@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "a3978ba7-612c-4a49-87ec-35c0205b9442"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:alternative "[The Greenwood Weekly Times]"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-01-14"@en, "1907-04-19"@en ; dcterms:description "The Boundary Creek Times was published in Greenwood, in the Kootenay Boundary region of southern British Columbia, and ran from September 1896 to March 1911. The Times was published first by the Times Publishing Company (1896-99), and then by the Boundary Creek Printing and Publishing Company (1901-1911), and its longest-serving editor was Duncan Ross (1897-1907). In April 1911, the Times was absorbed by another Greenwood-based paper, the Ledge. The Times was revived in 1983, and it continues to be published out of a small building in downtown Greenwood to this day."@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xboundarycr/items/1.0171915/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " IV !^' APR 241007 j! VICTORIA, ^��^' GREENWOOD, B. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1907 NADEN IN THE HOUSE Stands Up for the Peoples' Rights BEAUTIFYING THE GROUNDS. AGAINST A MAJORITY Ready to Do the Premier's Bidding Regardless of the Wrongs Perpetrate-?. Men's and Boys' Furnishings We have decided to clear out our entire stock of Men's and Boys' Furnishings, to accomplish our end quickly, we will reduce our prices on-these lines, to less than manufacturers prices. Don't- miss this opportunity of purchasing first ciass goods at'discounts vary- - ing from Thirty to Sixty Per Cent. Remember : Everything for men and Boys to wear at less thau wholesale cost. TERMS CASH. Men's Goods R WATCH IN THE HANDS OF AN INEXPERIENCED PERSON. vJF THERE IS SOMETHING WRONG WITH IT BRING IT TO A PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER. OUR SPECIALTY IS WATCH REPAIRING. ��MR WORK IS GHARANTBEB A.'L0GAN & C��9 Copper Street Greenwood Call and see them. W. ELSON That Mr. Naden, our representative in. the local legislature, would not see his district's rights invaded or neglected without protest, eyen if he stood alone, was to be expected of the man, and we were prepared to read in thej coast papers that during the f Budget debate he stood up valor- ously for the interests of those who had elected him as their representative. ' When the. question of road grants came .up and be saw the small appropriation for his riding'-compared with that giveu to districts returning government supporters, he took occasion to vcice his sentiments very frankly. We quote from the Victoria Times: - G. R. ��� Naden said while he could congratulate the .province upon its vast resources he' could not congratulate it upon its government.' A good government should be fair in its appropriations.. , He was astonished to-hear the minister stand without a blush and say that the needs of the province had been carefully gone over in making the appropriations. ' Had the minister been honest he would have said, \"we won out and we are going to take the rewards.\" Only one Liberal constituency in the ��� large list of increases had got an increase. While he congratulated Mr. Shatford in getting what he did, he thought he should have tried to get something for his neighing constituency��� Greenwood. Mr. Shatford ' said the , small farmers of his district were satisfied. ' Mr. Naden said that the small farmers in Similkameen had been able to get far more on roads in front of their homes than they ever paid to the treasury, It was a ' well known fact that there were farmers who could get all they wanted for roads in Similkameen, but nothing for the roads on the Greenwood side. He outlined some of the work required on the roads. In two miles.on the road between Greenwood and Midway there were seven railway crossings. The road should be altered. He believed the railway company, when constructing the line', should have been compelled to build the wagon road. That was not done, but it was dangerous to leave the road as it was. After specifying more needs for his riding, he referred to the Skeena constituency. He said he had spent several months in that district last summer, having carried a pack over the mountains. Thisjiew _regio_n_ was an_empire \"iiTitself. He had seen minerals in that country never equalled in the southern part of the province. Fifteen years ago the government of the country was better alive to the interests of the country than the present government. A road-had been, built from Penticton to Grand Forks at a cost of perhaps $150,000 or $175,000. Yet in Skeena, which was far more important, there was not a single road. He agreed with Mr. Oliver that the lands of the country should be reserved for the actual settlers. There had been a lot of speculation there. When he was there it was almost impossible, within a distance which required about six weeks, to communicate by mail with Port Simpson, to find any desirable agricultural land which had not been taken up by South African scrip or otherwise. Before the premier left for the foot of the throne to plead for better terms, he should deal justly witk the districts which had been unfairly dealt with. He did not see how the premier could go and ask for what he claimed was justice for British Columbia, and yet deal unjustly with.parts of the province. He would rather be a member of the opposition, however, and plead or demand justice than be a member of the government side and defend the injustice proposed. ,, He moved the adjournment of the debate. Father Bedard is setting- an example in the community that might well be emulated by others, in the matter of beautifying- the grounds around his chapel and parsonage. The site occupied by these institutions and the Sisters' hospital is by far the most beautiful in the valley, commanding- as it does, a view of the entire town. But to natural, 'the reverend gentleman seeks to add artificial beauty. Quietly he is engaged on the work he has in view, the making, of an arid bench into a place of green shrubbery and flowering plants. He is not trying to make wild land burst into beauty in one season, but is content with a somewhat slower or surer scheme. Slowly, but surely, the spade is reclaiming the plateau east of Church street. The stumps are coming out*, the soil is be ing enriched, trees are being planted, and some day the entire block surrounding hospital, chapel and residence will be attractive and refreshing in a district where trees are not apparently appreciated. ; Added to the instincts of his race for flowers and shrubbery, Father Bedard has the patience to work toward an end that it may take years to realize. A BIG CELEBRATION The Citizens of Greenwood Decide No. m%> ���MEN WANTED TO CELEBRATE MAY 24 A Lonjr List of Sports to Be Arranged and Bi�� Purses to Be Hun-? Up May 24th and 25th. WHO OUGHT TO PAY? The citizens of the 6mall towns of Washington west of us, Chesaw, Mol- soa, Oroville, Nighthawk, Loomis and Concouully, are chafing oyer their mail being delayed several days by the action of the Great Northern railway. This roai runs from Midway to Molson through Canadian territory, but the Canadian postoffice' department properly refuses to pay for hauling mail originating in the United Stages and destined for.United States points, merely because for convenience the road runs' for a distance through Canada, while the United States department refuses to pay for mail carried through a foreign country. Meantime the mails are carried to Republic and despatched from there hy stage line. ACCIDENT ON C. P. R. Hesitate about giving explcnations unless you are asked for them. Apologies oftea are ���mistaken for confession!! of wrong. Accidents of a serious nature ' are so rare on the'Canadian Pacific that when one does occur it not only excites surprise, but a thrill of horror runs from ocean to ocean. Wnat would appear a serious accident on many of the American lines, becomes a calamity on the Canadian road, v One oc the worst wrecks ever known in Canada took place near Chapleau station on the 10th inst., in which IS lives were lost and many injured. According to an official statement, the train was running at the usual speed, about 22 miles west of Chapleau. It was the regular transcontinental train , which left Montreal Tuesday morning- The train was partly derailed by a broken raili The cars ran down an embankment and caught fire, presumably from the cooking range. It is believed that most of the dead were occupants of the tourist car and were pinned down iu the wreckage, and were either killed outright or cremated, as the fire consumed the wreckage. BECOMING A FRUIT COUNTRY That the fruit growing .industry is becoming a recognized fact in British Columbia is evident by the trend of the debate in the local legislature over the question of irrigation. . In his speech thereon, Representative Ellison is reported as producing \"great yellow and redapples\" quite \"approaching the size of an infant's head. \"These apples are bringing S3 a box in \"Victoria today. But I care not whether they are apples or figs, or turnips, if they can bring $3 a box, is it not a good and a safe investment?\" '\"If my honorable friend is privileged to make this exhibit, may I not produce an exhibit of coal,\" put in the member for Nanaimo. (Laughter.) And a little later the apples went back in the desk, perhaps for the premier's 'lunch basket' to London.\" Similkameen's representative said: \"If the premier will call a summer ses-1 sion I will promise an exhibit here of the finest peaches in the world, and enough to go all round; and we can grow more than peaches. Similkameen has thousands of acres of the finest fruit lands in the world.\" Mr. McGowan of Vancouver, in a compliment to Price Ellison upon his able speech upon the subject of irrigation, strongly supported the government's policy, saying: \"Not long ago I stood under a cherry tree in Okanagan which in one year yielded SlOO.\" Mr. Ellison���\"We have one that yielded S150.\" Mr. McGowan���\"Then I hope thi3 summer to stand under that and eat its fruit.\" (Laughter.) Greenwood has decided to have a celebration this year. For several years now it has kept in the back-ground and has given its patronag-e to Midway, Phoenix and Grand Forks, but it has decided to play host itself this year and asks its neighbors to drop in and see us. . A mass meeting- of the citizens was held in the City hall Tuesday evening to consider the matter, and the decision was reached to hold a two-days' event May 24 th and-25th. Mayor Bunting presided at the meeting and submitted the matter, which was heartily taken up by those present. About $2,000 is in sight for prizes and purses, and the amusements will be many and varied. There will be a baseball tournament, horse races, rock drilling contests, hose races and small sports.. The committee named to take charge of the' entire affair was Messrs. Bunting, Hallett, McKenzie, Pair, Thomas, Roy, Car- tier, Cameron, Wellwood, Wilson, McAllister and Redpath. Mayor Bunting was chosen permanent chairman, A. H. Hallett secretary, and Kenneth McKenzie treasurer. The ball grounds will be put in first-class shape for the tournament, in which it is expected several fast teams will participate, and about $300 will be* appropriated to this branch of sports. Tbe citizens of Greenwood do not believe that the'ir long inact-. ivity in public events of this kind I will prevent.the-town from doing itself proud \"on this occasion, and take this early opportunity to promise two days of good. sport to all who come, and to ask the villages, towns and country districts all around to make May 24th and 25th dates for a visit to Greenwood. The B. C. Copper Co. is asking for more men . They can use 75 more at Deadwood and 25 at Summit Camp. Fhe management claims that in order to hold its men it has been compelled to agree to permit them to work two Sundays out of each month. No one will be compelled to work, but they who so desire may work every other Sunday. The men claim that other camps allow them, to, and if they can not do so here they will go elsewhere. Of course there are many others who feel the necessity of the Sunday's rest and will not work here or anywhere on that day. AN EARLY BLAZE NOW MANAGER THOMAS Mr. W. C. Thomas, who has been smelter superintendent at the Dominion Copper company's plant for some time lias been promoted to entire charge of the company's affairs, both raining aud smelling. Mr, Thomas is not only a competent man of affairs, but is very popular with the employees. LORD'S DAY ACT In a Small Laundry on Silver Street CLAIMED THREE VICTIMS Who Died in a Fruitless Effort to Escape the Merciless Fury of the Flames. In accordance with the request of the Lord's Day Alliance, Rev. M, D. McKee preached a sermon in the Presbv* terian church Sunday evening last on the observance of the Sabbath day. The discourse was unequivocally in favor of one day's rest in seven in response to man's physical needs and. in obedience to the law of God, The sermon was temperate in tone, but definite in statement. PAY ORE COLUMN The Bay is looking well and the own- srs are feeling jubilant. Work is. temporarily suspended on the Tip Top pending installation of aa electric hoist which the management expects to have ready early in May. . Work is being rushed on the install* ation of the 20 h. p. electric hoist on the Moreen. An electric compressor for the property comes next. At a point about 100 feet west of the shaft, and on the 200 foot level, the ledge has been struck on the Greyhound. The Freemont is giving evidence of What was a most disastrous fire to those most closely interested, occurred on Monday morning last, shortly after 1 o'clock. A small building, opposite the Alberta hotel, on Silver street, owned by the Stooke Bros., and occupied as a Chinese laundry, was the scene of the fire. The alarm was turned in from the bridge box, at Greenwood.and Gold streets, about twenty minutes past one, and in three minutes the department was* at the fire. , The first eyewitnesses of the fire claim that when the alarm was given the entire front was on fire and burning fiercely. The origin of the fire is shrouded in doubt. The inmates were sleeping upstairs, and the stove was in the back part of the building down stairs. We are unwilling to believe the. fire was of incendiary origin, but it certainly looks, like it. The inmates of the building,,numbering three, all slept upstairs, and evidently made a rush to save their lives. Their bodies were all found at the foot of the stair, where they had evidently perished, rather from suffocation, than fire, as the bodies were not burned beyond recognition. A narrow stairway led from the upstairs to the rear of the ground floor. At the foot of the stairs a door communicated with the' back part of the building, little damaged by fire. This door opened inward, and the rush for it and from tbe fl.ames appears to have been, the plan. But whether ^ _. __w^. *~.y. ��/JU.U. UUL W.U ****** LUCl becoming a great mine. The ledge is the quarters were so cramped that now ahnnt 1���� i��-iMi��.j ���*'.A*. -,-.^1 ~ - ��� RALWAYS BEING MOVED An important agreement has been reached between the Washington State Railway commissioners and the rail - ways operating in the state. The railways agree to provide improved accommodations at the stations, to bulletin all delayed trains, to interchange mileage tickets at 2% cents a mile, and to attend in many ways to the better comfort of their patrons. now about 16 inches wide and this week returned over S330, assays The E. P. U. people are much encouraged by late development and expect to strike the lead any day. Reports from the Riverside are very encouraging. The vein is now about 18 inches wide, and runs high in silver. WHICH WILL IT BE? AMENDMENT TO LAND LAW The chief commissioner has brought down a bill to amend the land act by abolishing the classification of third- class land, which has been heretofore sold at one dollar per acre. Hereafter there will be first-class land at five dollars per acre, and second-class at two and a half dollars. Another amendment to the land law provides an increase of royalty from 50 cents to 75 cents per thousand on Ium ber. For the first time in the criminal career of Standard Oil and the '-sys- tem*r:!_the \"American p\"eople,_through their courts, now have the opportunity to punish John D. Rockefeller through the colossal combination of which he is king. The jury in the federal court over which Judge Landis presides, has put the issue squarely up to that official. If the judge has the backbone dis-. played byhis jury John D. Rockefeller will have to disgorge millions of the untold wealth he has filched from the people. WHAT THE VERDICT MEANS Found guilty on. 1,462 counts Not guilty on. 441 counts Maximum fine, one count.. ' S20.000 Minimum tine, one count.. S* 1,000 Maximum gross fines 529,240,000 Minimum fine, if judge proves weak 51,000 j ���Seattle Times. The electric motor and hoist for the Crescent have arrived and have been taken to the mine, The Strathmore shipped out 30 tons of high grade last week.. Values will press the $200 mark. For some time past the B. C. Copper Co. has been taking a small part of the Snowshoe output. It is now reported that arrangemetits have been com- plated by which 400 tons daily of Snow- \"shbe~ore sliall-^ to\", the Greenwood company, PRICES OF METALS The prices of the metals continue very satisfactory, and with slight fluctuations, hover around the following: Copper ��������������������� 24 cents Silver 65 cents Lead 5 cents OUTPUT OF BOUNDARY ORES NEW PAMPHLET ���'British Columbia, Canada's Pacific Province, Its Advantages, Resources and Climate,\" is the title of a very neat publication just issued by the Canadian Pacific railway, and a copy of which is at hand. The booklet treats of farming, lumbering, mining and fruit growing, has a fine map of the province and is handsomely illustrated. An epitome of the many things an intelligent inquirer about the province would want to know, it will .doubtless realize its mission, the making known of the matchless climate and magnificent resources of the Pacific province. FURNITURE FOR SALE All the household furniture of T. R. Drutcmond will be disposed of by private sale at his residence from now until the 22nd ��� inst. Parties wishing to see or purchase same will find'it to their advantage to call at the house at once. 31-32 The i.ow ghadk mines of the Boundary, which first began shipment in 1900, sending out 100,000 tons that year, have been steadily increasing. The 1906 shipments were 1,161,537 tons, and that of 1907 will be a large gain thereon. The high grades, up to the end of 1906, had in the past four years shipped out over 10,000 tons with a.value of over $1,000,000. Mines. Total to Low graph, end 1906. Snowshoe 102,466 DqmCopCo 400,000' B C Cop Co 1,070,000 Granby Cop Co... 3,000,000 High grade. the trapped Chinamen were unable to get the door open, or whether they were overcome by flame and smoke, will doubtless never be known, but huddled in a heap the three bodies were found. One of them was that of Quong Wong Hop, who ran the laundry, one Fool Keo, a domestic servant, for several years in the family of W. T. Hunter, and one \"Jim\" a janitor about town. During the early forenoon the mayor ordered men to clean up the place and rescue the bodies, which were removed to the morgue, where Coroner Black held an inquest at 2 o'clock the same afternoon. We are not fully advised what the city's powers are in the.premises, but we believe them absolute, and think that it ought to exercise some discretionary power in the matter of allowing build- ings, constructedas\"this\"~was,~to~~ be tenanted. A similar disaster is likely to occur again. Rudely constructed, densely tenanted, and with no adequate means of hurried escape, many of the Chinese tenants are a menace to the city aud life. The coroner's jury returned a verdict in accordance with the limited evidence obtainable, and which in no particular hinted at any explanation of the cause of the fire. Tons in 1907. 19,060 55,501 52,533 165,873 Duncan Prince Heury. Preston Mavis Don Pedro Crescent ...A... Rambler Bay... _,.... Strathmore.... EP U Elkhorn Skylark Providence Jewel , Riverside , Sally 18 15 20 40 95 90 76 75 160 662 1,075 1,176 3,943 2,670 310 40 50 20 204 380 90 20 When you get begin anew. discouraged, try and HILLS CANADIAN INVASION The Wiuuipeg Telegram, quoting from a recent interview with President James Hill of the Great Northern, announces the following as among the plans of that great system for railway extension in Canada: Ten million dollars acquired through the new stock issue will be applied on Western Canada extensions. The system to be projected will be the equal of the present Hill lines in the states. Winnipeg will be the headquarters and vast terminals are being secured, or have been purchased, in Winnipeg, Minneapolis, Chicago, Vancouver and Seattle. Winnipeg, Brandon, Regina, Edmonton, Prince Albert and the Peace River valley will be ultimately covered by the Hill system. Thirty surveyors are now getting plans readyior the Canadian field. Five hundred men in the jjMinnesota woods have been getting out ties for the lines on'this side of the border all the winter. Huge contracts for steel rails, equipment and general supplies have been made in readiness j'or the projected Canadian -system of the Great Northern. ��� Don't be a coward. The sun hates to shine on those who are afraid of their own shadows. '/I i . ;$. CF* CF* CF*\\ ��� CF*\\ CF* CF* CF* ��5 3 ^mmmmMmmmmmmMmmmm well the town's interest guarded bj the laddies. are Now is the time to plant your sweet peas, while as yet the soil is not only damp but cold, for sweet peas are cold-blooded, and cold-blooded things too much warmth don't relish of surround- THE CANADIAN BANK tt? Paid-up Capital,$10,00,000. Reserve Fund. $5,000,000 HEAD OFFICE,*TORONTO B. E. WALKER, General Manager ALEX. LAIRD, Asst. Gen'l Manage BANK MONEY ORDERS ISSUED AT THS FOUXWiNO BATE8t ��3 and trader 3 cento Over $5 rod not exceeding $10...... 6 cents *' $10 -u \" $30 10 cents \" $30 * *������ $30...... 15 cents Tbese Orders are Payable at Par at any office in Canada of a Chartered Bank (Yukon excepted), and at the principal banking* points in the United States. NEGOTIABLE AT j\\ FIXED RAYB AT ii THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, ENG. *. They form an excellent method oi remitting small sums of motley with safety und at small cost. Savings Bank Department Interest allowed on deposits from $1 upwards at current rates. Greenwood Branch - - J. T. BEATTIE Acting Manager PROFESSIONAL CARDS. /. H. HALLETT Barrister, Soucitok, Notary-PTBijc. .i\",'. Cable Address: \" Hali.ett.\" ( Bedford M'Neill's Codes \\ Moreing & Neal'f. I Leiber's Greenwood, S. C�� F. M, LAMB, Provincial Land Surveyor. Office with P. W, McLaiue. Coppre Street. Greenwood, B. C BOUNDARY VALLEY LODGE '^i)W- No. 38.1. O.O. F. Meets eyery Tuesday Eveninp \"J*\"'-? I 0 O. F. Hall. A/Cordial mvi union is ex tended to all sojourning brethern. -R. U. MORTIMER, E. ANDERSON, N. G. Kec.-aec Cbe Boundary Creek Times issued every fridav BY THE Boundary CreeK Piiuting and Co., Limited, J, W. Ellis Managbh SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE. Pkb Yea* 2 00 Six Months.............. _....... 1 25 To Forbign Countries 2 SO FRIDAY, APRIL 19, W0? TIME TO AWAKE At the risk of being scoffed at -by-th e=,maru=too^absor.be.d,; in.;. his own business to do any gratuitous work for his district, and of being laughed at by the man whose own business takes so little of his time that he has leisure to ridicule the efforts of others, we desire to place before our readers our conviction that the time is ripe for a movement in the Boundary looking to the proper placing of the resources of the district before the investor and the man seeking a home. We do not mean the advertisement of Greenwood alone, but of the entire district, Greenwood, Boundary Creek, the Kettle River valley and the West Fork. Here are resources���mineral, agricultural, horticultural possibilities���so far very modestly heralded to the world. Here is a climate certainly unexcelled in the west, of which we seem so enamored ourselves that we hesitate to divide it with the heat- pestered east or the rain-burdened west. Here capital may lind in a dozen localities an opportunity for profitable investment in mining; here labor may find in as many places choice chances to make a home, where seasons are reliable, soil indulgent and the climate friendly. Within a day's ride of Greenwood, in all the numerous valleys of the district, are thousands of acres of land suitable for irrigation, and only awaiting the hand of industry to make them productive. Dependent as Most of the newspapers of British Columbia show a great improvement lately, the result, doubtless, of improved times, for after all, a newspaper is largely what its advertisers make it. A MOTHER'S MESSAGE TO MOTHERS Harry K. Thaw, who will, doubtless, be tried the second time for the murder of Stanford White, may not be electrocuted in the end, but he certainly got a good grilling. ' We quote elsewhere one of our favorite poems of the late Dr. Drummond, who was buried the other clay to the noise of a multitude's lamentations, \"Little Ba- teese\" has the genuine home-love flavor of the French-Canadian about it. Lord Ciiari.es Bekesford was guilty of a very witty remark when he told a New York interviewer that being on full pay in the admiralty, he could not talk, but that if he were on half-pay, he would be glad to tell all he knew, and more too. What Zam-Buk Did for Her Child. \"If this statement is the means of leading- some mother to introduce Zam- Buk to her home, I shall be very glad.\" So says Mrs. K. Watkins, of 26 Forgue avenue, Montreal, aud continues: \"My boy, Walter, aged 9, while attending school, contracted some sores. These tspread, and became so bad that some of them on the heel and ankle made it almost impossible for hini to walk. I used various ointments, but the sores persisted. One day Zam-Buk was recommended, and we got a supply. It seemed to take the soreness ont of the place to which il was applied right away, and the wounds began -to heal. In about a week's time the sores,which had defied other treatment, were completely healed, and there is now not a trace of sore on his.body! I believe Zam-Buk to be the best balm ever produced.\" \"When a mother runs on to the delicate skin of children a balm or salve, she needs to be as careful as if she were givining a child an internal remedy. Zam-Buk is pure���free from all animal fat and all \"mineral mattsr, and may be applied with wonderful benefit even to the skin of young babes. Zam-Buk heals sores; cures eczema, spring skin eruptions,, ulcers, ringworm,* itch, barber's rash, blood poison, bad leg, salt rheum, abrasions, abscesses, cuts, burns, seals and all skin injuries and diseases. Of all stores and druggists at SO' cents, \"or from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. Six boxes tor S2.S0. Baseball players and athletes fiud it best embrocation. we have been, on the mining in- dustr}7, we seem to have grown blind .to alLelse. Conscious that less generous soil and less generous climate elsewhere afford men the conditions of home-making, we seem to shrink from commending what our country is to those looking for betterment. Low grade mining appears to be incompatible with high grade public spirit. If men choose of their own volition to wander., into the district, we make them welcome, but we do very little to parade our privileges to the public. The stranger lauds our climate and we merely listen. He speaks highly of our mining and we shrug our shoulders. He descants on the beauty of Kettle river and the fertile lands along it, and we express our fears of frosts or something worse. We decline to enthuse, we don't like to lift ever so little, and as for boosting, that is out of our line. All along the line communities in the west are marching on to better things. Here we seem content to rest on the efforts of a few millionaire corporations, and they would never have remained had the words of the critic and the pessamist been considered a few years ago. When the big ore bodies were being opened the criticism was that the value was too low. When the high-grades were first being openeAvJie^ei^jwere too narrow or didn't go down,: and when Norris and Meyerhoff and Bubar and others began the cultivation of fruit, why, it was folly. First the critics, said the ores were too low for profitable mining, and then when that was disproved, and men begaa to talk range and ranch, and orchard, the same critic exclaimed ���'folly,\" this is nothing but a mining country. Grand Forks alone of the en- tire district appears to be altve to its possibilities. It talks Grand Forks and the surrounding valley because it believes in itself. . We seem to be ready to apologize for being on earth, and affect a conscientiousness which forbids an effort to induce\" peoplg to cast their lot with us. We are too modest or too indifferent. We need a tonic of some kind, or, better still, a blood purifier, for certainly this thing has become chronic with us. We would like to see Greenwood and the district west unite in some kind of an effort to get our resources before our own people, and then to get the same before the outside public. When once a strike occurs:m the coal mines both sides to the controversy will set about finding means of settlement. Why not do it. before the strike occurs?- We think capital'is frequently to biame in that it defers action until a case becomes chronic and more difficult of treatment. There is a constant conservation and circulation going on iri nature. Nothing is ever destroyed. One form may be changed into another, but it is never lost. Can it be possible that this law fails when it comes to deal with the human mind? According to Coroner Black's interpretation of the law, an inquest can be. held on only one death at a time. Three inquests and three verdicts appear necessary when the three victims of a disaster die at the same time practically, In the same way and from the same cause. Somebody was sulky or sullen, or stupid, or the impending coal strike would have settled long ago. It seems absurd that leaders among the employers or the employees may, ,by obstinacy, prejudice public welfare. Whose was the fault that something was not done during that long confer- ence? New Brunswick, always to the front in the cause of education, and-aealous-for-the welfare of-its teachers, has decided to increase the salaries of teachers of all classes. The increase is to.: become effective upon the first payment of the increased subsidies and is to be graduated according to the length of service of the teachers. Of course Harriman won't disgorge the millions he made out of the. wreck cf the Chicago & Alton. Some men make money by taking hold of second-hand goods and by application of intelligence thereon, make them look like new, Harriman makes money by getting hold of first- class things, and by application jof his art, making them look like 30 cents with the discount off. EDITORIAL NOTES The live wire gets in its work silently and effectively. The prompt response of the fire department to the fire alarm last Monday morning, shows how When Wm. T. Stead was addressing the New York Conference of the Methodist church recently, oh the subject of peace among the nations, he must have startled some of his pious hearers, who applauded his lofty sentiments, by fervent \"Amens,\" when he exclaimed \"nobody cares a damn for your 'amens' unless you do something.\" The conference thanked the English visitor for his address, and -more \"Amens\" were doubtless registered, but Stead plainly told them he would prefer action to either. Winnipeg has declared against the bucket shops, and raids thereon are the order of the day. WILL STAND PAT Representatives of the Fredericton Gleaner, Halifax Herald andV Toronto World, the papers to be proceeded against for libel by Hon. H. R.' Em- merson, have had a conference and have decided to retract nothing. ryooay gr.ee 5 that COD LIVER OIL and IRON are beyond question the greatest medicines 'known. Then why does not everybody *ake Cod Liver Oil and Iron ? Simply because most people cannot lake the Oi land few can digest the Iron in any ordinary form. These j difficulties have been entirely removed by tlie introduction of FERROL, in which the Iron is scientifically com-1 bincd with tlie Oil, rendering theOii*** palatable and the Iron diyestible.' While s is manufactured from the best quality of Cod Liver Oil (the whole of the Oil) and is richer in oil than any other emulsion, and while it contains just the right quantity of the best form of Iron ! ind Phosphorus, it is so scientifically | prepared that not one person in a thousand finds :iny trouble in taking it, and infants digest it without difficulty. Moreover the well-established value of the Oil . and Iron is immensely enhanced by the process ol\" manufacture, and as the formula is freely exposed it is not to be wondered at that j physicians everywhere have fully \\ endorsed FERROL and used it largely in their practice. FERROL is invaluable for the treatment of-any kind of! Lung or Bronchial troubles, while for wasting diseases it has no equal, and j \"You Know What You Take\" White Bros., Red Cross Pharmacy Druggists and Opticians. Greenwood the kind of ' \"Waterproof OfledClothii* that stands the1 hardest service DoT&uKhow Mado fev ��D fctofls of wet -woAor sport,! SOLD EVERYWHERE MINERAL ACT. iCertificate of Improvements. NOTICE. \"Ruby\" Mineral Claim, situate in the Green wood Minitifr Division of Yale District. Where located: In Kimberly Camp. TAKE NOTICE that I, Isaac N. Hallett, as auent for Edward Pope, Free Miner's Certificate No. B21H.lntendsixtydays from the date hereof, to apply to the Mining* Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining* a Crown Grant of theabove claim. And further take notice that action under section 37, must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate of Improvements. > . Dated this 5th day of March, A.D.M07. 26-34 I. H. LAtkETT. MINERAL, ACT certificate of Improvements NOTICE. ADMIRAL DEWEY MINERAL CLAIM, situate in the Greenwood Minintr Division of Yale District. Where located: Camp McKiunev. TAKE NOTICE that I. W. G. Gaunce. as ag-ent for myself Free Miner's Certificate No. B2168, W. M. Law, Free Miner's Certificate No. B2MO, G. O. Guise, Free Miner's Certificate No. B93026. Neil Lamont, Free Miner's Certilicate No. 1563*2, W. E' Yunkin, Free Miner's Certificate No. B93107. and C. E. Hamilton. Free Miner's Certificate No. B93104. intend, sixty days j'rom the date hereof, to apply to the Minin*; Recorder for Certificates 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 Certificates of Improvements. Dated this 11th day of March. A. D. 1907. 28-36 W. G. GAUNCE ���AMD- Stages leave daily for Ferry, Wash., Mother L,ode Mine, and Phoenix. West Fork stage twice a week, COMPLETE LINES OF PIPES, CIGARS and ^TOBACCOS. PROPRIETOR 'tt' oyers of Labor: Are you conversant with the Workmen's Compensation Act. Tlie only absolute protection offorded is a Liability Policy. Tlie \"OCEAN\" Policies, (the largest accident company in the world, with assets of over Seven Million Dollars) provides a complete indemnity against all liability, relieving you from]! all responsi- bi1ity, worry and trouble. District Agent, Greenwood, B. C. M;��;.<..;..x-K\":'*��:~:��>:��:^^ ooooooooooooooooooooooo*xx> CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Deaici;' in Sash, Doors,.; Tuivfred Work and ktside Finish, Etc. ESTIMATES FURNISHED. 0 GREENWOOD, : B.C. O PHONE 65. 0 00000000000<>0000<>00*00��<>00��00000<> Rheumatic Pains Relieved- B. F. Crocker, Esq., now 84 years of age, and for twenty years justice of the peace at Martinsburg, Iowa, says: \"I am terribly afflicted with sciatic rheumatism in my left arm and right hip. I have used three bottles of Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it did me lots of good.\" For sale by all druggists. ty [IIMWAI1K + ty ty ty ty + + ty ty ty % ty ty ty tttytyty tytytytytyty* Electric .current supplied . for Power, Lighting, Heating and Ventilating. Power furnished for Hoisting and -air-compressing \"plants,- with an absolute guarantee of continuous power service for operating, Get Our Rates. We Can Save You Money %;<*��� ty ��� ������: 0a; tyA.;; ty-'.A ty;7l ty .:���'������. ty V\\V ��|��V .\":'������ ty'AA .^.vv &-7 07 ��|��-'*;**.* *v PHONE NO. 20 FOR- CHOICE BEEF, PORK AND MUTTON SALT HERRING anagan Apples ji aa >. l^rsr Copper Street 9 asm astarimmt t KBBtOi Tea Coffee Spices and Extracts Received Highest Award Dominion Exhibition 1906 ��TEL ERNEST J. CART1ER. Proprietor. Finest Furnished House in the Boundary Steam Heated. Lighted throughout with electric lights. We offer special inducements to -travellers as we have the finest sample rooms in the city. Oiar bar excells all others. FIRST-CLASS CAFE, OPEN DAY AND NIGHT IV. ,fu THE B0WH0A&Y CREEK TIMES. Is under the management of Greig and *$ Morrison. The rooms are ��� comfortably furnished, aud the bar contains the best brands of wines, liquors and cigars in the city. Copper St. Greenwood *9B8!BBSK8IBBEISESiDSBDa' J3M��**Sffl-^rH'.W.'^.'TVI*l����^.^ vs/MtmKiemas^samxsS IP Exlro lei! DRAYING -- We Can Move Anything C. BUCKL ' ��� - PROPRIETOR ===== q^^^^-aim^ We have them from $10 up. - 1906 leaves us with three good drop-head machines that we had to take back and which we are offering at reduced prices. Call and see them at once, as we have-only three left; S3 a month takes a new drop head Singer or Wheeler & Wilson, the two best machines on the market today;-\" N.-B. LAMONT, Agent Settlers in great numbers are coming into Canada this year. In one day recently 1,400 immigrants reached Winnipeg. In one hour the other day three special trains lartfed 1,100 in the city. British Band in Paris���For the first time in perhaps a century, a British military band is visiting France. The fine band of the Prince of Wales' Own or West Yorkshire regiment ia visiting Lille at the invitation of an influential local committee which provides the poor children of the town with toys, loth in (j- and entertainment. LITTLE BATEESE Copper Street. Greenwood, B. C. ^iiiiiiiuuiiuuiaiiaaiimauuuiiiiiiaimiiuiuuauuiam^ ere s a Reason ., Why we are turning out more Job Printing than any other office in the ��� Boundary Country. Big. claim isan't it? FinestHjAssortment of Types and Materials, More and Better Presses, Never Substituting Cheap Stock, ��� Employing loniy- the\" best- Mechanics7 Work Delivered when Promised. That's The Reason THE BOUNDARY CREEK TIMES, LTD. -���������-���\"��� ���..�����. ^nH!!n?fHt!??!rn?n!!!m?n!^1!!!?n!mf?^nH!^?^r!n!1!fK COLUMBIAN COLLEGE New Westminster. B. C. Receives both ladies and gentlemen as resident or day stndents. Has a complete business or commercial course. Prepares students to ��� train teachers' certificates of all grades. Gives tlie four years'course for tlie B. A. decree, and the first year of the of the School of Science course1;1 in affiliation with Toronto University. Has a special \"Prospectors' Coarse\" for miners who work in J3. C. ��� Instruction is also given in Art, Mus-c, Physical Culture and Elocution. Term opens September 17.1907. For calendar, etc.. address COLUMBrANCOLLEG'E McRAE BROS. & SMITH. LIMITED NOTICE Is hereby given, that three months from the date hereof, the Company here lofore bearing the name McRae Bros. & Smith, Limited, will apply to theLientenant-Governor m Council for an order changing its name to JMcRae Bros., Limited. 0 Dated at Greenwood, B. C, this 9th day- v�� February, A. D. 1907. ARTHUR M. WHITESIDE, 24-36 Solicitor for the said Company..J Synopsis of Canadian Homestead Regulations. ANY available Dominion Laaids within the Railway Belt in British AJolumbia, maybe homesteaded -by any person who is the soli- head of a family, or auy male over 18 years of age, to the extent of one-quarbersection of 160 acres, more or less. Entry must be made personally at the local land ofiice for the district in which the IandJis situate. The homesteader is required to perform the conditions connected therewith under one of the following plans: (1) At least six months' residence upon and cultivation of the land in each year for three years. (2) If the father (or mother, if tlie father is deceased), of the homesteader resides upon a farm in the vicinity of the land entered for, the requirements as to residence may be satisfied by such person residing with the father or mother, (3 If the settler has his permanent-residence upon farming land owned by him in tlie vicinity of his homestead, the requirements as to esidence may be Satisfied by residence upon the said land. Six months' notice in writing should be given' to the Commissioner of Dominion Lands at Ottawa of intention to apply for patent. Coal lands may be purchased at ��10 per acre for soft coal and $20 for anthracite. Not more than 320 acres can. be acquired by one individual or compan v. Royalty at tue rate of ten cents per ton of 2,00 pound! shall be collected on the gross output. W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior N.B.���Unauthorized publication of this ad vertisement will not be paid for. 32-59 England aad Spain���The Madrid correspondent of the Eclaire says that it has knowledge that some of the main points of the Anglo-Spanish agreement were discussed by King Edward and King Alfonso at Cartageue. England, it is reported, will help Spain in the reconstruction of her fleet, and Spain will sec to it that certain important naval positions do not fall into the hands of any other power. May Starve Paris���\"Paris starved out,\"-is the amiable prospect announced for May 1, or thereabouts, by the alarmists. According to them all the uniousof foodstuff trades are combining to strike a great blow in favor of a weekly day of rest, the law for -which is not yet even fully carried out. The unions are supposed to number 180 aud to represent 10,000 workers, and just what will prove to be the ending of this queer strike it-is difficult to pre- dict- ' A most liberal pension system for railroad men has just been put into force by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fc Railway company. Thirty thousand employees have been made happy by it, for they all look forward to being retired on a fair competence if they live to the age of 65. Unlike most of the systems adopted by other railroads, this is so graded that the poorest paid employees get, proportionately, the largest pensions, and the high salaried men cannot get more than S7S a month. There are considerable more than 500,000 persons eligible to benefit by the various schemes upon attaining the prescribed age, and the appropriations made annually by the various railroads for pension purposes reach an aggregate of approximately $1,500,000. You bad lietle boy, not inoche you care How busy you're kipiu' you poor gran'pere, Tryin' to stop you ev'ry day Chasin' dc hen aroun' de hay��� W'jr don't you geev' dem a chance to lay? Leetle Bateese! Off on ne fiel' you folier de plough, Den w'en you're tire you scare de cow Sickin' dedog till de-y jump de wall, So de milk ain't good for not'ing at all��� An' you're only five an' a half dis fall, Leetle Bateeae! Too sleepy for sayin' de prayer tonight? Never min'; I s'pose it '11 be all right Say dem tomorrow���ah! dere he go! Fas' asleep in a minute or so��� An' he'll stay lak dat till de rooster crow, Leetle Bateese! Den wake us up right away toute suite Lookin' for somet'ing more to eat, Makin' me t'ink of dem long leg crane, Soon as.dey swaller, de start again, I wonder your stomach don't get no pain, Leetle Bateese! But see hcem now lyin' dere in bed, Look at the arm undernest' hces head; If he grow lak dat till he's twenty year I bet he'll be stronger dan Louis Cyr An' beat all de voyageurs lcevin' here, Leetle Bateese! Jus' feel de muscle along hees back Won't geev' heem moche bodder for carry pack On de long portage, any size canoe, Dere's not many t'in^j- ciat boy won't do, For he's got double-joint on hees body too, Leetle Bateese! But, leetle Bateese please don't forget We rader you're stayin' de small boy yet, So chase de chicken an' mak' dem scare, An' do w'at you lak wit' your ole gran'pere, For w'en you're beeg-feller he won't be dere, ' Leetle Bateese! ' The famine in China assumes alarming proportions. Ten million persons are suffering from inadequate supplies of food, and 3,000,000 are nearing starvation. The members of the committee at the front report that they find the bodies of sufferers bloated and that their faces turn -green or black as the result of starvation'. The people are pulling up the growing crops for food. Whole families have been found dead in their houses and corpses are seen lying by the roadside. Probably 5,000 persons are dying daily from starvation. A few cases of rioting for food have occurred and cannibalism is beginning to be resoited to. Newly made graves have been rifled of the bodies, and parents are exhuming their children to be ��� eaten. A dollar, the committee reports, will save one life until harvest, June 27, and 51,000,000 is needed, The whole amount cannot be raised in China. The situation is desperate, and Americans are urged to give $3,000,000 in the next three weeks, not for Christianity, but for humanity. It is suggested that it would be best to cable money to . the American consul, James Rogers, as supplies can be purchased in Shanghai. THAT_GREEN.FIELD_ NORTH ��^o^.^ People of Note In Short Meter ��-*���>- xvlr. Ralph Smith is reported to have declined the Yukon coi-nraissionership. Pat Burns says the price of beef and other meats must advance as the result of last winter's losses. The jury in the Thaw case disagreed and Jerome is going to try again to convict the slayer of White. Ex-Minister of Railways Emmerson. < it is stated, is likely to accept a lucrative position with the Grand Trunk Pacific. Botha is receiving the plaudits ef the British public, which seems to have forgotten all bitterness toward him who shed much British blood. At a meeting in Manchester, it was stated that Lord Strathcona was to guarantee an amount of ��10,000 for the Franco-British exhibition to be held in 1908 in Loudon. A well known philanthropist in England has cabled that he will devote 5100,000 toward the British Columbia University establishment, if the institution be located between Vancouver and New Westminster. A NEW BRAND During one of his many campaigns, \"Private\" John Allen stopped at a cross-roads store. While he was exchanging news with the proprietor, an old darkey from one of the plantations came in. When his purchase of \"midd- lin' an' meal\" had been wrapped up, he started out. At the door he paused. \"Got enny cheese, boss?\" he asked. \"Why, yes,\" said the clerk, pointing to a freshly opened can of axle grease on the counter. \"Box just opened.\" The darkey looked at it hungrily. \"How much?\" he asked. \"Give it to him for 10 cents and throw in the crackers,\" said Mr. Allen. \"All right,\" said the clerk, filling a bag with crackers. \"Here you are.\" The darkey laid a greasy dime on the counter, picked up the box and the bag, and going out, seated himself in the shade of a cotton bale. When he'had finished the crackers he ran his finger around the box and gave it a good long lick. In a few moments he put on his hat and started for his mule. As he passed the store Mr. Allen hailed him. \"Well, Jerry, what did you think of that lunch?\" The old darkey scratched his head, then he said: \"I tell you de truf, Mars John, dem crackers wuz all right, but dat wuz de ransomest cheese I uver et!\" COULD NOT BE MISTAKEN Mr. George McNichol, of Montreal, formerly private secretary to Mr. Frank W. Morse, general manager of the Grand Trunk Pacific railway, who was recently- appointed ,purchasing- age'nt for the G. T. P. on the coast, arrived in the city on Sunday. He will open au office and take up his residence here shortly. Other G. T. P. officials, at present iu Vancouver, are Messrs. C. A. Schrieber, Geo. M. Osborne and W. H. Toby, members of the engineering staff of the company. Their presence is due to the fact that surveying aud clearing of the Prince Rupert townsite has been discontinued for the time being. A report is current in the city to the effect that the Grand Trunk Pacific never actually intended to lay out a townsite on the land bought from the government, but that the pretence of doing so was made while endeavoring to secure from the Dominiou government the lands within the Indian reserve. The refusal of the British Columbia government to give up their revisionary rights in the land aud the order issued by the provincial constables for the company to desist from the driving of piles in the vicinity of the reserve, is stated to be the real reason for the withdrawing of practically all of the G. T. P. surveying force from the townsite. Mr. D. H. Hays, secretary of the B.C. Tie & Timber company, who returned from Prince Rupert, reports that his company's mill, recently put into operation there, is running at about half capacity. He does not know whether or not the niuch-talked-of new hotel will be built at Prince Rupert this summer or not. The Canadian Bank of ���Commerce still maintains a branch at Prince Rupert and the Bank of Montreal will shortly open an office there. ���News Advertiser. The attention of the smoke room company on a Liverpool Atlantic liner was held by an assertive Chicagoan reconteur, whose tale full of insiduous hits at denizens of New York, created much laughter. When it had subsided a New York gentleman who had been quietly listening, took up the running. \"Say,\" he commenced, \"guess I opinionated you a Lakesider vurry first day aboard.\" \"Haow?\" questioned the former speaker. ' \"Sat close to you at lunch atul noticed you ax'ut.\" \"Huh! my ax't?\" exclaimed the man from the porcine city. \" Why, first day aboard I grubbed entirely by myself, and spoke nary a word to a soul.\" \"Jes so,\" rejoined the other, \"but I could hear you ealin pie.\" Today and today make the morrows. For CUT FLOWERS, ;Pot Plants, Bouquets, Etc., Write or phone FRACHE BROS., Columbia, B. C. Funeral desif-ws-of every description. The application of Roberl E. Peary, U. S. N., for leave of absence for tliree yoars, which was approved by the secretary of the jiavy, has uncovered the fact that Commander Peary definitely purposes to make another attempt this summer lo reach the north pole. Premier Pugsley of New Brunswick, is thinking of contesting St. John county for the commons, a vacancy having occurred by the death of Dr- Stockton. The report is that Mr. Pugsley wired Mr. Emmerson his commendation of his course in resigning the Railway, portfolio, and immediately set about trying to secure it for himself* THE ORE TRAIN Cariboo���The Guggenheims say they will withdraw from the placer fields of northern British Columbia. They claim that a lease is too insecure a title on which to expend any- more millions, and will not operate in the Province unless a system of crown grants for placers is adopted as ia lode mining. Rossland���The usual quarterly dividend of iyz per cent on the capital stock of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting ��� Company of Canada, Ltd., was declared on Friday, to be payable to shareholders registered on April 22, on which date the books of the company will close. This is the sixth quarterly dividend paid since the consolidation was effected. The dividend amounts to the comfortable sum of 8120,000, and the aggregate of all of the six dividends is over $700,000. Similkameen���Messrs. .Armstrong and Ivaw of the Similkameen Mining & Smelting Co., are expected to arrive at Bear creek shortly. It is understood that they will immediately begin work on a tunnel with a big force of men. Shaft sinking has been carried on all winter and is down now about 150 feet. Development work on this property will now be pushed with vigor under the direction of an expert engineer. This company has made remarkable progress on this mine, considering the difficulties cf access. A good road has been built to the property and a large amount of surface worK done. BY TRADING WITH US FROM 25 TO 50 PER CENT. SAVED ON MR GROCERY BILLS We sell at retail at lowest wholesale prices. Hotel and boardinghouse keepers, farmers, miners and lumbermen will find it to their advantage to investigate us. WE PAY THE FREIGHT to any railway station in British Columbia. We only handle first class and. pure goods. We guarantee prompt delivery. No order too small, none too large. Write for our price list. IT IS FREE. Be convinced that you can save money. NORTHWESTERS SUPPLY HOUSE 259-261 Stanley St., WINNIPEG, Man. Texada���The Cornell mine on Tex- ada island, has cios:d down because of trouble with the miners similar to that which caused the Marble Bay mines to suspend operations on March 25. News of the closing down of the Cornell, which employed but a few men, was brought on the steamer Cassiar. It is reported that the management of the Marble Buy mines is now no nearer a settlement with the men than was the case at the start of the trouble. The cause of the strikes was the reftibat of the mineowners to meet the demands of the men for increased wages. THINGS DOING Dalhousie, N. B., reports a quarter million fire. Vancouver votea 51,000 to the Chinese relief fund. Kelowna selli a $60,000 tobacco farm. A Honolulu man claims to have discovered a leprosy cure. Vancouver plans to tax real estate dealers ?50 a year. The Bank of England reduces its rate of interest from 5 to *'/i per cent. A woman in Marlboro, Mass., is electrocuted while using the telephone. It is reported that Kings Edward and Victor Emanuel are to have a meeting. In his competitive essay on British Columbia's potentalities, for the Flumerfelt prize, and the successful one, ex-Goyernor Mackintosh has presented an array of fact** to which we shall refer later. ������������''���^���������vjyfl) Do you know there is big money in raising poultry? Do you know there is more money iu running agoo'd incubator than in almost anything else you can do for the amount of time and trouble it takes? Do you know my incubator will pay you a bijrger profit than any other thing you can have oa your place? Well, all these things are true, and I can prove it. Thousands of people all over Canada have proved it every year for the last five years. I want to quote you a price on my Chatham Incubator, ���sold ON TIME. I want to send you my Chatham book. This incubator book is free��� I'll send it to you for just a postal card. It tells you a lot you ought to know about the Poultry business���it tells you how to make money out of chickens���it tells you how my Chatham Incubator will make you -more money than you can make with hens���far more, and with less trouble. This book tells you how my Incubators are made���why they are the best ever invented���and why I sell them ON TIME and on a 5-Ycar Guarantee. /% My Company has been in business in Canada for over 50 years. We are one of the largest wood-working factories in the country. We also operate a large factory at Detroit, Mich. We have the Incubator and Brooder business down to a science. Chatham Incubators and Brooders will make you money, for a Chatham Incubator will hatch a live, healthy chicken out of every fertile egg put into it, in 21 days. Will you write for my book . __������C\") �� today? Do it now while you think c , p***\"v****k'���- ' \".LB of it. Just say on a postal \"Please \"-fSjESSiif send me your Incubator Book\"��� that's all. Address me personally, Manson Campbell President Tho Mr.nson Campbell Co., Ltd. Dept. , Chatham, Ont. NOTE���-1 carry larsre stocks and ���ship promptly from branch houses at Calgary, Alta., Montronl, Que.; Bran don. Man.: Halifax, N. S . Victoria, B. C, aud factory at Chatham. MINERAL ACT, Certificate of Improvements- NOTICE. MONTANA MINERAL CLAIM, situate in tlie Greenwood Minium Division of Yale District. Where located: In. Arlington Camp and adjoining the Arlington Mineral Claim, TAKK XOTICE that I, William Lindsay Caniefj-ie Gordon Free Miner's Certificate JCo. 1U931 intend, sixty days from the date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtain- iiur 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. Daied this 6Lli day of March, A. D. W07. 28-36 WILLIAM L. C. GORDON MINERAL ACT Certificate of Improvements NOTICE \"Bell Flower\" Mineral Claim, situate in the Greenwood Mining Division of Yale District. Where located: In Long Lake Camp \"-pAKE NOTICE that- I, Isaac H. Hallett, ���* as agent for Spencer Benerinan, Free Miner's Certificate No. B2122,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 their interests in 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 31st day of December, A.D. 1906. 21-30 I. H. HALLETT. mmmwmm&Mi&L)imtmHa HANDBOOK (New edition issued Nov. 15, 1906) Is a dozen books in one, covering* Ihe history, Geography, Geology, Chemistry, Mineralogy Metallurgy, Terminology, Uses, Statistics and Finances of Copper. It is a practical book, useful to all and necessary to most men engaged in any branch of the Copper Induetry. Its facts will pass muster with the trained scientists, and its language is easily understood by the everyday man. It gives the plain facts in plain English without fear or favor. Its lists and describes 4626 Copper Mines and Companies in all parts of the world, descriptions running from two lines to sixteen pages, accord in ji* to importance of the property. The Copper Handbook is conceded < be the 'I The Mining Man needs the book : the facts it gives him about min mining aud the metal. The Investor needs the book for ti facts it gives him about mining, min ing investments and copper statistic. Hundred of swindling companies are exposed in plain English. Price is SS in Buckram with gilt tcp; S7.S0 in full library morocco. Will N sent, fully prepaid, on approval, to any address ordered, and may be returtu within a week of receipt if not found fully, satisfactory. HORACE J. STEVENS Editor and Publisher. 453_Postoffice Block, Houghton, Michigan. OUR GUARANTEE: NO PAY UNLESS CURED When You Need a Specialist, Consult One of Wide Experience. We are just ncrw completing o��r twentieth year a. specialists in men's diseases. Durmtr theic years of close application lto a single cl.if* ol ailmenu we have oricin- ataii and perfected the only scientific aad certiiin methods by which these diseases are cured. If we accept your case for treatment, a cure is but a matter of a reasonable time. Wo fituarantco every man a- lifelong: euro for Varlcocolo, Hydrocele, Urethral Obstructions, Blood and Skin Dls- easos. Prostatic Troubles, Piles, Fistula, Lots of Vital Power, Kltlnoy, Bladder and Special Disease?. Wo especially offer our services to thoso who are afflicted with weakness as a result of their own follies or excesses. ���^ Our methods aro up-to-date, and are endorsed by the highest medical authorities of Europe and Aroorlca, Henco our suceess In tho treatment of Men's Diseases. Remember, our specialty is limited to tho diseases of MEN and MEH only. We cover tha entire field of nervous, ehronie. deep-soated tad complicated diseases. CONSULTATION FREE. If you cannot call, write for Symptom Blank. Many case* can be cured at home. AU correspondence confidential. SCOTT MEDICAL COMPANY 109 Marion Si.. Cor. Firs* A**, SEATTLE. WASH. MINERAL ACT. Certificate of Improvements. NOTICE. \"Mable Fractional\" Mineral Claim, situate ii: the Greenwood Mining Division of Yale Dis- tricl. -Wlicre located: In Greenwood Camjp.. AKE NOTICE Mi at I, Isaac H.\" Hallett\". \" as At***eut for John Mulligan, Free Miner's CeitiHcate \"Jo. 312021, intend, sixty dayr from the date hereof, to apply to the Minins; Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for ihe puroosc of obtaining a Crown Giant o: theabove claim. Aud further take notice that action, uudci ���section 37. must be commenced before the. issuance of such Certificateof Improvements. Dated this jits dav of December, A D. 1TO6. 21-30 I. H. HALLETT. Certificate of the Registration of an Extra-Provincial Company. \"Com*hanii:s Acr. 1V7 f HEREHY CERTIFY that the \"l-'iemoni I Miuitiir Company. Limited.\" ha-, ilns dai boon n.-iri'-terecl a-, an Extra-Provincial Com pany uiulei tlie ' Companies Aoi. 13\"7.\" to earn out or ellect all or any tif the objecis of thi Company to which thi* li'ui^lativi1 authority oi tin\" Leifisl-nurfliif Uritish Columbia evtrudn. , The head .itluv of thi* Ci>mp:i.i> i1- situate a- the City of Spokane. Countv of SpukniKv, Stall of Washington, U. S. A. The amount of the capital of th- Company h three hundred ami seventy-five thousand ve Act. Given under my hand aud seal of ofiice a: Victoria. Pruvince of Uritish Columbia, thi.. 11th day of March, one thousand nine humlre.. and seven. [1.. s.] S. Y. WOOTTON, Registrar of Joint Stock Companie- The objects for which said Company ur been established and registered are: ��� To work, operate, buy, sell^ lease, loca acquire, procure, hold and deal in mines, met; and mineral claims of every kind and descrij ion within the Proviuce of British Columbi and elsewhere; to carry 0:1 and conduct general mininjr. smelting and reduction bu*- ticss; to pure lift St, acquire, hold, erect ai operate electric and power plants for the p. pose of mining' and treating* ores, and for s purposeof \"creatine pov-.crand furnishing lisr\" needed in and incident to the Company's ����������\"*. ness aud mining; to bond, btiy, sell, lee locate and hold ditches, fiumasand water ri.irl to conduct, lease, buy, sell, build or ope: railroads, ferries, tramways or other ways transportation for transporting ores, miu and other materials: to own, bond, Dny. .*��� lease and locate timber and timber claims,.\" liually to do everything* consistent, propi convenient and requisite for the carrying 01. the objects and purposes oforesaid ia ti e fullest and broadest sense, within the territory aforesaid. 29;32 SHERWIN-WILLIAMS �� Dr. Mathison, block. dentist, Naden-Flood May 24th and 25th the Big Celebration. arc the dates of READY FOR USE WITH THE ADDITION OF COLD WATER DECOTINT is made in 15 delicate Loues and popular shades, also white, and is prepared for use instantly by the addition of cold water and thorough stirring-. DECOTINT is especially clear in tone and thoroughly sanitary. It is readily prepared and easily applied and gives an artistic finish without * a' prominent gloss to reflect a glaring light. DECOTINT, unlike kalsomines, does not rub off on the clothing and on account of its moderate cost permits of frequent changes in interior color schemes at ver}' little expense. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS The third story of the new Pacific going- up with a rush. Dr. Simmons, dentist, Phone 96 Wallace-Miller Block, open evenings. Call at the Greenwood Bakery for New England bread. About 30 men are now employed by the C P. R. at Greenwood. PREPARED Made to Paint Buildings With Outside and Inside. It costs less per job and wears longer than any other paint, either ready prepared or mixed by hand. ���-sasSfe**^ The Hardware Furnishings Groceries j Formerly sold at S8.25 Sale Price $6.50 Glassware Sale Formerly sold at sn,50 Sale Price $9.45 OH Formerly sold at S13.25 Sale Price $10,90 Next week Formerly sold at $15.00 sale Price $12.30 TERMS OF SALE CASH. Date of Sale April 30. I A. L. White & Co., Phone 16 '���tO'C-'KgaBEB^^ ���*��##��*o*����e ���4-rnt B I ^fc\" Greenwood's Big Furniture House. BEBwmsssmmSmm ~%mmS%J-tm~ ^ )ti One of the best appointed working-tne-ti's Hotel in the'eity. The finest of bars, stocked with the best . WINES, LI&UORS land CIGARS Lighted throughout with elec- tircity. Hot and cold baths. RATES: Board and room 31 per day. Strictly First-Class Service Itching Piles. If you are acquainted with anyone who is troubled with this distressing ailment you can do him no greater favor than to tell him to try Chamberlain's Salve. It gives instant relief. Price 25 cents per box.' Sold by all druggists. - Subscribe For The Times, $2 \"2H���SEHBIK83SE2SS��S3&E2��3 Can cure your Cough or Cold, _ no question about that, bufc��� why go to alt the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of having hispreseription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CUKE for a quarter. Why pay two to Sve dollars when a twenty-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you as quickly ? Why not do as hundreds cf thousands of Canadians have done for the past thirty-four years: let SHILOH be your doctor whenever a Cough or Cold &DDCAF8 SHILOH will cure you. and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you havs a Cough or Cold cure it with If your work ia not appreciated you have not failed. Experience counts for j JSO^ ^ ^ ..,__,_ ���omething. I ^SJaS^fa^^^SSyfi^SS^ies^J"@en, "Print Run: 1896-1911"@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Greenwood (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Boundary_Creek_Times_1907_04_19"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0171915"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.1000000"@en ; geo:long "-118.6833000"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Greenwood, B.C. : Boundary Creek Printing and Publishing Company"@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:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "Boundary Creek Times"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .