"e90559ef-9cbe-4407-975c-50b3eefd7d1d"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2016-05-04"@en . "1907-09-12"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/smreview/items/1.0083548/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Devoted to Advertising the resources\nof the rich Slocan\nMining Division. . .\nSlocan\nSent to any address\nfor $2.00 per ann.\nIf you see it in the\n\" Review,\" it's so.\nNo. 3 Vol. a.\nSANDON, British Columbia, Thursday, Sept. ia. 1937.\nSingle Copies 10c.\niW\n2nd Annual\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD?k\nKOOTENAY LAKE\nFruit Fair\nKASLO, B.C\nSEPT. 24tii ano 26TH, 1007\nGrand Exhibits of Products of the\nKootenay.\nits-flows-Tj;\n$2,500 in Prizes aud Attractions.\nSpecial Fruit Competition open to\nthe World for $800 casb prize.\nSpecial Contests for Prospectors\nand Loggers.\nBASEBALL and FOOTBALL.\nNot a dull minute for two days.\n*. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-.**\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* .at. ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, Ji iti o% \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD***\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD o% -*- _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD__.\nvTTTTTTT V ty *4 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ty tr 'V *V\nXocal anb (Beneral. :*\nPrize lists and entry forms may\nbe had from the Secretary.\n&\nA.J.CURLE\nPresident\nJ. W. COCKLE\nSecretary.\n*V)\n:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nFly Fraction and Dardanells Fraction mineial claim, situate in the\nBlocan Mining Division of West\nKootenay District. Where located:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nIn Dardanells' Basin.\nTake notice that I, D. Fraser, acting\nas agent for the Dardanells and Okana-\ngan Mining Companv, Limited, Free\nMiners Certificate No.'Bl7551, intend, 60\ndays from tlie date hereof, to apply to\nthe Mining Recorder for a certificate\nof Improvements for the purpose ot obtaining a Crown Grant of tlie abuve\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice, that action\nunder section 37, must be commeuoed\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate of\nimprovements.\nDated this24thday of Aug., A.D. 1907\nO 20 D. FRASER,\nAgent.\nLand Notice\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDistrict of West Kootenay\nTake notice that William Fovargue\nWhellams, of Kaslo, B. 0., accountant,\nintends to apply for permission to purchase the following described land:\nCommencing at the south-east corner\nof Lot 7523, thence north 40 cliains,\nthence east 40 chains, thence south 40\nchains, thence west 40 chains to point\nol commencement, and containing 160\nacres more or.less. This application\ncovers preemption'' of D. F. McKellar,\nPreemption Record No. 104, which was\ncancelled on the 34th day of August,\n1907.\nWilliam Fovargue Whellams,\nper Henry Stewart Whellams,\nDated. September 8, 1907. agent\n8-11\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nNOTICE.\nEvelyn Mineral Claim, situate in the\nSlocan Mining Division ot West Kootenay District. Where located:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nFour Mile. __\nTake notice that I, 8. E. Watson,\nfree miner's certificate No B6073, actu g\nfor C. D. Rand, free miner's certificate\nNo. B12529, intend 60 days fiom the\nda'e hereof, to apply to the Mining\nRecorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpoBeof obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above claim. And\nfurther lake notice that action under\nsection 87, must be commenced before\nthe issuance of sucli Certilicate of Improvements. ,\nDated this 3rd day of September,\nA.D., 1907.\n8-11 S.E.WATSON.\nWanted : Profitable proposition open i\nfor reliable man acquainted among j\nfruit growers and witli ability an sales-\nman. Full or part time. State age,\nexperience and references. Brown Bios, i\nCo., Nurserymen Ltd., Brown'a Nurseries, Ont. '\nSLOCAN LICENSE DISTRICT.\nNotice is hereby given that thirty\ndays from date I intend to apply to the\nBoard of License commissioners of the\nSlocan license district for a train fer of\nmy liquor license of Rosebery Hotel,\nRosebery, B.C., to Josepn Perant.\n^at** m. McCarthy\nA \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDty.eT.ng of the Board of License\nCommissioners will he held to consider\nsuch transferat the Court House, New\nDenver on Monday the 7th day of Oct.\nat 11 o'clock in tlie forenoon.\nDated at New Denver, the 6th day of\nSept. 1907.\nJOHN T. BLACK\nCliief License Inspector.\nFor Sale at the\nSandon Dairy\n1 Good Meter Cows.\nIf AS. McKINNON, Sando**, B C.\nP.O !.*>- 171\nPicked up by Butting ln Everywhere. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD >\n*\ni. ........ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,,, .tut .ti .ti .f..t. it. it. .1. .tut, .tut. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* .*.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* ...... ..\nr **f'_' Of 'V .' .' \"I'.TTt'l'f '*' '*' 'V .\" t\". TVTT V V\nHans Hagen has gone into partnership with J. P. McGuigan on the American Boy lease.\nHave you noticed that when the new\ndoctor wears his overcoat the sun always Bhines\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwe wore almost writing\nsmilfB ? What's the matter with paying bim a salary to wear it all the\ntime 7\nMissioner Baynes writes us as follows:\n\" Wbat about the fine weather predicted in your issue of August 29lh ?\nHow it would be for tho elements to\nhold a peaco conference?\" There he\ngoes, showing a man's sins up 7 Peace\nconference, indeed. Make it a peasoup\nconference, Missioner, and we'll call you.\nMr. and Mn. T. Jalland hayereturned\nfrom Calgary, where they have been all\nsummer. Tom is now in harness again\nand in the throes of stocktaking.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Sanderson have\ntaken up residence above McKinnon'e\nmillinery store on Front street.\nTbe snow crept below the mountains\non,Wednesday, and tell over tho town.\nIt was an insipid looking imitation of\nthe genuine article, but it had enough\nvigor in it to warn us of tbe approach\nof winter.\nThe KaBlo Fair committee have circulated some handsome litho posters\naround town.\nMrs. Bennett and Miss O'Donnell received a telegram Monday informing\nthem of tho dangerous illness of their\nbrother Bernard at Grand Forks, B.C.,\nand advising them to come at once.\nMiss O'Donnell left on the K. A S. train\nsame day.\nIn the list of outside donon to the\nSaudon celebration published last week\nwe omitted mention of the Canadian\nGroup per W. II. Brandon aud Hermann Clever, New Denver.\nByron N. White came in from White-\nhorse this week and spent a few days at\nthe Slocan Star, where ten men are now\nworking.\nSteve McCready arrived from 'Frisco\nrecently to spend a holiday with brother\nGeorge.\nThat was a fine write-up the Kootenaian gave of our celebration. We\nheard much favorable comment upon it.\nBut say, that remark of the Kaslo small\nboy who mistook our white-spinacbed\nstunt for Dad McClurg was an awfully\nrude one to make of the prince of good\nfellows. Everybody will be down to\nKaslo for the Fair. We will be there\nourselves\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthat is if Tt-wgood. switches\ncollars and promises to behave himself\nas a twentieth century editor should.\nSee bottom paragraph.\nWe intended publishing a full report\nof the New Denver regatta, hut our\nLucerne correspondent has evidently\nforgotten the Review is on the earth.\nRe the Dress suit. Petersky vs.\nMcCready. Plaintiff has obtained injunction against McCready disposing of\n\"roperty.\nGeurge Waite was bruised abont bis\nchest last Wednesday, as the result of\na log falling upon him whilst working\nat the Eureka.\nMrs. McAllister is improving. Her\nfriends will be pleased to learn that thc\nInjury to her foot is not impairing her\ngeneral health,\nThomey's little baby is now out of\ndanger and is fast approaching con-\nvalesence, we are pleased to state.\nOur old friend the Vancouver World\ncame ont this week with 2*inch letters\nfor a scare bead which made us tremble:\n\" Orientals Buy Arms.\" Blc-s ns, how\nthat did scare us. Can't a chink buy a\n22 to go grouse shooting without all that\nfuss?\nSays tbo Kootenaian:\nYoung Lady : \" Do you know it is an\nawful hard matter for me to distinguish\nMr. Atherton from Mr. Towgood. I can\nonly tell for sure by. looking at their\ncollars. Mi*. Alherton has inky finger\nmarks on bis.\"\nKaslo small boy (pointing to Geo.\nI.ovutt): \"Say, is that old guy there\nwith the bunch of white spinach thu one\nIhey call D.\d MeClu-g,?\"\nThe K. of P. Sandon Lodge met on\nWednesday and initiated four new\nmembers.\nDan Tattrie shot a monster wolf\nwhilst out after grouse one day this\nweek.\nNelson Fair opens next Weduesday\nand continues until Friday. The rock-\ndrilling contest will draw a large crowd\nfrom the Slocan. Faulds Brothers will\ncompete, but a Slocan team will carry\nour money. McGillivray and Erickson\nhave hitched up together, and Macken-\nand Johnson, have done the same. We\nunderstand that McDonell and Isenor,\nthe Saudon winners, are Bute Btartcm,\nThe Celebration Ball Committee wish\nthe following to go on record*.\nYour ommittee dosiro to extend tlieir\nthanks to the lad its who contributed refreshments, to tlie Sandon Miners'\nUnion for tbe use of their auditorium,\nto Messrs. Carl Westiu and Norman\nHurlburt for music contributed, and lo\nthe Ladies' Aid of the Roman Catholic\nChurch for the preparation of the sandwiches. Signed: Percy W. Johnston,\nWm. Tattrie,\nPurley W. Ward,\nAlex, Forrest.\nDave Scanlon is up from Whitewater\nfor a visit.\nC. E. Lyons and wife left for Fernie\non Wednesday. General regret is felt\nat their departure. Mr. Lyons haa\nfor the past six years held the joint\noflicee of City Clerk, Chief ol Police,\nAssessor and Tax Collector, to tbe great\nsatisfaction of the corporation and citizens generally. He was an admirable\ncitizen and a zealous officer, and our\ncommunity will sorely miss him and his\nestimable wife. May good luck encompass him in all his undertakings.\nC. E. Anderson has resigned his position of nurse at the hospital. Norman\nHurlbert is filling the breach pro tern.\nHugh Niven'i pacers got out of control one day last week on the Three\nForks road, and the ptuty in the rig\nwere pitched out. None were seriously\ninjured, but the demand for plaster has\nbeen enormous.\n\"BiU\"Ba!y, a well-known pioneer\nof the Lardeau district, committed\nsuicide by drowning at Revelstoke last\nweek. He was previously certified insane, and at the time of the aad event\nwas supposed to be in the custody of\nthe authorities pending his removal to\nthe New Weatmins'er asylum. It is up\nto the many friends of the popular old\nfellow in Revelstoke and the Lardeau\nto demand the reason why a patient who\nhas been certified insane and committed to the care of the authorities, should\nbe permitted to walk unattended on the\nbanks of the river.\nH. Wade, of Nelson, was in the district this week making arrangements\nfor a mineral exhibit at the Nelson\nFair.\nA meeting of the Sandon Celebration\nCommittee was held in tlie City Hall on\nTuesday eveninglast, there being a good\nattendance. The reports of all subcommittees were read and adopted, and\na hearty vote of thanks passed to all\nwho had sn generously contributed to\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo successful a day. The report of the\nball committee was indeed a favorable\none, they having netted $114 profit.\nThe balance sheet was also in a most\nhealthy condition, it showing a total\nsurplus of $170. This is most gratifying to tlie committees and all concerned. It waB agreed that a public meeting be called to decide upon the method\nof disbursing the surplus, such meeting\nto be held at thc City Hall on Friday\nevening, Sept. 20th.\nDave Morgan, late secretary of the\nFerguson Miners' Union, and Jack Mc-\nTaggart were matched on Tnosday, Srd\ninst. for a single-handed drilling contest\nat Ferguson. About $500 changed\nbands. Morgan won.\nThe secretary of the Spokane Fair is\ncommunicating with the teams which\ntook part in tlie recent rock-drilling\ncontests here. Evidently the fame of\nSlocan drillers is spreading, when tliey\nare needed in Spokane to show tbem\nhow to do it. On the 24th inst. the day\nwill he set apart for a great gathering\nof old MlSsOUrlanS now residing in tho\nInland Empire, and if tin Slocan boys\nare drawn for that.dato the represprta-\ntlves of the \" Show Me\" Btate will be\nshown much to marvel at.\nJag. Woods hns reopened hi* B.tkerv.\nTurn out the Orientals.\nThe Nelson footballers have evidently\ngot cold feet, as no notice has been\ntaken of the challenge issued by Sandon\nto meet them at Kaslo Fair. Challenges to meet Nelson have appeared in\ntlie Kootenaian, Daily Net's and Review,\nand besides being Bent through the mail\nto the Nelson secretary. If Nelson are\nlooking for something easy, they must\nnot interest them-elves in this, as tlie\nSandon Bocker players are the \" Champions of tlie Selkirks,\" and are skilful,\nsturdy and blooded. Let's hear from\nyou NellOIl, and then we will give the\nKaslo crowd a treat. Once again\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSan-\nd >n requires no monetary guiiruntoe.\nHis Lordship Bishop D mtenwill, of\nthe diocese of New Westminster, is\nabout to visit the district. Confirmation services will be held as follows:\nKaslo, Sun-lay next nt 10.30 a.m.; New\nDeliver, Tuesday, Sept. 17th at 8 a.m.;\nSlocnn City, 18th at 8 am.; Sandon,\nSunday 22nd, at 10 a.m. The date for\nNakusp is not yet fixed.\n, The Sandon Social Club have arranged to give a Grand Concert and Dramatic Entertainment In a few weeks, to\nbe followed by a Cinderella Dance. Tho\nlaughable one-act farce, \"Turn Him\nOut,\" will on that occasion be produced\nby local talent. We will all be there to\nsee. Miss McArdle will be pleased to\nreceive the names of intending members of the newly-formed club.\nThe Calg\ry Alberlan, Aug. 19th,\nsays: Tlie \"Pair of Country Kids\"\nconcluded their engagement on Saturday evening, and it is safe to say that a\nCalgary audience never laughed so\nhearty or so long. There were pathetic\nmoments, of course, moments of sympathy, moments of consideration, but\nfun anl frolic predominated. Tlie\n\" Country Kids \" as tbo central figures\nwere excruciatingly funny, and tliey\nwero Bevernl times recalled to the foot\nlights. The Pair of Country Kids company will appear at tbe Sandon Opera\nHouse on Monday evening next.\nComplete stock of men's Rubbers.\nAlso a line of ladies' Rubbers just arrived at Macdonald's.\nThere appears to be an epidemic of\ndiarrhoea and sickness in town.\nOb, yes; strange as it may appear\nSandon has a society leader.\nTru'y western ii the September number of Westward Ho, which is published\nin Vancouver. We recommend this\nmagazine,*^ our readers.\nThe first practise of the New Denver\nChoral Society will be held on Friday\nvening Sept. 13th at 8 o'clock, a t the\nreeidenceof Mr. Rankin. All interested\nwill be welcome. We hope Mr. Rankin's efforts to provide entertainments\nfor the winter season, will, as they\nshould, be appreciated, as he and his\ngood wife have always interested themselves in the welfare of New Denver.\nTheir return to that town has given\nuniversal pleasure.\nWork on the Eureka tramway has\nbeen begun and good progress has been\nmade this week. Crews are working at\nbath ends, The ore pocket now being\nconstructed is just below the Ruth mill\nand directly alongside the C P.R. track,\nAs we go to press we learn that the\ndirectors of tlie Kaslo Fair are offering\n$300 prizes for rock-drilling.\nWaking Up To Possibilities.\nFrom a Correspondent.\nAt last tho people of New Denver are\naroused to the fact of their having a\nwonderful aBfet which will bring fame\nto the town and profit to the merchants\nand business men. While all this talk\nof the Kitchener glacier bas been going\non in the press, New Denver citizens\nhavo remained passive, in fact, showing\nno disposition to advertise the magnificent glacier which overlooks tbe town.\nPerhaps, Mr. Editor, the occasional\njolts you have given them in your paper\nhave homo fruit, but whether or no, a\nparty consisting of those, three rustlers,\nCharlie Nelson, J. C. Harris, and W.\nThomlineon started to climb the glacier\non the 4th inst., reaching it on the Cth.\nThe Canadian flag was planted on the\nhighest peak, which was named tbo W.\nHunter, in honor of our popular M.P.\nA gnod trnil can be built from tbe\nlake, and Ibis the citizens of New Den.\nver ale going to do without delay, and\nalso build a chalet.\nIf New Denver hnd a few morn\nNelson's, Harris's and Tliomlinson'a the\npretty little cttmp would be booming.\nStrangers, Be Wary.\nChas. Marshall, representing Brener\nBrothers, of London, Out., the largest\ntobacco merchants with one exception\nin the dominion, did good business\nwith our hotel men and merchants this\nweek. In connection with Mr. Marshall's visit to Sandon, that gentleman\nrelated lo our representative a conversation he had with Sandon's prize\nmedal knocker. It is needless for us to\nbe unreservedly specific, as the knocker\nin question is toj fond of law and too\nwell known to need formal introduction.\nSuffice il to say he lias a lying tongue,\nwhite bug whiskers nud a gamey toe.\nWe have reason to know that this per\nson lias allottod to himself the position\nof general bureaucrat, and in that capacity shoots off bis venom whenever a\nBtrauger is inveigled into a conversation\nwith the bland old crank. To show the\nnature of the damage which might\naccrue from the \" talk \" of our subject\nwe mention that Mr. Marshall waa so\nincensed at a man knocking his own\ntown that he gave us the following\nfacts:\n\" He introduced himself to me on the\nstreet,\" said Mr. Marshall, and in doing\neo said:\n\" I see you are a stranger in this\ntown,\" to which I replied \"Yes; how\ndid you know that ? \"\n\" 'Aw,\" he replied, \" I know you're\na stranger. What's your business\nhere ? \" I thought that was a blunt and\nimpertinent question, but 1 satisfied\nhis curiosity.\n\"Then you won't do any business\nhere. I advise you to leave town without delay. All the stores are empty;\neverybody in town is broke; families\nare leaving town because the mine\nowners insist upon tlie married men\nliving at tlie mines; tlie city is in a desperate condition\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtliey had to get a\nlittle girl to teach school, etc., etc. ; 'Aw,\nthere is no need Ior you lo wait till the\nmorning, there is a train leaving this\nafternoon at 2.\"\nI assured him that I would oertainly\ntry and do Bome business now that 1\nwas here, at which he appeared horrified, and then he vouchsafed this\nadvice:\n\" Then don't trust a soul; noboby in\ntown's got a cent.\"\nHe then went into the family history\nand financial standing of every business\nman in town, and needless to add you\nwere the first to come up for dissectiorf.\nthen your namesake, then all the rest.\nI wondered what kind cf a town I had\nstruck, but I concluded that*it takes all\nsorts of people to make a world and that\npossibly my pessimistic mentor was one\nof the loured variety.\"\nOur scribe called upon Mr. Marshall\nat the Reco the same evening, and Unit\ngentleman wai all smiles. \"It has\nbeen a day of great surprises for me,\"\nhe said. \" Look jit my order book,\"\nand the Bcribe observed that the orders\nbooked for cigars alone were for over\n$1,000. \"I represent also,\" said Mr,\nMarshall, \"the well-known London\njewelry linn of Wray A Co., and I did\nmost gratifying business here fur them.\nTbat gentleman,\" be said, pointing to\ntlie name of one of our prominent merchants, \" paid me spot cash for the largest order booked since I left Victoria.\nTbat gentleman, according to our old\nhumbug of this morning, was linanrla ly\nbust. It is too bad that such a venomous person Bhould bealloweti at large.\"\n\" Wbat would you suggest ? \" naked\nour representative,\n\" Oh, well the remedy must be found\nby yourselves. Tar and feathers, possibly, if lie were younger.\"\nLest there bo any doubt ns lo tlie\nidentity of tbo subject of tbe above, we\nassure our readers hij name is not\nShoveit.\nIWalutsp motes.\nMr. R. Glendinning, who is in the.\nRevelstoke-hospital, is improving slowly.\nMr. R. H. Lime's wife and family\nhave arrived and settled on their ranch.\nMr. W. A. Mitchell's wife and child,\nof Winnipeg, have also arrived.\nMrs. L. J. Kdwards, ami Musters\nWyne and Mervyn ate enjoying a shooting trip to Slocan.\nR. Thomas, of Revelstoke, and F. II.\nBourne spent a few days in town.\nMr. Jos. Perant and family have removed to Rosebery, where Mr. Perant\nwill take charge of tlie Rosebery Hotel.\nWe are pleased to fee Mr. A. W. Hobbs\nback at bis old |.l.io- at the C.P.R. station.\nThe Wrong Spirit Prevaileth.\nIn no plnce in the world, perhaps,\namong human habitations (God's gift to\nman) do we find such a spirit of l'stlesi-\nneas or apathy, such paseive inaction, a\nsort of procrastinating spirit, as in\nour own city. If anything has to be\ndone it is put off and off until tome\nspirit witli ambition is either directly or\nindirectly concerned and brirgs us to\nour senses.\nWe residents as a whole live for ourselves. Eat, work, sleep, and no more.\nWe eat to live to cat, but not to i.ivk.\n\" Everyone for himself and the devil\nlake the hindmost.\" There is no social\nlife to speak of because no one has ambition enough to start it up, And\nBhould such an individual appear his\nardor Trill be dampened In short order\nby tho lack of Interest in those for\nwhose benefit he is working. Can a\nmore effectual wot blanket be imagined\nor describetl ?\nNot only docs this apply to the residents individually, but to their civic\nauthorities. To prove this we will cite\nthree instances.\n1. When diphtheria broke out not so\nlong ago, the city found i'self without a\nhealth officer because it tried to be\neconomical. The result ii it will coet\nthem as much, if not more, for this one\ncase. Is this economy ? We call it\napathy, \" doti't-caredness,\" s> to speak.\nThe people should demand the appointment of a health officer each year.\nApathy on their pait may again result\nin apathy on thc pait of the authorities.\nWo hope not.\n2. If a \"howl\" had not been raised\nthere would be no school teacher in\nSandon; yet after obtaining one she is\nput\"in charge ot a building whicli any\nhealth officer would condemn as unlit\nfor human habitation. It would have\nbeen and is impossible for a grown up\nman to clean tbe place with its broken\nwindows anddustof early days; and yet\na schoolboy is put in charge as janitor\nand perforins bis work with echoolboy-\nlike regularity. Not until it got simply\nunendurable did the trustees realize\ntbat not a Bingle child went to school\nfrogi tbe hill that tho \" barn \" stands\non. All the town children were marched up twice a day and were prepared to\ndo the came throughout a dreary\nwinter. Ia this alertness when we\nwillingly condemn our own children to\nfive hours per day to unhygienic and\ncold surroundings ? Talk about apathy!\nIt i_ criminal carelessness.\n3. A woman ia discovered dead in her\nhous\". Thia makes the authorities realize that they have no coroner in the\nneighborhood, and that with two legally qualified medical practitioners in the\ncily. They have to send to Nelson for\none to come and declare \" an inquest ia\nunnecessary.\" And the extra expense\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDperhaps the less said about it the\nbetter.\nWhat is and can be the remedy for\nthis laxiitide, botli individual and collective ? Let us wake up and .hake\nourselves and look forward towards a\nsunrise, not lie asleep and wake up late\nand find the sun has risen. Lit us\ncatch old Father Time by the forelock,\nor be will cilch us. Let ns lnok a little\nahead. Let ua prevent any further\nmistakes occuiring and not simply\nremedy tbem after they have occurred.\nLotus lake the adiie given to Leah\nKleshna: \"Shako out your lungs and\nbreathe the air,\"\nAll this is recommended in a con-\neillttory spirit as nn anlidote to prevalent apathy. Tbe limelight ol publicity has done wonders in the past, antl\nit is therefore our only desire to accoin\nplisli Bomo good, for the entire community. Ap.ilhy ever whispers:\n\" Sandon is all right ; let things slide.\"\nSensibility shouts: \" Sand n will bo-\ncome just what you make it.\"\nW\nHerbert Delaney Is Dead.\nFrom our New Denver Correspondent.\nIt is with groat regret your correspondent reports the death of Hubert\nDelaney, ton of Mr. and Mis. F. J.\nDelaney, of New Denver, who expired\nat Peierboro, On'., where ho baB been\nfor the past ten month* for the benefit\nof his health. Good reports bad arrived of hl_ return to good health, but\nwhilst out, with n camping party lie contracted ti cold whicli laid him low.\nHis death **aine in a great shock to his\nparents and the citizens generally us it\nwas enti ely imi'X|>ccted. To Mr. and\nMra. D.-l.uiey me extended the heartfelt.sympathy of their many friends in\nthe suiiMiindiii.' district,\n1. -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD: ! :'.- .\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' n-.ii! ,i ,\nA*. .\n^\nFIFTH ANNUAL\nNKLSON, B. C.\nWednesday\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThursday\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFriday,\nSeptembcrl^_19v 20,1967\nLarger nnd Better than Ever.\nSomething Doing Every\n***\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Minute.^\nFREE SHOWS TWICE DAILY.\nIIORSK RACES.\nCheap Excursion Kates on All\nTranaporlation lines.\nFor information or Prize Liat\nWrite\nD. C. McMorbis, Secretary,\nP.O. Box 95, Nelson, B.C.\nC. W. Busk, President.\n&.\nBilly Was Cheated.\nMcClurg was on bis way home from a\nfishing trip at Bear Lake. He had a\nfine string of trout so heavy that he\nibought he needed a counterweight to\nbalance them. Not having a can with\nbim he had dropped in to the Exchango\nhotel to put another weight in the\nmiddle, where ho thought it would do\nalmost as much good.\n\" And ivery wan of us,\" be said, winding up his ilory of the day's fishing,\n\" wint away with fifteen fine trout on\nhia etiing,\"\n\" IIo-.v many fish did you catch in\nall ? \" some one asked.\n\"Sixty,\" said Billy; \"there were\nfour of ns.\"\n\" Who wero they ? \"\n\" Well, I was wan, and two of Ihe\nTattrieB was two, and Dave Murphy was\nthree \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Murphy, he wns three, and\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nand\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI'm sure there wero four of us!\nout who the divil was the other\nfellow ? \"\nBilly began again.\n\" Try it this way,\" lie said : \" Murphy\nwas wan, and the two Tattrles was two.\nand I was three, and\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDand I was three\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDand, I'm blest if I cm thi.ik who was\nthe other wan.\"\nThen Billy laid down hia string of fish\nand began counting olf the members of\nthe fishing party on the fingers of his\ndisengaged hand.\n\" I waa wan,\" be slid, doubling up a\nfinger as he went along, \" aud th s two\nTattriea was two, antl Murphy was\nthree \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDand\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDer\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\n\"But the two Tattiies were three,\"\nsome one broke in.\n\" Do yon know tbo two Tattiies ? \"\nasked Billy, warmly.\n\" No,\"\n\"Well, then, how can you pay 'lit\ntwo Tattiies was three? Go on, man;\nyou're drunk! \"\nBilly stood thinking it over for a minute and thou picked up his string of\nfish.\n\"I'm tlommed,\" he snd, \"if tha\ncrooks\" didn't do me out cf\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlet's see,\nthree into sixty twenty times\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDout of\nfive fishes.\"\nniNERS' UNI^N\nOPERA\nHOUSE\nSANDON, B.C.\nOn Monday, Sept 16th\nC. J. Siniln presents lhe 4-Act Comedy\nSuccess,\n\"A Pair of\nCountry Ms.\"\nz^m^^^m-w^vem^\nm\nBrooklyn Bridge at Midnigln\nThe Resent' from Drowning.\nTlie realistic Explosion at tlu\nOld Mill\nSeveral High-Class Specialties\nand Musical Numbers\nPOPULAR TRICES.\nSeats on s.ili at the usual place. THE SLOCAN MINING REVIEW, SANDON, B. C.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDaw\n&,'**\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD?.\ntt Graustark |^W\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nI^:*?A*sJt\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*J\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n-saaa-\nH\n(Continued)\nCHAPTER XXV.\nOLD the lantern higher, Bev\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nIn the fury of the fight he\nremembered the risk and importance of not mentioning\nher name and stopped short He was\nfighting fast, but warily, for he realized that his present adversary was no\nmean one. As the swords played back\nand forth ln fierce thrusts and parries\nhe spoke assurlngly to Beverly: \"Don't\nbe frightened! As soon as I finish with\nthis fellow we will go on! Ah! Bravo!\nWell parried, my man! How the deuce\ncould such a swordsman as you become\na cutthroat of Marlanx?\"\nBeverly had been standing still all\nthis time, holding the light high above\nior head, according to her lover's orders, for she knew now that such he\nwas and that she loved him with all\nber heart She was a weird picture\nstanding there as she watched Baldos\nfighting for their lives, her beautiful\nface deathlike in its pallor. Not a cry\nescaped her lips as the sword blades\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwished and clashed. Sbe could hear\nthe deep breathing of the combatants\nIn that tomb-like passage.\nSuddenly she started and listened\nkeenly. From behind her, back there In\nthe darkness, hurried footsteps were\nunmistakably approaching. What she\nhad heard, then, was not the scurrying\nof a rat. Some one wns following them.\nA terrible anguist seized her. Lowier\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd nearer came tlie l^njj) k* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-;_<\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_ KQtu\nBaldos!\" she screamed In terror. \"Another ls coming!\"\n\"Have no fear, dear one!\" he sung\nout gayly. His voice was Infinitely\nmore cheerful than he felt, for he realized only too well the desperate situation. He was penned ln and forced to\nmeet an attack from front and rear.\nHe fell upon his assailant with redoubled fury, aiming to finish bim before\nthe newcomer could give aid.\nFrom out of the gloom came a fiendish laugh. Instantly the dark figure of\na man appeared, his face completely\nhidden by a broad slouch hat nud the\nlong cloak which enveloped him. A\nsardonic voice hissed: \"Trapped at Inst!\nMy lady and her lover thought to escape, did they!\" The voice was unfamiliar, but the atmosphere seemed\ncharged with Marlanx. \"Kill him,\nZem!\" he shouted. \"Don't let hlm escape you! I will take care of the little\nwitch, never fear!\" He clutched at the\ngirl and tried to draw her to him.\n\"Marlanx! By all tbe gods!\" cried\nBaldos in despair. He hnd wounded bis\nman several times, though not seriously. He dared not turn to Beverly's aid.\nThe scene wns thrilling, grewsouie.\nWithin this narrow, dimly lighted underground passage, with Its musty\nwalls sweating with dampness and\nthick with the tangled meshes of the\nspider's web, a brave girl and her lover\nstruggled and fought back to back.\nTo her dismay, Beverly saw the point\nof a sword at her throat.\n\"Out of the way, girl!\" the man in\nthe cloak snarled, furious nt her resistance. \"You die ns well as your lover\nunless you surrender. He cannot escape me.\"\n\"And If I refuse!\" cried the girl, trying desperately to gain time.\n\"I will drive my blade through your\nheart and tell the world it was the\ndeed of your lover.\"*'\nBaldos groaned. His adversary, encouraged by the change ln the situation, pressed him sorely.\n\"Dou't you dare to touch me, Count\nMarlanx. I know you!\" she hissed. \"I\nknow what you would do with me. It\nls not for Graustark that you seek his\nlife.\"\nThe sword came nearer. The words\ndied ln her throut. She grew faint.\nTerror paralyzed her. Suddenly her\nheart gave a great thump of Joy. The\nresourcefulness of tbe trapped was\nsurging- to her relief. The valor of\nthe south leaped Into life. Tho exhilaration of conflict beat down all her\nfears. \"Take awuy that sword, then,\nplease!\" she cried, her voice trembling,\nbut not with terror now. It was exultation. \"Will you promise to spare\nhis life? Will you swear to let him\ngo, If I\"-\n\"No, no; neverl God forbid!\" Implored Baldos.\n\"Ha, ha!\" chuckled the man ln the\ncloak. \"Spare his life! Oh, yes, after\nmy master has reveled In your charms.\nHow do you like that, my handsome\ngoat hunter?\"\n\"You Infernal scoundrel! I'll settle\nyou yet!\" Baldos fairly fumed with\nrage. Gathering himself together for\na final effort, he rushed madly on his\nvapidly weakening antagonist.\n\"Baldos,\" she cried hopelessly and in\na tone of resignation, \"I must do It!\nIt Is the only way!\"\nThe man in the cloak as well as Baldos was deceived by the girl's cry. He\nImmediately lowered his sword. The\nlantern dropped from Beverly's hands\nand clattered to the floor. At the same\ninstant she drew from her pocket her\nrevolver, which sho had placed there\nbefore leaving tbe castle, and fired\npoint blank at him. The report sounded like a thunderclap ln their ears. It\nwas followed quickly by a sharp cry\nand Imprecation from the lips of her\npersecutor, wbo fell, striking his head\nwith a terrible force ou the stones.\nSimultaneously there was a groan\naud tbe noise of a limp body slipping\nto tbe ground, and Baldos, victor at\nlust, turned In fear and trembling to\nHnd Beverly stiiuding unhurt staring\nnt the black muss tit her feet.\n\"Thank God, you are safe!\" Grasping\nher hand he led ber out of tho darkness\nInto the moonlight.\nNot a word was spoken ns tliey ran\nswiftly on until they reached a little\nclump of trees not fur from one of the\ngates. Hero Baldos gently released ber\nhand. She was panting for breath, but\nhe realized she must not be allowed to\nrisk a moment's delay. She must pass\nthe sentry at once. ,. _, . \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n-nave y'ou the wa'tchword.\" he\neagerly asked.\n\"Watchword?\" she repeated feebly.\n\"Yes, the countersign for tlie night.\nIt is Ganlook. Keep your face well\ncovered with your hood. Advance\nboldly to the gates and give the word.\nThere will be no trouble. Tbe guard Is\nused to pleasure seekers returning at\nall hours of night.\"\n\"Ib he dead?\" she nsked timorously,\nreturning to tbe scene of horror.\n\"Ouly wounded, I think, ns are the\nother men, though they all deserve\ndeath.\"\nHe went with her ns close to the gate\nas he thought safe. Taking ber hand\nbe kissed It fervently. \"Goodby! It\nwon't be for long!\" and disappeared.\nSbe stood still and lifeless, staring\nafter him, for ages, It seemed. He was\ngone. Gone forever, no doubt. Her\neyes grew wilder and wilder with the\npity of It all. Frlde fled Incontinently.\nShe longed to call him back. Then it\noccurred to her that he was hurrying\noff to thnt other woman. No, he said\nhe would return. She must bo brave,\ntrue to herself, whatever happened.\nSbe marched boldly up to tbo gate,\ngave the countersign nnd passed\nthrough, not heeding the curious\nglances cast upon her by the sentry,\nturned Into the castle, up the grand\nstaircase and fled to tbe princess' bedchamber.\nBeverly, trembling and sobbing,\nthrew herself In the arms of the princess. Incoherently sbe related all tbat\nhad happened, then swooned.\nAfter she bad been restored, tbe\npromise of Yetive to protect her, whatever happened, comforted her somewhat.\n\"It must have been Marlanx,\" moaned Beverly.\n\"Who else could It have been?\" replied the princess, who was visibly excited.\nSummoning all her courage, Bhe went\non: \"First, we must find out if he Is\nbadly hurt. We'll trust to luck. Cheer\nup!\" She touched a bell. There came\na knock at the door. A guard was\ntold to enter. \"Kilos,\" she exclaimed,\n\"did you hear a abot fired a short time\n\"I thought I did, your highness, but\nwas not sure.\"\n\"Baldos, the guard, was escaping by\nthe secret passage,\" continued the princess, a wonderful Inspiration coming\nto her rescue. \"He passed through the\nchapel. Miss Calhoun was there. Alone\nand single banded she tried to prevent\nhim. It was her duty. He refused to\nobey her command to stop, and she\nfollowed him Into the tunnel and fired\nnt him. I'm afraid you are too late\nto capture him, but you may\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDob, Beverly, how plucky you were to follow\nhim! Go quickly, Ellos! Search the\ntunnel and report at once.\" As the\nguard saluted with wonder, admiration\nnnd unbelief he saw the two consplr-\nntors locked ln each other's arms.\nPresently he returned and reported\nthat the guards could find no trace of\nany one In the tunnel, but tbat they\nfound blood on the floor near tbe exit\nand that the door was wide open.\nThe two girls looked at each other iu\namazement. They were dumfounded,\nbut a great relief was glowing In their\neyes.\n\"Ellos,\" Inquired the princess, considerably less agitated, \"does any one\nelse know of this?\"\n\"No, your hlghuess; there was no one\non guard but Max, Baldos and myself.\"\n\"Well, for the present no one else\nmust know of his flight. Do you understand? Not n word to any one. I\nmyself will explain when the proper\ntime comes. You and Max have be^n\nvery careless, but I suppose you sbo'i'd\nnot be punished. He has tricked us all.\nSend Max to me at once.\"\n\"Yes, your highness,\" sold Ellos, and\nhe went away with his head swimming. Max, the other guurd, received\nlike orders, and then the two young\nwomen sank limply upou a divan.\n\"Oh, how clever you are, Yetive,\"\ncame from the American girl. \"But\nwhat next?\"\n\"We may expect to hear something\ndisagreeable from Count Marlanx, my\ndear,\" murmured tlie perplexed but\nconfident princess, \"but I think we\nbnve the gunie In our own bands, as\nyou would say in America.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nCanada and the States.\nTime's whirligig brings mnny\nchanges; none stranger than th\" entirely alteretl relations of Ciit'idn\nwith the United States. Fifteen vears\nago Canada seemed to have no frt***\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>\noutside absorption by the Utrt'd\nStates; she was a suppliant for fiscal\nfavtirs which would eivp her an en\ntrance to the magnificent market un\nher southern border. But America\nwas an overhard bargainer, nnd the\ntariff wall from Oregon to Maine\ngrew higher and higher. It wns sharp\nmedicine, but gnve Onnnda just the\ntonic thnt wns needed to brnee up\nIter nationnl spirit nnd develop her\nresources. Instead of to the easy mnr-\nket to the south, Onnnda diverted her\nenergies to the east and 'xt the west.\nShe is now in tlie position of granting fiscal fnvors rather than soliciting\ntbem In her trade w!tb tbe Mother-\nlnnd nnd the Pacific she finds abundant outlet for the illimitable re\nsources thnt havo scarcely been\nscratched. Here is the opportunity of\nthe century\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDif tlie Imperial Government can rise to tlie height of it\nValue of Woods For Charcoal.\nThc different woods whicl) tare to be\nused in making charcoal may be estimated as to their relative value by\nthis rule: Of the oaks, 100 parts will\nyield 23 parts of charcoal; the beech,\n21; tbe elms, tbe tipple nnd tbe white\npine, 23; birch, 24; maple, 22; willow,\nit.; poplar, 20; hard pine, 22. Ali\ncharcoal used in the manufacture of\ngunnowder is mnde from either willow\nwood or elder wood.\nInteresting Facts as to Rattlesnakes\nIn Central British Columbia.\nA correspondent from Kamloops,\n.B. C. writes Some time ago I was\ninuen suiprised at reading an article\nIrom the pen of one of your readers,\nwho claimed that there were no rattlesnakes in British Columbia; very\nprobably he was correct as far as his\nown observations were concerned, for\nthis is a province of magnificent distances; and many large areas are entirely free from tbem, but it is equally true that other districts\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDparticularly parts of Yale\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcontain numbers\nof them; and in this respect 1 can\nendorse the letter of Mr. McDonald,\nwho wrote some time ngo from Nova\nScotia, in referring to which the editor stated ns his opinion that there\nwere no rattlesnakes north of Thompson River. This is a mistake, natural\nenough in one not familiar with this\nlocality. These snakes may be found\nanywhere along tlie north bank of the\nKamloops Lake (a river expansion\nabout 15 miles lone) and the Thompson River, from Kamloops to where\nit joins the Eraser at Lytton\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbut they\nnre particularly ncmerous in certain\nfavored localities, e.g., Rattlesnake\nBluff, between Kamloops and Trnnp-\nville, nnd nt Rattlesnake Moiintrrin,\nabout five miles up the Cariboo Road\nfrom Asheroft. A few yenrs ngo a\nrnnclter took un a homestead near\nRattlesnake Bluff; he possessed n hog\nwhich be facetiously named Rattlesnake Rill front bis success ns n i nake\nkiller; this gentleman states positively that to bis certain knowledge this\ntiog killed twenty-three rnttlesnnkes\nin one summer; nnd of course he is\nlikelv to bnve killed mnny more without the owner being nwnre of it. One\nnitrht this rancher found a rattler\nunder his bed. it had made its wttv\ninto the house through a knot hole\nin the floor, whicli was mnde of single\nbonrds for summer use. Rut though\nthere nre mnnv rnttlesnnkes, fort\"n-\nntelv fatalities from their bite or stine\nare verv rare: though I know of twn\ndeaths from this cause\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDone a child\nwho wns s/flthaH***\" pens in her fntb-\ner's enrden nenr Vernon, nnd the other thnt nf n ledv near Asheroft. who\nstooped from th\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD vernpdnh of her\nhouse tr** nick n flower nnd wns bitten\non thp finger\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDin eneh case medienl\nassistance was secured, but to no\navail.\nCANADA IS POPULAR.\nInformation Eagerly Sought by People\nIn Great Britain.\nCanada is the most talked-of country to-day in Great Britain, and appreciative audiences listen eagerly to\nlecturers from over the sea. Mr.\nJoshua Fletcher, president of the Alberta Farmers' Association, gave nn\naddress recently to an assembly of\nbusiness men in Manchester, England,\ngiving in brief form the advantages offered by Canada. The three prairie\nprovinces, he said, constitute the\ngranary of the British Empire. They\nhnve nn men of 580,000 square miles,\nor about four nnd one-half times the\nsize, of Kngland, Irelnnd, nnd Seot-\ninnd put together. In this vast agricultural country the population is about\nhnlf n million, or, counting men, women nnd children, not quite one person to eneli squnre mile. Leaving the\nGrent Lakes, proing West there is one\nhundred and fitty miles of compnrn-\ntivelv rough country, where mining,\nfar-mint?, nnd lumberinr/ nre nil ear-\nried on. West from Winnipeg the\nInnH st'-ptcbes nwny in one vnst plain\nns level ns the sea for a thousand\nmilps, nnd in its natural state thr\n'nnd wns covered with a rich nutritions cross nnd was the homp of the\nh\"i\"*nin and the beaver. GenoraHv\nsppnking. the soil is a deep black lonm\nwith a clay sub-soil. Manitoba is\nn .no'ii's grent wheat province, and\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDhe S\"ot\"'\"Tipn there have made it\n*nr\"n**a fn*. r'-'de horses and short-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*<*.-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"\"'tip. Tu\" southern portion of\nc, .i..,.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!.ownp ia nn open country.\n-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD mnf rn\"iin* thnn Manitoba.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD t.rl io ft nmpt r*>>'t1e rnnohine coun-\n'-** whp\"*p the p\"\"*bov rei-ms s\"*nreme.\nTV.p s\"\"1'*\"\"* r-.'.r.ion of \"lb\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDrtn is\n-.Ion n pottle po-nnfrv. but of lnte vpa*\"=\ntlie fnr'Tip'-s bivo b\"Pn mnkin\". n brilliant \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'*i\"i\"\"!= nt ..-inter wheat known\nas \"Alberta Red.\"\n****-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD***. or,A Porr.uoine.\nThe following Indian story is intended for the tale of the white man\nand the red. There were once two\nmen who lived a long way apart; one\nwas poor, and had nothing but his\nhunting grounds; the other wns rich,\nbut be wanted the poor man's land.\nThe poor man's poohegan, or attendant spirit, was a snake; the rich\nman's poohegan was a porcupine. The\nporcupine went to visit the snake, but\nat first the snake refused to let him\nin, saying: \"I will stick my arrow\ninto you.\" The porcupine said: \"Then\nI will stab you with uiy sword.\" Tlie\nsnake said: \"My arrow has only one\nbarb; but it, is a good one.\" And lie\nran out bis tongue to show the barb.\nThe porcupine snid: \"My tail is full\nof swords; but I will guard tbem very\ncarefully if you will let nie come in,\nfor my home is fnr away.\" The snake\nsaid*. \"I am bore with my children,\nand am very poor. It is not for the\nriclt to come to the poor for help;\nbut rather for the poor mnn to visit\ntli.* rich. If one of my children were\nto go to your house, you would kill\nhim. Then why do you come here?\"\nHowever, tbe porcupine promised so\nfairly that the snake at last let him\nin. All went well at first; but in the\nmorning tlie porcupine begun to quarrel, killed the whole snake family,\nand took possession of their land.\nFound the Way Home.\nAn extraordinary instance of the affection of a horse for its old home has\noccurred at Turvey. A farmer at that\nplace recently sold a horse he had\nhad for several years to a farmer from\nHanslope. The horse was taken to\nHanslope anil wns placed in a field\nfor the night, but after darkness had\nset in he broke bounds nnd mnde the\ncross-country journey'of a dozen miles\nfrom Hnnslope to Turvey, where his\nform\"** owner found him on Sunday\nmorning quietly grazing in his paddock.\nWhere Cats Are Saluted\nAt the Government House in Poona,\nIndia, every ent which mny hnppep\nto pnss out of the front door after\ndark is saluted by the sentry, who\npresents arms to pussy. Tradition relates that in 1838 Sir Robert Grant\ngovernor of Bombay, died in the Government House. On the evening of\nthe day of liis death n cat was seen\nto leave the house by the front door\nand to wnlk up nnd down n partitrinr\npnth where the lnte governor had been\nin the habit of strolling after sunset\nA Hindoo sentry observed this nud\ntold a priest, who declared thnt in\nthe cat was Governor Grant's soul, and\nit Bhould be saluted. As the particular cat could not be identified by the\nsentry, it wns decided to present arms\nto all the cats.\nOne kind ol\nunderwear, and\nonly one, fits right,\nwears out slowest, and satisfies you irom the day you\nbuy it That kind is trade-\nmarked (as above) in red, and guaranteed to you\nby stores that sell it and the people who make it.\nMade in many fabrics ana styles, at various\nprices, in form-fitting size, for women,\nmen and children. Look for the\nPEN-ANGLE.\nThe Vanishing Trick.\nInto the grocer's shop walked nn ancient ludy with n slow and halting\ntrend ami carrying on her arm a basket containing a large earthenware pot\nwith a lid. Placing the basket on the\ncounter, she made various purchases,\nwhich site put carefully In the pot nnd\nhud her bill made out.\n\"By the way.\" she said before paying\nthis, \"do you mind keeping tills pot\nwith the purchases In It until I come\nbuck and pay for them, ns I have to\nbuy other things some distance off,\nmid It will be nioie convenient for me\nto lenve the tilings here till later?\"\nThis request was willingly acceded\nto, und, lifting tiie i>ot carefully out\nof the basket, the old diiuie placed It,\nwith an effort, In n corner; then, placing her basket on her arm, left the\nshop. Hours went by, dny ripened\nInto evening, nnd evening gave way\nto night, but the old woman did not\nreturn. At Inst tlie proprietor thought\nof examining the earthenware pot to\nsee If by nny chance it lind its owner's\naddress upon It. and grent wns bis us-\ntonlshment, not untluged with dismay, to find thnt it possessed no bot\ntorn.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLondon Answers.\nWitchcraft In the Nineteenth Century.\nMost people believe tlint witchcraft\namong civilized people ended when tht\n\"Salem witch lunula\" ran its course\nand died out in the year Ki02. It did\nas fnr as America is concerned, except\namong savages, but In other countries\nthe belief in the superstition did noi\nilie until n much Inter date, even If it\ncun be truly snid to be dond now. In\nFrance nn oltl beggar wns tortured to\nlentil ns late as 1S07 ou the charge oi\ntieing one who \"001111111111011 with evil\nspirits.\" nnd in Spain n witch was\nburued iu 1808. In IHTiO In France a\ntnnn nnd his wife tortured n suspected\nwiteli to den lb, and nothing nt ull wus\nlone with llieni by tbe criminal courts\nin account of the lingering belief hi\nsorcery. Four yenrs Inter n witch wus\ndrowned In England, nnd In 18(30 one\nwns burned in .Mexico, ln 1874, 1870,\nI8S0 nnd again In 1SK0 witches were\npublicly binned In Russia, nnd even\nus lnte ns 1800 regular Judicial trials\nof witches were had in Prussia, Po-\nInnd and Austria-Hungary.\nFormality In Offices.\n\"Did you ever stop to think of th*\n.reat iucrense in the formality now ob\nserved In legal, financial and other of-\nIces? A few years ago when yoo\nwanted to see your lawyer you simply\nwalked right Into bis office,\" said a ua-\nUve of Philadelphia, now growing old\n'Nowadays you must send In your\ncard and wait to learn whether or not\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbe lawyer ls at liberty to see you.\nBanks, too, have adopted similar arrangements. Perhaps some recent lessons lu bomb throwing mny have influenced them. Doctors employ uniformed servitors to guard them against\nIntrusion during office hilars.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPhiladelphia Hp\"\"\"*1 \t\n$100 REWARD $100.\nTha realtors of this paper will be pleased to learn\nthat there ls at least one dreaded disease that so'eno*\nhaa been able to oure In all Its stages, and that Is\nOatarrh. Hall's Oatarrh Oure ts the only positive\ncure now known to the medical fraternity. Oatarrh\nlioina a couHtitutio-aal disease, requires a constitutional treutuiont. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls taken In.\nttirnally, acting directly on the blood and mucous\nsurfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength\nby building up the constitution and assisting nature\nln doing its work. The proprietors have so much\nfaith ln ItB curative powers that they offer One Hundred Pollnrn fur any case that it falls to oure. Send\nfor list of testimonials.\nAddress! F. J. CHENEY A Co.. Toledo, O.\nSold by druggists 75c.\nTaku Hall'a Family Pills for ooustlpatlon.\nFire burned over ten acres of Bi-s-\nbee, Arizona, destroying 200 buildings\nENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT removes\nill hard, soft ur calloused lumps and blero*\nshtis, from horses, bluod spavin, curbs,\ntplints, ringbone, Bweeney, -titles, sprains, sore\nind swollen throat, coughs, etc. Suve $130 by\ntse of one bottle. Wurranted the most won\nlerful Blemish Cure ever known.\nTlie Kid\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPa, what is an \"automobile meet''?\nThe Dud\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAnybody that gets in th;\nway of one is automobile meat. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\nCleveland Pluindeuler.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Garget\nin Cows.\nPrince Frederick Henry cf Prussia\nthe kaiser's cousin, was personally\ndegraded by his majesty, expelled\nfrom court and banished from Ger\nmany for the rest of his life.\nOne of the greatest blessings to\nparents is Mother Graves' Worm\nExterminator. It effectually exp3ls\nworms and gives health in a mar\nvelous manner to the little one.\nM. Lecomte, the first secretary if\nthe French embassy in Berlin, had\nto leave Germany owing to incidents\nconnected with his association with\ntiie Round Table Camarilla.\nDODDS \}\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD KIDNEY;\"\n&/. PULSUS\nmsdseW.\nW. N. *-'. No 8*10\nPAGEANT IN OLD TOWN\nBURY ST EDMUNDS SCENE OF\nHISTORIC EVENTS.\n'(wo Tt.ous.dnd Acto'a Extend Aid-\nWill Cost Half Million Dollars\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nWhere Magna Charta Was Conceived\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRichard Coeur de Lion Set\nOut For Crusades From This Ancient City.\nBury St. Edmunds, a town neai\nLondon, that hitherto has failed to\nwin tlie attention to whicli an extraordinary interesting history and\nmajestic ruins entitle it, proposes tc\nhave a pageant from July 8 to 15\nthat should astonish the world.\nSome of the most interesting events\nin the developing of the Anglo-Saxon\nrace have taken place in this Fast\nAnglian town.\nThere tlie barons took their vows\nbefore laying the foundation of Eng\nlish and American liberty by com\npelling John to sign Magna Charta.\nThere Sir Edmund tlie Martyr died\nfor his people und Kichard Coeur dt\nLion prayed before setting out foi\ntlie Holy Land.\nBig Pageant Is Planned.\nThe people of the whole County ol\nSuffolk under the, guidance of Louis\nN. I'urker, a dramatist, are preparing\nto put Bury St. Edmunds into the\nfront rank of European show places.\nTwo thousand actors will take part in\ntlie seven episodes of the pageant.\nTbey are East Anglinns, and every\none is giving services and costumes\nfree. If this mighty cast were to be\nI>iiid the pngciint would cost ralf a\nmillion dollars.\nParts are to be plnyed by 200 pecrp\nand peeresses and many other mem\nhers of the county families. A chorus\nof monks (all clergymen) will chant\nmelodies specially composed by C.\nG. Harold Shann, n local musician\nThe suits of armor and all the beau\ntth.il dresses are being made in the\nneighborhood. The leatherwork is\nfabricated from the tanned hides ol\nthe famous wild Chillingham cattle\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nthe onlv herd of wild cattle now in\nGreat Britain\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwhich were introduced into Suffolk at the time of the\nReforrmition.\nArtist Paints the Scenes.\nTo boom Bury there has been enlisted tlie genius oi a great English\nartist, Doore Adams. This distinguished academician has painted designs\nfor tlie costumes from ancient manuscripts, and everything will be historically accurate in the smallest particular.\nThe poster designed by Byam Shaw\n(whose picture of \"Our Lord\" fetched\n$6,000 at last year's academy) bas\nmade a sensation in artistic and advertising circles. It is pronounced the\nmost effective poster ever done by\nan Englishman.\nKING SURPRISES PEOPLE.\nECZEMA'S ITCH\nIS NEVER ENDING\nExcept By Active and Persistent Treatment With the\nGreat Eczema Cure,\nDr. Chase's Ointment\nPlan For Irish Trip Causes Anxious\nComment In London.\nConsidering tlie state of unrest in\nIreland and the present ugly temper\nof the peasantry, the announcement\nof King Edward's intention to visit\nIreland next month has not only tak\nen a greut many people by surprise\nbut bas given rise to mucli anxious\ncomment.\nAt the same time it is some months\nnow since this visit was projected,\nand it is nearly two months since the\nEarl oi Shaftsbury, speaking in Belfast, assured his hearers that His\nMajesty would be in their midst during tlie course of the summer.\nLoved by Irish Subjects.\nThere is not the slightest doubt\nnbout the King's popularity among\nthe rank and file of the Irish people\nEvery where lie went during his last\ntour in 1900 and 1904 he was received\nwith the wildest enthusiasm, and the\ncheers that greeted him were as sincere as any thut ever came from the\nmost patriotic Englishman.\nThere is one aspect of the King's\ncareer that has always appealed to\nthe Irish people, and that is his sporting proclivities. In Ireland love of\nthe horse is one of the strongest\nbonds of sympathy between mau and\nman. The fact that for some yeara\nKing Edwanl has kept a few horses\nin training at Curragh has strengthened him immensely in the affections\nof the Irish people, who will never\nforget that Ambush II. won the Grand\nNational in the royal colors after\nhaving been bred and trained in Ireland.\nMay Have Special Race.\nKing Edward's horses in Ireland\nare under the charge of a popular\namateur rider, G. W. Lushington. It\nis possible thut the royal colors may\nbe seen at 11 special meeting at Leo\npnrdstown on July 11, arranged at\nthe request of His Majesty.\nThe enormous popularity of th\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nKing is one of the most difficult\nthings with which professional agitators in In.land have to contend, and\ntliey have oinie to find that an attack\non the Government is a far bettei\ncard than personalities ubout the occupant of the throne.\nRubbing It In.\nThomas Beechnm, the famous pill\nman, was u witty old gentleman. They\ntell a story ubout him and u grocer.\nThe grocer wan guilty of some rather sharp practice on Mr. Beechnm\none day, und the latter stamped out\nof the shop roaring:\n\"You're a swindler, and I'll nevei\nenter your doors again,\"\nNext duy, though, h_ came bock\nand bought five pounds of sugar.\n\"Dear me,\" said the grocer, smiling in a forgiving way, \"I thought\nyou were nevei going to enter my\ndoors again.\"\n\"Well, 1 didn't mean to,\" said Mr.\nBeecham; \"but yours is the only shop\nin the place where I can get what I\nwant. You see, I am going to pot\nsome bulbs, und 1 need sand.\"\nWhaTGolf Courses Cost.\nTo-day tbe great majority of golfer*\nare new members, says a writer in\n\"P.T.O.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtbut is to say, they have\njoined tlieir club some ye.irs after its\nfoundation, and of these tlie proportion who bear in mind that the initial expenses of a golf club are extremely heavy is anything but high.\nThe amount of capital invested in\nnew courses naturally varies. The new\nclub near Versailles, for instance, has\nhad \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD34,000 spent on it; the latest in-\nlnnd course, tlie Harewood Downs\nGolf Club, laid down by Mr. Archibald Grove, M. P., on his own estate, has already entailed an expenditure of \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD7,000; the hundsome clubhouse nnd pnvilion opened by the\nMeyrich nnd Queen's Park Golf Clubs\nat Bournemouth represents an investment of \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD4,000, and the new Worthing links have had \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD3,000 spent on\nthem up to date.\nWhen left to itself, eczema runs on 1\nindefinitely, causing keen distress\nfrom itching and covering the body\nwith sores that refuse to heal.\nEven with careful treatment, eczema is obstinate in yielding to curative measures, but tlie regular 11 n I\npersistent use of Dr. Chase's Ointment is the most certain means of\novercoming this torturing disease.\nInternal treatments for eczem.i\nhave long since been discarded, except the use of medicines to regulate\nthe bowels and enrich the blood,\nwhile local applications are used to\nrelieve the itching and heal the sores.\nIt is the remarkable success of Dr.\nChase's Ointment in the c.ire of eczema which has given it world-wide\nrecognition as the standard ointment\nfor itching skin diseases\nMrs. Robert Clendenning, Welland\nStation, Out., writes:\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFor three years my daughter.\nFunny, wus afflicted with eczema in\ntin intense and persistent form, and\nfor nine days she was totally blind.\nThe burning, itching and disfigurement were horrible, her entire face\nbeing completely raw ior months,\nand the distress so great that she\ncould not sleep.\n'The best efforts of two eminent\nphysicians failed to even mitigate\nher awful suffering. One day when\nI was low-spirited over my daughter's condition Dr. Chase's Ointment\nwus recommended to me, and to our\nsurprise Funny wus helped with tlie\nfirst box and she has since been entirely cured by this treatment.\n\"Her face is now as smooth as a\nbaby's and she is in splendid health.\nThe credit for this cur*, is entirely\ndue to Dr. Guise's Ointment, and 1\ncheerfully give you permission \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo\nstate my daughter's case, hoping that\nit will lead many others to secure\nthe same good results.\"\nThere are a score of ways in whieli\nDr. Chase's Ointment, with its extraordinary soothing, healing properties,\nis useful in every home; 60 cents\nu box, ut all dealers, or Edmanson,\nHates A Co., Toronto.\nTrials of the Unemployed\nOnce there waa a young Boetian\nwho hnd money, says Puck. On*\nday he looked at his clothes, of\nwhich he had a great many, and he\nsaw that they needed to be brushed\nand folded; so he told his servant\nto do it for him. Then he went\ndownstairs, and noticed that his\nmanuscripts were in disorder; so lie\nhired a man to sort them out and to\nmake a list of them. Next he went\nto the stables and found one of his\nhorses sick; so he asked a man to\nget him another one. The other\nhorse needed exercise, so he engaged\na groom to exercise the Ir se.\nHe looked at a puppy which he\nhad and said. \"Why, it is time that\npuppy was trained to find birds\"; i.o\nhe sent the puppy away to a man to\nbe taught.\nThen he went into the house and\nyawned. \"Dear me I\" said he, \"how\ndull it is with nothing to do. I wish\nI had something to do.\"\nTlie Boetians were barbarians.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nThe French government has opened\nnegotiations witli tlie North of\nFrance Railway company to take\nover the cross-channel service between Calais and Dover.\nCholera morbus, cramps and kindred complaints annually make their\nappearance at the same time as the\nhot weather, green fruit, cucumbers,\ndebarred from eating tiiese tempting\nthings, but they need not abstain if\nthey have Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial and take a few drops\nin water. It cures the cramps and\ncholera in n remarkable manner and\nis sure, tp xlieck every disturbance of\ntlie bowels.\nThe Tyranny of the Stars\n\"The opera managers' trust again't\nthe tyrannical Hturs\" is the subject\nof a communication from its Puns\ncorrespondent in a recent Berlin\npaper. The various details of organization are dwelt upon, together\nwith the advantages which the general public \"not only in Europe but\nin America and Australia\" will derive from the movement, whicli had\nto come because of \"the demands of\nthe unreasonable, avaricious operatic\nstars.\" Editorially speaking tlie\npaper says; \"It has always been th*.\ncustom of operatic managers to secure for their houses the best talent\nprocurable with the means at their\ndisposal, and we believe this system\nwill continue for all time. The desire to have the best will always\noutweigh any trust consideration.\"\nA Cure for Fever and Ague\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDParmelee's Vegetable Pills are compounded for use in any climate and\nthey will be found to preserve their\npowers in .any latitude. In fever and\nague the/ act upon the secretions\nand neutralize the poison which has\nfound its way into the blood. They\ncorrect the impurities whicli find entrance into tlie system through drink\ning water or food and if used as a\npreventive fevers are avoided.\nA cheap jack stood in front of his\nstall and sang the praises of some\nscissors he had to sell.\n\"You can cut glass with these scissors, gentlemen. The biggest idiot\nalive could do it,\" he cried, and turning to a passerby, said: \"Perhaps\nyou'd like to try, sir.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBocian.\nItch, Mange, Prairie Scratches and\nivery form of contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes\nby Wolford's Sanitary Lotion.\nThe Sirius, the first steamer to\ncross the Atlantic, was 178 feet long\nand her tonnage 450.\nA dredge while nt work in the\nHarlem river, New York, brought up\na snake 18 feet long.\nThe Irishman wanted to sell the log\nbut the prospective buyer was suspicious, nnd finally decided not to buy.\nThe man then told him why he was\nso anxious to sell.\n\"You see,\" he snid, \"I bought thu\ndog and trained him myself. I got\nhim so he'd bark all the time if a\n1 person stepped inside the gate, and\nI thought I was safe from burglars.\nThen my wife wanted me to train\nhim to carry bundles, and I did. If\nI put a packet in his mouth the dog\nwould keep it there till some one took\nit away. Well, one night I woke lp\nand heard some due in the next room.\nI got up and grabbed my gun. They\nwere there\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthree of the scoundrels\nand the dog.\"\n\"Didn't he bark?\" interrupted tie\nman.\n\"Nary a bark; he was too busy.\"\n\"Busy? What doing?\"\n\"Carrying a lantern for the burglars.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDublin Freeman.\n\"I like my house all right,\" said\nLuschman, \"except foi oi.e thing. I\nguess you'll have to fix that.\"\n\"What is it?\" asked the architect.\n\"Several times lately I've nearly\nbroken my neck searching for another\nstep at the head of the stairs when I\ngot home late, so I guess you'd better put another step there.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPhiladelphia Press.\nTHE RECORD\nCALORIFIC\nproducer for churches and large\npossesses a very important feature\nhas two air courses\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe air travels up\ninner and outer castings. All product's\ncome in direct contact with\nsurround the hot air columns,\nthus making the largest amount\nof heating surface to every\nsquare foot of grate surface\never achieved in a warm air\nheater. The flue construction admits of heat being\nforced direct to the most\ndistant and most exposed\npart of the building to be\nwarmed. 107\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE\nRECORD WIHDRT&KACHIHEXO.\nFound.,., .t MONCTON. N.B. & MONTREAUff\nSales Branches at MONCTON, N.B.; MONTREAL, P.Q.;\nRONTO, ONT.; WINNIPEG, MAN.; CALGARY, ALTA.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nFOR THE NOON-DAY LUNCH\nNOTHING 80 SATISFYING AS\nTRISCUIT\nIt Is whole wheat steam-cooked, shredded and baked and com*\npressed Into a wafer, presenting greatest amount of nutriment in\nsmallest bulk. Delicious as a toast with butter, cheese, marmalades and beverages.\nAlways ready to serve. Crisp, tasty and nourishing.\"\nAll Grocers. 13c a Carton; 2 for 26c. l^n\nThe slocan mining review, sandon, b. &\nWESTERN CANADIAN EDITORS 5\nA Series of Articles Describing their Lives, their Aims\nand their Influence.\n62 Z\nF. H. SCHOOLEY '*\nry**'srr*ir***ir*sr***i\"*s.*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi1T\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-*'ff\nF. H. SCHOOLEY\nEditor and Proprietor of the Lacoinbe\nAdvertiser\nTo Sunny Alberta the lure of the\nGolden West lias been steadily calling tlie homeseeker from distant\nfields. Tliey have come from the\nMother Country, Continental Europe,\ntlie Antipodes; and Eastern Canada\nand tlie United Stutes hnve also contributed tlieir quota to the constant\nstream of settlers who are rapidly\ntilling up this Western province.\nThnt the population is decidedly cosmopolitan can be readily believed,\nand those who have a personal knowledge of the general class of people\nwho are now of the West, will admit\nthat it has a generous share of the\nbrain and brawn that contributes to\nthe highest elements of Canadian\ncitizenship. In the building up of\nthis new province the large numbers\nwho have been attracted across the\nborder from the United States have\nbeen a mpst important factor.\nAdaptability*, geniuB and enterprise\nare tlie accredited characteristics of\ntlie average American, and lie has n\nstrong tendency to \"make good\" no\nmatter wbat may be his position in\nlife. Certain it is that not a few have\nattained success in this new country\nand huve become identified with\nmany of tlie leading industrial undertakings. It is not surprising,\nthen, to find that many Americans\nhave engaged in newspaper work,\nand that they are publishing some\nof the brightest of our provincial\nweeklies. Among the number is Mr.\nF. H. Schooley, editor and proprietor\nof the Lacombe Advertiser, of whom\nthis article is particularly concerned.\nMr. Schooley was born on a farm\nin Warren county,\"Iowa, in 1866. In\n1870 his father forsook the farm to\ntake up tlie practice of luw, and in\n1872 entered the journalistic field\npurchasing a half interest in a weekly\nnewspaper at the county sent. At a\nvery early age Mr. Schooley evinced\na great deal of interest in the printing art, and when he was but six\nyears of age it was his particular delight to stand on a high stoo' and\nset type from reprint copy. At the\nage of fifteen lie was offered and\npromptly accepted a position as\n\"devil\" in a country newspaper office, and afterwards completed his\napprenticeship in a job printing office\nin Des Moines, Iowa. After working\nsome two years in Des Moines he\nentered into partnership with his\nfather, and purchased a country\nweekly, The Advocate-Tribune, at In-\ndianola, Iowa. He was identified\nwith this paper until January, 1902.\nIn April of that yenr Mr. Schooley\nmoved to Alberta, where he took up\nland with the intention of remaining\nout of the printing business. In this\ndetermination he had not reckoned\nwith the subtle fascination that the\nprinting office hns tor every true\nmember of the craft, and, as might\nbe expected, the desire to return to\nhis accustomed sphere of labor was\nnot to be resisted. Within an interval of one year he had acquired a\nhalf interest in The Lacombe Advertiser, and in June, 1903, he took over\nhis partner's interest. Since that\ntime Mr. Schooley bus continued to\nbe editor nnd proprietor of Tlie Advertiser, nnd bus been eminently successful in producing a paper thut\nhas a distinctiveness of appearance\nthat commands more than passing\nattention. The paper enjoys a liberal\nadvertising patronage, and lias an\never-increasing circulation throughout\nthe wide territory it serves.\nCoroner\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSo you found our poor\nfriend hanging in tlie burn?\nYokel\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDYes, sure, yer 'onor.\nCoroner\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAnd whnt did you do?\nYokel\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWell, yer 'onor, I takes a\ngood look ut 'un, and goes straight\noff for constable.\nCoroner\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHut you cut the poor fellow down first?\nYokel\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOh ! no, yer 'onor\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcouldn't\ndo that.\nCoroner (horrified)\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWhy not?\nYokel\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWell, it's like this, zur;\nwhen I found 'un he worn't quito\ndead!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLondon Outlook.\nSaving a Cab Fare.\nHere's u pretty tale of domestl.\neconomy from an English paper. Ha\nbud been brought up In the lap of\nluxury and extravagance, and when\nbad times came and be hnd to go down\nto the city unil look carefully after his\nshillings it was his pretty and tender\nlittle wife who helped him and encouraged hlm by example ln small savings.\nOue fence he never would face.\nHe balked nt taking a bus. \"It\nmight puss the club, you know, dear,\nand tbe fellows at the windows.\"\nOne evening, however, he returned radiant to dinner. Tenderly embracing\nhis life's partner, he murmured: \"I've\ndone It, dulling! All the way for threepence!\" Love and gratitude were In\nher eyes us she said: \"My brave boy!\nI lid you mind It very much?\" With affectionate clteerlness he made answer:\n\"No, dear! (lot box seat; real good old\nsort, the driver. Told me lots of stories\nand wus quite chatty. Capital chap!\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWave bim u big cigar and half a crown\nfor himself when I got down.\"\n-\".\nififops Hair\nFalling\nAyer's Hair Vigor, new improved formula, will certainly\nstop railing; of the hair. Indeed,\nwe believe it will always do this\nunless there is some disturbance of the general health.\nThen, a constitutional medicine\nmay be necessary. Consult\nyour physician about this.\nDoes not change lhe color of the hair.\nA\n.Formula with \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDaoh bottle\nShow it to jour\ndootor\n*4ik hla About It,\nthen do \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ho ity\niters\nHow Frost Affects Plants.\nPlants do not freeze to death In winter, but perish from thirst. The process Is simple. The cold causes tbe\nwithdrawal of thc water from the cells\nof the plant, forming Ice crystals outside of the cells. Tlie frost, cooling\nand contracting the surface, acts as a\nsort of pump, und ns soon as thc cell\nIs emptied of Its life giving fluid tbe\nplant dies. The truth of this theory\nhas been proved by numerous cnrcful\nexperiments, Great variation was\nfound In the amount of cold necessary\nto cause tbe dentil of vegetation. Some\nplants dry out quickly and are killed\nbefore the freezing point Is reached.\nMany plnnts will survive zero weather,\nnnd some die only at 20 degrees below. Certain vegetable growths never\nfreeze. There are forms of bacteria\nthat even when Immersed in liquid nir,\nthe Intensest cold available, come out\nof their bitter bath aa chipper and lively ns ever.\nPrecious Plant Stories.\nAmong the many strange things to be\nfound ln the Philippine Islands arc\nthe so called \"plant stones\" encountered now and tignln in eertuln vegetable\ngrowths. The bamboo, for instance,\nuecording to Kultur und Nutur, contains a scone very similar to the opal,\nbut on nccount of the rarity wltb which\nit is found It Is much more costly than\nthe opal. In many thousand cane stalks\ncut down and carefully examined there\nmtiy perhaps be one ln which this beautiful greenish pink scintillating stone\nbus been formed from the minute pttrti*\ndes of siliceous deposit thut Imparts\nIts Intense hurdness to the outer covering of the cune. The bamboo cane\nstone is known us tabasbirs. In the\ninterior of some cocoauuts \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD stonelike\nsecretion Is found that Is not Inferior\nIn brilliancy to tlie most beautiful genuine pearl.\nWonderful Builders.\nA personul inspection of the pyramids mnde by un English quarry owner led bim to the conclusion thnt the\nold Egyptians were better builder,*\nthan those of the present day. He\nfound blocks of stone lu tbe pyramids\nweighing three or four times ns much\nas the obelisks on the bunks of the\nNile. He saw n stone the estimated\nweight of which wns 800 tons. Many\nof the stones were found to be thirty\nloot in length nnd fitted so closely together tlnii the blade of a penknife\ncould be run over the surfnee without\ndiscovering the break between them.\nTbere Is no mnchiucry, he claims, so\nperfect thnt It will make two surfaces\nthirty feet In length which will meet\ntogether in unison as tbe stones in the\npyramids meet.\nSneaks Un For Candy.\nA noted Hurley street physician\nbids fair to become the most popular\nphysician in London, especially\namong the youth of both sexes and\nomoiif* the dentists. Everybody should\neat at least a quarter of a pound of\nBweets daily, is his dictum. *\n\"Nothing,\" he says, \"is more\nstrengthening than sugar. It is possible to work for hours after enting\nfour ounces of chocolate without feeling the slightest fatigue. If I had\nmy way every soldier in the British\nArmy should be allowed a quarter of\na pound of sweets very day. My practice is to take five or six lumps of\nsugar in every cup of coffee or tea.\"\nAsked ns to toothache, the physician replied: \"I can only advise people to clean their teeth oftener.\"\nEggs of the Gnat.\nThe eggs of tlie gnat are arranged\nby tbe parent insect in the form of\na raft which floats with its concave\nside uppermost. If upset, it readjusts itself and cannot be kept under water. At the proper time a valve\nin euch egg opens, antl the insect\nescapes into the water beneath.\nThe Origin of a Great invention.\nOn one of the dnily trips of young\nWestinghouse from. Schenectady to th*\nfoundry nt Troy his train was held nf\nby a bud wreck. Two freights bad\ncome together iu a head-on collision on\nn piece of straight track. The engineers bad seen the danger plainly, but\nby the time tbe band brakes were\nbrought iuto play It was too late. The\nyoung man allowed these facts to sink\nluto his mind. Then he said to oue of\ntbe train bunds:\n\"If the engineers had been able to\ncontrol their trains from the cabs, the\nwreck could have beeu prevented,\ncouldn't It?\"\n\"Control 'em how?\"\n\"Hi'iike them.\"\n\"Yes. __ Tbey hnd lots of time.\"\nThf.r. was enough. The air brake wa*\nconceived. Amid tbe piled up wreckage the thing that was to muke the\nname of Westinghouse familiar to er-\nery schoolboy the world over wus culled Into being. It did not come in its\nperfected form, but the Idea itself bud\ngerminated.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPaul Lutzke In Everybody's.\nA Fight In the Air.\nW. E. Webb, the author of \"Buffalo\nLand,\" tells this eat story:\nThe chicken hawk of the west Is \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nRavage and dangerous enemy, but once\none of these air pirate's got worsted. I\nwus sitting In front of the doctor's office when a liawk shot down with wonderful rapidity of wing\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDso fnst that\nIts shadow seemed hardly to reuch the\nearth before Its body. It pounced upon\nthe doctor's favorite kitten, which lay\nasleep on the grass, and made of* with\nIt. At nn elevutlon of about fifty feet\npuss recovered from its surprise and\nwont to work for liberty. Its feline\nmind was exercised to astonishment\nnnd wrath. Twisting like a weasel,\nits claws came uppermost, and to my\nstraining gaze a Bight presented itself\nmuch like u feather bed being ripped\nopen In midair. Tbe amazed bnwk\nreceived new light on the subject of\nprey, let go nud made off like n badly\nplucked goose, but the cat came safely\nto earth-ron Its feet\t\nThe Onion Dodge.\n\"Incredible as It may seem,\" snld the\ndetective, \"there are many shoplifters\nwho steal by the agency of the onion.\nThese men, before setting out upon\ntheir contemplated crimes, eat of raw\nonions abundantly. Then they stroll\nluto the silversmith's or the haberdasher's or the Jeweler's that they propose\nto rob.\n\" 'Show me those large solitaires surrounded with pigeon blood rubies,\nplease,' says the Jewel thief.\n\"The clerk brings forth the tray of\ngems nnd, bending over it, the thief\nsighs with admiration. His face close\nto the clerk's, he slgbs again. And the\nclerk's nostrils quiver, and be turns\naway his head. The inspection of the\ndiamonds continues for some minutes.\nThroughout It the thief keeps breathing hard, the clerk keeps turning his\nhead away, and hence It Is no wonder,\nnt the day's end, that a couple of costly\nrings are missing.\"\nNot Too Honest.\n\"lie sure you're right, then go ahead,\"\nDave Crockett said, but he is dead.\nThe man to-day who gets nlong\nAntl goes ahead is often \"wrong.\"\nAntiquity of Tea Smoking.\n\"With your ten clgurettes,\" said the\nantiquary sternly, \"you young ladles\nthink yourselves very modern nnd decadent. But look here.\"\nHe took from a portfolio a French\nprint of the seventeenth century that\nportrayed two men, with cumbrous\npipes, chnrging the same from a box\nof China ten.\n\"This shows you,\"* the old mnn said,\n\"the antiquity of tea smoking. It was\na common thing in France 200 years\nago. Blegnt mentions It and Grand\ntl'Aussay In bis 'Hlstoire de In Vie\nPrlvee des Fruneuis' describes It In detail. An old vice, a dead vice\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDfor the\nFrench found that tea smoking racked\nthe nerves\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDhow very, very foolish you\ngirls are to have revived it\"\nImitation of Ebony.\nThere are two processes, says the\nCarriage Monthly, in use in tbe Imitation of ebony. Take a fine grained\npiece of wood, use French black polish, made black with fine coloring matter, or good nlr drying blnck varnish\nmay be applied. This, however, gives\nonly a superficial coloring, and when\nthe edges wenr off the light colored\nwood shows. The other method Is to\nwash three or four times nny dense\nwood with a boiling concoction of logwood, allowing It to dry between each\napplication. Then wash with a solution of ncetate of Iron, which is mnde\nby dissolving Iron filings In vinegar.\nThis stain is very black nnd penetrates\nInto the wood so that ordinary wear\nand chipping will not show the original\ncolor.\nAnts the Ideal Communists.\nIt would perhaps be pushing metaphors to an unwarranted extreme to\nspeak of \"dignity of labor\" ln connection with the occupations of ants. But\nIf by the phrase we mean tbat lubor\nis the honorable lot of all Citizens, and\nthat all labors of whatever sort are\nupon the same level of respectability,\nthen we might venture to apply the\nsaying eveu to the labors of an nnt\nbill. For therein all are workers, from\nthe n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwlv fledged callow to the veteran\nof a second summer.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHenry McCook\nin Harper's.\nAn Epitaph.\nIn a little churchyard near Llanymy-\nnech, Wules, ts a tombstone with these\nlines upon It:\nIn crossing o'er tho fatal bridge\nJohn Morgan he was slain,\nBut it was not by mortal hand.\nBut by a railway train.\nJohn Mjrgan was the huntsman to\nthe Tanatslde harriers and paid the\ncapital penalty for taking a short cut\nalong the Cumbrian line.\nIntelligent Strongth.\nIt ts known that the largest church\nbells may be set In motion by a man\nor even a boy wbo pulls the ropes attached to them ut proper and regular\nintervals, eveu when their weight of\nmetnl Is so great that the strongest\nman could scarcely move them sensibly\nif he did not apply his strength tu determinate periodical Intervals. Helm-\nholt**.\nMRS. EMMA STOLT, OF\nAPPLETON, WISCONSIN\nr i\n\"A neighbor advised me to use P\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nruna. I began to Improve at once.'\nNot Literal.\n'Tapa, this paper says a lot of men\nIn office had their heads cut off Wd\nthey cut them off with an ax?\"\n''No, my_boy; with a sharp move*\"\nThe reason why Ayer's Hair Vigor stops\n' falling hair is because it first destroys the\ngerms which cause this trouble. After\nthis is done, nature soon brings about a\nfull recovery, restoring the hair and\nscalp to a perfectly healthy condition.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD mil bj- th* t. 0. Aysr 0*., Low.il. Mau.-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nOrphans.\nTwo of the young friends of Bishop\nWilberforce of Oxford gnve the authorities of the university so much\ntrouble that they won the nicknames\nof Ilophni and I'hinehns.\nOne duy, snys T. H. S. Escott ln \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'Society In the Country House,\" they\nwere lounging about the ball at Cud-\ndostlon palace, singing the Lutheran\nrefrain, \"The devil Is deud,\" when the\nbishop suddenly appeared.\nHe walked very gently up to tbem\nand In his most caressing manner,\nplacing one band on each bead, said in\na consolatory tone:\n\"Alas, poor orphans'\"\nThis cold-water starch\nr-Wl* ironing-dsy over\n^|J_V_*/quicker, with lesa wear on\nWiWftYi* ironer's musclesand far\nK'S/less on the starched pieces.\ny&i/G-ves a beautiful gloss.\n-^/Needn't be boiled, .yet cannot\nstick. It's astarchyou'll like.\nTry \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDfft/sa\nMRS. EMMA STOLT\nMrs. Emma Stolt, 1069 Oneida St.,\nAppleton, Wis., writes:\n\"Peruna has done me a great deal\nof good since I began taking it and\nI am always glad to speak a good\nword for it.\n\"Three years ago I was in a\nwretched condition with backaches,\nbearing down pains, and at times\nwus so sore and liime that I could\nnot move nbout. I had inflammation\nand irritation, and although I used\ndifferent remedies tliey did me to\ngood.\n\"A neighbor who had been Ufii'ig\nPeruna advised me to try it, and I\nam glud that I did. I begun to rn-\nprove ns soon as I took it and I felt\nmuch hotter.\n\"I thank you for your fine remedy.\nIt is certainly a godsend to sick women.\"\nCatarrh of the Internal Organs\nMiss Theresa Bertles, White\nChurch, Mo., writes:\n\"I suffered with catarrh of the stomach, bowels and internal organs.\nEverything I ate seemed to hurt me.\nI never had a passage of the bowels\nwithout taking medicine. I was so\ntired mornings, and ached all over.\nI had a pain in my left side, and tha\nlease exertion or excitement made me\nshort of breath.\n\"Now, after taking Peruna for six\nmonths, I am as well as I ever was.\nPeruna has worked wonders for me.\nI believe Peruna is the best medicine\nin the world, and I recommend it\nto my friends.\"\nTO DARN CLOTH.\n. litis and Money Saving Hints Tor ths\nHousewife.\nTo dam cloth, even though mucb\natiei.ee is required, both ln threading\nie needle and in using the materia),\nireads nf tbe goods itself sbould al-\nuys be used. Sometimes these are\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDily obtainable lu quite short lengths,\nut even so they nre better than uny-\nilng else, und sometimes a little pa-\nleuce-wll! lie able to draw out more\n.nd more from a specially wide seam\njuiie n loug thread. Next to these\nomes cotton of the proper color; never\ndlk. nn -.Litter how hundsome the\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDloth nitty be. Buste the rent upon a\npiece of stiltish puper\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwriting pnper,\nior Instance\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwhich will permit easy\nbending, but will not ullow pulling\nawny, the puper to be on the right side\nof the goods. Then with us fine n\nneedle ns will curry the tbreud draw\nslowly together the lips of tbe rent,\ntaking only the wrong side of the\ncloth. If tbe material is thick, then\nstitches sbould tie carried in us fur as\npossible without appearing ou the right\nside. Tbe word \"slowly\" ls used be\ntuuse this particular mending cun never tie done in tlie most buste. first.\nbeenuse the woolen thread will break\nunder very slight strain, nnd, second,\nbecause the work ls very particular.\nBy \"/axing ihe end of the woolen\nthread It inuy be carried by a needle\nwith n round eye nnd therefore a finer\none tbun would otherwise be the case.\nTHE BORROWING HABIT.\nThe Wrong Shade\nJacob A. Eiis tells of a 'ittle boy\nwho earned his living by blacking\nboots. Every Sunday he attended a\nmission school. This school, through\nits well-meaning teachers, decided to\nhave a Christmas tree. The gifts for\ntlie pupils were provided for them\nbv the teachers and Bome patrons of\nthe school.\nJimmy, the bootblack, was there\nChristinas eve, but was much disappointed when his present proved to\nbe a copy of Browning's poems. He\nfolded it carefully in the paper in\nwhich he received it and took it\nhome.\nThe next Sunday the superintendent of the school announced that any\nchild who was disappointed with his\nor her gift could exchange it.\nJimmy marched boldly to the front\nwith his.\n\"What have you there, Jimmy?\"\n\"Browning, sir.\"\n\"And what do you want in exchange?\"\n\"Blacking, sir.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDYouth's Companion.\nDo Not Be a Grafter on Your Neigh*\n. hors' Goods.\nIt is the easiest thing In the world\nto get Into the borrowing habit\nFirst It Is a newspaper, then n pattern, then a recipe, then a book.\nAnd then some duy a gown ls borrowed to look ut, then a little note\ngoes asking that a pan lie lent and\nthen It becomes the easiest thing lu tbe\nworld to ask the loan of a hat or an\nembroidered petticoat.\nNow, when you begun If any one told\nyou that you were a sponge you would\nhnve been most Indignant. And yet\nthnt ls Just what borrowers are.\nIt would be almost as bad to borrow\nyour neighbor's money and never return it as to keep up a constant borrowing of your neighbor's belongings,\ngetting out of them the wear that ls\nuot yours aud the pleasure that by\nrights belongs to her. .-\nWhat the mistress does the maid\ndoes. Iu the kitchen they do not hesl-\ntute to borrow a pateut coffeeixit, a\npudding dish, flavor extract, some baking powder, sugar or oil. Half the\ntime the things are not returned.\nTbe persistent borrower ls more or\nless spoken of as a sponge. So do not\npermit yourself to drift Into a very\npernicious bubit.\nTime Has Tested It\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTime tests all\nthings; that whicli is worthy lives;\nthat which is inimical to man's welfare perishes. Time has proved Dr.\nThomas' Eclectric Oil. From a few\nthousand bottles in the early days of\nits manufacture the demand has risen\nso that now the production is running into the hundreds of thousands\nof bottles. What is st eagerly sought\nfor must be good.\nAn envoy from the Emperor Mene-\nlik was received at Peterhof by tho\nczar, to whom he presented a num\nber of gifts from the Negus.\nMinaret's Liniment Cures Colds, etc\nJohann Orth, the cousin of the\nEmperor of Austria, who mysteriously disappeared in 1891, is report30\n\" \" Purchase of Land - 7,60\n\" \" License to Cut Timber 6.00\nAil locals will be charged for at tlie rate\noi 16c. per line each issue.\nTransient rates made known on application. No room for Quacks.\nAddress all Communications and make\nCheques payable to\nJNO. J. ATHERTON,\nEditor and Publisher.\nLAUD ACT.-KOOTENAY LAND\nDISTRICT.\nDtitrict of Weat Kootenay.\nTake notice that Robert Duncan Kennedy, ol Slocan, B.C., livery keeper,\nIntends to apply for a special timber\nlicence over tbe following deicribed\nlands. Commencing at a post adjoining James Smith'* south-east corner,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd marked \"Robert Duncan Kennedy's N.E. corner,\" thence south 40\nchains, thenca west 160 chains, thence\nnorth 40chains, thenceeast 160 chains\nto point of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ROBERT DUNCAN KENNEDY.\nJune 17th, 1907.\nTake notice that James Smith, ol\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSlocan, B.C., miner, intends to apply\nfor a special timber license over tbe following described lands: Commencing\nat a post pianted about one and oue\nball miles distant in a southerly direction irom Duncan Graham's north-east\ncorner, and marked \" James Smith's\n13.E. corner,\" tlience west 160 chain\",\nthence north 40 chains, thence east 100\nchain*, thence south] 40 chains to point\npi commencement, and conteining.640\nacres more or lees. JAMES SMl H.\nJune 17th, 1807.\nTake notice that Duncan Graham, ol\neiocan.B.C, miner, intends to apply\nior a special license over the following\ndescribed lands: Commencing at a\npost planted on the west shore of Slocan\nLake, about one mile distant in a southerly direction from the mouth oi Indian\ncreek, and marked \" Duncan Graham's\nN.E. cornor,\" thence west 80 chains,\nthence south 80 chains, thence east 80\nchains, thence north 80 chain* to point\nof commencement, and containing 640\nacres more or lese.\nDUNCAN GRAHAM.\nJune 15th, 1907.\nTake notice that Nils Nelson, o\nSlocan, B.C., a rancher, intends to\napply for a special timber license over)\nfollowing described lands: Commencing at a post planted about four miles\ndistant in a norlh westerly direction\nirom the mouth of Goat creek, a tributary of the Slocan River, thence west\n160 chains, thence north 40 chains;\nthence east 160 chain*, thence south 40\nchains to pointfof commencement, and\ncontaining 640 acres more or less.\nNILS NELSON.\nJune 20th, 1907.\nI * ' '\nLAND ACT-SLOGAN LAKE LAND\nDISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that I, Bert. Norris\nSharp, of Orient, Wash., occupation\nassayer, intends to apply for permission to puichase the following desciibed\nland :\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nCommencing at, a post planted on\nN. W.cor, located on Slocan Lake about\n20 milts from Slocan Cily, tlience webt\n40 chains, thence eolith 40 cliains, tlicnte\neast 40 chains, thence norlh 40 chains\nto pointof commencement containing\n180 acres more or less.\nBERTRAM NORRIS SHARP\nThomas Melville Sharp,\nAgent.\nJuly 81st, 1907.\nHALCYON\nHOT\nSPRINGS\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD****\nThe Most Beautifully situated\nSanitarium iu British Columbia.\nIt* medical watei* are renowned\nior curative qualities. \"That\nTired Feeling \" completely cured.\nA certain remedy for Rheumatism\nin its varied forms. A cure cure\nfor Metallic and other poisonings.\nTwo mails a day and telegraphic\nfacilities. Rates\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD$12 to $18 per\nweek. For further particulars\napply to\nHARRY MclNTOSII\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS\nCr\nARROW LAKE, II. C.\nSLOCAN LAND DISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that John St. Denis, of\nSlocan, B.C., farmer, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described land: Commencing ate\npott planted on the south-east corner\nof lot 7647, thenco nortli 20 chains,\neast 20 chains, south 20 chsins lo the\nnorth-east corner of lot 8127, tbenre\nalong the lino oi lot 8127, 20 chains\nwest.\nAugust lat, 1907.\nJOHN ST. DENIS.\n D. St. Denis, Agent.\nSLOCAN LAND DISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that Charles Plant, of\nNew Denver, miner, intends to apply\nfor perminion to purchase the following described land: commencing at a\npost planted at the north-went coiner\nof lot 6881, thenoe nortli 40 chains, east\n10 chains, south 40 chains, west 20\nchains.\nAugust 12th, 1907.\nCHARLES PLANT.\nD. St. Denis, Agent.\nKASLO LAND DISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake Notice that Florence Lawrence\nMclnnes, of New I'envoi, wile of Angus\nMclnnes, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following de scribed\nland:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorthwest corner of lot 8506, group 1,\nKootenav District, tlience west20 chains\nthence south 20 chains thence east 20\ncliains thence north 20 chains to tbe\npoint of commencement, containing 40\nacres more or less.\nFLORENCE LAWRENCE McINNES,\nKenneth L. Burnet, agent.\nLAND ACT-KOOTENAY LAND\nDISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that I, P. J. Gallagher,\nof Rosebery, B.C., lumberman, intend\nto apply for a special timber license\nover the following described land:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS.W. corner marked P.J.G. S.W.C,\nabout two miles south of the N. & S.\nRy., thence north 160 chains, thence\neast40 chains, thence south 160 chains,\nthence west 40 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres more\nor less. P. J. GALLAGHER.\nDated July 11,1907.\nTake notice that I, P. J. Gallagher\nof Rosebery, B.C., lumberman, intend\nto apply for a special timber license\nover the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 3W\nmiles smith of Summit hike, marked\nP.J.G . S.W.C, thonce north 80 chains\ntlience east 80 chain, thence south 80\nchains, tlience west 80 chainB to point\nof commencement, containing 640\nacres more or less.\nDated July 5th, 1907\nP. J. GALLAGHER.\nTake notice that I, P. J. Gallagher,\nof Roeebery, B.C., lumberman, intend\nto apply for a special timber license\nover the following described tract of\nland. Commencing at a post planted at\nthe S.W.C, marked P.J.G. S.W.C,\ntlience north 40 chains, thence east 160\nchains, thence south 40 chains thence\nwest 160 chains to point of commencement. Containing 640 acres more or\nlees. Post is planted abont 2 miles from\nwest shore ol Slocan lake nearly opposite Silverton.\nDated July 5th, 1907.\nP. J. GALLAGHER.\n-5\nJalland\nBros.\nSOLE AGENTS FOR 8TANSFIELD\n UNDERWEAR\t\nJust Arrived\nA LAROB\nSHIPMENT\nDELAYED IN\nTRANSIT.\nWe Will Sell at\nReduced Prices.\nAlso SUITS and PANTS\nAt Cost\nI\nSandon\nThe Review\nFor\nJob Printing,\nLAND ACT-KOOTENAY LAND\nDISTRICT,\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that Cornelius Morgan\nGething, of Slocan, B.C., prospector,\nintends to apply for permission to purchase the following described land:\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nEouth boundary of the C.P.Ry., lot 882\nat a point on the west hank of Slocan\nRiver where said south boundary crosses\nsaid river, thence west 40 chains, thence\nsouth 40 chains, thence east 40 chains,\nmore or less, to the west bank of tbe\nSlocan River, thence following the\nmeand. rings of said river in a northerly\ndirection, 40 cliains more or less to\npointof commencement, and containing\n160 acres, more or less.\nDated July 1st, 1907.\nCORNELIUS MORGAN GETHING.\nTake notice that William Ernest\nMarshall, of Rosebery, B.C., agent C.P\nRy,. intends to apply for a special license over the following described land-\nCommencing at a post on the eouth;\nwchI shore of Sloran Lake one half mile\nnorth-west of Sawmill creek abont two\nmiles frnm Rosebery and bearing thc\ninitials W. E. M.'s N. E. comer, thence\nsouth 80 chains, tnence west 80 chains,\nthence north 80 cliains, thence cast 80\nchains to point of commencement, and\n640 acres more or less.\nJune 21st 1907.\nWILLIAM ERNEST MARSHALL.\nZhc Slocan Ibotel\nGbree forhe,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.C.\nHeadquarters for Mining Men\nwhen visiting this famous Silver-\nLead Mining Camp. Every\ncomfort foi the Traveling Public.\nA Well-Stocked Bar and Excel-\nlent Pool Table.\nHugh Niven, Proprietor\nCertificate of Improvements.\n\"Independence\" Mineral Claim,\nsituate in the Slocan City Mining\nDivision of West Kootenay district.\nWhere located:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOn Lemon Creek\nadjoining the Crusader Mineral\nClaim.\nTake notice that I, H. R. Jorand, Free\nMiner's Certificate No. B78.800 acting\nfor myself and as agent for W. J. Shat-\nford Free Miner's ConificateNo. B4.685,\nintend, 60 days from the date hereof,\nto Bpply to the Mining Recorder for a\nCertificate oi Improvements, lot the\npurpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of\nthe above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 87, must bo commenced\nbefore the issuance of Such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 2nd day of Mav, A.D. 1907\nH.It.JORAND\nLocal Salesman Wanted for\nSandon\nAnd Adjoining District to represent\nCanada's Greatest Nurseries\nTrees of right size and age for British\nColumbia planting. Grown on limestone soil; hardier and longer lived than\nconst trees.\nA permanent situation, Territory reserved ; Pay weekly i Free outfit.\nWrite for particulars.\nStone & Wellington\nFONTHILL NURSERIES\n(Licensed by B.C. Government )\nTORONTO - - ' ONT.\nNotice is hereby given that 60 days\nalter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks lor permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands in West Kootenay District: Commencing at a post\nmarked \"A. J. Watson's N.W. Corner\npost,\" said post being at south-east\ncoiner of lot 7 Block 882, Group I,\nWest Kootenay District, thence south\n80 thains, thence cast 20 chaina, tlience\nnorth 80 chains, thence West 20 chains\nto point of commencement, containing\n160 acres more or les_.\nDatod April 20th, 1007.\n7-4 A. J. WATSON.\nVICTORIA\nHOTEL <\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\nSilverton, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\n*jfi\nRecognised by the Travelling\nPublic, Miners and Mining\nMen to be the Best Hotel in\nthe Slocan. The bar is stocked with the choicest quenchers.\n1?. flfo. Spencer * prop\nJ. J. PlDnlanil\nprovincial Hasa^er\nan& (Bbemlet'\nSandon Assay Office\nLate F. H. HAWKINS.\nOrdinary Tariff:\nGold, Silver, Lead, Copper, Iron, Silica,\n$1.00 each.\nSilver with Copper or Lead, Manganese,\nLime, $1.50 each,\n7-inc, Antimony, Sulphur, Gold and\nSilver, $2.00.\nGold, Silver, with Lead or Copper, Zinc\nantl Silver, $2 50.\nSilver, Zinc and Lead $3.00\nGold, Silver, Zinc, Lead snd Iron, $4.00\nb-p.cii.1 Rates, for Min. nod Mill Work\nNetice is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Cnief Commissioner of LSnds and\nWorks at Victoria, B. C. for permi*sion\nto pnrchaBe the following described\nlands situate id West Kootenay District;\nCommencing at a poet planted at the\nsonth-eatt corner of lot 7547 and marked\nJ. St. D, S.W. corner, thence north\nalong the east line of lot 7547 20 chains,\nthence east 20 chains, thence south 20\nchains to the north-east coiner ot lot\n8127, tlience following along the line of\nlot8127, 20 cliains to the pointof commencement and containing 40 acres.\nDated at Slocan, B.C April S0th,1907.\nJOHN ST. DENIS.\nPerD. St. Denis, Agent.\nTo Rent\nSeveral Residen c esat\nVery Small Fipre\nJ. M. HARRIS.\ni**t>***********************************************<>\nil Go to Wilson's for\n, Steel, etc.\nT. H. WILSON\nSILVERTON, B.C.\n*****\n1 Zhc Sanfcon Dotel\n\"Robt. Cunning proprietor.\nA Home from Home. Fully equipped for High-Class\nTrade. Excellent Accommodation and\nSplendid Cuisine Always.\nPersonal supervision given to the wants of Our Patrons.\nGboiceet Xtquore, Wines anb (Stgar-a.\nft******* .TTTT-TT-T ****** **************** ***********\nExchange\nHotel.\nTHOMPSON BROS.\nProprietors.\nThis well-known hotel is now open again for\nbusiness. The rooms will be found well ventilated, aud cosy, and visitors may rely ou\nfirst-class attention always. Bar well stocked.\n************************ M ************************\n' <5\nJust\nArrived\nSpring anb\nSummer\nSamples\nfrom Crown\ntailoring Co.\nTf The Most Complete aud varied assortment ever\nin the Country.\nTf In Worsteds, Tweeds, Cheviots, Serges, etc.\nComplete fit and entire satisfaction guaranteed.\nGroceries, Canned Goods and Provisions\nAlso complete Line of Gent's. Furnishings and Supplies.\nTKDL $. /Ifoacfconalb\n************************* i__ +**.++*+\"|.++**.\">+*<^+i*f*ft4.--*\"*v4*\nt^\nSANDON'S FAMOUS HOUSE OF CALL.\nKooteixay\nHotel\nThere ia no better houBe in the Kootenays ior\nthe Mining Man to make hia Headquarters.\nVisitors will find an up-to-dato style oi doing\nbu linen, and the Barkeeps are artists in their\nline. \t\nThe Finest Wines and Liquors and Choicest Brands of Cigars\nMcLeod & Walmsley - Props.\nSLOCAN LAKE LAND DISTRICT,\nDistrict of WeBt Kootenay.\nTake notice that I, Thomas M. Sharp\nof NelFOii, B.C., engineer, intends to\napply for permission to purchase tho\nfollowing (k'sciibed land:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nCommencing at a pott planted on S.E.\ncomer, located on we6t shore of Slocan\nLake; abou 1*3 mile. from the hear\" of\nsaid Slocan Lake, thonce west 40 chains,\nthence, north 40 chains, Ihence east 40\nChains, tlience .oulli \"long shore of\nSlucanLake to point uf commencement\ncontaining 160. hop? mpce.or.lose,\nTHOMAS MELVILLE SHARP,\nJuly Hint. 100. *' : * \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\nASSAYING.\nColin J. Campbell\nAssayer\nNotary Public\nConveyancing\nPH_.SE '-.\nP.O. BDS\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD?\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .\"-.x.\n=W\nNEW DENVER\ni\nThe Leading Hotel of the Silvery Slocaw\nThe Reco\nSandon, B. C.\n.Heaoquarters for flMntn-g an& travelling flDen\nMeals First Class. Bar, The Best\n\"Rooms Xarge, Clean anb Cos?.\n%& William Bennett \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\nI> ***********************************\nI J. R. Cameron\nThe Kootenay Tailor\ni FIT AKD 8TYLB\nGUARANTEED.\nSANDON, B.C. i\n,,***************************************\nNourishing\nStout\nPut up in Pint Bottles for Family and Hotel Trade.\nWe guarantee its Strength and Purity.\nMADB BY Till!\nNew York Brewery I\nr5^:S__S_2_S3-***f__*-S**-*__ai__B^\nSanbon flfoiners' TOnfon Hospital.\nOpen to the Public.\nRates by Subscription $1,00 per month. Non-subscribers $2.00 par diem.\n Hospital Staff\t\nC. E. ANDERSON. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD - S. PETERSKY, M. D.\nAddress Communications To The Secretary.\nSt. James' Hotel\nNew Denver, B.C.\nSTisitors to New Denver, the beauty spot\nof the Continent, will find this hotel\nto be thoroughly equipped for\nfor the comfort of Tourists.\nWell stocked Bar.\nExcellent boatini*. Grand Bcenery.\nSPLENDID 8AMPLE ROOMS\nA. JACOBSON - - - Proprietor.\nRATES $3 to 3,50 A DAY.\nPINE SAMPLE ROOMS.\nSpecial attention given to Mining Trade.\nSplendid Scenery, Fishing, Boating, etc.\nH. STEGE.\nWRY MAN\nNo mailer what bis occupation, may save\nmoney by getting his\nShoes Mail*! to Order.\nFor a Mining Shoe\nthere is nolhing belter\nthan tin\" famous RAL\nET FRILI.E FRENCH\nCALF or KIP UPPER\n-with a good, solid,\nhand made bottom\t\nThese shoes ran only he got by\nleaving your older with\nP. W. WARD\nShoemaker - Sandon\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. m. Wfobovpson\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYER and\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMIST.\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, each, $1 00\nGold-Silver.. $160 Silver-Lead. .$1.60\nZinc. .$2.00 Gold Silver witli Copper or\nLend.. 2.60.\nPrompt attention given to all samples.\n25 per cent, discount upon five samples.\nBAKER ST., NELSON.\nP.O. Drawer, 1108 Phono A67\nNADIAN\nHwiiiiiMi'i?.io\nNew Soo Spokane\nService.\n************\nTo Spokane tip the Beautiful\nKootenay Lake.\nSteamer Knskanook to Kootenay\nLanding, connecting at Cnrzon\nJunction witli Train to\nSpokane via Spokane\nInternational..\nIlit Host Popular Trip this Sum,\nRATES:\nSINGLE FARE ROUND TRIP\n$9.20 $16.80\nGood for Thirty Days.\nApply Local Agent, or\nE, J. Coyui, A.G.P.A.\nVancouver,\nJohn Mob, D.P.A., Nelson.\nSLOCAN LAND DISTRICT.\nWait ICio'.e 1 iv\nI, William Stewart Drewry, by occupation a Land Surveyor, intend 10\napply for a special li**onse to cut timber upon six hundred and forty acres\nof land, Biluatu on Ihe west, sido of\n*-lncaii Lake about one-halt mile norlh of\nNemo creek b inndod ns follows *\nCommencing at a post planted nt\ntbe N,E corner of Lot 6521, tho ire\nnorth 20 chains more or less to tho\nS W. etyn-r of Lot 8426; thenco nortli\n100 chains, hence ivc.t40chains, thenc*\nsou b 40 Oh.vln-*, thenco cant 80 chains*\nmore or less to ihe point of commencement.\nDated Aug 14th. 1907\nWILLIAM STEWART DRKWRY\nNotice bj hereby given tl nt 110 diy.\nafter! date we. intend to apply to lio\n1 cc,80 board oi tlie cily 11t4.--lo.11n !.,('.\na 'ransf*.!* of liCenco hold by na for the\nArlingtonJlotcl,in Bio k A, lots land :i\nto Robt. Grahnm in il Prill k O* iffl'lh.\nOETHING A HENDERSON\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD}.Q::v. B. O,, August 1st, 1007.\nSLOCAN LAND DIS1RICT.\nDistr'ctof West Kootenay.\nTake notice that Fied D. D. Kelly,\nnf New Denver, nurse, intends to apply\nfor permission to pimdinee the following\nile-irilii'd hind:\nCommencing at a pout planted about\none iui!o from tbo NiikiiHp and Slocan\nRailway to the south and about two and\none linif miles from Slocan Luke, and\n12 chains wegt troni the westmly boundary of lot ol27, on the line of A. Jucoh-\nFoil's tior.fierly boundary, thence 80\nchains jxmh 11101 c or less to lhe botlll-\ndary *ff'timber lease No. 485, thenco 40\nchains west, thence 20 clmins nortli,\nthence 20 clmins west, Ihe'Ce 50 chains\nson'h, thence til) chains ea*t to point, of\ncommencement. Containing 210 acres\nmore or less.\nAugust 12tli, 1007\nFRED D. Di\nim.1 1'. 11. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDssaW,-*,\n EM-.\nint John McGrafl^'of,\nondinnster, intends to\nTako notico Hint\nNelson, B.C., Ron\napply for a special timber license over\nthe following described trac. of lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about l>_\nmiles, west oi New Denver on the vtee\\nside of Slocan Lake, marked J. McG.\nN. W. cor., tlience north 80 cliains,\nIhence cant 80 chains to the shore of\nSlocnn lake, thence south 80 chains,\ntlience wast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Containing 640 acres moro\nor lese.\nJ. McGRATH\nP. J. Gallagher, Agent.\nTnko no-ice thut John McGrnth of\nNelson. B.C., rondinna'cr, intends lo\napply for ft special limber license over\nihe following described tract of lands:\nCommencing at 11 post planted about\n4 miles wett of New Denver on tho west\nside of Slocnn Like marked J, Mc. N.\nVV. O.i Ihence nortli 40 chains, tlience\neast Hill chains to tlu th ire of Slocan\nLake, Ihence siu.li 10 chains, llfT\nwest 160 chains to pointof cotntneii\nment, Containing 840 notes more\nless. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n.1. M.-GRATH.\nP. J. Qellsgher, Agent."@en . "Published in Sandon from 1906-09-06 to 1907-10-17

Published in New Denver from 1907-11-07 to 1908-11-16."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Sandon (B.C.)"@en . "Sandon"@en . "Slocan_Mining_Review_1907-09-12"@en . "10.14288/1.0083548"@en . "English"@en . "49.9755560"@en . "-117.2272220"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Sandon, B.C. : JNO. J. Atherton"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Slocan Mining Review"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .