun.\nThere was not even a shrub on the green s\nward. 1 was on the point ot crossing it\nwhen a terrific roar sent all the blood back\nto my heart, and a magnificent tiger trotted\ninto \"the enclosure. I was too much taken\nback to move. My pipe dropped from my\nmouth. 1 was just resolving to pour both\nbsrrels into the tiger's face, in the hope of\nblinding him, when be snarled at me and\ndisappeared, lashing his tail.\nThis was a great relief, for the perspiration was streaming down my face, and my\nteeth were clinched as in death. 1 recovered my pipe and looked round for my boy.\nHe was gone, carrying with him my powder\nand shot, and my calls received no answer.\nLost in a tropical forest at nightfall, and\nfor ammunition only the two charges of\nsmall shot already in my gun ! This was\ntruly an enviable position, especially as the\nforest was known to be swarming with\nwild beasts, such asl had just encountered.\nI shouted once more for my boy, and\nplunged again into the thicket at haphazard,\nand in a sate bordering on desperation.\nFear tjulc?*0\natepa ; my eyes seemcl\nto penctf'ftto further than 'usual, and my\n\u00C2\u00ABtua detected the faintest sound. In addition to my gun I carried a stout branch,\nwhich I hurled at every clump that looked\nlikely to harbor any kind of animal. Hope\nwas ebbing fast, and I scanned tho trees\naround with a view to taking up my position in one of them for the night.\nEven then I should not he beyond the\nreach of tigers, snakes and black ants. And\nwhat if 1 should fall asleep?\nI was sick with anxiety, and so weary\nwith suspense that I almost wished the end\nwould come and lea\e me at rest.\nIt was decreed otherwise, however. The\ntrees began to be further apart and the\nundergrowth less dense, ana\u00E2\u0080\u0094oh, joy !\u00E2\u0080\u0094a\nfamiliar sound smote my ear. I once more\nstood on the brink of a stream. I laid down\nmy gun and drank greedily. Then I once\nmore lighted my pocket companion. We\nwere encamped on just such a stream as\nthis. Was this the one ? And if it was,\nshould I go upstream or down?\nI decided to go down, and advanced with\nextreme caution. Once a large object\nloomed ahead, leaving the water's edge and\nstriking inland. Probably it was a tiger,\nbut it was too dark for me to sec plainly.\nOn making the next bend I saw a light\nnot far ahead. It might belong to a party\nof rebels ; it might be the camp I had left.\nOliiling from cover to cover, 1 advanced.\nOther fires came in sight. I crept closer\nand closer, resting for a few seconds behind\nevery convenient bush. At last I saw everything plainly. It was our own camp. I\nstood upright, and as gaily as possible, and\nwhistling a tunc, I sauntered in among my\ncompanions.\nPEARLS OF TEUTH-\nWe open the hearts of others when wc\nopen our own.\nAction is life and health, repose is death\nand corruption.\nThink more of your own progress than\nof the opinion of others.\nA man who lets himself havo loo man}\ntilings to do is always u 1'ooliHii man, it he\nis not a guilty one. A\nSuch is the charity of some that th !j\nnever owe any man any ill-will, making\npresent payment thereof.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Strong minds Buffer without complaining;\nwe.Uc ones complain without Buttering,\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n[llocliefoit. itild.\nA little timely writ, is a rivet to the\nchain of tilleetiou, and a letter, untimely\ndelayed, is as rust lo the solder.\nAs gold which he cannot spend will make\nno man rich, so knowledge which he can\nnot apply will make no man wise.\nCharacter, like porcelain ware, must be\npainted before it is gla/.ed, There cau bo no\nchange of color after il is burned ill,\nHe that will believe only what he can\nfully comprehend must have a very long\nhead or a very short creed.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 [Thin-low\nWeed.\nPride may sometimes be a useful spring\nboard to the aspiring soul, but it is much\nmore fre'piently a destructive stumbling\nblock.\nDo not believe in Mammon; his golden\nmountains are but the ocean's foam ; his\nparadise deceptive phantoms. \u00E2\u0080\u0094[Meau-\nchard.\nYou may depend upon it that he is a\ngood man whose intimate friends are all\ngood, and whose enemies are characters\ndecidedly bad.\nAN ARKANSAS MIRACLE.\nA Remarkable Story of Interest\nto Every Woman-\nAYoans Woman Who Was Literally Fail\niiig Away\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fbyalelapa Pronounced Her\nCase Hopeless\u00E2\u0080\u0094How Sue Was saved.\nFrom the Arkansas Democrat.\nThe story of renewed health told in tho\nfollowing article ha3 been carefully investigated by the Democrat, and is of tho deepest interest to all parents. The condition\nof Miss Clements is that of thousands of\ngirls in our land, whose health and vitality\nis slowly but surely being sapped away.\nPale, listless and sallow girls meet us on\nevery side, and unless the same prompt\nmeasures arc taken as in the ease of Miss\nClements, a premature grave is the inevitable result. Lulu Clements, the nineteen\nyear old daughter of Mrs. Cora V. Clements,\none of the most prominent residents of Lonoke, Ark., was attacked with a mysterious,\nwasting disease over a year ago, and despite the strenuous efforts of the local physicians she continued to grow worse. Her\nblood had turned to water, she suffered intense agony, and was almost ready to give\nup life when relief came. Her story is best\ntold us related by her mother to a Democrat\nreporter : \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\" Jn the fall of 1892 my daughter began\nto show signs that some disease was wrecking her system. Despite tho constant attention of local physicians she grew worse.\nHer complexion was pule, and she became\nalmost as white as marble. She complained\nof heart palpitation, Her feet and hands\nwere cold, and she was almost driven into\nhysterics by racking headaches and backaches and shortness of breath and other\ndistressing symptoms. All these conditions\nbetoken anosmia, or in other words watery\nand impoverished condition of the blood,\nwhich could not perform the functions of\nnature, She had no appetite; for many\ndays she did not eat enough for a child to\nsubsist on.\n*' Her condition grew from bad to worse,\nand becoming alarmed, I souther to prominent physicians in Virginia, Tennessee and\nLittle Itock. All efforts of this naturo to\nregain her health proved fruitless. Patent\nmedicines of many kinds were tried and\ngiven thorough tests, but without any apparent cfleet towards improving the patient.\n\" Myself and daughter had almost given\nup in despair, having almost concluded\nthat a restoration of her health was an impossibility. In the Arkansas Democrat I\nespied an advertisement of Dr. Williams'\nPink Pills for Pale People, which claimed\nthat they would give ready relief to persons\nsuffering from a disease the symptoms of\nwhich were the same as in the case of my\ndaughter. I purchased some of the pills,\nand commenced giving my daughter three\npills a day. Before the first box had been\ntaken an improvement was noticed. Color\nin her face was notice 1, and her uppetite\nreturned. The terrible headaches and\nbackaches ceased, and she could breathe\nmore freely. When tho fourth box had\nbeen taken she was entirely well, and since\nthen has enjoyed excellent health. She ia\nCOW robust and full of life, making our\nfamily happy once more. Quite a contrast\nto the situation six months ago, when everybody thought she would die.\n\" I think l Pink Pills ' the best medicine\nin the world for the blood, and have recommended them to several citizens of this\nplace, who have been restored to health by\nits use. Mrs. Henry Brown was in a very\nbad condition. She tried the Pink Pills,\nwhen she improved rapidly and is now a\nvery healthy woman.\"\n\" Thediscov'rerot Dr. Williams' Pink Pills'\ntor Pule People certainly deserves the highest tribute that pen can frame. His medicine has done more to alleviate the sufferings\nof humanity than any other medicine known\nto science, and his name should be handed\ndown to future generations as the greatest\nsavant of the present age.\nDruggists say that Dr, Williams' Pink\nPills have an enormous sale, and from all\nquarters come glowing reports of results\nfollowing their U3C. In very many cases the\ngood work has been accomplished after\neminent physicians had failed, and pronounced the patient beyond the hope of\nhuman aid. An analysis shows that Br.\nWilliams' Pink Pills contain in a condensed form all tho elements necessary to\ngive new life and richness to the blood,\nand restore shattered nerves. They\nare an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, paralysis, St.\nVitus' dunce, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of\nla grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and\nsallow complexions, nervous prostration ;\nall diseases depending upon vitiated humors\nin the blood, such as scrotula, chronic\nerysipelas, etc, They are also a specific for\ntroubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities, and all forma of\nweakness. They build up the blood, and\nrestore the glow of health to pale and sallow\ncheeks. In men they effect a radical cure\nin all cases arising from mental worry,\noverwork, or excesses of whatever nature.\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills arc manufactured by the Dr. Williams'Medicine Company,\nJlrockville, Ont,, and Schenectady, N.Y.,\nand are sold in boxes (never in loose form\nby the dozen or hundred, and the public\nare cautioned against numerous imitations\nsold in this shape) at 50 cents a box or six\nboxes for \u00C2\u00A72.50, and may be had of all\ndruggists or direct by mail from Dr.\nWilliams' Medicine Company from either\naddress.\nA Girl's Dearest Friend-\nHe found her sitting alono in a secluded\ncorner, apart from the merry dancers, where\nthe musiccarne In subdued throbs of melody\nand tho mingled voices of the glad company\nmade but a gentle murmur.\n\" Ah,\" he exclaimed, \" I am fortunate\nindeed.''\nHer eyes were cast down iu sweet confusion.\n\" I have just boon talking with your\ndearest friend about you.\"\nHalf rising from her seat, she confronted\n1 im with a look of terror.\n\" Then\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\nHer lips trembled as she spoke and her\ncheek was as devoid of colour as the satin\nshoes 3he woie.\n\" 1 suppose you want that' engagement\nring back, but you don't get it. Wee?\"\nThere was that about her manner which\nprompted him to say nothing.\nNo Disappointment\nCan arise from the use of the great sure-pop\ncorn cure\u00E2\u0080\u0094Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. Putnam's Extractor removes corns\npainlessly ii. a few days. Take no substitute. At druggists.\t\nProfessor Holden says that the cavity represented by the largest spot on the sun is\nsullicient to take in the whole of our planet\nwithout touching the sides.\nWe should sutler little from ill-will were\nit not for an ill-will within ourstlves, that\nholds treasonable correspondence with the\nwor.\u00C2\u00BB* parts of our natures.\nA Grand Schema-\nA tir\u00C2\u00ABJ.i little woman was shopping last\nweek ai the counter of one of our large\ncloth initio uses, and a cro3s-looking man\nwith her was trying on a smoking jacket\nunder hw direction.\n*' Do, Vou think Jack would like this\none V sj.e asked.\n\" He la an ungrateful dog if he doesn't,\"\ngrowled The impatient model who was her\nhusband.\n'* It if-vcry cheap,\" she said, \" and not\nlined win satin all through. Would you\nwear it ?\"\n\" Wovldn't I ? Just try me. Do you\nsuppose that any man wouldn't be glad to\nget such a garment ':\"\n11 He's just your size, and it fits you\nsplendidly ; but 1 intended to spend more\nmoney on a smoking-coat \u00E2\u0080\u0094this iB so\ncheap.\"\n\"More money. Why you have everything exquisite\u00E2\u0080\u0094good cloth, good fit. What\nmore du^you want ? That's enough for a\nsmcking-coat for any man living.\"\n11 Yes. I gttppose so. Well, dear, I'll\ntake it, . ml you need not wait any long-\ner.\nAnd sttc smiled sweetly, as if a great\nload were off her mind. Outside her husband met a chum.\n\"Grand scheme, Fred,\" he said, \"I've\njust beev fitted fur a smoking-jackot that\nmy wife is going to Bend to her brother. I\nwouldn't be aeeu in the tiling, but it will\nsuit him'u.11 right. Gof it cheap, too, which\nis another advaut ige.\"\nMeatr-yhile th>; wife was saying to the\nsalesniRii^n the clothing store :\n\" If v*^will bn good enough to keep it j\nuntil thV 17th, 1 will have it sent for then.\nMy husband will be surprised when he finds\nit was fof him as a birthday present.\"\nAn Important Scientific Discovery.\nNerviline, the latest discovered pain\nremedy, may safely challenge the world for\n'a substitute\" that\" will as speedily and\npromptly check inflammatory action. The\nhighly penetrating properties of Nerviline\nmake it never failing in all cases of rheumatism, neuralgia, cramp3, pains in the back\nand side, headache, lumbago, etc. It possesses marked stimulating end counter\nirritant properties, aud at once subdues all\ninflammatory action. Ormand & Walsh,\ndruggists, Peterboro', write : \" Our customers speak well of Nerviline.\" Large\nbottles 25 cents. Try Nerviline, the great\nnternal and external pain cure. Sold by\nill druggists ami country dealers.\nNo days of grace are allowed in Paris on\nbills payable at sight, as is the custom in\nthis country.\nDr. Harvey's Southern Red Pine tor\nCoughs and colds is the most reliable and\nperfect cough medicine in tho market. For\nale everywhere.\nAt a great Methodist conference held in\nOctober, 1891, it was estimated that there\nwere 30,000,000 Methodists.\nAit roM thinking of sending .vour young\npeople to ichool? ir SO, read Ihe adv. Of\nPlckeriuicCollegeandscnd for rnienilur.\nA. P. u7.->.\nThey poulticed her feet and poulticed her\nhcftil,\nAnd blintored bar back till'twas smarting and\nred,\nTried touies, elixir-, pain-killers nnd salves.\n(Though grandma declared it, was nothing but\n\"nprvos.\")\nThepoor^woinan ihoughtshc must certainly\ndie.\nTill \" Favorite Prescription \" she happoncd to\nlry.~\nNo wonder its praises so loudly fhoy s-ncnk :\nShe was better al once, and was well in a\nweek.\nThe torturing pains and distressing nervousness which accompany, at times, certain\nforms of female weafcaess, yield like magic\nto Dr. Pierce's Kevonte Prescription. It is\npurely vegetable, perfectly harmless, and\nadapted to the delicate organisation of woman. It allays and subdues the nervous symptoms and relieves the pain accompanying\nfunctional and organic troubles. Guarantee\nprinted *>n bottle-wrapper and faithfully\ncarried cut for many years.\nIn tho United States statisticians put the\naverage iife of farmers at 04 years ; of lawyers, 52 i merchants, -IS ; mechanics, 47 ;\nseamen, 4'j ; labourers,44.\nThirty Years' Ezpsrenca\nn treating all chronic diseases gives positive\nproof that ''Tissue Builders\" (iTistogenotic) arc\ntho best remedies. Send postal card for\nbook (f reej to Dr. W. Rear, room 19, Gerrard,\nArcade, Toronto, Ont. Mention thia paper.\nThere :s a clock in Brussels which is never\nwound by human hands. Wind power does\nit.\nACUTE or CHRONIC,\nCan be cured by the use of\nLarge as a Dollar\nWore thd scrofula sores on my poor little1 boy,\nSickening and disgusting. Tlioy wereCTespe-\ncially severe on his legs,\nback of liis ears and on\nliis head. His hair was\neo tfitt&ca mat Combing\nwas sometimes Impossible. His legs wero so\nbad that sometimes lie\ncould not .\".it down, and\nwhen lie tried to walk\nhis legs would crack\nopen and the blood start.\nPhysicians did not effect\n, I decided to give him Hood's K.irsapa-\nrilla. In wo weeks the sores commenced to\nheal up; lie scales came off and all over bis\nbody new and healthy flesh and skin formed.\nWhen he .ad taken two buttles of\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'' **arsaparilla\nno was entirely free from sores.\" IIap.ky K.\nRi/by, Box .ii)'--, Columbia, Pennsylvania.\nHOOD' ' Pll.LS aro a mild, gentle, painless,\noafoandel int cathartic. Always reliable. 25c\nof pure Cod Liver Oil, with\nthe Hypophosphites of Lime\nand Soda. A feeble stomach\ntakes kindly to it, and its\ncontinued use adds flesh, and\nmakes one feel strong and\nwell.\nGerman\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'C A cUTIOX.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Iter, are of substitutes.\nGenuine prei'iireel by Scceit As liowno.\nMelieville. Sold by all druggists,\nStic, ami 81.00.\nMartinsville, N.J., Method?st Paf\u00C2\u00AB\nBonage. \" My acquaintance with\nlyour remedy, Boscbc.:,9 German\n'Syrup, was made about fourwen\nlyears ago, when I contracted & Oold\nIwhich resulted in a Hoarseness and\na Cough which disabled me from\nfilling my pulpit for a number of\nSabbaths. After trying a Physician,\nwithout obtaining relief\u00E2\u0080\u0094I cannot\nsay now what n 'iecf> liilJirriMiinrrl\nI saw the advi\"tisen*eut oQjov.r\nremedy and obtained a bofJW^ I\nreceived such quick and penu-rtent\nhelp from it th^twhenever Tie have\nhad Throat T5r?|fconclr!al trotiilea\nsince in our family, BeSdiee't^^r- (*\nman Syrup has been our favorite\nremedy and always with favorable\nresults. I have never hesitated to\nreport my experience of its use to^\nothers when I have four 1 theirt^\ntroubled in like manner.\" .P.BV.\nW. H. HaogarTy,\nora\u00C2\u00AB Newark, New \" A safe \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJersey, M.E. Conference, April 25, '90. Remedy.\nC.G. GREEN, Sole Man'fr.Woodbury.N.J.\nliein't wait till sjniiiK\nis past before trying Iv\nlu.\ It cleanses and\nheals the stomach, invigorates and tones\ntiie system. No other\ntonic needed.' Tade it\nnow.\nK.D.C. COMPANY (LIMSTED)\nNEW GLASGOW, S.S ,\u00C2\u00AB'.IXAB-i,\nor 127 STATE ST., BOSTON, IUASS.\n! Mention this paper.\nFree sample mailed to any ailrlrose-.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 H\n1111 ki-it ;n ii.li\n[i.y. win cin nil work Sny\nplnin circular knutlnR maclibic\nwill do. from homespun nr factory yarn. Tim most prnctlcal\n\"-jjlc^_ IlL^r I fiiiiinyl;:iilter nil tlie inurki'l. A\nV--^^iH^ww3 \u00C2\u00BB e'l'l'l can sirein'.*.\nzA Dnmhle, simple, IiinMd. Wo\n. ,;uf]fr guarnntce cvory machine te th\n^yP? 1 gooilwork. Beware of Imitation..\n_*F_r i A^eins wanted. Wrliu fe,r particulars,\nDundas Knitting M.iei-:r,s Co., Dundas, Ontario.\nJos. lluby.\na cure.\nSMI'IIOVKH central Toronto Properties to\noxohabge for farm lands. Money to loan.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lenity, llliickslnck, Ncsblll .'- Cuadwlch,\n5S Wellington Street K., Toronto.\nriVCACHF,l!-S d older Scholars can make\nM monsy oanvasslng for \"Farmers' Friend\nand Account Book.\" Send for circulars. WILLIAM ItlHGCS, Publisher Toronto.\nmOKONTO CI'T'I'IMI SCHOOL OFFERS\nfl unprecedented facilities for aequiring a\nthorough knowledge of Cucting In all its\nbrunettes; jilso agents for the McDowell Draft-\nng Mdohlno. Write for ei roulars,123 Yongo St.\nTIMDLElf & STEWART M'F'C, C37\nM VNt'F.UTl KKKri OF\nRUBBER. /HD METAL STAMPS,\nLodge SoVk School Seals, Oillco and Hank\nStamps, Stjtmps of every description,\n111 King Street West, Toronto.\nWrltofor Circulars.\nF YOU W8ULO 8AVE TIME AND MONEY\nSEW WIILIAMS SEfflXfl MACHINE\nAgents oyorywhere.\nDC YOU IMAGINE\nThft*pooprVwould have been regularly using\nour Toilei Soups since 1813 Iforty-soven long\nyears! if tiff\", had notbeen QOODI The public\nare not fool.and do not continue to buy goods\nunless they irosatisfactory.\n3!\":::.'E!^%.r.:\u00C2\u00A3,3r..:!E3-\nalbe;rt college\nBELLEVILLE, ONT\nOrantfl Diplomas in Commercial Scionco\nMunio. Km' An-, Elocution and Collegiate\ncourseB, t\nAw*'\"-'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'-.' \"\" **'*-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>??' a?'-- \\nIT IS A GREAT MISTAKE\nTo think that you must\nill-looking \\ncomfort, j\nare both\nPickering Collkgi-:\nWILL REOPEN SEPT 5th.\nA lii'.'b grade Boarding School for both uoxos.\nK \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 clep.iriiiieni- Preparatory, Collegiate,\nCommercial and Fine Arts. Klglit t.xperl-\neiieeii Traelii'i's. Terms Preparatory 9110.00.\nrogular 9105,00 por annum. Bonutlful mid\nhealthy location. Send for calondar to\n1 KINCIl'.M. ill; in.\n\"ickerlng On,\nwhile in wear.'\nThe J. I). KING CO. Lti\n70 KING EAST.\nRupture\nBest in tfli Wor!ci!i\nGet the Genuine!]\nSold Ev;: i/where!'\nGreatest Exhibition\nunci Kei eiei.iii tod a\nTETJSS\nWhich In- ual In tho world.\nHonor- tholasl Myonrs, Paris, Philadelphia,\nTonin oand whoreveroxhlbltod,\nCM BLUTHE,\n131 KING STP.EET WEST. TORONTO\n0|i|io-ito Rossln House.\n$3000\nEXCURSIONS\n; From all Stations in Ontario, llelum Rates to\nBstevan\nneliirnine | mno nt\\nMootumun efp\u00C2\u00A30\"Uu\nBinncni'lli |\nReston I\nRenlnn |\nMousojnw\nYnrltton I\ngtSS? I $35 00\nAlbert I\nEdmonton $4Q 00\n'in l.h.Wl; .M.I. POINTS IN Till. PROVINCE OF OXTAHIO, ON\nAUG. 15. return in.Ill OCT 16\nAtlO, 22. \" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 OCT. 22\nSEPT. 5, \" NOV. 5\nParties ticketing from other points should\nI ai i ML'-' to arrive at Toronto En time to oon\nnee', witli the 10:15p.m. train on above-\nI dati --.\nNORTHEY\n3. CO. LTD\n1,000,000\nACRES OF LAND\nfor sale by the 'Saint Pa it..\nDur.iTii Kail road\nCOHPAKT ii Minnesota. Eeud for Mapu and Cir *i\ \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!> *;\u00C2\u00BB *Iv \nOKANAGAN\nFALLS\nAI\nCity possessed of a Wonderful\nCombination of Advantages.\nAll Work Guaranteed,\nKeep in Stock a Full Supply of Bngineqrs' and\nMill Supplies, Pipe and Fittings, Brass\nGoods, steam Fittings, Etc,\nKstimalcs for Boilers and Kugiues on Application.\nSolo Manufacturers of tho Kendall Band Mill\nB.C. Shingle Machines. StflftQk _____[Hauling\nMachines, Marion Steam. SnfAreli\u00C2\u00A3^r>iipi'o\ ,,(i\nWinding Moist, Kijgcr uju'd*\" Hai'\nKing Ditching MaelttncffgW*\"'' '\nBallast l-uloaders, etc.\nAg-nts fin* OttuiflB\nRook Brill, and Ueevs>i\nMail Orders Receive Prompt jtftteiition.\"-\nJ. E. \"\V. Maoparlane, Manager\n.]. W. Campion, Sec.-Treas<\nf\nW. J. SNODGRASS\nManufacturer of\nLUMBER\nOf livery Description\nM\nGood\nPrinting\nNothing in business pays better:\nbill (here is very little of it, and i!\npays all the belter on that account.\nWhat we mean by good printing is\nBUcb as belits your business; neither\nabove nor below it; not mean in any\nway, nor extravagant ; but businesslike; pVoper; corret.\nIt costs no more than inferior work,\nand you are benefited by the favorable\nimpression which (he use of neat and\ncleanly printed office stationery makes\non those with whom you deal.\nThe little exlra attention required\non our part to turn out a good class of\nwork is compensated for by gaining\nand retaining your custom.\nThe Okanagan\nMining Review\nIt is the natural Distributing Point for tie whole\nof the Lower Okanagan Valley and the\nfamous Kettle River country.\nOkanagan Falls\nBritish Columbia\nBILL STUFF A SPECIALTY\nMILL AND OFFICE:\nOkanagan Falls, B. C.\nf\n\L>\nVJv\"\ne*\nSUBSCRIBE FOR\nOkanagan\nMining\nReview . .\n_i-i__y(_\u00C2\u00A3'i__\u00C2\u00A3lt__l:'t___i,' *!* \u00C2\u00A3'\u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A3'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n *\u00C2\u00BB> *,v*,v <*vViV <\u00C2\u00BBvvlv\n&\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC . .\nRAILWAY.\nTHE HIGHWAY OF THE WOULD\nSpeed, Safety, Economy of\nTime and Money!\nDaily Through Express Trains\nFROM\n-Coast 3E*o\u00C2\u00B1x2.*ti\u00C2\u00A3s\nBY THK FAMOUS\nDIRECT ROUTE\nTo Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton,\nOttawa, Halifax, Portland,\nNew York, Boston, Chicago\nand St. Paul.\nPassengers Booked To and From All\nEuropean Points.\n$2 PER YEAR\nOKANAGAN\nDining Hall\nJ. J. FORD, Proprietor\nFirst-Class Tallin\nSingle Mi'iils 50o,\nHoard per Week 811.0(1\nMain Street, . . Okanagan Falls\n^' For tlnio-tablos, rates, and full Informal]\napply to\nGEO. Mil.. IfltoWX, \u00C2\u00AB\nDistrict Pass. Agont, ViuioouvA'.'\nLOOMISTON\nORO AND -\nPENTICTON\nSTAGE LINE\nIn Connection \u00C2\u00A3~*\nwith....; '.... ^^\nShortest Route to Spokane Falls,\n'seattle, or any point\nBast or West\nStage loaves Loomiston at 12 noon Tuesdays,\nThursdays and Saturdays.\natago arrives at Loomiston at 10 a.m. Mondays,\nWed ni'sdays and Fridays.\nSinge leaves Oro at 7 a.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, arriving at Pentiolon at (i li.m.\nSinge leaves Penticton at 7 a.m. Tuesdays,\nThursdays and Saturdays, arriving at Oro at\n(i p.m.\nMakes connections at Penticton with C. P. H.\nstreamer Aherdeen and trains to all points.\nFor further particulars apply to\nII. C. NEWMAN,\nManager, Oro, \\*n.\nOr Oko. MoL, Bkown,\nHist. Pass. Agent, C.P.II,, Vancouver.\nINCE the announcement was made that a new City.bearing the name of Okanagan Falls, had .started into life\nthere have been numerous enquiries bearing on the subject. It has for some time been a SINK gu.\ .vox that a\ncity of importance must spring up somewhere in the Ok- nagan\ncountry, which for several years past has been attracting the\nattention of capitalists, not only on this continent but in'Great\nBritain as well. Its combination t f resources so richh aggregated, comprising mining, grazing, fruit-grcwing, etc., tnusi of\nnecessity evolve a city in its midst, which will be one of the\ncentres of the Province. This is just as certain as the fuct that\nat the terminus of the CP.RI.on the Pacific coast there was\nbound to lie a se.i?|>ort eitv 6A importance. The qi:csi ion_if\nlocation is to be decided by th* cnncUtS&ns \"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB' invoranii' lo\"\nUrban growth. These conditious, as will be shown in answer\nto some of the numerous received, are all comprised iu the\nsituation of Okanagan Falls.\nOne question asked is, \"Where and what is Okanagan\nFalls?\" In reply, it is the nucleus of a city, the prospects of\nwhich are not surpassed by any other on the Pacific coast;\nsituated at the foot of Dog lake, in the famous Okanagan valley, B.C. Had the conditions for a prosperous and populous\ncity been especially stipulated and ordered as the work of nature,\nthey could not have combined more favorably to produce success. The first and most, natural question to arise in the mind\nof any common-sense man is, \" What is there to make a city\nat Okanagan balls?\" Unless such a question is fully and fairly\nanswered, any person endeavoring to place in the market town-\nsite property, backed up with glittering promises of a rich\nreturn, may fairly be regarded with suspicion and distrust.\nReaders are requested to carefully consider the reasons here\nadvanced in support of the strong faith the promoters have in,\nthe future of Okanagan Falls.\nIn the first place, Okanagan Falls is likely to be the\nterminus, of the Canadian Pacific & Okanagan Steamboat line ; it is in the line ofa the only possible pass which\ncan be utilized by the C.P.R. south cf the present line, or, in\nother words, via the Crow's Nest Pass route to the Pacific\nCoast ; it is the proposed terminus of the Spokane & Northern\nRailway, and of the Okanagan & Osooyos Railway, to connect\nwith the Great Northern at the boundary. It will be preeminently a railway and mining centre.\nIt is the natural outlet for the greatest gold mining region\non the continent, a country which also \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 possesses immensely\nrich deposits of silver, lead, coal, platinum, iron, etc. For\nproof of this, see Dr. Dawson's reports and the annual reports\nof tlu: .Minister (if Mines;\nIn the next place, it is being built by the side of a mag-\nnificcni waterfall, capable of generating a horse-power of between 50,000 and 100,000 at a very low cost, sufficient to\noperate all the mining machinery, reduction work', tramways,\nsawmills and other industries in it or in the country surround*\ning it. Being easy of access and having unexcelled transportation facilities in prospect, Okanagan Falls will naturally attract\nall the industries referred to which the country will demand.\nThe country also abounds in Coal and Wood.\nHOLMAN & LOEWEN\nGeneral ~Agents\ny \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n605 Hastings Street, Vancouver, B.C."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Okanagan Falls (B.C.)"@en . "Okanagan_Mining_Review_1893_09_23"@en . "10.14288/1.0311677"@en . "English"@en . "49.35"@en . "-119.56667"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Okanagan Falls, B.C. : Okanagan Mining Review"@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 . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Okanagan Mining Review"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .