"49b67618-12c1-4718-a6c6-cf08cfddd9d3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-30"@en . "1899-07-22"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/silsil/items/1.0312974/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " 0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ; \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a\nf\nReliable\nAnd Up To Oare\nMining News\nOf The Richest\nCamp Of British\nColumbia.\nVOLUME T\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBeE\nSILVEKTON, BRITIaH GOLUMBlA, SATURDAY. JULV 22. 1*99\nNUMBER 4\nABOUT THE MINES\nflOOSDAY EMMA WW m\nWakefield Increasts il* Force\nUnderground Miners.\nUSMfJkl \u00C2\u00BBl\u00C2\u00BBl*|t ***** **\u00C2\u00AB\nttattlm of tke Week.\nLocal\nThe Noonday mine haa adlml considerably io lis fort* durinn* the \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-. and\nit now employlOB a forci .1 65 men. 18\nof -\u00C2\u00BBhom are eni-aH-d a* \"ie sorter*.. Tne\nvalue of the ore ke.pi Improving as\ndepth is -wined, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nd Is nctti' g ih<> man-\nauoment, Messrs Bei-edum end Stuart\nllros. over *1000 i er car. An high as\n300 sin ks bave la-en sorted and put up\nn i-iug.S days work. J. H Stewart, SUp-\nc'liiitcndentafthe min.*, expect- during\nthe nexi week, to lie able to sack ai d\nship a carload \u00C2\u00BB d\u00C2\u00BBy. Tlie >.oon ay\nmine has more ore tu eight and l.-oks\nbetter at the present time than ever before. As a ship-XT. it is the record\nhieuker ol the Slocan.\nSLOGAN LAKE ORK SHIPMENT-.\nThe shipment nt ore from Slocan\nLake p.iints, up to anl luol'ilimj tbe\npra-unt week, fiotn Jan. 1, 1899,\nFrom Bosun Landing. Tun*.\nBoson ,, $40\nFrom N iw Denver. Tons\nM iriou , .40\nFrom Ten Mile.\nEnterprise 600\nFrom Slocan City. Tons\nTaiiiiiiai.' , 20\nFrom Silverton. Tons\nOoisf ck 20\n\" ooncetitrates 100\nEn Ily Edith 00\nFidelity 3\nN ujiid iv 22*1\nVaiii-u-tver -20\nWakefield 680\nTotal 248.1\nUH)-. SHU'MivNTSFORTUJ': WEEK.\nThe ore shipment fiom Sloon Lake\n-.mints forthe we.-k nmoiliit In 80 tons\nTho Tamnruc mine near Mm .m Ciiv\nsent out SO tone, that i.i-'uik tiie initial\ncar from that puna for the season, but\nowing to the renew,*.! activity around\nSlocan Citv, thin carload will no d-iOM\nin- billowed by many more before the\nl work underground, a contract having lu-.-n let by\ntbs i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 inpriny for dining ahead hoiiiu ol\ntha development work. II Km-ebone,\nwho hss the contract, waa lu loan in\nsearch of miners ye>teid..y and seciued\nseven additional men. Whicli, with Ibe\nmen already at wuik uiakes tsrelvu uii*n\nnow working underground, in ih-.i mine\nMl Kneebone an-ure*. u\u00C2\u00AB that all llien\niiii.li-rgriitiiid are l*lng paid tbe union\n\u00C2\u00BBagu of (3.IS0 per day, and as tbey are\nall union men this statement cann.it lie\ndogbtod. These, with thn men Working\non the outside makes qiiii- a reap cl able\nlorce working oo the Wakrt]ed.\nTin- T.imarac mine, on Sprinarr creek,\nhas joined the Hat of Slocan Lake shipper..\nThe 1 ijiily Edjlli Company sre alv.-r-\ntising for Certificates of Improvements\nof some uf their claims.\nWork on the hi,- \u00E2\u0080\u009E. 11. gold property\nin Uitiu pnvhed light along ami 'he lead\nis boi lin. its own, both iu ni.*- and\nvalue.\nTlie for. <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 of men woiking on lhe\nWilla, on Red j.em.thin, sre making\ngood piogrme, S\u00C2\u00AB<1 (lie Wills is gelling\ntu lie une of our big gild-cup-ier prop\noaiiious.\nAndy Stewart, one of the bonders of\nj the Nuu!iil.,y mme, retained f.om tlie\nLardeau lost Sunday. Mr. SU*wart haa\nbeen looking alter the mining Interests\niu that country held by himself an*l\nbrother, H\u00C2\u00AB* reports considerable\nactivity in the Lardeau, although the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2now in places is still quite dean.\nList Sunday while wuiking on the\nsurvey of the Rockland claim, on Red\niloui.lain, Beri O'Neill, of Slocan Ciij .\nha.) the u.islotluue to eul his legaeverely.\nA MINE MANAGER'S VIEWS.\nAs will be seen by our advertising columns, the Wakefield Minea want fifty\nmen |o w\u00C2\u00AB>rk for them lor JlOO u day.\nWhile we wish all our advertisers to\nrace!vo ample returns for their ads., we\ncannot nay thai even The Sh.vkktosia*\ncan get fifty scab miners fur onr patron\nMr. Patterson, the msns-er of the\nWakefield Mines, inform* ns that he is\nprepared to hire 130 miners, as mkhi sh\nthey are prepared to accept |3. a day.\nIf the minera remain nhdnrate, he\nilireathens to advise his Company to shut\ndown the-nine for a year. He, lookiriu\nat the question from a manager's aland-\npoint, could not see why the for.inii\nstockholders in the Waked: Id Mines\nshould be dictated to hy lhe r.*i>re\u00C2\u00AB.enta-\ntivesol the popple ol Brhisli Columbia.\nThe underground force at th.* Wakefield\nwonld not be increased until the present\ntrouble wss declined off.\n(Since Ihe above wss put in type, wo\nlearn thst six more miners have been\nput underground in the Wakefield.\u00E2\u0080\u0094En.\nSlt.VRKTOMAN.)\nwith an sxe. He was bn.uyl.t ioiu Sii\nverton and Dr Bit-use of New IVover\nsummoned. Mr. O'N.ill will be around\nin a few days, the cut, although severe,\nnot lieing d..ngei.nia.\nOn Wednesday a Urge packiran.\nload, d with gereral supplies Isft for the\nA. E. mine on Red Mountain. A trail\nhas leu.i built, a peiui.uent camp\nestablished and dew-lii-iuii-nt work\ncommenced on Ibis property, Ihe A. I-\nis one of t.'i:' biggot g ld-copper prop-\nnsitions on Red M iiiiilain and will be\nthoiouglil) ilevelou-d this bCiSou iii'de*\nthu Kii| erintenileiii v of F. L. Ilyi-.ii of\nSilveiton.\nNeil O'Domiel , of 8and\u00C2\u00BB ihm hauling\nMini lake care ol hleotliei lam. ntdgl 'ing\nand packing business, Mr O'Doniii-l is\nlie.ping him out with tils four horse\nt.-.in. min big ore wagon.\nAssrya made on the ore from (he\nPioneer claim, near Slocan City, gave\nfor the .mlinniy lock, which was be,ng\nthrown over the dump, $20. in gold, and\nthe ordinary quarts gave gold values of\n$128 per ton. The owners, W. M. Branch\naud J M. M. Beneduiu, did notennsider\nit. worth while to bave th** first class ore\nassayed, plentv of gold being visible to\nthe naked eye. It will run sovera|\nhundi ed dollsrs to tku tou in gold.\n~U SINKS-} IN SILVERION\nThe Nelson Miner takes upon it^elt to\nsav tliat the merchants of Silverton are\nidle, and that uo miners, excepting\nthose at ihe Noonday arcearuiig $3.60\n/or the eight hour shift underground.\nQuite p. umiI-J) tins juf iin.tiiou was\na\u00C2\u00BBnt from Silveiton, Th-*re are some here,\nwho are actui.lly grieved t*' see lh.it the\nminers c.iu wors, ihe iniues shiii ore,\nthe merchants sell guo.la and the town\nloige ahead, when i.,i*y lefiim* lo play.\nWherever ihe Miners' information\ncine hum, however, It is false. We\nhave iiiiei viewed oy.r ninety per cent of\nlUr uusi era iiir.i ut-*dV'i ion, only one\nOf \u00C2\u00ABi.uiii would say that 1.1*. |.r.:-.*nt ou.*-\niii. on ,iid not show au increase vet that\not Hit- prest ul iiaoiiii, a year ago. Our\n.wo l.ng ni ntuics, ill,i l\ ai liunier Co\ni.uu .McKiiinun k Co., aro both carrying\nlarger slocks aud doing a better ai d an\n{ucreaaliig OUsiueaS. PBurnh&Co aie\nlitoiugiwice as much Mu-iuess now as\n| Was done, in tne a.iiiii* hi.uid a ;, ear ago.\nlue hotels renori au in..ica*-e ol nuuiuess\nail aiouiid; ihe iiuuitjttr ul p.ir\u00C2\u00BB uinl\nsaddle IiuiSl-s i,...- boell la.gcly lucroa.ed,\naud all aie at present UUSJ'. Ilie lan-\nioa.1 lieigin receipts aie an null, uiiuii ol\nbui-iuers. Fur tne lUloriUallou ot tuose\nwho ta'K uf dull busiuu.a, we give the\nfullowiug cuiiip.uilive tiguiet::\nRevenue I ruin freight r. ceived\nfrumJul> Is. io Hib. Ia!i8, $76.10\nRevenue Irom I1VI4I1I r-llIj,|>.-.l\nIrom .luly lsl 10 14ui, XbOi, $1*0 U9\nlutai, 1st l\u00C2\u00ABo week.-, July, '9.1; $lo0 25\nBut then the kiglit Hour Law cume.\nund l.usii.ess was \"ruiUed\" to the I-11-\nluwiug ex lent:\nRevenue Irom freight received\nfrom July 1st 10 H1I1. 1699. (4il.ll\nKevenUi* from ireiglit atiipe^ I\nfroui July Ut lu Htb, lb9a. *-08.U4\nTotal 1*1 two weeks July, '98 $779.78\nTne lucreaae from $156. Ui $7TO. does\nuot >tiye the impresalou 01 a rui..ed community,\nNu more men than is usual at this time\nui tlie year have leu town, Mild nine men\naie uuw Working iu ..ml aiuund the\nSilv- rton iniues, iw 10 over, than ut ih t\nlime last vear. At 111^ Wakefield, Condor, E.>sex, Kmilv fc-iiib, Boauu, L. H.,\nt\ ilia and Noonday, men ure working\nunderground and every uudaiground\nmau is rcctiviug $U 50 ior tiie eight hour\nday.\nIf the Miuer desires, as we believe, to\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0a.* lair IB ibis eight hour question, it will\ncontradict its article of the l.S.li ni*t.\nchip in. iIhIh, which thev won t\u00C2\u00ABice in\nsucce-Hion. this making the trop iea\npersoi'sl property. During the past\nweek Freetby and Tallon have been\nciiallenged by ihe champions nf Colorado\nwho won first money at a Fourth of Julr\ndrilling contest The champions have\naccepied the .led and when arran einents\nhive been \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ffecled will ro to T* lluride\nto tr.liii for ihe contest. It is untices-\nMi.iv to'state that the champions are not\nonly willing to drill thu Colorado men\nbut do 111.1 except tiie ainbii ions of any\nI.oul who are willitui to put np the\nwherewith to mane the contest interesting.\nORGANIZE A BAND.\nTln-re are at present, among our cit-\nixeus, eleven old bondsmen, as iininv as\nsire needed to make up a uood band.\nThere are two or three Well fitted to\nundertake the leadership. Why should\nthis, talent go lo waste' Why should we\nhave to depend upon outsi le bands for\nour music? The small Mini of money\niiece-saty to purchase iustiuinenta cou'd\nla* * cineil with little effort, if someone\nwould take the matter iu hand. Silver-\nton, the premier town of Slocan Li.ke.\nis the only ore which does no' boflst thi*. idea.\nDo You Know\nWhere To Oet\nHOOTS AN D SHOE 8,\nA NEW gTOCK HAS JUST ARRIVED.\nVATTD CANNED GOODS,\nYOUR\n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 NO ARMY BEEF IN THIS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2M***6****^*\u00C2\u00BB|t\u00C2\u00BB'!**\u00C2\u00BBM***\u00C2\u00A5\u00C2\u00A5M*******P\nOUOC-KRIES AND PBOVISIONr?.\n I ALWAY8 THE BEST IN QUALITY.\nGENT'S FURNISHI N.G,\n I NOBBY AND 8TYLISH UNEB,\nYOUR\nYOUR\nWHY F OM\nJ. A. McKINNON & CO.\nOeneral Merohant-i\nSilverton, n* C5.\nJQKE8 FROM THE ROSSLAND\nMINER OF THE 19TH. INST.\n100 foot crosscut will be driven on the\nA. E. at New Denver.\nThe Wakefield vfill aoon resume Bhlp-\nplBR. They are enxa^in. all the uiipets\nthey can at $3.60 per day.\nShipments frocn Slocsn Lake points\nfor weekending .Inly 15th.\nNew Denver\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTWmvac 90 tons to Nelson smeller\nNoonday 40 tons to Trail styflk-r\ntilocu-ily\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTatqarac 2 tons to Nelson smelter\nTotal'.' 80 bms\nHARRY FYMAN DEAD.\nWith deep reuret. we chronicle the\ndeath ol Hurry I'*. man, at his home in\nNew Denver, yesteiday moruinK- The\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 eceiiHed was well known and verv\npopular hero, havint* been ut une time\non the staff of Thr Silvxrtonian Harry\nhad been sick (ol some time, dread\nconsumption clnlir\u00C2\u00ABinK Mm as its victim.\nHe had lately returned irom law Auiielor,\nCall., where he had unsuccessful) sotittht\nto rev-over his lost he 1th. Hs was 24\na member of the Knights\nCHAMPION DRILLERS AND THEIR\nRECORDS.\nJos. Freethy and Tom Tallon, chain\nI'ion drillers of the world, li.nl their\nphotogiaphs taken wilh ha mers and\ndulls on Ihe twelfth ul laat 111 nil, 10 hs\nf rwardi'.l to ihe Cr. scent &tei*l com*\npuny of Fitlsbuig l'a., sa\s the Hutte\nTribune* Review lhe phulOi>ra| h* wuh\nsteel ins .1 hy ih.* oliuuinioUS Will be\nforwaided 10 1 he World's fair to be held\n1'i.lis, Frame, next year. Following if\nihe Treeiby and 1'ailoii record as tar af\ncan beo* tallied just now. altliouxh manv\nof their prouiinen. inatchcs havo been\nomitted. A>i|{. 1802. Boseinun, won first\nPiise, 37.'a inch h in 15 minute-i, winning\nhe championship from D.tvcy ami\nlVi-iic. who weic the chumpio'.is st\nthat time, having won same ut milling\ncongress in Helena, the same year, ly\ndrilling 45?jJ inches, On Aug. 20. same\nyear, Freethy and Tallon v on first prize\nbj drilling (dry bank bole) 21% inches\nThe following Sunday at Deer Lodge\nthe champions drilled, dry hack hole,\nwinning the contest with LM'., Inches,\nFreely antl Tallon in this match were\nsingularly unfortunate, as the platfoim\non which tho drills were laid fell away,\nwhich seriously interfeied with the\ndrillers snd impeded Uieir progress\nThe next match in which ihe champions\ntook part wss in the old pavilion, in 18t'2\nwhere 15 teams took part. Freethy und\nTallon won the pri\u00C2\u00ABe tl.e first niuht\neasily by drilling ;iK*i-lli inches, but\nowing to a dispute, in which it was\nclaimed the champions drilled in a seam,\nthey agreed to drill the following\nthey did, and\nRaffles are of dally occurrence.\nJ. A. McKinnon has been on a business trip Nelso iward-t.\nBo is*: O 1 tli\" 17ili ins', at. Silverton,\nthe wife of Jas. I. Mcintosh, of a daughter.\nResidents alonj; the beach are\ngathering '.iie.ii* crop of futjiv-Q.I froii} '-he\nlelffj.\nQl) Wednesday the bnige delivered a\ncarload of steel mils lor the William\nHunter Co.\nMrs. tl. A. Jackson, who has b-en'\nvisitin. friendM iu Nelson, returned last\"\nWednesday,\nJim .Mcintosh set up the cigars for the\ntown oq Tuesday.\nC. L. Copp left on Thursday for Trout\nLake He wiil do some prospecting\n..round there.\nC. K Hammond and A. Grierson of\nSandon, were etjoying the scenery\nhere, on Tu. aday.\nMiss Barr, of Prince Edwards 1-luml,\nis spending the holidays iu Silverton,\nvisiting Witli Miss Hunter.\nTiie R*v. M D McGee re'nrued last\nTuesday with bis bride. Mr and Mrs\ntftHiee havu taken up their residence in\nSlocan City.\nDuitald McMillan, a former Silwrtoui*-\nan, is doins a good brokerage lui-iness in\nOsmp Mi'Kiiiney, under the firm name\njf McMilKii k Co.\nFishing 1,11 ties ure hiving great\nsuccess on lite Lake now, and a luri.e\nnumber of Rainbow Trout are being\nbrought into town daily.\nF. L. Christie, Barrister of ^andon\nB. 0. will .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 at tho S-lkirk H \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 el every\nFriday In the future, Anything lequlr-\ning his set vices will bo attended to by\nhilt. t\nMessrs. Webb, Fair'.\u00C2\u00BBirn, Ardiel an 1\nlal'kson, f >ur Silvertoiilans, have been\nlooking over the mineral possibilities of\nupper fen Mile, returning to town las'\nWednesday,\nMr and Mrs Grunt Thorburn have left\nKredricion, N, 1>. on their way homo\nTh.yii'turn via Boston and San Francisco, and will arrive in Silverton In\nnbout ten days.\nAll work in the Jewelry Repairing\nline, left at the .silverton Dru,i Store, will\nbe promptly forwaided to Jacob Dovei,\nthe well-known Nelson jeweler. All repairs are GUAB-KT-KD kok onk year. *\nA water |>olo team is being organised\namong our amphibiously inclined youths.\nThere are several first class swimmers\nhere. New I/enver has been invited to\nsend down a team to play with the locals\nThe Thistle Hotel is attain open and\nrunning under the popular management\nof Tom Clair. Mr. Clair has recently\nreturned from Spokane, much improved\nin health and ready again to welcome\nhis old friends anil patrons.\nSC McClnre and Frank Watson, two\nfollowers ol Isank Walton, have had excellent luck among the tinny tribe at\nBennington Fulls. Each returned witli\nlull Hiisk'ds and the other accompuni-\nments of '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fishermen's luck.\"\nThere is music in the air Daring the\n\u00C2\u00A5# Ms Ms _B__S_5_--S_BI_--_M&\nAssi_.rE\nSilverton,\nB.C.\n::\nii\nSILVERTON\nM DRUG STORE.\nPATENT M-DICIOS, PLRK DRUGS.\nMineral Glasses and Compasses.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m\nPerfumes and Toilet Articles,\nLake Ave - - - Silverton, B. C.\nLAKEVIEW HOTEL\n8Uverton\t\n..^t\u00C2\u00AB'\",**'/*'**-^'*'*'^***\"*^ *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2! THE SILVERTONIAN, SILVERTON, B. C.\nTERSE TICKS FROM THE WIRE.\nA UompleU BnM\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00C2\u00BB tor\nth. Past We** la --!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 aad Jror.lg-\n-Uuda-S-n-nartaa** From Una Latest\nOtspata-as.\nThs Distillery Company of America\nwith an authorized capital of 1(125,000,000,\nhas been incorporated.\nThe war department has announced that\nthe customs receipt? at the port of Havana\nfor dune were $1 #2,-09. B\nThe salvagers have removed the American Line steamer Pari! from Off the rock\nwhere it struck some time ago.\nAugust Bodien of Helena, Mont., whose\nIsaly was found recently, did not commit\nsuicide as was at first supposed.\nThe slam-wheel steamers Naldeen and\nIjouise were destroyed by tire at Victoria.\nThe loss is about $35,000; .slightly insured.\nThe president has appointed Colonel Alfred K. Bates paymaster general of the\namw, to succeed Oeneral Asa B. Carey, retired.\nSeven persons already have died in and\nnear New York from lockjaw caused by\nFourth of July accidents, and others are\nin a precarious cundilion. ,\nThe United States transport steamers\nNewport and Ohio, with the returning\nOregon volunteers on board, were sighted\noff Point Reyes Wednesday.\nThe big trust swelter at Omaha is shut\ndown, the tires iu several of the furnaces\nlieing out, and others are to follow. The\nshortage of coal is given as a reason.\nCharges have been tiled against Indian\nAgent John S. Mayhugh, of the White\nHock agency, in Nevada, alleging, among\nother things, arbitrary administration.\nKlias Hatfield, the noted desperado and\nson of \"Devil Anse\" Hatfield, the older, of\nthe Hatfleld-McCoy feud that cost 141\nlives, bas surrendered to Governor Atkinson at Gray, Ky.\nThe cruiser Olympia has entered the\nSuez canal. Admiral Dewey says he is in\nvery good health. He appears in excellent\ncondition, which was also the case with\nhis officers and men. Tlie most of them\nhave suffered from malarial fever, but have\nnow recovered.\nAnother trolley car strike Is on ln\nBrooklyn.\nThe tidal waves have caused great\ndamage to crops In the Carolines.\nFire destroyed the Tompkins Opera\nHouse block and postoffice at Gallatin,\nTen^^\nPractically every mine In the Coeur\nd'Alons is being worked again by new\nmen, mostly from Missouri..\nJames Crosby, a wealthy manufacturer of Marion, Ind., attempted to\nshoot bis wife and famHy Sunday.\nThe large plant of Somers Bros.,\nmanufacturers of horse collars and leggings, was totally destroyed by Are.\nTlm Kearns,*of Boston, knocked the\nwind out of Jack Daly of Wilmington,\nln less than twe rounds, In New York.\nA postoffice has been established at\nValdez, Alaska, 80 miles northwest of\nOreas, with F. C. Bartlett, postmaster.\nWilliam Going, the Choctaw murderer, whose Indian name is Wallatonaka,\nwas executed recently ln the Choctaw\nnation.\nChief Officer* Brlown and three seamen of the New Zealand government\nsteamer Hinemoa^ 'were drowned, oo\nJune 4th.\nThe strict enforcement of General\nWood's quarantine seems'to have had\na good effect on the yellow fever situation ln Santiago.\nNews from Port Hill, Idaho, reports\nthat Wm. Reeser was shot and instantly killed recently by T. J. Dendaurent,\nof the precinct.\nParris C. McGrath has been appointed postmaster at a new office just established at Velma, Stevens county,\n20 miles west of Springdale.\nThe plate workers throughout the\ncountry to the number of 50,000 resume\nwark Immediately. The scale fixed ln\nChicago is based on the price of bars.\nNews of the accidental killing of\nCaptain Charles Buckle of the whaling\nsteamer Bayless, was brought down by\nthe steamer Alliance last week.\nThe second -Are within a week oc%\ncurred at Fori Duchesne, Itah, Sunday, when the quartermaster's stables\nand contents were entirely consumed.\nThe badly decomposed body of W. H.\nCreighton was found tn the -Spokane\nriver Just above the Great Northern\nbridge, near the army post, by six boyB.\njfhe body of an unknown man was\nfound ln the Sacramento river nine\nmfles below Preeport The corpse rs\nthat of a man of 60 years. He had a\nwooden leg.\nA bad derailment occurred at Blue-\ncut, Cal., 10 miles south of Redding.\nThe second section of the . Southern\nPacific passenger train ran into the\nfirst section.\nThe steamer Queen has sailed for\nAlaska with a large list of **_r***r-\u00C2\u00BBlon-\nists. Among them were United States\nSeAtor Perkins of CaKfornU aad Henry Villard.\nFollowing a -n_|ly q-Ht-rtf ?.nts*Uw.\nMet. G-brg- T#\u00C2\u00AB*t*. of t&s*nywriilm,.\n111., shot and kifie-J her *-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*.-._*>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-. Mra.\nChristian Pons, wosnsrfer! ber isms.rn.ad\nand killed herself.\nFour bombs were extiiruie.it *_ differ-\nent parts of Ba/e*M_a. laar. ws-fc. No\nserious damage waa rtJ-.n**. iiut tto excitement waa fatt-MK. T_\u00C2\u00AB mthar ot\nthe outrages Is on-sown.\nIt Is said that tbe mew n*\u00C2\u00BBa.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 enwmm\nArgentina and the rr_Wert tome* girtm\nnew American on tmsmw. ;i;nV* and\nwool, and on Ansrf-* <*\u00C2\u00ABrw.\u00C2\u00ABrr gamm,\ntimber and certain foo-t.i\nThe body of the mar, wtta \u00E2\u0099\u00A6hot n-rm-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2eJf at Lako Harriet, Mint. h*_ o**m\nMNWtfMfl as that of. B. C. Hlnnant.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-ashler of the construction department}\niof tint Northwestern Telegraph Co.\nFirst Washington volunteers, and that\nMajor Canton, Captain Otis of Company A, Captain Scudder of Company\nE, and Lieutenant Lemon are under arrest.\nCommissioner Wilson, of the Internal revenue department, has lssui;.'. a\ncircular absolutely prohibiting banks\nbanks from affixing stamps to checks\nunstamped when presented and requiring them to return the same to the\ndrawers.\nOrders have been received at Fort\nWright, Spokane's new army post, to\nprepare to open a recruiting office to\nenlist volunteers ln the Philippines.\nEvery effort will be made to hasten the\npreparations and begin the enlistment\nus quickly.as possible.\nj. Homer Bird, of New Orleans, ls\nnow a prisoner In the military barracks at St. Michael, Alaska, charged\nwith thc murder of H. Herllng and R.\nH. Patterson. Charles Sheffler and\nNorma Strong are held under 15,000\nbonds as witnesses.\nGeorge M. Valentine, cashier of the\nMiddlesex County Bank of Perth Am-\nboy, N. J., which has recently closed,\nhas surrendered himself and now ls in\njail on account of a shortage In the\nbank's funds, which has been variously\nestimated all the way up to $165,000.\nThe schooner General Slglln from\nCook's Inlet, Alaska, brings news ot\nthe drowning of seven men at Turn\nAgain arm, early in June. The names\nof only five of them are known, as follows: A. B. Johnson, Malone, 111.; Louis Peterson, Chicago; Chris. Madison,\nChicago; Porter, California; \t\nHutchinson, Rockford, 111.\nThe steamer Lindus, belonging to\nMessrs. Huddart, Parker k Co., Limited-while proceeding to sea ran aground\nand Boon became a total loss at the entrance of the port of New Castle. She\nwas of 1,079 tons and valued at $50,000.\nA southern newspaper reports the\ngovernment Is considering the sale of\nthe Bank of New Zealand.\nCharles Elmquist of Spokane was\ndrowned at Medical Lake Sunday. He\nwas ln a boat with his sister-in-law,\nMrs. Fanny Elmquist, and a Mr. Anderson. All wore bathing suits. The\nboat dipped water and finally sank.\nWm. Huntoon who was swimming near\nby, rescued Mrs. Almquist; Mr. Anderson caught hold of a floating plank and\nheld himself up until help arrived.\nCharles Elmquist sank Instantly.\nTen striking miners have been convicted in Fort Smith, Ark., for entering Into a conspiracy on July 5th for\nthe purpose of Intimidating and terrorizing the imported negroes ln the employ of the Kansas k Texas Coal Company, in violation of the injunction issued by Federal Judge Rogers restraining the strikers from Interfering with\nthe company's employes.\nWhy Women Are Nervous.\n(British Medical News.)\nThe frequedt cases of nervous prostration or utter collapse of the nervous\nsystem under which women \"go all to\npieces,\" as the saying is, have cause-\nmuch thought and investigation on the\npart of physicians.\nCertain inorganic substances are\nwell known to cause various forms of\nnervous diseases which are readily\ntraced to the poisons producing them.\nFurther research leads to the belief\nthat alum is a prevailing cause of so-\ncalled nervous prostration, for tho\nsymptoms it produces on the nervous\nsystem' after' its absorption into the\nblood arfe -very remarkable indeed. Experiment- physiologically made upon\nanimals by Orflla, Professors Hans\nMayer, Paul Seim and others, show\nthat alum frequently produces no visible symptoms for many days after it-\nIntroduction into the body. Then follow loss of appetite and other alimentary disturbances, and finally a serious\nprostration of the whole nervous system. The most prominent physicians\nnow believe that \"nervous prostration\"\nand many affections of the nerves from\nwhich both men and women suffer are] claims,\ncaused by tlie continued absorption of\nalum into the system.\nIt Is probable that many medical\nmen are unaware of the extent to\nwhich salts of alumina may be Introduced Into the body, being under the\nimpression that the use of alum in\nbread is prohibited. Alum, however, is\nstill used surreptitiously to some extent to whiten bread, and very largely\nIn making cheap kinds of baking powder. In families where baking powder Is generally used great care shonld\nbe exercised to procure only those\nbran'ds made from cream of tartar.\nThe alum powders may generally be\ndistinguished by the lower price at\nwhich they are sold.\nMINES 1 MINI\nMETALS OF THE NORTHWEST.\nturns sTrom tha Rich Bl.l.x.s of the Pa-\nel-e North wast, Maws From All tha\nPrlnolpla Miulag Usa-us -Person-ls-\nM-lnlng Motes.\nFilially Hart in ., lllr-rlr Accident.\nNew York, July 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094nchri Fournfor,\nthe noted 'French King-distance bicycle\nrider, died at tie Manhattan hospital from\ninjuries, received in a bicycle accident on\nSeVt-jUnTvenue a fey** hours previous. He\nwas 35 years old.\nFounder, was run down hy s racing\nteam. He was thrown from his Wheel and\nunable to rise, and another team was close\nonto him when a citizen saw his peril and\ndragged him to tbe sidewalk. His injuries\nwei-e internal. M .\nPits Ready to Flu,In Agraln.\nChicago, July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bob Fitsslmmons\nrill fight his next battle in this city. Martin Julian has accepted an offer from\nthe Fort Dearborn Athletic Club for a\nsix-round bout between Fitzsimmons and\nsome hea,vy weight to bc chosen later.\nTbe bout will be fought in the latter\npart of August, probably the week folio-, ing the \"Kid\" McCoy-Jack McCormlck\ngo, which is set for August 18. The ex-\nchampion and his opponent will box for a\nper.cntSgc of the receipts.\nIn 1775 there were only 27 newspapers published in the United States.\nA man calls his dog Coal, because\nIt to stated there Is trouble in the' the first Jay he had him he bitumen.\nPrecious stones to the value of $160,-\n290 were found in the United States in\n1898 as compared with $136,675 lu 1897.\nThe most encouraging reports continue to come from the Conjecture\nmine, ln Lakeview camp, on Lake\nPend d'Orellle. The mill recently\nerected is said to be surpassing the\nguarantee of the manufacturers and\nthe hopes of the mine owners. It ls\nrunning steadily and Is turning out\nconcentrates of a value of about $140\nper ton.\nRepublic Note*.\nThe south drift on the Georgia Reed\nIs making good progress.\nThe Butte aud Boston mine ln Republic camp ls again to take its place\namong the working properties of the\ncamp.\nA large force has begun working on\nthe new Wauconda tunnel. It Is to he\nan adit tunnel and will be driven at\nleast 300 feet, at which point it will be\n200 feet below the surface of the\nground.\nThe Apex Mining company, Limited,\nIs the name of a recent Incorporation\nto acquire and operate a group of\nclaims in the south half of the Colville\nreservation.\nWork has been resumed on the Silver Chief in the Huckleberry range,\nJust west of Addy station In Stevens\ncounty.\nThe compressor on the Golden Lily\nls working in fine shape and two shifts\nare at work sinking the shaft.\nThe new shaft of the Agnes, which Is\nsunk near the line of the Mud Lake\nclaim, ls 75 feet In depth.\nThe Quilp has been prepared for\nsinking a winze from the bottom of the\ntunnel near the north end of the big\npay chute.\nSome work is being done on the San\nJuan, and a report is in circulation\nthat a good ledge has been uncovered\non the property that Is supposed to be\nthe Kate Hayward ledge.\nFrom numerous causes the water has\nnot been taken out of the Princess\nMaud shaft, but the work will begin\nto-day. As soon as the water is out and\nthe shafts straightened up work of\nBlnklng will be resumed.\nWork Is progressing very slowly on\nthe Golden Lily shaft, owing to the\npresence of foul air.\nRapid work is being done on the\nCopper Mountan claim. The tunnel Is\nbeing driven about three feet each 24\nhours with two shifts.\nAllttle Bui-faee scratching is still going on at the Hit or Miss claim.\nThe Delta drift is in 35 feet The\nledge looks fine and the ore maintains\nIts high grade.\nThe winze In the Morning Glory was\nsunk to a depth of about GO feet without timbering, but the rock began to\nscale off and timbering became necessary. It has been nicely timbered and\nthe roof lagged with plank In a most\nsubstantial manner. Sinking the winze\nwill now progress without Interruption\nuntil the level ls reached.\nBig news comes from Republic con\ncerning the recent development of the\nInsurgent. Since the first of the present month thc value of the property-\nhas been doubled by the development\nIn following the vein from the Lone\nPine side line Into the Insurgent fraction. The vein turns to the north and\nis running parallel with the Black Tall\nvein.\nBuffalo Hnmp.\nMr. Turner Is erecting a substantial\nlog house at the Concord group of\npreparatory to obtaining a\npatent for the property,\nA fine copper ledge has been opened\nup about four miles south of the Jumbo, and Is improving as development\nprogresses. From several prospectors\ncamped In the vicinity of this work It\nIs learned that the showing, outside of\nthis and one other ledge, Is not prom\nlsing, and the men were preparing to\nremove to some other locality.\nNo pack trains are in over the Brown\ntrail yet, but they hope to get through\nwithin eight or ten days. A force of\neight or ten men has been at work this\nweek and ls completing the road as\nrapidly as possible.\nThe Cracker Jack people are still\nrunning on the drift that was started\nlast week, and It Is looking very promising.\nThe St. Paul is being worked by a\nsmall force of men, and the development Is quite satisfactory to the management\nA great deal of work Is being done\nall over the camp, and as soon as thc\nsnow ls off ln the main part of the district a great deal more will be undertaken. There is from one to three feet\nof snow.\nThe Big Buffalo people have opened\na new find on their group of claims\nthat assays far up in the hundreds. It\nIs on the Oro Flno claim, and is a new\nledge, entirely distinct from the big\none on which they have been at work.\nWork on the Jumbo is still progressing, and the ledge was reported as\npitching and growing lower ln value\nuntil on the 6th the workmen struck\na richer body of ore, and It ia now said\nto be looking One.\nHrlilan Colombia.\nA fifty-ton concentrator Is under\nconstruction within six miles of Boss-\nland.\nOn one of the claims In the Delphino\ngroup, on the north fork of Toby creek,\nabout 20 miles from Wildemere, a shaft\nis down 140 feet, and between 80 and\nlevel about 50 feet down. Besides the pi\noutcrop on the surface has been strip- M\nped 4,160 feet. I **a_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_B__\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nWlldermere district, in East Kooten-\t\nBy, is attracting a good deal of atten- FE0M H0NQ K0NQ|\nHon from both prospectors and men MUbl __u\u00C2\u00BB_* r\u00C2\u00BBu\nlooking for prospects.\nThe Ymlr mine surveyors are survey-,\nIng a wagon road up the north fork of\nWild Horse creek, which is very liber-1\ntil, as the extension of the Ymlr minea\nroad is of no actual benefit to the company, lt may be stated in this connection that the government, in the\nmatter of the construction of roads,'\nwill put up dollar for dollar with the\nclaim holders. I\nCannot Uo Any Business There - %re too\nClosely \V\u00C2\u00BBl.'lic\u00C2\u00AB.'\nNo. 1 red, bulk, 45c; sacked, 47c.\nhay, $13; alfalfa, $11.\nVegetables\u00E2\u0080\u0094Potatoes, $2.00 to $2.26\nper cwt.*, onions, $1.35\u00C2\u00AE$ 1.60; cabbage\n$2.60 per cwt.; celery, 50 to 60c per do*.\nHay\u00E2\u0080\u0094Timothy, $13 per ton; wheat\nhay, $11; alfalfa, $11.\nRye\u00E2\u0080\u0094Country points, f. o. b., 7Je per\ncwt; Spokane, 75c per owt.\nCorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whole, $1.16 per cwt; cracked, $1.20.\nFeed\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bran and shorts, $14 per ton;\nshorts, $13.; bran, $16.; rolled barley,\n$20.; chicken feed, $15 to $20.\nWood (on car)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fir, $3.; tamarack,\n$3.75; pine, $2.75. Retail\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fir, $3.60;\ntamarack, $3.50 to $4; pine, $3 to $3.26.\nCoal (retail)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Roalyn lump. $6.60;\nPennsylvania antharcite, $18; Colors\ndo antharcite, $16; foundry coke, $16;\nCumberland black, $17.60 to $20.\nPoultry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chickens, live weight, 16\nto 17c per pound; turkeys, dressed, 16\nto 18c; spring ducks, dressed, 14 to 16;\ngeese, Ihe, IU to 18c.\nMeat*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Beef cows, live, $3.50 to 4.50\nper cwt; dressed, 7 to 7Vic; hogs, live,\n4 to IJe; dressed, 6 to OJc.\nWheat.\nPortland.- It was dillicult to secure a\nbid Of over 08o for Walla Walla wheal,\nand some dealers were quoting down aa\nlow as 57c. Valley i-niel ai Mia 59 l-2c;\nbluestem, .it)(\"tllc.\nTacoma.- There is no improvement in\nthe local wheat market. Pi ices are steady\nat 57c fur club and til).' for bluestem.\nMetal*.\nNew York.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Silver\u00E2\u0080\u0094Certificates, DOci)\nt.i. : bar silver, tM\u00E2\u0096\u00BA\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 _ Mexican dollars,\n47 7-8c.\nLondon\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bar silver- Quiet at 27 5-K.I\nper ounce.\nSan Francisco.- Bur silver, 60 l-_c\nMexican dollar*-, 40 A-4(a M) 1-lc.\nNew York.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tin made a sharp turn today, declining IS to _.*> points under a\nrefusal of buyers to go in and a breathing\ns|iell all around resulted. There was little\nor nothing in the news from thc west\nor abroad lo bring about the reaction,\nrather the contrary beng the Case, Othrl\ndip.irtm.nts i f ihe 1 cal market hel 1 about\nat unchanged prices.\n1-ake copper -Unchanged, $IH(\u00C2\u00AB in 50.\nLead I nchanged, |6j60jH--. Ths\nlinn that lixes the selling price fir Diners\nand -.inciters quotes lead al -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"!*4.: 1.\"\u00C2\u00BB at tlie\nItoltlMT) anil Murder.\nSpokane, July 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Matt Schlott was\nheld up, robbed and mortally shot\nabout 11 o'clock last evening near the\nNorthern Pacific roundhouse.\nAbout half an hour earlier two mask-\ne dand armed highwaymen held up\nProprietor Will Meyers in the New\nYork Exchange saloon. He showed\nfight, was horribly beaten by the rob\nrhe strike was made ] hers, who took bis gold watch, robbed\nIn the west end of No. 2 level, which\nhas 800 feet of tunnel.\nWork was resumed on theSt. Lawrence-Richmond tunnel, Saltese, Mont.,\nJ again the first of the month after a\nshut-down to get ln supplies and fix\nthings up a little on the outside.\nRasmus Nelson sends word of his\ndiscovery of an eight-foot ledge ln\nSlaughterhouse gulch, near Susans-\nville, Grant county, Or., assaying $5000\nto $10,000 to the ton In free gold. The\nyellow metal ls visible to the casual observer. The discoverer is a pioneer\nresident of the Susansvllle district\nThe new find ls so located that lt will\nbe easy to develop. Mining experts,\nnow Investigating the camp, predict\nthat great wealth will be uncovered.\nAn exciting time, amounting almost\nto a stampede, ls taking place ln the\nSyndicate camp In the Burnt Creek\ndistrict, of Central Idaho. The re\nmarkable development of the Syndicate group Is the cause ot the excitement.\nIt Is stated that Captain Delamar, a\ncapitalist, has virtually completed the\npurchase of the Bully Hill copper mine\nfor $.150,000. Smelters are to be built\nand ten miles of railway constructed lo\nconnect with the Southern Pacific, and\nwhen the works are ln full operation\nover 10,000 men will be employed.\nThe Deer Trail No. 2 Mining Company has declared Its regular monthly\ndividend of $2,500, being a quarter of\na cent a share This Is tbe fourteenth\ndividend of similar amount paid by the\ncompauy and brings up the total to\n$35,000.\nIdaho has another Klondike. It ls\nlocated on the Clearwater river ln\nwhat ls known as the Cove country, 18\nmiles from Buffalo Hump. It Is stated\nto be one of the richest placer discoveries ever made in the state.\nArticles Incorporating the Pacific\nCoast Smelting Company have been filed ln Seattle. The capital stock is\n$300,000. B. W. Drew Is the promoter\n_____________________________________ __^____^^__ -100 fpet \u00C2\u00B0f drifts have been run from a\nl-***)---***^-*^\nthe till of the day's receipts and es\ncaped. The same men are supposed to\nhave been responsible for both crimes.\nThe patrol wagon force was responding to a call from the saloon when the\nfatal holdup occurred.\nSchlott died at the police station a\nfew minutes after he was brought\nthere. He died without giving any\nstatement of the occurrence beyond a\ncry of \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I'm robbed; I'm murdered,\"\nwhich followed the sound of the shot.\nThe flash of the gun, sound of the\nshot and Schlott's cry were heard hy a\nnumber of passengers on a town-bound\nHlllyard car, which was within 100\nfeet of where the shooting took place.\nThe Train Was Held l'p.\nTrinidad, Colo., July 14. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tlie southbound passenger train on the Colorado _\nSouthern railway was roblicd by four men\nat a point five miles south of Pol\u00C2\u00BBom, N.\nNf., al the same point the passenger train\nwaa held up last September. After the\ntrain came to a standstill and the crew\nhad heen intimidated by guns, the rubbers\nused dynamite with good effect, blowing\nopen the express ear. Railway and express\notllcials state positively that nothing was\nsecured by the robbers. The few pisscn\ngen on tlie train were not molested. A\u00C2\u00BB\nsoon as the robbers searched the car they\nmounted their horses and, tiring a few\nshots to alarm the trainmen, fled without\nan attempt to go through the mail car.\nParties here who claim to know say there\nwaa a large amount of money in the ex-\npress car, as well as other valuable matter.\nAfrnlr.\nNo News of Ihe iiimlriiinlsii\nWashington, July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Neither the\nHritish nor the C cnn an embassies here\nhave received a word concerning tlie Cua-\nt.-iii.il.iii affair and the 'repotted purpoM\nof a United movement to compel I'tiate\nmala to observe her obligations to foreign\nbondholders.\nThere is the same lack of official con\nUrination of the report Ihat the Oennan\ncruiser GeleT has been ordered to piiseed\nto Guatemala.\nPacker* Have C'loaed Down.\nKansas City, July 15.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Swartzchild k\nSulzberger's local packing plant was\nclosed rather than grant a second advance\nin wages to its 2(10 butchers and their\nhelpers. One thousand men are out of\nemployment.\nIt has been a union house nnd only\nMonday last the employes were given an\nincrease in wages which, according to the\ncompany oiliciais, brings them up to the\nunion scale.\nWlrrlesja Telegraphs'.\nChicago, July IH.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Tribune special\nfrom \ ii toria says:\nThe \"M.ii imi system of w ireless telegraphy is to Im* put in opciation in Hawaii as a means of communication be-\ntHf.li the different Islands of the group.\nAn organisation has Inch funned, capital has been -itl.~. nl\u00C2\u00BB-d and -.unr of the\nmaterial for the system is alieady on the\nway.\nIf some men were to eat their words\ntheir health would bc ruined forever.\nKaslo & Slocan\nTIME CARD.\nTrains Kun un Pacific Standard Tims.\nLeave. Arrlvs.\nGoing: Weat. Dally. doing Essi.\n8:00 a. m Kaslo J:6\u00C2\u00BB p. m.\n8:32 a. m South Forte 3:M p. m\nS:30 a. m Bproule'a I:tt p. ni\nS:46 a. m Whitewater M0 p. m\n9:65 a. m Bear Lake 200 p. in\n10:12 a. in McOulgan 1:46 p. m\n10:26 a. m Balley'a 1:M p. m\nl'i xt a. in\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cody Junctli n .... l:23 p. ni\nArrive. Leave.\n10:40 a. m Bandon 1:11 p m\nCODY BRANCH.\nLeave 11:00 a. in..Sandon..Arrive 11:40 a. m\nArrive 11:16 a. m...Cody...Leave 11:16 a. m\nO. F. COPE-LAND, Supartntendsnt.\nIlll\nOverloaded Vessel l-'oundera at Sea.\nChicago, July IH.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A special from Victoria, U. C, says:\nAdvices received hy the steamer\nAorangi, just arrived, state thai the Union\nSteamship Company's iiitei-i-lnd liner\nOiihu foundered at sea while on a vnyage\nfrom ('rcynioutli to Dunedin and the creiv\nof 211 were lost. The disaster was due lo\noverloading thc vessel.\nDealha From l,\u00E2\u0080\u009Eekja-r.\nPoslon, Mass., July 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094There have\nbeen a number of deaths from lockjaw in\nthe past ten days. The victims were Ix.vs\ninjured in Fourth of July accidents.\nMot hem will find Mrs. Winslow'_ Sooth,\ning Syrup the best remedy to DM for tlieit\nchildren dining the I\nI lull T.mn Flooded.\nRait Lake, July 14. \u00E2\u0080\u0094A special from\nManti, Utah, saya the river has overflowed\nits banks and Hooded the greater part of\nthat town. No lives were lost, though\nthere were many narrow escana, 'J'ho\nproperly loss will be heavy. Manti is a\ntown' of 2(KK) Inhabitant*, situate. 180\nKootenay....\nRailway aod Navigation\nCompany,\nOperating Kaslo & Slocan Railway, International Nav. ft Trading Co.\nBchedule of Time-1'aclflc Standard Tlm*.\nKAHLO A SLOCAN KY.\nPaasenger train for Sandon and w\u00C2\u00BBy\nStations, leaves Knslo at 8:00 a. m\nDally, returning, leave* Sandon at 1:16\np. ni.. arriving at Kailo at 3:66 p. m\nInternational Nav. A Trad. Co.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Operating on Kootenay lake and rlv*r.\n8. 8. \"INTKKNATIONAL.\"\nLeaves Kaslo for Nelaon at 6:00 a. m.\n.lally, except Sunday. Returning, leave*\nNelson at 4:30 p. m., calling at Balfour,\nPilot Hay, Ainsworth, and all way point*.\nConnects with 8. F. A N. train to and\nfrom Bpokane, at Five Mile Point.\n8. 8. \"ALBERTA.\"\nLeaves Nelson for Bonner's F*rry Tu**-\ndays and Saturdays at 7 a. m., meeting\nsteamer \"International\" from Kaslo at\nPilot Hay.\nReturning, leave* Bonner'* Ferry at l:W\na. m. Wednesday* and Sunday*.\nConnect* at Uonner's Ferry with Or*\u00C2\u00BBt\nNorthern railway for all point* east and\nwc*t.\nSteamers call at principal landing* I\"\nboth directions, and at other point* whin\nsignaled.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tickets gold lo all points In Canada a\"1*\ntho United Slate*.\nTo asc.rlali) rate* and full Information\nSddreaa s I\nhave been run from a'rhidren during the lei'thinir iH'ii.\u00E2\u0080\u009E| -., .. ,..,,,, \" * \u00E2\u0096\u00A0w HiltlFJlTJPYlNO ManM*r.\n-*\"\\*1r*lSe**rW. THE SILVERTONIAN, SILVERTON, B. C.\n\"He is Wise Who\nTalks But Wter\nThis is only a half truth. If wise men\nhad held their tongues, we should know\nnothing about lhe circulation of lhe-'Stood.\nIf it were not for this Advertisement you\nmight never know thai Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best blood medicine.\n'BY THE AMERICAN REPORTERS\nIlia Very Strkj-t ailed Kffort ,f ,*.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\ntTfow&m&\nNever Disappo\nFound Dead.\nSpokane, July 10,-Grasping a limb of I\na laiien tree with both hand*, aa if trving I\nlu pull himself up from a kneeling position '\n*\"\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 With his head thrown hack as if in\ngreat agony, the dead body of Fred Har-1\nV'.v was found by his father on the farm |\nabout 11 miles from Spokane. Tlie young\nt'ori-..poDd.\u00C2\u00BBt. 1U.I Kffeii-Thev\" Had I '\"U\" , been gwi a\"(1 *-\"\"% bruised' by\nInterview, With ots- He Prowls.- ' .\"T8 bl'\"' bl,t **ud \u00C2\u00BB*anage'* to get\nThen, llreater Liberty. ullt uf re'**-'' of the animal and had\ntrawled several feet away from the place\nwhere the animal was tied.\nPETITION OF THE HITLANDER-.\nMiie II.O..NH...I of 'l'i..-,,, Ss\y 0<\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00BB\nI'tiul la All II I-1.1.\nNew Vork, July 1S.-A special from\nWashington says:\nThe Boer j-.ncimm nl lias transmitted to\nthe United .Slates a copy of a petition nd-\ndressed Id ii by 6000 UitUnderi denying\nih.it ihe present government in the Trans\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2gal i* tyraiiiiir.il, as declared by other\nlitlaiiilers supported by Great llritniii.\nThe petition wa- circulated in jMay and\naddressed to the Boar government and a\ncopy of it has been received at the state\ndepartment.\nNr Alfred Milner, Ilie BrUislrnlgtl commissioner, iu writing to Mr. Chamberlain\n ccruiiig the petition, declares that it\naas general]] discicdited and it is openly\n-lated that the signatures hud bun r,b-\nt.iined through the instrumentality of\ngovernment officials ami railway lervants,\nn ho aie mostly naturalized.\nlu diplomatic circles here the opinion\ni- expressed that the Beer government has\niram-mittcd copies of the petition to the\nj>uvem nia named therein iii order to\n, olivine** them theic is little truth in the\nHritish statement and te prevent any of\n!licm from joining Great Britain iu en\nilenVOrlng to fours better treatment for\nihe ritlanders.\nluslruellona to llowlaon.\nThe f.s-ling prevailing in administralion\ncircle* is sh\u00C2\u00BBwn by the Instructions setii\n(.slay to Hear Admiral Hoaison, dircctiiij-\nliiin to continue his cruise.\nThe admiral reported Inn airival al Cape\ntown from Pretoria and that the Chicago\nwa* ready to sail, and the fact that he\nmade no mention of the situation an!\ntailed to recommend that a warship l-e\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0slit to I Magna bay shows conclusively\nI,, the minds of the oiliciais that he is\nsatisfied lh<* situation is calm and that\nllii-ie is no danger of war.\nStriker* Selae Non-I'nloa Men.\nllii.lgip >rt. X. J., July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The airival\n. I l.'i non unit u gUst, blowers here caused\n.hi outbreak. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2* -;\nI lo strangers came fiom Indiana on *\ntrain over the New Jersey Central. They\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2eie met at the station by a huge crowd\ni.i strikers, win. Immediately stormed the\ntrain and captured the n >n um n men. A\nlively fracas ensued, dining .'hi.-li man/\nblow! weie exchanged\". HalUgei f\ili|; of\nthe I'iiiuIh ilaiid iJI.iss Works, who wa* in\ncharge of the party, was Nit on the head\nwiih a hi ok and badly Injured.\nTl.e doors and windows of the car were\n-.haltered and a hack Halting at tlie st.i\nt on f, i mail, was wricked hy strikers in\nlhe belief that it wt* lo take Manager\nKing to lhe works.\nlhe nmi union men Were tiu.illy in lined\nto a company the strikers to the latter'*\nliemlipiarters, where an attempt is being\nmade to force them to leave town.\nThe Manhattan Elevated Railroad,\nNew York, carries 625,000 passengers\nper dsy.\nAn Excellent Combination.\nThe pleasant method and beneficial\neffects of the well known remedy,\nNYBOT or Kios, manufactured by the\nCaufokma Fio Syrup Co., illustrate\nthe value of obtaining the liquid laxative principles of plant* known to be\nmedicinally laxative and presenting\nthem in thu form most refreshing to the\ntaste aud acceptable to the system. It\nis the one perfect strengthening laxative, cleansing the system effectually,\ndiapelllng colds, headaches and fevers\ngently yet promptly and enabling one\nto overcome habitual constipation per\nmanentlv. Its perfect freedom from\nevery objectionable quality and substance, and ita acting on the kidneys,\nliver and bowela, without weakening\nor irritating them, make it the ideal\nlaxative.\nIn the process of manufacturing figs\nare used, as they aro pleasant to the\ntaste, but tbe medicinal qualities of the\nremedy are obtained from senna and\nother aromatic plants, by a method\nknown to the --.-tani-tiA Fio SvHur\nCo. only. In order to get Its beneficial\neffects and to avoid imitations, please\nremember the full name of the Company\nprinted on the front of every package\nCALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.\nsan rmAMOisoo, oa_.\n-OUtSVIL-B, IT. W_W YORK, W T.\nKnr \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB.v sll nt-.inrlsts.\u00E2\u0080\u0094t'r'c-e JOc. oerhopli\nC. M. PASSETT,\nASSAY OFFICE\nand' Ore Teslimr Works.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0established In Bpokan* In IMS. Oold\n\"usi and Bullion boushl. Band for price\nlist ami innlllnc or* sacks.\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^'Ae.Arm}\nPISO'S CURE FOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iial FAH.8. ,\nl*!<\u00C2\u00BBt<'ou\u00C2\u00ABhS>rup. Tastes dual. Das I\nla lime Hold by druggl**-\nM-KV-'''\nI Manila, July li,__i.c constantly iu-\n'Tcasing strictness of cen.sor.ship of pre*.\n'hspatches, which has prevented th. cab*\n.im to the United .States of anything that\n| did nol relied official views of important\nevents and conditions, resulted in a united\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'N'li't on the p,\u00E2\u0080\u009E| \u00E2\u0080\u009Ef correspondents here\nto stir an abatement of the rigors of\ncensorship.\nThe initiative in this dilution was taken a mouth ago ami resulted in the form-\nIng of a statement which was presented\non Sunday, duly (i, t\u00E2\u0080\u009E Major General Otis,\ncomiuiimling the military forces of tho\nI'nited .States. Thu eorres|H.iidents also\nI'.ked for permission to cable Iheir papers\n\"11 the facts ahd different phases of events\na* thev transpired h,.,,..\nTin* correspondents had two long inter\nviews Kith litis, in the cans,, of whiin\nthc.i claimed that the evident purpose of\nthe eoiiVfslifp \u00C2\u00ABas not to keep information from the e ny, lint to keep from the\npublic ihe knowledge of i|,e real condition\nof aHaiis lure' It was also asserted by\nthe coi'irs-ioiidentH that newspapers printed in Manila, whicli reach the enemy weekly, are permitted to publish Kta'tcnients\nsimilar to those which lhe correspondent**\nSr*J forbidden to cable.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ieneral Otis finally promised greater\nliberality, agreeing to pass\" all matter that\nhe might consider not detrimental to the\ninterests of the I'nited States. He ap-\npointed Captain Qttm of his staff as\ni elisor.\nThe Statement.\nThe statement of the correspondents i-\nas follows: ,\n\"The iin'dYr-igncd, being all the staff correspondents of American newspapers -ta-\nlioned in Manila, unite in thL. following\nstatement:\n\"We believe tliat from official dispatches\nmade public in Washington the people of\nflic I'liiled \"states have not received a correct impression of conditions iii the Philippines, but these dispatches have presented an ultra-optimistic 'view that is\nnot shared bj the general officers in the\nOdd.\n\"WeKelfrvr thai the dispatches incorrectly represent cxi-ting conditions among\nthe Filipinos in IVSpeel lo their dissension\nand dempra-tatloa resulting from the\nAmerican campaign and to the brigand\nhar.ii ter of their army.\n\"We Is'licve the dispatches err in the\ndeclaration thai ihe situation is well in\nhand and the IKumptlon that the insurrection can Ih* speedily ended without\ngreatly increased force*.\n\"We think the tenacity of Filipino pur\n(sis,, has li.fii underestimated and that the\nStatement! are unfounded thai volunteers\narc unwilling to engage in further service,\n\"The ccn-orship ha-, compelled un to participate iu this misrepresentation by -_->\nrising or altering uncontrovcrlcd state*\nDirata of fads on the plea that ihey would\nalarm the -soph at home.\n\"-p cific.itii ns: Thc prohibit] n . f re\nporta** the suppression of full reports of\nfield up. ration* in the event of failuic; lhe\niiiiihIm i of heat prostrations in the Held,\nthe systematic minimization of naval op-\nrrations, and the suppression of complete\nie|Mirts of the situation.\n\"John T. Mi-Cutchc.in and Harry Arm-\nstrung. Chicago Record.\n\"Oscar K. Davis and P. (',. McDonnell.\nNew York Sun.\n\"Robert M- Collins, John P. Punning\nand C I., .femes, the Associated l'r.->s.\n\"K.I. Keen.', Sciipp* Mdtae A*s,icia\ntion.\n\"Keinhard Little, Chicago Tribune.\"\nSnitiu- Will Have Xo Klu_.\nWashington, July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It ll stated in\nquarters intimately acquainted with recent conduct of .Samoan affairs that the\nabolition of kingship in Samoa has advanced considerably further than a provisional arrangements by the Bamoan commission and that the three governments\nnave so far acquiesced that this feature\nis assured as part of the permanent system for the government of Samoa.\nKilled Ilia Sweetheart.\nLincoln, III., July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Roy Sutton Is\nunder arrest charged with murdering his\nsweetheart, Leona Klmere of Mason City.\nSutton, it is alleged, shot the girl twice\nand then fired a bullet through his own\nbody. He will probably die.\nSutton served in the anny during the\nwar with Spain.\nf'erniania Hank Closed.\nSt. Paul, duly 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The (.'ermania State\nbank, capitalized at $200,000, was closed\nby State Hank Kxamincr Pope. The last\nstatement showed d posits on hand of nearly half a million.\nHOWS Tiiisr\nWe offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for\nsny case of Catarrh laat connot be cured by\nHall'a Catarrh Cure.\nF. J. CliENEY A CO., Toledo, O.\nWs. the undersigned, hnve known F. J.\nCheney for the last 15 years, and believe him\nperfectly honorable In all business transactions\nsnd nnanclally able to carry out any obligations\nmuds hy their firm.\nWEST A TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.\nWAI-HN-. KINNAN _ MARVIN, Wholesale\nDruggists. Toledo, O.\nHall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free.\nPrice 75c per bottle. Bold by all Druggists.\nHall'a Family Pills are ths best.\nSt. Augustine, the oldest, city in the\nUnited States, was founded by the\nSpaniards ln 1505.\nI.a,Ilea Ian Wear Hl..\u00C2\u00BBea\nOne size suiallei after using Allen's Foot-\nK.i * u powder to Ih? shaken uilo tlie shoe*,\nll makes light or new shoes feel easy;\ngives Instant rebel* lo corns ami bunions.\nIts tin- greatest comfort discovery of the\nage. Cures -swollen feet, blisters and callous spots. Allen's foul-Base las certain\ncure foi Ingrowing nails, sweating, snniri\ning. hot, selling teet We haveSO.OOO testimonials. All druggists and shoe stores\nteil it '.'.-Vc Trial pad age KltKK by mail.\nAddress. Allen H.Olmsted, be Boy, N. Y.\nAn ounce of keep-your-mouth-shut Is\nbetter than a pound of explanation\nafter you have said lt.\nI'erfect Syslem t'leasera.\nKeep clean Inside ns well ns outside and you'll\nbe nearer godliness. Oasearet*> Candy Cathartic\ncleanse and purify your body inside. All drug\ngists, lue, ISO. OOc.\nl>.-\u00C2\u00ABir...-il... III..?.- al the Vs.) Vard.\nNew York, duly lit. Kin* at the llrook-\nlyn navy yard threatened much valuable\npropert) in the building occupied by the\npro. isiou and clothing department of the\nbureau of supplies and accounts.\nT'he fire was discovered on the third\nfhs.r in which the duck cloth was kept and\ncut up for the men in the navy. Aliout\n1000 worth of cloth was on the Hour, and\nit is thought that it was entirely consumed by thc lire,'as the Haines swept\nfrom one CBd of the building to the other.\n(in the second ftW \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<* stored in bales\ncm end by waterproof matriial all the\nother cloth for the suits worn in the navy\nnnd needed for ol her. pin poses. The cloth\non this floor was estimated to be valued at\n$500,000, How much of il was deslroyed\nby wuter could not be learned, but it wns\nthought that it must have been somewhat\ndamaged! despite the fact thai it was protected by watorpipol covering.\nBailie Wilh Robber (Jans*.\nLas Yegas, N. M . July 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meager de\ntails were leccivcd here of a pitched battle\nbetween a sheriff's posso and the gang of\noutlaw* who held up the Colorado _\nSouthern passenger train nt Folsom a few\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lav* ago. The affray occurred near Cm.-\narron. J. W. Knir. member of the posse,\nwas killed, ('iniairon is situated inland\nfrom telegraph lines.\nDeputies tan and Smith of Springer,\nN. M., were probably fatally woiindeds\n\V II. Reno, chief nf the secret service do\npartment of the Colorado _ Southern, was\nalso wounded.\nThe rolil-er* were uninjured. They es\ncapcl to the hills. ABOtlwr pOW Ml 0T*\npolled at Cinia'iri.iiaiid i* now* in pursuit\nof \Mew^mV*' | *\u00C2\u00BB.-..' '\nBy a wise provision, close beside the\nlittle tree on which nutmegs grow, often stands a greater.\nI.j \u00C2\u00AB>..\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Boarding School lor Boys.\nSuperior advantages; reasonable charge.\nSend for prospectus lo Jnmes Lyon, principal,\nSpokane. Wash.\nA Frenchman who loves his wife\ncalls her his \"darling cabbage,\" or his\n\"little blue rabbit.\"\nKeser and Iron Work*.\nI'nllTI.ANI\" WIRE \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 IROM WORKS; WIKE\nuri.l Iron fencing; 00*10* railing. \u00C2\u00ABtft Ml Aider.\nAt Naples ln 1656 during the plague\nwhich lasted 28 weeks, 380,000 people\ndied.\nIF!\nPENSION\nCI.AIMANT8 FOR\nwrite to NATHAN\nB1CKFORD, Washington, D. C, they wUI\n. ., receive quick replies. B, 5th N. H. rots..\nBuff stlth Corps. Proeecutlns claims since UT7S.\nPhysicians do not laugh at the\n\"faith cure.\" They know the value of\nfaith\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the doctor.\nRemember that you can buy Jesse Moore\nA. A. Whiskey for the same price that Is\npaid for ordinary whisky. For sale by all\nllrst clasa dealer* and druggists.\nThe author of a book on etiquette\nshould be an authority on ways and\nmiens.\nEpileptic\nCAW BE CURED.\nIf you suffer from Eoilepty, Fits,\nSpasms, Spells, Falling Sick-ess, St.\nVitus' Dance, &c, have children, lela-\ntives, friends or neighbois that do so,\nor know people that are afflicted, my\nNew Discovery. Epilepticide, will give\nimmediate relief and PERMANENTLY\nCUKE them, and all ynn are asked to\ndo is to send for a FREE BOTTLE and\ntry it. lt has cured thousands where\neverything else failed. Mv BO-page\nillustrated Book, \"Epilepsy Petmauent-\nly Cniod,\" FREE.\nWhen writing please mention reading this in this paper, and give name,\nAUK and full address. All correspondence professionally confidential.\nWm. MAY, M. D.(\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0at* UDorsto-Y. 94 Fin* It. Naw York Clt.\n.REGISTER OF TREASURY.\n. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094. a\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nlion. Judson U'. Lyons, Register of\nthe United States Treasury, in a letter\nfroui Washington*? \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00BB. <.!,, says;\nIF-.I'! STIIIAI. NOTES\nTrack-laying on the three-mile ex\ntension of the P. V. &Y. R. R. will be- t|lM nif.a ,)f ,,|0\ngin this week, with a crew of twenty\nmen.\nA starch factory is the latest manufacturing Institution which the Chamber of Commerce is attempting to locate in Spokane.\nMessrs. Savage and Schofleld of Olympia were awarded the contract to'states. Hon. Lyons address is Au-\nHon. Judson W, Lyons, Ueglster of the\nTicasury.\nApril .'Sii, 18119.\ni'e ni ua Drug M'f'g Co., Columbus,\nI).:\n(iHnllciiien\u00E2\u0080\u0094I find Pu-ru-na to he an\nexcellent remedy for the catarrhal affections of spi'u-.' and summer, and\nllioao wiio nitTci from depression fiom\ni summer will find uo\nremedy the erpial of Pe-ru-na.\n.Unison \V. I.vniis.\nNo man in battler known in the\nfinancial world than Judson W. Lyons.\nHis name on every piece of money\nof recent date, makes his signature one\nof the most familiar ones in the Unitod\nTO USE SCTftlCT REGULATIONS.\nMothers will find Mrs. Winslow** Sooth-\nbuild a new bridge across the Yakima\nriver; contract price, $3,783.\nTwenty tons of machinery to complete the stump mill ln the Peahastin\nhas arrived and will be taken in as\nsoon as the road is completed. Prospectors are coming in every day.\nM. R. Staight was ln from Summit\ncamp (near Republic) recently and\nstated that the first kiln of lime burned by his company, which amounted to\n500 barrels, had all been disposed of\nand that he was having the kiln refilled.\nSam Hull sold a bunch of horses at\nauction ln Pomeroy, Wash., the other\nday, receiving about $15 per head for\nunbroken 3- and 4-year-old colts. Old\nAlwood, whose history and pedigree\nare familiar to every horseman in thc\nPacific northwest, was knocked down\nto Frank Morrison for $31.\nFish Commissioner Little of Washington has arranged to start a small\nfactory In Tacoma for the manufacture of wire baskets to be used In the\nstate fish hatcheries. About 1,700 will\nbe required, and three men will be required to work about three months in\nmaking a sufficient supply to last several years.\nOne agricultural Implement firm at\nColfax, Wash., sold six headers, one\nbinder and a sower recently, and It is\nstated that sales of agricultural machinery generally throughout the\ngrain belt are very heavy, approaching\nvery close to the phenomenal record of\nlast year, when dealers could not procure appliunces fast enough to supply\nthe trade.\nCounty Commissioner Strong reports the grain crop In the Wenatchee\ncountry to be a good average; alfalfa\nabout a third of a crop below the Mission, owing to the freeze-out last winter; above that place the alfalfa was\nnot injured. Peaches and apricots\nwill be short, but a better quality.\nDuring the oyster planting season\njust closed at Wlllapa, Wash., over 200\nmen were engaged In tonging in the\nvarious channels for young growth for\ntransferring to the artificial beds.\nAbout 150,000 baskets wero taken out,\nand twenty-two sloops and forty bat-\nti'iius were employed.\nPotatoes are only eight cents a\npound ln the Republic market Nearly all kinds of new vegetables have\nfound their way into market, but they\nare far from cheap. Eggs are scarce\nand fresh ones sell at 50 cents a dozen.\nThe British ship MacDuff, for Portland, Ore., is now several days overdue\nhaving ben out 155 days from Calcutta. She has a cargo of 4,000,000 grain\nbags, and unless she arrives soon, the\nprice of grain bags in the northwest\nwill probably take a big Jump upward,\nas harvesting has already commenced.\nIn Clarke county, Wash., prunes are\ngoing to be scarce. There are a few\nsmall orchards which promise almost\na full crop, and there are larger or-\ngusta, 'la. He is a mem bet of thn National Ke'inblleaii Committee, and is a\nprominent ami influential politician.\nHe is a particular liieud ut Piesideut\nMcKinley.\nRemember tbat cholera morbus,\ncholera infantum, summer complaint, bilious colic, diarrhoea and\ndysentery are each and all catarrh\nof the bowels. Catarrh is the only\ncorrect name for these affections.\nPe-iuna is an absolute specilic fui\nthese ailments, which are so common in summer. Dr. Hartman, in\na practice ol over forty years, never\nlost a single case of cholera infantum, dysentery, diarrhoea, or cholera nimbus, and bis only remedy\nwas Pe-ru-na. Those desiring\nfurther particulars should send for\na free copv of ''Summer Cataiih.\"\nAddress Dr. llaitman, Columbus, U.\nOeneral Wood In Charge-riflteer* aud\nKmplpyea Cannot Enter Ihe C'ltj The\n.Mayor Ordered tu Close All Hotels and\nSaloon* Captain WoodruO Is Dead.\nSantiago de Cuba, July 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094General\nLeonard Wood, in command of the department of Sanliago, has issued an order establishing ubsolutc quarantine. Alt ofllcers\nand employes of the government are forbidden lo enter the city \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Uh tlie exception\nof those belonging to tbe department. Tho\nmayor in directed to close nil American\nhotels und siiloona, to forbid other liquor\ndealers lo sell Intoxicant* to Americans,\nand lu arrest all intoxicated Americans or\nloiterers in tlie miloona. Pack teams have\nbeen ordered to establish camps outside of\nthe city, und all troops will be moved to\n'bongo except one company at Mono caatlc.\n| The headquarters of all departments were\nmoved to CriatO, -nd the railroad* and\nsteamship line* are forbidden to bring\nAmericans into the city. No ship* are permitted to touch at the wharves, Tho\nstrictest regulations have been established\nfor the protection of the soldiers at Camp\nMono Iroiu fever. No travelers will be\npermitted lo leave here without having\nundergone live days' detention in camp.\nGeneral Wood proposes to adopt bcruie\nmeasure* to stamp out the fever.\nDeath or Cap- Woodruff.\nWashington, July 14. \u00E2\u0080\u0094The adjutant\ngeneral has received a dispatch from Colonel Combs at lioniago, near Santiago, announcing tlie death from yellow fever of\nCaptain Thomas M. Woodruff, adjutant of\nlhe Fifteenth infantry. Woodrulf '.-as a\nWest Point graduate, appointed from the\nDistrict of Columbia.\nThe Lake Patrol,\nManila, July 111.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Laguna de BflJ is be\ning patrolled by three tioops of the Fourth\ncavalry, under Captain McGraw, nnd the\narmy gunboat Napidan, commanded by\nLieutenant Carsen. The force make* its\nheadquarters on un island, living in cas-\n(ncs. in which the men arc towed about\nto make unexp.-clid visits to towns when.\nthere are small forces of insurgents, for\nthe purpose of keeping the rebels moving.\nRecently the troops hid an engagement\nat Mantilupa, on lhe south coast of the\nlake. They found 5IKI insurgents there.\nentrenched near the sin.re. Tlie .Napid.ui\nshelled the rebels and a party of Aineri\ncan troops, numbering 185, landed and\ndrove them by a sharp running lire to the\nhills, where they were too strongly en\ntrenched for the small force to attack\nthem.\nTwo of the cavalrymen were wounded\nand the bodies of 10 insurgents teen\nfound. It is supposed the enemy \"a loss\nis 35.\n-*iKht Hour Un Declared Void.\nDenver, July 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thc supreme court\nunanimously decided the eighthour law to\nbe uiieonsiitution.il.\nThe eight-hour law whicli was enacted\nat the late session of the legislature, applies only to mines, smelters and mills for\nthe reduction of ores. Tiie refusal of the\nAmerican ,*5meltitig and Refining Company\nto pay the utile wages for eight hours,\ncaused its smelters to lie closed on June\n16th, when the new law became operative.\nThis company, which is known as tho\nSmelter Trust, will now endeavor lo reach\nan agreement with its formnr employe^ as\nlu wages and hours of lalair, and to reopen il* smellers us sunn ;is possible.\nOfficers of the Snnlteinieii's Union say\nthat, the fuinaceinen who formerly worked\ntwelve hour* a day will work eight in the\nfuture.\nAthletes llt-ain Their i'r-rtii-e.\nLondon, July 18.- Tlie American University athletic (Harvard-Yule) combination his ei ui i men ceil practice at the Queens\nClub. Ten members of the Cambridge-\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Moid team did a little desultory work.\nWhile il is too early to discriminate between the con testa nts, the Englishmen do\nnot appear to be iu as good condition as\nthe Americans. The Americans all around\nare younger and lighter, but they are in\nI excellent foi in.\n\"They did not pick that stuff quick\nenough, did they, mamma?\" asked a\nlittle boy as he passed a grocery where\nseveral cakes of limburger were taking a breathing spell outside.\nSn.s She l-'lr.-.l in Srir-Derenae.\nChicago, July is.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A special from St.\nLouis says:\nLouil \V. Hot-day, son of Jesse W. Hol-\nllday, a Chicago millionaire, is lying probably fatally wounded at the lt.iptist Sanitarium, lie was shut by his wife at their\nhome.\nMrs. llolliday was arrested and locked\nup at the police station. She says she did\ntlie ihooti-g in self-defense. Young llolliday met Mrs. llolliday. nee Annie lirew-\niter, a triek bicycle rider, in Houston,\nTexas, in 1897.\nMi mil roe k Takes a Third Spin.\nSouthampton, July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tlie cup challenger Shamrock went for a spin in\nBoothaniptod waters. She started under\nall her working siiN and ofl Calshot\nCastle bottle, her club topAail. Near the\nisle of Wight she caught a spanking\nbreeze and went down the west channel\nbig Syrup the best remedy to use for their : ,.*jar(is which show from one-fourth to apparently at tremendous pice. Later the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-ildrea doing the teething period.\none-half crop, while the bulk of the or-\n| ehiirdH are either without fruit or\nThe more noise a dog makes the less snow onljr a few pruneg on the trees.\nIs his bite to be f -red. The contrary | TnIg ,8 probaij*y true ln a general way\nIs the rule with the mosquito. | of al* weBtern Washington.\n '. T_i_,.. r-..r\u00C2\u00AB I Everywhere ln the Palouse Is notic-\nI believe my prompt use of Plso a cur* \u00C2\u00BB\npreventedlq3o_ con.umptlon.-Mra. Hi- ed active preparations for harvest,\ney Wallace, Marquette. Kan*., Dec. 11 'Ut i The farmers are getting their machln-\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094 j ery ready, and the annual exodus of\nA rosebush Is thought to be exceed-1 harvest hands to tho counties south of\nlngly modest, but yet it wants tho snB^e -.ver na8 begun. There is a no-\nearth.\nCIT* PermauenUj- OureO. f n BM or nsrronsne,\nill* after first day's use of Dr. Kllos's Urea\nNern Restorer. Send Ibr FKKB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2J.OO trla\nxaue and treatise. DIV B. li. ___N_, lid., \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nirc_ street. Phli*ael---la. P-\t\nSometimes unpleasantrles or controversies arise between factions, or Individuals, and sides are taken by respective friends or admirers; and when we\nhear one side of tho story we are in\ncllned to think the party of one sldi\nhas been badly\nmuch to blame; but when we hear the\nother aide of the story we find the mat-\ntlceable dropping off in the number of\nmen and teams that are going south to\nwork ln harvest fields, compared with\nformer years, which presages a shortage of harvest help ln tbis country\nshould there bo as large a yield as\nmany expect.\nShamrock returned to lior moorings with\nher mainsail damaged.\nTo lii.estlm.le the lie. ..lull.....\nNew York, July IS.'\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Herald's correspondent in San Salvador reports th.it\nthe gtiveriiment has decided to declare the\ncapital iu a state of siege in order to investigate the recent attempt at revolution.\nAll is quiet in the country at present.\nTo \u00C2\u00AB*ro\u00C2\u00BBa Ihe Continent.\nN'ew Yo,k, July 15.-*Tohn D. Davis\nand his wife have started for a trip t^ter quite different from what we first\n. -n_.line automobile,\ndeted,\nThe i InilMiiiru Illolera.\nCherbourg, July 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094More arrests have\nlieen made owing to the police station\n:iMi| 0^r being besieged by i. pirty of marines who\ndemanded lhe release of their comrades.\nHEADACHE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Both my wile and myself have been\n-alng CAsrAiu: is and thev are the best\nmedicine wo have ever had In the bouse. Laat\nw*elt my wife was frantlo with hesduebs tor\ntwo days, sbe trleil aomoof yourCASCAKKTS,\nand then relieved tho pain In ber head almost\nImmediately. We both reeonimeml Caacaret* \"\nCiias. STtntroKU.\nPittsburg Sat* A Deposit Co., PUMburg, Pa\nCANDV\nCATHARTIC\nrise, on a gasoline nutoniobil.*-1 mipposed, and If both sides ****\u00C2\u00A3&\nThe trip will be tlie longest, if com*\never made by an automobile.\nTo Kiplore the Arctic.\nI'eary\nblame we may find the supposed Innocent party most to blame.\nIIOITT'M I-HOO-,\nM. nl\nlit til\nPark, ***ni Mme\". Co,\nrnlversliles. Ijn-nlli-n.\non., accredit. 11\ni-llnmii' unit eni'i'\nTNADS MA**. niaisnniD\nTlie windows of the station were broken.\nSoldiers with drawn swords pursued the\nmen who were engaged in tearing down\nI.interns after thc national fete. The riot-\nus in several places attempted to provoke\nthe Infantry by insulting cries. The\ntroops, however, remained calm.\nPleasant, PslstsWe. I'ntent. Tstte Good. 1st\nEmDloyer to Clerk\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"I don't object HiVlamll*\u00C2\u00BB*n. W*ak*B.orOri5\u00C2\u00BB._ftm\u00C2\u00ABa\nCURE CONSTIPATION. ...\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aia,, Ctaiaaa, Xaalrral, *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 fart. Ill\nTHE JVDGKS OF\nCARTERS INK\nare the users. More users of it than\nany other. Why > THE BEST I\nCosts VOU no more than Ihe poorest I\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6I\nSUPPOSE YOU THINK\nihi> over a little bit The blood uonrlshu tbe\nsystem. When tba blood become* Impure It Is\nunable lo furni*h lunirMiiiieiii lo all parts of\nthe bo.lv anil sn kne*s iu seme purl results. II\nyou sre slelt pin 1 ly rou I blood with\nMoore's Revealed Remedy\nThousands ol seemlngl*- Incurable rases have\nbeen cured-It ne.or un sla \u00C2\u00ABlvo relief. Easy\nsnd plenssnl to lake. ll.on per boiile al rout\n-niKiif-t's.\nRelief for Women*\n\"C^^ -toni/Vw.in pIftJn,in*lp and TtNttuuoiLl-Jj uf ML MAUTK _\u00C2\u00BB\nFrench Female Pills.\nPr_Ji-r<*i by IbOWUdaof Mtmflnl !*d.\u00C2\u00ABiu\nwf-rt, nl wny* rrlUtMi'anil without an i-riuiU.\nMwbrauai-Tunriittlq m\u00C2\u00AB*ia, ml nv-kw\nf on tot) In Blue, White and Red, Take no other.\nUtah Drug Cu.,tttl ft UM htfl Bt., Mew Vork City.\nYOUNG MEN!\nFor GADTrhi\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 ami (!l\u00C2\u00AB I uri-t Pale,', l ikaj Bpe\u00E2\u0080\u0094TV* II\na tha ONI.V niMllrlD,' \u00C2\u00BBlm-h \u00C2\u00BBlll , ur.' ,_'li alii ..try\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094ao. NO i'ask known lt haa \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .,r ri.il.sl to cur*, do\n_*U\u00C2\u00ABr now wHiHm or of hi.w Ions- aumllnff. h\u00E2\u0080\u0094nilts\nCrora llr use will aatonlsli v.,u. It la alaolutelr aa/a,\npr^vpot* *rl.-lurv and can Is- taken without Iih-out*.\nolrn.s. ami ik-h-nllim from l.u.in.-*a PUP K S>00. Foe\n.ale hy all reliable uni|ra1*1f, or Bent prep\u00E2\u0080\u0094it l>, nils asm\no\u00E2\u0080\u0094iiily wraj-ed, on r.\u00C2\u00AB-c*|>t of nrlce, by\n_, . I'Aiwt ca*_iioj_(xi..oi__-o._i.\nOmdB-f mailed oc ravjua-\nSURE YOURSELF!\nUm BU 41 for iinmtnri\n: diitrharfcea, Inflammation!,\nirritation, or n.cerattoM\nof in ii i .> u a membrane-*.\nIfre-reau -.mam..*. Painle.-, end not Mtrta\u00C2\u00AB\niTHEEvANf (W\u00C2\u00ABMICIiL0O. B*Dt 0r l\u00C2\u00B0,MD0M'\nI Mold by Un-nt*-S\n*or tent In plain wrapper\nby efpreM, prepaid, fo.\n11.00, or I b.-tilee, $_.;.v\n(Ircular Mut 4W reQ&\u00C2\u00ABe\u00C2\u00BB\nDUBimiraTiKrNLU\nQlff F0R A DOSE. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\"\"* Sick Hesdach*\n\"'' ''y'IM'1-sla, KemoTt* llmplrsaml Purity th*\nBlood, Aid 1'iiiistionsndProTfntltilloasness. Do\nnot Urine orSlokrn. Torontlncsyon.wewlll msll\naample free, orlull ho\u00C2\u00BB for25c. nil. IK.SANKO\nCO., Philada., friiiiu. Sold by PruggltU.\nCURE FOR PILES\nII (.11 INi. riles priiiluretniMst ure.nd oanne itch Ing,\nThia form, aa well aa llliiul, Blacdinaor 1'rotruilinf\nl'llsa aro oursdhr Dr. Boarinko'* Pile Remedy\nStopa Itclilne andhleeilltiK. -AI.BDrtia tumors. Ns-a\nJaratdraaKiataoraeut uy oia,:. Treatiaofrao. Writs\naia about jour caae. Hit Ui is \ \'Kl\u00C2\u00BB, I'hil.da . l'a.\nnn aitenihin to M.nt-ii. Moral iimi I'tiysbui |0 your g0|ng to a funeral once in a JfS _\"_____\n^Zu^Z^iVrZr^ f^cSSSS-S! wWl*. but I think you'mlght brlng mo ^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"iV!0'' i NO-TO-BAC f^K-VWrailt^af\ni*v-^**w^et'1i\u00C2\u00BB4iw<'V.,*'--'s*ev\u00C2\u00AB^ .\u00C2\u00AB**v*^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2l\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*H'<,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*...'->!\u00C2\u00BB#eTX.*^^*^-^\nDIITK1T Hltr-K.\nN. It. V,\nI the world's greatest her,,,\n' by M iir.it llnlstead.\nAmenta **A anted.\nOnly at.no\nB.C. Miller, SWash. Bl.\nrhlragn.\nNo. 20, 'L'*).\nmm\nV tlWL\t\nV '\nyy\u00C2\u00A7 ere now agents for\nTHE RAYMOND\nSewing Machines\nJust Arrived\nWMMV***** <\u00C2\u00A5\u00C2\u00A5***\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB** ******\nWE SELL AT THE MANUFACTURER'S PRIOES, WITH THE\nFREIGHT ADDED. CALL AND\nSEE THE MACHINES.\n^MM\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00A5\u00C2\u00A5>^MMN^^******************\nAN I) A 8MALL\nSHIPMENT HAS\nO\no yon want\nAix_vtlilin5*?\nCLOCKS OR\nIN WATCHES,\nJEWELRY, ------\nIN SEWING MACHINES, 0*(\nTHE CELEBRATED EARN\nPIANOS !-_-_--__\nWjVTCH AND JEWELRY REPAIR\nING A SPECIALTY.\nJaoob Dover,\nIII 81 . . fl,'8.n, E.G.\nTIE JEWEL.R.\nI_>o You _R*lali?\nI HAVE A GOOD ASSORT-\n, MENT OF\nFISHING TACKLE,\nIiqDS and BASKETS,\nTH1E0 DPfOSITI\nSELKIRK THR\nHOX_B>__v. WWW.\nWHICH I OFFER AT\nLARGE AND COMFORTABLE\nROOMS TABLE UNSURPASSED IN THE\nNORTHWEST.\nRook Bottom\nr _F\u00C2\u00BBrIoe\u00C2\u00BB\nTO CLEAR OUT THE UNE.\nJIM. McINTOSH\nSILVEKTON,\nB. C.\ny^QTOHlA\nHOTEL\nJAME8 BOWES - r - - PROP.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0EVERYTHING NEW, NEAT.\nAND CLEAN. FINEST APPOINTED HOUSE IN\nTHE KOOTENAYS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2; Heafl(|iiartm Por Mining Men :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\nSILVERTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - B*C.\nCA_vivr>ijA__v\nPACIFIC\nRAILWAY\t\nted SjjO LINE\nNew Fast Daily Service Between\nATLANTIC A PACIFIC\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,'V TUB\nIMPERIAL LIMITED\nImproved Connecting Service via Revel-\neto.ke or Crow* Neat Routes,\nTO AND FROM\nKOOIENAY COUNTRY.\nFirst olasa aleepen on all trains from\nARROWHEAD and KOOTENAY LDG\nTourist cars, pass Revelstoke, Duily for\nSt Panl, Thiiredave: lor Montreal and\nBoaton, Tuesdays and Saturdays for\nToronto.\nSILVERTON TO\nToronto 92 boors, Montreal 06 hours.\nNew York 108\" Winnipeg 62 \"\nyancouver 26 \" Victoria $1 \"\nCONNECTIONS.\nPor the North, Revelstoke, and Main\nLine 10;30 K ex* Sunday lv. Silverton,\nar. ex. Sunday, 1&:50K.\nP\" to earn it, U\nthis a bluff or only a jo*-?\nIBta/tale.\nGOOD SADDLE AND PACK'HORSES FOR HIRE AT REASON\n*-fc*8 a GENERAL FREIGHT AND TRANSFER BU^\u00C2\u00ABjjeaa Don\"\nMINING RECORDS.\n888888888888881888889.fi?!\nfcl)|.0ML 0UTCK(l.ri^-. \\nl8888g;8i888S8888888888k\u00C2\u00BB8\nThe iiicnilicra of the Mine Owners\"\nAssociation are still deluding themselves with the idea that the Eight\nHour law is to be held in abeyance\nand tbo political wejjfaro of the\ncountry is to be dictate*! from tbe\nbead office of their association. They\nfail to recognize the true state of\naffuirs, which is that tiny are a lot of\ncalamity howlers, who are largely\noverestimating their importance antl\nwho aro destined to be \"sat down upon\nhard\" at the next meetiigof the\nLegislature, Tbey are like spoil\nI'hildreu, wbo, because tl.ey cannot\nhave their own wuy, throw .way their\nciti.dy, little realizing ibat in a shun\ntime they Will betryiug for .ln.se*. If-\nsame sweet- They would, if tiny\nhad I heir way, to gain their belli h\nBuds, wreck tins uh-le oui'iitry und\ndestroy its piiiaperity witli as little\nr gard f.,r tin welfare of the people\nwho are mnk'ng this land 'tietr jiome,\na* the ab*e..tc- I* sub landlord lias for\nIns tenantry.\nRATES\nOutside Parties Desiring Horses in Silverton\nC.in Have Them Reserved By, Writing To\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nf t t T t t * t\nA. P. MoDONALD,\n,' 8&VKBT0'nl. . . -\nThe reports circulated by the subsidized agents of the Mine Owners\nAssociation, to thc contrary, the fact\nstill remains that thero are at present\nmore miners employed in the mines\nHound and about. Silveiton, twice\nover, than during this stason lai-t\nyear. In fact thn demand for mir.ers\nhas been so great that, twice within\n(he last week, Sandon haa been called\nupon to furnirh miners to a)\ up the\nquota ot men wanted. Not only are\nall the Silverton miners working but\nthey are motiving the full Union\nwage of $3 50 per dav,\nFollowing is a complete list ol the\nmining ir-iiBSt: iom. recorded during the\nweek ior the Slooan Miuing Division.\nNKW DKNVKB\u00E2\u0080\u0094LOCATIONS\nJulv ll-Jack Pine Fr, Four Mile ck, G\nH Dawson. Nickle Plate, Red Mt, roloc\nhi.BH, L M Kuuwles.\n12\u00E2\u0080\u0094buck Fr, reloc New Oxford, W .\nCl.ik. Rancher, Eight Milo ck. Geort/e\nWhite. Le Rov.ratne.\n14\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bell Smith Fr, McGuigan baBin, T\nJ'lo-Suiid..y, Cody ck, Jas Croft.\nGeorge, Wiibonck. A W Markham, G >\nVaiiBtone. Four Silver Tipn and Pearl,\nname. Mario, Four Mile, reloc Summit.\nJ Anderson\n17\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fanny, Glacier ck, H Bymell. Imperial, u fork Carpenter, \u00E2\u0080\u009En(li n.Ttoi hy, Alias, Slavonic,\nr-i'uuiiB, Ajax, Bird fr.\nTKAKSFBRS.\nJune II\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hon. vino,.o. \$, A F O'Brien\ntu Frank Fmuie, Jnm* 30, $100.\n12-A I, 'j HO Wheeler to VV8\nClark, .Im'.* 16, -K>\u00C2\u00BB0.\n14\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oruekeijatk H, Broken Lock 1-12\nF J 1'iniiciine to T J I/emlriim, Jnne 5\nFidelity Frm'lioti,all, Broken l*H'k,,',\n(!rai'ke\u00C2\u00ABjack '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2}. Saiueto Scott McDonald\nJii\".' 5\n16\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fsiry.CTPoiter to Jno G Steel.\nMm 21)\n17-Ile.lnv llo*s, all. Slsiiley. >,. II I\nBrag'di u to II Clever, July 12, *30Q.\nNunc* Leo H I'Htellu, Ai E Bragdon\nto Smiir*, Juiv 12 i'sisO.\nWil'.ml ''.'. II T l5ro*.il*Jli lo M E Rrag\n.ion, Julv 12, \u00E2\u0099\u00A6180.\nMINING AND COMMERCIAL MEN MAI\u00C2\u00A3E THgfR\nHEADQPARTEftS AT THE\nThorburn **\nH-OLIS\u00C2\u00A9 ROUSE ilEWLV rUIUISlED.\nSILVERTON, B. c\nGRANT THORBURN, Prop.\nACCURATE, RELIABLE\nMINING NEWS\nOF THE RICH SLOCAN.\nGATHERED AT FIRST HAND POR\nTOIVXAiv,\nSENT TO ANY ADDRESS,\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A62 00 p.r Anr,\nWm.\nIf, by means of false lights and\nlyinjj Bif-nsls, some vessel ir lured on\nthe rocks and wrecked, tbe wreckers\nare hung, if caught But, if hy means\nof false leports and lying despatches,\nthe transportation companies can\ndump a crowd of men an some bleak\nand frozer shore, where starvation\nand death must lie the lot of many,\nare the liars hung? The u*u\u00C2\u00BBl seasons\ncrop of lies of golden finds in the\nArties, is coming up in the Pacific\nCoast papers, This year, not many\nwill be found to believe them.\nHOW SOME LEARN*.\nMr C concluded to mine. He\nbonded the I. mine und spent con-\nfiileralile money o:i it - tt at is he fur\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnjahed considerable money, which wis\n*|ient by someone elee. He i.ever\nwould no down the mine, partly Wattse\n|he was afraid nml -naitly because he\nhud sens.* enough io kuow he would be\nin no wav wiser for iM-iu*.', He fpent\nI Is time on the veranda of the' hoarding\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0joiiee, plavins pedro. T|i m|ue was\nrun Ior home months and C lost ail\nbe pnt into it, and now he -.-oi.demnB all\nmining ventuies as basardous and\nillegitimate\u00E2\u0080\u0094says 11 miners are robbers,\nand would go to *ieep on shift.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Helena Independent.\nThe mine owners of tbis seption,\nsay that they will not he \"-forced\".\nThey are not being forced. Tbey\nshut down their mines of their own\naccord. This was not force. They\nkeep them closed\u00E2\u0080\u0094of their own accord\nagain. They can cpen them when\ntfcey wish Provided, of course, that\nthey psy living wages. No force is\nnecessary, unless the stockholder*!\ndeem fit to use it on their managers.\nWAGES.\n\"The rate of wages paid undercround\nminer* in the Seine River district i*\n$2 75 per day, surfacd men ge tting from\n*2, to |2 25, Out of tbis, they pay from\n|4. to $5. a week lor board. Contract\nlabor rules at the rate of $18 to tf 25 a\nloot tor sinking and |8 to $12 a loot for\ndrilling.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Exchange.\nAnd it is from the Seine River\ncountry nnd other eastern districts\nthat the mine ownera of the Slocan\nthreaten to import men to tako the\nplaces of the miners now on strike.\nla it likely that men, will leave the\nSeine I^iver country to come out and\n1 .cab\" in the Slocan miuei for less\nactual pay than tbey are now receiving\nwhero they are. They s,rc actually\nA HOT THING-STOLEN.\nOh wheie\nHas all the nice c.-ol air\n(tone that wn uwnl to swear\nAt lam winter, eh?\nO f.r a daj\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nY.a,\nEven a few\nHour* would do,\nWith the thermometer playing\nTag with the zero mark and the snow\nlaying\nAll over the place.\n'M.-mber you used to race\nDown\nTown\nTo work\nWiih trie north wind a-chirk\nAt vour chin\nAnd your thin\nOvercoat\nAfloat\nIn the breezy,\nKreeity\nAI ii ion l\u00C2\u00BBhe re?\nAnd now we're\nDallying with a lot of heat,\nTorrid,\nFlorid\nHeat!\nDoesn't it heat\nAll how lime \u00E2\u0080\u009Eies?\n'Member how your eyes\nUsed to get\nFull of wet\nIrani when the wind blew\nA few\nFreezes across the wild moor?\nNow it* your\nForehead that is leaking,\nAmi you'd give $4 for a shrieking\nBlast'\nUf last\nWinter, wouldn't yon?\n'Member how your feet flew\nFrom under you and vou sat\nFlat\nOn the icy sidewalk\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDon't talk I\nley hiilewulk\u00E2\u0080\u0094doesn't that sound grand?\nKn|h'.:i.iIIi* when you've fanned\nAn arm off trying to get hreesu\nEnough to make you sneeze,\n0 Wi. ter. say!\nYou were a\nGood thing, and we did wrong\nTo. push yim along.\nFor Sale or Rent,\nA lliilcl In Silvcrlim,\nGO JD LOCATION,\nFUl.tY FURNISHED,\nOLEAU TITLE.\nApply to\u00E2\u0080\u0094Matheson Bros,\nSlIvertoD, B. O.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.,\nNOTICE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Noktii ExciuNott Faic-\ntion\" mineral claim, silnute in the\nSIixmii Ci'y nijnii.g .divisiuu of Weal\nKoot. ii .iv district.\nWlim-fi I.M-aleil: Ou Diytoo creek nd-\njoiiiing the \"Silver l'lalc\" mineral |\nclaim. '.\nTake mt ice thai } FrnndaJ. O'RriUy\nus ... nt l.r R .la-rt A. Hr\u00C2\u00BB,|\u00C2\u00ABh:uv, free\niniiier'a-.-citinValeNo 2J4t \u00C2\u00BB.\"j *>. 1. Clone*,\nfree miner's certificate No. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0r*879.\,Geor_e ;\n\l Surelle. free miner'* certinVuto No\nBH600snd D 0 Lewis, free miner's cer- I\nlit! nt.- No. 2874\u00C2\u00BB Intend sixty day*:\nirom (he .late hereof, to apply to the!\nmil ing leciird-r for aiertifiorc oflin-l\nproven ent*, fur the pnr|-Q-t*tjf oiiiaii-titi\na Crown Grant of the aiaivt claim.\nAmi further take notice that action\nunder nection 37, must lip commenced\niieinre the i-i-naiu'e of buc)) pertlfiisita <*f\niiii-nrovemeiit*.\nDated thin Twelfth .lav of June 18'JO.\nFK.'MIh J. O'RrlLl.V\n24 I 6 I 99.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENT!* j\nNOTICE. :^t- \"I.ucar Jack\" Mineral |\nClaim i -Ituaie in the HI.,can City Mm-1\ning Division of Weal K.Kitpnay li|~ n-i\nWhere l.iciile.l:\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Kuminii Or I'-r-o\nCreek, 10 miles from Kin-can River.\nTake notice that I, J Murray McGregor,\ntcting as u.ent for Robert Bradshaw,\nlue Miners Certificate No. 2.40->\, in-\nt*-ml sixty day* fn m the date hereof, to\napply to tbe Mining Recorder (or a Certificate nf Improvements, forthe purpose of obtaining a Crown Graut ol the\nuLove cla'in.\nAnd further take notice that action\nunder section 37, must l-e commenced\nburore the issuance of sucb Certificate o\nImprovements.\nDated thia fifteenth day of June, 189ft.\nJ. li. McGaaooa.\n24 | 6 | 99.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENT\nNOTICE :\u00E2\u0080\u0094' Rncller\" and \"Rock-\nlf-d Mineral Claim*; aituata in the\nSlocan Mining Division of \. eat Kootenay District.\nWhere located :\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Eight Mile creak\nadjdning the Willa Mineral Claim.\nTake notice that I, J Murray McGregor\nact in as agent for W W. Spinks, Free\nMiner. Certificate No. B1.9M. intend\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2dxty days from the dale hereof, to apply\nto the Mining Recorder tor a Certificate\nof Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crowr Grant of tbo above\nclaims.\nAnd further Iske notice that action*\nunder serti'in 37, must be romme_erd\nbefore tbe issuance of sucb Certificate\nof Improv. ment*.\nDated this 17th day of July 1899. ...\nJ. M. McGaaooa.\nUse None But I\nThe Best!\ni\nSctraapttrliifll\nWILL ERADICATE ALL TK.\C1>\nOF IMPURE BLOOD, CVW\nRHEUMATISM AN'Ii AF,I,|\nBL'JOD DISORMvKS.\nTry fr-fnww 1\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0WIS 0.! AllLUJUTW\nAMD THS\nfifBfral IWf Of M, lit.\nBr W. J ADAMS.\nii.i.rn.n-Ten.\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that sixty\ndays after da'e I, W. I) McGregor,\nintend to apply to Uie Chief Commissioner nf Lands and Works for parr-is.don\nto purchase the following described tract\noi land * Situated four miles east of\nSlocan River on Lemon Creak at tlie\nmouth of tbe First North Fork, in West\nKootenav District; starting from a post\nmarked W. D. McGregor's N E. Corner,\nthence soutn 40 chain*, thence west 40\nchains, thence north 40 chains, thence\neast 40 chains, to place of beginning, the\nwhole containing 160 acres\nDa*ed J une 30th. 1899.\nW. D. McGregor.\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that sixty\ndays after date, I intend to apply to tbe\nChief (\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2mmi*i*ionnr of Land*and Works\nfor permission to pnruhaae the following\ndescribed land: situated four miles east\nol Slocan River on Lemon Creek, at the\nmonth of the First North Fork, in West\nKootenay District; starting from a po-t\nmarked J. M, McGregor's N. W. corner\nthence south 40 chain,*',\" thence east 40\nchain*, thence north 40 chains,. thence\nwent 40. hiiii.H to place of beginning, the\nwLole containing 160 acres. ^\nDated June SOth. 1899.\nJ. M. McGregor,\nA Pit Acne**. Book roa. Pg/ cnc.u Bo\nShould ho in the hands of every\nMining Man and Meullnrg-l.\nIt Is not based on lar-oratorr test*. Im!*!\nthe VMentUb aasvLTS obtained hj Ik\nauthor in an experience of ovxa ttPH\nItUI, and tei a how best tn ewplov M\nwhich is already in use. ant in an) *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nlocality, but all over the world.\nCLOTH BOUND, |1.80.\nMo-brn Macbivbrt PuitwnixfiC'\n218 L* Hall* St\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB_t, Cm caoo, I'. 8.1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2When In\nJ _V_\u00C2\u00A9_LySt)X.\nCALL IN FORYOURMEAr>AT\nRestaurant,!\nC\u00C2\u00ABnh*r H.II mi Strm Sis. t\nFoniisN Rouas.\nJ.M. BARRV, PROI'.\nOaigle's Black-\nsmith Sho\"'\nQeieral Bhek-Mthiig\nEXPERT HOR8E SHOER U''\nWAYS ON HAJ-t)-\nTOOL BHARPEN1NG A -PECIA-^'\nS.DAIQLE, BILVERTON, ^\nYe^empWeWIt^*^ teiti1tit)s\s*,'JI*4r^\njsemm \u00E2\u0080\u00A2^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-^wm\u00C2\u00AB^.-\u00C2\u00BB,'%'*\u00C2\u00BB*w>w*h'V' *r H\"mswmt^*Aw^irm*j\u00C2\u00BBiw*^ *wt*m*m)^km^eyi\u00C2\u00BBm I\n:jjri^:^;.AZ:^''j/,^trx:t, ~<:v.x:x\:.'rt . i;^'^:.*^*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2J\"^'\u00C2\u00BBA sffiZ^t^^"@en . "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_07_22"@en . "10.14288/1.0312974"@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 .