"49b67618-12c1-4718-a6c6-cf08cfddd9d3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-30"@en . "1901-03-09"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/silsil/items/1.0312988/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ii \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mt m.-\nA Local\nNewspaper\nTHE\nt ' < \" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*$}'\nThe Time\nOiv?o\n\u00C2\u00A3l\u00C2\u00A3iro_meit\u00E2\u0082\u00ACdx*o\nVOLUME FOUR.\nSILVERTON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1001.\nNUMBER 36\nWb Have the Goods the\n. www People want.\nA irenernl Une of <<\\nO-rocexies, Boots miners, halfol whom me fiom Sil-\n; vcitoii.\nMr. Sandiford knows nothing that\nBhonld precipitate nub action.nponthe\nI part ot the Rostra owners In Eutiland, Bud\nI is awaiting for fattier details by m.iil 1\n' ia probable ihat ihe ownership lias been\nI transferred io new people, us there ie\nnothintr around the property to cause n\nshut-down, On the connry the local\nmanagement la In a position to enlarge\ntlie scope of ibeir work, tho lower tunnel\nhaving reached Ihe ledge, irfvingan exit\n(or the nro practically on the Lake shore,\nthos rciluciiiL* Hie cost of trana|>ortation\nand giving a much greater amount oi\nsloping ground than hai evei before been\no|iei'.eil no in licit property. Until word\ncun be bad from England there is no way\nFour of the Silverton contractors who\nwere laid off on Sutbrday with iho rent of\nthe ctew of the Bosun have returned to\nwork at that property.\nLatt week's shipments from tho Bn-\nterinii;i', ii'i-oiin'Mi'.! lo 40 Ioiih were h-fi\nout of our lin*, This week no oie was\nshipped from this mine.\nDuring the WOBk lour horses were\nadded to A. P, McDonald's string of\nstock whioli ia nt work bringing down\noi'' Irom the II.--.vi it. mine.\nWin. Thomllason, manager of Ihe\nsptciibiioi iniiii'. p lid the camp n visit\non Wednesday, coming down hero to inspect tlm Atletu claim, in which he la\ninterested.\nTlm II ill Mines 8ir.oit.ir hns been\nd<.'ibled in capacity, hv the blowing in i f\na new fin mice on Thursday , and tl.e\naddition ofa moe.baiiJcal roaster and a\nlirlquc'tting machine.\nT, t't. Proctor mndn an inspection of\nthe Silverton Hoy oo Tuesday. He is\nhaving this property developed under\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ontlr.et, and h Well snlisfi.'d wilh the\nresult of development bj far.\nTho Chapleau mino has beon sie/.ed\nhy BheriffTuck under a number of judge-\nmerits filed agaittst Hint property. A\nmortgage (or }2t),00i), issued in France, is\nal.so out against the mine anil buildings.\nThe Prescott 'ten I is oft', unless the\nbonders have a force of men nt work on\ntl.at Oioperly to-day, which is hardly\nprobable aa none of those Interested are\nhere. A n-quest for mi ex'ention of time\nas been nsked for und refused.\nSLOCAN LAKE ORE SHIPMENTS.\nShipments of ore fr.im Slocan Lake for\nthe year IS'.)!), total,-il H07S Ton*.\nBhipmontsin 1010 totaled\"4080 Tops.\nThe shipment ot ore from -Slocun\nLake points, up to and Including tho\nine.-..-iit week, 'rom Jan. 1, 1001.\nFrom N\"i-w Denver Tons\nHartney 100\nFrbni Bosun Landing.-\nr.i--m 180\nFrom Silvi-ito'i\nil .-a. tt 470\nI'r mi Enterprise Landing\nHut. rprl\u00C2\u00AB! 12.)\nFrom Hlocan i 111 ,-\nArlington 720\nTwto Fr e .e licence of the Rasin Hotel in the\nArlington basin has been transferred to\nDrlsooll k MoKlnnon.\nTo br> strictly up-to-date the new City\nnf Slocun will do wi'hoiit a Mayor. This\nis a horseless age, you know.\nO TI. Poole, who spent some time\nheie lepros. tiling .John Choldftoll k Cn,'\nol Nelson, returned to that eity on\nThnisdav.\nDuring the week F. F. Liebscher, our\nmerchant tailor, received a large assortment of spring goods for his tailoring\neatonllshmfftlt.\nFlower and Garden Seeds for sale nt\nTho Silverton Drug Store. *\nII ynu are suffering from la grippe or\n\"ny kindred affliction, lake Perfect\nWaters. One box will effect n cure.\nFour-bits nt The Silverton Drug Store.*\nGo to R G. ri.-ii._Vs for all kinds of\nfresh fruits. He is receiving shipments\ndaily. Freeh confectionery, choice line\nof fresh groceries. *\nHockey is still on In the skating rink,\nalthough enough bare ground haa pushed\nthrough tlie snow on the football field to\nwarrant blowing up the ball. It wjuld\nnever do if ihese games interfered with\neach other.\nH. II. Reeves is in the Slocan Hospital serionaly ill with pneumonia and typhoid fever, having been brought down\n(rom Three Forks Inst Saturday. His\nmi'iiy friends here hope to hear of his\nearly recovery.\nThe secretary of the Women's Christian T''ii:;erance Union has written to\nihe Attorney General complaining that\nIlie Licence Commissioners wero not\ngiving ''British justice\"fo Slocan City in\ntheir manner of granting hotel licences\nfor Ihat town.\nPolice (ifficer Stublis made a trip down\n'rom S.itidnn on Saturday lapt and gath-\ncrc I in a Sandon miner, charged wilh,^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nobtaining a watch from (i. Tl. Knowles j their mines ready to produce lead and\niiinU-r fiiNv pretences. TI13 accused did | silver, piactically closed down, at the\nnot remain long in durance as be was\nlioek again on Monday.\nflrecn, On The King's Speech.\nR. F. Green, in speaking during Ihe\ndebate on t i Speech from the Throne,\nhad mu\"h say upon what waa not\nmentioned in il.a Speech, that waa the\nsilver-lead mining and smelting problem.\nHe was glad that the Government had\nmeasures in contemplation which promised lo encourage the introduction of capital into tlio Province. The railway to\nthe northern part of the Province was an\nimportant proposition which should receive ihe aid of the Government, and\nthe same applied to the Coast-Kootenay\nrailr-.i,\".'!. and tlio railway to the northern\npart of the Island. There was another\nmatter, however, which he considered\neipially important with that of transportation, which he thought theGovern-\nment should have included in tbe Speech\nbad Ihey justly realised its significance.\nHe referred to the question of tbe treatment of tlie lead ores of the Slocan. In 180ft\nthere were practically no lead ores mined\nin East Kootenay district. In one short\nyear tl.e industry had jumped from practically nothing to 38.000,000 pounds. It\nwas estimah-d, with facilities for getting\nrid of their ore, it would double in tho\nnext year. Altogether in the Slocan\nthere was produced in 1899, 16,660,000\npounds of lead. Last year the product\nwas 2d.000.000 pounds, an increase of\n3,340,000 pounds, and they had come to\nthe present year with a prospect of having a st ill more prosperous year for the\nlead industry. But the American Smelter Trust came to Ihe conclusion that it\ndid not want onr ores. Whether it wus\nthat thev had ore sufficient in their own\ncountiy, or whether Ihey had thousands\nof tons of lead piled up in vaults, simply\nseeking to regulate the supply, tbat they\nmight hold the price of lead to a higher\nfigure than before, he did not knor. He\ndid know tliat they simply refused on the\n1st of Janmiiv. 1901, to re-affirm the contract they had made with the Slocan\nmines in the previous year. The consequence of that was that a number of the\nmines were shut down. A number of\nothers seemed to be able to get some little terms from the Smelter Trust and\nhad closed down partly, or limited their\noutput. Some of the mines, notably the\nLat.t Chance, were limited to a certain\nnumber of tons per day. Tills state of\naffairs was serious; that they should have\nTHE METAL MARKET.\nSilv\ner,\n61 M\nof leaniin;\nraenced.\nwhen work will ba recom-i\nOutside ParlU De.-iring Horses in Silverton\nCan Have Them Reserved Ry Writing To\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 t t t t \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\np. Mcdonald.\nSILVERTON, - - D\nC.\nureraner\n1 put 111:0\nN't-w York, Mar. 7\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Bar\nLake copper, !tl7.0i).\nLend\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho firm thai fixes tho selling\nprice f ir ini-icrs ai.il sin dlers quotes lend\nat. i 1.37 ui the close.\nWG WOUIJ) CALL THK mBfflOS *t*y*%<^\nOf our Customers and the Public in general to *\nthe fact that We carry tlio Most Complete Linn and #\nTHE LARGEST STOCK OF GENERAL MERCHANDISE\ncarried by any firm in the Slocan District, antl are #\nprepared to fill orders of any sine at short notice. #\nWE WOULD INVITE MINE Ol'EIUTOKS\nand others, who are in need of supplies, to inspect our stock and secure our prices before\npurchasing elsewhere.\nTired The Dnndi.\nLabor Commission ts E. P.\nand E. Willi on-* ha.I a chance t\nforce this week the Alien Labor law find\ntook full advantage of it. The contractor grading for tho new spur of the Red\nMountain railway at Ross.nnd Imported\n16 luborers fiom across the line, in spile\nI of tie fact that thi-ie wero many idle\nmen in that city. The labor coinmls-\nI slonera Went to Itosslnnd and convinced\nI themselves of these facts. They then\ndeported the alien laborers at tho con\u00C2\u00BB\ntractors'expanse, warning ihem ar the\nsame time that, the fnll measure ofthe\nlaw, providing for tv lino of $1000 for cacti\nalien imported under contract, would lie\nenforced in future. Tho Alien Labor law\nmay be regarded as non-operative bv\nsome, but it is quite evident Ihat neither\nEd. Bremner nor hia colleague have received any instructions lo that ellect.\nA SPECIAL SERMON.\nP. II Partlett preached n special\nsernion nn Sunday in th-' Horton build-\nini: to n record congregation, his subject\nbeing \"Life In Silverton.\" He dealt with\neveryday life in the mining camps, its\nenjoyments, drawbacks and temptations,\nlie approved of harmless athletics on\nSlindftv, provided ihey did not interfere\n\u00C2\u00ABiih religions services. Mr. Bartlett.\n-ince his retirement from the ministry,\nhas lived among miners, in town and in\nthe-blink-house, and his words and opin\"\nions ^ri> of moro weight than are those of\nthe vast majority of clergymen, whose\nknowledge of men ajvd things has been\nlearned in a theological college.\nWE ALSO CARRY CERTAIN LINES OF GOODS WHICH ARE\nHANDLED WHOLESALE! AND ARE IN A POSITION T.O BELL TO\nTHE TRADE AT FIGURES THAT MAKE IT AN ADVANTAGE TO\nBUY FROM US.\nOVER THE LAST DIVIDE.\n.Icir.es O'Dlil 11, one'of Silvrrlon's mn=t\nrespected young men, died on Wednesday in Kaslo, after nn Illness of but n\nlow days duration. II i hud been working for some time nt the Last Chance at\nSandon. g\"ing to Kuslo, on bis lust trip,\nbut a few dttVB ngo. The remains were\nInterred yesterday,\nThcdece. led was n vigorous and bright\nyoung man, 85 years old, und wna one\no! th.' mos! popular minora In the camp.\nlie wuf. Interested ia some good mining\nproperty here and ownad some of the\nbenl ii-.il estate in the towu.\nHe was a native of Peterborough, Out,\nand c.-iine to Silverton, with bin brother\nlu the early days ot the camp. Besides\nliis brother, he leaves Iwo sisters in O 11-\ntaiio.\nbidding ol a foreign corporation. He\nhoped that the Government, having here\nfacts before it, would bring down a measure of relief, in the way of a subsidy to a\nlead smelting industry largo enough to\ntreat the output of tl.e Province. He did\nnot care where (he smelter was situated,\nalthough he naturally believed that the\nplace for it was in the heart of the lead\ncountry, lt would not be sufficient to reduce the ore to bullion. They must havo\nmeans of refining it, so that the product.\nmight be placed on the market. To-day\nthey were in a position of having the\nriches of the earth io their hands, without being aide to make use of them. He\nbelieved that the Government should\nstep in and establish a Government\nSmelter and Refinery within the Province or aid the establishment of the industry. That was the policy whieh a\nprogressive government should, at this\ntime, undertake.\n\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 WILLIAM HUNTER CO.\nSTORES IN NELSON. ALAMO. AND THREE FORKS, B. 0.\nHeadquarters In Silverton, B.C.\nThe Standaid Oil Company has declared a dividend of (19,600,000 or |20.\nper sham payable ou March loth.\nThis will hiing iho total dividends paid\nby this company up to $D_.\6:_5,(i00.\nST. PATRICK'S CONCERT.\nMr. Alex. Oliver, a reciter of French\ndialect selections, will figure on the program for the St Patrick's Concert, which\nwill be given ill the Union Hull next\nSaturday evening, the Ifiih, under the\nAllspices of St Patrick's Roman Catholic\nChurch of Silverton. The best local\ntalent \u00C2\u00ABill also lake part in the concert.\nA big turnout is looked for, as the record\nmade nt the last St Patrick's concert is\nnot forgotten, and this one promises to\nexcill even that.\nA Good One.\nPILING UP THK ORE.\nDuring the week another carload\nof ore was sent out to the smelter from\ntho Hewett mine, of this place, which\ntilings the total shipped lor the year np\nto 470 tons. A. P. McDonald who bus\nthe contract for freighting the Hewett\nore from tlni mine to the wharf is bringing down over ten tons of ore per day\nand piling it up just above town id the\nsnowline, Irom where it will be bronu'ht\ndown to the dock for shipment as soon \t\nn tho road is passable for wagons. The I\t\nI H iwett mine is now our biggest property ; \"Do vou consider prohibition a failure ?i\nand has a body of Shipping oie thirteen 1 \"1 do sir\u00E2\u0080\u0094most, enipliatic.illv.\"\nfeet wide tapped over lour hundred (eet, \"Ma/1 auk your business?\"\ndeep. I \"J, um a Kansas druggist, sir.\"\nThe Gates Iron Works, of Chicago, has\njr.st finished lhe largest, ore crusher evei\nmade. It weighs SO tons and is 20 feet\nhigh from the floor to the hopper. The\ncrusher will l>o driven by a 160-H. P.\nengine, and will crash eight tons of ore\nper minute or oTtSO tons every twelve\nhours. The machine will be need by\nthc Biwabik Mining Oompany, Minn.\nA feature of what may bo termed\n\"the Kelson spirit\" is the whole-souled\ngeneroMty which is manifested whenever\nan opportunity occurs whereby it may be\nexercised.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Nelson Miner.\nHUS'lANDSTO BURN.\nShe wns a weeded widow wise,\nShe had tliree husbands in the skies;\nA .silver um, in solemn state,\nEncased the ashes of each mate\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJames, George, and Henry, fond and\ntrue,\nCremated\u00E2\u0080\u0094how, and when, and who.\nShe was a maiden, old and thin,\nShe bad no liusbanda canned in tin,\n\"A'as! alas ! ah cruel (ate!\nYears have I yearned (or a mate !\nWhile you\u00E2\u0080\u0094she gani-s on each urn\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"While you've had husbands here to\nbini!\"\nI -The Spinster.\nIdshtivr Labors.\nR. F. lircen is serving on tho Mining\nCommittee,\nTlie Legislature has received no notification from Ottawa that the \"B. C. Im-\nmigration\" or the \"Labor Regulation\nAct\" ure to bo disallowed.\nNo less than fourteen applications for\nrailroad charters are being considered by\nthe Railway Committee. Tlie question\nof govern nu'iu ownership keeps coming\nup, but tin-great majority of the members are opposed to such. The much re-\nferred-to public systems of New Zealand\nare pointed to by those opposing such a\nsystem as an example of how railroads\nshould not be run. They are spoken of\nas \"systems which would not be tolerated\niu Canada.\"\nThe Estimates for the year were\nbrought down hy the Provincial Treasurer yeiteiday.\n.loe. Martin is back in the House so\nbusv conducting the affairs of the Province that he has overlooked his little\nthreat about retiring.\nAn amendment to the Mineral Act\nwill be brought down by the Mining\nCommittee, making a radical change iit\nthe locating of claims. The new amendment pr ividea that ten feot of work must\nbe done and mineral in place found\nbefore the claim can be recorded, ninety\ndays being allowed for the work. Tins\nis similiai '\" the piovisions of most of\nthe mining states in the United States.\nIf th< in-mi'Ts feel that they most\namend the Mineral Ac_, this is undoubtedly one ut the i.i-.-i changes to make.\nSn\nt\'-.! *\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\n- .V- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -. --\u00E2\u0096\u00A0<-- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 --..:-,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HMiflMaflBHBnaaHinHH_________________bh_________b________i\nmAHMMH f*m' '\nlit!\nye\nif\n1\nwm\nTHE SILVERTONIAN.\nlasued Weekly.\nSILVERTON, BRITISH COLUMBIA.\n!\nNEWS OF THE WOBLD IN BRIEF.\nA Complete Review of the Events of\nthe Paat Week\u00E2\u0080\u0094la This and Foreign I.nnda\u00E2\u0080\u0094Taken From the\nLatent UUpatahea.\nPaul Armand Silvestre, the French poet\nand critic, is dead.\nUnited (States Minister Conger estimates the total demands on China at $-100,-\n000,000.\nThe house has passed the sundry civil\nappropriation -bill und immediately took up\nthe general deficiency bill, the lust of the\ngreat supply bills.\n'lloth houses of the New York legislature\nhave passed the New York city single police hill over the mayor's veto hy a party\nvote. It now goes to the governor for his\nsignature.\nC. E. Perkins, president of the Burling\nton road, lias resigned, and Vice President\nC. U. Harris has been chosen president. Mr.\nPerkins remains as director. His resignation is due to a desire to be relieved ol\nthe many cures of the ollice of president.\nA special dispatch from Pretoria says\nthe Boers at Klip river derailed a train\ncontaining Generul Kitchener's baggag-'.\nThe train was preceded by another with the\ncommander in chief as a passenger. An\narmored train drove off the Boers, but the\nlulter secured the contents of the train derailed.\nThe foreign envoys have received an official communication from the Chinese\nplenipotentiaries offering to agree to all\ntlie terms of the powers. The Chinese desire, however, to save the lives of Cliao\nShu Cliiao aud Ying Nien, but they were\ninformed tliat the ministers insiitcd upon\nthe former demands. A complete surrender is expected.\nThe resentment of the Cubans against\nAmerican interference with the formation\nof a government has unquestionably been\nincreased hy the demands made by Secretary Boot. The military governor's newspaper organ now admits that the constitutional convention will probably refuse\nthe concession of coaling stations und will\nalso reject American supervision of foreign\naffairs.\nThe crest of a mountain, whose top is\nmore than a mile in circumference, slid\ninto lajugliborough inlet, 100 miles north\nfrom Vancouver. The great slide was\ncaused by an earthquake, which shook the\nsurrounding district for several seconds,\nand the resulting shock of the falling\nmountain top could be felt a long distance.\nGrave anxiety is felt for the fate of\nSmith-Doricn's column, which has not\nbeen heard of since February 0, when it\nlost 24 killed and 40 wounded in a heavy\nengagement with Commandant Botha at\nBotltwi'll. The officer in command at Won-\nderfonlein, the nearest post on the railway to the scene of the engagement, reports he has uo news of Bmith-Dorien,\nwho has about 2500 men under him.\nThe jury in the cose of the state of Minnesota against Frank H. Hamilton, charged with murdering Leonard R. Day, oiler\n40 hours' deliberation, furnished a gciniin \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nsurprise by coming into court and reporting that it had ugreed upon a verdict of\nmanslaughter in the first degree with a\nrecommendation to the mercy of the court.\nThe jury had been out so long that hope\nof an agreement had about been given up.\nJohn G. A. Leisliin.in, United States\nminister to Switzerland, who was recently\nselected to succeed Oscur S. Strauss as the\nAmerican representative at Constantinople,\ntoday presented his letters of recall to\nPresident Brenner.\nCaptain Jones of the Eighth infantry\nhas arrested at a town on the bay province of Laguna, Florenta Orluna and '.Miguel Ponce de Leon, agents of the Tabaca-\nleria company, and William Webb, Pedro\nLorenzo and Victoria Scenta, employed by\nthe Philippine Trading company, on\ncharges similar to those brought against\nD. M. Carman, the American contractor,\nnamely, furnishing the insurgents with\nsupplies.\nA mob of eight determined men took\nPeter Berryman, a desperate negro, out\nof the Menu, Ark., juil and hanged him to a\ntree. The crime of which Berryman was\naccused was an assault on a 12 year old\ngirl, whose condition is critical. The\nmasked men met Night Offioer Jones und\ncompelled him at the point of a gun Ui\nhand over the keys and his revolver. Two\nof them were left to guard Jones, while the\nothers went to the jail and secured the\nnegro. About 2 o'clock they returned\nwhere the officer was being guarded and\ngave him his keys and gun. Then the\nmen quietly disappeared without a word.\nAbout two months ago this nqgro attacked an engineer with an ax, nearly\nkilling him, and he has been guilty of\nnumerous other offenses. Prompt action\nwas taken by the authorities, but no clue\nhas been found as to whom arc the members of the mob.\nThe United States auxiliary cruiser\nScorpion has arrived at La Qulara.\nBrigadier General Robert McFeely, j\nretired, of the army, la dead at an ad- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nvunced age. j\nConger wants to come home but President McKinley, however, desires htm\nto remain In China. I\n-Official statistics estimate the French\nvintage of 1900 at 67,352,661 hectolitres,\nwhich is an increase of 19,444,981 hectolitres over 1899. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I\nAt Sharon, Pa., an Erie & Pittsburg\nfreight train ran Into a crowd of men\non their way to work. Five men were\nkilled outright, being cut to pieces.\nFighting has occurred between a\nlarge body of Bulgarian agitators and\na force of Turkish villagers, near Ghe-\nveghell, Macedonia. Six Bulgarians\nwere killed and three tuken prisoners.\nFive Turkish soldiers were killed and\nseveral wounded.\nLl Hung Chang asserts that tho punishment to be Imposed upon Prince\nChwang and Fu Slang has been carried\nout according to the demands of the\nforeign envoys.\nThe latest edict of the Chinese court\nexpresses the desire that Chl-Hslen and\nHsun Ching Yu, now In the hands of\nthe powers, be handed over for immediate execution.\nAt St. Petersburg, ln honor of Washington's birthday Mr. Charlemagne\nTower, the United States ambassador,\nand Mrs. Tower gave a reception to the\nAmerican colony.\nThe president has Issued a proclamation calling a special session of the\nsenate for executive purposes immediately upon the dissolution of the present congress, March 4.\nAt the John Hopkins university the\nresignations of Presidents Gllman and\nProfessor Herbert B. Adams are announced, 111 health being given as the\nreason. Both were accepted.\nAt Santa Cruz, Cal., Dr. Pierce B. Fa-\ngen, a pioneer of the state, Ir dead.\"Dr.\nFagen laid out'the site of the city of\nDes Moines, Iowa, ln 1840. Deceased\nwas a native of Iowa, aged 82 years.\nAn imperial decree orders the Chinese officials In Pekin to repair to the\npalaces so that they may be In readl-\nnesB to receive the court, which will\nleave Slan-fu toward the end of March.\nMr. Cudahy is in receipt of a letter\nfrom Pat Crowo. He maintains that\nhe had nothing to do with the kidnaping, but kept away from Omaha because he feared the hot-tempered people would lynch him.\nAlthough the situation arising out of\nthe RusBO-Amerlcan tariff controversy\nis unquestionably full of peril, neither\nwell Informed Americans or well informed Russians anticipate an unbreakable deadlock.\nColonel Walter Schuyler, with a detachment of the Forty-Bixth volunteer\ninfantry, had a skirmish near Santa\nCruz, province of Cavite, In which several Insurgents were killeu. The Americans captured 10 ritles.\nThe bill providing for the Louisiana\npurchase exposition at St. Loula has\npassed the senate with an amendment\nwhieh provides tor the closing of the\nexposition on Sunday, and a further\namendment providing for a government exhibit at the Charleston exposition. The bill passed the senate without division.\nOn the North German Lloyd steamship Werra, which recently left for the\nMediterranean, was a party of scientists bound for Sumatra to view the\neclipse of the sun on May 17. There\n,were 38 members of the first party,\namong them being Professor Alfred E.\nBurton, Professor George L. Hosemer,\nHarrison W. Smith and G. ... Matth-\newe.\nSeveral hundred Imperial Chinese\ntroops attacked 50 Germans west of\nPaotlngfu February 21. The Germans,\nhard pressed, fought a rear guard action and eventually drove the Chinese\nback. The Germans had one man killed\nand seven wounded. It ls estimated\nthat the Chinese lost 200 in killed and\nwounded.\nLattimer Jones, wno 15 years ago\nstartled financial circles by his vast\nenterprises, failed for many thousands\nand fled to South America and was later arrested in London on a charge of\nforgery and extradited to this country,\nhas been pardoned by Governor Odell\nfrom Sing Sing, where he had been\nsentenced for five years and six\nmonths. He was convicted of forgery\nln New York in June, 1897.\nThe American syndicate prospecting\nfor oil In Egypt It ls said has struck lt\nrich. Thomas Sharkey, a driller,\nwrites home that the first well drilled\nis a producer. Oil is struck at a depth\nof 2350 feet. It Is near the batiks of the\nRed sea. The syndicate obtained favorable grantB from the khedlve. Experts predict the field will be the largest ln the world.\nI\n6\nDEWET HAD TO RETIEE.\nIlls l.'orcea St'iittcri'd\u00E2\u0080\u0094All In Killl Re-\nircni\u00E2\u0080\u0094tinny iin.-i-N Taken Prison-\ners\u00E2\u0080\u0094 A in nt ii n It 1 tin nml Supplies\nCaptured.\nOUR NORTHWESTERN MINES.\n(tenia Olenned From Late Reports-\nAll Dlatrlcla Arc Helnv Developed\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094A I'rosiieroua Xear la 1'redlctcd\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMlnliiK Notea and I'eraonals.\nLondon, Feb. 25.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho war office has\ni received the following dispatch from'\nLord Kitchener:\n\"Mlddleburg, Transvaal, Feb. 24 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFrench reports from Plet Retlef, February 22, that the result of the columns sweeping the country east ls that\ntho Boers are retreating ln scattered\nand disorganized parties to the number of 5000 ln front of him. Amsterdam and Plet Retlef have been occupied and troops are protecting the\nSwazl frontier. French will push on,\nbut Ib much hampered by the continuous heavy rains.\n\"Summary of losses Inflicted upon\nthe enemy up to February 18: 292\nBoers known to have heen killed and\nwounded In action; 5G taken prisoners;\n183 surrendered; one 15-pounder gun,\n462 rifles, 160,000 rounds of small ammunition; 5500 horses, 70 mules, 3530\ntrek oxen, 18,700 cattle, 155,440 sheep\nand 1070 wagons and carts captured.\nOur casualties: Five officers and 41\nmen killed and four officers and 108\nmen wounded. I regret to say that Major Howard, a very gallant officer of\nthe Cnnadian scoots, was killed February 17.\n\"Plumer reports that Colonel Owen\ncaptured Dewet's 15-pounder and pompom February 23, as well as 53 prisoners and a quantity of ammunition. We\nhad no casualties; enemy In full retreat and dispersing after being vigorously pursued.\n\"Dewet's attempt to invade Cape\nColony has evidently completely\nfailed.\"\nIiiinUli Weat Indlea.\nCopenhagen, Feb. 26.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A satisfactory\nUnderstanding has lieen reuched by the\nministry und finance committee of the\nrrichsdag regarding the sale of the Danish\nWest Indies. The result, it is understood,\nwill shortly lie communicated to the\nWashington government in such form, it\nis thought here, that it will prove acceptable. The Danish proposal, it is expected, will include new suggestions, but\nnothing, it is stated, calculated to defeat\nthe conclusion of the convention.\nI: ii (cm li.-.l Over Two liny*.\nTuscaloosa, Ala., Feb. 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094After 03\nhours under ground, for the greater purl\naf the time in water, 10 of the 13 negroes\ncaught in the Asylum mines hy a sudden\ninrush of water, have been rescued. When\nthey reached Ihe liyht they were exhausted and nearly blind. It is hoped to rescue\nthe remaining three during the day after\nI large pump, in addition to the others\nalrle.idy in operation, has been put to\nwork. '\nExtrn Seaalon l!nneorn\u00C2\u00ABnr>-.\nWashington, Fab. 26.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-The senate com-\nmittee on relatione with Cuba has agreed\nlo an amendment to the nrmy approprii-\ntion hill regarding Cuba. The entire com\nniiltee is agreed and there will lie no minority report anil no opposition is expected from the democrats In the senate.\nIt is the general impression that lhe agree-\nBieM today makes un extra session of congress necessary.\niln. lie (liven n Sew Trial,\nWashington, Feb. 26.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Justice Shiras\nof the United States supreme court hurt\ndelivered an opinion in the case of Homer\nBird, under conviction from the United\nStates district for Alaska, for the minder\nOf J. II. Iliirlin in the Yukon river in lsiis.\nThe verdict of the Alusku court was iv-\nversed and it is expected a new trial will\nbe granted.\nCape Town, Feb. 25.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Colonel Plum\ner engaged Dewet yesterday near Dis\nselfontein, on the south bank of the\nOrange river, capturing a gun and a\npompom and taking 50 prisoners. The\nPeers were scattered and are being\npursued by Colonel Plumer. It Is reported that General Dewet escaped to\nthe opposite bank ln a boat and Is now-\nfleeing with a handful of followers.\nIt is reported from a Boer source\nfrom Zeerust that General Delarey has\nbeen captured.\nLondon, Feb. 25.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A correspondent\nof the Dally Mail, with Hennlker'B col\numn, wiring Saturday, says:\nGeneral Dewet was routed yesterday\nby Colonel Plumer, with whom were\nColonels Hennlker, Craddock, Jeffreys\nand Drabbo. This success was preceded by a series of desperate attempts\non the part of the Boers to escape from\nthe water belt of the Orange and the\nHrak rivers.\nGeneral Dewet, after unsuccessfully\nattempting to cross the Brak at Klip\ndrift and the Orange at Read's drift\nand Marks drift, moved along the bank\nof the Orange with one gun and one\npompom and laagered opposite Kam-\neel drift. At dawn Colonel Plumer left\nWelgeverdon, 22 miles west of the\nHoer camp, and moved northeasterly.\nAt Zurugat he attacked the enemy,\ntaking 40 prisoners. The pursuit was\ncontinued during the afternoon, the\nRoers moving toward Hopetoun. Toward evening the leading troop sighted\nthe enemy, who had laagered beyond\nthe range. Colonel Owen charged the\nspot where the Boer artillery was supposed to be and captureo the whole of\nIt. The enemy fled, leaving their\nhorses ready saddled and their cooking\npots full. According to the latest reports only 400 Boers recrossed to the\nnorth side of the river. The Orange is\ngreatly swollen.\nLondon, Feb. 25.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Daily Telegraph publishes the following from\nDe'aar, February 24:\nMr. Steyn addressed the Boers yeB-\nterday and told them they must shift\nfor themselves, returning to Orange\nriver colony as best they could. He\nand General Dewet took 300 of the best\nhorses with which to escape.\nTlie Mlnlstrra Arr Bntlafled.\nWashington, Feb. 241.--Mr. Conger has\ncaliled the stale department under date of\nlhe 23d, ns follows:\n\"A satisfactory edict in answer to Ihe\npunishment demanded has lu-en received.\"\nFrom this the department assumes that\nthe punishments are to he substantially as\nstated in Mr. Conger's cablegram received\non the 21st. The minister has not yet informed tho state department of the date\nhe has selected for his departure from\nPekin for home.\nKn More Ilotllea Reeovered.\nSan 1-Yani-isco, Feb. 2(1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094No more\nboditt of the victims of the ltio de Jain iro wreck have been recovered and it is\nnot expected that any will rise to the surface Iiefore next Thursday or Friday At\nthe spot where the vessel is supposed to\nlie the water is .1(1 fathoms deep, which is\nslid to be twice Ihe deplh at which divers\ncan work. It is thought by expert wreck*\ners Unit the bodies of those who went\ndown within the ship will never Ih- reeovered.\nIl<-ilil> to Silrri-nil.-r.\nCAPK TOWN, Feb. ii.5.\u00E2\u0080\u0094it is reported\nthat the inlliieiili.il commandant, I'iel.\nFourc. wilh sevci.il hundred lloers in the\nDcwi'tsiloip district arc willing In surrender if the commandant receives a proposition direct from General Kitchener,\nThe expert's report is said to be favorable on oil lands near Lewiston,\nIdaho.\nRepublic\nOre of remarkable value la being taken out of the Morning Glory. Good\nprogress Ib being made from the raise\nfrom the second level. Drifting ls also\ngoing on us usual. '\nAn unpsually high grade of ore is reported to be coming out of all the\nstopes ln the Republic mine.\nRapid work ls being done on the\nQuilp shaft, which Is now 200 feet below the third level of the mine, and Is\n520 feet below the cropplnga of the\nledge, according to Republic advices.\nAfter sinking another 100 feet a crosscut will be driven to tne ledge.\nThe working shaft of the Mountain\nLion has reached a depth of 130 feet\nbelow the lower level of the mine, or\na total perpendicular depth of 555 feet.\nIt will be pushed te the 600 foot level\nbefore a crosscut Ib i un on the ledge.\nFollowing Is the schedule of rates\nto ba charged for the treatment of custom ore hy the Republic mill, as announced by Manager D. C. Jackllng:\nFor ores containing 6-10th of an\nounce or less of gold per ton, $4.50.\nFor ores containing \% ounces, $7.50\nper ton.\nOn ores running between these\namounts a scale increasing with every\nadditional quarter of an ounce of gold\nfrom the lower to the higher will be\ncharged.\nOn ores containing one ounce of gold\nor more the mill will pay for 90 per\ncent of the assay value and on ores\nrunning less than one ounce, 85 per\ncent\nThe mill will pay for 50 per cent of\nthe silver shown In assay at market\nquotation?.\nIn addition to these charges a flat\nsampling rate of 75 cents per ton will\nbe charged.\nThe drift on the Flag Hill Is in 150\nfeet from the crosscut tunnel. The\nledge Is between flve, six, and seven\nfeet wide. The values are regular, but\nthe average Is about $20 per ton.\nStoning has begun on the Ben Hur\nand the output will be shipped to the\nRepublic mill as soon as arrangements\nfor Its treatment have been completed.\nAll work has been suspended on the\nSan Poll and will probably not be resumed until the shipment of ore be-\nglnr.\nIt Is reported from Sheridnn camp\nthat the ledge has been cut on the Tom\nQuick. The Tom Quick lst'',\"''>>- *-** N\"U\"\" ^ ' \u00C2\u00BB\nCancer until ,l'1,M*1'(1 from the county Jail and has left\nthe blood is '\"'' ''\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"'ia to act us editor of the Peoria\npo.luted arid the system thoroughly con- JoOrwd for one day, for whtejl she is\nThe!,\"a 7 thlsdf '\"y virulent poison. ' to be paid $100, A.'XX. McAfee and Rev.\npart of tl.ri.odv\" ?1HPITr8 \u00C2\u00B0\"*\u00C2\u00B0\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 ]\u00C2\u00BB'-- Mcl'urlaml, pastor of the Firm Met!,,,-\nWmlesstokSatfirrLt^The^n ** ****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB* *CT **>\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 M\u00C2\u00BB' N\"-\ncerous cells form and are deposited by Uo\" re''''1V('1 several urgent telegrams rathe blood near the sore, it increases iu jesting her to eomc to Peoria, and her\nsia_ and severity, with sharp shooting determination not to give bond could not\npains. No matter how often the sore is hold out against the requests. Bo the.\niWrovin^,!^ mr&on'' knife or flesh last of ,h,- entailers is out of jail. Before\ndestroying plasters, another comes and is \u00E2\u0080\u009E;\u00E2\u0080\u009E, i,.,-, M\u00E2\u0080\u009E v..(i,m ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,,, t, ,,lf, - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nworse. The real disease is in the blood ''\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , \"'' ' \"\" JJ\"\"1\nand the treatment must begin there The ?nMhln8' H\u00C2\u00AB only .'uiniiieiit was \"Praise\npoisoned blood must bc invigorated and V\"h1 '\npurified, and when this is done cancerous \u00E2\u0084\u00A2-rs- Nation was acoompanted by ltcv.\ncells can no longer form and the sore will Mr, Itiissell, a temperance orator from\nheal naturally and permanently.\nMta. Sarah M. Keentlncr,\nMl Windsor Ave., Ilristol\nTenn., writes: \"lam 41\nyears old, an- Train.\nGoshen, In I.. Feb, _!! - Three person*\nwere killed lure and several Injured hy a\nWabash westbound pa*\u00C2\u00BBengcr train running Into a sleigh tilled wilh people ut a\n'i\"--ing near Wakaruss. The dead ure:\nChristian Wagner, l/mis Wagner and\nChristian Deering. Berioualy injured: Edward Wagner, aged 21, leg broken and in-\ntemal injuries; will die. The train was\nlate and was running at a high rate of\nsliced.\nlin- government - rgads and ihe agrarian\nand am .agrarian prcaa. liie Nation today contains a remarkable article on tha\nsubject by Dr. Berth, the leader of the\nIrelsaitaigna party, reviewing Russia'!\nic.iiiiiinii- relations with Qermany and tlw\nI'iiiieil Statea, aod *.i\s.\n\"The pres in Kiis-.i-Anieii an tariff ivar\nis of a tcinpoaiy nature, since l!u-*n\nU seriously and aytunstically working lo\nIestablish the closest relations with toe\nj United Stan-, not onlj c menial, but\nfinancial, thus assuming tin- portion Qer\nI many haa heretofore occupied. Thli tormJ\nhi Inherent part of Russia's n licy. li i-\nihe best blood purifier ever produced. '\"' \"Ml-V M- \",u m* I\"'1\"'-'- ''\" il '\" \"\"\nIts cures of dyspepsia, biliousnesa, I'''\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>' \"' l!\"' whoW -;-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0vcruincni.\"\nncrvouBness, loss of appetite and that Those statements, ii i> a - .vied, an\ntired feeling make it the greatest stom- baaed on Inride biformation.\nsch tnnic; nerve-builder and strength-\nTln-alt-r Ut-Htroyt-tl.\n(iihiniliiii. Mo. Feb. 21. Uadcn's open\nI house uas destroyed by lire Saturday. Tin\niire was caused by a defective tutnaee and\nsiiited while u matinee perfcuinance was\nin progress. Tlie audiapce \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB- largely\ncomposed of ebildran. Imt all escaped in\nj :ry. Loss, *i-.u,iiihij in-iirauce, $-lil,m\u00C2\u00ABi.\nA Million Dollar Gift.\nChicago, Feb. 24\u00E2\u0080\u009411 is announced lint\nMi-. KmmoiH Maine of this city has turned over to the Chicago university ths ('hi\nTurin War. cago Institute of Pedagogy, which wil\nBerlin, Feb) 2.V The two Russian semi- npresent an addition to the university en\nilliiiat tit.--1.ir.>ti nis. amminting to threats \"towmetit of nearly $1,000,000. The iu-ti\nif a vigorous t.irill law if lieiiii.iny. midori*11*8 \"\"* st.irtoil by her some years ac<\n.-.<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2i-.iii.iii pressure, should persist in levy- I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'>[ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00C2\u00BB appropriation of three quarter- of .\nIng heavy import duties upon foreign ag- |m*,M\u00C2\u00B0T\" d liars and since that time she ha-\nrieultuml products, have hem tig 'chief i1\"'1'1'' addiiilial gifta to it.\nniplei of public discussion here, both by\nThe comedy of the world ts as appar\nent as the tragedy, and far more eco\njomlcal for the brain.\nSOU KNOW WHAT YOC AUK TAKING\nWhen vou talto Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic,\nixciuise thu formula is plainly printed nn every\nlotiU-sliowimrt_i.it ft tl simply Iron and Uul-\nliino in a tnseless form. No Cure, No fay. 50c.\nTho skeptic never expresses doubt;\nhe feels it too deeply.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB <\"l'*frl\"loM\"li'>\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB*\n< >\n< \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFine\nrestorer the world has ever known.\nHood' s*Sarsaparilla\nIs a thoroughly good medicine. Begin\nto take it TODAY. Get HOOD'S.\n$Ti >K$>\nWill Keep You Dry\nGfl\u00C2\u00AETTK]0K_\u00C2\u00A9 EUSB VlWWW\nTam No 3ustituts . FaceCAvateooe,\nSUOWINC FutkllMC Of (_.\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBHCMT5 AHDHivn,\nA. J.TOWER Co Boston. Mms_\u00C2\u00BB\nOn Hit- lift I red Lint.\nWashington, Kb. 26.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094-JBrteadier (_!.\u00C2\u00AB\neral Theodere Sehwan haa been placed on\nthe retired list on hi* own application un-\nder the 40 yeurs' lenrlee clause.\nA WHOLE GARDEN\nFor 14c.\nW\u00C2\u00BB Willi Ms fain thli y\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABr IM.OM mw\ncut'om*!.. una hone* otter\nYkM. umiii'i '\"is Hln--I TomaSo.. He\n- -Ili.Nnrthfrn Union i:\u00C2\u00AB\n\" K.mi'. k&Tortu Onlo& IM\n1 \" Inm-iia Omen I'llcumbw.... Ue\n1 \u00C2\u00AB t'iiru\u00C2\u00BBi\u00C2\u00BB\nol tkle petlee \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB* It. In po\u00C2\u00ABu\u00C2\u00ABe\nOkelee Oelew Serd SCe Ik **t at*\nPotato* MUM mit beml Md ep'\nOetelorae elone. I cenU. P\nmt t. uim ikb ce.,tK_wii.wH.\nl i-mi|>\u00C2\u00BB tti I.envr China.\nl'.uis. l-'eh. 86.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A dispatch to the Temps\nfiom Shanghai says ii is believed the evae-\nnation of lhe foreign troopa from China\nv. ill begin al the end of March.\ni <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDon't Stop Tobacco Suddenly\nH Injur*! Dfrvotu lyitem to do to. BAOO-\n< UKO la tbe only cure that rmlly ourei\nend notlfle* you when to Hop. Hold with s\n(tierantee that three boxei will cur* nny cue.\nRiP.n.nilflfl >\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TFtotahle and herml.-se. lt bu\nutUU UUnU rur,.,i , honii\u00C2\u00BBiid\u00C2\u00BB, It will cure you.\nai an drucfiiU or by mill prepaid, |1 a box;\n> box** $2.60. Booklet frea. Writ* Xuriiu\nChxmioaL Co., he I'miie, Wis.\nDE. W. F. DUNLOP,\nDKNT1ST.\nMoid Crown and Ilritlm- Work.\nKatrauee aoi-'-'tiU-Htl.'l Mnhavrk Ulok\nSpokane, Waah.\n1)11. HUNT A SON*,\nDentlata.\nAll klmla of wcrk neatly done and prlcm\nr'aeonablo.\nRnnme S-4-K-S Eaxle niork, Hnnkane\nGBHil'SURBOUTEif IODINE\n_ A guaranteed t'uro for Catarrh and\ntHin-Uimptlen. |1.00. V Iaick Hux M5.\nW. H.SMITH a CO., Buffalo. N.Y, Prop's.\nIt c,L\u00E2\u0080\u009Er,rN\s,^ pension\nII B CKFONii, Waihlnalon. 0. C, ilu-i will r\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00C2\u00ABe\u00C2\u00ABlT* quick repllee. B. Mh N. U. Vole. Btaf\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tkCorp* FroeeotittntelainmlncalSVS\nWANTED.\nEnergetic men nnd women to represent ua in every section. Steady employment, good wages. For particulars call on or address Manager, 22\nGolden Gate Ulk., Spohune, Wash.\nThe miners and operators are now In\nspss-wi ln Columbia. The latter want\na raise of 10 to 20 per cent and minor\nconcessions, and the bosses want to en-\nfcrcc a reduction. Both sides are making threats and sparring for advantages. The outlook for trouble Is good.\nThe skin and flesh feel like\nthe fit of a new soft glove when\nSt.\nJacobs\nOil\nhas driven out\nSoreness\nand\nStiffness\nfrom cold.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n..\n.\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n+\n+\n+\n<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nn\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nf\n. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nll\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nli\n<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nI \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHARD TO BEAR\nStory of a Druggist Who Was\nAlways Compounding ltem-\nedies for Others Yet\nSuffered Agonies\nHimself.\nFrom the Ri publican, KUlmmto, III.\nPerhaps in im oase where Htninucli\ntrouble was the uilmeni has the elli-\nciency of a popular remedy been ho\nthoroughly dsmonstrited as in the case\nof VV. E, MutbiH, a prominent druggist\nof Eldorado, 111. Tho story uh told by\nMr. Mutliis is iib fullows:\n\"lu the spring of 1894 I hud a very\nserious cut-e of iudi^ehtiou. My stom-\nO i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Omii.ouced to give me grent trouble,\nami, while] knew the uutuie of the\npain, 1 did riot at first use the proper\npreu.utiou^ For some time I did not\nimy anv attention, but it gradually\n__r\u00C2\u00ABw -worse, when I consulted a phy-\nsivian, who prescribed for me. 1 used\nhis medicine according to instructions.\nI begun to experience nervous Bpells,\nbeoaiue subject lo congestion of the\nstoiiiiioli, uml considered myself in a\nprecarious condition. The physician's\nmedicine nnd other remedies I tried\nfailed to beuelit me.\n\"One day a friend urged me to try\nDr. WilliauiH' I'ink l'ills ior Pale Peo- I\npie. I considered ita useless expert- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nment, but ns 1 bud tried everything '\nelse, I agreed to take them. That was\nthree and a half yenrs ago. When I\nbad used three boxes I could note very\nplainly the oliHnge for the better. ;\nWhen 1 had used the seventh box 1\nWas cured.\n\"Tiie pills have not onlv cured the '\nindigestion, but tney have ul.-u cured\nmy uervouHtiesH, my blood is in perfect\ncondition, and they huve brought my\nweight from 140 pounds at the commencement of the stomach trouble to\n180 at present.\n\"If any oue who reads this desires\nto know more nf my expuiience I will\niliuily answer letters which enclose\nstamp for reply. i-igned,\nW. E. MATH IB,\nSworn and subscribed to beforo me\nthis :_?th day Of June, 1900.\nThos. D. Morris,\nJustice of the Peace.\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale\nPeople are sold at all druggists or will!\nue. sent direct from Dr. Williams Medi- '\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. j\nI'rice 50 cents per box; six boxes, $2.50. i\nmm*,\nti\nXX\nRAIDED A liaUOR HOUSE,\nTwenty tu Thirty Simla Kit-oil\u00E2\u0080\u0094One\nMun iiiiitii> Wounded, With Ttrn\nBallets in in- Hd-iim\u00E2\u0080\u0094KuuU si.i.-\nAffiiHot the Oilier,\nTqieka, Kan., Feb. 20.-J. W. Adams\n.lies at a hospital hovering between life\nund death, ilet\u00C2\u00ABus shot during a raid\non u North Topeka Wholesale liiiuiir\nhouse.\nAt midnight a crowd of citizens heavily\narmed with revolvers, sledge hammers,\ni rov. bats and a battering ram broke into\ni he wholesale liquor bouse of ''Cash\" Our-\nlis un West Curtis street, between Kan-\nsun avenue :ind Jackson Street, nnd\nsmashed the beer casks found there.\nThree polioemen drove the crowd back.\nBoth the policemen und the citizens tired\ntheir revolvers, and J. W. Ad.uns, u car-\npenter, was simt twice iii the breast, lie\nvas taken in a hack to Riverside hospital,\nwhere be lies in a preoarious condition.\nfreaoliar I nder Arrest.\nDr. M. I!. Mitchell and Hev. V. \Y. Km-\nanon were arrested, ltcv. .Mr. Emeuon\nwns taken to the pubic station, when-, he\nwas biiokcd uiiilcr the charge of resisting\nun officer. His left hand was cut and\nbleeding. He was allowed tn go upon his\nown recognisance. Dr. Mitchell tonk tin\nInjured man to the hospital and was al\nlowed to stay and administer lo him with\n\"Ul Living bond.\nThe three policemen, Patrolmen Down*)\nnnd Ituyles nnd Private Watchman Don\nnuis. claim that Adams was shut by \\\,\nown crowd while he was retreating train\nthe place where the liquor Waa smashed\nand Adams says he was shot by a police\nman. Officer Downey says he did not ar-\nrive at the scene of the trouble until it\n\u00C2\u00ABas about over.\nlii.-.l tn the Air.\nOfficer liuylcs, who carries a C'olfs 44\ncaliber, claims that the Uo shuts be liieu\nwere in the air and that he did not aim ai\nany one. Dr. Mitchell and Dr. Charles \Y.\nIluiiiniiiud, who cared for Adams at thi\nhospital, say that he was shot With S\n'Ai or 'AS caliber revolver.\nBoiler Makers' strike on the Erie\nthose interested in the movement.\nThe newspaper carriers of San Fran-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0isco have organized and are seeking\nrepresentation in the Labor Council.\nLIBERTY LAKE POULTRY RANCH.\nM ift * xtanalvc breeder* tn thf northweet.\n1. c. White 'uvi B, C. Brown Legfconu. S. C.\n-Hf k Minorca*. Dark Brahroaa, C. i. QutM,\ntlhode Wand Rods, Barred Plymouth flocks\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Vr*. $100 sluing ot U. Pekin -lurks. $1.90\npitlnn 15. Bmnw turke)**, W.0O per 11. Order\nr\"2: now. Toulouse Koe**< ?:; per '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'.\nUU'K HARDTNCK 1'rop.\nBast Bpokane, Waah.\n<\u00C2\u00A7WA\nhi. il8n\u00C2\u00BBturo la on every Sox of the genuine\nLaxative Bromo-Quinine T\u00C2\u00BBbi.u\nHe remedy that curve it cold In on\u00C2\u00AB d\u00C2\u00ABjr\nMen confeiw to making love, hut\nblush or rugo If accused ot really feeling lt.\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'HUH \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB 9999\nChicago stationary flreemen will\nitrlke for the eighthou* day In the\nspring.\nThe Trust Problem.\nTo a thoughful mind, the mist prot.le.ii\ni\u00C2\u00BB min nt ..fin ui- uuj.uit. li inii-i in-i.rnily\njcmppled with, for it creeps njioti societv\nuefore you am .iwnre uf hs existence, iii\nibis respect much resembling the var-\ni'.iis dimirdera wliiih auan me itoinach,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tich us iiiii-iijmtiuii, Indigestion, dyspepsia uml hilioiiMiese. Honfetwr's titbmach\nliillers \u00C2\u00ABill cure nil Mich ailments, und\nurivetit lu grippe, malar ul fever und ugue.\nBe >iuc in i,'iu. jt n trial.\nlewiirr nf Olntincnt-i fnr Cntarrh\nTllltt rtllltulll M.r.nry.\nV.8 mercury will surely destroy tbe sensi\nif smell and completely derange tht\nvhole system when entnrinn tt throueh\nhe mucous surfaces. Such articles shouie\n'ever be used except on prescription.\nrom reputable physicians, as the damagi\nhey will do Is ten-fold to the Rood yoc\nan possibly dorive from them. Hull'.'\n'atarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Che\ney & Co.. Toledo, O.. contains no mer-\nury, and Is taken Internally. actltiK di\nectly upon the blood and mucous sur\naces of the system. In buying Hull',\n'atarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine\nt Is taken Internally, and made In Toledo\n>hlo, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials\nree.\nSold by drugRlsts; nrlce. 75c per bottle.\nHall's Family Pills era the best.\nCharity draws from an exhaustless\nAnother increase of 5 per cent ln\nwages was received by the miners in\nthe area of the Miners' Federation of\nGreat Britain on January 12th, which\nwill average about \u00C2\u00A31, or 14d. per week.\nCASTORIA\nFor Infants and Children.\nThe Kind You Have Always Bought\nBears the\nSignature of\nMEDICAL EXAMINER\nOf the U. S. Treasury Recommends\nPeruna.\nDr. Llewellyn Jordan.\nDr. Llewellyn .Jordan, Medical Examiner of (J. S. Treasury Department,\ngraduate ol Columbia College, and who\nserved three yeurs at Weat Point, haa\nthe following tu nay ol Peruna:\n.\"Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived\nfrom your wonderful remedy.\nOne short month has brought\nforth a vast change and I now\n.consider myself a well-man after\nmonths of sutler!ng. Fellow suf*\nferers, Peruna will cure you.\"\nCatarrh is a system io disease curable\n..nly by sys*.ciiiii' treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed nerve centers.\nThis is what l'eruna doea. Peruna\nimmediately invigorates the nerve-centers which give vitality to the mucous\nmembranes. Then catarrh disappears.\nThen catarrh ia permanently oured.\nPeruna cures catarrh wherever lo-\nmteil. Peruna is not a guess nor an\nexperiment\u00E2\u0080\u0094it is au absolute sclentiflo\ncertainty, l'eruna has no substitute!\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094no rivals. Insist upon having Peruna.\nA free book written by Dr.\nHartman, on the subject of catarrh\nin Its different phases and stages,\nwill be sent free to any address\nby The Preuna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio.\nFourteen Itntllcw Recovered.\nVancouver, B. V., Feb. 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A sp cial\nfrom Cumberland slates that more water\nwas turned in to Xo. 0 shaft to quench\nihe lust vestige of fire, il having been\nfiiiind yesteid.iy that the fire had extended\n50 feet up No. ti shaft. Fourteen bodies\nhave so fur liiin recovered from the exploded mine, .ill of them having been taken\nout by way of So. !> shaft.\nSermons are preached In many places\nbeside pulpits.\nTIIK (iltKAT HERB CI'__VB.\nThe uses ol f-iirlli'ld Ten are maul-\nfold: it regulates the digestive\norirans; cures constipation; pari.\ndes the blood; brings nimil health.\nBELGIAN HARES FOR SALE.\nThoroughbred stock 4 months old $5\neach; three months old $3 each. Lord\nBrittain Hoc with 5 young $15. We\nship everywhere. Over 100 to select\nfrom. CENTRAL RABBITRY, 1001\nThe roots of a strong tree do not j Sprague Ave, Spokane, Wash\nmake much rustle, but they do the\nhanging on in time of storm.\nStop. th. Cough .nil\nWork. Oft thc Gold.\nLaxative Brptno-Qnlnlne Tablets cure a cold in\none day. .Kouure.NoPay. Price 25 Cents.\nAs a rule the laborer is worthy of his\nfountain; the more it gives the more it hire, but there are cases where the sal-\nShort absences increasi friendship;\nlong ones kill it.\nhas to give.\nI ary is rather bigger than the preacher, bones of difficulty.\nTO Cl'RK A COLD IN ONK DAT\nTake Laxative Itromo quinine Tablet*. All\ndruggists refund the money if lt falls to core.\nE. w. Grove's signature la on each box. 25c.\nIt Is a jellyfish creed that has no\nPeople who hnve for years suffered\nwith tick headaches bave never\nused Garfield tea, lor this hkkii tea\nis ii peattWe cure lor constipation\nanil sick hcailacheR.\nIt Is hopeless consulting the compass\nof conscience whon you lay tho load-\nBtone of lust beside It\nLIFB OT QCKKN VICTORIA.\nOnmpliia life ol Qnean Vlotorla B\u00C2\u00ABat\nbonk, bait term*. Outflt mailed tre*.\nA.ldr.i. H. O. Miller * ft... Portland, Or.\nThe approbation of self is seldom\nborn ot the approval of conscience.\nN. N. U.\nNo. 9, 1001,\nFIT8 altar Anl il\u00C2\u00ABy'\u00C2\u00BB uiieof br. KDm'iHr'-at V\"\u00C2\u00AB\nIto-t-i^r. Semi to FltKK*i.Optrl,lll,,.tll.-.;n;ltr...'-\ni-... Hl_.Il.ll Kl_i.il,l.l,- \ H AV II III TO ll'lll' nlllMit.-elirnnl>le\u00C2\u00AB. ni>i>e.iill clUa, hlllonaneia,\nbnd t>.-.':.tl,, imil l.lnml, uln.l on the Moium-li, MnuteU buwi'li ftnil nutt.th,\n, -.allow ii'iii-\nyon will never km well antl he well nil Ihe time until yon lint yonr bowel*\nright, inki' onr u.lvlrei .imi with I tmAIII'lN toUtiy. untie r un ahsnlute\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uurtinlee to uir miiii,-] refunded.\nOt-AKANH'FF.n TO ITRKl fllf\nI'AUV-TH waaaold. Now It !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 over-Um million hoxe\u00C2\u00BB u yrur. irrrnirr th\u00C2\u00BBn an\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Intlliir medlelne In the world. Thia la nhaolute proof of grent merit, _\u00C2\u00BBn_\nonr l>e\u00C2\u00ABt teatlmnnlnl. We hnve faith, und will aelf l'A*C \ RETN nhaolutcly\nenra nun the ant box of CAB.\nyrur, greater than any\n..I nf areat merit, and\n*l- IKI'lN nl...,lately\ntriiarunte^d to eitre or monev re_Yi~ntletK Oo hur toduy. two ftOe hoiea, alve\nthem u fnlr, honeat trial. u\u00C2\u00BB Iter almulr tllreetlona. uml If you ure not antlafled\nlifter intlng one HOe bo*, return Ihe iinuaed JtOr tint nml the empty box to\nua by mull, or the druirirlat team whom you inirehuaril II. antl get your money\nImeli for hoth hovea. Talie oar ndvler no mm Kr whul alia yon\u00E2\u0080\u0094alart today.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.--.111. w III nulekly follow und vou w 111 hleaa the liny you llrat\niiU'AM'UIl'.l-s. liook (Vre by mull. Addi iii.iii.im. Ill nvi.i I n.,\ntlrat atnrted the ua*\nS.. V.,rk.rlkU\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBt_.\n:\n___k \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nt\n%ytti**tu%tmmiys,w*%*itm\n\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB_N\nn*stm^***mm\nii \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB* Kl\nlus\neel\ny\u00C2\u00BB|\nIt!1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2n\u00E2\u0080\u0094r mi-i\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ,i a_p;_-iT\" iti-. t\u00E2\u0080\u0094!,_.\u00C2\u00BB-ytru'Wcrrp-;\nr.iimiT'i\nTIIE SILVERTONIAN.\nSaturday, March 9. 1901.\nPUB1.I8UKD EVERY SATURDAY AT\nSILVEKTON, B. 0.\nM ATHKNON II1COK., HdltOM A Prnpa.\nWatches,\nClocks and\nJewfllery.\ntine Watch Repairing a Specialty.\nAll Work Left at The Lakeview\nHotel, Siiverton, will he forward-\noil and promptlv attended tu.\nO. H. Knowles,\nSANDON, B. 0.\n>________\u00C2\u00BB_______\u00C2\u00BB__\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0___________.! II\nTHE)\nARLINGTON\nHOTB^\n -__\u00C2\u00BB.\t\nConveniently Situated near\nRailway Station and Wharf.\nGOOD SERVICE COMFORTABLE\nROOM8.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES:\nTWO DOLLARS A YEAR.\nAdvertising rates will be made known\nanon application at this oflice.\n__\nadvice know what would would hai\nthe immediate result of such a measure?\nWhile the number and capacity of the\nlead stacks in Cunada are so limited\nas at present, any talk of an export\nduty is sheer nonsence. The Slocun\nhas stood much, but this would be the\nlast Ptraw and the population would\nsoon he limited to buliffs-and deputy\nsheriffs. Slocan ores already pay the\nduty charged by the United States!\nwhether treated at home or abroad,\nand if an export duly wero charged\nthey would pay that too, even to the\nhome smelters.\n0 0 31N UIVI C A T E I).\nTables supplied with all the delicacies\nof the season.\nHENDERS0N&~GETHINU, - Proi's.\nSLOOAN CItY, .... BO.\nSAVE\nTHE\nPIECES.\nWhen your watch goes wrong or\nyour clock refuses to go bring it to me.\nIf you have a piece of jewelery in\nneed ot repair, brim; it to me.\nj; I am prepared at all times and in\nevery case to guarantee my work.\nIF YOUR SUBSCRIPTION IS DUE\n04\u00C2\u00AB4\u00C2\u00AB4Q OR IN ARREARS A\n\u00C2\u00BB (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBLUE CROSS WILL\nBE FOUND IN THIS\nSQUARE. SUBSCRIPTION ARE\nPAYABLE IN ADVANCE. PRICE\nTWO DOLLARS A YEAR.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 WHEN THE HUMBUGS GO.\nThere'll be weeping, there'll be walling*\nThere'll be wrath, and there'll be\nrailing.\nThere'll be many a pulpit empty, many\nan exit high and low,\nAnd the Knisers ami their corn-ins,\nShall depart the earth in dozens,\nTo escape the desolation\u00E2\u0080\u0094when the\nHumbugs go!\nTliey shall flee thn c-ew prolific,\nIn an exodus terrific,\nAll the oily ones who fatten on tho pallid\npeople's woe;\nAnd the Sweater sweot and pious,\nWith his 8qtiulid den nnigh us,\nShall levant to sweat al leisure\u00E2\u0080\u0094when\nthe Humbugs go!\nBut the unaccustomed laughter\nShall salute lhe sooty rufter,\nIn the cottage when the laborer hns\ndropped his weary hoe.\nAnd co wants shall e'er tissnil him,\nAnd his bread shall never fuil him\nIn the happy time a-coming\u00E2\u0080\u0094when the\nHumbugs go!\nE. M. Brindle, Jeweler,\nNEW DENVER, - B. 0.\nJ.-G. GORDON,\nMIKES, REAL ESTATE, (MEYAMER\nNOTARY PUBLIC.\nilLVERTON, - - - B. C.\nii'i'i'ii't'uuuumtuuui\nEDITORIAL 0UTCR0rrii\G8.\n[8888 88888888 8 8 8 8 UU 8 8 8 8 8\nIn the House of Commons a few\ndays aqo, Davis, of Saskatchewan,\nasked. \"Why .should we hmd over\nto the C. P. R. the entire northwest!\"\nThat's what we all want to know.\nH. R. JORAND,\nBARRISTER k SOLICITOR,\nNOIARY PUBLIC.\n8L00AN, - - - B\nC\nSandon Miners' Union\nHOSPITAL\nOPEN TO THE PUBLIC.\nSubscribers, (1. per month.\nPrivate Patients, 12. per day\nexclusive of expense of physician or surgeon and drugs.\nDr. W. E. Goin in, Attendant Physician\nMiss S. M. Chihhoi.m, Matron.\nJ. D. McLaughlin, President.\nW. L. IlAtiLKR, Secretary.\nWm. Donahue, J. V. Martin,';R. .1.\nMcLean, A. J. McDonald, Mike Bh/.dy\nDirectors.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\n-and Soo line\nW. W. Beaton and C. W. Webster\nhave purchased the Kaslo Kootenaian.\nTbat publication may now take the\nturn for the better which it.has needed\nfor many months.\n-FIRST-CLASS SLEEPER8-\nOn all Trains from Revelstoke\nand Kootenav Landing\t\n TOURIST OARS-\nPaaa Dun more Junction for St.\nPanl on Sundays, Tuesdays,\nThursdays and Fridays\t\nToronto on Mondays and Wednesdays t\t\nMontreal and Boston,on Bat-\nli rdays\t\nSAME CABS PA8S REVELSTOKE\nONE DAY KARliER.\nvor rates, tickets, and full information\ntall on or address\n. ' .O. B. Gil ANDLKIt,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^Agent, Silveron, B. C, or\nJ*. S. CARTER, E. J. COYLE,\np. p. a., a. a. p. A..\nNelson*. Vancouver\nThe City of Slocan is at last a\nreality, the bill of incorporation having\nthis week secured the assent of the\nmembers at Victoria. Without wishing\nto bo premature, we Congratulate the\nCitizen's Committee of Slocan who**\nlabors have proved so successful. Il\nseems a shame however that the incorporation and civic election will not\nbe Over in time to allow the Mavor\nand Alderman to send the Heir\nApparent an invitation to visit this\ndistrict This is a lost opportunity.\nThe Dominion Government is\ngrowing more penurious instead of\nmore liberal in regard to lhe Post\nOffice affairs of the Kootenay, if their\nactions in Sandon are any criterion.\nPostmaster Atherton has been notified\nthat his salary is to bo cut down by\n$340. a year and in future he must\nrent an oflice for $10. a month.\nThe Government should spend less\non schemes for immigration and more\nto oil the int.er.ual machinery of the\ngovernment By ao doing they would\nmake Canada if good place to come to\nand our population would come unassisted.\nThe Nanaimo Herald has blossomed\nout into a daily paper and is now the\nonly daily'abor paper \u00C2\u00BBpublished in\nCanada. If labor organizations in\nthis Province are alive to their own\ninterests t'ley will see thai this\npaper is well supported and given it\nchance to live. In times of trouble\nthey look for support from the local\npapers, and are indignant if they do\nnot receive it, but in times of peace\nthey send out of the country for tlnir\nliterature and let their home press be\nsupported by the ' plutociats\".\nMr. R, F. Green hns proposed to the\nGovernment that they estnbli'h a\nGovernment Smelter and Refinery in\nthe Slocan, or at some most conviemci't\npoint, to handle the lead ores of the\nProvince. Such asch'uno has much to\nrecornuiend it. Not only would the\nreduction work* pay for themselves\ndirectly, besides settling the lead\nsmelting problem, but they would indirectly be a source of much revenue\nto the Province in thn matter ofthe\nmineral tax nnd the licences winch\nwould be taken out by men-hunts and\nthe taxes whicli would be paid by\nthem if the mining industry here was\nencouraged in this practical wny.\nThis seems to be one r,f tho ernes\nwhere government ownership tO'ild\nnot be objected to, by even the niai-t\nconservative.\nSome are now clamoring for nn\nexport duty on coal. Are these people\ntrying to shut up our const coiliere-i?\nIf so they are tnking the. pre per bourse.\nA* the const collieries depend upon the\nAmerican market nml if shut opt\nTho Editors do not bold themselves In\nany way responsible ior ihe opinions ex-\nprtssed under this bead. All communication, intended for this column, mnst\nbe accompanied by the nnuie of the wilt-\ner. None will be published otherwise.\nEditor Btlvbrtonian :\nDear Sir:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1 um jrivon to understand tbat\nthe editor of the \"Ledge\" considers himself debarred from matins, nny reply to\nmy letter, which you were good ehoimh\nto imlilifih in your issue dated 2\" February, by the-fact that I did not si^n my\nnama thereto. My object io addre'ssinp\nyou now is to supply tha necessary information; if the \"ledge''still linds itself iinnble to justify its impudent attacks\nupon religious belief we tdinil know lo\nwhat cause its silence is to be ascribed,\nYi-iirw truly\nL. II. FlLMOMt, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThrco Forks, March 1.\nMr Schominprhorn (sjianklng bis son)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Willie, tills is biirtlnu nie fur more\ntl an it is ynn !\nLittlo Willie\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, I hope it is! You\nate wnv out of my class, and, besides,\nyour're bitting me below tbo belt!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 A Grndy Comity, Kan., physician\nrecently sent to tha address of one of\nthe patients Q bill fur prof.-s.-i mal services, nnd iu ten days received the\ntollowinu letter written on the.book of\nhis memorandum: \"Doer Stir this was\nput in my box by mistake l han't the\nman bee's d__ul and ainl nny relation lo\nmine iinvWav. I dint see bow jour\nconsbens will let yon dun (he dead.\nWhy dont J'OII live and let live and try\nto meat that mat] who died in heaven\nwhicli i.s nroilh moar than forty dollars\nto enny doctor.\"*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ex.\nCEYLON AND INDIA TEAS.\nGREEN \u00C2\u00B0\" BLACK.\nTln.ro is nothing ariiliri.il about these teas. Tin; iniriiy ^ 1\nmi(ps(ioni.(l, ilie ILiyor is delicious, the bouquet is a revelation, k\nyon hare never tasted Hritish grown teas a treat awaits yon. j^\ntea drinkers try Ceylon Green.\nil free sample of delirious S A l> A D A Tea sent on receipt of \n\nmentioning which vou drink\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mark, Mixed or Green Tea. Addri\n\"SALADA,\" Toronto or Montreal.\nCALIFORNIA WINE\nCOMPANY, LTD.\nNELSON, B. C.\nAgents for Calgary Seer,\nGener^l Full Line Lumber,\nMining Dry & Mixed Sash ar,d|\nSupplies. Paints. Doors.\nMoCallum \u00C2\u00AB& Co,, Slooan, 11* o.|\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nJNoTicii:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"II.\:.auI'\" Minjwi! Cl,,iini,\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2limited iii lira Sloi-im Mil.ina\nPkiHiin nf Wf>: KuotPti iv l>!stri. I\nWhere located :\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Ibt'iluiNv F.insi\nadjoining Iho \"Cuiilkv iMnjauL\nClaim\" mi tin- !\i-t.\nTako Notice that 1, Kraneli. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 o'lteil!.! i\nni Silvcriiin, 1! ('. nn n..:fM fur Flunk\nOwen, I\"r,|i Miner's lYiiHleute No\n\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9.COCCI _\u00C2\u00ABCCK\u00C2\u00A9Q.5^XC^\ni UNEQUALLED t\n____!\nw\nt\nK3;\nMEOY for COUGHS\nAND COLDS.\n14503. iit-ml Rimy ititys fnun tli- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2t,r.\u00C2\u00BB j Xf*\"-^ [fT*\nn'Miii. \niijiplv in tin- Mlnltiu llpeor.lHi I \5\u00C2\u00BB> 'TT \"7'V/'*\"fl T! ^\"V /f\"^ w\nuiO.CVrtilUiiti'iifliii|.mvHlo'Msf'\u00C2\u00BBt tih.illl ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nAmi imiiiir tuko miliro thnl nclloii\n'.inil.r M'i'tiini 'At, nitu-t lin ii> tinit'ini'il\nlii'i-.r.. Ilif i-s:tn:,iv ul Hiitib LVrllUuHie\nf\u00C2\u00BBl litijiitivt'lni-'.t-,\nli.it..! :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \* 22 b.l'v nrFi'Tin'T, 1001\nFiuxcia 3. (I'll! u.i.v.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A22rx | \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 101\nfrom that lliiliket would all lift clilBWl\ndown within a week. For ibit Jetir)\nup lo tlm first of tlm pipsrnt liiflith,\nthere was shipped from tlialveiv Viui-\ncfitiver Coal Co, tlm I'liinn Onlliecy\nand the Lady^niith Collit'iy to 15. C. \t\nuoints 28,400 tons tit.d from tlm same j Wiim- |.,.-iit.-i! :-On tl e bv:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!,- M>t\u00C2\u00AB>en ft\n* \u00E2\u0080\u009E. . ^. \u00E2\u0080\u009E~ I Ki.!.l hi.I I,'it A.'ii-','..'.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_<- : \,\ncolln-rii'ti to American points fi.L'OO Tukf^ntitut UibI I. I M. y.filrevtir, \\\ntona. To \"cut oil'your none to gpiti!\nAnd Tolu.\nemrxeitawRx,** mwn .yir,.v.i'i'\u00C2\u00BB'.i.'.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB Milling Jliviniuli i;MVu.\nA to \u00C2\u00BBtoi>% l^ttt H (Ss AJ^ will do It.\nyour t.tdi\" nny suit \u00C2\u00BBomo in'^le.\nbut it is a policy such ns put Cliina in\nher present predicament\nA Pill h now befori\nto ri'K'^'it'! Ihn weight or load a\nvehicle may carry HCconliii^' to the\nwidih of the tires on its whi-els. As\nluck wruld have it tliii* bill, if passed,\nwill only covj-r thst portion of the\nProvince west of the Cascado llanje.\nIn this part of the country tlm load\nwill be regulated, nsusim', not by the\n;i't'niij i)i* ntfi'tit fur i'iiwi!\u00C2\u00BB Kyiid, ln-i\nMir.i.i.i ('\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 r'ilii'iiTe Ntt i.,'.i'.._\",-), jiteiel\n>i.s'y tl.'i -s I'iMtii Uie llitle lirlft.l In in;.!,\nto tlm Minim; Ueu r\u00C2\u00AB.ler lure peilifiiM'u\nof laipltivenii'lii, foi Ibe liUrpnee '.: nli-\ntuliiinji u down Grant of tlm above\nliiiliii.\n^^^^^^^^^ Ami fi'.i-li !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lako notion tJiet nctloti\nour Legislature|nnderai-ctionS7. nvnel im fumni ine.1\nhefqro Iho iiMiiaiinO of mieh Ci rlilliaite t-f\nlinnrovini'.-.iH.\nDated this (itb diir of November.^lOO.\n$\u00C2\u00BBoltl cit\nthe Siivertofi Oriig Store,\nSILVERTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . . B. c. '\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A01\nma\nq omoooc :cocc^\u00C2\u00A9 \u00C2\u00A9.'ccooa xcco^og^-^ ^^\n\".VtAAiVS tMWtlVl\nc\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A20\n22\u00E2\u0080\u0094II-CO\nJ. M. .Me'.iliKCOK.\nV*.*.V.W.\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB^VVM\u00C2\u00BB.VWV\n' t/AVWVWWVUWVW\nNOltOK TO DKLIXQU\u00C2\u00A3ST\nCO-OWM-It.\nPo Gtr* KiiVfii.u, or to nny person or\nperM'ii< l.i vi li'iiu he mny have Irmi'*. i ii^!\nwidih of the tires, hut by the state of |',iH Intereata In tlio ii'il\".iini. Minn .1\n, , ,. , .. ,,, riaima.Coiilm i.o'2. Cuinnmiider hs >\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I\nrouds, over eoine of winch it would be nriaol on I'M Mntiiain. nenr Mllverton\nhard to run on empty eImclLirrow. 1B 0.. Slpcun Miidnj Phi i,m\nwf^l\nnistie\nThose fanatics, wiio are branded ss\n\"Orangemen\" are busy at the present\ntime in passing resolutions condemning\nthe recent yote in the House of Commons regarding the anti-Roman\nCatholic clause in the British coronation oath. The cluuse was inserted\nin the oath at a time when it and the\nOrange order both had some reason for\nexistence, but happily that time has\nlong been past We are glad to s?e\nthat only ninteen members of the\nCanadian House of Commons were\nbigoted and narrow- mindei' enough\nto vote against the resolution.\nIf our povtrninetit has such pretty\nVou me liinliv riniiii\nt'M'i'inh-il thrive hundred\nI ihat 1 !m\t>\ndollars (!-;:i()0)\ncarriage drives west nf the rantfr* thitlhi InStpr nnd Improvements upon ibe\n^^^ ' \"iOVO lii'-n'ioi.t'd, .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 inenil CliillllS in\nIt is with a great deal of disgusted\nsurprise that we note that some of our\nProvincial exchanges are snriounly\nadvising the placing of an export duly\nj on h.-ad ores, Do tbe writers of such\nthey nre afraid n freighter miulit upoii\ntlmiii by hauling a decent loiid, it is\nnothing to the government'! credit\nwhile they hnve such makeshift rortdi\nhere. The fmuirr of this hill, Jlr\nOliver, bis tuL't'll a leaf out (it the\nbook of a foriimr superintendent of,\nthe Yellowstone National Pit!.-, who\nmade just moll regulations ai thin bill\ncovers to keep freighter* from crossing\nthe Park. This regulation was pooh\nrecinded, as the freighters, to get\neven, had eight inch tin-s tacked upon\nthe outsido of the wheels of their\nfreight wagons, loaded up with rock\nand tcok a trip over tho imw government roads and as a consequence cut\nthorn up badly. If our government\non this side of the mountains would\nrun their road building on as broad a\nbasis as they want the wagon tires on\nthe other side of I lie range, people\nhere would be thankful.\nOrder tn hold snid mineral claims meter\nprovlxliiiis 'f iho Mitiyrtil Act\" nml if\nwithin ninety it iyn from the ilaln ol i li s\nnotiee yon f.ijl or refuse to contribute\nvoiir pro|iorlIon if mill QXponditi ie\ntogether \"iili nil posts of advertising,\nm.iii- Itiierenrs in anhl rlnhnu will bi'coiue\nti.e |T'.|'eiiy ol il.e siibbcrlber under\n.'\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2etioii 4 nf mi 'et to Auiend tlm\nMineral Ait 1000\nI'ii.'.xi: I.. l.rjs~'\nDated thlsSiOili. iiny of December IOOO.\nBmmtitmw**W*mr**mu*s*m*, at ni_iiir\u00E2\u0084\u00A2--,am -stem i\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ninn\n'ihe;\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^HoteL\nIS NOW KK-Ol'KN'KD UXDKU THK PERSONAr.\nCllAUGR Ot \t\n 1\u00C2\u00BB AT. G R I F F I N.\t\nI^irst-oiass accommodation\nfor Xtie IJttt>lio.\nSiLVEUTON, H . I! C.\nTbe .Slate of Kansas bss for long\nyears been nominally a prnli il ii ion\nfilate, and tbe law hag Dean enforced\nperhaps as well nfl such drastic law*\ncnn be. Spirits are lilowed to no snhl\nonly as \"im-dicine,\" and Ihat is bow tl.e\nfollowing story eatno to tie told, A\nbronzed suit Htnlwiir'. cowboy planted n\n\"two-cnllon ib niij'iliu\" on Ilie con ter of\naelinmist'e ebon. \"Fill her up,\" I19\nsaid, \"haby'e sick,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094London Chronicle\nORDERS FOR\nANY KIND OF\nJot>\nWill 13o\nattended\n^^^^^^^ Promptly\nTo By\nTHE SILVERTONIAN\nGOOD WORK jit\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PROMPTLY DONE,\nOFFICE ON LAKE AVENUE, SILVERTON, B. C.\nB. H. WILLIAMS.\nStock and Cuktomh\nHkai, I', statu and\nA OK NT.\nBhokkii,\nOttNKHM,\nRaker St.,\nNELPON, II. C\nJ.M. MoQBEQOR\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nAND Ikimm ENGINteER.\nSLOGAN CITY, B_ c\n- GERMAN - -\nfAA'ATfVE COLD CURW-\nCONTAINS THK NEW\n INGHFUIl-.NT\t\nFor Pale at All DruKmists.\n\" TO ADVERTISE IN.\n'3)fS TIIK SILVERTONIAN.\n'"@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_1901_03_09"@en . "10.14288/1.0312988"@en . "English"@en . "49.9508330"@en . "-117.3580560"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Silverton, B.C. : Matheson Bros."@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 .