"49b67618-12c1-4718-a6c6-cf08cfddd9d3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-30"@en . "1899-09-09"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/silsil/items/1.0312952/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ,\nAnd Up To Oafe\nMining Hews\nTHE SILVEETONIAN.\nOf The Richest\nCamp Of British\nColumbia.\nJ\nVOLUME THREE.\nSILVERTON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SATURDAY,\n.|ttDWlto being driven on the \io_*\ni! one of the promising properties\nS'giugtoEd. Stewart.\nVtorceo. men are being employed by\nllC owners of the Martin Group on Wll\n1 iu extending the government\n- fio iheir property. This new\nJ, pt trail will be alxmUei long when\nboat brought\nOn the\ni trin\ntorapleted.\nOs Tuesday, HlllBro-\nZtrom their mill a buff lotdej\n7,000 feet of lumber. Thi. lumber\n,J5 bv the Wakefield Mines,\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E of \u00E2\u0080\u009E going into the flume betag\n;\u00E2\u0080\u009Eilttu M1p,,ly water and power for the\nntrator to be erected.\ncast fork of Wilson creek and\nHoming the Martin Group is a promia-\n,i prospect belonging to 3. Libby. On\n,ia prop -rty i\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00C2\u00AB concentrating pro-\nMitlon over 50 feet wide, being an\nItered quartslte dvke carrying values in\nliver and lead. Specimens assaying as\niK|- as L-OO ounces in silver and tt5 per\nml to the ton being obtainable.\n.1. K. Daniels, deputy collector of cus-\nita- at Northport, haa lieen authorl7.ed\nv Ilie I'nited stales treasury depart-\n,enl to receive free ol dutv all ores Irom\nritish Columbia which arc eonsianed to\nio Spokane Industrial Exposition min-\ndepartment, provided their are\n*d in quantities of no commercial\nAll shipments, should be ad-\n,| to H. Holster, Manager ol bpo-\nIndnstrlal Exposition, Mining\n,'pirliiient.\nHILL'S IN LUCK\nYY. Lnney who left Silveiton a lew\nmaths ni* i ou a proapeatb.il trip through\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Hound.*v and Kettle River country,\ni struck il big ou Copper creek, a\ni.i.nv ol the Kettle River. He\nixl hU partner, J. L ferny, discovered\nnl located abat U Mown as the Lottie\n.liroup, a big copper dyke over 600\nlet wide, irom which assavs can bc\nlitained running aa high as 40 per cent\n{Upper. An oir.r to l\u00C2\u00BBond (or tbe sum of\nbo.Otvi has beeu rofuiedb. the owners-\nSEPTEMBER 9, 1899.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0r.u\nlipi\nliiin\nir- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\nLn-\nsoon be accumulated on our dock. The\nshowing in tbe mine is immense. Two\nfeet of solid clean galena carrying large\nquantities of grey copper and ruby silver\nis the showing in the face of tbe drift,\nAt no time previous has there been such\nlarge bodies ol reserve ore blocked out\nand ready to be stoped. The managei\nstates that heavy shipments of ore to\nthe smelter will be again resumed in a\nfew days. This property ia being stocked\nand the miners working in the mine are\nvolunteeriog their services and askint*\nfor their pay in stock in the new company being formed. This of itself is\nevidence that the Noonday of Silverton\nIsa paying proposition.\nSTEADY DEVELOPMENT.\nAmong other claims on Wilson creek\non which considerable development\nwork is being done is the Jennette.\nThis mine, for it bas virtually passed tbe\nprospect stage, lies up the creek about\nsix miles from Rosebery. A force of ten\nmen are given steady employment and\nthe development work is being driven\nnight and day. The mine is opened by\ntunnels the longest one of which is now\nin .'1-tO leet. The ore from this vein\ngives assays ranging from 200 to 800\nounces to the ton. Preparations are\nbeing made to work a large force of men\non this property during (he ensuing\nwinter aud large buildings are being\nerected for their accuumiodation. The I\nJeannette will ho ainon** the lirst ol the I\nBoeebery mines to become a\nshipper,\nNUMBER il\nTHE GALENA MINES,\nTho new owners of the Galena Mines\nhave stated, in late interviews granted\nnewspaper representatives, that they\nintend to commence operations at once\non that property. That they intend lo\nexpend a large amount of money on improved machinery and that a concentrator will be among the first things to\nbe erected. This is encouraging news to\nthe citizens of Silverton, many of whom\nbelieve the Galena Mines to ono of our\nbiggest properties. It is to bo hoped\nthat the statements given out are correct\nand Ihat Mr. Hand the new manager\nwill have work commenced at once on\nIhi* near-by property\nBut I hear it callin' still, as\ndown to rest,\nAn' I dream the Voice\nnever lied,\nThat I hear a people comin'\nPeople of tbe West\nAn' maybe 'twas his voice\nto guide.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Clive Phillips-Woolley in London\nSpectator,\nI lay me\nI love has\nthe Great\ncallin' ms\nADVERTISING TUE FACT-\nsteady\nTill'. REDWOOD.\nEVELYN BONDED.\n\ mud for one year bas l-een given bv\n|ihowners,W.Brown, W. Horton and\nW Kyte, on tbo Evelyn claim to\ni. -: M \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 l> malilot Sand jn. This claim\nac* just \u00C2\u00BB*-low the Baftalo, In the Reed\nliil Itoblnson gulch. lt has a well\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2il ledge nl concentrating ore that\ndim\nand has\nNo time\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ma ol the bell lurtace showings in the\nvicinity of Skcan t'itv is on the Red-\nwood claim on Dayton creek. This,\nprospect whi.'h belongs to .!. W. Kyte,\nGeo. Sioll and Martin Isaaeaon, lies in'\nthe granite formation on Ihe right hand\nside of the gulch an.l about one mile\n'rom the Evening Star Mine. The ledge\nwhich ts Irom eighteen inches to three\nfeet wide, has been traced for aerer.*\nhundred feet. The paystreak which\ngives average values ol 80 ounces ol silver snd 112. ip gold to the ton, varies\nfrom six inches to one foot in width-\nThe ore is what is known as dry or\nsiliceous ore. carrying considerable iron\nsulphides and a small percentage of lead\nand running well In both tbe precious |\nmetals.\nCharles A. Mackay, President of the\nNelson Miners' Union, and the accredited representative of the min ers' unions\nat Nelson. Sandon, Rossland, Whitewater, Ymir and Silverton, is in the\ncity. He is in tho east to impress the\nfact that a miners'strike is in progress\nin the Kootenay country, British Columbia. His presence is due, he says, to\nthe fact that the mine owners have bad\nan agent here seeking to engage miners\nunder contract to work in the mines\nthat 'lo not pay the union wages. He\nhas been at Rat Portage, Sudbury and\nParry Sound, and will proceed from here\nto Nova Scotia to notify tlie miners\nthere.\nOn June 1 last a law came into io rce\nin Hiitish Columbia making eizht hours\na day's work iu the minea. The work\nbefore tbat was done in ten hour shifts\nand the wages paid were $3.50 a day.\nWith the decreased honr. a number ol\nthe mine owners cut down the pay 50\ncents a day and the men went on strike.\nAt present only about a third oi tha total number of mints are not paying the\nunion bcnle ot wages. No fixed scale\nwaa eel by the unions, but they demanded that the same amount thould lie paid\nfor eiuht hours' work as had heretofore\nbeen paid for ten. The chief difficulty\nis in the Slocan country, where Mr\nMackay says the mine owners are nearly\nall Americans.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Toronto ;ilobe.\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ragca over six feet in width\nill traced a long disl.mcc.\nbum lost in getting to work on it. a\n'mnletcoulflt being sent up Wednesday\nfde property will now 1)0 thoroughly\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.oped.\nHI-Y HBADYllUBQ.\nWork is now being pushed vigorously\nj-ii tne Hume that is to supply the water\nsnd power for the Wakefield eoncen-\niratnr. W.C. K. Koch whs has the\npnlract, of not Only koildlng the flume\n[ait also for furnishing every thiug used\n|n us construction, has the work now\nunder way. The flume is to be a\nlittle over ono mile in length and will\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ornish nmple power for tho proposed\nMl, Tho Emily Edith wagon road is\nilto lieiug built by Mr. Koch, who has a1\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2resent over 40 men employed on his\nrarioiw contracts in tbis district. He\nKpeotg to increase his force to 75 men\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ithin thc next few days.\nINACCURATE STATEMENTS.\nThe New Denver Ledge with its usual\ninaccuracy in giving mining news, comes\nout with a blathering piece about tbe\nNoonday mine of this place, leading the\npublic lo believe tbat Ihe present management, Stewart Bros, and Penedum.\nhad sold out or wero about to transfer\ntheir lease and bond and interest acquired\nby I hem to Percy Dickenson of Slocan\nCity, and that Mr. Dickenson bad\nTHE WESTEHN PIONEER.\nI can hear the willows whispering, 'way\ndown the arctic slope.\nEvery shivering little leaflet gray with\nfear;\nThere's no color in lhe heavens, and on\nearth there seems no hope,\nAnd tho shadow of the winter's on the\nyear.\nAn' its lonesome, lonesome, ionesotne,\nwhen the russet gold is shed,\nAn' the naked world stands waiting for\nthe Doom;\nWith the northern witch-fires dancing in\nthe silent overhead,\nAn' my camp-lire just an island in the\ngloom.\nalready purchased tbe property and was I When tbe very bears are hiding from tbo\nto havo poaession in two months Such j Terror that's to come\n,, '. .... . . i_i_.ji__ An the unseen wiiil's above me whislle\ninformation as this is entirely misleading, j 6oml).\nThe situation regarding IhiB property ill When except Ihe grnanine pine-trees\nttvs Stewart Bros, and Benedum are and the willows, Nature's dumb,\nthe owners of a one fourth interest in the AmMhe river roadway freezes to its\nNoonday mine, tbey havo also a bond\n' strike the home trail\nIfrotn\nTHE MAPLE LEAK.\nAbout one mile from Rosebery and\njoining tho Royal Five Group is the\nPlaple Leal claim, This property is one\n[I Hoselrery's most promising prospectB\nsnd is owned by tt. Malloy and W.\ntiith of Sllvertou. The vein, which is\nIS inches to three feet wide, has\n\u00C2\u00ABen traced, on the property, for over\n1 feet, numerous open cuts have been\nfUO on it and a shaft started, on which\nlionsiderable work will be done this\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0winter. The vein lies In a granite for-\nlllRtioi- nnd the ore is dry, carrying\nlvalues of lift outces In Bilver and |18. in\nIRohl to the torii ]t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E a -00- surface\n[\"'lowing and with work should make a\nImini*.\nand lease on the other three quarters\nand on this bond they have made the\nfirst payment, another payment not\nbeing due yet for 60 days. It appears\nthat Percy Dickenson, ol Slocan City,\nhas purchased, for cash, from the other\nowners, their interests, amounting to\nthree quarters, and subject to the boud\ngiven by them to Stewart Bros, and\nRer.edum. Tbe piice was slightly\nless than that for which tho bond calls.\nMr. Dickenson will mako as profit the\ndifference between his pun base price and\nthat which he will receive from Stewart\nBros, and Benedum when they take up\ntho bond on the property, which without\ndoubt they will do when due, if not\nbefore.\nTHE NOONDAY.\nOre is a^ain being brought down from\nVANCOUVER GROUP,\nThe Vancouver company which is\noperating the Vancouver Group above\nSilverion, has lately been reorganized\nand made much stronger. The object ol\nthus strengthening ihis company was to\nenable them to pursue operations on a\nmuch larger scale than formerly. An\nera of deep mining will be inaugurated\nby this company and tho question as to\nwhether there is 11 body <>l galena ore\nunderlying tbo lino r,ono in that property\ndemonstrated. This company has so far\nboen very sucuessful iu their mining\noperations and have always |had the\nvery best of managers in charge ot their\nRut I cannot strike the home trail. I\nwould uot if I could,\n\n'I want no othe'r smoke across my\nskv;\nWhen I drop, I'll drop alone, asalone I've\nalius stood,\nOn thc frontier where I've led, let me\ndie.\nI wonldbn't know men's language, I\ncouldn't think their thought,\nI couldn't bear the hurry of mankind ;\nWhere every acre's built on, where all\nGod made is bought.\nAnd they'd almost made a hireling of\nthe wind.\nI've been alius iu the lead since I grew\ngrass high,\nSince my lather's prairie schooner left\nthe Known,\nFor a port beyond the sky line, never\nseen hy human eye,\nWhere God aud God's creation dwell\nalone.\nWay back 1 heard men callin', one woman's voice waa (ond,\nAn' Ihe rich lands towards harvest\nmurmured, ''Rest.\"\nBut a sweeter voice kept callin' from the\nUnexplored Boyoud,\nA wild voice in tho mountains callin'\n\"West.\"\nI heard il in the foothills\u00E2\u0080\u0094then I climbed\nthe Great Divide;\nIn the Canyon\u00E2\u0080\u0094then I faced the rapid s\nIo the little bre<\u00C2\u00BBse at dawning, in the\ndusk at eventide,\nThe voice that kept a callin' went before\nMv crooked b'inds aro empty, my six-*\nio,1 frame is bent,\nThere ain't nothing but my trail to\nleave behind.\nAn' the voice that I havo followed has\nnot told me .vhat it meant,\nWork on tbe new school house was\ncommenced on Wednesday by tho local\ncontractors.\nWork on the Rathborn cottage is\nnearing completion and that building\nwill be one of the neatest and cosiest\ndwellings in the camp.\nSeveral of our young folk attended a\nsocial dance ln New Denver last Thurs-\nj day evening. The \"Alert\" made a\nI special run for tbe visitors.\nAll Wilds, B. Kneebone, J. Connor\nI and R. A. Sait, who are interested in\n! some good properties near Slocan City,\n! returned to Silveiton on Wednesday,\nW. C. E. Koch, who has numerous\nfreighting and road building contracts in\nthe Silverton district, will erect a large\nbarn on the Lake front, for tho accommodation of bis work stock.\nI'. I.. Chiislie, Barrister of Sandon\nB. 0. will be at the Selkirk Hotel every\nFriday iu tbe future. Anything requiring his services will he attended to by\nbin. +\nG. W. Grimmett of Sandon will conduct the services iu the church to-morrow\nin the place of Rev. A. E. Robert, who\nwill occupy a Nelson pulpit. Service\nwill commence at 3 p. m. as usual.\nThe house being erected for J.M. M.\nI Benedum on Lake Ave., is uow ready\nfor lhe lathers. Mr. Benedum's new-\ncottage will make a beautiful home, and\nis a credit to our enterprising townsman.\nAll work in tbe Jewelry Repairing\nline, left at lhe Silverton Drug Store, will\nbe promptly forwarded to Jacob Dovei,\nthe well-know 11 Nelson jeweler. All repairs are quakantekh i-*ok onk, ykak. *\nA subscription list was drawu up last\nMonday evening to raise funds for the\nFootball Club and before the business\nhouses bail closed, over *f50. bad been\nturned into the treasury. As all thc\ngames played by tho team are free to\nspectators, a subscription is tbe only\nexpense-raising scheme open to the\nClub.\nA. P. McDonald has secured the Silverton agency for the sale of Lethbridgo\ncoal aud expects to do a good business in\nblack diamonds this winter. As there is\nno better coal mined than tbe Lethbridge\nproduct, we have no doubt that Mr. McDonald's energy will be substantially\nrewarded. The first carload of coal will\nbe here next week.\nIt is said that Slocan City is preparing\na challenge (or tbe local footb:*ll club\nto meet tbe Slocan team next week.\nNew Denver is also said to be practising\nfur a game. Sil.erton has played np to\ndate ten matches. Allot Slocan City's\ngames have been with the red and white,\nthey having won one of the matches,\ndrawn one and lost two. Could not\nNew Denver and Slocan City be brought\ntogether?\nThe Silverton Literary Society held its\nfirst regular meeting on Wednesdav\nevening, with a good attendance. The\nfollowing program was rendered.\nAddress, hy tbo President.\nSong, Mr, VV. Gilbert,\nReading, Miss Barr.\nSong, Miss Brandon.\nEssav, \"James Wbitcombe Riley\"\nby Mrs. Yates.\nLIBERAL CONSERVATIVES UNION\nAs will be seen by our advertising\ncolumns, the Liberal-Conservative Union\nwill hold its annual meeting in New\nWestminster on the 5th of Oetober next.\nThe meeting should have some very interesting matters to discuss, and the ex\npeeled announcement of a genera'\nelection, which many of our eastern exchanges are propheoylng, should mako\ntbe meeting an eventful one for Conservatives in British Columbia. The Union\nbas a good local membership and doubtless a strong Silverton deelgation will be\npresent when President Wilson calls the\nmeeting to order in New Westminster,\nprof. Montgomery of Trinity College,\nToionto, who is one of the best known\nmineralogists in Canada, spent part of\nthe week on Ten Mile creek. The\nAn' tbo eyes that sought a sign nro Koyai Standard was tho property exam-\nnearly blind. | )W&.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A29\no\nN\nGENERAL\nMERCHANTS.\n*\n\u00C2\u00A9llvextoaa., S. C-\nT# :m. ixl* _B-g_v_Eor>xj_M:.\nASS\nSilverton,\nB.C.\nt:\n::\nSILVERTON\n3! DRUG STORE.\nPATENT MEDICINES, PURE BRlIfiS,\n^^mmm^m^^mWaWA\WamwmwaWmm \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-^---^----\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0--\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-fc*\nMineral Glasses and Compasses.\nPerfumes and Toilet Articles.\nLake Ave - - - Silverton, B.C.\n1\nLAKEVIEW HOTEL\n Silverton\n(STTHLS HOTEL IS NEW AND NEATLY FURNISHED,\nTHE BAR 1.8 SUPPLIED WITH BEST BRANDS OF\nWINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS.\nId. -L\u00C2\u00A3- Knowles. -Prop,\nPatronise Home Industries.\nn-\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2- ---\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*- -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nearly Dll-Ui\n,|1>^\"^*tt^^nTC\"ia'_,r\"\u00C2\u00BB ^uHc^-:**^*i,itSJ-vJcV**1 * * >\u00C2\u00BBet&mrrit \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-<*.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ***** ro^wc-Nib \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*-> *mtee*r*%eA<*ttv wavm\n.MAILORDERS PROMPTLY AND CAREFULLY ATTKNDED TO.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0**.** 4a**uAau tMif-Msac**;*-- tx*^t**tetrwm\ \u00C2\u00AB-<\u00C2\u00AB>,*\u00C2\u00ABi\u00C2\u00ABm\nHEAD OFFICE...,\n#*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094**\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00AB.\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB tUAt^stAtuusstsle><.'dAAc*jSttsty**mr\nNELSON, B, 0.\nW eiis*.,^*****..\nM^iN^'\u00C2\u00AB^;\u00C2\u00AB^4;^r->^\u00C2\u00AB^^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB-\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> Ms* r.\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* .-**,*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i*m THE SILVERTONIAN, SILVERTON, B. C.\nDIGS THROUGH I Wi\nJEWS OP THE WORLD 19 BRIEF.\nA Complete He*, lew ol(t_o Invent, tor\nthe Past Week lu Till, and For*-lK\u00C2\u00BB\nI\u00E2\u0080\u009E-.ndi\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sui-ma-lse- l'*rom .tlie Latest Dispatches.\nHilly Boyle, a notorious character of\nMontana, is dead.\nThe big battleship Wisconsin will aoon\nbe ready for her triul trip.\nAguinaldo, a Japanese paper claims, waa\nassassinated hy General Pilar a short time\nago.\nMajor John M. Logan, son of the late\nOeneral Logan, has been assigned to the\nThirty-third infantry.\nThe builder'* trial trip of the Alabama\nbattleship resulted in developing a inuxi-\nmum speed of 17 1-4 knots.\nNotice has been given that the option\non window glass plants, whieh expires\nSeptember 1, will not be renewed, and that\nthe combination which was to have been\nmade has been abandoned.\nThe steamer San Salvador, in leaving\nRio De Janeiro, came into collision with\nthe United Stutes cruiser Montgomery,\ncausing some damage.\nJames Jeffords, the big heavyweight uf\nCalifornia, knocked out Nick Burley of\nPortland in two minutes at the Olympic\nAthletic Club, Portland.\nThe Keokuk express on the Rock Island ran off the track near Elgin, 111. The\nengine, baggage, mail and smoking cars\nwere demolished, the engineer, fireman,\nbaggageman and mail clerk injured. None\nof the passengers is reported seriously\nhurt. The accident was due to a broken\nwheel on the engine.\nRalph Drought, son of Henry Drought,\na merchant of Wardner, Idaho, waa run\nover and killed by the 0. R. k \u00C2\u00BBN. passenger train. He wus deaf and dumb.\nThere is active recruiting everywhere,\nand the Peruvian government continues\nto send troops to the interior. Business\nis at a standstill, and the mines are shutting down.\nRioting and disorder broke out in connection with the strike on the lines of\nthe Big Consolidated railway in Cleveland, 0., and four cars were nearly demolished, while the crews were compelled to\nflee for their lives.\nlt was reported at El Paso, Tex., on\ngood authority that Mrs. Rich, who .killed\nher husband, hud been taken from Juare-.\nto Chihuahua, Mex., under a strong guard\non the previous dsjr. An investigation\nproved that report \u00E2\u0080\u009Eto be without foundation.\nJoe Choynski was given 'the decision\nover Australian Jimmy Hyan at the end\nof a 20-round go in Dubuque, la., for the\nlightweight championship of the world.\nWith about 100 conin-issioned places yet\nto fill in the 10 new regiments under organization, Secretary Root finds himself\noverwhelmed with applications, even\ngreater in number than the sum total of\nthose received at the beginning of the\nSpanish-American war,\nA Burlington train was wrecked near\nBarnard, Mo., on the Creston branch of\nthat road. Engineer Chris wus instantly\nkilled and Conductor Metlier and Fireman\nSmith were fatally hurt. The wreck was\ncaused by the train running into cattle.\nW. L. Chambers, chief justice of the\nSamoan islands, has arrived iu Washington.\nThere were disastrous forest fires in\nthc southern portion of Calhoun county,\nArk., this week.\nThere wus grave apprehension of trouble .Monday during the progress of the\nLabor duy parade in Cleveland, O.\nThc president and Mrs. McKinley, accompanied by Assistant Secretary (Jortcl-\nyou, have arrived at the capital.\nThe single taxers of New York arranged for a big demonstration in celebration\nof thc 00th anniversary of the birth of\nHenry tieorge.\nHis holiness, Pope Bophronlus, patriarch\nof the Orthodox Urcek church of Alexandria, Libya, Ethiopia and all Egypt, is\ndead, aged 103.\nThe Quaker City lias donned ita best\nbib and tucker ih honor of the visitors\nto the national U. A. R. encampment,\nhehl there this week.\nAs a result of a saloon brawl in Chicago, in which a score \u00C2\u00B0' \"ten participated,\nseveral were injuied by Hying bullets,\nand the establishment wrecked.\nA pleasure yacht on the Man nice river\ncapsized near Ironvillc, 0., and it is believed the entire company aboard, nine\nmen and women, were drowned.\nA violent cyclone raged recently in\nthe Azores Islands, doing much damage U\nTlie Kansas and Washington regiments\nare loaded on the transports; two battalions of thc Thirteenth infantry have relieved Ta_anuble stronghold of the bunds\nwhich have been destroying plantations and levying tribute on the people\nof Negros, was taken by the Sixth infantry under Lieutenant Colonel Byrne. The\nonly means of reaching Ihe town was up\nun almost perpendicular hill, covered with\ndense shrubbery and a thousand feet high.\nThe Americana accomplished this under\nlire, although nn ollicer and several men\nwere hit aiid rocks were rolled down on\nthem. The nativestrehgth was estimated\nat 400. -Many of Ihe rebels were wounded\nand captured and 21 were killed.\nThe American for.es captured a quantity of stores and destroyed (he fottill.'U-\ntions.\nThe shipping coinmi*\u00C2\u00BBioncr at Manila, a\nKilipino hitherto iu high standing, has\nbeen arrested, charged with appropriating\na half mouth's salary and levying month-\nly thereafter an assessment from all the\nnative sailors shipped from this port, lt\nis represented that he held a commission\niu the insurgent army and was raising\nfunds for the insurrection, but it is\nthought thai his operations were merely\nprivate blackmail.\nThe Insurgents made an unsuccessful\nattempt to drive Colonel Smith's command out of Angeie. with artillery, the\nlirst time Ihey have attempted to use\nthis arm for muni lis. They brought two\nKrupp guns from Porta and tired eight\nshrapnels at the town at dawn. Only a\nfew of the shells exploded and the aim\nof the gunners being had no damage was\ndene. Lieutenant Kenney's guns of the\nFirst artillery were brought inlo action\nimmediately and soon drove the enemy\nfrom their position.\nHoera Await the Outbreak.\nCape Town, Sept. 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Reports received\nhere from various outlying districts of the\nTransvaal describe them as being in a\nstate of excitement. The burghers, it i-\nsaid, are watching the developments\nkeenly, but the majority of them hope for\na peaceful settlement of the crisis. There\nis a general exodus of British subjects\nfrom the large towns.\nSon Domlii-ro'a Chief.\nPuerto Plato, Sept. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Snn Domingo\nThe air Ib clearest at Arequlpa,\nPeru. From the observatory at that f . .\nnian_ -nr-n #\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009Et -i\u00E2\u0084\u00A2, \u00C2\u00BB_ . ... I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\">\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 l \"*' capital, has declared for Jim-\nT'on^neh \u00C2\u00AB T ,' * \ * a\"* \"\"* Telegraphic, postal and railroad com-\n;.? , \ n \u00E2\u0080\u009ElameUr* \u00C2\u00BB,aced on munioation ha. been restored wit-out oen*\n\"^E-f'^ir* JoimPollock.wa188h\"t ^h'te d'sc, has been seen on Mount gor.lnp throughout the country. Tlm\nand killed, William Thayer seriously in - Charchanl, a distance of 11 miles,' members of tin\nTruln Struck the Slide.\nTacoma, Sept. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094On the Northern Pacific tracks east of Palmer, on the west\nside of the mountains, is a huge pile of\nrocks and mud. Into this huge pile crashed an east-bound freight train, hurling the\nengine into (ireen river below, and injuring K-glnoer Wiley, the fireman and head\nhrakeman. How seriously these men are\ninjured it is impossible to learn of the\nrailroad officials.\nThc scene of the accident is in a narrow\ncanyon, thc sides rising precipitously,\nwhile a short distance below is the rushing Green river, a mountain torrent.\nAdmiral Watson i*. Quite in.\nBoston, Sept. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A letter received here\nfrom nn officer with Admiral Watson at\nManila, dated July 20, says thut the admiral is very ill, no improvement in his\ncondition having been shown since the\n11th, thc date of the accident which threatened to destroy the launch and to which\ntho attack is attributed. It is understood\nthat he will ask to he at once released.\nnred nnd about eight men hurl. I through a 13-Inch telescope.\nnk-BM-^^^^UM ^.i**-.-^-.*--!*'**^ **,-*_,\nA new woman's club Is to be started\nmembers of the provisional government In London to which no one under bIx\n__ _}v\u00C2\u00B0__*!*. S_.ntia4J\u00C2\u00B0 for tLe capital. | feet tn height will be admitted\n-_-, . -a.***** 4tr **&.<***** \u00C2\u00AB*._\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* stria i-v*. <*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB.\u00C2\u00BB -*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2/,, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00C2\u00AB* ***-. wmm,^.\nIDAHO .lOTKS.\nThe result of the queen voting contest for the state fair is increasing ln\nInterest daily.\nGovernor Steunenberg and party\nwill accompany the volunteers on their\njourney home.\nRain has improved the ranges In all\nparts of the state, and stock is in excellent condition.\nThe state militia is showing up In\ngood shape, and ull the members seem\nto be taking an active Interest.\nThe Idaho volunteers who left Manila on the 3l8t ult., on the transport\nGrant have reached San Francisco.\nLarge shipments of apples, plums\nand peaches are being made from this\nstate to the eastern market this year.\nMining interests in the Nine Mile\ncountry are such as would indicate a\nboom in that vicinity ln the near future.\nFrost injured the vines of potatoes,\nbeans and melons In the northern part\nof the state last week. The damage\nwill not be great.\nThe Boise Gun club has accepted the\nchallenge of the De Lamar club for a\nmatch, and the event will come off on\nSeptember 15 in Boise.\nRalph Drought, son of Henry\nDrought, a merchant ot Wardner, was\nrun over by the O. R. k N. passenger\ntrain. He was deaf and dumb.\nThe grain harvest In Ada county Is\nalmost complete; threshing Is ln progress and threshers report grain turning out better than was expected.\nThe prospect of the main line being\nbrought through Boise has already had\na marked effect upon the real estate\nmarket and property is rapidly advancing In price.\nThe three-year-old daughter of\nGeorge Merrill, living near Nampa,\nwas killed last week by a colt, which\nkicked her, the hoof striking directly\nover the heart.\nThe work of computing the assessed\nvaluation of the state as equalized has\nbeen completed. The total shows It to\nbo $40,248,412.33, as against $30,423,-\n671.95 last year.\nAttorney Sam McFarland, brother of\nR. McFarland, ex-attorney general for\nthe. state, now a resident of Lewiston,\narrived in Kendrick last week greatly\nexhausted, after being lost In the mountains for nbout 15 hours.\nThe total assessed valuation of the\nrailroads for the state Is $8,290,4r.2, of\ntelegraph lines $94,799.31, and tiie telephone lines $51,169.76. The first conn.\nty In assessed valuation Is Ada with\n$\"),180,271, the second Latah with\n$4,038,907.26.\nComplete returns of Lewlston's assessor show the valuation of taxable\nproperty ln the city to be $830,912.80,\na gain over last year of ver a quarter\nof a million of taxable property. The\nnumber of school childron In the district by the census just taken Is 1031,\na gain over last year of 231.\nGeorge Flood, a motorman In tho\nHunker Hill mill yards, was making a\ncoupling between a lumber car and another car, when the brakes slipped,\nstarting the train, which threw him\nofT his balance. While falling ono of\nhis feet caught between the two cars,\nbreaking his leg just above the ankle!\nAll Will Soon Iletarn.\nManila, Sept. 2 \u00E2\u0080\u0094Of the troops about to\nreturn lo thc United Stales, the Kansas\nmen will leave on hoard the transport Tartar; the Washington regiment on hoard\nthe Pennsylvania, and the Nevada cavalry on lhe Ohio. All these departures\nwill occur within the next Meek.\nFight hundred men of the Kansas regiment will return, and 200 will remain at\nManila, 150 of them re-enlistlng. Three\nofficers and 30 men of the Kansans were\nkilled and 19 ofllcers and men died from\ndisease during lhe smullpox epidemic,\nwhile 128 members of the regiment were\nwounded.\nOf the Washington 8715 men are embarking, while eight ofllcers and 200 men\nwill slay, mosl of them re-enlisting iu\nthe new* regiment*, forming here. One of\nthe ofllcers of the regiment was killed,\none was wounded and one died from dis-\nease: 24 men were killed and 128 were\nwounded and nine died.\nAffairs In Trntiavaul.\nUndnn, Sept. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Judging from surface indications an altogether new phase\nseems to have come over the Transvaal\ncrisis. The tables have been turned and\nnow if is Joseph Chamberlain, the seere-\ntarv of state for the colonics, who proposes further conferences. In this and\nother respects the official negotiations present a more pacific uspeet than last week.\nBut with the bare exception of these negotiations every other circumstance points\nto war. Whether, as has been suggested\niu these dispntehes, higher powers thtu\nMr. Chamberlain have interfered in the\ninterests of peace or whether the secretary\nhas taken a leaf out of the book of President Kruger, of the Transvaal, meaning\nproems!ination, can scarcely lie determined at Ihis stage.\nAn English (Ind.) clergyman refuses to pay poll tax on the ground that\nhe is church property; the property of\nthe congregation as much as is the pastoral residence, and that, aa such, he\nIs exempt from taxation, the same as\nthe parsonage.\nTo prevent the bursting of water\npipes when freezing a uew Invention\nhas an expansion chamber formed ln\nthe upper side of a section of the pipe,\nfilled with air, which Is compressed by\nthe expansion of the water to Increase\nthe area inside the pipe.\nOne of Uncle Sam's Alaskan Islands\ncan boast the largest stamp mill In the\nworld. It has r.40 stamps, and crushes\nquartz enough daily to give $8,640 In\ngold, which the other mills ln the plant\nIncrease to $14,000.\nIn 1886-7 there were 209!) professors\nand Instructors at all the universities\nof Germany. In 1896-7 the numlier was\n2494, an increase of 19 per cent In a\ndecade.\nSome Paris friends of one of the victims of the Bourgogne disaster have offered the sum of $30,000 as a reward\nfor any one who will give an Impetus\nto the discovery of life-saving apparatus.\nElectricity has been applied to the\nmanufacture of glass. A pot of \"batch\"\nran be thus melted In 15 minutes that\nformerly required 30 hours.\nKaslo I Slocan\nTIME CARD.\nTrain* Run on PaclAc Standard Time.\nLsava. Arrlva.\nGoing Weat. Dally. Oolng Kaat.\nJ no s. in Kaslo IU p. m.\n1:31 a. in South Fork 1:10 p. m.\n1:10 a. m Bproule'i l:-> p. m.\n.lb t. m Whitewater 1:10 p. m\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Vt t. in Hear Lake 1:00 p. m.\n10:11 a. m McGuigan l 41 p. m\n10:16 a. io Ilulley's l.M p. m.\n10:31 a. m.... Cody Junctl. n .... 1:11 p. ro.\nArrive. Leave.\n10:40 a. m Bandon 1:11 p. m.\nCODY BRANCH.\nLeavt 11:00 a. m..Bandon..Arrlvs 11:40 *. m.\nArrlva 11:16 a. m...Cody... Leave ll.\u00C2\u00BB a. m.\nO. F. COPELAND, Superintendent.\n..\u00E2\u0080\u009E Kootenay \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nRailway and Navigation\nCompany,\nIII If Guns to Siiluie Dewey.\nSan Francisco, Aug. 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two 10 ton\nguns will leave Mare Island for Vermont,\nwhin they will boom a salute from the\nliills surrounding Admiral Dewey's native town of Montpelier when tlie ll.igsliip\nis sighted off Sandy Hook.\nOperating Kaslo A Slocan Railway, International Nav. & Trading Co.\nSchedule of Time-Pacific Standard Tlroa.\nKASU) A 81*>CAN RT.\nPassenger train for Bandon and way\nstations, leaves Kaslo at 1:00 a. m.\nDally, reluming, leaves Bandon at 1:11\nP m\u00E2\u0080\u009E arriving at Kaslo at 1:56 p. m.\nInternallonal Nav. A Trad. Co.-Operat-\nIng on Kootenay lake and river.\nB. H. \"JNTKRNATIONAL.\"\nLeaves Kaslo for Nelson at 1:00 a. m.\ndally, except Sunday. Returning, leave*\nNelson at 4:30 p. m\u00E2\u0080\u009E calling at Balfour,\nPilot Bay, Ainsworth, and all way points.\nConnects with 8. F. A N. train to and\nfrom Spokane, at Five Mile Point.\n8. 8. \"ALBERTA.''\nLeaves Nelson for Bonner's Ferry Tuesdays ami Saturdays at 7 a. m., meeting\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0teamer \"International\" from Kaslo *t\nPilot Hay.\nReturning, leaves Bonner's Ferry at 1:00\na. tn, Wednesdsys and Bundayi.\nConnect! at Bonner'a Ferry with Great\nNorthern railway for all points east and\nwest.\nSteamers call at principal landings In\nboth directions, and at other points whan\nStar Polntrr'a Mnrk. slgnslnl.\nHARTFORD, Conn., Aug. ll-The fen- '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ck*tl1 \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00B0',J \u00C2\u00ABo sll points In Cansda and\ntun of the. day nt Chnrter Oak today was I'nited States.\nHiar Polnte-'s grent mile In two minutes To \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2certain rates and full Information\nnat without a slip or brenk, breaking the *d\u00C2\u00AB**Mi\n\u00C2\u00AB_^_!$_&A d 1I_L_5 Umo h0r,ie ,a,t I \"OBKRT IR VINO, Manaf .f,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^^liay*,^^,,,^^..^^^,-,,., ^tMrlgAWUtr*'* *-Wk\u00C2\u00AB!li&IUflb*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB,,\ntmmemmmmirmarmatAtitMt i^y^s\u00C2\u00BB-%\u00C2\u00BB4S-w^iw __^_________-*\u00C2\u00BB**-^*\u00C2\u00BB^ ww\u00C2\u00BB>-~ 41\nOne Year's Seeding,\nNine Years' Weeding.\"\ngAfjtgiedtd impurities in your blood will\nsow seeds of disease of which you may\nnever get rid. If your blood is even the\nleast bit impure, do not delay, but take\nHood's Sarsaparilla at once, h so doing\nthere is safety: In delay there is danger.\nBe sure to get only Hiiod's, because\nTHE SILVERTONIAN, SILVERTON, B. C.\nOtJl IOETHWESTEEH MINES,\nPLANS OF PRESIDENT M'KINLEY\nThe \"Tutors of the New Colonies\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sr-ra*\nlary Hoot's II.h< AIIiuiiIiiiiik l'r\u00C2\u00BB,l-\nl.lriil. He hui in an n \".Present- Hail Iln p.\nfill i...ii,ii.l Ulls to be Cliaugeil,\n\\ .i-liinfiti'li. Sept. 0. The cibinct to-\n,l.iy was iu _-4_ul f>\u00C2\u00BB' more tliun J. hours\nnml a variety of matters, whicli have ao*\n,11 later] during the presidents abeeece,\nwere discussed. It was letexelfrf Hoot's\nllrsi attendance, The other rut-hlSbra\ntUms O.eauod lrram ths Lata Reports -\nAU lllstrlcts An Being Developed-A\nProsperous tear Is 1'redlr \u00C2\u00ABj-Mining\nNotes and Personals.\nA combination among zinc mine opera*\nlois at Joplin, Mo,, to demand $ut per ton\nfor ore carrying 1)0 per cent metal, |s to\nbe fought by refineries, llepresentatives\nof leveral large concern*- are now iu Colorado contracting for ore. ]\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'.. VV. Hum\nphreys, of Uplands, ind., owner of a huge\nrclini'iy, and A. 11. Crowe, of Weir _i!y,\nKan., have engaged the services of un ex-\nperl, and are exaininig leveral Colorado\npropcilie-., said to yield a good necuent-\nage of yinc ore. Mr. Humphreys has already obtained three large properties, anil\nbus over Km men at work. A ileal is\nprobably to go through for a dozen silver\nmine* iu the stale tha! can supply ore currying 40 per cent of zic.\nRepublic noire.\nActive development ii in )n*.*grc-s on the\nRebate, one of tbe promising properties\npf lhe Clark group.\nThe joint shaft of the*Vresuo and Littl\"\nTom Thumb is nn feet deep, it became\nriwrnnwi\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nLayer\nLazy\nW il\t\nI'leiident Si*buriiian nf the I'hili'-piin\n(.,uiini-*ii,|i a*a* also pi.-enl by invitation\n,Hi,l in.nie a comprehensive statement\niii,- situation in iln- Islands, It i* under-\n.li..ol lli.il lie will s.uin make u Statement\nhi ihe press which will cover his older.\n\.ill,,u ill tlie islands, ami later he will\nin.ik, a formal repurl to the president\nending the subject in dctalL\n11 is understood that fc-churman takes a\nlui|K'ful view of the situation iu the Phil-\ni|ipincs ,mU lias in. iluiilii that wiih our\nincreased forces we will be alilc to in.ikc\nciiin|iaialively very slinit work of Aguin-\nal.l.. and the Insurgents. Although the\nwork of ilie anli ini|icniili-l league ha*\nhad no considerable Influence among the\nsoldiers in our army, Schuiman said it\ncertain)*' had given great encouragement\ni.i Aguinaldo and bis followera\nThe subject nf relieving Oli* from part\nof his duties hs head of b dh the civil nov-\n- al -lbr_lt-r.\nQlbralttrr, Sept. Ii. The t'nited Slates\ncruiser Olympia, with Admiral Dewey on\nboard, nrrived. The usual salutes were\nexchanged between the Olympia and the\ngarrison.\nDeary is slightly Indbyoeeil al present.\nHi.... ..( Fort Slrrlr, B. C.\nFort Steele, Sept. S.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Kiie broke out in\nthe Hotel International and it WM totally\ndestroyed, together with the nlntc ol T.\nArmstrong, the Dominion Express office\nnnd the dwelling of I1. I.ulner, besides\nbadly damaging several buildings on the\nopposile side of the street.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 >\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> f..\u00C2\u00AB Trli.l Monday*.\nltennes, Si'pt. 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Dreyfus Iriol In*-\ngan today with the largest allcndancc\nyet seen in the I.ycco. The interest in\nthe trial grows as lhe denouement approaches. Six to ten days is given as Ihe\noutside limit for the further duration of\nthe trial. There was an exceptionally\nlarge number of ladies present today, their\nblight costume* giving a gay look to\nthe court room.\nCASCARETS are absolutely ksnoless, a ***-reIy n.etable compon.a. Ho merer-rial er other mineral pm-polioo la Cascarets. Oasesrets n-emptly, e_ee_\u00C2\u00BBely aad **i___-ro_y\ncsre every disorder of the Stomach, Liver aad Intestine*,. They not ouly eare constipation, hut correct auy aod every lorm ol irregularity of the bowels, lacladiatdlarrh-aaoddyssatery-\nPleasant, palatable, potent. Taste good, do food. Never sicken, weaken or gripe. Be sure you get the genuine I Beware ot imitations snd substitutes I Buy a boi of CASCARBTS\nto-day, aad ii not pleated ia every respect, get your money back I Write as for booklet and tree sample I Address STERLIH0 RBUBDT COMPAHT, CHICAGO or MBW TORK.\n873\nAt the Knob Hill mine, iu (Jrecnwood Mr. iW. T. Stead, who has worked ln- French coal mines employ about 81,-\ncamp. a mass ol ore about B2_ feet each i defattgably throughout Europe in the 000 persona; other mines, 12,000, and\nwuy on the four sides and ahout 17(1 f.-et | interests of tbe peace conference since quarries 8000. Of the miners 15 per\nfrom the surface is blocked put ready for' the czar's rescript was issued last fall, cent are women and children; the aver-\nstoping. writes of The Hague Conference in age of working days is 289; the aver-\nA tiail i lo be built from the Wonder- its Outcome\" In the Review of Reviews age work hours 9V4, and the dally wage\nfor September. Mr. Stead was at The average 75 cents. The production of\nHague during the entire conference,\nand he undoubtedly enjoyed a closer\npersonal acquaintance with the delegates than any other journalist. He ts\nconvinced that great progress was ac-\t\nabout 628 feet in. \\ here intersected C0InpIuhed \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E the direction of univer- Line bave added a buffet, smoking and I\nsome nice looking copper ore wa* opened gal ______ ,jbrary \u00C2\u00AB_ tQ t)|_.J Horl\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E*.(*,,joago >\n tbiough train, and n dining car eertfoe\nAn Englishman bas patented a bi- bas been iuauguarated. The train is\nfill trail to the Yakima and Sunshine\nmine, in the .Slocan, in the near future.\nA 1 OUO-tunnel is contemplated by the Sunshine company.\nThe tunnel on the Morison, in Dead-\nwood camp, has reached the ledge at\nup,\ncoal and lignite last year was 32,439,*\n730 tons.\nImprove.! Train Kqulpute-t.\nTbe 6. It. & H. and Oregon Short\nIncluding the cost of passage and\nback, a four months' trip from England to India can now be made for\nnlwut $1,500 first class, and $1,000 seo*\nond class.\nMT- rVrn-jui'iitly I'ored. No-uornorvousn-ss\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ll* iiller tlml 8r>y'\u00C2\u00BB use of l>r. Kline's dresl\nNerve Ueslnrer. Wnd for FKKK \u00C2\u00BB'J.OO tr.nl\nboUletnd in-mise. Du. It. II. KI.1NK, Mil., wr\nArch street, I'lillHilel-ihla, l'a.\nMarblehead, Mass., haa attained the\n250th year of Its honorablo history and\nIs having a loan exhibition ot cherished antiquities.\nirdr more than 15 years 1 was a\nSUITS?, r from K.slrllls In tj*0\"\nform. 1 was much redaicod I ties\nB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABe_\u00C2\u00BBSaj\u00C2\u00ABwtWta.baa\nneriiianeiit. When 1 began l\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ntha Ills I welshed lilfl pounils; novv\nI itfc HIS. These pills dl\u00C2\u00BBf>\"',ll1'\u00C2\u00BB\ntlUs-.ecoiiddn.voriieceinl'er.l'Wi.\nU u 11 W A ta.ACt. N<*n rV l-itblio\n-Frmnthe Press. Hamilton. IU.\nToTnr surr.rers from^,\u00C2\u00AB \",'\"'chd,.rt\nbower trouble Dr. winmu- di.'\nlKK,k Is free on roi|U\u00C2\u00ABeU\nThe War Kagle mine is now* producing\nore ut the rate of nearly 10 carloads a\nduy.\nWork continues on the two double compartment shafts, which are being sunk ou\nthe vein of the Mountain Trail, ut Koss-\nland.\nA ten-stamp is to be installed without\ndelay on the Hunker Hill property near\nH,?'-''u- . L \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E.,. , An Illinois man has patented a\nlhe \ en.ee group at Hall Sid.ng has h telephone de8k> whlch ha8 a pair\nbeen bonded to II fc. Cro.sdale, manager \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 br_cket_ atta_h_d ^ ^ vM ._ ^\ncycle tire with sectional air pockets, equipped with the latest chair cars,\nformed of hollow rings, wi, i grooves day coaches and luxurious flrst-olses\n# W. H. STOWELL & CO., {\nJ ...ASSAYERS...\n\ and Dealers In Assayers' Buppllee,\n\ SPOKANE, WASH. ^\nir**. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2e_^VVV%%.'\u00C2\u00ABV*V%^%^V%''vi\nBUY THE GENUINE\nSYRUP OF FIGS\n... M A**r-JTACTUm\u00C2\u00AB_ BT ...\nCALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO.\n*W HOT_ TBI HA MB.\ncut in the face of the rim and a bolt\nset across the rim to suspend each ring\nand allow it to rotate Individually, a\npunctured ring being easily replaced\nby \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094other.\nof the Nelson smelter, who is actively dc\nvcloping thc property.\nltecent developments on the Wilcox\nmine, near Ymir, have served to show* up\na fine body of ore. Thc shaft on the\nFourth of July claim, adjoining the Wilcox, is on thc same vein as No. 2 tunnel on the Wilcox.\nThe official returns from tho Ymir mine\nfor July are as follows: Bullion from\nplates, $14,000; concentrates, $6250; crude\nore shipped (carbonate ore, 40 tons, galena\nore, 2_ tons); estimated value, $4000.\nThis makes a total of $24,250 from 21\ndays' working, the accident to the crushing machinery having made a short working month.\nThe ore shipments from Rossland last\nweek were:\nand ordinary -.leepeis. Diteot connection mail.' ut Granger with Union Pa-\ncitlo, and at < <_-i.ii with Kio Grande\nline, from all points in Oiegon, Washington and Idaho to all Eastern cities.\nFor information, rates, etc, call on\nanv O. It. & N. agent, or addrsss VV.\nH. Hurlburt, General Passenger Agent,\nPott laud.\na shelf, with rollers set In the lower\nportion of the brackets to carry rolls\nof paper which run across the face of\nthe shelf in conjunction with carbon\npapers for duplicating.\nA writer in an English magazine declares that the real average Englishman Is a working man earning $6 a\nweek.\nGambling In France ls said to have\nreached sueh proportions that the government has begun to study the question seriously. It Is estimated that half\nof the suicides In Paris are due, to\nlosses at the ra.es.\nWeek, tons.\nY'ear, tons\nIa. Roi 2.3U2.r.\nWar Eagle 8,-W.fl\nIron Mask 252.0\nKveiiing Star *t>3.0\nDeer Park \t\n68,271.5\n34,0205\n2,73l).0\n737.0\n18.0\n0,157.0\nColumbia Kootenay .. 31.5\n31.5\nPlso'i Curs for Consumption hai save.\nm\u00C2\u00AB large doctor mils.\u00E2\u0080\u0094C. I*. linker, t.li\nKegent 8q., Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. S, '\u00C2\u00AB.\n I JtS-B .. th. do.es or hundred\nMahogany comes to the United 8tatea\nfrom Mexico at the rate of $25,000 a\nmonth, an Increase of about 10 per cent\nover last year _ figures.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- smtymt^mtAi\u00C2\u00AB_. _.\u00C2\u00AB, \u00C2\u00AB* *,\u00C2\u00AB, m*esnit^^MrAt..*uA*mswtt**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTotal 5,008.5 102,580.5\nHI MM. ItO.-BS.\n1). ('. (lark, who has charge of woik On\nthe Silver Chief iu the Huckleberry range,\nnear Addy, Wash., reports the shaft down\n50 feet and has crosscut both the foot and\nhanging whits, showing on the footwall a\nthree-foot vein of quart-, carrying copper\nmiles.\nThe mineral department af the Spokane\nIndustrial Exposition i* ending letters to\nall the manufacturers of mining machinery asking them to exhibit in machinery\nall.\nThc Crystal mine, near old Fort Spokane baa struck it rich again, and in a\nplace where ore was not expected.\n\" T.-i.-Tftrnfi***: -maite that can lie found\nin the slate of Washington will bc secured\nfor the rock drilling contest at the Spokane Industrial Imposition In October.\nWhen thc Spokane Industrial Exposition opens its doors the lirst thing the entering crowds will sec will be the mining\nexhibit.\nA 75-foot shaft has been ordered sunk\non the lllack Cat mine iu Sumpter camp, i\nOregon.\nA 22-ton car of concentrates was shipped\nfrom the Conjecture mine on Lake Pend\nd'Oreille to the Tacoma smelter recently.!\nIt is reported lor a certainty that Rtille\nand Anaconda men will begin the erection\nof a custom mill for Republic camp and\n\u00C2\u00ABi\u00C2\u00AB0 an electric tramway from the north \\nend to the south end Immediately.\nThe work of placing the hoiat and building the ore bunkers nt thc lllack Hear at\n|/Himis is progressing favorably.\nAt the Cold Hill at L0-mii good pro*\ngtBH is being mnde in both tunnels and\nshafts and in one of the latter, on the main j\nledge, sonic particularly line ore is showing i\nup.\nParlies returning from the new mining;\ncamps on Snake river coiillrm former re-\nporta fnmi thai district. J\nI.-.n... UBS *V-\u00C2\u00BBr Ml.or.\nine size smaller after usins; Allen's foot*\nEase, a powder to oe shaken Into the s hoee\nIt Dii'.ts tight or new aboes feel easy,\nrives Instant relief to corns and bunions\nIt's the greatest comfort discovery of tbe\ntie. Cures swollen feet, blisters and callous spots. Allen'. Foot-Ease la a certain\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2rare for inf-To~tiiR nails, eweatlng, smart\nIng, hot, aching feet. We bave SO.OUO testi\nmonlals. All druggists and shoe stores\nsell It. 25c Trial nad-age KKK_ by mall.\nAddress, Allen 8 Olmsted, I.e Roy, N. Y.\nROBUST AND STRONG.\nSuch a prison Is the constant envy of the\nweak, nervous prrsou\u00E2\u0080\u0094ol the -\u00C2\u00BB-r\u00C2\u00ABou wiih thin,\nin en re blood' tlie way to build up health la\nthlOUgll tile biiK.d.\nMoore's Revealed Remedy\nMakes lmvurs Mood rure. It creates a good\nappellir anil \u00C2\u00ABill\u00C2\u00BB digestion. (1.00 per bottle\n, al . i.nr .li ii, .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nShingles...\nGood No. ., 65c per 1000,\nloaded on care.\nWrite for prices of No. L\nCENTRAL SHINGLE CO.\nP. O. Box S06 Tel. 670. Spokane, Wash.\nYOUNG MEN!\nfor Qon-rrhu- snd Ota* g*t I _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 O\u00E2\u0080\u0094st Bpe\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094* U\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the ONLY nwdlMns vbfc- will ear* each and ent*\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094as. MO CASK known It h\u00E2\u0080\u0094i .nr raited to can, u.\n-J how serious or of bow long- Standlna. HrrilW\ntro\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mi UN will art-nlth j ou. It la a\u00E2\u0080\u0094roruWlr \u00C2\u00AB_*,\npr-Teou. Krfctura and can tM> salten without tnoc-Tv\nalenc* and qassadon from bui.ln.-m PHIC\u00E2\u0080\u0094. SS.00. r_\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094dr h; at> n'\u00E2\u0080\u0094Uik. dr >KirU\u00E2\u0080\u0094.. or \u00C2\u00AB.nt pr,.|-l'J br\nId\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094hrwraepad.onr-n'.' r\nO-M-f __M oa MM\nIfnt\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094.or w-nt nr,'\nwpt of nrlty, oj\nturf 0J___O>X r\n00.0__*.\u00C2\u00BB,!_\nNew York City annually pays $00 ln\ngold, ln one payment, to every blind\nperson who has been a year resident\niu the metropolis, and who has not\nbeen an oecupajit of a city Institution\nduring that time.\nCURE YOURSELF!\nUs* Big Si tor tmoetnra\ndischars**, ix\u00E2\u0080\u0094tamme'tioaa,\nirritation, or alosratlo\u00E2\u0080\u0094*>\nel mo con. membrauM\naitrlM. P*\u00C2\u00BBI-In\u00C2\u00BB, and not Mtria\nl*nu_\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABiOs\u00C2\u00AB\"ioiillc. **\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '** xi-onos..\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2all k. Draiitik.\nor wot In slain wr**f*e\nbr slfnss, sr\u00C2\u00ABf\u00C2\u00BBld, (\u00C2\u00BBi\n11.00. or 1 tKUtla., bit.\nClronlar ssat d_ naossS\nThe deliilitatinjj drains and\ndischarges which weaken so\nmany women are caused by Catarrh of the distinctly feminine\norgans. The sufferer may call\nher trouble Leuchorrhoea, or\nWeakness,or Female Disease or\nsome other name, but tbe real\ntrouble is catarrh of the female\norgans aud nothing else.\nPe-ru-na radically and permanently cures this and all othet\nlormsof Catarrh. It is a positive\nspecific for female troubles\ncaused by catarrh ol the delicate\nlining of the organs peculiar to\nwomen. It always cures if used\npersistently. It is prompt and\ncertain.\nTbe microbes tbat cause oh ills\nand lever and malatia enter the system through mucous membianes\nmade porous by catarrh. Pe-ru-na\nhetill tjie mucous membianes and\nprevents the entrance of malntial\ngenus, tbas preventing \u00C2\u00BBnd curing\nthese affections.\nPISO'S CURE FOR\nThere Ib nmre Cntarrh In thli eectlon of Ihe\ncc-umry than all other dlseasea put together,\nand until the Inst few years waa supposed to\nbe Incurable. I-or a (crest many years ductora\npronounced tt a local dlscoce, and prescribed\nlocal remedies, and by constantly failing to\ncure with local tieatinent, pronounced It Incurable. Science baa proven catarrh to be a\nconstitutional dt\u00C2\u00ABpi\u00C2\u00BBu\u00C2\u00BBe, and therc-fora requlr.m\ni-.'ir tiim.ii.n'*l trt'Utmrnt. Hall's Catarrh Cure,\nmanufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo,\nOhio, la the only constitutional cure on the\nmarket, lt Is taken Internally In doacs fmm\n10 drops to a teat-poonful. It acts directly on\nthe blood und mucoua surfacea of the aystein.\nThey offer one hundred dollara for any ra*-c\nRPR \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 A R m/fl BOOK,\nelief for Womeiv\n_^*C_v Sent A*\u00C2\u00AB. In plani, staled enr-one. wrne\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\" - - ^ to-da; ter thi. Hook,contain\u00E2\u0080\u0094ig Fart\u00E2\u0080\u0094*a-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0an aad W-Hi ot DO. _AST_*,*S\nFrench Female Pills.\nPialaed by tboaaa&df of uttRflnl Mks as\nsafe, ahnmrallabla aad wltbqatanequal.\nH-iilJbjalfdrmririinstn m- I>riifgisu,\nSURE CURE FOR PILES\nITl'lTlMil'ilrnrriMlu, \u00E2\u0080\u009E iniM\u00C2\u00ABliir\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00BBii,lr\u00C2\u00ABi.\",. ll.'luii*\nThis form, a* will aa Blind, Blwdinaor i*rotrudina\na_6B-M**si__L|-p_*\nniunlala. Aildresi.\nr *. CHENET * CO.. Tolrdo, O\nSold by dru_slsts, 7\",o.\nHalls Family Pills sre th* best.\nThe population of the South African\nrepublic consists of 65,000 Boers, 87,000\nother whites, called Ultlanders, and\n000,000 Kaffirs and Zulus.\nPilMir*cur*d l.y\nStop* Itchlnfl andTjlPed\"in_.\"Ab*torTis t\"iirio*ff,__0o .\n.I.r st dmifTH*or**ntbr n.a.1.Traatls*fr**. Writ*\nuna. A\nby mail,\nstaabootfenroaa*. DR. IIOHANKO, I'bil.da.l'a\nRemember that you can buy Jeess Moore\nA. A. Whiskey for the same price that 1*\npaid for ordinary whisky. For sale by al.\ndrat clasa dealers and druggists.\n\u00C2\u00A3ARTERSINK\nA politician weakly and amiably\nright is no match for a politician tenaciously and pugnaciously in the\nwrong.\u00E2\u0080\u0094E. P. Whipple.\nV N. V,\nToo flood and Too Cheap to be\nWithout lt.\nKo. .10, 'WI.\nMothers will find Mrs. Win-low's Sooth\ning Syrup the best remedy to use for theii\nchildren during the teething period.\nPatience is tho support ot weakness;\nImpatience is the ruin ot strength.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nColton.\nFence nnd Iron Works.\nPORTLAND WISH * IRON WORKS: WIRE\nand Iron fencing-; office ralllns. et- _4 Ald*r\nThe maximum number of visitors to\ntho Royal gardens at Kow, England, on\nany one day last year was 71,874 on\nMay 30. The smallest, 61, on November 21.\nLord Dunraven, who no longer cuts\nany conspicuous figure ln yachting circles, Is saltl to have become a patron\nof professional pedestrlanlsm.\nPure Tea\n(n package*\nat grocen'\nSchilling's\nBest'\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2n\n'il\n1\n\u00C2\u00BB*.,s*\u00C2\u00BB-w\u00C2\u00ABm.j atmtmem wswtmtwtsvm*w*swsw*i\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nwi_MMM'M\u00C2\u00AB lira \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 **eveir**tw*m^*wa*m\*mo You IM\u00C2\u00BB1-V\nI HAVE A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF\nFISHING TACKLE,\nRODS -tod BASKETS,\nTHE OPPOSITE\nSELKIRK THE\nHOTBIy. WHARF.\nThose acquainted with tho late\nmanagement of the GaleDa Mines\nknow that that property waB in the\nhands of thoroughly competent and\npractical men. When thc new owners\nget in and do something towards making a success of this property, besides\nblowing, it will be time enough to t Ik\nabout the late management.\nWHICH 1 OFFER Al\nLARGE AND COMFORTABLE\nROOMS TABLE UNSURPASSED IN THK\nNORTHWEST.\nRook Bottom\nPrices\nTO CLEAR OUT THE LINE.\nJIM. McINTOSH\nSILVEKTON,\nB, C.\nVICTORIA\nHOTEL\nMME8 BOWES ,- - - - PROP.\nfl-TEVERYTHING NEW, NEAT,\nAND CLEAN. FINEST APPOINTED HOU8E IN\nTHE KOOTENAYS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*; Headquarters For Mining Men :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\nSILVERTON\n- B.C.\nBR4IM & BARRETT\nSILVERTON,\nPROPS\nB. C.\nCHAS. A. WATERMAN k 00.\nAir-TIOX--R8, Customs ISrokehs,\nAnd General Real Estate Agents,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2mee la Bealey Block \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - Baker 81.\nNELSON, B, 0.\nC4NFORD G. McINTOSH,\"\nGeneral Freight and Transfer\nHusiness Done.\nOrders lelt at News| Stand will be\npromptly attended to.\n\"fl G. GORDON,^\nMINES, REALESTATE, CONVETARGER\nNOTARY, PUBLIC.\nSILVERTON, - - - B. C\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nRAII.WAY-\nftnd S00 LINE\nNew Fast Daily Service Between\nATLANTIC k PACIFIC\nBY TBE\nIMPERIAL LIMITED\nImproved Connecting Service via Revelstoke or Crows Nest Routes,\nTO AND FROM\nKOOTENAY COUNTRY.\nFirst olasa sleepers on all trains from\nARROWHEAD and KOOTENAY LDG.\nTourist cars pass Revelstoke, Daily tor\nSt. Paul, Thursdays for Montreal and\nBoston, Tuesdays and Saturdays for\nToronto. \t\n\u00C2\u00A5lLVERTON TO\nToronto 92 hours, Montreal 96 hours.\nNew York 108\" Winnipeg 62 \"\nVancouver 20 \" Victoria 31 \"\nCONNECTIONS.\nFor Uie North, Revelstoke, and Main\nLine 10*80 K ex* Sunday lv. Bilverton,\nar. ex. Sunday, 15:50K.\nFor Rossland, Nelson and Crows Nest\nLine 15:60Ke_. Snnday lv. Silverton,\nar. ex. Sunday 10* 30K\nFor rates aud fait Information apply to\njienreet local agent or\nW. S. CLARK, Agent, Silverton\nW. F. ANDERSON,\nTrav. tan. Agent, Nelson\nE* J. COYLE.\nA> O. P. Agent, Vancouver\n\"f\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ..... - ______\nj. m. McGregor,\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nAND MINING ENGINEER.\nSLOCAN CITY B.C.\nThe trouble in the Slocan, .raised\nby the issuance of the Mite Owners'\nAssociation's ultimatum iu th. matter\nof wages and the proper resenting of\nthe same by tho miners, will toon V*<*>\nover and work be resumed in the\nmines at union wages. We venture\nto say that never in the history of\nmiuing in the Rocky Mountains has a\nstrike been won against such apparently overwhelming odds as in this one,\nwhere capital was fully organized to\nopposo their men. But, backed by u\nfriendly government, held up by public\nopinion and officered bv determined\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd conscientious men, tho miners of\nthe Slocan are teaching the world what\ncan be done ia a righteous cause by\norganized working men against the\narrogant demands ot capital. By their\ndetermined stand, their solid front and\ngentlemanly behavior, they have set\nan example and won the admiration\nof their fellow workmen throughout\nthe Dominion. This strike has shown\nthat British Colombia has more honest\nworkingmen and fewer scabs than any\nother mining country on the American\ncontinent\nColumbia. ^\t\nNot less interesting was the speech\nof Jos. Martin, M. P. P., who followed Mr. Mclnnes. After detailing\ntbe events leading up to his dismissal,\nhe spoke of the present plight of the\ngovernment snd the probability of an\nearlv election. We quote below some\nportions of his speech.\n\"Some of my friends sny 'But if you do\nyon will let in the Turner party.' II the\nTurner party have a majority behind\nthem they ought lo be in power. That\nix government .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 majority. If they\nhave a majority they ought to rule thi*\nprovince, and therefore why should I or\nwhy should you be afraid of a new election? To appeal to the people of tbis\nprovince on the question whether they\nare .oing to be ruled by people liko lh,\nCotton. The premier i? premier only in\nname\u00E2\u0080\u0094ft pieroW who jumps when told\nto jump b * Mr. Cotton, who rules. We\nsre to be hindered, we nre lo he coerced\nas free men from expressint! our views,\nsnd hindered from anothf-r appeal to the\npeople by the bogey Mr. Cotton, und his\npaper put? up every time: \"Don't knock\nns nnl: you'll have the Turner party in\nagain.\" I vvculd lather have them\nback. We know* what they will do. He\nat losst has no sympathy with Ihe cause\nof labor. Mr. Cotton onlv pretends to\nhave-sympathy in order to remain in\npower. Any man that savs that the\nbuildtngofainillwhichwill add 5,000\npeople to your population, which will io-\ncreose prosperity, shall not be allowed\nbecause it is going to mar the view* from\nbis residence is a man whose heart und\nsympathies are more deadly opposed to\ntlie interests of labor Han Mr. Turner\n<\u00C2\u00AB For alter all the Turner parly only\nACCURATE,\nMININC\n~1\nT\nRELIABLE\nNEWS \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOF THE RICH SLOCAN.\nGATHERED AT FIRST HAND FOR\nT\nH\n_\u00C2\u00A9\n^roivi^^.\nKENT TO AMY ADDRESS,\nt- 00 per Annum.\n_B>. M. -Brlnc-le-,\nWATCHMKER k JEWELER\nWill visit Silverton every\nWednesday, prepared to\nrepair all disabled Watches,\nClocks and Jewelery. He\nwill also bave on hand a\nComplete Assortment ot\nJewelry, consisting of Rings,\nWatches, Chains, Guards,\nSeals, Ac. kc. Repairing\nis Guaranteed. Prices are\nas low as First-Class Work\nwill allow. While in Silverton, he will be fouud at\nTux Lakeview Hotel, and\nall work left there daring\nthe week will be promptly\nattended to on his first visit, A trial order is solicited.\nNEW DENVER, B. C.\nSOVEREIGNTY OF THE PEOPLE.\nTit. Keynote Struck by Mclnnes and\nJos. Martin on Labor Day.\nwanted everything for themselves; they\nwere honest aliont Ihst. Bui that principle is dead in this province. But I\nknow Ihers is no danger of _ Iheir being\nreturned again; the Colonist, the chief\nol tltem, admits that tbey are dead.\nWhether we want it o> not, JWO may\ndepend upon it there is bound to be a\ngeneral election in this province just ss\nsoon as tbe hou.*e meets. In August\nlast vear the government was dismissed\nbecause tbey did not have the confidence\nol the country, and we came into power\nand justified His Honor and I was heartily in sympathy with that principle.\nWhen a government has lost the support of the house, it should so. Not in\nsix months, but immediately. But here\nwc are in the same position again. A\ngovernment which has not the sympathy\nof the people is administering the affairs of the people, and are allowed to\ndeal with grave questions Involving large\namounts of money. If Mr. Cotton were\nto run attain in Vancouver, and I speak\nadvisedly, he could not save hia deposit;\nand yet he is the master ot the situation.\nAnd if we should have a general elec.\ntion, in what way nre we to deride?\nThings look rather chaotic. Some say,\ngive ns party lines, hut how are vou and\nI, after denouncing the*. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,Ottawa g vern\nment, going to array ourselves on tlie\nside of those who break their p.edges to\nBritish Columbia? Did not Mr Mclnnes\ngive the keynote when he said the sovereignity of the people! Is not that a\nprinciple broad enough for us to stand\non? The principle tbat a member is only\na member elected to do Ihe duty demanded bv bis constituents? And even\nif we don't succeed, if we don't send\nenough members down there to form a\ngovarnnn n , we will have enough to prevent any government from violating\nCERTIFICATE <>K IMPROVEMENT\nNOTICl\". :\u00E2\u0080\u0094-UnMler\" and \"Itwk-\nl..ml Mineral Claims; situate in the\nBloom Mining Division of IN est Kootenay District.\nWhere located:\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Eight Mile creek\nadjoining the Willa Miuera) Claim.\nTake notice that I, .1. Murray McGregor i\nacting as agent Ior W. W. Spink*, free j\nMiner's Certificate No. itl_1M i. intend',\nsixty (lavs from the dale hereof, lo appl> i\nto the Mining Recorder for a Certificate\nol Improvements, (or the put pose of ob- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ntaining a Crown Grant of the above '\nclaims.\nAnd further take uotic that action j\nunder section '>\", must he commenced\nbefore the issnanoo of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this IT'li day of July IS;***.\nJ. M. McGbroor,\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice ia hereby given Uiat sixty\n -Gregor,\ndays after tla'e I,\" W. I). M \u00E2\u0080\u009E_.\nintern! to apply to Hie Chief OommN\nsinner of Lands and Works for permission\nlo purchase the lollowing described tr.net\noi land: Situated four miles east of\nSlocan Kiver on Lemon Creek at the\nmouth of the First North Fork, in West\nKootenav Distih't; starting from n post I\nmarked W. D. McGregor's N. E. Corner,\ntheme soutn 40 chains, thence west 40\nchain*, thence north 4. chains, thence\neast 40 chains, to place of beginning, the\nwhole containing 100 acres.\nDa*ed June Wth. 18;)0. j\nW. !>. McGregor\nUse None But\nThe Best!\nf\nLa\u00C2\u00BBKley*s\nJSfir^f.p.i'rill.i\nWILL ERADICATE ALL TRACES\nOF IMPURE BLOOD, CURES\nRHEU M ATIS.M AND ALL\nULOOI) DISORDERS^\nTry It-Prove It.\nIIIMS l>.\ M.LMMITI0.\nAM) THK\nGeneral Tire Of Cold\" SHIx.\nLAND NOTICK.\nNotice is hereby given that sixty\ndays after date, I intend to apply to ihe\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works I\nfor permission to pnrchsse Ihe following\ndescribed land : situated four miles east\nof Slocan River on Lemon Creek, at the\nmonth of Ibe First North Fork, in West i\nKootenay District; starling from a po*t\nmarked J. M, McGregor's N. W. corner, '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nthence sooth 40 chains, thence east 40 |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_\nchains, thence north 40 chains, thence : It is not Imiscc] on laboratory tests, but on\nBv W. J. ADAMS.\nII.I.I'STRAT.D.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094____^H . M\t\n| A P_-cn.il, Book for Pr,.ctic*.u. Mrs.\nshould he jn the hands of every\nMining Man and Metallurgist.\nFor Sale or Rent,\n.1 Hotel Id Silverton.\nGOOD LOCATION,\nFTTLLY FURNI8HED,\nCLEAR TITLE\nApply \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094Matheson Bras,\nftllve-rton, 0\nTHE SILVERTONIAN, W. a year\nW. W. B. Mclnnes, M. P. has broken away from the Laurier government\nfor their abandonment of their measure\nraising tbe Ohine.e tax. Speaking of\nthe government's action in this matter\nin hit Labor Day speeoh, he said:\n''We have resorted to every device to\ncompel the government to redeem its\npromises and they have absolutely refused to do so. It may serve a purpose\nto send a man East, but there bas always been too much talk and too little\naction. The time bas now come Ior\na'tion, r.nd I think there should be an\nopportunity for tbe entire province to\npronounce on the question. But I intend to give you the chance to so pronounce. I intend to resign and see il\nthe united voice of 5,000 electors on\nVancouver Island will not be listened lo\nat Ottawa. If that fails what are we to\ndo?\"\nA Voice\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Turn them out.\"\nMr. McInnea-MTurn them out nothing t\nIf that should fail, act yourselves.\nWhat is the use of turning ont one lot\nof political tricksters to put in another\nlot? Go back to first principles. We\nare the people and the people rule. If\nthose in power are too cowardly to act\ntake the law Into your own hands. You\nare the fountain of all authority, and\nthere. omes a time when nothing but\n^tT "Titled Silverton Silvertonian from 1898-01-01 to 1898-01-29; titled The Silvertonian from 1898-02-12 onward.

Published by James Cameron from 1898-01-01 to 1898-02-19; published by R.O. Matheson from 1898-02-26 to 1898-06-04; published by R.O. and Harry Matheson from 1898-06-01 to 1899-02-11; published by an unidentified party from 1899-02-25 to 1900-02-10; published by Matheson Bros. from 1900-02-17 and thereafter."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Silverton (B.C.)"@en . "Silverton_Silvertonian_1899_09_09"@en . "10.14288/1.0312952"@en . "English"@en . "49.9508330"@en . "-117.3580560"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Silverton, B.C. : [publisher not identified]"@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 . "The Silvertonian"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .