@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "b22d3e30-181a-4bd5-9eba-2fe1ad483080"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:issued "2016-07-15"@en, "1902-09-06"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/paystreak/items/1.0318500/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ p ~wv~-; (^t-^V-^t���^y THE PAYSTREAK. BOOk 6 Sandon, September 6, 1902 ^9999999999999099999999999 ! LOCAL EXTRACT. 8 " .. mi ^1 e and the Toronto Telegram can do which we cannot do, but there are things which this great journal can do lhat. those eastern productions have not thc nerve to try. I wo hundred cents a year. Delivered l�� any address this side of Mars. Circulation limited to one million. Agents wanted. A Fable in Slang When Miss Dovey lit from the Stage and the Gang of Rubber had all sized her up, She had the whole Camp Coppered. She looked like the Cherry in a cocktail or the Joker in a Double Ace Hush after the draw. Every Gazabo in Camp polished up his Chin Music and sent to Montgomery Ward for Winning Ways in Carload lots. They made Cod Fish eyes at her by the Cord, and sent her candy iu Water Barrels. But one by one they Wore out until the contest narrowed down to the Big Husky that had the Camp Buffaloed and the Little Wise Guy who could Waltz like a dream and handle the Atmosphere like the Duplex Blower. He would collar Miss Dovey and pour Hot Air into her Shell-like ear till she voted him the only Pay Streak in the Ledge. Big Husky was lakingall this in, but he was a Chuckawalla and a Waster, and had to go Away Back. This put him on his Ear at the Wise Guy and he concluded lo do him up and make a Shining Light of him. He tackled Wisey on the Trail near the Main Drag and put a face on him that was Unfit for Publication. Then Miss Dovey got next to his Collar, called him a mean thing and an Old Chump, and left him at the Post. She nursed Wisey hack lo Life and 1 hey are now Traveling in Double Harness with the Stay Chains down and are eating oul of the same Nose Bag. Moral���Don't try to uppercut your way into a woman's heart.���Fad in Searchlight. A* Sure Cure for Liberty Toronto Tele Factory on Main Street The Newmarket Hotel ���*NEW DENVER*- The only up/to'date Summer Resort in the Slocan. "% ^ ��k ��� ; Henry Stege Proprietor. *�� I CAN YOU CAN ATTEND THE 2 9th ANNUAL I SPOKANE INTERSTATE FAIR ' October 6th to 14th Inclusive. FINE EXHIBITS IN ^lUCIV cattle, Sheep Fine Arts Exhibit SS Fruit Exhibits "SSSii^? r*. i a. r\\ 0��^:*��^. BIO EVENT EACH DAY Eight Day Racing 300 horses entered Agricultural Exhibits ^aum!* $25,000 In Premiums. RFST MUSIC���Amusement Extrordinary. Concession Privileges of All kinds for Sale. Write for Catalog GEO. H. MARTIN FRANK LEAKE, Advertising Agent. . Mgr. and Secy FOR SALE OH TO RENT-A two story build. ing, Wke shop (with complete fixtures) and .tore fixture., at Sandon. Imgljj of^ ^ | {^^^ ^^^^^aj^^ < V the papstreak, Sandon,B. C September 6 The Paystreak. Published Every Saturday in the heart of the Richest White Metal Camp on Earth. Operated in the interests of the Editor, Subscription - - - - $2.00 a year Strictly in advance. Specimens Shipped on Suspicion, William MacAdams, - Publisher and Proprietor. SANDON, SEPTEMBER 6, 1002. Bvarice and Bloodshed in pennsplvania. Sixteen weeks have passed since the miners of Pennsylvania laid down their tools, and the strike is still unsettled. Ninety millions of money have been lost in the industrial war. Many lives have been sacrificed. The machinery of production has slipped a cog and the concussion has vibrated thru the whole industrial system. No one can be altogether free from the effects of the disturbance for the whole civilized human race is interdependant, even to the remotest part of the world. Those closer to the scene are more affected; those more remote less so, but the effect is universal tho sometimes imperceptable. Six men sitting" in palatial offices in New York control the situation. They are the coal barons and the railroad kings. They control the land, the money and the transportation. Their power is more absolute than the Romanoffs and they are more despotic. Thousands of poor people will shiver this winter within sio-ht of their office windows, but the trust magnates will capitalize their loss and saddle the public with the interest on the bonds. It the strikers win the magnates will increase the price of anthracite. If the strike is lost the miners go back to a worse condition than that against which thev now revolt. Avarice and arrogance are the magnates stock in trade. Living luxuriously they refuse the miners a scanty livelihood. Tho it may lead to revolution, they refuse to arbitrate. They will accept nothing but a complete subjugation of the workingmen. They are the government and they control the state. The army, the navy and the police are at their command. The courts are theirs for a price. They enforce their rule with the bayonet. To resist is anarchy and rebellion, punishable with death. Can it be wondered at, then, that the miners of Pennsylvania are becoming desperate. Condemned to lives of squalor and drudgery by an insane social system, they know only a hopeless present and see a future full of gloom. Only a miracle could relieve them���or death. To the coal miners the declaration of independence has become a satire. The emancipation proclamation is a josh. The land of the free is the home of the slave. The statue of liberty is a blasphemy in bronze. There is no happiness for them. Only grinding toil and the carking cares of poverty. No fullness or freedom or gladness of life. No respite except in the grave. Can it be wondered at that these men will fire a mine or burn a tipple? Is it astonishing that they should shoot from ambush ? To them justice is an effigy; they have met no law but force. They know that the trcop-; will shoot to kill. They are starving and desperate and they strike back. The amazing part of it all is that they have stood it so long. Think of it! Six millionaires in New York; one hundred and forty six thousand miners in Pennsylvania. Some day soon the miners will drill in secret as the Dutch did in St. Louis previous to the American war. Some day another Coxey's army will march to Washington, but next time the army will go on business and if the subsequent proceedings fail to make a prophet of Ignatius Donnelly then United States will be more lucky than she deserves. The Pennsylvania strike is only a ripple of the storm that is to come. TAussel Sage and the trusts. Russel Sage says the trusts in the United States will lead to a revolution. Russel must be a very wise man, as he has come to exactly the same conclusion as The Paystreak. No one man or group of men is or can be greater than the whole people. The concentration of wealth does not increase the physical or mental force of the individuals who do the accumulating. Any time that the whole people catch up with the fact that the multimillionaire is a dangerous animal the plutes will have to go. There are no enuf of them to stand against the world, and as the revolutionists are liable to be pretty hungry about the time the play comes up, vested rights and vested wrongs are likely to go over the dump together. The revolution may be a peaceful one, enforced by the ballot as the socialists claim, or it may be a bloody one, enforced by dynamite and Hotchkiss guns, similar in character to all the other great revolutions of history; but whatever form it may take it is certainly coming and United States is traveling toward the cataract on a swifter current -than any other nation ever did. It took Egypt several thousand years to get to the revolutionary stage. Persia and Thibet made it in a little less, and Rome accomplished her rise and fall within a few centuries But with the aid of modern appliances such as steam, electricity, tariffs' monopolies and joint stock companies' United States has hit a pace that has put her over more ground in the last fifty years than Egypt covered in fifty centuries, until today ten per cent of the people in the great American republic own ninety per cent of the wealth. When the crash comes it will surely be a corn-cracker that will put any little side shows like the Pennsylvania strike or the Homestead riots away back in the shade and will make the war of secession and the French Revolution look like thirty cents. If Pierp Morgan and John D. live out their time they may yet find themselves chasing around back alleys for a dark corner or trying to convince some torch carrying factory workers that they have been hod carriers all their lives and wouldn't know a merger if they saw it in the garbage barrel. Time works some wonderful changes and history repeats itself with unerring regularity. It is only fifteen minutes walk from the palaces of Fifth avenue to the tenement quarters of New York. When the storm breaks there will he something doing in the tenements and it will be a bad dav for Fifth avenue. Russel Sage has the situation sized up right. United States is sleeping with a glycerine can under the bed. Il the people fail to legislate the trusts into public utilities the friction of concentration will light the fuse. If the little chippie boards oi" thruout the Kootenay have their way the mine owners ofthe Slocan will soon find a tariff placed on lead which will stop them from selling ore in United States and prevent them from getting a reduction of the tariff on mining supplies. These boards of trade have no license to speak for the mining industry and the members thereof do not represent anyone but themselves and the corporation interests for which thev continually speil. If all the boards 01 trade in the Kootenay were off the map this country would be many times better off. The aggregate intelligence of the whole works is not. sufficient to run a sawmill. Clifford Sifton's Doukhobors are getting so freakish over in the 1 er- ritories that they threaten to starve themselves to death this winter for religious reasons. Saving the soul by starving the body is a curious process of salvation, but as Sifton imported the Douks in job lots at $3.65 per, religion included, the people of Canada are getting an elegant display of the imbecility of the European outcast at bargain counter rates. the papstreak, Sandon,B. C, September 6 Canadian journalists have lately become so contemptuous towards Canadian judges that the judicature will soon have to relinguish its shroud of dignity or follow the example of the corporations by retaining newspapers to speil their cause. We would respectfully suggest to the honorable chief justice Hunter and the honorable judge Maegar that the Vancouver Province and the Winnipeg Free Press should be come-atable on a very reasonable basis. As neither of these papers have any dignity or probity of their own worth defending they could afford to take a sub-contract upholdin5 the dignity of others at cost prices. When Colonel Prior returned from his tour of exploration in the Kootenay he told the Victoria Colonist that, contrary to expectations, he had been hospitably received. The colonel probably expected that the populace would line up along the gulches and heave porphyry at him. Another strike is due to come off in Fernie as soon as that 60 days time limit expires. It will tie up every smelter in Kootenay and the Boundary and leave the whole country idle this winter while the inhabitants rustle wood to cook their bacon with. If William Lyon MacKenzie King's department of labor is any good this is a fine opportunity for it to get action. A little common sense and an impartial enforcement of the alien labor law would save British Columbia from the worst catastrophe in her history. The miners of the Yukon are going to elect Joe Clark to the Dominion parliament and burn Clifford Sitton in effigy. This action will not hurt Joe and it may jar Sifton a little. Canada has a free trade government which advocates protection and a protectionist opposition which roasts the government for abandoning free trade. Between the two they have got the thing so sadly transmogrified that the free traders are hollering for protection on a free trade basis and the protectionists are hollering for free trade on a protectionist basis. Will some politico-economist Moses please fetch along a light. We want to know where we are at. A bartender at Whitemouth, Manitoba, shot two men last week because they refused to dig up tor the tarantula juice they absorbed. This booze slinger must have been a rank amateur. Page 127 ofthe Bartenders Guide prescribes the soda syphon for such emergencies. Bill Galliher is touring the A commission has been appointed to investigate the Fernie explosion. It is a safe bet that its report will bring out the fact that those 139 miners are still dead. A Montana man is suing the Northern Pacific for not running its trains on time. If this man gets judgment we can see the finish of a lot of jerk lines in B. C. Building railroads from the Coast to Kootenav has now advanced from 9 being a legislative industry to the stage of an industrial enterprise. The leaders of the Conservative party are going to visit British Columbia. This brings to memory the fact that there once was a Conservative party in B. C. Mackenzie & Mann are still at Boundary. Some of our readers may war writh their employees and at peace remember the name. with the Dominion government. ALBERT DAVID THE MINERS' TAILOR. The Pioneer and Leading Tailoring Estalishment of the Slocan. Always Carries a Complete Stock of Imported Suitings and Pantings Material, Fit and Workmanship Fully Guaranteed PATRONIZE UNION LABOR. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. ALWAYS JUDGE A MAN BY THE CLOTHES HE WEARS. if lie is Decked in Shoddy, Sweat Shop Goods Assay His Character and You will Kind Him a Shoddy Man. if he has the Lael on His Garments He is Sterling. So are the Garments. Stores at Sandon and Slocan dtp. % Full Zine of Furnishings Carried at Both Stores. No Flies on You. If you use our Screen Doors, Screen Windows, Wire Cloth and other devices for protection agaiust flies. LiDe in Comfort During the summer months. Our stock of Fly Arresters is complete. H. Buers & Co. Peaches are Ripe WILLIAMSON'S. ��� .! I . I I the papstreak, Sandon.B. C September 6 THE MILLS OF THE GODS Labor Herald, Savannah, Oa. When I read of the fellow behind the trust, Who adds to his golden store By raisin' the price of the dear-bought crust At the cost of the suffering poor; 1 don't git mad, but I figures out How he'll fare at the judgment call, For "the mills o' the gods grind slow," no doubt, "But they grind exceedingly small." And then when I hears how the man who's riz By tramping the poor, rough shod, Gives thousands of dollars for lib'aries To square his account with God��� 1 jest cain't see how his surplus gold Can balance his sins at all; Tho "the mills o' the gods grind slow,'' I'm told That "they grind exceedingly small." If Christ Came to Pennsylvania W. F. Clark of Wilkesbarre, Pa., recently addressed a letter to president Baer of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad company, appealing to him as a Christian to settle the strike. The writer says that if Christ was taken more into business affairs there would be less trouble in the world and that if Mr. Baer granted the strikers a slight concession they would gladly return to work, and the president of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad company would have the blessing of God and the respect of the nation. President Baer replied as follows: " I see you are evidently biased in your religious views in favor of the right of the workingman to control a business in which he has no other interest than to secure fair wages for the work he does. I beg of you not to be discouraged. The rights and interests of the laboring man will be protected and cared for not by the labor agitators but by the Christian men to whom God in his infinite wisdom has given the control of the property interests of the country. Pray earnestly that the right may triumph, always remembering that the Lord God Omnipotent still reigns and that his reign is one of law and order, and not of violence and Mre Hon Well Stressed 7 $fmot,MreyouMillingtobe? Cameron the Tailor makes a business of turning out clothes which are stylish and up-to-date in every particular. His goods are worth the money and the work-, manship is guaranteed. Keep these facts in mind when you want a new suit for the summer. It does not cost any more to have your clothes cut by an artistic cutter and put together by first-class workmen. J. ��. & S>. Cameron, ""KZZ 1S, Sandon THE FILBERT HOTEL Neat, Clean and Comfortable Rooms. JAfines, Liquors and Cigars, the Accomodations Unexcelled. Best that Moneu can Buy. First Class Dining Room Sernice. American and European Plan. P. H. MURPHY PROPRIETOR crime. The populace of ancient Rome was kept from revolt by distributions of bread and performances in the circus. In London king Edward recently fed half-a-million poverty stricken working people and then treated them to a variety show. One square meal in the course of a reign is small recompense for a life-time of robbery. Miners unions have recently been organized at the Chika Ho and Ubari coal mines in Japan. On June 12 a convention of 150 delegates representing 500,000 miners was held. The Labor World, the organ of socialism in Japan, is agitating for the formation of a national union. "Idle luxury and idle misery always come and go together. They belong together. The millionaire hobo and the ragged hobo are products of the same cause. They are manifestations ofthe same social disease. They made their appearance at about the same time. Each is a parasite upon productive industry. E;ich is supported by the labor of the industrious. And the ragged hobo is the less virulent manifestation of the disease: he doesn't cost so much to keep."���The Public. The farmer puts in longer hours than any other class of workmen. He buys his tools and m ichinery from the trust and the trust sets the price; he sells his wheat to the trust and the trust sets the price; he sells his cattle to the trust and the trust sets the price. And yet there are a whole lot of people that the fool killer missed in the rush who think that the farmer is the most independent person on earth. And there are just lots of farmers who think they own the farm they work because they happen to have a title deed to it. The cheering welcome to the Boer generals in London, and the crowding of the Poor Houses with discharged soldiers, is one of the peculiar freaks of war. Finest draught beer. Coolest in town, at the Denver house. Repairing is our Speciality But we also carrp a fine lineofOentle men's Shoes inallthelat* est stples. Miners boots made on demand. Will stand more wear than anp two pair of factorp make. Made to fit the feet. Louis Hupperten Main Street Neto York Bretort) Totogood & Bruder, Proprietors. Brewers of Fine Lager Beer Special attention given to our rapidly increasing bottle trade. Give it a trial. Both ol us wm make by it. We a little. You much. Let us hear from you. Telephone, 24, Denver a" Silverton. Worden Bros., agents, Slocan cuy Sandon British Columbia the Papstreak, Sandon,B. C, September 6 CALUMET AND HECLA Made Net Earnings of $4,900,000 Last Year/"Has Paid Seventy Nine Millions in Dividends. The annual report of the Calumet and Hecla company for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1902, has just been issued to the stockholders of that celebrated mine. The report shows that the net earnings of the mine for the year was $4,900,000 exclusive of nearly a million dollars expended in additional machinery equipment and various surface improvements. The Calumet and Hecla has earned $79,000,000 in dividends since its opening 50 years ago, which is equivalent to average annual dividends in excess of $1,500,000. This is the world's banner record for a metal mine ;ind is calculated to more thoroly establish the belief lhat the particular industry of copper mining is rather profitable business. Six mines in the lake Superior copper district���Atlantic, Calumet and Hecla, Osceola, Quincy, Tamarack and Wolverine���up to the first of llie year had earned dividends amounting lo $107,497,300. While the dividend record of the Michigan mines makes an admirable showing it is not lo be compared with the record ot" Hutu's copper mines, which have distributed over a hundred million dollars during tne past 20 years. The copper mines of Arizona are becoming noted by reason of their large dividend earnings, and it is said senator Clark's United Verde mine is the most valuable copper property in the world, its fortunate owner having refused seveniy-five million dollars for it. The immense producing capacity of the Verde ex- p'ains why Clark has been titled the "Copper King" by common consent. Provincial Tax Sale Notice. Slocan Sawmill Slocan City has a sure thing on a sawmill that will employ 100 men. The company has plenty of capital and a contract with the railroad that will permit them to lay down lumber in the Territories at a rate to compete with anv other firm west of the Rockies. This will give Slocan City a permanent prosperity that will keep the metropolis ���it tlie foot ofthe lake humming. If you want to change your boarding house, try The Denver " Hotel. Best meals in lown. All Home Cooking. 'REE LUNCH EVERY NIGHT AT THE KOOTENAY. FOR SALE Sfinn SHARES (of �� each) fully paid up ^VUXJ stock in the Similkiimeen Valley Coal company, at k cents each. In loiaoflOQ shares "r more. This is not poo'ed stock, and the cert Ifloatei will he delivered on receipt of remittance. If you want to buy or sell stock of any kind *rite us. K. n. McDERMID, Chartered Accountant, Nelson, B.C. NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby Riven that the partner- slop heretofore existing between the under signed under the firm name of the Coin Mining & development Company has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. E. L. WARNER. JOHN D. CAMPBELL. Dated at Sandon this 27th day of August, 1902. NOTICE is hereby given that all property of every description, in the Slocan Assessment District, upon which there were taxes in arrears, and remaining unpaid, and due the Provincial Government on the 81st day of December, 1901. will be advertised for sale for the same aftei the 20th day of September, VMYi. All persons in arrears for personal property or income tax will be distrained upon. This is the final notice and costs of the sale or distrangement can he saved by paying the said arrears at the Government Office at Kaslo, B. C, before the above last named date. E. E. CHIPMAN. Assessor and Collector. Certificate of Improvements. CROSS ROADS MINERAL CLAIM. Situate in the Slocan Mining Division of West Kootenay District Where located. On Washington wagon road, about three miles from McGuigan. TAKE NOTICE that I, David Stevenson Wallbridge, acting as agent for S.K.Green, Free Miner s Certificate No. B51401, and J. W. Power, Free Miner's Certificate No. B5'.KH7, intend, sixty days from the date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the above claim. And further take notice that action, under section 37. must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate of Improvements. Dated this 18th day of July, A. D. WO*. iyi'Vo.' D. S. WALLBRIDGE. TO NOTICE. DELINQUENT CO-OWNER OF O.K. NO. i MINERAL CLAIM. THE To C. S Falls or any person or persons to whom he may have assigned his interest in the O K. No 2 Mineral Claim, situated on Seaton creek, and about two miles from Three Forks, and recorded in the Recorder's Office for the Slocan Mining Division. You are hereby notified that we, the undersigned, James Lowdon, Gust Johnson and Margaret McCuaig, have caused to be expended four hundred and ten dollars in labor and improvements upon the above mentioned mineral claim under the provisions of the Mineral Act, and if within ninety days from the date of this notice you fail or refuso to contribute your proportion of such expenditure, together with all costs of advertising, your interest Jn said claim shall bocome the property of the subscribers under seetion IV. of an act entitled, "An Act to Amend the Mineral Act, WOO." JAMES LOWDON GUST JOHNSON MARGARET MeQUAIO. Dated at Sandon this 25th day of July, W02. NOTICE. TO DELINQUENT CO-OWNER OF THE RELIANCE MINERAL CLAIM. To Arthur Mul'.en or any person or persons to whom he mav have assigned his interest in the Reliance Mineral claim, situated one mile and a half from Three Forks, adjoining theHinklev Mineral claim and recorded in the Recorders oflice for the Slocan Mining Division, You are hereby notified that I, John Foster, have caused to be expended one hundred and two dollars and nifty cents in labor and improvements upon the above mentioned mineral claim under the provisions of the Mineral Act, and if within ninety days from the date of this notice you fail or refuse to contribute your proportion of such expediture, together with all costs of advertising, vour interest in said claim will become the property of the subscribers under section IV of an act entitled "An Act to Amend the Mineral Act, 1900." J0HN F0STER. Dated at Sandon this 19th day of June, 1M2. Hotel Slocan THREE FORKS Has Passed into New Hands and will be Con/ ducted in such a Manner as to Warrant your Pat* ronage. HUGH NIVEN, PROPRieTOR. Sandon Bottling Co. C. A. BIGNEY. Manufacturers 01 Carbonated Drinks of all kinds. CODY AVENUE SANDON The Auditorium OFTHE THE MINERS' UNION BLOCK Is the only hall in the city suited for Theatrical Performances, Concerts, Dances and other public entertainments. For bookings write or wire Anthony Shilland, Sccretarq, Sandon Miners' Union Sandon, B. G. F. L- Christie, L. L. B., NOTARY PUBLIC, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. ATHERTON BLOCK SANDON M. L. Grimmett, L. L. B., BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. SANDON, B. C. NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that I, the under- sinned have disposed of all my interest in the Coin Mining Company, and do not hold myself responsible for any accounts against the company. All liabilities have been assumed bv the present owners. [1 by v J()HN D CAMPBELL. I Dated at Sandon this 27th day of August, 1908. Established 1895. E. IM. SANDILANDS. Sandon. B. G. Notary Public. Insurance and Mining Broker. Mining Stocks bought and sold. General agent for Slocan Properties Promising Prospects for Sale. Sandon Miners' Hospital Subscribers, $1 per month ; Private patients, $2 per day, exclusive of Expense of Physician or Surgeon and Drugs. Open To The Public. DR. W. E. GOMM, Attendant Physic tan. MISS S. L, CHISHOLM, Matron. J. H. MrNEII.L, Pros. Hospital Board. ANTHONY SHILLAND, Secretary. SILVER CITY LODGE NO. 39. I. O. O. F. Meetings in the Union Hail every Friday Evening at 7:30. Visiting Brethern coidially invited to attend. JAS H.THOMPSON, N.G. J. E. LOVERLMG, A.J. BECKER Secretary Vice Grand. A. F. & A. M, ALTA LODGE NO. 29. Regular Communication held first Thins day in each month in Masonic Hall at 8 P, H Soiourning brethern are cordially invited to attend, JAMES M. BARTON, Secretary. Sandon Cartage Co. Mcpherson & hurley. Express, Baggage, and Cartage. Delivery to all Parts of the City. ANADIANo 'Pacific Ky. WORLD'S SCENIC ROUTE DIRECT LINE EAST WINNIPEG TORONTO OTTAWA MONTREAL ST. JOHN HALIFAX BOSTON NEW YORK WEST WESTMINSTER VANCOUVER VICTORIA SKAGWAY DAWSON SEATTLE PORTLAND SAN FRANCISCO LAKE ROUTE From Fort William, the favorite summer route to all eastern points. VIA SOO LINE For St. Paul. Duluth, Sa< Ste Marie. Chicago, etc. Through Tourist Sleeping Cars EAST Leaves Dunmore Junction daily for St. Paul; Kootenay Landing Tuesday and Saturday for Toronto,'Montreal and all eastern points. WEST Leaves Revelstoke daily for Seattle and Vancouver. . ���..., Through bookings to Europe via all Atlantio lines. : , . Prepaid tickets at lowest rates issued from all European countries. For rates and full particulars apply to looal agents or R. B. McCammon. Agent. Sandon J. S. Carter E. J. Coyle, D. P. A. A. G. P. A., Nelson, B. C. Vancouver, B C. t jwitHik,tf Cfte Vagstveak, SanOon.X. C. September 6 ��-. #' Hi p if Hong Brothers, Plugugglies Walter and Robert Hoag are in the Slocan no more. They have left for other parts, address unknown. Last Thursday Robert left the city for the Rambler mine, on the same train with Albert Peterson, a peaceful Swede. At McGuigan Robert and the Swede got into an altercation, in which the Swede got the best of il. Resorting to diplomacy Robert induced the Swede to call it a draw, and proceeded to the mine, accompanied by a bottle of firewater. On the trail hostilities broke out afresh, ai.d Robert struck the Swede with the bottle and fled down the hill. Mr. Peterson proceeded to the half-way house with a sore head and stopped to irrigate. While engaged in this delightful pastime Robert passed the house and arrived at the mine where he engaged the services of Walter Hoag and Jim Piatt lo help him knock the Swede's block off. The triple alliance met the Scandinavian about a quarter of a mile from the half way house and pulling him off the horse pounded him until he was soft. Then they kindly put him on his horse and headed him down to the hotel, where he arrived in a badly delapitated condition. Foreman Zvvicky fired Hoag brothers and they came to town. Here again they resorted to strategy by swearing out a warrant against Mr. Peterson for attempt to hold them up. But in the cool shades of the evening they vanished down the trail and the law has no cognizance ot their whereabouts. Mr. Peterson is an honest man and peaceful. Hoag brothers have established no claim lo honesty and their greatest delight is to lick somebody. Considered in a national sense, Canada is winner by their migration. But Mr. Peterson got a hard deal. CASCAEA COMPOUND TABLETS. You will Find Them Superior to Pills. We Guarantee them to Give Satisfaction RESORCINE HAIR TONIC NONE BETTER. It kills Dandruff, Promotes the Growth of the Hair and Clears the Scalp. Zavge SBottle 50c Donaldsons' Rheumatic Cure. It Will Cure Rheumatism. If it Does Not Give You Satisfaction we Will Refund Your Money. IRed Cross Brug Store. F. J. DONALDSON Chemist and Bruggist Labor Day in Slocan City. Labor Day in Slocan was a success from a labor union point of view. Tiiere were fully twelve hundred people present from Rossland, Nelson, North- port and Slocan points, in fact it was a grand reunion of workingmen from all over lhe Interior. Some very forcible speeches were made by Smith Curtis, Jas. Wilks and others. Rossland and Norlhport learns played a good game of ball, and there was the usual accompaniment of rock and athletic coniests with a grand ball in the evening. The gathering demonstrated beyond a doubt the industrial and political strength of the labor organizations of the Kootenav. Oct on the $ wide of an Wp*to*buu Summer Suit. It does not cost any more to wear good clothes than poor ones. The only difference is where you do your purchasing. Me are might XCheve with the 6006s all the Vime. If there is anything you want in the Ready- Made Clothing line, Hats, Neckties or Shoes you can find it on our shelves. THOMAS -:- BROWN. MONSOON. WE CAN SUIT YOU TO A -T- The only Indo-Ceylon Tea on the market having two qualities combined. STRENGTH AND FLAVOR. Try one pound and be convinced. ONLY 50 CENTS. rip H -A CUP THAT CHEERS RUBBER STAMPS Notary Seals, Stencils, Price Markers,Printing Wheels, Numbering Muchines,Band Dating & Numbering Stamps, Wax Seals, Check Perforators, Rubber Type. Crown Printing Presses etc., etc. Your patronage respectfully solicited. H. J. FRANKLIN STAMP WORKS Vancouver, / B. C. If you want Groceries of the best quality that the market affords send in your orders to 2T/je fbuntev^lkendvick Co., Zimitet p. Burns & Co. h. gii;gerich. m fbead ��ffice, IRelson, B.C. Ttleco Mvenue, Sandon, B.C. Bealers -Jn fresh and Cured Meats of all Mnds. MARKETS IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL TOWNS OF BRITISH COLUMBIA."""@en, "Issued simultaneously in Sandon and Cody; publisher headquarted in Sandon. Published by Jno. J. Langstaff from 1896-09-26 to 1897-03-27; by an unidentified party from 1897-04-03 to 1899-04-08; and by WM. MacAdams from 1899-04-15 to 1899-12-30."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Sandon (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "The_Paystreak_1902_09_06"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0318500"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.9755560"@en ; geo:long "-117.2272220"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Sandon, B.C. : William MacAdams"@en ; dcterms:rights "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 ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "The Paystreak"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en ; dcterms:description ""@en .