"20f50b6b-c8d8-4e7d-8598-b09d33ac9a5e"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-25"@en . "1904-08-05"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/thenugget/items/1.0082752/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE NUGGET.\nVol. I. No. 36.\nPoplar, b. C, August 5,1904.\n$2.00 A Year.\nNews of the Mines.\nThe lower tunnel on the Mother\nLode is in 20 feet and the face in ore.\nGeo. H. Davis came down from the\nSpyglass this week, and will take a\nshort holiday. He reports the mine\nlooking well. \t\n[)r. Mi Hoy is applying for a crown\non the Alpine, 1 X L and 1 X L Fraction mineral claims, situate on Eight\n;md Nine Mile creeks.\nJohn Keen commenced development\nthis week on the Golden Chest group,\nMarquis mountain, about a mile from\ntown. Two men are at work.\nD. McRae and Chas. Diamond went\nup to the AI ha in bra group, at the head\nof Rapid creek, this week. They will\nrun a 20-foot tunnel before returning.\nP. Sheran and A. C. Cody have taken\na working bond on the Ethel and Silver Leaf, Cascade creek, from John\nQuay and Chas. Luce. These claims\nadjoin the Young Dominion. About\n$300 has already been expended in\n\ running a crosscut tunnel. The lead\nis about three feet wide carrying gray\ncopper and galena.\nLocal Happenings.\nA. J. McDougall of St. Paul, who\nabout six weeks ago bonded the Ross\nproperties, writes that he will he on the\nground in a few days to commence development.\nParson Smith and Ken Morrison\nhave struck a 3-foot lead of pyrrhotite\nin the Denver, near Bosworth. Samples have been sent out for assay. The\nA very rich lead has been uncovered,\non the Winslow, Seven Mile creek. It\nis from 5 to 6 feet in width of quartz,\ncarrying high values in gold. The\nlead has been stripped for a distance of\nabout fifty feet.\nJ. J. McKinnon of Poplar has been\nawarded the contract to cut out and\ngrade the 3-mile trail from the wagon\nroad to the Mammoth group on Fish\ncreek, the work to be completed by\nOctober 1, when regular shipments\nwill be commenced. Fifteen hundred\nore sacks have been ordered and are\nnow on the road to the mine.\nThis week Chism & Hendrix bonded\n the Hecla and Hecla Fraction to John \t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1 \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" \"\"\"\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\" mmJ ' w\" \" w~**m **\n\"T***'TBItatldl/ft :e.\"1)Nmf- and Cap Race*} the children have been attending school\nLof Spokane for $5,000, development\nChas. Scott of Nelson was looking\nover the camp this week.\nJackson Radclirfe is over in the Slocan doing assessment work.\nOrders have been issued to keep off\nthe fence at the C. P. R. depot.\nJ. A. Magee of the Spyglass made a\nflying trip to Nelson the past week.\nF, A. Tamblin leaves today for Nelson, whore he takes a position in the\nHotel Strathcona.\nH. Mcintosh and Mrs. Mcintosh\nwere down from Rapid Creek this\nweek after supplies.\nW. E. Morand, Mrs. Morand and\nchildren arrived from Greenwood Wednesday and will reside here.\nJ. Chapman left for Kaslo Wednesday, where he will have charge of the\nbuilding of a concentrator.\nA pack train of twelve animals was\nsent up with supplies for the Spyglass\nby E. L. Masterson this week.\nMrs. E. L. Morand and family arrived from Montreal Wednefday, where\nJohn Ryan has completed assessment\nwork on the Gold Finch group, situated\nabout six miles up Poplar creek. The\nwork consists of surface crosscuts. The\nlead is Irom 8 to 12 feet in width, carrying silver-gold values.\nJacobs &. Irwin have completed the\nseason's work on the Big Talk, located\nabout seven miles up Poplar creek.\nThe ledge is a large one, carrying copper and g.tlena. Samples have been\ntaken to Spokane for assay.\nwork to be commenced at once. The\nterms of the bond are $1,000 in 60\ndays, $1,500 in 90 days and the balance\nin 120 days. The claims are loeated\non Rapid creek, near the Broken Hill.\nAssessment work lor the year has\nbeen done on the Black Diamond,\nsituated on the south fork of the south\nfork of the Lardo river and about one\nand a half miles northeast of Bonanza\ngroup. The work done consists of a\n10-foot tunnel and open cuts. The\nlead is 30 inches wide and assays $18\ngold and 60 ounces in silver. The\nBlack Diamond was staked in 1897\nand is owned by J, J. Foltz of Tacoma.\nA\nJ. Stierle has completed the year's\nassessment on the Victoria, adjoining\nIhe Mother Lode on Poplar creek.\nThe lead is 8 feet of quartz carrying\ngold and silver values. Three open\ncuts have been run crossculting the\nlead.\nOn the Ironsides, an extension of the\nCopper King, there is a 70-foot lead,\nassaying 33 per cent copper, from 2 to\n5\u00C2\u00B0 ounces in silver and $2 to $6 in gold.\nThe Ironsides is about a mile from the\nCopper King and was located this season by J. Simpson and T. Armstrong.\n\u00C2\u00B0n the Elkhorn and Golden Eagle,\nCascade dUETl. McHale has a 10-\nfoot lead of quartz carrying gold values,\n'he lowest assay from which was $6\nand running up in the hundreds. The\nassessment for this season is done,\nconsisting of surface crosscutting and\nstr\u00C2\u00ABpping.\nWork has been commenced on the\nInternational group, near the First\nCrossing, and owned by A. J. Ogilvie\nand Spokane parties. The group comprises the International, Fairview,\nRiverside, Spokane and Blue Grouse.\nThe lead is three feet wide carrying\nsilver-gold values of from $36 to $80.\nA 50-foot tunnel is being run to tap\nthe lead at a depth of 75 feet.\nDevelopment was commenced this\nweek on the French group, four miles\nnorth of Goldhill and owned by G. B.\nRosicat, A. Plante, A. Robilette and\nRay Sturgeon. The group comprises\nfive claims on which there is a 30-foot\nlead of quartz carrying copper and gold\nvalues. There is considerable native\ncopper in the lead. Last week the\nowners completed a good trail from\nGoldhill to the group. A 50-foot shaft\nwill be sunk and the lead crosscut at\nthat depth. Those who have seen the\nproperty say that it gives promise of\nhfcomme one of the big mines of B. C.\nfor the past year.\nWednesday the school population ofj\nPoplar was increased by ten. Before\nschool opens it may be necessary to\nhave an extra teacher.\nJ, J. Cameron, Mrs. Cameron and\nfamily leave Monday for Trail, where\nMr. Cameron will engage in business.\nClarence Morgan takes charge of the\npost office.\nNo! Unfortunately there is no\npenalty in the criminal code for persons\ndancing to phonographic music. However, it might come under the head of\ninciting to murder.\nAt last the C. P. R. is beginning to\nappreciat the commercial importance\nof Poplar\u00E2\u0080\u0094a broom and scrubbing\nbrush were this week added to the furniture of the Poplar depot, ^\\nAll the thermometers in Poplar have\ngone out of business. Wednesday last\nthe mercury climed through the roof,\nand Thursday boiled fish were found\nfloating on the surface of Poplar creek.\nThe glacier at the head of Cascade has\ngone out of business. Hot, hotter, h\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nBonanza Group.\nOscar Nelson and Chas. Dandell returned last week from Haskins' creek\nbasin where they had been working on\nthe Bonanza group, lying between the\nAmerican and Silver Cup mines. The\nBonanza has the Silver Cup lead. The\nwork done consists of a 140-foot tunnel on the lead and two crosscuts from.\nthe foot wall, one 20 feet at 60 feet, and\nthe other 23 at 120 feet, without reaching the hanging wall. The lead is\nquartz carrying galena and gray copper, and assaying $44 in gold and over\n200 ounces in silver. There is also an\n18-inch fissure vein on the Bonanza,\nrunning over $30 in gold and about 20\nounces in silver. The Bonanza is\nabout four and a half miles from the\nAmerican landing on Trout lake and\nfive miles from Gerrard. A cabin 14X\n20 has been built on the property. The\nowners are J. N. Nelson, Nat Lay,\nOscar T. Nelson, P. A. Lindgren, C.\nA. Dandell, Henry Carlson, J. W.\nWesthall and F. C. Elliott. The group\ncomprises six claims and was located\nin August, 1899.\nI becoming one\nMulock's Quick Delivery.\nMail from Poplar to Goldhill, a distance of three miles by train, is taken\nall the way to Kaslo, held there two\ndays and then sent back. This is fast\nmail service with a vengeance. It can't\ncost any more to drop the Goldhill\nmail of on the down train than it does\nto carry it to Kaslo, unless Mr. Galliher is trying to give the Lardeau the\nworst possible mail service at the\ngreatest possible expense to the country. It takes three days to carry mail\nmatter three mille, and going like\nblazes all the time. As a departmental\nhead Mulock is a wonder.\nThe Swede Group.\nProspect work has been completed\non the Swede group and work resumed\non the lower tunnel, which is in 117\nfeet. This tunnel gives a vertical\ndepth of a little over one hundred feet,\nand will be continued for another 100\nfeet, after which very little development\nwill be done until a stamp-mill is installed. It is very little use reiterating\nwhat has already been said of the\nSwede group. On the surface the pay\nore has been proved over an area of\n300 by 1000 ft and this by underground\nworkings to a depth of over 100 feet.\nIt is a huge quarry containing millions\nof cubic feet of pay ore, the lowest assays from which was $6 and running\nfrom that amount up to over $100,000\nto the ton. That the Swede group is\nnot paying dividends must be attributed\nto mismanagement. These statements\nare not made with the intention of\nboosting the camp, but with the object of placing facts before the shareholders of the Great Northern Mines,\nLtd., many of whome are subscribers\nto this paper. Within twelve months\nof the installation of a 20-stamp mill\nthe Swede group will have turned out\nmore gold than the amount of the\ncapital stock of the Great Northern\nMines, Ltd. This is not the opinion\nof the editor alone, but of experienced\nmining men who haved examined the\nproperty. Shareholders should examine the property and then act, if they\nwant to mine and pay dividends.\nE. L. Morand is papering and otherwise improving the interior of the\nRoyal. He is going to stay with the\ncamp until gold can be picked up in\nthe streets.\n/\n/- itel\n\u00C2\u00BB\nI\nmi\nJB\nPoplar, B. C, August 5, I\n^^^m\nTHE NyGGET.\n>::\nI\nm\nI\nwmmmmmmmm\nTHE NUGGET *\nla published every Friday at Poplar, B. C\nand is sent to any address for $2.00 a year.\nCommerciala\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 r at /\u00C2\u00BB\"ii' i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nNow that it has been definitely\nsettled that the spectators at the \"Hen*-\nley regatta did not call Lou SoholeS\nthe champion Toronto oarsman,\"\neither a \"foreigner\" or a \"stranger/'\nthe Dominion elections will not be\nheld until a new policy has been\nmanufactured.\n*T \u00E2\u0096\u00A0<\nThe Camborne Miner_ omplains\nthat time cheques issued by. tjhe Great\nNorthern and cashed by merchants\nof that to n, have not been honored\nby the company. A gold brick i$ay\nbe expected this month from, the\nOyster mill. The Swede group Js\nturning out ore rich enough to pack\nin grips, \t\nYodng men trom the \"Greatest\nNation on Earth,\" should cache Cheir\nguns south of the 49th parallel when\nvisiting British Columbia. In the U.\nS. guns are a necessary adjunct to\nfreedom In Canada the law and\nguns do not harmonize. Here it is\nnot necessary tor the individual to\nwear his nip-pocket out with a shooting iron. Whin wc lose in liberty\nwe gain in vital statistics. Some giin-\npr&metms -mfigeTln here last\nweek \"by liberty loving citizens of\nthe republic sotxtu d^.tfife^ Tiie Nugget woulditiggek, should''th'e young\nmen\"contem^)late i Vfetuih'to Poplar,\nthattWy' l&itfJ thWJjuiis ^t' home;\nThe ibwest\"rater lor* shotting'ttdlfefe\nthrough windows' iri\"KobtgnU^ is'M\nmdthi bh Bbb 'Lenioh's<'8i^ie>urVea^.\nSom'ettme^th^'ratfe^ fare' 'tiiglter; as\nmuch'depVrids\"uti6rt 'how thejud^e's\ndigestive flrtfafis 'Me working alt' ihe\ntime. Oi CuriW thli ^Ifodtihg was a\njoke, but the judg^'oF-fil'Wm so\nutterly devoid\u00C2\u00A9 of \"hunTfor''that\" they\nhave so^ur tailed.to enter iritti tMtyiMt\not a joke with gun atticftme'rifci u\u00C2\u00BBtW\nyoungsters who made the* '^Un^ky\nwere very fortunate that theJ'infcid&nt\nwas kept quiet until they were saltely\nout of the country, otherwise ri.' Gi\nwould have been the owner of three\nextra guns, and Bob Lemon would\nhave been compelled to increase the\nforce on his rock quarry. Canadian\nbooze and Yankee guns make a very\npoor combination tor the person who\nwishes to earn more than board and\nlodging. __\nSays the Kootenay Mail: \"The\nPoplar Nugget is rather inconsistent.\nIt praises the McBride government\nfor dealing with the coal and oil\nlands and then describes the administration of the mining laws as so bad\nprovincial government the Kootenay\nMail has probably arrivad at wrong\neonotasioofii -hi -tetewjooe- to the-item/\nin the Nugget. The manner in whicl^\nthe |n|iinfe lajMuive been alminis-^\ntereH&i ft is jji^lct-/bV;\"(iQhi Com<\nInissiouer Fraser and his subordinate^\nis-'afeovB^criftieism. -Hftk is-^ot^to- the1\naoliuinistratpn \u00E2\u0080\u009E o|, *he ^mjnjng laws\njby theprovincialgoverntqflnt.thaf we.\nmpM, ftRifi* wm ?fw BwMp\nbut to ignorance of ^aD^intees^of the\nLaurier government in regird to\nAlt Q'U* Ol U;jU-'I fl^-Jfc' 'ifHli.AlitUlU\nminrng conditions. It will he remembered 'flbVt nearly''Vill'* tiie ' ap-\npoihtirifenta\"' \u00C2\u00ABbt ^thtS1' fcujtteule 'court\nb^rtCfi .by the Laiirfer government\nhaVe teen lime 'art*waJirfruni the turnip afid\"'wwkgrewii\u00C2\u00BBg' pproviHces-'oi\nCanada. It is impossible for t^iesb\njmen in a fewi/yeare. toouuitgrow: jthc\ninfluence.of tb^r>preHwus bucolic^-,\nvironment. It req.uUes|(tinwi;tober\ncome faipij^ar^w^thcoiidj^ons in a\nI mining camp, evenly those who.a^e,\ndaily engaged in, uiinin\u00C2\u00A3~sometirn,e,s\nyears before the prospector can arrive\nat intelligent conclusions in' regard\nto the industry in which' he \"is en.\"\"\njgaged. Yet lawyers! who; iiave\njriev'er seen a mine, and wtii ^e'prj-\nvfbus'training has been among th'6'\n'turnips, the shorthorns, the cots-'\n'wolds,'>the spring wheat and the\nOlydtsdales, are appointed to the\nbench-ajid-'expected to arrive at just\nconclusions in reference to an in iustry\nabout which they, know absolutely\nnothing. Had< the tcial judge in the\nTanghe case been familiar with mining conditions and had he.visited the\nLucky Jack mine, it is-probable that\nhis decision would have been dif-\nfewart\u00E2\u0080\u0094and ~ claim ju\u00C2\u00BBpi\u00C2\u00BBff\u00E2\u0080\u00944W\u00C2\u00ABkU\nhave become unpopular in the dis\nago. expressed practically the same\nopinions as are contained in \"this\naFtiele^J^ut/Som\u00C2\u00ABJw^iat stoongeK^iioldr\nObmmissioner Eraser's decision, if al\n7 \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nlowed to stand, would have effectu\nally put a stop to claim jumping, the\ndecision, of JC^JM^Jbtrtin had\nthe opposite effect. The one was fa.\nmiliar wWT. mtoijfe coJdiJionV the\nother was not Mr. Fraser examined\nthe \"ground in dispute, Mr. JU8tice\nMaj^ii^4Wv--iM>tw^>e^\u00C2\u00ABpe Anew,\nthe other did not know.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2f\nr \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 j\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i'i i.i\n\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 l; , 'Jf!\n3J-.i \" m* i Mm m \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' m \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nW 7Wl1\n#fifiifnula\nM . . POPWR\n$k \u00C2\u00AB Has ample accommodation for a ^\n| large number of ie^te. Thffe ^abl6 I\nfn is ^taWi^d tiith the best in the mar- 4\njR^lteto The-bar contains the popular $\nW 'brands of Jiquid' S*j^\nV2v\nTTTT -,|\n!...<>!<\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2/ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>;.' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 f'un!\nHambly & Nelson.\n.ii iiiKi\n--r rr-\nHawthorne Bros\nGOLD HILL\nMiners and Prospectors7\nSupplies.\nSTEEL\nii '^u.'.i.iiy\n-Sk ,l|\u00C2\u00BB\"tUl 4*. IJlll. 111 l.t\n,U)(^jU L.I.jK i\nlJ.il\nI\n'e* *l\ *i\ ^> *l> ^iv7iv?;v7;v\nin- . A i, '. J\n\u00C2\u00ABi'i.' . y\ t\nIN KASLO , ,\n. ft iblYt'UrJ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'; L..'ifl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2Jj'll J|; \u00E2\u0080\u00A2I'alX.i^; \u00E2\u0096\u00A0>, 'j\nthatm\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBe\"notisurpa^\u00C2\u00ABed\u00C2\u00BB \\n \h&\nGoldery^We^^^nti^tHer^ is\nmi^g^o^um Jims th(at\ntf(fefecferH HWhdf day eosrrlbkfe\n-i -*ifl 1 .At..r\ i.i-j* ,\,\\; i.i... .y(>)\nit. iFuiraisJicd*. .)Room&< i,ai-\nGOmfiflERGiAL HOTEL\ni.i\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2i j^.j\nm\n.it\u00C2\u00AB\n^FOBMKBLY Horn. |.\.\.,\nChas. Hanson^ Proprietor.\nFirst-class In^venr doj>amnenl. Wines Liquors and C^ars (he 0\nfinest'p^uraBfr^lie Menu has no equal in the\nLerdea-u, Call ?wid be convinced that\nBE\nTHE COMMERCIAL 18 THE BEST\n^Sg^'fSi:BSS''sr\"\"l!=:=\"\"'m'\" \"*\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HI .UOlLt. (\u00C2\u00BBJ\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HI jtj'HU- \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBj 'Jt Mil / u; y,,\nways read^.f^^tli^^nee^.\nPoplar pr'ospetocfrs ,;atvvay\u00C2\u00AB\nwelcome and g,wepri,tb^ test.;\n;i \"'\u00C2\u00BB>ii.l il ./|,\nALLEN & PAUMEfi\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ii p Hi. -'jxj.in THE NUGGET.\nPoplar, B. C, August 5, 1904.\nThe Waste Dun\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nTbe rubber sheets known as sheet\npacking may be more easily cut if\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6he knife be dipped frequently in\nwater during the process.\nThe Detroit Copper Co., Arizona, is\ndoubling its concentrating capacity,\nwhich will give it, when completed,\na capacity of 1,000 tons in 24 hours.\nIt will require about eighteen months\nto make the change.\nThe first week in July saw the\ngenii annual disbursement of divi\ndends and interest payments aggregating $150,000,000, which is a very\ntidy sum to be distributed throughout\nthe commercial world.\nIn Utah during the six months\nending June 40, 1904, the value ot\nthe local ore and bullion settlements\nin the open market reached a total\nof $11,2(\u00C2\u00BB7,540. compared with $11,-\n21i),200lor the corresponding period\nof 19C3.\nThe counsel for the plaintiff had\nteen bullying the witness for an\nhour, when he finally asked: Is it\ntrue that there are traces of insanity\nin your family ? Likely answered\nthe witness. My grandfather, who\nwas studying for the ministry, gave\nit up to become a lawyer.\nOver In Boston little eiirht-yearold\nJimmy Syry surprised his teacher\nwith this outburst of confidence:\nTeacher, my mother is awav; been\naway for two weeks I was out to\ndinner last night, goin'out to dinner\ntonight, goin' where I ple::seSu day,\nhain't had a bath for two weeks.\nThe ^desrspeciitlefis of glass, Bays\nan authority on curious information,\nare traced back from 1,500 to 2,300\nyears liefore Christ. These are of\nKgypthw origin. Transparent glass\nis- believed in have first been used\nabout 750 years before the Christian\nera. Glass was not used for windows\nuntil about A. I). 300.\nThere is an enormous quantity of\ntimber used annually in the mines of\nthe United S'ates. In the copper\nmines ot Nortl ern Mic igan more\ntimber is forever sunk from sight\nthan in anv other place in the world.\nThe Calumet and Hecla copper irine\nis said to consume r.o less than 30,-\n000,000feet ot lumber a year, and its\nneighbor, the Tamarac, more than\n$15,000,000 feet.\nThe \"proper\" amount of mercury\ntc feed 11 a*stamp battery depends\nupon the value ot the ore being milled\nor, more correctly, upon the amount\nof the amalgamate gold in the ore\nThe miliumn is guided in adding\nquicksilver by the feel of the outside\nplates If the amalgam is hard and\nciumbly there is a deficiency of\nmercury; if thin and slippery and\neasily broken up, then too much mercury is being added and the supply-\nis regulated accordingly.\nA tempered copper instrument,\nclearly a relic of the prehistoric age,\nwas fv.und a lew days ago by camp\nera on the shores of Lake Gogebic, a\nsmall b!\ntonic nnIfc ^ *!e,d P^ulnir view*,\n\u00C2\u00A3- Pi Jhe,CUdffeI and declared that\nhe would show that the Bible itself\nwas obscene. He therefore published the Train League, a p\u00C2\u00A3per\ncontaining excerpts from certainly\nblunt passages of the scriptures. For\nthis he was arrested and thrown into\nprison una charge of circulating ob\nttene matter. He was held in the\nlombsfive months, and finally ad\njuaued insane. The prosecution was\ndropped when it was discovered that\nins publication was extracts from the\nBible.\nSubscribe for The Nugget.\nTHE\nGrand Central\nHOTEL\nIs convenient to the C. P. R.\ndepot, and provides all there\nis in the market. Cosy rooms,\nTasty meals and Pure liquors\ncan always be had at this\nhotel.\nJohn Carey, Prop.\nFront St., Poplar.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce:\nWith which is Amalgamated\nThe Bank of British Columbia.\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTQ.\nPaid up Capital, $8,700,000. Reserve Fund, $3,000,000.\nAggregate Resources, Exceeding $83,000,000.\nHON. GEO. A. COX, President. B. E WALKER, General Manager\nSaoings Bank Department, Doposits received and Interest AUoved\nNelson Branch. BRUCE HEATHCOTE, Manager.\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA.\nCapital authorized, $4,000,000\nCapital [paid up] - 3,000,000\nRest 2,850,000\nHead Office:\nB TORONTO, ONTARIO.\nBranches in the Northwest Territories, Provinces of British Columbia,\nManitoba, Ontario and Quebec.\nT. R. MERRIIT, President. D. R. WiLKIE, VicePres. and Gen. Man.\nE. HAY, Assistant Gen. Manager. W. MOFFAT, Chief Inspector.\nTrout Lake, B. C, Branch: A Oeneral banking Business Transacted\nSavings Department\u00E2\u0080\u0094Deposits received and interest allowed..\nDrafts sold available in all parts of Canada and the United States. Special\nattention given to Collections, Mining Bonds and business transacted by\nMail.\nE. K. BOULTBEE, Manager.\nHe who fights ane runs away\nFrom awful battle scenes,\nMay live to write them up some day\nFor all the magazines.\nNELSON FAIR\nTHE\nSTRATHCONA\nHotel in Nelson has\nno superior in West\nKootenay. Always\nplenty of room lor\nPoplar millionaires.\nB. TOMKINS, flANAGER.\nSecond Annual Exhibition of the Nelson Agricultural and Industrial\nAssociation.\nSeptember 28-29\nJOHN KEEN\nNotary and Commissioner\nPOPLAR and kaslo.\nEDWARD BAILLIE A. N. VARS\nBaillie, Vara & Go.\nREAL ESTATE, MINING AND INSURANCE ACTS\nPOPLAR, B. C.\nHOTEL BOSWORTH\nGOLD HILL, B. C.\nThe hotel is furnished ami nMfed up in the\nmost modern style. Best of accommodation\nf.r mining men and tourist*. Only A 1 brands\nof liquors an4\nM 0. B. N. WILKIE, P L. S., Trout Lake.\n!\nI\ni\nThe\nGrand\nHotel\nPOPLAR\nBest Menu in the City\nBed Rooms Large and\nComfortable\nWe Sell Liquors\nJust as They\nCome from the\nWholesalers.\nJacobson & Anderson\n!\ni\n!\n1\n+000000000000000000000000%\nThe\nKaslo Hotel\nKaslo, B. C.\nIsa pleasant halting place\nfor pilgrims on their way\nto Poplar.\nCockle A Papwotrith\nE. HARROP\nLumber and Builders' Material, Hardware, Granite-\nware, Stoves, Lamps, Tents,\nPaints, Oils, Etc., Etc\nFRONT STREET, POPLAR B. C\nF. H. HAWKINS\nA88ATEE\n% SANDON, B. C.\nMoKlnnon A\nSutherland\nCarry the largest stock in\nthe Lardeau, including\nMiners' and\nProspectors'\nSupplies.\nHardware,\nGroceries,\nFurnishings.\nFERGUSON, B. C.\nIT\nSADDLE and PACK\nANIMALS\nSupplies delivered to any\npart of the district at\nreasonable rates. Prospectors outfits moved and\nSaddle Horses furnished.\nGEORGE CHATAWAY\nPOPLAR, B. C,\nJ\". H. 3L.OVE3\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT\n1\n{9\nAGENCY S\nHelp of All Kinds Furnished I\nnmmmmmmtm 1\nON SHORT NOTICK\nR. ELLIOTT\nFurniture and\nUndertaking\nBargains in all kinds of\nFurniture, Stoves, Crockery,\netc. Wall Paper. Two\ncomplete sets of Bar Fixtures,\n1 British Plate Mirror 46x96\ninches, new, Letter Presses,\nBiliard and Pool Tables, Cash\nRegisters and other specialties\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention\nR. ELLIOTT, KASLO, B. C.\nThe Place to Buy\nFURNITURE\nD. J. Robertson & Co.\nFurniture Dealers\nand\nFuneral Directors.\nNELSON, B. C."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Poplar (B.C.)"@en . "Poplar"@en . "The_Nugget_1904_08_05"@en . "10.14288/1.0082752"@en . "English"@en . "50.416667"@en . "-117.13333"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Poplar, B.C. : R. T. Lowery"@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 . "The Nugget"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .