"e90559ef-9cbe-4407-975c-50b3eefd7d1d"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2016-05-04"@en . "1907-07-25"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/smreview/items/1.0083610/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Devoted to Advertising the resources\nof the rich Slocan\nMining Division. . '.\nSlocan\nr./n *A\n7\nin\n| Sent/to any address\n\ for $2_O0i $&/ ann. ,\nv I*f\"/,you see it in the//\nNo. 48 Vol. I.\nSANDON, British Columbia, Thursday, July 25, 1907.\nSingle Copies 10c.\nBannerSilver-Lead\nDistrict.\nEVERY DAY SEES THE REVIVAL IN MINING BECOME\nMORE SUBSTANTIAL\nConsolidated Company About\nTo Instal Compressor\nAnd Tramway.\nIt is witb genuine pleasure that we\nrecord a substantial revival in our staple\nindustry. From the many mines which\nsurround the once famous payroll centre\ncome most excellent reports. We can\ntruthfully write that at the present time\nat every mine in the vicinity the miners\nare working on ore. In some instances\nthis is tbe outcome of a program of development and deep miniDg, sterling\nfactors which have established the per-\nmane-ace ol the values and tbe reputa- |\ntion of the banner silver-lead section of\nthe province. For the past six weeks\nthe arrival of miners to the camp has\nSeen steady, and these have immediately found employment at tip-top\nwages. But yet many more good miners\nare needed, the lack of which is retarding the progress of many* property\nholders.\nEUREKA-RICHMOND.\nThiB well-known group, owned and\noperated by the wealthy Consolidated\nfining and Smelting Company of\nCanada, Limited, is likely to rrove the\nmost potent factor in the resurrection\nof tbe industry in our midst. There are\nnow about forty men on the payroll\nand good miners are being eagerly\nsought. At the mine there is an immense bodv of concentrating ore blocked out, to treat which the company\nhave in view tbe construction of a mill\nor tbe leasing of either the Ivanhoe or\nSlocan Star concentrators. Arrangements are also under way for tbe erection of an aerial tram, tho proposed\nsite for the lower terminal of which, together with a compressor plant, is the\nfoot of the Star gulch, a point from\nwhich ore can be dumped direct from\nthe bim to the cars of both the Canadian Pacific and K. & 8. companies.\nRECO.\nThis famous high-grade mine, alter\nbeing closed down for some time, has\nonce more been opened with a large\nforce of men by J. M. Harris, and it\nwill shortly enter the shipping lists\nagain. The Reco trail is a busy one,\npack trains making two trips a day. A\nlarge consignment of ore sacks went up\non Tuesday. We understand that a\nnew ledge has been located with a pay-\nBtrcak of great richness.\nLAST CHANCE.\nThis properly was shut down two\nmonths ago when the ore body was\nshowing up strong, but the legal proceedings which threatened to tie up the\nmine for a long time have been withdrawn, and Lieut-Governor Dunsmuir,\nvirtual owner ei the adjoining Noble\nFive group and tbe Last Chance company have agreed to submit the disputed\npoint to arbitration. Work under contract, however, is being pushed at an-\nother level by William Findlay and a\ncrew of men.\nMcALLISTER.\nAt tbe conclusion of last season's\nWork the local syndicate owning the\ngroup shipped 30 tons of ore which\nnetted them $7,000. It was then agreed\nby the owners that to prove tbe value\nof the rich vein at depth, a 300 foot\ncrosscut tunnel would havo to be driven.\nThl8 work is in progress, and when it .s\ncompleted it will give them a vertical\ndepth of 175 feet on the ledge. Extra\nminers are needed, as about the 1st of\nAugust it is intended to develop No.\n8 level, running north and south drills,\nwhichareinore. The syndicate figure\non shipping enough from the noith and\nsouth drifts this fall to pav for the development. Geo. Clark, one of the\nowners, is superintending.\nCANADIAN GROUP.\nWork was resumed at this mine three\nweeks ago, and a good sized crew put to\nwork. The property will enter thei\nshipping lists again in a few days. The\nTowgood packing outfit have orders to\nbegin on the first car.\nMONTEZUMA.\nBoth mine and mill are working full\nhanded, and gratifying results are reported. The output from the mill is\non an average four cars of concentrates\na month.\nMOUNTAIN CON.\nThis is another of our high-grade\nmines which has been re-opened the\npast month. This property has yielded\nenormous profits to the owners from tlie\ngrassroots. Ore is now being sacked by\nHoward Thompson and a small force.\nMAJESTIC.\nThe lessees of this property, C. A.\nBigney et al., have broken down a large\nquantity of Al ore. A shipment of\ntwenty tons will be made in a few days.\nELKHORN.\nThe lucky leasers of this ground made\nenough from their initial shipment to\nhold a substantial balance alter putting\nin *. 1000 to exploit tlieir holdings. A\ncrosscut is being driven which when\ncompleted will given them a good area\nfor stoping. There is a large quantity\nof clean galena on sight In the drift,\nwhich will be left standing until the\ncrosscut tunnel is completed. A car of\nore \"extracted in the process of development now lies in the bins.\nADAMS GROUP.\nNeil and Alex. McMillan and Angus\nMcGillivray of Queen BesB fame have\njust secured a lease of the above group\nfrom Brandon Brothers, and a start has\nbeen made. There is ore to begin on,\nCHICAGO.\nTwo shifts are working at this mine,\nwhich is reported to be showing up fine.\nMessrs. Duck, Orchard and Baskerville,\nof Milwrukee, inspected the property a\nfew days ago, and to our representative\nexpressed themselves as delighted with\nthe ore body and the development work\nproceeding. Tliey also said that twenty\nmen would be put to work in a few\nweeks. Mr. Duck, purchased for cash\nseveral interesls iu Cody mining property held by John McKaskill.\nA steady output is kept up by the\nSunset, and other mines in the Sandon\ndistiict being worked from which good\nreports aro to hand are the Corinth,\nGoodcnongh, Sunshine, Slocan Star,\nMoon, Bachelor, Ya-Ya, Alps, Rambler,\nRuth, Redress, Farnum, American Boy,\nSlocan Bell, and Surprise.\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. A .\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, A ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, .f. ,f, \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, i\nr-n-TVVVTTWVVVTVvVVVVVTVT^\nlocal anc- (Beneral.\nNot a Fish Story-A Fact.\nThere is one lake in the Kootenay\nwhich contains myriads of rainbow-\ntrout, and he would indeed be a poor\ndisciple of Isaak Walton who failed to\nlure a few dozen to his hooks at any\ntime in Bear Lake. On Sunday last a\nparty of Sandon anglers, Messrs, W. T.\nMcClurg, S. J. Towgood, T. McAllister\nand J. J, Atherton journeyed down and\nwhipped the water for several hours.\nOn counting up the days' catch the nett\nresult was, McClurg, 849; Towgood 271;\nMcAllister 88; Atherton 51. The poor\ncatch of the last named iB attributed to\nthe fact of his cooking tbe lunch and\nhaving charge of the \" bait.\" The total\ncatch of 754 should be a sufficient inducement to any tourist who is looking\nfor a quiet spot for a fair days' sport.\nF. E. Archer and his plumbing staff\nwere up from Kaslo Thursday to put a\ntin hat on the upper stope of the K. &\nS. dago mansion.\nA. J. Curie, the man who is boosting Kaslo next best to our lakeside\ncotem., Assessor A. Lucas, and C. E.\nStone, owner of the famous Lot 819,\ncame up to make a flying trip to the\nburg. Owing to the dense crowds and\ntraffic block they were unable to reach\nthe depot in time to make the return\ntrip.\nJ. D. Moore, government road inspector, is in town.\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 ft 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\neast 40 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.\nPicked up by ButtlDg In Everywhere.\n************************\nAlways a full line of fresh frnits nf all\nkinds at Macdonald's.\nMrs. S. J. Towgood and children\nhave gone to New Denver on a two\nweek's visit to Mn. G. F. Ransom.\nCharlie Walmsley, an old-timer here,\nand now one of the best hotel men in\nNelson, was in visiting brother George\non Saturday.\nAlex. Forrest, Pete McLnnders and\nBilly Cliffe have been to Nelson this\nweek to cousult a solicitor re a bigihip-\nment of ore which was secured bv them\nwhilst working a portion of the Payne\nmine under lease, and through s une\nflaw in the agreement they have not\nbeen allowed to sell to a Binelter. The\nboys propose to fight the matter in the\ncourts. Geo. Ranson, also went to Nel-\nBon to make things interesting for the\ncompany.\nA small gathering ot both sexes with\nterpsichorean inclinations indulged in a\nsocial hop at the M.U. ball on Monday\nnight.\nWe regret to report that Geo. Bruder\nlias had a very severe attack of lumbago\nand rheumatism the past two weeks.\nHe left on Monday for Harry Mcintosh's\nsanitarium at Halcyon Hot Springs,\nwhere he feels confident he can obtain\nrelief. We all wish Mr. Bruder a speedy\nrecovery.\nMisses Frances and Doris Wilbers, of\nVancouver, Bchool mates of Mrs. C.\nStewart, paid'her a visit on Wednesday.\nThe young ladies left the following\nmorning for Kaslo, where they will\nspend their vacation with their aunt,\nMrs. Cockle. Another school chum,\nMis? Mary Cody, will visit Mrs. Stewart\nat the end of August.\nThe famous Bon Ton in Jackson\nBasin is open for leasing. The property\nis owned by tbe Brandon Bros., of Silverton, who have as much as they can\ngive personal attention to in the Canadian group. From a 25 ft. opencut on\ntlie Bon Ton four tons were shipped\nwhich gave the owners $1,242.00 profit\nabove freight and treatment.\nTbe best mining boot on the market:\nLeckie's. Macdonald sole agent.\nThe new time table of the Kaslo and\nSlocan Railway which came into effect\non Monday last is as follows*, leave\nSandon 2 p.m., McGuigan 3.2*3, Whitewater 3.42, Sproules 2.55, South Fork\n3.30, arrive Kalao 4 p.m. The boat for\nNelson departs on arrival of train. This\narrangement permits of the boat arriving at Nelson forty-five minutes earlier\ntban by the old schedule. The Sunday\ntrain is cancelled.\nAs proof positive that the wave of\nprosperity which rolls toward Sandon\nhas already kissed this city, we might\nmention that one of our leading merchants informed us this week that his\nbusiness for the past month more than\ntrebled that for the corresponding month\nof last year, and that the present month's\nsales would double last month's. He\nclaimed tbat last month was the best\none with him for four yeara. He ia a\ngood advertiser, and we hope in five\nyeara he will own a departmental store\naa big, well nearly, as Timothy Eaton's.\nTen years ago there was a mining stock\nboom in B.C., and little attention was\npaid to fruit lands, lumber or real estate.\nThe stack boom faded away, leaving\nmany a sore heart perched upon a pile\nof gilt-colored certificates, but mining \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ndid not cease. It has gone steadily. Tbe\nincrease alone in the produclion of cop-!\nper in this Province _the last decade I\namounting to ovei 800 per cent. All the *\nsigna now point to a veritable boom in\nreal.mining and the wise once are already\npreparing for the advent that muBt come\nin '08 or '09.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLowery in Saturday Sunset.\nMrs Joseph Macdonald, writing from\nMaiden, MaEs., reporlB a favorable journey and an enjoyable holiday.\nGeo. T. Clark had to make a trip\ndown from the McAllister group on\nThursday. He waB unfortunate enough\nto get a piece of steel in his eye the\nprevious day. Doc. Gomm extracted the\noffending morsel, and George left the\nlollowing morning for the mine.\nA large and varied assortment of\nchewing and imoking tobaccos at Macdonald's,\nWe got ao many new subscribers last\nweek, after ordering our paper, that we\nhad to slight a few of our exchanges, we\nsay by way of apology that we hope the\naame thing may happen often.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMoyie\nLeader.\nThe Review is in receipt of the last\nweek's Leader, eo we concluded that the\nReview has a warm corner in Peck's big\nheart.\nEvery newspaper wants to publish the\nnews. The better the paper the more\nprosperous it will be. Locil news\nitems are especially hard to rnn down.\nHow many times, dear reader have\nyou been approached by the newspaper man for an item and told him\nyou knew nothing of interest. Probably at that time your wife was away\non a visit or someone from out of town\nwas visiting at your borne. Of course\nyou didn't mean to deceive the scribe,\ny-*t when you received your paper\nyou wondered why your wife or\nfriends were not mentioned. A good\nway to avoid this is to inform ua\nof the fact or drop a note in the Post\nOffice to the paper. One item may not\namount to much, but several columns of\nsuch news is the life of a local paper.\nThere are such men as think themselves religious, but behold no man\nknoweth how religious he really iB until he goeth forth alone to ensnare the\nfinny tribes, and the mosquito getteth\nbusy with much fierceness.\nThe only full line of gent's furnieh-\nings and miner's supplies in town at\nMacdonald's.\nDoily Service On\nSlocan Lake.\nCHANGE TAKES EFFECT AT\nONCE, BUT SANDON GETS\nCOLD SHOULDER.\nC.P.R. Has Promised to Give\nLake Towns \"Just What\nWas Asked For.\"\nRob* to the Occasion.\n\"I'd like to show you ray new elastic\ncement,\" said the soft voiced man in\nthe shiny black suit. \"I make It myself, and I'll warrant it to mend anything that ever\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"I don't need any,\" interrupted the\nman nt the desk, \"but if you will tell\nme the biggest lie nbout your cement\nI ever heard I'll buy a bottle of It\nmerely to encourage jou.\"\n\"I wouldu't lie to sell a thousand\nbarrels of it,\" protestod the other.\n\"But I'll tell you of one thing I really\ndid witb It. You have heard, I presume, of the frog that tried to swell\nitself up to the size of an ox. The skin\nof that frog, aa you remember, was uot\nequal to the strain, and It burst all to\npieces. Sir, I happened to be on tht\nBoot, and I gathered up the fragments\nof that frog, patched them carefully\ntogether with my cement and made\nthe creature as good as new\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbetter,\nln fact, for it is a wiser frog. To\nprove to you that I am telling the absolute and exact truth I will show you\nthe frog, which I have here in mjr\nvalise\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"You needn't show it to me,\" snld\nthe man at the desk gloomily. \"I'll\ntake a bottle of your cement. Here's\nyour money. Never mind the obanga.\nGood day.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDChicago Tribune.\nSq-aelehlnsT m Bore.\nOne of the famous Rothschilds was\nonce entertaining at dinner a distinguished party. The dinner went on\nadmirably. Nothing marred the general enjoyment save the silly loquacity\nof one young man. This young man\ninsisted on monopolizing the conversation. He insisted on talking about himself\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDabout his books, his works, his\nlove affairs, his automobile. Finally\nhe Jumped to bis feet.\n\"By Jove!\" be said. \"I must show\nyou my new cuff buttons. I got thera\nthis morning. They are malachite.\"\nAnd he passed from one guest to another, exhibiting tbe buttons. \"Malachite,\" he kept repeating\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"genuine\nmalachite.\"\nBaron Rothschild watched the young\nman's progress with a faint sneer.\nWhen the buttons reached him he\ntouched them with his finger superciliously and drawled: \"Ah, malachite, eh?\nIt is a handsome stone. I have always\nliked it. I have a mantelpiece of it in\nthe next room.\"\nHommirn on Lanfr\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.\nThe German historian, Professor\nTheodor Mommscn, was noted for the\nfacility with which he acquired languages. The tongues of modern Europe as well as the classics were to\nhlm not studies, but tbe familiar tools\nof bis dally work. An American reporter who was interviewing hlin some\nyears ago asked to have a certain reference put Into Knglish, as he did not\nread German well.\n\"Not read German well? And you n\nJournalist?\" exclaimed the savant. \"I\ndo not see how it is possible. Young\nman, German ls one of the four necessities for a student. The other three\nare English, French and Italian. Without them you can never know the tendency of modern thought. If you have\nthem not, do not rest until you have\nlearned tbem all.\"\nTraining; a Hone,\nThe borse is a logical and therefore\na teachable animal. Once convince bim\ntbat a locomotive or any other object\nof terror ls not really dangerous and\nbe will never shy at it again. Every\nyear accidents occur because the harness breaks or tbe vehicle upsets, and\nthen tho horse runs away. But such\naccidents are unnecessary. Any horse\ncan, with a little pains, be taught to\nhold back a carriage by bis hind quarters ns well ns by tbe breeching. To\nhave wheels come off and straps and\nother things hitting his legs should be\no part of every colt's education.\nWhen the Review joined the people\nof the Slocan in the fight for better\nterms from the C.P.R., it did so with\nits eyes open and fully cognizant with\nevents which led to the reduction of tbo\npassenger service to a tri-wcekly one,\nand we do not 'propose at this stage of\ntbe fight to throw up the sponge and\ncry quantum Buflicit because the railway company has granted tbe prayer of\nresidents of the four lakeside towns and\nreverted to a daily service. Sandon demands a daily mail servi.-e and it will\ncontinue to emphatically voice its demands, yea, even unto the Railway\nCommission. When Mr. Coleman visited the Slocan prompted by a spirit of\nenquiry, be unburdened himself in a\ncommunication to the Sandon Citizen's\nCommittee as follows: \" Will watch\nbusiness closely, and first indications of\nrevival will put on additional trains.\"\nTbat revival no one will deny has begun.\nDuring the past month we have kept\nclose tab on the trains, and we feel confident the increased business will cause\nthe Divisional Superintendent to redeem\nIiia pledge.\nFrom the Nelson Daily News of the\n19tb inst.. we cull the published interview with Mr. D. C. Coleman:\n\" The result of the agitation started\nby the people of Slocan lake and of\nSandon, which was backed by tbe Nelson board of trade was announced yesterday by Superintendent Coleman of\ntbe Canadian Pacific. He said: \" After\na careful conference with Mr. Wliyte\nand Mr. Busteed and a careful examination of the whole of the circumstances\nwe have determined to give the Slocan\nlnko pooplo just that which they asked\nfor, which was a daily service. That\nservice will start from Slocan City. Ou\ntbe three days in the week when the\ntri-week!y service between Rosebery\nand Nakusp is conducted, Monday,\nWednesday and Friday, the steamer\nwill leave Slocan City in the morning\nand will take up passengers to Rosebery\nto cinnect with the line to Nakusp.\nThere they will be able to make connections with the Arrow Lake boat and\ngo through to tbe coast Calls nill be\nmade going up to Silverton and New-\nDenver. The steamer will then turn\nround and go back down the lake, calling at both places on its way. In the\nafternoon, after the arrival of the train\nfrom Nelson, another trip will be made\nup and down the lake, calling at Silverton and New Denver. On the trip\ndown the lake passengers coining in\nfrom Nakusp and the coast will be\nbrought toany po!nt on the lake. Thus\non tiiese three days there will boa\ndouble service as before the alteration.\nOn the other three days of the week\nwhen the boat -:0'8up in the morning\nshe will not call at the way points. On\nher return down she will do so. Aleo\non the afttmoon trip, after thc arrival\nof the Nelson train, sbe will call at all\nway points but will not do bo on her return from Rosebery on the second trip\nof the day. This is arranged in this\nmanner for the purpose of allowing the\nsteamer to handle more expeditiously\nthe freight which has largely increased\nof late. No, this docs not mean that\nwe are going to put in the winter schedule. Privately I am of the opinion\nthat the winter schedule is the one that\nwill, in tbe long run, come to be permanently employed, judging from the\nconditions of tbe country, but just now,\nat all events, we will handle the passenger traffic Irom Nelson and points\neast, ns well as from Rot* .land and the\nBoundary by way of Robson and the\nArrow Lakes.\n\"As far as the service between Rosebery and Nakusp is concerned, it will\neinain tri-weekly, although freight will\ngo irregularly every day. A passenger\nmay take chances if he care! to and\navail himself of that. As far as Sandon\nis concerned there has been no alteration except in so far as the daily service\non tbe lake has made the diSerence desired.\"\nCommenting on tlie above the News\ngoes on to say;\nIt is understood that the change will\npartly meet the desires of the Sandon\npeople, but the chief alteration desired\nby Sandon waa the laying over of the\ntrain from Nakusp at Three Forks, just\nbelow Sandon, rather than at Rosebery,\nbut in this our esteemed contemporary\nis at fault. At the present time the\ntrain lays over at Rosebery, Three Forks\nbeing a flag station. We contend that\nthe most economical and advantageous\npoint for a roundhouse ia Sandon. The\ntrain could leave here every morning**\nfor Rosebery, and a daily mail service\nand connection would thus be once\nagain established at no great expense to\nthe company and to the intense satisfaction of the public. For three daya a\nweek tbe train makes two trips a day\nfrom Rosebery to Sandon, but one of\nthese trips\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe first\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDis abortive for tbe\nreasons (hat there arc no connections\nto make at such an early hour, and on\naccount of the train laying over at Rosebery (nearly halfway between Nakusp\nand Sandon) which entails a useless\ntrip to this city, after which a few minutes later it turns round and begins its\nreal and legitimate days' business.\nEven if the company cannot see its way\nclear to running the train through to\nNakusp, it can at no increased expendi -\nture give thiB important point a daily\nconnection with Slocan Lake by establishing a round house here. It follows tbat the freight could be just as\nexpeditiously handled on the three off\ndays passengers were not conveyed beyond Rosebery.\nWe commend this point to tbe consideration of tlie powers that be, as\nwe have every confidence in the executive ability of Mr. Coleman to Btraighten\nout the tangle with credit to himself\nand to the satisfaction of the travelling\npublic generally.\nA COMMUNICATION.\nWe snipped the following from tlie\nCranbrook Herald:\n\" The Sandon Review is happy\nnow that there is a prospect of\nbetter terms in the Slocan on the\npart of the C.P.R. The Review\nhas done great work to bring this\nabout and is entitled to a lot of thc\ncredit.\"\nOur excellent contemporary has a very\nobservant attitude, and it but. echoes\nthe sentiment of manv admirers who\nhave penned us cheery words of congratulations on Slocan's victory and for\nthe strong stand we took in the fight.\nWhen we issued the fiist number of our\nnow established weeekly excitement our\noutlined policy was to stand as the\nspokesman|for)lhe people of tbe district,\nand in all matters appertaining to the\ncommon good to fight the good fight.\nDuring our eleven months existence we\nhave had no cause to complain of the\npaucity of \"scrap0,\" in which by a\ncombination of circumstances we have\nalways managed to be at tbe winning\nend at the stick, but whether we will\nsecure the \" credit\" which 'Brer Simp-\nsou maintains we are entitled to, the\nclosing month will decide. There are\nthose whose standing a Is. in this paper\nhave been to us our existence. There\nare such, however, we regret to say,\nwhom a goose couldn't graze after, but\nwhen they realize that we are mere -nary\nenoUi.li to expect a quid pro quo for\nservices rendered to the community as\na whole they may jar loose. Wc wish\nto remark that the paper id not on n\npaying basis, and were it not for our\nrustling job orders and compe'ing with\ncheap John outfits the Review would\nhave been relegated to Gehenna or the\nliterary bone yard some months ago.\nNow, its up to you, Mr. Merchant and\nMessieurs Subscribers to commune with\nyourselves before this paper icaches its\n52nd number. Yon can have every\nconfidence iu our doing the right thing,\nand wc conclude by quoting from the\nSalutation in No. 1, Vol 1.: \" We will\ndo our part; will you dnyuU'S? \"\nCITY OF SANDON COURT OF\nREVISION.\n[It must always be diminclly understood\nthat the E litor is not responsible for\nthe opinions of correspondents, nor\ndoes he always agree with them.]\nDear Mr. Editor.--As a matter of\npublic interest, I think the following\nshould be inserted in your paper, and\nin asking you to insert the item I feel\nthat were vou to do so it might meet\nthe eye of officials in high places and do\nsome good.\nOn Wednesday evening last I traveled from Rosebery to Sandon by the\nC.P.R., and a man, whose name I afterwards ascertained wns Brandon, aleo got\non the train. He carried witb him a\ngrip and a hand saw, which he deposited under tbe end seat of the coach out\nof the way. Acting under instructions\nfrom the conductor, a brakeman swooped down on the articles to take tbem\ninto the express car, but the owner\nrightly and strenuously objected to any\nsuch graft being worked, and he took\nthe two articles into the scat with him.\nThe conductor came along and prepared\nto seize the articles, but the owner refused to part with them. This brought\nabout a scene, and the passenger was\nput in a most humiliating position. I\nheard him tell the conductor to either\nput him off the train or else go about\nbis business and quit tantalizing him,\nbut the conductor eviilently thought it\nwas his business to antagonise a respectable member of Ihe traveling public,\nfor to my wuy of thinking nnd the general opinion also of my fellow travelers,\nthe conductor had no right to openly\nattack a passenger against whom it is\nasserted lie bears a petty grudge. Now,\nBir, I am a commercial man, and I have\ntravelled by rail very many thousands\nof miles, but I bave never yet witnessed\nanything to compare with the autocratic\naction of the being who is head push on\nthe Sandon-Nakusp run. My point,\nsir, is this, and oue as a drummer I\nwish emphatically to emphasise, that\nif it is the custom on this run for the\noffii-ials to lake out of the possession of\na passenger any small articles and\nlevy express charges on them, then the\nsooner it is advertised the belter. For\nmy part I should refuse lo allow the\narticles to leave my possession, and in\nconsquence I should dread being put\nin the same humiliating pos'tion as my\nfellow passenger of Wednesday night.\nI am, dear sir, yours truly,\nLouis E Devbrkox.\nSandon, B.C., July 15, 1907.\nLAND ACT-KOOTENAY LAND\nDISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Koo'enay.\nTake noticj that Cornelius Morgan\nGething, of Slocan, B.C.. prospector,\nintends to apply for perm'ssion to purchase the following dc.-crihed land:\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nsouth boundary of tho C.P.Ry., lot 882\nat a point on tlie west bank of Slocan\nRiver where said south boundary cresses\nsaid river, thence west 40 chains, thenoe\nsouth 40 chains, tlience east 40 chains,\nmore or less, to the west bank of the\nSlocan River, Ihence following tbe\nmeandering!* of said river in a northerly\ndirection, 40 chains more or less to\npointof commencement, and containing\n160 acres, more or less.\nDated July 1st, 1907.\nCORNELIUS MORGAN GETHING.\nTake notico that WiDiam .Ernest\nMarshall, of Rosobery, B.C., agent C.P.\nRy,. intends to apply for a special license over the follow ing described land:\nCommencing nt a post on the southwest shore of Slocan Lake one half mile\nnorth-west of Sawmill creek about .two\ntiiiteu fmm Rosebery and bearing the\ninitials XV. E. M.'s N. E. corner, thence\nsouth 80 chains, tnence west 80 chains,\nthence nortli 80 chaiiiB, thenco cast 80\nchains to point of commencement, and\n610 acres more or less.\nJune 21st 1907.\nWILLIAM ERNES f MARSHALL.\nNOTICE is 'hereby given that the\nAnnual Silting of the Court of Revision\nfor the purpose of he.iring all coiu-\np'aints neain.t Ihe Assessment for thc\nyear 1907, as made by lhe Assessor of\nthe City of Sandon, B.C, will beheld\nin the Council Chamber, City Hull,\nSandon, R.C., on Tuesday, tho 27th\nday of August, 1907, nt. 7 o'clock, p.m,\nC. E. LYONS, City Clerk.\nSandon, B.C, Ju'yJS, 1H07.\nTake notico that I, P. J. Gallagher,\nof Rosebery, B.C., lumberman, intend\nto apply for a special limber license\nover the following desuihed lands:\nCommencing at a p >st planted about 3'B'\nmiles soulb of Summit lake, marked\nP.J.G. S.W.C, thence nortli 80 chains\nthenceeast 80 chain, thence south 80\ncliains, tlience west 80 chains to point\nof commencement, containing 640\nacres more or less.\nDated July 5ih, 1907\nP. J. GALLAGHER.\nTake notice that I, P. J. Gallagher,\nof Rosebery, B.C., lumberman, inioiid\nto app'y for a special timber license\nover the fill.wing d( scribed tract of\nland. Commencing at a posi planted at\ntha S.W.C, maiked P.J.G. S.W.C,\nthenco norlh 40-chain s, thence east 160\nchains, thence south 40 cliiiint thencu\nwest 100 clmins to point i.f commencement, Containing 640 acres more or\nless. Post is planted nl> ml 2uiiles from\nwest shore of Slo. an lako nearly opposite Silverton.\nDated July 5ih, 1P07.\nP. J. GALLAGHER. ' 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\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..'\n___\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD__>*\nWvxfl\\n'A&tiil\nGraustark\n?&s\nAnlhsK of ~<_ru__ __-_.**\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-r.*\"-'jjt*_\nh**?**.*?'. J\n(Continued From Last Week.*\nI\nCHAPTER XVIII.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJEVERLY was speechless.\n\"Of course, your hlghuess,\"'\nsaid Baldos, deep apology In\nb's voice, \"Ravone is woefully\nmisinformed. He Is honest in his belief, and you should not misjudge his\nmotives. How he could have been so\nblind as to confound you with that\nfrisky American girl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbut I beg your\npardon. She Is to be your guest. A\nthousand pardons, your hlghuess.\"\nSbe bad beeu struck dumb by tbe\nwording of tbe note, but bis apparently\nsincere apology for his friend Bet her\nevery emotion Into play once more.\nWhile he was speaking her wits were\nforming themselves for conflict. She\nopened the campaign wltb a bold attack. \"You\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDyou believe me to be tbe\nprincess, sure enough, don't you?\"\nBut with all ber bravery sbe was not\nable to look bim in the face.\n\"How can you doubt It, your highness? Would I be serving you lu tfie\npresent capacity if I believed you to be\nany one else?\"\n\"Ravone's warning has not shaken\nyour faith ln me?\"\n\"It bas strengthened It. Nothing\ncould alter the facts in the case. I\nbave not, since we left Ganlook, been\nln doubt as to the identity of my benefactress.\"\n\"It seems to me that you are beating around tbe bush. I'll come straight\nto the point. How long have you\nknown that I am not the Princess of\nGraustark?\"\n\"What!\" he exclaimed, drawing back\nin well assumed horror. \"Do you mean\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDare you Jesting? I beg of you, do\nnot Jest. It ls very serious with me.\"\nHis alarm was so genuine that she was\ncompletely deceived.\n\"I am not Jesting,\" she half whispered, turning very cold. \"Have you\nthought all along that I am the princess; that I am Grenfall Lorry's wife?\"\n\"You told ine-fciat you were the princess.\"\n\"But I've never said that I was\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwu\nany one's wife.\"\nThere was a piteous appeal ln her\nvoice, and be was not slow to notice it\nend rejoice. Then his heart smote bim.\n\"But what is to become of me if yon\nare not the princess?\" he asked after\na long pause. \"I can no longer serve\nyou. This is my last day ln the castle\nguard.\"\n\"You are to go on serving me\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI mean\nyou are to retain your place ln the service,\" sbe hastened to say. \"I sball\nkeep my promise to you.\" How small\nand humble she was beginning to feel I\nIt did not seem so entertaining after\nall, this pretty deception of hers. Down\nin his heart, underneath the gallant ex.\nterlor, what was his opinion of her?\nSomething was stinging her eyes fiercely, and she closed them to keep back\nthe tears of mortification.\n\"Miss Calhoun,\" he snld, his atiine*\nchanging swiftly, \"I have felt from tbe\nfirst that you are not the Princess of\nGraustark. I kuew It an hour after I\nentered EdelweiBB Fran* save _n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ni at Ganlook, but I did not read It\nuntil I was a member of the guard.\"\n\"You bave known it so long?\" she\ncried Joyously. \"And you have trusted\nme? You have not bated me for de\nceivmg you?\"\n\"I have never ceased to regard you\n1.1 my sovereign,\" he said softly.\n\"But Just a moment ago you spoke of\nme as a frlaky American girl,\" she said\nresentfully.\n\"I bave used that term but once,\nwhile I have said 'your highness' a\nthousand times. Knowing that you\nwere Miss Calhoun, I could not bave\nmeant either.\"\n\"I fancy I have no right to criticise\nyou,\" she humbly admitted. \"After all,\nit does not surprise me that you were\nnot deceived. Only an imbecile could\nbave been fooled all these weeks. Every one said that you were no fool. It\nseems ridiculous that it should have\ngone to this length, doesn't it?\"\n\"Not at all, your hlgbness. I am\nnot\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"You bave the habit, I see,\" sbe\nsmiled.\n\"I have several months yet to serve\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa a member of the guard. Besides, I\nam under orders to regard you as the\nprincess. General Marlanx bas given\nme severe instructions ln that respect.\"\n\"You are willing to play the game to\ntfie end?\" she demanded, more gratl\nfled tban she should bave been.\n\"Assuredly, yes. It ls tbe only safe\nguard I have. To alter my belief pub\nllely would expose me to\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDto\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"To what, Baldos?\"\n\"To ridicule, for one thing, and to thi\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDgenerous mercies of Count Marlanx\nBesides, it Would deprive mc of tin\nprivilege I mentioned a moment ago\nthe right to kiss your hand, to be youi\nslave and to do homage to the oul.\nsovereign I can recognize. Surely, yoi\nwill not subject me to exile from the\nonly joys tbat life holds for me. Yoi.\nhave sought to deceive me, and I bavt\ntried to deceive you. Each has found\ntbe other out, so-we are quits. May wt\nHot now combine forces ln tbe verj\nlaudable effort to deceive the world'.\nIf tbe world doesn't know tbat \v.\nknow, why, the comedy may be Ion*;\ndrawn out and tbe climax be made tin\nmore amusing.\"\n\"I'm afraid there was a touch of\nyour old time sarcasm ln that remark,''\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDba said. \"Yes, I am willing to con\ntlnue the comedy. It seems the safcsl\nway to protect you\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDespecially from\nGeneral Marlanx. No one must evei\nknow, Baldos; It would be absolutely\npitiful. I am glad, ob, so glad, thai\nyou have known all the tlma. It re\nlleves my mind and my conscience tremendously.\"\n\"Yes,\" he said gently. \"I have known\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDII along that you were not Mr. Lorry's\nwife.\" He had divined her thought.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd she flushed hotly. \"You are still o\nprincess, however. A poor gpf\"! _iu*_' t\ncan only look upon* the rich' Am erica i*\nCtrl as \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD sovereign whom be must wor\nship from far below.\"\n\"Ob, I'm not so rich as all that!\" sin\ncried. \"Besides, I think it is time fo:\na general clearing up of mysteries\nAre you Prince Dantan, Prince Fred\neric or tbat other one\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDChrlstobal some\nbody? Come, be fair wltb me.\"\n\"It seems tbat all Edelweiss look*\nupon ma as a prince ln disguise. You\nfound me in tbe hills\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"No; you found me. I bave not forgotten, sir.\"\n\"I was \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD vagabond and \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD fugitive.\nMy friends are hunted as I am. We\nhave no borne. Why every one should\nsuspect me of being a prince I cannot\nunderstand. Every roamer ln tbe bills\nis not a prince. Tbere ls a price upon\nmy bead, and there is a reward for the\ncapture of every man wbo was wltb\nme ln tbe pass. My name Is Paul Baldos, Miss Calhoun. There ls no mystery in tbat. If you were to mention\nit in a certain city, you would quickly\nfind tbat tbe name of Baldos is not\nunknown to the people who are searching for bim. No, your highness; I rr\ngret exceedingly that I must destroy\nthe absurd Impression tbat I am of\nroyal blood. Perhaps I am spoiling a\npretty romance, but it cannot be help\ned. I was Baldos tbe goat hunter; 1\nam now Baldos tbe guard. Do you\nthink that I would be serving as a\nGraustark fuard if I were any one it\ntbe men you mention?\"\nBeverly listened ln wonder and some\ndisappointment, It must be confessed.\nSomehow a spark of hope was being\nforever extinguished by this straightforward denial. He was not to be the\nprince she bad seen ln dreams. \"Yo-i\nare not like any one else,\" she said\n\"Tbat is wby we thought of you as-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDs\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDas\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"As one of those unhappy creatures\nthey call princes? Thank fortune, your\nhighness, I am not yet reduced to such\nstraits. My exile will come only when\nyou send me away.\"\nTbey were silent for \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD long; time\nNeither was thinking of tbe hour or\ntbe fact that ber absence ln tbe castle\ncould not be unnoticed. Night bad\nfallen heavily upon tbe earth. Tbe\ntwo faithful cbalr bearers, respectful,\nbut wltb wonder in their souls, stood\nafar off and waited. Baldos and Beverly were alone ln their own little\nw.rld.\n\"I think I liked you better when you\nwore tbe red feather and that horrid\npatch of black,\" sbe said musingly.\n\"And was a free hearted vagabond,\"\nhe added, something imploring ln bla\nvoice.\n\"An Independent courtier, if you\nplease, sir,\" sbe said severely.\n\"Do you want me to go back to the\nhills? I have tbe patch and tbe feather,\nand my friends are\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"No! Don't suggest such a thing-\nyet.\" She began tbe protest eagerly\nand ended it In confusion,\n\"Alas, you mean that some day banishment ls not unlikely?\"\n\"You don't expect to be \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD guard all\nyour life, do you?\"\n\"Not to serve tbe Princess of Graustark, I confess. My aim Is much higher. If God lets me chooao \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 *jiowu i\nwould serve I would enlist for life. The\ncrown i would serve ls wrought of\nlove, tbe throne I would kneel before is\na heart, tbe scepter I would follow ls\nin the slender band of a woman. I\ncould live and die in the service of my\nown choosing, but I am only tbe humble goat hunter, whoBe hopes are phantoms, whose Ideals are conceived ln Impotence.\"\n\"Tbat was beautiful,\" murmured\nBeverly, looking up, fascinated for the\nmoment.\n\"Oh, tbat I had the courage to enlist,\"\nbe cried, bending low once more. Sbe\nfelt tbe danger ln bis voice, half tremulous wltb something more tban loyalty,\nand drew ber band away from a place\nof Instant Jeopardy. It was fire that\nshe was playing with, she realized wltb\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD start of consciousness. Sweet as the\nspell had grown to be she saw that It\nmust be shattered.\n\"It ls getting frightfully late,\" sbe\nsharply exclaimed. \"They'll wonder\nwhere I've gone to. Why, it's actually\ndark!\"\n\"It bas been dark for balf an bour,\nyour highness,\" said he, drawing himself up with sudden rlglduess tbat distressed her. \"Are you going to returu\nto tbe castle?\"\n\"Yes. They'll bave out a searching\nparty pretty soon If I don't appear.\"\n\"You have been good to me today,\"\nhe said thoughtfully. \"I shall try to\nmerit the kindness. Let me\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"Oh, please don't talk In tbat bumbk*\nway! It's ridiculous! I'd rather hare\nyou absolutely Impertinent, I declare\nupon my honor I would. Don't you remember bow you talked when you\nwore the red feather 7 Well, I liked\nIt.\"\nBaldos laughed easily, happily. His\nheart was not very bumble, though bis\nvoice and manner were.\n\"Red ls the color of Insolence, you\nmean.\"\n\"It's a good deal Jauntier than blue,\"\nshe declared.\n\"Before you call tbe bearers, Mlss-\nyour highness, I wish to retract some\nthing I said awhile ago,\" he said very\nseriously.\n\"I should think you would,\" sbe responded, utterly misinterpreting bis Intent.\n\"You asked me to tell you wbat my\nmessage to Ravone contained and I\nrefused. Subsequently tbe extent of\nbis message to me led us Into a most\nthorough understanding. It ls only\nJust and right that you should know\nwbat I said to him.\"\n\"I trust you, Baldos,\" she protested\nSimply.\n\"That Is why I tell this to you. Yes\nterday, your hlgbness, tbe <*astl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD guard\nreceived tbelr month's pay. You may\nnot know how well we are paid, bo 1\nwill say tbat.lt Is 10 gawps.to each.\nune envelope which 1 gave to Kavone\ncontained my wages for the past six\nweeks. They need It far more tban I\ndo. Tbere was also a short note of\ngood cbeer to those poor comrades of\nmine and tbe assurance tbat one day\nour luck may change and starvation\nbe succeeded by plenty. And, still\nmore, I told bim that I knew you to be\nMiss Calhoun and tbat you were my\nangel of Inspiration. That was all,\nyour highness.\"\n\"Thank you, Baldos, for telling me,\"\nshe Bald softly. \"You have made me\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDshamed of myself.\"\n\"On the contrary, I fear that I have\nbeen Indulging ln mock heroics. Truth\nand egotism, like a salad, require a\ncertain amount of dressing.\"\n\"Since you are Baldos and not a\nfairy prince I think you may Instruct\ntbe men to carry me back, being without the magic tapestry which could\ntransplant me ln a whiff. Goodness,\nwho's tbat?\"\nWithin ten feet of the sedan chair\nand directly behind the tall guard stood\na small group of people. He and Beverly, engrossed ln each other, bad not\nheard tbelr approach. How long tbey\nbad been silent spectators of tbe little\nscene only tbe Intruders knew. Tbe\nstartled, abashed eyes of the girl In\nthe chair were not long In distinguishing the newcomers. A pace In front\nof tbe others stood the gaunt, shadowy\nform of Count Marlanx,\nBehind him were tbe Princess Yetive, tbe old prime minister and Baron\nDuno-loss.\n,To Be Continund.)\nKIDNEY TROUBLE.\nSuffered Two Years\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRelieve,-j In\nTJiree Months\nEFFECTS OF OPIUM.\nThe Drug Will Stupefy Some People\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd Excite Others.\nComparatively few persons know\nwhat opium really 1b. When they turn\nto a dictionary and glean therefrom\nthat it ls tbe \"inspissated Juice of tbe\nsomniferous poppy\" tbey are still like\nly to be ln the dark.\nThe process of obtaining it ls to\nscore tbe pods at fixed intervals during\na certain period. The milky liquid\nwhich comes out soon turns a darker\nhue and thickens and is then scraped\noff and molded into cakes, witb poppy\nleaves for an outside covering.\nIt was ascertained from evidence nf\nforded to the Indian opium commission\nof 1890 that ln some states of India\nnot a few of tbe natives took as much\nas forty to eighty grains of opium\ndally and tbat consumption of forty\ngrains was common.\nContrary to tbe impression that death\nresults from a sudden cessation of the\nhabit, it bas been proved tbat when\nconfirmed opium eaters bave been im\nprisoned for awhile and thereby deprived temporarily of their favorite\ndrug tbelr bealtb has not usually suffered.\nThe article bas a varying effect on\ndifferent races and constitutions, exciting some and stupefying others, it\nreduces tbe average Chinaman to u\nstate of torpor if he takes it plentiful\nly and not infrequently causes tbe Malay to run amuck. It bas been record\ned tbat tbe Javanese regularly took it\nbefore going to fight so as to work\nthemselves up to a pitch of excitement.\nMost of tbe drug that is imported\niuto England is mncb stronger than\nwbat ls ordinarily consumed ln India\nand imported into China. The stipulation of tbe British pharmacopoeia is\nthat all opium used medicinally sball\nyield at least!)._ per cent*of anhydrous\nmorphine.\nThe morphia percentage in much of\nthe opium prepared in India for con\nsumption tbere and exportation to China is less tban balf this specific\nstrength. This is a detail which novelists who are addicted to poisoning their\ncharacters should note.\nIt ls rather striking that opium does\nnot seem to be largely resorted to in\n.rutin oa o. moans of uu'cuie. The evi\ndence of tbe largest insurance company was to tbe effect tbat after twenty years' experience there the company\nhad decided that it was not necessary\nto impose any extra premium on Unlives of moderate opium users.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCham\nbers' Journal.\nThe Servant Problem.\nA Washington man was telling some\none of tbe trials of his wife, an excel\nlent housekeeper, with reference to the\nservant problem. Just about tbe tinu\nthe mistress would get a new girl bro\nken to the ways of tbe household and\nshe would bid fair to become a model\nservant she wonld decamp or enter tbe\nservice of a neighbor.\nOne of these, a Mrs. B., had incurred\nthe especial enmity of tbe first woman\nfor she had lately taken two servants\nfrom Mrs. Brown. One night in tbe\nwinter Brown was aroused from bis\nslumbers by queer sounds ln the\nkitchen.\n\"Burglars!\" he hoarsely whispered lu\ntbe ear of his spouse as be prepared\nto tumble out of bed and proceed\ndownstairs.\n\"Edward,\" calmly observed the wife,\n\"I'd glue anytbtng to possess your optimistic nature. Always looking on tbe\nbright side. I'll wager anything It's\ntbat odious B. woman trying to get\nMary away from me.\" \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNew J\"ork\nTimes. _______________________\nKnew What He Wanted.\nSmart Boy\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot any soap that will\ntake off trademarks?\nGrocer\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTake off trademarks?\nSmart Boy\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThat's wbat I said. Dad's\na shoemaker, and he wants to wash\nbis hands. See?\nMiss, Mrs. and Mistreee.\n\"Miss\" is an abbreviation of \"nils\ntress,\" which, as an English law die\nttonary explains, Is the proper style of\ntbe wife of an esquire or a gentleman\nBy Dr. Johnson's time it bad become\n\"the term of honor to a young girl.'\nIn the earliest part of tbe eighteent!\ncentury, however, it was used respect\nfully of girls below the age of ten\nalone. After that age \"miss\" was\nrude, implying giddiness of behavior.\nIn Smollett's writings an unmarried\nwoman of mature years and her maid\nare both \"Mrs.\" It is certain tbat\n\"miss\" bas grown older, so to speak,\nwhile \"master\" has become confined t\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nboys. ____________________________\nThe Planet Mars.\nFlammarlon, the famous astronomer,\nsays ot the planet Mars: \"The climate\nls very mild. There are no gales, while\nthe atmosphere Is very light, wltb\nscarcely any clouds. The inhabitants\nenjoy fine weather, the climate being\nsomething like that of Davos Platz, In\nSwitzerland\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDdry and clear. We know\nthe globe of MarB perfectly\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDln fact,\nfar better than the earth.\"\nMr. C. B. Fizer, Mt. Sterling, Ky.,\nwrites:\n\"I have suffered with kidney and\nbladder trouble for ten years past.\n\"Last March I commenced using\nPeruna and continued for thro.-\nmonths. I hnve not used it since,\nnor have I felt a pain.\n\"I believe that 1 am well nnd 1\ntherefore five my highest commendation* to the dilutive qualities of\nPeruna.\"\nPe-ru-n? for Kidney Trouble\nMrs. Geo. H. Sitllfler, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes:\n\"I bud not been well for nboul\nfour years, I had kidney trouble,\nand, in fact, felt badly nearly all\nthe time.\n\"This summer I got so very bad I\nthought I would try Peruna, so I\nwrote to you and began at once to\ntake Peruna and Miiiiiilin.\n\"I took only two bottles of Peruna\nand one of Manolin, and now I feel\nbetter tlinii 1 hnve for some time.\n\"I feel that Peruna and Manalir\ncured nie and made a different wo\nmini of nie altogether, 1 bless the\nIt is the business of the kidneys\nday I picked up the little book und\nread of your Peruna.\"\no remove from the blood all poison-\niu3 materials. Tbey must be active\nill the time, else the system suffers.\nThere nre times when they need a\nittle assistance.\nPeruna is exactly this sort of n\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDemedy* It bus saved many people\nfrom disaster by rendering the kidneys service at a time when tbey\nwere not uble to bear their own bur*\n.lens.\nBarrel Racing on lee.\nAn exciting form of winter sport In\nwhich Canadian boyu excel ls barrel\nracing on the Ice. Ordinary barrels\nwith tlieir heads removed, are placed\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit regular Intervals nlong the race\ncourse for nbout a quarter of n mile.\nThen nt a given sIruii! nil the boys\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiknte for (ho first barrel. Many reach\nIt together, nnd ns ench skater must\ncrawl through nil the barrels In or\nlor to win It Is to be Imagined thnt\nthere Is quite a scramble for first turn.\n.Sometimes n barrel wheels complete!.\nnround while the boy Is working his\nway through It. nnd when he come,\nmt he 19 so confused that he skate*\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDilT In the wrong direction. Usual!.!\n'ho Inurrh of the spectators makes lilm\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDenllze his blunder, nnd he quickly\nturns nbout nnd tries to ninke up for\nlost time. It Is quite nn exciting sport\nnnd an Interesting ono also for tlie\n'poctntor. ns (lie boys and barrels bol*\nnbo'.il In (he most amusing fashion.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nChums,\nGetting Her Legal Rights.\nAn old colored womnn, nrrnyed In \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nrnstv black dress nnd a gorgeous p-i.r-\npie picture lint over which wns n black\ncrape veil, appeared nt the courthouse\nof a Carolina town.\n\"Am yo' de Jodge ob reprobates,\nsnh?\" she asked; cautiously opening n\ncrack of the office door.\n\"Yes, I nm (he judge of probate,\naunty. What enn 1 do for yotl?\" was\nthe smiling reply.\n\"Yassah! T'anky, snh! I's henh\n'cause mnh oie man died detested an'\nlef fo' 111' Infidels, an Ah wanter be\n'pinted ter be dere executioner, ef yo'\nplease, sah.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSuccess Magazine.\nHinged Houses.\nAn American visiting Dublin told\nsomo startling stories of tbe height of\nNew York skyscrapers.\n\"Ye haven't seen our nev-*st hotel,\nhave ye?\" asked an Irishman.\n\"No,\" replied the Yankee.\n\"Well,\" said the Irishman, \"it's so\ntall tbat we have to put tbe two top\nstories on hinges.\"\n\"What for?\" asked the American.\n\"So we can let 'em down while the\nmoon goes by!\" said Pat\nFlowerpots.\nAll new flowerpots, require to te\nsoaked In water and allowed to dry\nthoroughly before being used. Tbe soil\ndoes not bang well to tbe sides of garden pots unless so treated. Dirty pots\nare open to tbe same objection. Let\nany one try to put a plant with fresh\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDoil Into a pot which has been used\nbefore and left unwashed, and he will\nfind in a few days, when the soli begins to dry, tbat It leaves a space and\ndoes not adhere as It should to tbe\nsides of It No plant can possibly\nflourish under such circumstances. The\nroots of a plant draw to the sides of n\npot naturally ln search of moisture,\nand growth of course Is checked If n\ncurrent of air ls allowed to pass between them and the sides. Some plants\nexhibit this tendency In sucb a remarkable degree that few roots are to be\nseeu, except a network on the outside\nof the soil next ihb pot\nDODD'S '\n^KIDNEY\n!/,.P.LL.#\nPULL SNAKE'S TEETH.\nEighteen Men Sit on Python While\nOperation Is Performed.\nFeast day for Salome, the longest\naython in the Zoological Park, proved\nto he the busiest day the attendants\nlave had for many months and tlie\niveliest occasion in her career. After\n'-11 arrangements had been made to\n.'eed a brace of rabbits to the twenty-\nlour foot serpent the discovery was\nnade that fourteen of the snake's\nteeth were decayed, and the intended\nleast became a tooth pulling.\nSalome eats only once in a while.\nHer last feast was on New Year's\nDay, when the attendants forced five\n\"abbits down her throat. A peculiar\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDestlessness during the last few days\n*^d the attendants to believe that she\nas feeling the pangs of hunger again\nmd plans were mado to feed her more\nrabbits. Three were dressed and tied\ntogether, Salome was untangled and\nhoisted into a corridor and twelve\nIturdy men were instructed to range\nthemselves along her coils. Dr. Dit-\nmars stood by with a ten foot pole,\nto be used-in placing the rabbits in\nthe proper place, nnd at the proper\nmoment tbe jaws were pried open.\nA Patient Python.\nUp to this point Salome hnd been a\npatient python. She hadn't so much\nrs opened her eyes. But when her\njaws wero forced slie writhed and\nBquirmcd and kept the dozen bodyguards busy. Dr. Ditmars was surprised to find that fourteen of the\nforty teeth in the upper jaw were\ndecayed and the whole mouth badly\nswollen,\nPincers of large size were obtained,\nand while eighteen men sat and stood\non tiie snake, which made desperate\nefforts to switch its massive tail and\nwiggle out of the grasp of the impromptu dentists, Dr. Ditmars drew\nout, tlie affected teeth.\nSalome was left in a rather ugly\nmood, and no effort was made to\nforce upon her the delectable feast\nthat had been prepared. Instead she\nwas carefully rolled up into the conventional coils and was carried back\nto her cage. Dr. Ditmars expects she\nwill recover from the operation and\nwill be an improved python.\nTn two or three weeks she will be\nfed\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDif her condition is normal. If\nthe feast were deferred for several\nmonths it would not worry Salome, the\nattendants said. Eating is the least\nof her worries.\nHAD A NASTY\nBRONCHIAL COUGH\nAs an After Effect of Pneumonia\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNothing\nProved Effective Until we Used\nDr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine\nMany a mother can say, as does\nMrs. Harker in the following letter,\nfiat Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and\nTurpentine has pi oven a friend to her\nin time of colds with the little ones.\nMrs. i.'alier Harker, Sydenham,\nProntenao county, Out., writes:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n^ \"Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and\nj Turpentine has proven a friend to me\nin times of colds with my little ones.\nI have tried many others, hut have\nfound none just as good. My little*\nhoy, about a year old, had pneumonia,\nand was left with a nasty bronchial\nooUgh, but Dr. .haae's Syrup of Lin\nseul and Turpentine is helping him\nwonderfully, and 1 am* sure it will\ncure him.\n\"We have also used Dr. Chase's Kid-\nnev-Llver Pills w.ilh splendid results,\nand have great faith m all of Dr.\nChase's medicines.\"\nIt may not have occurred to you\nthat both bronchitis and asthma are\ndiseases of the nerves of the bronchial\ntubes and lungs, and that this is why\nsevere attacks of coughing are brought\nAn Ancient Office.\nAlmost as ancient as the office of\nLord Chief Justice of the realm iB th-t\nof Master of the Rolls, to which S.r\nHerbert Cozens Hardy has just been\nappointed. The master haa precedence over all the other judges of t' e\nSupreme Court of Judicature, wi.h\nthe exception of the Lord High Chancellor and the Lord Chief Justice, next\nto whom he ranks alike in dignity\nand emolument.\nOne hears of the master of the rolls\nalready at the beginning of the thirteenth century, and there is no doubt\nthat in tbe origin he had charge of\nall the patents, and grants, and writs\nissued under the great seal, and that\nhe often fulfilled the duties of tbe\nLord Chancellor and Keeper of the\nGreat Seal during the letter's absence.\nIn fact, at one time lie used to be\nknown ns the Vice-Chancellor. Formerly he was eligible to a scat in the\nHouse of Commons, but he was deprived of this privilege, enjoyed by\nno other member of tbe judicial\nbench, by an act of Parliament passed in IS73, debarring nil judges of the\nHigh Court of Justice, Court of Appeal, from sitting in the House of\nCommons. He has custody of all the\nnational records, which date bacl for\nmore than 1,000 years\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDsince times\nprior to even the Norman conquest\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nand which, comprising Doomsday\nRook, are preserved in a huge building known as the Rolls house, which\nopens on to Chancery lane through\nan arched gateway.\nIt is precisely on account of his\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDkeepership of the state records that\nthe Master of the Rolls is more frequently consulted by the monarch\nthan any other law officer of the crown\non points concerning his prerogatives\nand duties as sovereign. He receives\na salary of $30,000 a year, which is\n$5,000 more than the lord justices, or\nthe judges of the High Court of Justice, and is usually created a peer\nof the realm on his retirement or promotion, which latter fate has overtaken that genial Irishman, Sir Richard Henn Collins, who now becomes\nLord Collins, and who will be remembered in this country as .one of the\narbitrators of the Venezuelan bound,\nary controversy.\nJack Tar's Song-Book.\nDeBpite the time the Lords of the\nAdmiralty devote to schemes for the\ncutting down of Britain's fleet, they\nstill find a space of that fleeting commodity to issue an official song-book\nfor the use of bluejacket vocalists.\nOne recently published contains\nseventy-two songs, which have all\nbeen selected to suit naval requirements. The first is, as one might imagine; the National Anthem, and the\nbook closes with, \"Off to Philadelphia.\"\nOther old favorites contained in the\nvolume are \"The Death of Nelson.\"\n\"Tom Bowling,\" and \"They All Love\nJack.\" Of course, the sister countrie\"\nare all represented with songs, nn 1st bin Am\n*y ^ th\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn do tJho\n.oat It,\nHS7S\nIndeed, the one great leading feature of\nour new Hair Vigor may well be said to\nbe this \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit stops falling hair. Then it\ngoes one step further\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit lids nature in\nrestoring tbe hair and scalp to a healthy\ncondition. Ask for \"the new kind.\"\nI by tho J. C. Avar Co.. Lowall. Xssm\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n^M\nNurses' and\nMothers' Treasure\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDsafest regulator for baby. Prevents\ncolic and vomiting\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDgives healthful rest\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcures diarrhoea without the harmful\neffects of medicines containing opium\nor other injurious drugs. 4a>\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCljreR 25c.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDat drug.store\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWill CO national Drug \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt Chem\nD*J_iThoeak*___j_r1\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA\nInexplicable Fate oi the Ensmiea of\nDreyfus Revision.\n\"Always the dead!\" Relnach cried\nbitterly. \"Whenever we find a forgery, a crime, always It ls set to the\naccount of a dead man!*'\nAnd he drew up a list, horrible ln Its\neloquence, of tbe dead who strewed\nthe dark path of this monstrous case\nof crime and cruelty ami Infamy. Yet\ntbere bad fallen so many of tbe enemies of truth end justice tbat he might\nbave called tbem the expiatory dead.\nThree I have told you of\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthat poor\nwretch, Lemercler-Plcard. \"found dead\"\nin his room ln tbe Rue de Sevres; Henri, \"found dead,\" wltb a closed razor\nnear by; Felix Faure, \"found dead\"\naud smuggled Into his palace.\nThere were many others. Captain\nd'Attel, who claimed to have heard\nDreyfus avow bis guilt to Lebrun-Re-\nnault the day of his degradation, was\n\"found dead\" lu a railway train, bis\ncorpse blue and already on the way to\ndecomposition, though bis Journey hud\nlasted but au hour. This pretended\nconfession, which Dreyfus never made,\nD'Attel eonllded to bis friend, Chaulln-\nServlnlerc, a member of the chamber\nof deputies. Now, the deputy took\ntrain oue day to visit his borne. An\nhour later he was \"found dead\" on the\nrailway tracks between two stations.\nAnd Itocber of the prison guards, wbo\nalso claimed to have beard Dreyfus\nsay, \"1 am guilty, but 1 am uot the\nonly one!\" died, aud to this duy no one\nknows where or how. It was as\nthough eternal truth bud reached down\nand slain this lie wherever It lifted Its\nevil bead.\nTbe prefect Barreme was sujuinoned\nto Paris by his government chief. He\nwas \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\u00BDfound dead\" ln his compartment\nwhen the train arrived at the Gare St.\nUi'/.are. Lauren.euu, prefect of the\nnorth, was called to Paris to give evidence regarding tbe spy system on the\nGerman frontier. There wus uo accident ou the Journey. The next day be\nwus \"found dejid\" iu his room at the\nHotel Terminus.\nLorlmer, one of Henri's most tire\nless agents of forgery und crime, was\n\"found dead,\" hanged in a lonely buru;\nanother, Uuenee, was \"found dead\" on\n(be floor of his room lu PariH. Then\n(here was Mtinier. His part in tin* conspiracy bad been to falsify tbe mean\nlug of a cryptic telegram sent by Pa-\nnlmirdl to the Itulluu government, so\nthat It affirmed the guilt of Dreyfus.\nAnd Muuler wus \"fouud dead\" lu a\nrailway trulu. Was It any Wonder tbe\nmartyr's frleuds began to see m these\nmysterious und opportune deaths the\nwork of an avenging destiny? With\ngrim emphasis Relnach declared. \"De\ncldement la fatalite est Dreyfuanrdel\"\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtlie very stars lu their courses fought\nagainst the lie.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDVance Thompson In\nSuccess Magazine.\niSJfflnqr\nler-\n\f-f This cold-water starch\n*\"*\"ZgetM ironing-day over\nquicker, with less wear on\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:'/the ironer's muscles and far\nless on the starched pieces.\n^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.yGives a beautiful gloss.\n.^. Needn't be boiled, -yet cannot\nK/stick. It's astorchyou'U like.\n^ Try It _o_\ni_\"\nHEAD OF FLYING ROLLERS.\nPOINTED PARAGRAPHS.\nRemember that the money you\nsquander won't work for you.\nWe are always too young to have\nknown lietter If our mothers are thc\nJudges.\nMen do a lot of things Just es fool\nIsh as having their clothes button in\nthe back.\nDreaming of wbat you would do If\nyou had a large Income is probably\nabout tbo slowest way to get one.\nTbe man who fails In his efforts to\ndo something well Is still more of a\nsuccess tban tbe one who never trios.\nA mother worries If her daughters\nare not Invited to parties nnd then sits\nup and worries because tbey are out\nlate when they are invited.\nEver occur to you thnt you ought to\ndress up more and brush your clothes\noftener? Most people as they become\nold neglect their personal appearance\ntoo mucb.-\nJury Friendships.\n\"The eleven men ln the world for\nwhom I entertain a feeling of peculiar\nfriendliness are those with whom I\nserved on a Jury once,\" -snld a broker.\n\"There Isn't any other human tie Just\nlike that existing among Jurors in a\ncriminal case. There we are, twelve\nmen, all perfect strangers to each other, with different tastes, temperaments and habits, picked up and bound\ntogether for days ln the most tryln*.\ncircumstances. The hardships, the\ntragic phases of the sltuatiou, reveal\nus ln a new light. Hltberto unsuspected traits crop out W6 argue, we quarrel, we sympathize, we make up. In a\nmanner tbat would surprise our closest\nfriends. The responsibility thut we\nshark eets up apart from everybody\nelse and establishes a bond of Interest\nand sympathy that Is pretty stire to\nlast,\"\nA Plea For the Indolent.\nMen who fill unaccustomed positions\nexacting severe mental toll are almost\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDure to be short lived. Persons whose\ncallings subject them to n heavy nervous strain ought occasionally to spend\na day or two ln bed. Even an afternoon nap ls a tonic and may do much\nto lessen tbe wear and tear of nervous,\nanxlons days. One of tbe ablest statesmen of modern times, when once reproached in early life for Indolence, retorted, \"I am storing energy.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWilliam Mathews In Success Magazine.\nThe Angel Face.\n\"He said I had a face like on\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD of\nRaphael's angels,\" said the blond, wltb\nUl concealed satisfaction.\n\"Oh, well, the faces of Raphael's angels were all painted, you know,\" replied tbe Jealous little brunette.\nA Lesser Evil.\nMessenger \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Your wife has eloped\nwith your chauffeur. Husband\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThank\nfortune! Now I won't have to break\ntt to her that the cook has left\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHarper's We\"*t|y.\nA Sly Thrust.\nMiss Ann '1 eek\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIleally, some of the\nyoung girls nowadays nre positively\nawful. The Ic.en of n girl bekii: en\ngaged to two young men at the same\ntime! It's Just shameful! Miss Cutting\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBesides, you find It aggravating\nalso, don't you?\nHis Fatal Mistake.\n\"Adam wuz his own boss, wuzn't\nhe?\"\n\"Yes, an' ef he hadn't gone ter sleep\nat de wrong time be'd 'a' been so\nylt\"-Atlanta ConsUtuUon.\nSunday School Convention\nWhat promises to be the largest\nconvention ever held in Manitoba\nwill meet in the First Baptist\nchurch, Winnipeg, July 2, 3 and 4.\nThe attendance at the annual conventions of tbe Manitoba Sunday\nSchool association has greatly increased during the past four yenrs.\nFour years ago it was 225, three\nyears ago 425 and last year 750. It\nis confidently expected that it will\ngo up to 1,200 delegates, outside of\nWinnipeg,\nNo less than three outside speakers ore to be present: Mrs. J. Wood-\nbridge, Newark, N.J.; Rev. W. C.\nMerritt, Tucoma, Wash., both of the\ninternational staff, nud Marshall A.\nHudson, Syracuse, N.Y., author of\nthe Baraca and Philathea classes.\nBesides these, many of the Sunday\nschool experts of the province will\ntake part. The music will be an\nimportant feature of the programme,\nSingle fares on all the railway lines\nwill be given. For full information\nwrite W. H. Irwin, oil Mclntyre\nblock, Winnipeg.\nMinard's Liniment Co., Limited,\nYarmouth, N.S.\nGentlemen\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIn January last Francis\nLeclare, one of the men employed by\nme. working in thc lumber woods, had\na tree fall on him, crushing him fear-\nfullv. He was, when found, placed on\na sled and taken home, where grave\nfears were entertained for his recovery, his hips being bady bruised\nand bis body turned black from his\nribs to his feet. We used MINARD'S\nLINIMENT on him freely to deaden\nie pain, and with the use of three\nbottle:! he was completely oured and\nable f,o return to his work.\nSAUVEUR DUVAL.\ntflerin Road, L'Islet Co., Que.\nChief Officer Davis of the steamer\nManchester Commerce was carried\noverboard in mid-ocean, and was\nrescued niter being one hour in tin*\nw*ater.\nA Carefully Prepared Pill\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMuch\ntime and attention were expended in\nthe experimenting with the ingredients that enter intio the composition\nof Parmelee's Vegetable Pills before\nthev were brought to the state in\nwhich they were, first offered to the\noulilie. Whatever oflier pills may be,\nParmelee's Vegetable Pills are the\nresult of much expert study, and all\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlersons suffering from dyspepsia or\ndisordered liver and kidneys may confidently accept i hem as being what\nthey are represented to be.\nIh a Utile tow.n in Louisiana a\nvoung woman skated for four hours\nin a rink and won a prize. Then her\nheart gave out and the prize is to be\ninventoried among her belongings.\nMinard's Liniment, Lumberman's\nFriend\nIn his \"Queens of Spain\" Major\nHume says that Isabella I authorized the burning of 700 persons in\nSeville alone, and condemned 5,000\nmore to life imprisonment and the\nconfiscation of their property.\nFeUows'Leeming's\nEssence\nBut don't wait until an animal Is\nInjured. GET IT NOW\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDand you\nhave the remedy that CURBS all\nlameness in horses.\nIf your dealer does not handle\nIt, send 60c. to\nNational Drug * Chemical Co., Limited,\nMONTRIM. 13 _\nmmm:\nThe perpetual charm\nof freshness and crispness\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDof daintiness and deli-\nciousness \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD is in every\nbox of\nMooney's\nPerfection\nCream\nSodas\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDheld captive by the\nair-tight, moisture-proof\npackages. There is a\nbest in everything. In\nBiscuits, it's Mooney's.\nIs Madame Dis de Barr, Famous Wo,\nman Convict.\n\"Mother Elinor,\" sometimes known\nas Mrs. E. L. Mason, head of the\nFlying Roller Colony, of Detroit and\nWindsor, Ontario, has been proven\nbeyond all doubt to be none other\nthan the notorious Anne Dis de Barr.\nAlso it has been learned that she was\nknown in England as Editha Loleta\nJackson, where she served time with\na man reputed to be ber husband for\na serious offence.\nThe Editha Loleta Jackson, of Lon*\nj don, was positively identified os the\n\"Mother Elinor,\" of Windsor. F. E.\nSwinden, a member of Mother Elinor's cult, made the identification in\na sworn statement.\nMadame Dis de Barr was liberated\nlast August on ticket-of-leave from\nAylesbury Prison, in England, to\nwhich she had been sent on Dec. 20,\n1901, sentenced to seven years' penal\nservitude for connection with an alleged immoral cult of which her reputed husband, Theodore Jackson, was\nthe head. It was her third imprisonment during a singularly sensational\ncareer. For years she had been known\nas the \"notorious\" Madame Dis de\nBarr.\nHer Trump Card.\nThe trump card of her life was probably played when Mme. de Barr\nwheedled Luther K. Marsh, the New\nYork lawyer, out of a fortune and\nmade him the laughing-stock of bis\nold ago. In the seventies she traveled about America representing herself\nas a medium who could reveal hidden truths. While living in Madison\nSquare she met Mr. Marsh. By means\nof alleged spirit manLestations and\nspook-painted pictures she so infatuated the old man that he gave her\nlarge sums of money and deeded to\nher his house in Madison avenue.\nThere she officiated as a priestess of\nspiritualism, and got fame and more\nriches.\nFinally she was sued for conspiring\nto defraud Marsh. The grand jury indicted her, the Geny Society took\nher children, she was convicted and\nsent to prison. After experiences in\nEurope after her release she turned\nup in Chicago and under the name\nof Vera P. Ava was sent to the Joliet\npenitentiary for two years. Free\nagain, she married William J. Mc-\nGowan, in Chicago, in 1895. He had\nmoney but quiet domesticity didn't\nsuit ber.\nBrotherly Love Colony.\nIn 1899 she was run out of New\nOceans with Theodore Jackson, whose\nwife she claimed tx> be. They were\nspirit materializing again, and were\nalso said to be running a \"fruitarian\"\nsolony in Florida. As \"Helena\" and\n\"Horos\" they performed in South\nAfrica, Mine. Dis de Barr incidentally\nSetting some money from a rich con\ntractor t.o establish a brotherly love\nsolony.\nThey turned up in London, where\ntheir Theocratic Unity scheme turn\ned into n scandal, and wound up with\ntheir arrest.\nMme. de Barr has claimed to be the\nchild of Louis I. of Bavaria and Lola\nMontez, a famous dancing beauty.\nShe really wa*B the daughter of s\nschool teacher in Harrodsburg, Ky.,\nJohn C. F. Salomon. At the age of 14\nsbe was taken by her father to Louisville, and soon became a \"medium\"\nof powers. She waa born in the forties.\nSANITATION IN CANADA.\nFlag For Canada.\nA new design for a Canadian flag\nhas been prepared by Mr. Ernest Gir-\nardot of Sandwich. The design includes a Union Jack in the upper left\ncorner, a beaver and maple leaf below and perpendicular bars to represent the nine provinces of tbe Dominion. The groundwork of the flag\nmay be either white or read.\n\"I think it is time, now that we\nhave just added two new provinces to\nthe great Canadian confederation, to\nadopt a new flag, a national emblem\nthat every Canadian citizen may cherish and revere, one that has no objectionable features for any race or\ncreed, and one on which every province is equally recognized,\" writes\nMr. Girordot.\n''Herewith is a design for a Canadian national flag which, in my humble opinion, embodies all the desirable features which should pertain to\nthe flag or standard of the Dominion\nof Canada.\n\"The Union Jack on the upper left\ncorner represents our fealty to England and (he tie which binds us to\nher. Our emblems, the maple leaf\nand the beaver, dear to all, are preserved. Each perpendicular bar represents one of the nine provinces.\nWhen any other province will be\ncreated another bar may be added to\nthe flag.\n\"I believe I am saying the truth\nwhen I state that there is not one per\ncent, of the Canadian people who\nknow or understand the semi-barbaria\nsymbolisms expressed by the coat-of*\narms which appears on our present\nstandard.\n\"We are asserting ourselves more\nand more every day as a distinct nation. The glowing importance of our\ncommercial relations with foreign\ncountries and the glorious succera we\nhnve achieved through our participation at the Liege and Milan exhibitions, where we have given evidence\nof Canada's greatness and inexhaust.\nible resources, demanded that we\nshould without any further delay\nadopt a national flag, one which does\nnot recall any conflict between any\nof the races which compose the Canadian nation or remind one of any tra*\ndition cherished by one class of people and hated by another \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD a flag\nwhich does not symbolize any particular creed, but oue that is an emblem of peace and prosperity.\"\nIrregulars In Boer War.\nThe number of irregulars engaged\nin the Boer war\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDinfantry, mounted\nand artillery \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD waa about 80,000, of\nwhich 60,000 were supplied by the\nSouth African colonies, the oversea\ndependencies furnishing the remainder, viz.: Australia. 16,415; New Zealand, 6,513; Canada, about 6^500, and\nIndia and Ceylon 600.\nOr. Osier Says There Is Somerni...\nRadically Wrong.\nPublicists nowadays realize that the\npublic health is one of the most important subjects that confront them\nfor solution.\nThere are those who say that perfect sanitation would not only kill off\nmany deadly oacilli, but would put\na damper oo crime.\nWriters of fiction picture their morbid types alwi._ as flourishing amidst\nunclean surroundings, physical as well\nas moral.\nThe useful man ie the healthy ma i.\nThe useful community is the healtiy\ncommunity.\nIn ancient cities they had their\nfrigidorium; their ice-cooled apartments and their sanitary applianc-H.\nThe model city or town to-day is -ne\nlaid out as is the mo-del stock fa.-m\nstable\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDclean, airy, presenting smooth,\nhard surfaces to resist dirt accumulation; a basic principle is to keep\nwaste \"on the move\" to final auni\nfiliation.\nAre We Sanitary?\nThe United States, in parts, has taken cognizance of these truths. So\nhave some European cities. Canada as\nyet would be called by many an unsanitary nation.\nTo be clean costs money,\nBelore you spend the money yon\nmust wunl to be clean. Then you\nmust hit on the right method,\nThe live mayor of a live town In\nOntario bus given ensiderub'e thought\nto these mutters. He sought Ihe opinion of a scientist of world-wide reputation, Mr. William Osier, who, though\nnot resident in Canada, knows the\nsituation here thoroughly.\nDr. Osier sent the following reply\nFrom the Hegius Professor of Medi\ncine, Oxford.\nApril 2 1907.\nDear Sir,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNothing I think, is more\nimportant in die Canadian provinces\nlhan the sunitiition ol lhe small towns\nind rural districts. While, ot course\ninturio has dine a great deal, and\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDie public health work has been splen*\nid in every way. yet. ns I said the\nother day in Toronto, the prevalence\nif typhoid (ever indicates that then\nis still something radically wrong\n. million dollars contributed by tlu\nGovernment in improving Hie sani\nlat ion, if it only helped to get rid of\ntyphoid fever, would be well spent.\n(Signed) Wm. Osier.\nChance For the Governm\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.-it.\nThe Canadian mayor ubove --pferred\nto recently expressed himself us fol-\n!ows: \"The increased indemnity to\nilie provinces from tbe Dominion Gov-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDniinent, and the returns from the\nnines of Cobalt seem to indicate that\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlie exchequer of Ontario will be in\ni Nourishing condition foi some time\nio come. No doubt there will be li\nliousand suggestions us to what the\nGovernment will be asked to do with\nhis money. Much of it likely will\nne spent in a manner which will not\n_ive (lie people a full measure ol\nbenefit, which otherwise might nntur-\nilly be expected. 1 venture to point\nmt a case which deserves the ser\nnus consideration ol the Legislature\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDis being not only urgent, but one\n.vliich, if contributed to, will stamp\n'.he Whitney Government as being\nimong the foremost, intelligent, de\nliberative bodies of the world.\n\"The sanitation of the towns and\nvillages of Ontario is in a very backward state of repair; more especially\nin regard to a proper sewerage equip-\ntient. There are 450.000 people, most\niy recruited from rural districts, who\nire congregated in these centres in\n-uch a manner as to cause the soil\n0 be thoroughly polluted. The greal\niced of these communities is drain\ni'-'e. but the cost is so great (hat they\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiiiinot i\"iidertake the work unless as\nisted by the Government. In all\nowns there are unsettled districts\n.vliich cannot be drained from a front-\nige tax, and the expense, falling upon\nlie general taxpayer, simply closes\n*.p any possibility of securing a per\n,'ict system.\nCost $4,000,000.\n\"It is estimated that $4,000,000spent\nipon this work by tlie iu\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD oi On.\nario would produce a fairly complete\n.ystem of sewers. Towards this\n.rent work the Ontario Government\ncould well afford to contribute at least\n51,000,000, or 25 per cent, of the cost.\n1 he method of payment might be apportioned in a manner somewhat similar to that of building good -oada in\nthe rural districts.\"\nITS SUPERIORITY\nII\nOver Japan Teas is so pronounced that\ntea critics have nothing but praise for\nit on a teapot infusion.\n!!\nSALADA1\nGREEN TEA -__.\nEvery leaf is uncolored, undoctored and of virgin purity.\nLead Packets Only, 40c, 50c, and 60c Per Lb. At All Grocers.\nThe Giant Pine.\nThere ls a species of pine tree which\ngrows in California and is known as\nthe giant pine which la the largest of\ntbe pine genus, often rising to a height\nof 200 feet, with a trunk twenty to\nthirty feet in girth.\nLily's Grammar.\nThe grammar longest ln use In England was that of William Lily, first\npublished ln 1513. This grammar\npaused through more editions tban any\ntext book of the kind and was in use in\nSt. Paul's school, London, up to forty\nyears ago. The preface to the first edition wss written by Cardinal Wolsey,\nthe English rudiments by Dean Colct,\nthe Latin syntax chiefly by Erasmus,\nthe remainder by Lily, tbe book being\nthen the joint production of four of the\ngreatest scholars of the age.\nImpure Milk.\nIt ls stated that 9,000 children die\nannually ln New York city from the\npoison of impure milk.\nCanada's Lakes.\nLake Ontario Is as large as Wales;\nSuperior exceeds Scotland In size; Huron equals the area of Holland and\nBelgium combined. No other country\ncan match Canada for lakes and rivers.\nWhen Not to Leave a Balloon.\nIt Is a hideous and unpardonable offense to jump out tbe moment the car\ntouches the ground. The veriest novice\nshould know that a balloon always\nbounces twice before settling herself\nfor the third and last time on the\nground, and you must stick to her till\nIt is all over\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPrincess Di Teano In\nStrand Magazine.\nA Sad Case.\n\"This milk Is blue,\" said the customer angrily.\n\"I know It, and I'm very sorry,*' replied tbe milkman, \"but the weather '\nwe've been baring lately has given the '\ncows melancholia, and It chows vo 1\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD j\nthe milk.\" . '\nTrade r[arK\nlo a variety ol styles.\nfabrics and prices, lor\nwomen, men snd\nchildren. Form-ntted.\nDealers are authorized\nio replace instantly and\nat our cost any Pen-\nAngle garment taulty\nin material or making.\nPen-Angle Underwear is form-knit\nso it can't help\nfitting your figure,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit's made of\nlong - fibred wool\nso it won't shrink\n-and it's guaranteed besides. The\nwhole idea is to\nmake it so good\nyou can't afford\nnot to buy by the\ntrademark (in\nred). -205\nPasse\nMen spoke of her as \"passing fair,\"\nBut Time Hips by so fast,\nNow some of these same men declare\nShe's actually \"past.\"\nAsk for Minard's and Take no Other\nOf the 3,503 vessels of all classes\nentered at the port of Montevideo,\nUruguay, in 1005, only fourteen nre\ngiven as American, while England\nwas credited with 1,414.\nWhy go limping and whining about\nyour corns when a 25 cent bottle of\nHolloway's (.'dm Cure will remove\nthem? (live it a trial and you will\nnot regret it.\nWest Deny claims lue only woman\nengineer in New Hampshire in Mrs.\nBertha M. Wilson, who is au expert\nwitli u stationary engine.\nKeep Minard's Liniment in the House\nA powder magazine exploded in\nCanton, destroying 1,500 houses.\nTwenty-one bodies have been recovered.\nWHY HE LIVED\n\"My friond Grealhead has actually\ninvented a Hying machine, you know.\"\n\"Indeed Has lie given it a practical\ntest yet?\"\n\"Oh, _io, he's still alive.\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPluladcl-\npbia Press.\nTo. Know Is to Prevent\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIf the miners who work in cold water most of\nthe day would rub their feet and legs\nwith Dr. Thomas' Eclectnic Oil tliey\nwould escape muscular rheumatism\nand render their nether limbs proof\nagainst the ill effects of exposure to\nthe cold. Those setting out for mining regions would do well to provide\nthemselves with a supply before starting.\nThe railway passenger rate throughout Minnesota is 2 Cento a mile, beginning May 1, and the Dakota rate\nwill be 2 1-2 cents a mile after July 1.\nVALUABLE MEDICAL\nPRESCRIPTION\nRecommended by a Well-known\nToronto Doctor, Whose Love\nfor Humanity If -Greater than\ntils Prejudice Against Pr\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\nprietary Medicines.\nHON. C. VV. ROBINSON\nDirector of Record Foundry Co.\nHon. C. W. Robinson, until recently\nSpeaker of the New Brunswick Legislature, and who, a few weeks ago, was\nsworn in as a member of Premier Pugsley's\nCabinet, is, outside of bis political interests, associated with some of the largest\nmanufacturing concerns in his Province.\nAmong the principal interests with\nwhich Hon. Mr. Robinson is connected is\nthe Record Foundry and Machine Co., of\nMoncton, N.B., and Montreal, P.Q.,\nmanufacturers of the celebrated \" Penn\nEsther \" ranges and \" Admiral \" and\n\"Calorific\" furnaces. In this company,\nHon. Mr. Robinson is a large stockholder\nand a director.\nVictoria Day\nExcursions\nFare and One=Third\nFor the round trip between stations on the\nCANADIAN NORTHERN RY\nThe following T\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDry -valuable prescription, by an eminent and success-\nj ful physician, will be appreciated by\ni many who are suffering from la grippe,\n; cold, cough, pneumonia, or any throat,\n| long or stomach trouble, or run-down\nsystem, as it is a certain cure, and\n| will save many a doctor's bill. It is\n| almost a certain preventive as well: \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nj \"When you feel that you are taking\n' cold or have chilly reeling or aching\n1 in any part of the body or head, or\n| feel weak, tired, dissy, unfit for work,\nSain in the head or back of the neck,\no not neglect these dangerous symp-\nI toms, but send immediately to your\ndruggist and get a bottle of Psychine\n(pronounced Si-kecn), and prepare aa\nfollows:\n\"Psyohine, 2 teaspoonfuls.\n\"Sherry, whisky or water, 9 tea-\nspoonfuls.\n\"Choice of the latter can be mad*\naccording to the judgment and preference of the patient.\n\"Mix thoroughly and take regularly\nbef.ro each meal and at bedtime.\"\nThis prescription has been used in\nthousands of cases and has been so\nuniversally successful that a number\nof leading physicians regularly prescribe Psychine in their practice for\nany of the above troubles, or any rundown, wasting or constitutional difficulty. It is the most reliable and\nvaluable home remedy. It tones np\nthe entire system, giving a feeling of\nyouthfulness and vigor, adding many\nyears to the life of those who use it.\n\" Years ago I was almost a physical wreck and\nwas sufferin. with lung troubles. Frlondi and\nneighbors thought I would never get better. I\nbegan to despair myself. Losing faith ln my\nphysician, I procured another one who recommended the use ol PSYCHINE. It was surprising\nbeyond description the effect it had. I seemed to\n_am with every dose. Inside of two weeks I was\nable to attend to my housework again. There\nare no symptoms of consumption about me now.\"\nMRS. HENDERSON,\nSt. John, N.B.\n\"I bad been suffering from Le Grippe. My\nlungs were weak and I had a cough, but Plyohlns\ncured mo.\"\nMRS. H. BEAN,\nCheapslde, Ont.\nPsychine can be procured from any\ndruggist at 50o. and $1.00. It is a very\nTijkets good to go May 22nd to\nMay 24th, Inclusive.\nReturn until May 27th, 1907.\nAny Canadian Northern Ry.\nAgent will be more than pleased to\nfurnish fullest information. I\n'MY BACK\nIf so lame, If a common complaint.\nJohnson's _\nAnc^Iiniment\nRubbed on Briskly\nJ ranoYM all lameness and soreness, of nim-\nj cies, aud quickly heals outs, burns, scalds,\nJ bites and bruises. Established 1810.\nI 15c, three tin-as as much 60c. All dnslers.\n' I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass.\nLAMENESS\nWhether it is a fresh Bruise, Cut or Strain\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDor an old Spavin, Splint,\nRingbone or Swelling\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDyou can cure your horse with\nKendall's Spavin Cure\nThos. Castles, of Newark, N.J., bought a horse\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDlamed with a Jack\nSpavin\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDfor .100. He cured every sign of lameness with Kendall'*\nSpavin Cure\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwon five races with the horse\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthen sold the animal to bis\nformer owner for .1,000.00.\nWellington, N.Z.,'Nov. and, '05.\n\"I have found your Spavin Cure a very fine remedy for\nall sorts of lameness tn horses and I am never without it.\"\nB. J. WISBBY.\nGet Kendall's Spavin Cure\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe remedy used by two\nnations for two generations, tl. a bottle\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD0 for *.5. Our\nbook\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"Treatise On The Horse\"\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwill save you many a dollar If\ncarefully read and acted upon.\nWrite today for a free copy.\nDR. B. J. KENDALL CO., V\nI ENoeeusa FALLS, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Vermont, U.S.A.\nmm\nUnderwear\nW. N. U. No. 637\n**--nBaBBBl.Sai_________________________S___H_HB^\nYOU NEED NOT FEAR THE COMING OF SPRING\nIF YOU USE\nSHREDDED\nIts strength-giving,\nmuscle-building properties fortify the system\nagainst the dangers that\nlurk in fickle spring\nweather. Keeps ths\nbowels healthy and active.\nReady to Serve. BISCUIT for Breakfast; TRISCUIT for Toast.\nAll Grocers\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD13c a carton, or 2 for 26c.\nWHEAT ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n*\n-a\nBank of cMontreal,\nCAPITAL ALL PAID UP, $14,400,000.\nREST. $11,000,000\nUNDIVIDED PROFITS, $422,089.98\nPresident\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLobd Stbathcona and Mount Royal.\nVice-President\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHon. Geohge A. Dbijiimond.\nGeneral Manager\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDE. S. Clouston.\nBranches In All The Principal Cities In Canada\nLONDON, ENQ., NEW YORK, CHICAGO, SPOKANE.\nA General Banking Business Transacted.\nNEW DENVER BRANCH, - II. 6. FISHER, Manager.\nSlocan fllMning IRevtew.\nPUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY\nAT SANDON, B.C.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD/Subscription 1*2.00 per annum, strictly\nin advance. No pay, no paper.\nAdvertising Rates :\nNotices to Delinquent Owners - .12.00\n\" for Crown Grants - - 7.50\n\" \" Purchase of Land - 7.50\n\" \" License to Cut Timber 5.00\nAll locals will be charged for at the rate\nof 15c. 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.\nSee McDonald for fresh fruit and\nvegetables.\n1 Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Alexander camo\nMp from Kaelo on Wednesday.\nMrs. A, G. Erickson and daughter,\n.of Whitewater, yisited friends in town\nWednesday,\nLAND ACT.-KOOTENAY LAND\nDISTRICT.\nDistrict of West Kootenay.\nTake notice that Robert Duncan Kennedy, of Slocan, B.C., livery keeper,\nintends to apply for a special timber\nlicence over the following described\nlands. Commencing at a post adjoining James Smith's south-east corner,\nand marked \"Robert Duncan Kennedy's N.E. corner,\" thence south 40\nchains, thenca weet 160 chains, thence\nnorth 40 chains, thence east 160 chains\nto point of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\n. ROBERT DUNCAN KENNEDY.\nJune 17th, 1907,\nNOTICE.\nTENDER. FOR MINERAL CLAIMS\nFORFEITED TO TIIE CROWN.\nSealed tenders will be received by\nthe undersigned up \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD to 12 o'clock noon,\non Wednesday, the 14tli day of August,\n1907, for the purchase -t the undermentioned Mineral Claims, which were\nforfeited to the Crown at the Tax Sale\nheld in the Government Ollice, at Kaslo,\nB.C., on the 7th day of November, 1904.\nTo be considered, all tenders must be\nat least equal to the upset price asgiven\nbelow, which is equal to the amount for\nwhich sueh claim could have been repurchased by tho owner, or owners, on\nthe 30th day of June, 1905, together\nwith the taxes, costs and interest which\nhave accrued since the Tax Sale, the\ncost of advertising for tenders, and the\nCrown Grant fee.\nName of Claim Lot No. Upset price\nArana Fraction 2539 $56.60\nJ.I.C, 2583 90.95\nJenny Jones 2534 68.95\nEach tender must be accompanied by\na certified check for the full amount\nthereof, payable at par at Kaelo, B.C.,\nin favor of the undersigned. The checks\nof all unsuccssful tenderers will be immediately returned.\nE. E. CHIPMAN,\nGovernment Agent, Kaslo, B, C.\nTake notice that James Smith, of\nSlocan, B.C., miner, intends to apply\nfor a Bpecial timber license over the following described lands: Commencing\nlat a post pianted about one and one\nhalf miles distant in a southerly direction from Duncan Graham's north-east\ncorner, and marked \" James Smith's\nS.E. corner,\" thence west 100 chains,\nthence norlh 40 chains, thence east 160\nchains, thence south 40 chains to point\npi commencement, and containing 640\nacres more or lees. JAMES SMl H.\nJune 17th, 1907.\nTake notice that Duncan Graham, of\nSlocan, B.C., miner, intends to apply\nlor 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 of Indian\ncreek, and marked \" Duncan Graham's\nN.E. corner,\" thence west 80 cliains,\nthence south 80 chain.**, thence east 80\nchains, tlience north 80 chains to point\nof commencement, and containing 640\nacres more or less. I\nDUNCAN GRAHAM.\nJune 15th, 1907.\nTake notice that Nils Nelson, of\nSlocan, B.C., a rancher, intends to j\napply for a special timber license over\nfollowing described lands: Commencing at a post planted about four miles\ndistant in a north westerly direction\nfrom the mouth of Goat creek, a tribu-'\ntary ol the Slocan River, thence west\n160 chains, thence north 40 chains;\nthence east 160 chains, thence south 40\nchains to point of commencement, and\ncontaining 640 acres more or less.\nNILS NELSON.\nJuno 20th, 1907.\nHALCYON\nHOT\nSPRINGS\n*Jp\nThe Most Beautifully situated\nSanitarium in British Columbia.\nIts medical waters are renowned\nfor curative qualities. \" That\nTired Feeling \" completely cured.\nA certain remedy for Rheumatism\nin its varied forms. A sure 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 MclNTOSH\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS\nARROW LAKE, B. C.\nPURE\nBLOOD\nAND A HEALTHY SYSTEM\nare necessities if you\nwish to ward off any\ndisease:that threatens.\nThese can both be\nsecured by taking\nwhich is a simple\ncompound of Sarsap-\narilla and Oregon\nGrape Root with Saline laxatives.\nTRY A BOTTLE NOW\n>n. Spencer \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD prop\nprovincial Hssa^er\nano -3bemist'\nSawloii Assay Office\nLate F. II, HAWKINS.\nOrdinary Tariff:\nGold, Silver, Lead, Copper, Iron, Silica,\n.1.00 each.\nSilver with Copper or Lead, Manganese,\nLime, $1.50 each.\nZinc, Antimony, Sulphur, Gold and\nSilver, $2.00.\nGold, Silver, with Lead or Copper, Zinc\nand Silver, $2.50.\nSilver, Zinc and Lead JIl.OO\nGold, Silver, Zinc, Lead and Iron, $4.00\nSpecial Rat\".**, for Mine and Mill Work\nNotice is hereby given that 00 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Cnief Commissioner of LSnds and\nWorks at Victoria, B. C. for permission\nto purchase the following described\nlands situate in West Kootenay District;\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nsouth-east cornerof lot 7547 and marked\nJ. St. D, S.W. corner, Ihence north\nalong the eaBt line of lot 7547 20 chains,\nthence east 20 chains, tlience south 20\nchains to the north-east corner ot lot\n8127, thence following along the line ot\nlot8127, 20 cliains to thc pointof commencement and containing 40 acres.\nDated at Slocan, B.C. April 30th, 1907.\nJOHN ST. DENIS.\nPer D. St. Denis, Agent.\nTo Rent\nSeveralResldences at\nVery Small Figure\nJ. M. HARRIS.\nGo to Wilson's for\ns.\nIrom, Steel, etc.\nT. H. WILSON\nSILVERTON, B.C.\n*****************************\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+*+\nZhc Sanfcon Ibotel\nIRobt. 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.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDboicest liquors, Mines anb tgars.\n****************** *********\nTHOMPSON BROS.\nProprietors.\nThe.\t\nExchange\nVisitors to Sandon should not fail to test the\nExcellent quality of the \"shots\" at this famous saloon.\nRooms. The very choicest Liquors, Wines and Cigars\nalways on hand. :: An excellent Pool Table.\nThe Leading Hotel of the Silvery Slocan\nThe Reco\nSandon, B. C.\nHeadquarters for flDining anb travelling fIDen\nMeals First Class. Bar, The Best\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRooms Xaroe, Clean anb Cos?.\nS> William Bennett S>\nJ. R.\nTUue\nFIT AND STYLE\nGUARANTEED.\n***************************\\nCameron\nSANDON, B.C.\n*****\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDkAAAAAAAAAAAA 4AAAA4AAAAAAAA4AAAAAAAAAA2\nNourishing\nStout\nPut up in Pint Bottles for Family and Hotel Trade.\nWe guarantee its Strength and Purity.\nMADB BV THI*\nNew York Brewery\nSanbon flMners' XHnton Hospital.\nOpen to the Public.\nRates by Subscription $1.00 per month. Non-subscribers $2.00 per diem.\n Hospital Staff\t\nC. E. ANDERSON. - . WM. E. GOMM, M. D.\nAddress Communications To The Secretary.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.-M*v*t.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^**K***H**t**l**t'*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD**l**\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; m ************************.\nJust\nArrived\nSpring anb\nSummer\nSamples\nfrom Crown\ntailoring Co.\n1 The Most Complete aud varied assortment ever\nin the Country,\nf 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.\nSt. James' Hotel\nNew Denver. B.C.\nVisitors to New Denver, tho beauty spot\nof the Continent, will find this hotel\nto be thoroughly equipped for\nfor the comfort of Tourists.\nWell stocked Bar.\nExcellent boating. Grand scenery.\nSPLENDID SAMPLE ROOMS\nA. JACOBSON - - - Proprietor.\n'MflsWi\nIM. 3% /Ifcacfconalfc\n.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .A. *\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.._.. lit .\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_ AAAAAA _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD__. ___. a _*\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_. A .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. A \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD__. .***. L\\nTTTTTTTTT \mB TTtTtTTtTTTTTTTtTTTTTTTT *\n/%TIve\nKoofenay\nriotel.\nSANDON'S FAMOUS HOUSE OF CALL.\nThere is no better house in the Kootenays for\nthe Mining Man to ranko his Headquarters.\nVisitors will find an up-to-date style of doing\nbu*iness, and the Barkeeps are artists in their\nline. \t\nThe Finest Wines aud Liquors and Choicest Brands of Cigars\nMcLeod & Walpnsley - Props.\nioo MINERS\nWanted at\nSandon.\nWages $3.75 to $4 a Day.\nASSAYING.\nColin }* Campbell\nAssayer\nNotary Public\nConveyancing\nphone 2.\nP.O. box 10\nNewmarket\nRATES $2 to 2.50 A DAY.\nFINE SAMPLE BOOMS.\nSpecial attention given to Mining Trade.\nSplendid Scenery, Fishing, Boating, etc.\nHi. STEQE\nWRY MAN\nNo matter what his occupation, may save\nmoney by getting his\nShoes Made to Older.\nFor a Mining Shoe\nthere is nothing better\nthan tin* famous BAL\nEI* FRILLE FRENCH\nCALF or KIP UPPER\nwith n good, solid,\nhand made bottom\t\nThese shoes can only be got by\nleaving vour order with\nP. W. WARD\nShoemaker - Sandon\nCANADIAN\n%J:^PAQ!*FIC.\n!ER__ail-,**7V- sty\nSUMMER\nExcursion\nRates\nEAST\nFROM SANDON $55.25,\nTo\nWINNIPEG PORT ARTHUR\nST. PAUL DULUTII\nSIOUX CITY\nSt. Louis \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.('2.75 Chicago 186.75\nToronto .81.2. Ottawa 85.30\nMontreal .80.75 St. Johns -.D0.75\nHalifax if 104 55.\nTickets on Sale\nJuly 3, 4, 5. August 8, 9, 10.\nSeptember 11, 12, 18,\nFIRST CLASS RCUND TRIP\nDO DAYSUMir.\nCorresponding reductions from\nall Kootenav points. Tickets\navailable fur lake route including\nmeals and berths on lake steamers.\nThrough notes quoted io any sU-\ni*m Ontario Quebec or Maritime\nrovincps on application.\nIB. W. Wfbfcowson\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYER and\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMIST.\nGold, Silver, Oipper or Lead, each, .1.00\nGold-Silver.. |1 50 Silver-Lead..$1.50\nZinc.. f.2.00 Gold Silver with Copper or\nLead.. 3.50.\nPrompt attention given to all samples.\n25 per cent, discount upon five samples.\nRAKER ST., NELSON.\nP.O. Drawer, 1108 Phone A07\nWindsor\n: lb otel :\nDUNCAN GRANT,\nProprietor.\n7THIS Well Known\nHotel has lately\nbeen purchased by the\nabove, and he promises\npatrons personal attention to make their stay\nwith him a pleasant\none. Everything strictly First-Class.\nLAND NOTICE.\nSixty days af;er date I intend to\napply to the Hon. Cliief Commisi-ioner\nof Lands nnd Works at Vic'orii, B.C.,\nfor phi mis-ion to purchase the following\ndescribed lands, situate in West Ko iten*\nav District : Commeiicinir at a post on\nthe north side of rirht of way of N. A S.\nRailway, thence 23.258 chains north\nalong west boundary of lot 7034, thet'ce\nbait a'ong north boundary of lot 7634\n20 chain*), thenco north 20 chain**,\nthence wi st 20 chains more or hss to S.E.\ncoincr of lot 7547, thence nlong south\nboundary of lot 7547 10 clmins more or\nless, thence north 20 chains, thence\nwest 30 chains, thence north 20 chains\nthence west 30 clmins more or less to\nEast sido of right of way nf N. & S.\nRailway, thence along Enst boundary of\nN. & S. Railway right of way to a po'nt\n40 chains south, thenco west 28.0-1\nchairs, thence south 20 chains, thenco\neast 10 chains, thenoe south 10 chains,\nthence east 26.809 chains to intersect,\nwith N. & S. Railway iLiht of way,\nj thenco southerly along enst sir]-) of\nJN. AB. Railway right of way to point\nI of commencement, and containing*402.78\n| acres more or let-s.\nLocated March 23rd, 1007.\nETTA SI'. PENIS,\n,Te27 PerD. S*.Denis, agent.\nNEW DENVER\nSilverton =- J6,(X,\n'Tailholt\" mineral claim, *.iti.nt*> in the\nSloc.in Ciiy Mining Division of West\nKootenay District. Where located :\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nAboui 2,000 feet in a westerly direction from Howard Fraction, nbout one\nmile north of North Fork of Lemon\nCreek.\nTake nolic? that I, Henii Robeit Jorand, Free Miners Certilicate No. B78.300,\nas agent for Anna Ferguson, Executrix\nof the last will snd testament of William Henry Ferguson deceased, Free\nMiners Certilicate No. 114719, intend, 60\ndays from the dato hereof, to apply to\nthe Milling Recorder for a certilicate of\nimprovements for the purpose ot obtaining \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Crown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice, that action\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate of\nImpiovments.\nDated thia -Joth day of April, A.D. 1907.\nJeSW li. It. JORi.NO."@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_1907-07-25"@en . "10.14288/1.0083610"@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 .