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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2016-06-27","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1913-05-24","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/cranbrookpro\/items\/1.0083202\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Pro-lnclnl   legislative Aineml.ly\n\/\nWe Test Eyes\nOtind Onr Own Unset ua\nGusrantes Yon a Pit\nWILSON\nJBWBLIR\n*E- '\u2022aw  Leading Newspaper\nWl ^ 0 I \" n      ri     in the\njj     Koot\u00ab*n\u00ab>*s\n^gJb&iA \\\\\u00a3r        The\ns*#_s^-ss**T  \"Prospector\"\n$2.00 Per Year\nVOLDMB 19.\nCRANBROOK, B.O.\nSATURDAY MORNING\nDeath of J. A. Martin\nOn Wcdncsd\".. of last week, I'r. J.\nT. Martin was en o ing Beamingly\nbood health, even nssistin* Mrs. \u00bb ar-\ntin around tho house, wh n very\nsuddenlv he was taken sick and hai\nto be removed to the Bt. Eug.ns\nHosltnl, Cranbroor, where be wac\nfoind to be suffering from cere'ernl\nbemorrhuge. On Thursday it wni\nobsirved thnt his end war n ar and\nhlB tnmllv waB BUirmo- d *n hi* side\nand remain-\"] ln attendance to the\n\u2022 nil, wlil h came on Saturday m.ini-\nIng.\nOw'n** to the son* h.vin\" to r'turn\nto their so* eral i lacs of bull obi,\nthe funeral wns arra g d to ta e\ni*lnce on Sun _v i nd*r ht aus i*e\nof the Knlchts of P.. thi-a. A cm\nsldera'l- numier ot '\"'gh't toioveil\nhtm to his re t up rlace in s' ito o'\nthe fact that rain was falling the\nwhole time.\nMr. Martin is \"n old timer of\nWn**dn\u00bbr, having corns i^to the dls\ntilit before cn tec'ion on the C.\n\". R. wsb commenced, He f-.'1-wv*\nthe o-e'i-at'oi if tl' i\"s e tor for\na, considerable time-, inter rn account\nof his siiflern\" from rheumatism, he\ndid   a little book-keening.\nMr, Martin w\u00bbs wll '1 tl for hit\nunrg'itress, and since-ly of pvrpo e\neffectionate husband and a'rue father. Several wr rths of beautiful\nfowers mark bis list resMng n'ac\\\nand ere but emblems ot the rates n\nIn which he was held by his friends.\nCARD OF THANKS.\nTo all the friends whose sympathy\nand services were so kindly tendered\nln our time of bereavement, we desire to extend our sincere thanks.\nEspecially do we wish to thank the\nCatholic Fathers and Slst-ra; also\nthe Knlfhts ot Pythias for th.lr kind\nasslitance.\nSincerely yours,\nMrs. J. T. Martin and family.\nJ. T. Martin, Jr.\n;      Chas, Martin.\nClarence Martlne.\nVerlle Martin.\nNew Picture Show\nFort Steele is to hare a Mo Ing\nPicture Theatre. Mr. J. W. Maugham, formerly of Bonnera Ferry, wlll\no-ien this week a Mo ing Picture\nTheatre, to be popularly known as\nthe Star Theatre. This will be located in the St. Mary's Inn, Just opposite to the Windsor Hotel.\nMr. Maugham is having the place\nredscorated and the accommodations\nof Uio geniral public wll be well\ncared for. The Theatre will be open\nfor the present on every Wednesday\nend Saturday, when the pictures\nsto ra will be from the Calrary Film\nBxcnange. The general admission\nwill be 25c and (Oc, and Ib claimed\nby the proprietors to be \"The Place\nto Cure the Blues.\"\nIn addition to the above and at\nother times -at hla difosal, Mr.\nMaugham, wbo ls a practical plumber, will follow hla oan trade. Everyone in Fort Steele, who is in\nneed ot plumbing done in first class\nstyle, will do well to consult THE\npractical men.\nMAY  54th, 1913\n.'UMBER   21\nOverflow\nSt. Joseph's River to the east ot\ntha City ls overf owing and lf tome-\nthing ls not done immediately the\nsmall ranchert will suffer tig 1)11 s\nthrough the water covering their\nsmall farms. Canaldcrable counter-\nnation ls to be observed at\nthe ?fforts of the various mra\nto divert the water in'o ohann'la on\nthe highway.   The overflow it caused\nBeauty Chorus in the Georgeous Musical Spectacle ''The Prince of Tonight\"\nAt the Auditorium, Tuesday. May 27th, 1913\nthrough the snow being melted in the\nsummer heat and coming down the\ntiilla ln such large qtiantitl s. Along\nthe river various dams have be n erected to conserve the water tor miration which Ib good in the latter\nmonths of- the yean; at the some time\nnow, that the fanners have Just sot\ntheir seeds in it might be rossible\nto remove some of these and al.ow\nthe water a freer flow, as these can,\nand do, and it is naturally to be ex-\noected will, hold the water in check,\nthereby helping the water to run at\na furious rate just where it is not\nwanted. In places along tho river\nthere have been several trees fled\nand other debris can plainly be seen\nln the river, which, is removed,\nwould greatly alleviate the suffering\nwhich will undoubtedly be caused, if\nthe river ls allowed to overflow at\nits present rate. Several ot the small\nranchers bave hod to bank up whole\nfields to stop the Inflow at considerable expense and for a while It ia\nstanding tbe strain; but how long\nwill it last? It is a question that\nla being asked.\nCourt of Assizes\nThe Court of assizes ooened at Fernie on Monday with Mr. Justice Murphy on tbe bench. The cas:s were\nprosecuted for the Crown by Fred C.\nMoffat of Nelson. The grand jury\nwas composed of A. B. Tiltes, as\nChairman; N. C. Kendall, of Hosmer;\nW. J. Morrison. J. R. McEwlng, O.\nJ. D. Quail I. Bell, J. L. Gates, R.\nDuthle, and J. F. MacDonald of Fernie; C. D. McNabb, of Waldi; J. It.\nAgnew, of Elko: J. F. Laidlaw anl\nV. Hyde Baker, of Cranbroo'.. Only\ntwo cases were up for consideration\nand both were statutory charres. In\nthe caae of Res vs. Wallace, no bill\nBanff-Windermere Road\nDescription of Route Traversed by New Government Motor Road\nThere is a great .rotor road now\nnow in course of con truction from\nJanff to Windermere, in the Colum-\n!a Valley, eighty-five miles south of\n.olden. Prom Calvary to Banff the\nroad ninety miles long, is now com-\ni-l.te. From Banff, Alta., on the eastern Bio s cf the  i.oc.y  .-.ount ins\no WinJermcre, B. 0., is nuDther\nninety miles. It is thc in ten .ion to\nconstruct such a motor road that the\ncrip <an be made in four or five hours\nbetween Eanff _nd Windermere,\nwhere the   C.   p.   R. proi-03e,   upon\nompleticn of the motor road nnd of\nthe railway now being b.ilt south\nfrom Golden to Winderirero, to establish at lnvermere, on lovely Lake\nWindermere, one of ita largest to.ir-\nst hotels.\nIa time this great national hi bwaj\nwill be continued from lnvermere\n\u2022cross th? Splv'rk *'o n i\/iw *o W\"flt\nKootenay, and from thence by way\nof the Mona-.hce Pass to Vernon,\nin the cenu. of the northern u a...--\nian distrirt, connecting at tins point\nith p\\1 the Okara an r ads- froii\nehere by way of Grand prairie   to\nNicola, Pr.nvton and serosa the\nHope Rantre Into the Fraser Valley nt\nHupam ihcnce to  Vancouver.\nTho totul distance from Calgary to\nVancouver by suc\u201e a road, for thj\nmost part remote from the main line\nof talwnjs, will bc six hundred anu\nfifty mi;-~s; lt is ta-rd to re [Ue,\nmuch less describe, the possibilities\nit ofiers. The traveller la.in* Calvary in the mo.ning couM lun.h a.\nis...)ii and s.ind ihe night at Inver-\nUfcre, luiu'h the following day cn the\nwest side of ; he Sel irk Mountains\nand sleep at the Arrowhead Lakes.\nWith un l'hvIv start on the third day,\nhe n.uld lunch nt Vernon and spen,\nthe night in the Nicola Valley, The\nfourth day would take him through\nthe llopi. Ridge, aud with a good run I\nhe coul;! mako Vancouver that\nnight.\nThe specifications call for a road at\nl.a-a twelve feet iu width, with ade- !\n-luate drainage, built in the best\npcssiUc grades and alignment. The\nsurf Tim' of thn ro ul will rovust o j\n\"n six-metal surface rolled with a five-\nton roller. J\nReturning to the Banfl-Windermere\nsecti n of this route, 1 find that the\nDominion Government is building\nthat part within ttie present Rocky\nMountain Van, a distance from Banfl\nto the summit of a--uroxi irately\ntwenty-six miles. The Provincial\nGovernment of British Columbia and\ntbe C. P. R. are uniting in building\nthe British Columbia Rectlon from\nVermillion summit to tbe Columbia\nValley Government road at Sinclair\nHot Springs, a distance of sixty-two\nmiles, The Dominion Government\nhas built a bridge over the Bow\nRiver and has two large parties of\nmen working on the Castle division.\nTbe work between the Vermillion\nsummit and Sinclair Hot Springs has\nbeen late and will bc finished in 1913.\nThe Castle division, where the Dominion Government Is now at work,\nconsists of an eii.ht-.nile ascent cn an\naverage grade of not over two per\ncent., through   a   co       which has\nbeen partly burnt, but commands\nfrom practically all points of the\nroad a magnificent view of the Bow\nRiver valley with Castle and Storm\nmountains close at hand. Two nretty\ntakes lie at the summit, and no\ndoubt at tbis point within a short\nTramp and Margaret.  Scene UL  \"Passers By\"\nLocal Items\nAllan A. Moore, of Cnl,ary, was in\ntown Friday.\nMrs. A. Mellor, of Marysville, was\nin town Monday.\nbill wus returned an 1 the accused was\ntaken before the petit jury,\nMr. and Mrs. Moffat of Nelson were\nOranbroolt visitors Friday.\nJ, McBride of Marysville, was transacting business at Ornnbrook Monday.\nMr. and Mrs J. Mclntyre, of Vancouver, were ' Or-Mibrook visitors\nMonday.\nMr. nnd Mrs. W. Hiclm. of Nan ton,\nAlta., wore registered at tha Oran-\nhrook Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. It. Macdonald lef\non Saturday last on a hull lay visit\nto Vancouver.\nMr. and'Mrs. .1. F. Smith, nn'1\nMisa linil_v   of   Vancouver n o' ore\nto Klko on Friday.\nMr. nnd Mrs. J, V. Smith Wll1\nleave on Wednesday next on a holiday trip to Toronto.\nMrs. h. Lundeen and children of\nMarysville, were in the Citv Monday.\nCourt of Assizes at Pernio.\nMrs. W. K, Thomson, wife of the\nRev. Thomson cf the Peeshyterlnn\nChurch left on Mon lav f >r Edmonton for a visit.\nAt the Ret Theatre the attractions\nwill consist, of the fol'ow'ttg films,\n1 'The Farm Bully,\" *'Parcel Post\nJohnnie;,\" nnl the God Within.\"\nLittle Miss Marguerite Oaven  will\nbreak thu fin\", at the demons!ration\nof schoi.l    chlldrm  on   Km lie  Day,\nwhen   tho  children   sing   that   grand\n< old tottg, \"Oli Canada.\"\nI Mrs. F. MacMnhon and Children,\nnnd Mr, M. W. Drew, of Mnrvs lie,\nwere In the City Monday and tnol-\nd-n-uM\" too'< in the big circus before\nreturning homo.\nAt   11 o'clon'' ihT'. at tho Auditorium   the school chlldrrn nnd their\nparents will hn given a free exhibition.     Special  lllrn, have been pro-\njvlded for the oocailoa,\nJ. Chasi-av of Bull River, who has\nbeen ill at the ht. Eugene Hospital\nfor several wee.*.s, has t.ai-tiuil\/ recovered and is now recei.lng the\ncongratultitious of his ma.iy friends.\nMr. W. A. Nesbitt left on Thursday\nnight for Al..uii.i.i.n, 0\u201et., in response to a telegram stating that his\nbro cher, Mr. Bert Nesuite, was\ndrowned in Algonquin La-e on Wednesday.\nBuffalo Bill is rusticating in the\nwilds of Bull River thiSe ..o,s, helping on the hig dii.-e whlcb Is now\n-a.ing place, \"bill\" says lhat he\nnas a bach every dav, which lasts\n.nl dav long.\nLocal liihcrals are quoting Senator Bostocs as saying, \"that there\nwill be a. general election inside of\nwight weeks.\" 'lhis is why the Lib-\ndrall arc so active in their mo.e-\nments just at  present.\nCharles Gal fin and Husky Barr\nleft on Thuisd.iy for Trail, where\n(hev will f\u00bb111v with the Trail nine on\n(Umpire day. Potter has a good team\nwhich will be strengthened materially hv thfl boys from ('ranbrook.\nThe New York Yacbt Club has ac-\ncp*M  th i:i,.cngo  ol  -Sir Thomas\nLlpton foi the America cup. The\n.\u2022aces will due place in September,\n101*1 under the present rules of th.-\nfOW York club na to time nl ownnce\nmd racing rules.\nA reception was held at the resl-\nlonco of Mrs. Harold Darling nn\nfhursdftv afternoon, when a large\nnumber of \/il nils assembled and\ngave a tin shower in honor of Misi\nVera Krlrkson. The afternoon wae\nthoroughly onjoyed by thoso in nt\ntendance,\nMrs. II I'.obichaud left on Wednesday for tho coast where she will visit\nseveral of hcr relatives and incident\nly pav a Visit to the (.Irnnd Lodge ol\nthe Pythian Sisters to he held in\nVancouvor, In \u2022 conl unction with th\nKnights of liV'-iins.\nA Apodal line of films will be\nshown at the Kilismi Theatre lon'ght\nAmong theso will ho thfl celebrate;'\n1(11 feature entitled \"A l-Vontl-r My\nstory,\" also \"Half WAV to K no.\" '\nverv laUghnblo comedy and the \"Bu\ngie Cull,\" in ithar  un toituro,\nThe (ireat Northern railway bas an\nnounced the following rates for shl|>\nmeat of fruits from Wenatehee, Wash.\nto the following points in Canada.\nTo Lethbridge. 97J cents- to Calgary\n$1.05); to Kdmontcn, $1,151. ThU\nis a substantial reduction over those\nThe new McLaughlan automobile\nfor Road Superintendent John Reed\narrived ln Cranbrook Friday, May\nICth. and waB put in commission this\nweek. It Is a five pass.nger car,\nand is Just what was needed for dis\npatch in travel iin , from point to\npoint in the district.\nThe Dorothv M,, n new steamboat\nbuilt at SpSlimachcne by Burns &\nJordan, Kootenay Central contractors, was launched on Tuesday. Mrs.\nJordan acted aB sponsor. This boat\nwill bo used in carry ip - sunallps for\nthe construction of the railway in tbe\nvicinity of Wilmer and Windermere.\nThe supplementary estimat's hue\nheen brought down in ths Dominion\nHouse. British Cnliiiul.li will receive $62,005. A total vote of $3,-\n300,000 on capital account Ib pro\nvided for harbors ami rivers. It in\neludes $500,000 for n dry dock at Ks\n(liilmalt, and $600,000 for improvements to Victoria harbor,\nMr. .Haslewood, of the firm o'\nlliulewood & M orr If on, is being kept\nSusy these days with insurnn e business. Two claims he Paid lad week,\none tn .IntTrav and another in Manistee, claims ii'\/ninst tbe lute-nit ion.i'\nCasualty Co., of which he is the\ndistrict manager. Mr. Ha lew* o \u25a0\nwas down in Wardner thiB w-*e*t look*\n'n\u00bb over some of his baslnes*- in this\n-onnection.\nThe Cranbroo. Automobile Association are cxpectim- *o hive na nit-\nng on July 1st, wh-.ii in company\nvlth tbe ladies, tbey will tl'e over\nho Kimberley anl enjoy \u25a0\u25a0 splondld\nllme. It is to !\u25a0(\u2022 hoped that \u2022\u25a0 largi\nlumber of thn automobile (.warns in\n\"he Olty belonviftg to the Assoc).\n'Ion, will hear the date iu m'ul.   A\nood outing Is ho ed for. Further\na-iiiouiiCHiiienls of tblt will ha m idint a  later date.\nRev. W. K. Thorns n, Pr'shytor-\n'\"ii Minister* will leave f r Toronto\nnext Tuesday, to attend the PrcsSy\n-rtan Conference to In- held In thai\nItv. Mr. Thomson will be awnv for\nleveral weeks. During h's nlsence\nhellaptist Minister. Rev. 0. K. Kci\n'all, vvi'l hold Jo'n* services wlt'i\n'Us own for tho first three wro'isaiil\n'Uw. W. K. Dunham. Methodist minister ddring the othor two Sundnyn\nalso bold union servicer\ntime a stopping place will  he erected.\nThe scenery near the summit Is\nvery beautiful. Several creeks run\ndown from glaciers at the bead of\nthe valbys, while radiating from the\nsummit are Indian trails up these\nvalleys, to ths glucicrs. with lakes\nnestling at their feet.\nThe main range of tho Rockies at\ntbls point combines some of the finest\npanoramic views in any part of\nAmerica. Paradise Valley nnd the\nfar-tamed Lake Louise district 11'\nclose to the northwest, with I-mul\nand Mount Assiniboine to the southwest. The Vermillion Valley dtrops\nquietly down between these two\n\u25a0\u25a0roups of mountains at an easy rate\nwith an average of two per cent, and\ninto this valley run th? vnrinus\nmountain streams that rise in th .\nglaciers of the main range.\nAt a point ten miles south of tbe\nsummit' tho celebrated ochre teds are\nsituated; tbey have been deposlto\nfrom a mountain of Iron ore. nud the\nIndirns fer num centuries here obtained their red paint from this\nsource.\nOn tbe west side of the valley nc\u201er\nhere extend great grassy slopes,\nlocally called slides, for avalanches\nof snow have cleared off alt th 1\"\ntimber, and on these moose, aheap\nand goats may frequently bo seen.\nKxcellent pasturage is obtainable\nhere. The camping ground on the\nbanks of th*. Vermll'ion is rwallv |\n'deal. From this point southward\nthe valley of the Vermillion widen-\nand the motor road travers a bi:h\nbenches, crossing the cree'*. cnlv once\nat the canyon. There are two of\ntheae cunyons on the river, caused by\nlimestone intrusion; both are very\npicturesque, though ehallow. In the\ndeep pools below them, which are\neasily   accessible   to   tbe  ti-hernia...,\nThe location of tbe tend through\nthe valley ban been cnrefully selected; in some places It boldly crosses\nthe foot of huge slides In order to\nobtain better points of view nnd\navoid lon<r detours. The Vermillion\nRiver loins *hp Simpson on thi west\n\u2022dope of the Rockies, at a point no'\n\u2022nore than thirty-five m'.l-B from\nBanff b\u00ab trail. The h.gbwav 'rllows\n\u2666he north bank of the Vermillion be-\n'ow its Junction with tho Simpson,\n;n full view of Coat Mount nin, which\nhas alwavs been famous among hunters for its sheen and --oits.\nThroughout this section o' the\nroid and down the wid\" \u2022tratcbos of\n'he Kootenay Vstlev the charm o'\nhe environment 1s remarka* I*.\nther hunter nor tourist could find n\n\u2022nore attractive region on this continent.\nThough there are over one million\nncres of fairly level land in the upnef\nstretches of the Kootenay Valle\ntraversed by tbe motor road, all of\nIt lies above an elevation of -Moo\nft., and, while en-oying a mild climate. It is safe to predict that it\nWill never support env large agricultural population. Ihe road through\n\u2666he Kooteney lection follows wide\nbenches on level grades for twenty\n\u2022iiilt-h. No high pcaSl are visible\nhere, the timber prow n-r clnie 111* e\nton of the adjoining lan-es, huf t'-c\nvalley   is   wide   nnd  the forests nn\nTo Banquet Green\nThe Hon. H. F. Green, has accepted an invitation to a banquet to he\nheld in Fernie on bis return from\nOttawa, which is expected about the\nend of May. A Kootenay 0 nsjrva-\ntivo Btn iiiet Committee lias been\nformed for thc purpose of entertaining public servants who een do\nthings which produce tangl le results fer their consti.uents the Hon.\nR. F. Gseen has proved hy p act.eal\nexperience that he Is tne of t at\nkind, and lt li our duty to *h_w\nwt niMireti it\u00a9 bis efforts.\nA. B. Trltes, of Kernie, is the pre-\ne id ont of the committee; T. D. Cav-\n<ii, M.P.P, of Crunbroo. is Viae President; anil a. Oarniy, of i-asto, is\nTreasurer;   a!l    the   ine nbrrsf   t*ie\nProvincial Parliament f >r l ..o i-\ntenays have hem In 1 tt U to act < n\nthis committee; several of them bnve\nwired their acceptance and ezprestsd\ntheir approval. Sir itl bird McBride\nwrites that lie will atttnl if Hi -i.ili',\nami there is no doubt but that ba\nwill come with seven. 1 members of\nliis cabinet. The mem'ers of the Dominion and Provincial Parliaments\nmd tho mayors of all the ci ies in\ntho interior of British (l.mbia hive\nbeen invited, and the Pren lar, the\nRight Honorable R, L. Borden, has\nalso been invited. It Ib expected.th t\nlilts will be one of the grcnf-Ht recaptions ami banquets e-er b Ul in\nBritish Columhla. Tho committee on\nthis occasion propose to meet the\nguest, on arrival at Pernio, with the\nbest band obtainable, The taniuet\nwill be tbe finest und the truest!, the\nmost eminent that Canada contains.\nMr. R. F. Green wires that he will\narrive on May,   28th.\nCranbrook will he well represented\nat the big reception, at Fernie, tendered to Hon. R. F. Green; already\na large number of Conservatives\nbave signified their intention to be\npresent on that occasion.\nA Contradiction\nConfi'lcrable comment is being\nmade at an article appearing in this\nweek's \"Herald,\" und.T the caption\nof \"How Graft Is Be ng Wor ed In\nBritish Columbia.\" In ano her c d-\numn of tbe same paper th.re a>\nlears another article Wllh uno'.her\nstatement credited to have come\nall the way from Ottawa, which\nstates tbat the Senate have\nin their all wise wisdom, Been ft o\nannounce that iu all pro tt* illty\nthere will be a general (lection in\nabout eight week's time or thereabouts. Wc might ask in view ot\nthese two facts: \"If th:s is Boms\nwork of the etectioneeriu - party and\nir they hope bv the*, means to blind\ntbo eves of the electorate of the Koj-\ntenavs to tho cood wor'. bel g dono\nby the Provinciul Government. The\narticle em:nites from Vancouver and\nit might easily be accredited to one\nof those proverbinl groucbers vho\nmove about the country frenn rlace\nto place and knock eacb place\nas the worst place they have\n-jver seen. Cranhrook is th. onlv live\nlive place to be found In the country\ntoday and small notice is neccsstry\nfor the kind as states these \"sup-\nnosed facts.\"\nspoiled by fire. It abounds in game\nand tho Upper reaches of the Kooten\n\u2022iy -River as well as its main tributary, the Vermillion, are full of char\nand rainbow trout. In the autumn\ngrouse and partridge are plentiful,\nwhile hlnck-und-white.tnil deer can\nbe Boon fording the river at their\nfavorite crossing places\nThc ascent over the Briscoe Range\nfrom    the    Kootenay    Valley is six\nmiles  long,  with a maximum grade\nof five per cent., the total rise being\nwhich   lies  at  an  elevation  of  4,630\nfeet.      The descent  to   th?   Sinclair\nHot Springs Is on an average grade\nof about four and u uuarter, and follow*. ,i narrow tract in thc mountain\npassing  through various can.ons anj\nrecrossing Sinclair Ores'-. Ibe Biii-\ncoe   Range   of   tbe   Rockies at this\npoint has very light tfm.er, abounds\nin deer, and is remarkable, as is all\ntbe Kooten iv Vallev, for its profusion of wild fruit.     Tbe red cllfis in\nthc  pass  traversed  by the road are\nbrilliant bits of color.     An  Km: 1 ish\nsyndicate bas ac mr. d the tot springs\n(in the West entrance to the puss and\nis  now developing   a    health    resort\nthere.     The   motor   roud   runs  close\nto th.\"so sprints,   Oroilln\"   the Creek\nlower    down,    and    avoiding a deep\nCatty OP,   it  joinB the  pr.sent  Columbia   Valley Government road  on the\nsouth side, fn miles from lnvermere\nand    Windermere,    and    seventy-two\nmiles   from   Golden.   Saturday   Sunset,\nScene from Life of \"Petrosino\" ' the padspEcton. crawjjbook, b. g.<\nSUMMER SKINJROUBLES.\nSunburn,  blistering,  ami  Irritation\nsip the commonest form of su miner\nKlein troubles, nnd SStim-Buh ends these\nvery quick I J'.     It works in two ways\nPaper Making In Japan\nNext to cotton spinning, tba production of paper is Japan's greatest\nIndustry. Centuries before Occidental people tea rued to manufacture pa*\nper from rags it was being made in\nChina from actual fibres, From\nchina Mils art was carried to Europe\nNo Music at Windsor Castle\nu Wind.-or Castlo, if anywhere in\n'.ngiaml. ono mlghl expect to tind tho\niiluibltuuiB puftctlllous iu tho obser-\nauce of all the usual outward dem*\nastral Ions In loyalty to the crown.\nAs soon as   applied,   iis   antiseptic I But the Colonel in command uf the\npowers gei (o work aud kill all the Socond Life Guards, the regiment at\npoison tn a wound, a sling or a sore. I present, stationed ;.*\" Windsor, has ; through Central Asia by lhe Arab;\nTld.-. gencrnlly ontte the smarting and j found tin townspeople remiss ami has! It Is c\/lmed that Egyptians were the\nthu pnln. Then \/.am Blllc begins the j tnken the only means open to hliu first to manufacture paper, but their\nhealing process, and rresh healthy tis* J of punishing them, papyr,ua was not real   paper,   being\nhup Is built up. For sore, blistered One of thu three regiments of merely tlw peeled hark of lhe reeds\nfeet, sore hands beat rashes, baby's Household Cavalry Is always stationed growlug on tho banks ot the Nile.\nheat spots, rove places due t.i persplr- iir Windsor, and for generations It | The material for first malting paper\natlon, etc., you can'l equal SSam-Bnk. lias been the custom of the towns- employed by the Chinese was tho soli also cm-is mils, ulcers, abscesses, p-ople to go to the barracks after called paper mulberry bush, which\npiles, and all Inflamed and diseased church parade aud listen to the reg- Is known as \"lcozu\" In Japan. The vnl-\nconditions of skin and subjacent Us* j j men lal band One Sunday recently ue of the annual production of Japan-\nColonel l-'erguson, the commanding ese machine-equipped mills Is about\nofficer, was present In the barrack eight million dollars, aad lhat of the\nsquare when the baud played the na- hand mills reaches over nine million\ntlonal nullum a* the close of lis pro-  dollars.\ngramme ami wns sn struck with ihe Thousands of natives are employed\napparenl disrespect of mnny of the'la paper manufacture. llnml-mmle\ncivilian listener.' who did not raise . paper is produced mainly by farmers\ntheir hats or salute in any fashion las a Becondarj occupation which limy\nthat on the following day lie Issued can pursue lu seasons when there is\nan onicr prohibiting ihe bami from nothing t\\ be. done In the fields There\nplaying In the square till further or* are no less than sixty thousand lain\nders,\u2014McC'all's Magazlue. piles engaged  lu the industry.  Print-\n  ing paper in tbo most Important kind\nTommy, said the fa-  produced  In  Japan,     Th\nsue.       Druggists  ami    stores\nwhere sell Xnm-Buk. 50c. hox.      Ubi\nKam-_.uk Soap nlso. 25c.  per tablet.\n'All stores  or \/..uur-nl. Co., Toronto.\nAM Made Clear\nA woman missionary In Chlus waa\ntailing tea with a mandarin's eight\nwives. The Chinese Indies examined\nbor clothing, her hair, her te. th. nnd\ns i on bm her feel especial.} amazed\nthem. \"Why,\" cried one, \u25a0\"you cnn\nwalk am: run ns well ns a maul '\n\"Ves, io he Mire.\" Bald the missionary\n\"Can von rid.' a horae, nud swim,\ntoo?\" ' \"Yes\" \"Then you nuts' be\nas Htrong as a mnn!' ' I nm \" And\nyon wouldn't lei s man bi al you nol\neven If he was yeur htiBhand -would\ny. u?\" \"Indeed I wouldn't.\" Ihe mis\ns mary snld. The mandarin's elghl\nwives looki il nl one another, nodding\ntheir h nds Then the old) -\u25a0 said\nBofiiy: 'Nov l understand why the\nforeign devil nevev hns mor\none wife.     Hi- Is afraid.\"\nSing Me the Good Old Songs\nOh, sins me the songs that once you\nsang,\nIn tbo days that have gone hy,\nTha sailor songs and the shepherd's\nsongs,\nAnd the songs \u00bbf sea and skjr.\nThe Bongo of peace and tlio songs of\nwar,\nOf the buccaneor bold nnd free\nWho roamed tho main for gatu and\nfame\nTill ho hung ou Ilio gallows tree.\n(\u00bbf horsemen who rodo through blood\nund  lire\nNever heeding Hip hellUh blast,\nor cannon's boom and mortar's hiss\nWhere the \"Jpeftth King\" followed\nfast.\nmul\nOh,  sltig me  the  songs of lo\nmirth.\nWe heard In our youthful glee,\nWhen our hearts were light and our\nspirits bright\nAs the bird that sings on the Ion.\n-   Mail  nml   I5u.plre\nI'm surpr\nther,  reprovingly, that    you   should | Importance is oardboard\nBtrike vour im'*. brother      Don*, you \t\nknow  thnl   ir   is cowardly to Btrike       meeting a fishing bear\nanyon   smaller than yourself?     Yes, \t\nanswered Tommy Bul when you\nspanked hip yi sterdoy I was too polite to mention It\n\u2022han\nINDIGESTION\nRIGHTLY CURED Kftt\nTowns Without t.ix.h\n11 wan recently reported from tier-\nnuiiy that lliere was U llttlo town\nwlthlu Ibe Kmplre In which there\n\u00bbere no taxes The town possessed\nbene faction 8, Ihe revenues from which\nenabled II lo pa) II way without the\ninter..mtion of Iho tax gntheror,\n.\u2022'ranee  in ver Its n lo bo outdone\ntroyed. ..nnv bears visit r  ** ;,,\"\"li\"\u00ab Owumn  ion.Paris con-\n,....;\u201e.,.      , ,, ,.,\u201e   \u25a0... ,,,.,.   tempoiary has iel   Itaoll  the tusk of\nA  Hunter Watched  Bruin  Procure an\nEvening Meal\nThis year, the berries   being deii-\nfor Huh.     I was wai kin rh   r\ntind lug a parallel     Somethlug mm\nslmre    one    evening    aboul    itinsel   ,.\ntor a dee* Rounding \u00bb ['l\". \", \u201e\u2122.\"?1 .*-.\u2022 1\":\"\" .\"\".*_\nia in relit ,1 upon a Mat rock\nm,. tea, feel rrom the shore u largs\nblack bear I could nol lell al llrsi\nwhnl he '..i*. doing He wan Btoop\nlog down with one paw In tin water\nwaving ll gentl* to and fro I watch\nu close!*,  and saw Just  beyond  lii.*:\nror nol onlj are thero uu taxes hm\nui.' timber* on the romuinnliil lands\nari Miiii.i, in in iirnnl each person a\nstnull annuity I'hls happy land is\nMontiuarlon In lhe Midi. Thoro arc\nBeveii electors In the liamitM, si. in\na. ..id an] tiling like rivalry lhe Boven\nreturn themselves (o ilu* local coun\nI'll.* transition  from  winter's f.-l.l\nto sin r's heal  frequently  puts  a By Toning up the Stomach to do the\nstrain upon the system thai  produces Work  Nature  Intend. It Should\nInternal complications, always painful I    indigestion should nol  be tieglecl\nand often serious.     A common form ed for a moment, for by depriving the .,,\u201e-,,  , large male salmon  eo nearlj\nof disorder is djsentei,.   to   wnicn bod)   ol    lis    proper    nourishment j,,\u201ei ibat lie could nol -wlm       I'he\nmany  arc  prone  lu  the  spring ana trough  lhe  food, tbe trouble grow, beat   was   using   his   paw   lo   create\nsummer. . The very   nc,t    mil. i \u2022 s-\u201e,|n*, worse     Neither should sum a\u201e eddy  which would draw ih,* ilsh\nto use In subduing thisjminiui aliment \u201eidtlng medicines   which ruin the al within his grasp:     SIowli lhe salmou\nIs Dr. .1. IJ. Kellogg \u00ab liys..,.'.-r. Cord* ,.,\u201e,,.      ...,;,   ..omaclj   \u201e.   mMag   ,. irmei  .oward  lh|, |w!k*\nlal.     n Is a standard lemeo*  \u201eork  ,._.,\u201e_ \u2022,,   .,,\u201e\u201e,,,,   ,\u201e. \u201e.,..       \u201e \u00bb-as amuslni; to watch hot, care\neverywhere. nur pre-digested foods, which do nol fully  lhe bear moved Ins paw   so as\n  \"',:'\" ''' \"\"',l  \"' ,;,:' digestive fluids not   to  frighten   his  pre*       Al   lasl   .,      \u201e\u00bb-,\u2014 .\u2014\u00bb.\u00bb\u00ab. .... _\n*  Poet Successful aed lazy \u00bb\"'l   b>   >H-:ii*f cause the  stomach  I\" ill,-  lisli  cam-   within  reach.       Ilruil    Nil   f |PKk ATlIlN   W_\\\nuii,i ar\" di-- -''\"'\"  weaker     Nowhere Is the tonic reached ovei   gave   a   quick    slap,  llv  VI UlHlIvll   IrrtiJ\nrlj  rising ol treatment h.v I'r   Williams' Pink Pills selaed  II  In  m>    Jaws   and    leaped CUPD  MCCnCH UCDE\nthink  nt  lln- \"'-\"i'''  'Icarii   useful       Tii,   prnici|.:,. ashcie   The   whole  performance   tick LTLiY  il&Ial\/_I\/   tlCKL\noral be com* '\"' '::--* '\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   ment !- to   enable    the led me so thai  I Iel Iiim tin off. He\n1%\niWQOXi^YS\nCrsjaiv SOOftS\nM.\nYOU'LL HAVE 1.KS.S WORK AND MORE PLAY\nI. YOU TltY THE MOONEY WAY\nTlm MOONEY way mentis more biscuits, less home cooking:\nBecause. MOONEY'S BISCUITS uro fresh enough anil appiaWng\npiuuigli lo lake the place of the protiuct of jour own oven.   For tho duily meal\nyou'll llko\nMOONEY'S PERFECTION\nSODA   BISCUITS\nThey're Ihe orlspost, creamiest, most dolloiousBodu,\nbiscuits ever produced and they'ro mado in Winnipeg.   A Western biscuit for Western people.\n1 In air-tight packages or scaled tins.\nLet\nMCDNEY\nDOIT\nii.\nt'uttlng down tr.es nnd selling them\nis sufficient u. provide a livelihood\ntor (lies,- Btinple people, whose tastes\nare so modes! thai Ihoy may bq termed hi soni' uncivilised. London\nGlobe.\nAspirants to Buccess\ncoitraged by the ver) i\n(olie am',  Kant should\nr.'.ri'e'iT    ' I1'.\" Thomson  was  oue  of stoma,* to do its own work by build-   salmon dangling in his mouth, with    BECAUSE   MRS   GOODINE     us Ell\nthe laziest men thol  ever lived, and Ins np 'he hlood and giving toi          oul even    taking   a shot    al    him -\nseldom rose before noon. ''\"   nerves       Wben  theae .ire  once  Charles Stuart  Moody in Uie Outln\nAnd vel in \"The Season-\" lie man stored to their normal h _i,:, imli    Magazine\ni_d to aivi  us one of our finest des-   gestlcn  disappears  and   th,   cnn   Is \t\n\u2022rip Ions of a sunrise      II   Is   said permanent.      Kere  Is an  experience    still   OBSERVE   market   day        dergo operation, but Dodd s Kidney\nDODD'S   KIDNEY   PILLS\nDoctor  said   she   would   have   to   un-l\nof Iiim lhut lie would\nside off Hie peaches\nwith   his hands  In  hi\neven such late rising nnd 1\nor Indolence did  not prevei\ncoming famous.\u2014London Ch\nKeep Minard's Liniment in the house\nDisappointed\nA member or the Chicago bar told\nthis storj or a lawyer's dinner In\nludluna,\nA farmer's son Ir. Illinois conceived\n1 desire lo shine as n legal light.\nAccordingly he went to Springfield,\nwhere lie accepted employment nl a\nsmall sum Irom a [airly well known\nlawyer. At thc end of three days'\nstudy ' o returned lo lhe form\nWell, Bill, hoiVd ye like lhe law?\nasked the father.\nit. aill't  Whal   H'S . racked   up lo lie.\nresponded Hill, gloomily.     I'm sorry\nI learned It.\u2014Chicago livening Post\nhe sunny   with this treatment      Mr  John Bre   Pills cured her.\nh, garden   nenstal,  Calgary.  Alia    says-     'For  Canadian  Cities  Preserve  a  Worthy\ndiets,  bul   years I  ivas r.n almosl constant suf- old Institution\na Castle   ferer f.om Indigestion, and natural!:\nhis be-   because there  '.li-  much    nutrition\nr.uicle.      food which I\nin  and  discomfort   which   (ol-   wi,,, interest  by the tourist wlio vis-   mark, for ull need of the dreaded op-\n\"  its Halifax, Nova Scotia, or Charlotte- eratlou had vanished.     Mrs. Uoodlue\nCentral Klngsclear, York Co., N.B.\nSpecial)\u2014\"The doctor said I  would |\n\"Market  Day\" [or ag. s an  in-iiin   have to undergo an operntlon.\"    So\ntion in tCnglcnd, stiil .xisis in oertaln   said .Mrs .1, V. Qoodlhe, oi' this place.\n0   localities,  aud   mo)   still   be  studied ' But she smiled as she mado the re-\nlowed. I  v.a\ndiwii.      [tried  many medicines  but to\"Wii.\"'prtoce  Kdward\" island, \"where   used Dodos'Kidney  nils''und'\"i's''n\n1  ': ' helped nr until 1 be- |ar\u201e\u201e  enclosures and   roomy   ntlkethvell woman.     Qlven in brier and in\ne use oi   iir   Williams   Pink houses a-P maintained [or the bene*  her own words, Mrs. Goodine's exper*\n\u25a0   '   ' ' fit or lhe country people and mich oil*   lence is as follows:\nnone\nRan\nPills\n.as   mueh  better and   ill   the\ncourse\nizens ;..,-\u2022 bavi   established  a  regular      \"1 was very miserable with Kidney\nor a couple ol mouths was quite well, market business. Everything from Disease nnd unable to do my ow..\na id^ could eal any rood sol before l|ve Block to a hoipiet ol Mowers may work. The doctor said 1 woulil have\n111,. be brought here   for sale, ilie owner   lo undergo an operation.     After us-\n.i you a ri  n  sufferer Irom Indlges-   being  allotted  a  snhable  place  nnd   Ini; Ihree boxes   of Dodd's    Kidney\nuon.  or any  trouble    ,1 in-    to    bad  charged a small fee ror his accommo* . Pills 1 wus all bettor and nhlo to do\nhi md or weak nerves, you can begin   datlon, and while most of tl irk-  my  work.      This statement  i.s ime.\nto cure yourself today by taking Dr. ..(..p, \u201er,. fUr from being rusty in their as you can easily prove by enquiring\nUlllianis' Pink Pills, Sold by all I el are tar from bains rustic In their among my neighbors.\"\nmedicine dealers or by mail al 60 dress or speech, the variety and ! Dodd's Kidney Pills cure the Kid\n| cents a box or six hoxes for *.,60 from sometimes the peculiarity of tbeir of* neys; cured kidneys strain nil the\nThe Iir Williams' Medlcino Co.,lferlngs still suggest the important J poisons und other causes of disease\nBrockvllle, Out, pari  which the English .Market and  out of the hlood.    Thus Dodd's Kid-\n**-\" \u2014 ' iis legal cuttiol planned in the local   ney Pills nre n natural cure for all\nThere Is Mich a Ihlng as overdoing  anl  business  ff,. of tin  countries i Kidney diseases nnd llll  ills caused\nWould not Save His Heroine |||U .'|,|.|g|,|  B|,|n\u00ab business, recently  ago.\u2014Charles Wlnslow Hall   in    Na*   ny diseased kidneys.\nBalfour's loast of Hie \"literature In  observed  a crusty old  bachelor,  as tlonal Magazine. \t\nparticular whloh  sorves    lhe    gronl   was evidenced recently In the house.,   England's Last Fatal Duel\ncause oi cheering n\u00bb llll up ' reminds   | , \u201e rrlend o[ mine, whose wire j The Company She Kept ,. \u201e.\u201e\u201e,,, b mcuU ,,, \u201en(1 a\u201e,.,m(iv\nono how nu arts   \u00abas once   ennileil   |ma \u201ehv\u201e,., \u201e,.|,,,,,| h,.,.M.u \u201e\u201e ,Ue ,.|,, |    A ^...^ \u201e\u201e,. \u201e, mMdIe -g. \u201e\u201e(1   wh() ,.,.\u201e11,m|\u201e.,.a (be last fulal duel iii\nto give his bet i health ami hnppl*  eumsUiuoe lhal  she looks    on    the  kind  beans,   spent    ihelr   vacation I Bngland.     The dale  was  .May  20,\n\"\"'\" .bright side. | \u201e ,\u201e,. Augusta. Oa\u201e and during their   1845. and  the place a  spot  ou  the\nThe husband,   an absent    minded visit took a greal   fancy to an  old  shore near Gosporl. Lieutenant Hawk-\nIssued   periodically,  aud   sort, uf a chap, put the lighted end of; \u201e\u201e_\u2022\u201e woman.     When tbey left  Au-  ev. of the  Itoyal  Murines,  believing\n\"Clarissn  Harlow.\nln  volumi\nal the cud of lhe sidli Clarissa was I bis cigar In his inoutli as be sat read\nied dying.     Tills so affected u mis- j |Ug one evening\nguided etithuslnsl lhalL he at once of- humped up anl made a dreadful rank-1 understanding Ibat Ihey wer\nfored Richardson $a.\u00abuu l[ in ihe next   et ror a moment.     Then wlfey, an\ngusta tliey in*, it**. 1 her lo pay them a ; Lieutenant Scion had paid too much\nvolume   *h.   would    restore\nheallb\nRichardson refused. I\nlu heroes.\nlur\nOf   course,   be | v|\u201e|ti W|,|n|, Kiu. accepted   with   the\nto pay\n\"a-j her  expense\nto   ions In live up lo her reputation of!    Having arrived in Hoslon. she was\nhelng  e and ell tul and encour-  given  a   room  in  the house  of tile\nims'iieum. smiled blandly  1 observed\u2014  white folks, and was Invited to hav\n\"\u2022' '\"'-J' r * dear. It was most for*  her meals at the same table wllh her\nlunate that you dis\nThc Oldest Newspaper \u2014-\n\\ clans was recruiting a lesson in I     Waller was S y,\nanclont   hlslory,   says   n     Laohlne  1\"'\"\" '''''>' naughty\nBchool lenclier and one of lhe pupils  '\"' lli\"1 emptied a holtl\nwas describing tho Olympian games.\nA great  many    people went    to   see |\nthem, she said, because e was put i\nHie   paper   when   lliey   w\nil it at once, i tost and hostess,\n\u2014 \u25a0   Mrs.  .Tones,  said  the hostess,  you\nId.     He had \u25a0 were a slave weren't you'.'\nlu point of fact i    Mrs. .Tones replied  that   such   had\nI  ink   been her condition or servitude.\nr's white Pomeranian\u2014      1 suppose your master never invit\u2022\ncourse led you to eal at his table, hazarded\nuT.   Did  they  lime papers In  those\niluys'.'      Why,  yes.  was the reply\nli   sa;,\"   so   in   llle  book   anyway.    It\nsays III'* Hi raid proclaimed Ihem!\ner his mul\nii li.r [tin\n\u2022Jaw lhe price had to be paid for ihe ! the Boston woman.\nI,,,.   enjoyment, ami fattier was taking n|    No, honey, dal    lle dldn'l    replied\nattention to Iils wife al a South Sea\n[unction, culled him a villiaii und\nblackguard, threatening In horsewhip\nhim aud attempted to kick him.\nAlthough dueling liad been forbid*\nden by urtioles of war lu 1SI-1. nftor\ntb\" horror caused by the death of Colonel Knwcelt nl the bauds of bis\nbrother-in-law. I.leuteimnl Munro. in\n18.11), the piovocatlon in the i'lawkey-\nSetou case wus such linn a meeting\nresulted, Scion fired and missed. The\nhammer Of Hawkey's pistol being sel I\non lhe safety notch, fi would not go j\noff. Al the second discharge Setou |\ntell,      Hawkey ded lo I'ranc\nCotton Is grown\nteal or   eiiii-iriiplenl   regions,\nwool comefl nltnos! entlrel* from ih\ntemperate regions,\nmud In ilie game, | Mrs. Jonas.     My master was a gen\nLlttlo Lucy, Walter's sister, was In I il.-m.iii.     He ain't never iel  no rilu-1 . ... ., M. , .\nllm room ni the lime of the contllcl    gns si t at tho lable 'longsldc of him M \",\"8n* m'\u00bbM\"\"\nThud, iliud. thud, tell father's baud.  ,  i   At a recent football match one of the\n_ pu.ieluat.il by Walter's walllngs. Poetic Justice in France | players cntlglll the ball heavily In tbe\nAi lasi Lucy could stand It iio lone-1    The following is n case of poetic 1 <\"1''1- \"\"'\u2022 l',',,l \"' ,',',i,''\" \u2022*\u00bb' '\",\"\"\u25a0' \"\",\"'\u2022\n'\u25a0'    '       '\" Burstlug, with Indignation, she jusilce ns meted out In I'ranoe A \",a  the crowd, conspicuous by\ni.imne: her iluy loot on ihe Iloor. \"a\" weii-liitown\"   PiirislnV   arc'hlteol \"\"\u2022' \"\u00abu\u00ab\u2122i si\"0 <\" llis \"o\"1'* suddenly\n!Tr I o\" Ills corn, Wai,\" she cried,   was sitting in Iris offlco   when    he \"\"\"j1\u2122''*-.       , ,,      ,\n' I,,,,,- a knock at ihe door.     As he i    Bali, some of the ilnyers now iys\nwished to i one. i\u201e. mnk no noticeh-\u2122 mi\"il' ot gingerbread.     Why, In\n\u201er ii\u201e  knock imi wenl on wltb hi, my youngor days, when   \u00bbj.s playing\n1  .......I V     fen        \u201e\u201e,\u201e,,.,, l.       lal,.,        ha    \u00b0H    OlIC   OCCIISIOII    111,\"    llllll    llll    UU'   OU\nabsent-minded    prolessor        \u2022      \u25a0   I        \u2122>  ' nts   Intel    lie ,,       fc f  (|     ,    \u201e (Q\n;\" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ' \"?Z !^A%SW*-S\\ lm*|^j^ \"\"' ' \u25a0\"\"'\"\"' J ' \"\"\nAnd   so  did   tbe  crowd.   1   suppose,\n\"That'll stop bim\nAn Absent  Minded Professor\ni   lhe  nur-. opeiieil    ' s \u2022\u2022<\u2022>>  ...\"  -.e.,\u201e a \u201e  \u2022\">\u2022\u2022\u25a0   I      , \u201e.,.,,\u201e,,\ndoor ami   announced   \u00bb  l\u00bbr. the architect armed himself wltb I \u25a0\"J.J!!1\"\u2122*,\nt.n busll;\ntitle problen\nth.* library\n'.rent rainiii event\n'lhe Mule itxanger hai arrived, pn\nfeasor\nEh ' .aid the professor\nIt i. a littl,  bo)   said lhe nurse\nl.ltth   hoy. Ilule boj,   mused    ib\na revolver and   quietly   hid    behind , ,   ,,   ,\nI'reseiiiiv ihe thief  \"!il\"''1 s foil, behind.\n''oriiiiiily not, why should Ihoy?\n' Well. Ii looks ii) me us though thoy\ni left your nose on I In* Hold und liiouglii\nilie football av ay In mistake, replied\nI tit*, olher. ile suddenly became en-\n! glossed iu tin. pliy.\nsome curtains\nentered snd pr 'dod   lo   rifle   Ihe\nplace.     Tli' n suddenly lie started and\ngrow iiah-      In :. minor be lunl seen\nlule boy,     ii used    -iel0  revolvel   leveled ai  bis bend  from\ni\" if.   ..       IVel    ash him whal he  l*\"1*'\"** ' '\"'\" \u25a0   ,\nitil,    Woman    Home Companion '\"I\"'\"  ,!\"'  -\"Mow,    ordered    lbs\n  il, \"and sliiint \"iKillee!\" ____\u2014_.\nA Boon for lh    Bilious\u2014Th.   u ,., '    The bu\u00ablnr lunl Iio alternnilve Iiiii I But He Had to Slay\nicrv sensitive orean -.ml e-.llv   '\"\"hey Mul so siimmoiied the oltlcor      ,\\t   a   fashionable   parly   held   the\nd ram .    Wh*,, \u201el._m.\u00bbibe?el, l\\'    _^_   \"\" \"\"\" '\" \"\" \"lr\"    ' otter m ig, ono of the mon guest,\nundue secretion of bile and the acrid  ,'1''1'\" \"'\"\u2022 |s I Jieur the door yawning,\nli mid  flowi Into the    itomsch    ami\nsonn It.    li is a   mosi   distressing  ,,   ,     , .  ..,.,\u201e    ,     ..,,,,   ..,,..      , ,,,...\nailment, and many er.. prone lo li        '    \"',,...,    .'lV1'' !*.!.'!.\u2022 ...L0.!! I    Aro you very much bored. Blr?\n     An .1.    .!.\u201e    l         HilU-     ,1      WM\n.  'I    sii.-iinii;  Uol men, iu..i.,..i*  critical* a(i<\nUa   moat   dlstreulns   ,.,   ,lt   \u201e ,\u201e\u201e-\u201e  ,.,,.,,,  mUii  ..Voil\nin thin condition n man flint- the Ijphi\nremedy In Parmalee'n Vegetable r.i'-\n\\'.!iitli are warranted la ipeedlly cor-\nrecl the dlaorder.    There la nn bptter\nwlm\nAnother mun, t>iuiuiin_ neur, ask\nid\nHi\nCUTICURA\nSoap and Ointment I::\n\u00bb I\" very rt ly j     v,,s, dreadfully, cum\nami buys im i ol new gowns against An dyou?\nyour  will.      Tbeu ynu bave four or j     j!,,'.;   oil, 1 am bored half lo dentb.\nlive daughters who do likewise,     You      Tll0 nrBi nilill yawned tijiuln.\n|m_lcltte  In  the  entire  list  of  pill |!!rM?\u00bbr-J!7o_a\"\u00b0n\u201e,rvm,aim_,n      H\"\" \u00ab \u00abe clear out together? he\n' II1Q    I   It'll     WMU    DJI.S.    .Mil      Ull     MUVfl   .1   i  .'in...(.-.In\nj i\"-.\"'ra\"\"\"_<_  mortgage on your house. I \"\"fB0\"'\nMnn   That  Is riuiii  iu every  way\nItut   (Ileal   Scott.   Ilow  lllll   you   |{|iow\nKberioeii. hiconlcnlly \u25a0um-yliig Ilu\ncigar   The olgtir.\n1    ti,,,. ,;..,  Mail, Twain    was   being\n1 aha* \"ii hy a very talkative barber I\nwas  forced   l\"  listen  to  many   of  his\n'I'll-- barber had i\" strop his razor\nland  when he  vas ready,    brush    In\nhand, to commence again, ho o ked:\nShall I ko on*,, ii again?\nNo thanks, drawled    Mark Its\nirdly   nee. ssiuy.   I   think   I   can   ie\n\u2022tuber every word    Everybody's,\nEquivocal\nI'll let  lillle Mrs  (lot[I  wus afraid\n| to ask ilu\" grumpy husband of hers\nfor 11   new   While   willow  |illllue\nI  leii  lliere awhile iii'.o, nml  1 ns-\nini\" vou Hit., was showing the wllll.e\n! f other.\nNo Other  emollient!) do BO milCh   Min.rd'.   Liniment,  ths   Lumb.rnUn'S I\nfor pimples, blackheads, ral, j Friend.\nrough   ami   oily   skin,   itching, j Why Not?\nHC-tly -calps, (Iry, lliin find falling      nonsu a physician thla morning\nhair, i happed hands nnd shapeless   and In* ndvlsed me to glvo up my pipe.\nnails. They do even more for sltln. i   (llv\" \"\" '\"'\"' \"1|\"' \"l,:    Whnl M\nIlii\n.    ,       iii, , i he charge ynu for Unit.\ntortured ana disfigured Infants,       t,.\u201e dollars    i guess h. ihoughi\nAltlKi'ith  fiiliriir.   M.nn   .ml  otnttnpnt  nn | for the Inoiuent  lie  wa. ti  plillnhei.   .\nBoston 'I'ramiei i|ii\nThe Point of View\nThe I'Olioly Visitor tal a small ho-\nleii. very much on n branch line) -\n1 Hiipposo visitors liern are not very\ncommon?\n'I'he Superior Wail, i Indeed lliey\nore. sir painfully so mosl on 'ein.- \u2022\nSketch,\n.',1,1 I., .1   ...-.\u25a0 i re\u201e| ilriir,, ,.v>-ivfti'.|<*. ll llti\nWaUll. \"f Mfll, Wltll .'I'.'-J'IB'* linOklClon U' ,.,.........\nilfaklB nel li.lr. win l\u201e. ,;\u25a0\u25a0..!   IKiaU'r-M, en .pplll i-\nale. n ' UUI Iniu.,\" lli'l'l '.''  Ilonl,>tl. I . s. ...\nVV.  N.  U. 90}\nWns lie cool on ib,.\nVes. ll'illl tin' law.\naide began io ronil bim,\nivltnem stand?\non tbo other\nSpeaking From experience\nTiny   say   money   talk-.      Well,\nwhnl does II say?\nI'm sorry 1 can't.     I'm lhe host.\nWar  Against the  Fly\nThe typhoid (ly Ih the   nume   by\nwhich the United states Government\ndoes nut hesitate io cull i hte common\nbouse tly, which Is believed lo be the\nni'iHl deadly enemy of man, klllin'*\nmore people Hutu lions, tigers, snakes\nor eveu wars.\nUy sprinkling red powder over\npiles ot garbnge ii has been possible\nto follow the Joitmeylngs ot tiles and\nto trace litany epidemics that had\nformerly been attributed to drinking\nwater or milk supply to their actual\nagency or transmission, the fly. Not\nonly typhoid but other dangerous\nintestinal diseases are known lo be\nspreud by (lies and germs of tuber*\nculosis, cholera Infant um. .spinal meningitis and infantile paralysis are curried far and wide by llie same little\npcHts-\nThe United Stales Is engaged iu a\nsystematic crusade against the house\nhy, und utmost every stale has con-\ntrlhuted io the methods used. One\nstate has Issued two pamphlets; one\non \"Ply Hiiblts\" pud the other on\n\"Fly Catechism,\" which the youngest\nchild can understand; another publishes u quarterly document ou \"The\nAnti-Ply Crusade.\" Many reach those\nwlio cannot or will not read the ordinary colored posters; while Indian*\nas slate board of health has kept local newspapers ull over the commonwealth supplied which muy lie t|ui*k*\nly read and easily remembered.\nTrial's have been offered for th-3\nlurgest number of (Ilea killed In a\nHivou period, and Worcester. Massachusetts, collected forty bushels in\nthis nay iu a few weeks, but one boy\nwho won Jltitl fur briUKing In ninety,\nflvo quarts was found to be breeding\nthenl In lisli offal, so prizes are nuw\noffered Instead for flyless blocks of\nhouses, or farms or barns.\nWomen's organisations are taking\nthe matter up uud philanthropic individuals providing funds. Hdward\nHutch, jr., of New Vork, takes a very\ndeep interest in the work, and aent\na man to London at llis ow-n expense\nto secure microscopic photographs of\n(lies and their dangerous activities\nfrom which a moving-picture fllni bus\nbeen made and shown all over the\ncountry. Mr. Hutch litis also sent\nout several hundred thousand bullet*\nins explaining what should be done\nto gel rid of Hies and Ims offered two\nsets of prizes iu each of u number of\ncities for essays ou this subject by-\nboys und girls under sixteen yenrs\nuf age.\nA small pamnhlel prepared by Jeau\nDawson of Ibe CTevelund Normal\nSchool\u2014Clevolund, by tbo way, is\nrapidly becotuiiic uu tllniosl fly-less\ncity\u2014adopts the question ami answer plan of instruction, uud lu answer\nto ii question as to how we may pro-\ntecl ourselvos against Hies mora thnn\nwe already have done suySi- -(ill Hy\nkilling all winter lllos llmt imve I ii\nhiding iu buildings us fast, as they\ncome oul (which means killing the\nmother i*ies before they enn lay eggs\nlu lite spring), (In My cleaning up ull\nmanure and iilili in which flies breed,\n(el hy keeping traps net in covers\nof garbage ciiiih and ou porches\nwhere Hie flies ure llliekisl, lo catch\nllicm boforo Ihey can enter our\nbo s,   Toronto lllobo-\nWhen You Buy Matches,\nAsk for\ne<\/B\/r&\nWW.\nThey have a true safety base\nhead,   with  silent    tip.    Will\nnever explode if Stepped  on.\nEddy's Katc'ies have satisfied Canadians since 1851\u2014accept r.\u00bb cthirfc\nThe E. B. Eddy Company, Hull, Canada\nINSIST ON GETTING \"EDDY'S\"\nWashboards,   Wood Pails and   Tubs,\nFibre Pails and Tubs.\nThe Clinton Motor Car Co., Limited\n*    Will Shew a full line of\n\"CLINTON\"\nMotor Cars, Delivery Waggons, and Heavy Trucks, at the Winnipeg Fair\nJuly 10th, to July 20th.\nYou are cordially Invited to inspect these Canadian made cars If you\nvisit the Fair.   \u2022\nWe want agents In all the centres of Manitoba and Alberta, that are\nnet already signed up.   For Information address\nE. D. Cleghorn, Sales Manager,\nQueen', Hotel. Winnipeg\nAgents lor the Province of Saskatchewan:\nSTERNS & BURTON, SASKATOON\nTrapped\nI'lver   turesletl   before'.'     Ilskeil\nJudgo.\nNever, roplled ihe prisoner,\nVour honor, said the prosecutor, iho\nilefentlillll's stltlement sIlOWS llle fill-\nally of his statement Hint be lias seen\nlietier dnys, li |iro\\os conclusively\nlhal lie neitr onin-ii ii motor cur.\n\t\nThe Average Income\nThe average income is sorely tried\nIn the striiRRle lo make ends meet-\nTo pay the wages ot those who help\nAnd the bills for the food wo eal.\nTor iml ter I-i up, potatoes aro up.\nAnd meals were never ho dear\nBut the average income Just stuiuls\nstill,\nOr else grows smaller eacll year.\nThe euok III lhe kitchen asks for mure\nAnd so does Ihe serving multl.\nAnd then, porforce, as a matter of\ncourse,\nThe increase must bc paid.\nWe nt-e lohl llie coal Is aboul lo rise\nThe gas bills nru Iwlce as large--\nAnil for every strike which threatens\nthe bind\n'Die fiuu*\",uici- musl pay lhe charge,\nSn.  whnl a\"> the people Ruing lo do,\nAnd how lire wn going 10 live,\nWhen the average Income Is stretched\nand strained\nBeyond uImt It's able lo give?\nHEST AND HHHH TO MOTHER MiO CHILD.\nM.S. WiasLowa SooTHINd SYBIL ll.. bMg\n\u25a0Md 'i>ri>--r SIXTY VEAKSIiy MILLIONS et\nMorilltllH (ur Ihelr CltlLlUIRN WHII.lt\nTUKTIIINQ. Wllh rSWISCT StlCCRSS. It\nlOOTIlKS thS CHILI,, SOlTTiNS III. HUMS,\nALLAYS .11 PAIN; CURIiS WIND COLIC. avM\nI. the beat remedy ter DlAnKHOiA.   It I. **\u00bb\nMhtlely hirmle... he .nre .nd a.k for \" Mnl\n\" .-\/'. B-wuhint Svrup,\" and take ae otbef\nTwe\u00bbty\u00ab.ecent., home. '\nARLINGTON CHALLENGE\nWATERPROOF COLLARS\nTht Arlington Co. ol Canada,\nLloyd's reports fur the II nionths\ncnillng lice. 1 Ins., BllOW llle loss\nor condemnation of 986 ships of one\nhundred ions nr over. Ot theso -4\nwere ubaiuliiucii nt Ben, seven burned,\n\u2022jl wero lost by collision, :m toundorod\nitu.l  l_  wrecked.\nThey huil heen hnvlng n Utile tiff.\n(III. Ill' course, Ml.ill lie. wrnthftilly, I\nnm always In iho wrong.\nNot always, suid nhe, onlnily, l,usi\nweek you ndmlltod lliat you lybro In\nthe wrong -\nWeil, whnt's Umi ''.nl lo do wllh it?\nhe demanded,\nNothing,  cvecnl   thut   yoil   were  per\n(colly right when you llilmlttcd II, sho\nroplled.    \t\nA Man's Wanlt\nWhnl more should n mini wnul Ilinn\ngood health, a good Job uud u good\nwife?\nWell, ti good reputation mlghl conn\nIn handy,   Chicago Rocord lloruldl\nMother's c.iiiiioo\nDobby\u2014O-oliI   Mammal   Here's   a\nlillle green Bitake,\nMilluniu    Keep nwny  fl i  11, ilem'\nOther side of thc Window\n\"Why,  lirltlgel, you    surely    don't\nconsider those    windows   washed'.'\"\nsnlii tho lady of tlu house reproach*\nfully.\n\"Sure, I washed 'cm nicely on Ilio\ninside, 'mum, so yo can look out,'' re*\nnlieil Bridget, \"hm I intentionally lift\nHum ,i iiuli> dirty ou ihe nnlsldo su\nthim lafiiortiul Jones children nlxt\ndour couldn't look in.\"\n\\a far ns 1 nut concerned It gen-  It \"1|J,* he just us daugorous us u rlpp |\n,11,.    o.., J    \"It,     1,1\/ \" I n\",' 1\norally a\n\"Bi by\n<vy.\nConstipation -\nis an enemy witliut the camp. It will\nundermine lhe eiroiiRrst constitution\nami rum llie most vigorous health.\nIt lr\u201ed. io Indigestion, bllouKlcn,\nImpure blood, bad complexion, lick\nkcndaclioi, and is one of ,tj><* moil\nfrequent cause- oi appbntllclil*, lo\nnctlcct ft li slow suicide. DrvMonc \u25a0\nIndi.lll Knot Pills positively cure\nConsllnntloil,    They   (ire jjfaHrvIy\nveerlnlile In fAmpoillion ami nil \"ier\nllcketl, weaken or gripe. Preserve\njrour health by taking\nDr. Morse's   \"\nIndian Root Pills\nThe Japanese Beggar\nliireclly n policeman of one stutlou\nllosorloa ii beggar be klckH Iiiiii away,\nuo matter whither, uud another i\u00bbi-\nllceman if another station ditches\nhold of the fellow nud throws lilm\nmil of his urea, and so on, with the\neonsetiuence (hat beggars nfter wandering from tine wanl to another aud\nbnck again ultimately nettle down Itl\nthe regions uf tho leiisi resistance\nnamely, ihe suburbs. The latest hup*\npollings prove that the suburbs ure\nfast becoming the centre of uumdicity\nnml crlmluallty. The Mulnlchi there*\nfor begs* the authorities \"Lo utlopt a\npositive instead of patchwork poljee\"\nailvocallng ar. exhaustive study of tho\nproblem.\nAnother plan Is that the teachers\nof primary schools bo called upon to\nImpress upon the emotional young,\nsters the utter tlesplcabillty of beg\ngars, ho thai the younger generation\nmay consider hoggars nH those deserving lu hn kicked out for Ihelr limitless or lu lm imiintiiiiieil by public\ncharity, rather titan hh poor follows\nmeriting liulii IiIiiiiI assistance.--.''rom\ntho Toklo iMallllchi.\nChurch I see II Is anld'UuiTlli ilie\nIlini. Nile region iii Kgypt a unlive bib*\not-i't- run live very enmfortubly on six\nto olgl't < Is n day,    (Itilham\u2014Ves,\nbill I Hlippose Ibe i rouble Is Itl llnillu?\nnut Jusl where lho six tu eight cent\"\na dny Js coming from,\u2014Yonkcrj\nSintosinan.\nM.v ilnui'hlcr suys 1 hovn n gontl\n}\u00ab* tor music. What tloeii she menu\ni.v thatv ! dmi'i (mow tanotly, l'\"i\nnfraltl sho rotora\"\".* the '\"<'\u25a0 \"mt, \u2022\nrun lisle  somo of in\"-***U4\u00bbJi''\nplays Without Killing the oaraciiT-**\nWasb'ngion Star\nThe Wrong Pert\nMrs. Neurltch\u2014So you heard from\nyour sister. Ilow did she enjoy the\ntrip across?\nMiss Voting\u2014Well, she wrote lhat\nshe waa very glnd when tbey reached\nterra lit-pis.\nMrs. Neurltch\u2014Terra Itraial Why,\nI thought she wua to land ai Liverpool.\nA lillle buy who was vory much\npu\/.-'Icd over lhe theory of evolution\nquestioned his mother thus:\nMantina,   um   1   descended   from  *,\nmonkey\"\n1 don't know, the mother replied, I\nnever knew any of yuur fullier'w people. \u2022\nlove.\nHusband    (cheerily)\u2014Well,\nhave yor hail a pleasant day?\nWife\u2014Oh,    splendid! After    I\ndressed the children and got them\noff, washed the dishes antl made somo\npies, cleared away the luncheon la*\nlile nntl answered snme letters, I still\nhad time enough left, to dam iny\nstockings.\u2014Harper's Bn\/nr.\nHusband\u2014But you musl admit lliat\nmen Imve better judgment I bun women. Wife\u2014Oh, yes\u2014you married\nme, nnd 1, ynu\u2014Life.\nWillis\u2014Whnt posil hm do yon occupy in your household? (lillls t\nam treasurer in my wife's social sec.\nrotary.' -Judge.\nThe term reverend was first nn\u00bb\npiled to a clergyman In 1057-.\nin -Ml) wasps' nesls there wero aa\naverage tf 25,0(1(1 lusccts. -i\nCHCW\nHIE TOBACCO \u2022  ,\nTill'.  PltOSP F.CTOR. CRANBROOK, Ii. C.\nSTOREY'S\nEXTRA BIG\nSHIRTS\nLarge llody\u2014Long sleeves.    Juat\nihu altirt fer Big Men\nFor sale by Dealers Mverywhere\nMade by\nW. H. Storey &Son, Aclon, Ont.\nBROKEN       CYLINDERS       AND\nALUMINUM  CRANK CASES\nanil till Melnla, welded lo perfection\nhy the Oxy-Aeelylenn Process\nTHE   HUB   WELDING   CO.,\nRear of 253 Shcrbrooke Street,\nWinnipeg\nVeribrite Venoil\nTHE WORLD'S BEST\nWOOD     POLISH\nCleans and dlsinfeotH\neverything In your\nliotti*, from the eel-\nItir tn Uio ntti.-. Put\nIt nn yonr ((until' tinil\n.lust Hardwood Floors,\nWoodwork, Linoleums,\nPianos, Furniture,\nnto. Makes everything JUBt like\nnew. Money refunded\nif tn,i satisfactory.\nMado by tho\nPOIW-STIC JKCIAITV COU.\nPANT, MMtrEO.\nHamilton,  Canada.\nIf your Clothier does not sell\n'S\nBRAND CLOTHES\nsee the other fellow\nTHE'ALBERTA'HOTEL\n71S MAIN ST., WINNIPEG\n!*\u25a0 A tew doors aouth or C.P.R. Depot\nRatts I, 50 te 12.00 per day\nCulilna unexcelled\nfist and cold water In every rears\nHot.l   practically   Flropreet\nAll Outside Rooms\nTHE JOHN INGLIS CO., Limited\nEngineers antt Boilermakers\nBoilers   ot   all     kinds\u2014 En-jlnea,\nPumpa. aud Heavy Pla's Work\nWrite us for Priest\n14 Stracli.in Ave., Toronto, Canada\nAre the lies* over made and are guar,\nanteed to Blv-j you satisfaction. Al\nall dealers, or send us 25 cents stat\ntng stv \u2022 and size required.\nThi Arlington Co,, of Canada, Ltd-,\n61 Fraser Ave., Toronto, Ont.\nPREACHERS'  PREDICAMENT\nBy the Rev. Forbes Phillips. Author\nof \"Cassock and Comedy,\" etc.\nTo discover suddenly Mint you nre\n\u25a0diatributlnK a pack ot ordinary 'ilio-\ning cards anioiig your congregation\nls disconcerting enough, It happened to a clert.vyman once. \u2022\nThe old mnu was fond of a quiet\ngame ot patience, ami luul slipped a\npack Into his cassock-pocket, for u\nlonely game in tho vestry, where In;\nhad somo time to wait alter tlio service, before takltic a wedding, .lust\nbefore giving out tills textile had occasion to use his handkerchief, llo\npulled lt out with a jerk. Tbo next\nmoment his cards wero fluttering\ndown from tlio pulpit to tiie powa.\nOn onu occasion, Just before Uie\nsermon, u curate noticed that the\nelectric light was fading. Ho entered the pulpit quickly, then culmly gave\nout the *oxt: \"Aud there was darkness.\" Three seconds afterwards\nthere was, for liio electric, light was\nextinguished altogether, but lho people thought It had been done purposely. .Tho humor ot the situation was\nforthcoming In au augry letter trom\nIhe bishop to -the curate, doniamllng\nto know whal now ritualistic idea was\nlhls!\nA cathedral dignitary ln Ibe North\nhad left him hy Ills great uncle, an\nIriEli doan. among other things a\nnumber of sermons In manuscript.\nOne Sunday morning lie preached\none of these, nnd the congregation\nwore atari led and amused by hearing\nlilm say: I remember being ln Florence lu the year 17911. There was\na slight Utter. \"Says lhe Dean of St\nPatrick's,\" added the preacher with\na smile. Another Sunday ho spoke\nof tho \"benoflcent rule of our sovereign, George IV,\" but with a slight\ncough ho corrected this saying: \"Victoria, by tho grace of God!\"\nA young minister, on ills way to\na camp meeting, stopped and bought\na couple of meat-pies, which bo put\nln his frock coat. A hungry dog, attracted by ilia scent, followed, making snaps at his tails. Arriving at\ntbe gathering, he ascended the wagon,\nand begau lus iliscour.se. A worthy\nelder tugged his coat-tall at the end\not bait an hour; then he tugged again,\njust to remind him that he was exceeding his time.\nA lew mote seconds, nnd the official pulled tlio preacher'* coat-tail\nonce inure. This time ho received a\nback ltlok from tbo young minister.\nWithout looking round, tbo minister\nbegau nn explanation. The fact Is,\nhe said, I havo two pork pics ln my\npocket, and that beast bas been trying\nto get litem for the lasl. hour.\nA dear old country pai'Bon was taking a holiday with a rich old rector.\nOus Sunday morning iiis host eald:\nHow fortunate you are ixetfil There's\na message from the next parish. The\nvicar is III. Will you take his place?\nI don't mind taking (he service, but\nI hnve no sermon with me, ho said\nThat's all right! was the reply. Help\nyourself to one of mine\u2014which he\ndid. Later he found himself preach-\nIng a sermon on the \"Value of Time.\"\nHe was a nervous man. Presently\nto h.ls consternation, he discovered\nihnt he wai offering to glvo n clock\nto tills particular church.\nThe preacher perspired, lost his\nhead, and went on committing himself\nwholly to a somewhat generous responsibility. Ho comforted himself\nwith tlic idea of explaining matters\nafterwards, btrt when ho entered the\nveslry, tho churchwarden seized Ids\nhand. Fortunate'thing our vicar is\ntakeu 111. We have wanted a clock\niu this villago for years.\nMeanwhile the news had spread far\nand wide, and a gratiful people cheered him as he drove away. IIo gave\nthe clock. There was uo other solution to the problem.\nREST MD HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.\n_u*,*vVttw.ow'a SooTitiao svaup has beea\n\u25a0and for over sixty YKVRSby MI I.UONS of\nMorilBKS for Ihelr CHI..UR8N Wltlf.B\nTOOTHING, Willi   PERFECT  SUCCESS.     It\nsooth its ile ciut.o. softkns in. oums,\n_,l.*.Y*>ull PAIN; CURES WIND COI.IC. and\ni. Ui. txtt rrinrdy for 1,1 AKKWi-.V , It Is absolutely liannlea!,. Ile siir-- antl B.k for \"Mr..\n-Window's SoutlUnp; Syrup,\" aod tskt* ao other\nkind.  Twenty-five acutsa bottle.\nSappho Up to Date\nEncouraged by success in ihe small\ntowns, a building manager decided to\ntake out a Snppbo  company  for a\ntour of the second class cities.\nTo play It right we will have to\ncarry our own stairway, bis singe man*\nager told lilm.\nStairway nothing, replied lite manager, this is going to be a city show.\nGet an elevator.\nToo Much Competition\n1 hnve decided to quit smoking aaid\nMr, Biggins, seriously.\nPooler's orders?\nNo, I'm lireil of hearing lite varlou* members of my family wrangling\nover thn kind ot pictures and cerHII\ncntes I shall he compelled to collect.\nTlio alatlsllcs ot French Insurance\ncompaulea prove beyond qneatlnn lhal\nwoman live longer than men: nor ls\nlho feminine advantage 111 longevity a\nmatter ot a few months, or oven j ears\nThe difference Is one of almost a\nthird. Vl.ua the average age of\ndeath for womon annullnnla ou the\nWoke of one company la seventy, aud\n(or men a barn fitly. Another company lias aaveral uiMitenarinns, all wo*\nSien, on Us booka. This company\n\u25a0 now thinking of revising tho tariffs\nnnl making one law for lhe man and\nanother for the woman.\nDODD'S\nKJDNEY\nPILLS\n_B\nHe. a box or tin boxy tor f2,60,\nM all 4-aUra, or Tha bedda Midi.\n_h\u00bb 0\u00bb*n\u00bbany, Limit,*.,   Toronto,\n\u25a0Mr\nPWBB\nV*. N, U, 923\nI PANAMA  CANAL\nLatest Marvel of Engine'rlnfl\nThe construction   of   Uie   Panama\nCanal across the narrowest part of\nCentral America\u2014the total length of\nHie cnnnl In iug about lliitly-llve miles\n\u25a0 - -lias cost $560,000,000,\nFor nearly 100 yenr iho Joining up\nof ilio Atlsnlic nnd PaciUc Oceans by\nI means of a cnnal out at I'niiiiuin has\nj been ihe dream of engineers and nav-\nj igiilors. Tlio suggestion that such a\n' eunul could bo constructed wns Ilrst\nniiule in lho sixteenth century.\nBut although surveys woro made by\nsuch countries us Spain, Holland and\nAmerica, with a view to cutting a\ngreat canal, nothing wns dono to curry\nout imy plan until Ferdinand do Lea-\nsops, the lunn who constructed the\nSuez Canal, convened in Paris ln\n1879 an International congress to dlS'\ncuss a plan for cutting through the\nIsthmus of Panama, Do I.osseps'a\nplnu was adopted, money got togothor\nond two years later a commencement\nwas made on the work. \u2022\nAt nrst De Lcshcpd's Engineering\nCommission to Panama estimated tbat\nlho cost of tlio canal would be \"-00,-\n000,000, but tho great engineer reduced their llguioa to $120,000,000,\nand announced lhat a tide-level canal\neould be completed for that sum.\nTlio history of Do I.esseps's Iraglo\n[allure is well known, Year nttor\nyear the work wont on, and llttlo progress seemed to be made. Moro mil-\nlions were borrowed until, at the ond\not eight years, $350,000,000 had been\nexpended In endeavoring to carry out\nhis projeot\u2014a sum three times aa\nlnrgo as tho whole cost of tho Suoz\nCanal, completed and available for\ntraffic.\nThen the crash came, and some\n800,000 helders ot shares ln France\n1-jst their money; and the story of\nmismanagement, bribery of public\npersons and journals in Franco, and\ntho investigations, prosecutions, and\nimprisonment ot Do i.esseps and his\nson Charles and others, which damaged tho credit ot many eminent men,\nshook the Republto to Its foundations.\nAlter.thej* Panama scnndals practically nothing was done for len years\nand then tho French company which\nhad been formed by De I.esseps sold\nthe canal to the United States for\n$50,000,000. Then came another difficulty. Columbia, which is connected with Costa Hlca by the Isthmus,\nrefused to grant territorial rights to\nthe States with n view to the completion ot the canal. Thereupon occurred startling developments, for\nPanama, anxious for tho coustructlon\nof tho canal, revolted, declared Itself\nnn Independent State, and was duly\nrecognized as such by the United\nStates.\nWith little loss of time a treaty was\nsigned, by which tho Statu ot Panama\ngranted tlio uso ln perpetuity ot a\nzone ten miles wide, with all rights\not proprietorship to tho United\nStates. In consequence ot this the\nState paid tho llttlo Republic $10,000,-\n000 down nnd an annual subsidy of\n$2,500,000, which si,i)sldy begins this\nyear. Altogether the canal has cost\nthe States $200,000,000, which includes\ntho $50,000,000 paid to tho French\ncompany, $10,000,000 to Panama and\n$140,000,000 Tor construction.\nYears ago, uncording to tho Hay-\nPauneefoto Trenty, it was agreed that\ntho canal should bo neutral and open\nto the coiuiuerco of tha world, but\nthe exclusive coutrol and management waa left to tho United States.\nAnd it ls becauso America now de-\nninnda that nil vessels, other thnn\nthose belonging to the Stulcs, shall\npay a toll for passing through the\ncanal that tlio indignation of European countries has been aroused.\nHow It Feels   to Fly\nDr. von Schrotter, a doctor practising In Vienna, describes the curious sensiiti uu. encountered by aviators when ln tho air.\nHo soys tnat apart from the strain\non tbo nervotiH and physical organs,\nthe sudden chnngo ot tho pressure of\n(lie atmosphere, and consequently of\nits oxygen component, nffects tho circulation as Ihe gradual aBcent ln\nmountain climbing does.\nThe powerful draught causes a keen\nsensation of cold, which is the.ilrst\nsymptom complained nf, and deafness\nis very soon experienced. The reduced\nsupply of oxygen caused hy tho rapid\nmovement end the fall of iho atmospheric pressure gives rise to vomiting nud visual hallucinations.\nA dangerous and frequent symptom\nIs tho desire for sleep, occurring come\ntinio during flying, iu spilo ot tho\naviator's strenuous efforts to keep\nawake,\nA very \"unpleasant sensation Is that,\nol dizziness caused by lho altitude of\ntho aeroplane the result being that\nobjeots on lhe ground appear lo he\ndistorted, displaced, or In rapid unwonted movement, and lhat the aviator Is often nt a loss us lo his actual\nposition. Perhaps this condition is\nresponsible for Inexplicable falls nf\naeroplanes from n model nto height.\nSometimes tlio avlnlnr does not know\nwhether ho is In the horizontal position or not, espoolall) when ho Is surrounded by clouds.\nTliu late Mr. ..album tohl Dr. von\nSchrotter (lint on one occasion ho was\n.ompletoly bewildered after u fow\nminutes' experience ot tills kind, uuil\nume to the ground without llis know,\nledge. It is believed that flying nitty\neasily cause a nervous breakdown.\nPertalnlpg te Parke\nIn Kiiglan 1 the tlrst large park opeu\nto (he public was Woodslock, formed\nby Henry 1, In 1125. Of modern\n(linos the most famous parks known\nto dwellers of. (he molropolis arc Regent's and Hyde.\nThe former was originally the\ngrounds of a palace belonging to good\nQueen Bess, while Hyde Park belong.\ned to the Abbey ot Westminster, nud\nbecamo Crown properly in 1535. when\nthe Abbey was dissolved.\nThe United Kingdom, however, cannot rival America for the size and\nsplendor of Its public parks. The\nfamous Yolloffitono Park, Wyoming,\nconslBls of no fewer than 11,300 square\nmiles, and Includes mountains, forests\nnnd volcanic geysers.\nAnother wonderful product of America Is a park built by a Mr, Duke, n\nwealthy tobacco manufacturer, of\nSomervlllo. New Jersey. It cost\n$15,000,000 to form. In Its grotuids\naro 40,000,000 plants and trees, nud\nthe fountains urn tho most magnificent In tho world.\nIkey\u2014This coat is green I Vou said\nIt was plum color von 1 bought It Inst\nWight,\nMoses\u2014That's all right, iny boy, It\nain't turned ripe yet,\nIn England and Wales there arc\nthirty-five Parllomciilary boroughs\nwhich contain n population of J00,-\n000 and upwards,\nRoyal Fanciers\nTlio lato King Edward VII. is the\nonly English monarch to have owned\na National pigeon-race winner. In\n1800, when Prince of Wales, bo supplied the first National flier from\nIiorwlck\u2014n flight, cf over 510 miles\n\u2014and although the bird was entered\nln lite name of Mr. Jackson, the chlof\nkeeper at Sandrlngiiam, tho Pence-\nmaker, with ills usual guod judgment,\nallowed lt to bo public knowledge that\nthe winner was from Sandrlngiiam,\nSingularly enough tho third, fourth\nand eleventh prizes In the same event\nwent to King Oeorge V , then Duke of\nYork. Our present King is still an\nardent pigcon-'anoler, being president\not tbe National Flying Club; whilst\nboth kings havo given cups fur racing pigeons, and theso are keenly contested each year.\nQueen Alexandra, too, was a generous supporter of tho feathered fancy.\nIlnntama wore lier favorites, and tho\nSandrlngiiam slud mot with much sue.\ncess at tbo shows. Old English\ngame, Kosecoiubs, Cold anl Silver\nSebrights, Pokins. anl Japanese were\ntho miniatures In which site showed\ngreat Interest. Her lovo of dumb\nanimals caused hor lo make u stand\nagainst tin, practice of dubbing game\nfowls, aud her humaneness ln this\nmade her exceedingly popular\namongst lady fanciers.\nOstrich Plttnia In Jars\nThero ls no place llko a pawnshop\nfor picking up useful hints, suld (he\nImprovident man. Bvery time my\ncircumstances compel me to patronize one I glean somu Hem of general\nInformation thai almost reconciles me\ntn the noOOSSity of being there. Ou\nmy lasl visit. 1 saw a mini redeeming\nostrloh feathors, Our uncle brought\nthem oul. tightly sealed lu n glu.s\njar.\nWhat .11.1 you can Ihem for? lite\nman asked.\nSo tliey wouldn't spoil, said ilie\npawnbroker. A glass Jar is thu\nsafest thing on earth to keep feathers\nlu. Mollis and dust cannot get nt\nlitem. Besides, you can keep nn\neye on litem easily, nntl any troublo\nthat mlftlii. have been breeding when\nlho feathors were brought in can be\ndiscovered nntl nipped In Ibo bud.\nThat hint i consider worth going\nto a pu'wnsiinp for. The way things\nlook now nooody belonging lo ine will\nover have any oslrloh plumes lo Inko\ncare of,, but If wo ever have any I\nshall know what fo do wllb thom,\nPrimary Education In Russia\nA llussiau newspaper prints nn historic apereti of lho development of\nprimary education in Itussla, Elementary schools woro founded in 1800,\nand at. tho end of Iho reign of Alexander 11, (heir number had reached\ntho llgtiro of 22,700, wllli an attendance of n million pupils,\nThero are now In Russia over 100,-\n000 primary schools with six million\npupils. Tlio expense of upkeep fnr tho\npresent yenr has been estimated at\n63,000,000 rubles which amount lias\nliton duly (appropriated liy the stale.\nThe total amount voted for educational purposes In Iho Itnssluu Empire\nIs 114,000,000 rubles, but anothor tlfty\nmillions accrue from private dona\ntions and appropriations from local\nftmitVMi\nRates and the Coat of Living\nA citizen ot Western Canada |g\nbreakfasting at an Ottawa hotel on\nbroad and butter, bacon, egga and\ncoffee. The waiter hands him tht\nitlil, which Is mora than It used to tat\nwhen he waa there a tow yeara ago,\naud, ot courso, he laya the blame oa\nrail tales.\nLet us consider the facts, Th*\nrate on flour from Winnipeg to Ottawa In car-load lota, nlhrall, ls 30 cents\nper 100 pounds, eay 60 cents for a\nbarrel of 196 pounds, Manitoba flour\nbeing strong and well-matured, th\u00bb\nOttawa baker ls able to make 196\noaves, eaoh weighing l'\". pounds, from\na barr*!, th* addition of water und\nyeast accounting for the seomlngly\nmiraculous Increase In ths flour. Assuming that our friend oats heartily\not bread, wo get down to this atrm\nin Uui* of Three:\u2014If the rail rate on\nthe principal raw material of 190\nloaves ls 60 conls, what portion ot lt\nla paid by the consumer of half n loaf.\nTho hotel pays flvo cents or so per\nloaf, but may charge htm twlco or\nthreo times that much for half a one.\nIn any event it 13 evident tbat t!*e\nrail rato conslltuteo tlio merest fraction of tho first cost ot tho bread.\nThat a barrel of dour should bo carried 1300 mllos for 00 cents is, lf ono\ncomes to think of It, nothing short of\nwonderful. ln Eastern (,'amula It\ncosts 25 cen's or thereabouts to move\na barrel by hois-e and wagon frum the\nrailway station to liio nearest bouse\nin town,\nThe bacon lit brought lo Ottawa from\nToronto ami the Cnuailiuu Pttcllln tate\nfor car-load lots Is 20 cents por 100\nputuuls. Tbo butter and eggs como\nfrom Smith's Falls nod tbe rato for\nIes', than car-load lots ls 15 uud 19\ncenls per 10U pounds respectively. We\nneed not trouble ourselves about the\ncoffee.\nBacon retails ln Ottawa Just now\nfor 25 nnd butter for 30 cenls per\npound, and eggs for 30 cents per dozen. Onco more, therefore, the rail\nrate Is a wholly Insignificant factor\nin the composition of the price, tint!\nconsequently in the Westerner's hotel\nbill.\nHere, however, we see lhe beneficent working of lhe prfiieiple of\ncharging what the traffic will bear,\nwhich be 6ays ls an outrageous principle because lt moans that the railways mulct tho settler for all he can\npay and llvo. In reality it means\nquite tho opposite. The bacon' butter and eggs pay a higher rate by a\ngood deal ln proportion to length of\nhaul than the flour, in order thnt the\nflout* may be shipped from Manitoba\nto distant markets and leave tbo miller and the farmer a tolerably good\nprofit. But for this system the Cuu-\nadlan West would still bo to a great\nextent a desert place.\nDragged Down by Asthma\u2014Tho\nman or woman who is continually subject to asthma is unfitted for his or\nher llfo's work. Strength departn\nand energy ls taken away uutll llfo\nbecomes a dreary exlstoncc. And\nyet. this ls needless. Dr. J, D.\nKellogg's Asthma Remedy has brought\na great change to au army of sufferers. It relieves tho rest rioted air\ntubes and guards against ftilt.ro trouble.     Try lt.\nVisitor\u2014That's llie village doctor,\nIsn't lt?\nNative\u2014Ye?.\nVisltoi\u2014Is he n good doctor?\nNative\u2014Oh, ho's all right if you've\ngot a strong constitution.\nMlnard'a  Liniment  Cures Garget  In\nCows\nThe Othe.- Half\nTho nnrish tea was over, and the\ncurate stood up to say a few words\nto tlio recipients boforo they dis-\nperse4- He spoke in eloquent terms\nof the Inipocunloslly of curates In general and then wont, on to suy, in apparently touching tones: Why, oven\nas I stand before you now I have only\nhalf a shirt on my back.\nA fow days Inter Hie reverend gentleman received a parcol containing\nliall'-a-dozen new shirts, accompanied\nhy a card hearing tlio name of one of\niiis fair (though, alas! no longer\nyoung) parishioners, At the earliest\nopportunity ho called upon the lady,\nantl thanked her for tho glfr. nnd then\nproceeded to ask what bail prompted\ntho kind notion,\nWhy? she replied, you told tis the\nother night that you had only half n\nshirt to your back.\nTrue, Iio answered, but the olhor\nhalf was in front.\nXSS\nMinard'e Liniment  Cures Colds, dc.\nMaking It Up\nWhat? shrieked tho visitor, in an\nIndignant, voice You're going to\ncharge me llvo shillings for that poky\nlittle room I bad lust night? It's preposterous.\nWell. sir. roplled tho landlady, that's\nour charge, and I cannot, ulicr It.\nThe visitor nearly burst himself\nwitli wrath.\nAnyhow, I refuse to pny it, ho went\non. Especially as 1 didn't got n\nwink of sleep Inst night. I was walking up and down Iho whole llmo with\nraging toulhache.\nTho landlady smiled, ns only landladies call smile.\nIn that cose, sir. she snld. I must\ncharge you an oxtrn shilling for wour\nof the carpel.\nFully Explained\nLook here, stormed the customer,\npointing to tile lureull, what ls the\nmeaning of linn dead ii\\ lu the soup?\nI regret, air, until the waller, politely, I cannot supply you with the desired Information. 1 nm only supposed to serve lhe Hotip, not explain\nthe ingredients.\nUut a dead fly, man, persisted iho\ncustomer, a dead flyl flow did it\nhappen?\nI am sorry lo ssy, sir, replied the\nwaiter, I line no Idea'low lhe poor\ncreature mot lis fate. Possibly it\nbti'l not lalfiii any food for u long\nlime, and illlltorlng near lite soup,\nfound the flavour particularly pleasing\nnntl, eating ino heartily, contrnatotl\nappendicitis or some kindred tillment.\nwhich, In llie absence of no opportunity lor lhe application of ihe X-rays\nnml the resilllapt opcriilloii, caused\nIts untimely' end.\nHe   Understood\nA Scolllsh duchess, ami In order at\na supper parly n certain young dninly\nwns ulttlng  next to  gain hei- good\ngraces utfc-lcd  u  knowledge of lhe\nBcottlsli longuo, declaring ihem was\nnot a Scolllsh phrase lie tlbl uol understand,\nRax mn a spraw o1 Ihnt bubbly-\nJock, roplled iim duchess, scarcely\nMoving a mllsolo of her face,\nThe rxftulvjlo looked appnlieil, and\nthen slunk away in Contusion, while\nUio commission was oxeoulod by n\ncavalier bulling fioiii north of the\nTweed. The tluchess wanted a turkey wing,\nA RIMARKABLE    MIGRATION\n. Tb* mutation ot th* goose from tb*\nNorth to th* South, and again baok\ntrots th* South to the North, Is one\not th* myattrles of natur* which has\nnot ytt beta explained, but the big\nannual wtourslon miration of Western Canadians to Oreat Britain, Eastern Canada and ths United States is\nmore easily explalnod.\nThe migration Is looked forward to\nby all the big railroads interested ln\nlho truffle It was etartod 25 years\nago end has been growing ln volume\nyearly slnoo.\nHosts of pasBengor traffic solicitors from tho railroads ln tho United\nSlates and Canada Invade Western\nCanada at this timo of year to point\nout tho undoubted advantages of tliolr\nlines with suro and certain conviction\nthat their revenues will bo boosted.\nThis year tho Canadian Northern\nRailway Is helping tho migration by\nstrong arguments put up in dainty\nbooklets, distributed by their agents.\nThese booklets contain full information regarding tbe vory low laves to\nEastern Canada nnd England, when\nand where tickets \"may bo purchased,\ndetails ot time tables nnd choice of\nroutes.\nFOR MAKING SOAP,\nSOFTENING WATER,\nREMOVING   PAINT,\nDISINFECTING SINKS.\nCLOSETS.DRAINS.ETC.\nSOLO   EV CRY WHERE.\nREFUSE SUBSTITUTES\n=====\nDISTRESS FROM\nINDIGESTION\nTRIED IN VAIN TO GET A CURE-\nALL MEDICINES FAILED\nAid Trouble Disappeared   When   the\nLiver and Bowels Were Set\nRight by\nDR. CHASE'S   *\nKIDNEY-LIVER PILLS\nYou cannot make a greater mistake\nthan to think that indigestion is confined to tho stomach, it is a disease\nof the liver and bowels, und it ls only\nby getting theso organs healthy nnd\nactive that you can ever hope to curd\nchronic Indigestion.\nHero aro two cases reported by ?.Ir.\nSkinner which will tell of continued\nfailure to euro indigestion by dosing\nthe stomach. Iloth wero cured thoroughly by using Dr. UhMO'i Kidney-\nLiver I'llls.\nMr. A. C. Skinner, Atlantic St.,\nllardwnralhill, Sydney. CD., writes:\n-\".My wife was troubled with ludi-\ngeslinn and tried nil sorts nf medicines In vain. Hearing about Dr.\nChase's Kidney-Liver Pills, I got hoi\nto try them, and to our great delight\nsite was cured. We would not. think\not being without them In the houso\nfor uso when the liver aud bowels became sluggish,\n\"I told a friend about Ihem and\ngavo lilm a box. He had Buffered\nfrom Indigestion for years ami tried\nmost everything ho could got. iir.\nChuso's Kidney-Liver PIIIb were also\nsuccessful iii bis caae, und ho says\nthey beat any medtclno he ever came\nacross.''\nDr, t'baso's Klilney-I.iver Pill?, one\npill a dose, Mr. ii box, at all dealers\nor |Sdmanson, Utiles & Co., Limited,\nToronto,\nWillie's Deal\nWillie had a yellow dug lhat was a\nperfect nuisance, but so devoted was\ntho boy lo iiim tbnt be could not bo\npersuaded to have bim killed. One\nday when his father hnd beeu unusually annoyed by tbo unties of the dog\nbo called Willie In from play and\nsaid: \u2014\nMy boy, I'll give you a sovereign\nif you get rid ot that dog.\nWillie's fn co expressed great amazement at tbo thought of so much money\nbelonging in him, IIo looked long at\nthe dog, uud finally told his father he\nwould givo lilm his decision tbo next\nday.\nThe following day Wiliie sought bis\nfathor nml said:   \u2022\nI've got till of Max, father.\nlh more than glad, Willie, snld lhe\nfather. Hero's your money; you've\nearned It. How tlbl you get rid of\nhim?\nWhy, answered Willie, lis Iin put Ibo\nmoney In his pocket, 1 swopped him to\nDill Morgan for two yellow pups.\nVery many persons rile annually\nfrom cholera antl kindred summer\ncomplaints, who might havo heon\nsaved it proper remedies hail been\nused. It attacked do not delay lu\ngetting n bottle of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's\nDysentery Cordial, tho medicine that\nnever foils lo effect a cure. Those\nwho have used It sny It acts promptly\nnnd thoroughly subdues lhe pain und\ndisease.\nHis Only Claim '\nLittle Mr. Spluks was an excelleut\nman nf business, and falrlv prosperous ln a modest way, but he lacked:\nartistic talent\nFor the Slate\nWithout the slightest ceretui ni   lhe\n\"id dairy farmer bundled Into :... nl*\ntoady overorowded railway   compart-\nThe i articular custom*    was rather\na dandified person, and  by  ws    \"t\npleasantry asked the far r tin   tu\nture of the contents ol the box In b id\nunder bis arm.\nWell, said the dalt  mai. as n mat*\nSuperstitious people ln Franco ere\nworried liy tho new mot hod of count-\nlug the hours. Trains wlileli start\nat 1 p.m. (now thirteen o'clock) uro\nmuch less crowded Ihan others, especially on Fridays, It Is curious\nhow tho superstition of thirteen\npersists. Massonot never dated his\nletters on tbo fatal day. Even bis\nmanuscripts he numbered thus: 12, 12\nbin, M, Ily a strange coincidence\nor fatality Hie great composer died on\n(he thirteenth of the luiutlli in a year\nwhose flgurts added up amount to\nthirteen.\nary and artistic set as being u remarkably brilliant woman, and one\nwith great powers of entertaining.\nIt elinm-eii that both Mr. nml .Mrs. I\nsplnka wore Inadvertently asked to a\nlargo party togothet it, nohemlan\ngathorlng, whloh wns not rjulte lu the!\nutile num's line. During the course'\not the evening bis wife Bang, nml the I\nrichness ot bor voloo attracted u well-\nknown mun who happened to he present.\nlie nsked lo be introduced to lur.\nThis was dono by tbe hostess, but ln\nabout livo minutes after effecting the\nintroduction she hurried up, and carried Mrs. Sptnks oft again, telling\ntho discomfited stranger that he must,\nn't monopolise tbo celebrated woman.\nDut I'll Introduce you (o Mr. Splnks,\nsbo added, by way of consolation.\nMr. Spiuks! ejaculated tho great\none. Nover heard of lilm. Ifo's a\nstranger, Isn't he? What's ho famous\nfor?\nBr\u2014well, his wife!\nA WELL-KNOWN  MAN\n.Minard's Lliijmont Co., Limited.\nDear Sirs,\u2014I can recommend vour\nMINAUD'S liniment for   Rheumatism and Sprains, ns I havo used It\nfor bolh with excellent, results.\nYours truly,\nT, B. LAYERS,\nSt  John.\nTrying a caso over the telephone ia\ntin. novel method adopted by u New-\nYork coroner lu order to nave llmo\nMr. Hellensteln, a coroner, took the\novldonco uf witnesses, listened to arguments and gave bis decision without\nleaving his study chair.\nIt all Depended\nFair Elizabeth tripped blithely Into tho country post, olllce.\nNow, I want to kuow, sho demanded, wllh a tell talo blush, as site\nhanded tho clerk u pink communication addressed lo her lover, bow long\nIt will be heforo I get an answer to\nthin Iel ter?\nThat depends, be answered, If he's\nIn Jail they will lot him write once a\nweek, or maybo once u mouth only.\nIf he's dead broke he'll have to wnit\ntill ho can eiirn tho pr! if a slump.\nand I havo no data upon which to base\nnu opinion ot his earning capacities, !\nIf he's ill in bed he muy not enre lo\ndlcintohls heart's sentiments lo a cold\ndisinterested third party; and If it'sj\nsmallpox they won't lot blm write nt I\nall; ditto If he's dead.   Then again,\nit' lie's gni a new girl- -\nAt which moment, ho realized that!\nLln,< fair Elizabeth hail down,\nler of foot, sir, tills ,.- ii box of <\u25a0 milt,\nI see, replied tho young man, with\nau air ..I fact wisdom,   (.'hall for the\nmilk\u2014oh?\nWell, not. exactly, drawled the man\not tho soil.       1 ve   don,-   _   ,\u201e,.,.,\nchalklng-up tor the milk you've ban\non tick, that I've .id to buy another\n, box ot chalk,\nGUARD BABY FROM COLDS\nThe mother can guar.] her little\nones from colds during the damp, cold\nfall days by tho ubo oi lia-o \"ri own\nTablets. The Tablets act ..-, a g< ;.-\ntie laxative, keeping the bowels working freely and th- stomach sweet\u2014-\nthat Ib the secret of preventing colds.\nTho Tablets will not only prevent or\nbanish colds, but will euro constipation, lndige3tloii, expi I worms and\nmake teething easy. Tliey are sold\ntnder tho guarantee of n government\nmalyst to contain no harmful drag?\nami may safely be given to the newborn babe, Sold by medicine dealers\nor by mall at 25 cents a box from Tho\nDr. Williams' Medicine ra nroel-.\nvllle, Ont.\nAn Oklahoma resldont has petitioned Mm authorities to hav.. an tlio\nBtroet lamps turned out by midnight\nalleging that bin fowls feast all night\non tho grasshoppers attracted bv the\nelectric lights, Thfl hens are drowsy next day and do uot lay,\nOlasgow Rangers won overy match\niu the Scottish League Competition in\n189!.-18..ii, and no other club hai  n\ncompllshed this performance.\nAn extraordinary scene was witnessed at Calcutta recently when ;. small\n| trolly, studded with rows of iron\n; spikes, on which a Hindu wan lying nt\n\u25a0 full length, was being pulled Llirougli\n'_ the streets, A large crowd was foi-\n1 lowing. Inquiries elicited the lnfor-\n' mat ton tlmt tlio 111:111 was doing pon-\nI ance, and was on h's way to t'n.- tem-\n: pie nf tho goddess Kail at Kalfghat\n1 Tho Hindu bud been several days 011\n; tiio Journey, and was in a terrlbto condition. The spikes, which numbered\nabout J\"\u00bb\", wero quite sharp, and Ilia\nl man worn only 11 Join cloth, il-- must\nhavo boon Buffering aeulo pain from\ntlm fact that 1Mb body uaw bruised and\nlacerated all over as a result of lying\non tho sharp nails. Neither thc police nor any passer by made any attempt to stop the self-impus, | i< .-\nturo.\nWaiter's Rebuke\nSims\u2014While In Paris I paid $;*.\"\u25a0 in\nftps alone.\nWalter assisting him on with his\ncoat)\u2014You must liavo lived there a\ngood many years, sir.\nAt a recent birthday party a young\nImly begau a Bong:\nThn autumn days havo come; ten\nthousand leaves nn* fulling.\nSho began ton high. Ten tlinus\u2014she\nscreamed, and thon stopped.\nStart her at flvo thousand, cried an\nauctioneer who waa present.\nA  Helping  H-.nl\nMlstreBS   (hurrying   frnncl\nMary, what time ia I' now'.'\nMaid   Half paal   two.\nMistress\u2014Oh, I thought it waa later.\nI Btill bave twenty minutes Lo catch\ntho steamer.\nMaid\u2014Ycb, mum, 1 kuew yo'd be\nrushed, bo 1 art tho clock back thirty\nminutes tu give ye more time.\nSince 18;J7. the largest Liberal majority in Britain was 884, in 1006,\nani the smallest waa 1 in 18.7; whllo\ntho largest Unionist majority waa 163\nin IM., and tlio smallest 46 In lss:<.\nAustralian Government's Gift of 1,000\nAcres\nSpeaking ai a mooting of tho Child\nEmigration society at Dolgrava square,\nLondon, under Ilio prosldonoy of Lord\na revile, J. n. Jefferson, of the executive committee, Bald tlmt the Australian Government waa ko pleased with\ntin* society's sahemo that thoy liad\ngiven thom |,000 acres of laud outright, nnd hm sores itsd already boon\ntaken up lu I'oitli. Hulldliiga wore\nbolng erootod, and thoy hoped to Bond\nout ibo first party of children iu Sent*\nember. Thoy tntonded that each\nchild should bco-jmo a sbnrer In ihe\nprofit fl ot the lai 111. Ho would not\nbe paid much por week, but Ilio bai*\nnnco of tlio amount bn oarnod would\nbo banked, no thai whon thn child toft\nthem ho would havo something to coirt-\nUieilOO llfn Oil. Thoy Intended, ton,\nto bring Up Ibo children aa a family,\naud any lal 111 of JriHlitutintittllHin would\nbo ellmlunloil,\nTho sooloty wnnlod to draw upon\ntho l!;-,uim children whom It bad been\natalod worn under ihn onrn nf tho\npoor law. They wanted to omlgrflto\nthorn -both girls and boys\u2014to Australia, whoro they would bo brought up\non lho ininl, whloh would In fuLtiro bo\ntholr homo, tmd hn thoroughly trained\nin all doparttuonia or {arming, Thoy\nwanted to got hold of tho children\nwhllo they wore between tho ages ot\neight and len yonr*, and keop them\nuntil thoy were 1(1, do that (hero\nshould bo no dangor of tholr being\nexploited as child lauorers, Alongside\nihe technical Instruction would go\nelementary education, which the Australian Oov'intuent had promised ta\ngive, and Indoed, to erect schools If\n, necessary.\nEMPIRE\nNavy\nPLUG\nCHEWING\nTOBACCO\nWhat the Old Pilot Says t\n\"To steer \u2022 ship ufelf to\nport It no easy job. On or off duty,\nthere is great comfort In Emplro Navy\nPlug Chewing Tobacco.\" THE  PROSPECTOR,  CRANBROOK,  B. C.\n:!.____\u25a0\nn 1111111111111 IIH 1111 *** \" \" I H f' M ' ****** ****************** **\u25a0 I * I *\u25a0* * 1111 * Ir****** l'l 111 III 11 * * ll'l 111\u00ab.H-t-l-ln llllllllllll I !\u2022 ******** I*******************''\nIllllSIt^^ 11111111111 .\"i\"M 111 n 11111 h 11111 n 11 ** i *** * \"i \u2022*\u2022** \u25a0*\u25a0*\u2022* \"i \"i 11 * \"i \"i ** ******* 'i-i \"i-i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i \"i\"i \"i\"i:::;\nAuditorium I^______, May 27th\nLeComte & Flesher  Offer\nTHE MOST ELABORATE PRODUCTION EVER PRESENTED IN THIS CITY\nThe Gorgeous Musical Spectacle\n\"The Prince of Tonight\"\n50\nPEOPLE\n18 MUSICAL NUMBERS SPECIAL ORCHESTRA\nOverflowing with Now Song Hits and Stunning Girls   Excellent Cast and Chorus\nWith\nTOM ARNOLD\n50\nPEOPLE\nThe Dancing Eight in \"The Prince of Tonight\"\nFEATURES\nf| The Blue and Silver Ballet\n::| Transformation to the Land of the Moon\nil The Brilliant Water Fete\ni| The Banquet at \"The Breakers\"\nI The Changes of Custumes   and Scene are\nBewildering in their Frequency\nJ\nn * 11* \u25a0_!Ifl  _\\M\n_i    sis\n__. \u25a0\n\u25a0_ 1__G_BKI_-*4I__I\n\u25a0?..-_[\nfl\n\\WI Jt* _\n1      \u25a0\nr      .__\u25a0\u25a0__     ____.      __r__\nI     ^_Ww     ] _\u25a0    \u25a0 ^1\nM-ft\n*   i    *f'   \u201e__r _a    _J\n.a-\"      j    \\ ,         -mam     J^^B     . jH\n_l_^\"'ii___^ \"_\u25a0\n___r   !___! \u25a0' i^B\n' ': k*\u25a0''\u25a0\"\u25a0   \u25a0\nI              __\u25a0          . .'M              ^D\nL__l ill 1\n\u25a0\u25a0 im\nill         1\nI ' \u20221\nr i-'i\n.      Jl\n_____3H\nStunning Girls in Stunning Gowns with \"The Prince of Tonight\"\n\u25a0 \u00bb\nThe Entire Chicago Production will be  Presented Here as produced there 260 times il\n\u2014. A Brilliant Spectacle of Flowers and Lights \u2014=     \t\nPRICES $ .50. S1.00 & $1.50.\nSEATS NOW SELLING AT BEATTIE-MURPHY'S DRUG STORE\nmi m nim-m-. whwiii i i i i i i i i i i i u i i i ***** ihi i *** ***********************.*** 1111 ***** hi ******************** 11 in +** hi1 **\u25a0* ********************* n***t\nI********************** I ************ I ***** ********* I II I I I I I III ****** ************ llll I I HI *** II llllllll iiiii n ********************* **************************\nCranhrook and Fernie Water\n|Districts\nBefore the Hoard of Investigation\nNOTIOH IS HKIlKltY QIVHN tltttt tlic clniiiiH to wnter rights In the\nCrnubi k nml i.*.i-i,n- Wntoi  Districts \u201entl objections tt. the said claims\nwill l,o heard mul ilotorminod nt tin- I'ltit'.'H hereinafter mentioned, vta\nt\\l  the ('..nit  id.ntti'. drunbronk  on   in.'   Uth (inu   17th days ol\n.lune,   1913, nl nl 'clock In t ie [orenoon local time, tor all claims\nt,. tvntor [towing !i,,tn the Wenl i:,t.> tho Kootenay Kiver nml Its western  trlhiitniles, Including the  Moyie lliver and (tn tributaries,\nAt the Courl Houso in Pernio on the isth day \"I .lime, 1913, at\nmn.' o'clock in id- I'i \"it  local timo, lor nil claims to wuter (low-\nlilt! into the Kik Itlver and its tributaries above the Canadian l'acWk\nHallway Bridge ovor tho sni.l Kik Kiver. At tin* Lock-up in Klko un\nthe 19th day ol June, 1913, nt nin- o'clock In the forenoon local time\nfnr iiii claims to waters II.mm; from tlio Bast Into the Kootenay\nRiver mul Its tributaries between Canadinn Pacific Railway Undue at\nWtirtln.T itii'l tho Intornntlonal Boundary.\n~ Al th,. I'l.tit-i House in Fort Steele on tin* 2ntli day of June, 1913,\nal ten o'clock In tin lorencon for all claims to wnter (lowing from the\nlOtiHi Into the Kii.ti't-av Kiver an d its tributaries between the Canadian\nPacific Kitilwiiy Bridge al Wardner ami the Southern boundary of the\nHolder  Water  District.\nBy Order ol the Board,\n,1    I*'   ARMSTRONG,\nVictoria,  li.  ('. Chairman\nlllth  Mny,    1913.\n\u2022-M-.-H-+-H-M\n..      HEAD   OFFICE\n20-Bt\nCALOAKY, Alt*       .,\nOUR BRANDS\nOn Meals and Lards Guarantee Their Quality-\nAll our Products are Government Inspected\n\"The Kind That Tastes Good.\"\nI P. BURNS & CO. Ltd. 1\nCRANBROOK, - B.   C.\nlin-IIIIIH IIIIIIIH H I H IIHIII H M I HI Ml\nToday in Umpire Imy and will be\nobservod aa a national holiday, nil\nbUllfltaa hoiiHCN ami l-iink*- .vill ba\nclosed. Tin- day will bo celebrated\nnt the Kmr Ground*), by horse racing and  other athletic Bvonte whlrh\nwill   he.   tree   to   all   RClll -\u00bbl   children,\nIt. iti expected that ii inr\u00abo numbor\nol   vlHitdin   will   he  horo   to    wltmsHH\nthe sports. Tho Turf Awtoclatlon\niuih provided a larno and Interesting\nnrogrnmmo with appropriate nurm'H,\nand a large numbor   ol good i> iroes\n(rom   Alberta   and   Spokane   are   ex\npMttd\nj iti,ii.iuii from Windermere, Tobacco\nj Plalm, and Croston arrived in ('ran\nI brook thirt week to attend the te.ati\nI vui \u00ab>( Oorpui Obrtstl at tbe Ht. Ku\n! gene Mlsalon bn Thu.ti.iay. Cor pun\nObrtstl Sunday wlll be celebrated at\n| the MlHrtlon tomorrow\nCorpus chriHii in ,\u25a0 festival of the\n1 Church ut Romo, and ih obierved on\n: the first thundny alter Trinity Bun-\nday, Iii honor of the donntnen of th'!\nDJuehai'1st,     it   wuh   instituted   by\nI Pope Urban IV, In   IUM, and la atlll\ni colobratod    aH on<e    of   the grestest\nj li'tmti: of thr church\nParadejsat Noon\nYankee Robinson Circus and Wild\nWest Parade Takes Place at Noon.\nIn order that the country folks cun\nhave as much time at home on circuB\nday as is possible, also that incoming excursionists can have the opportunity of witnessine; the immense\ncircus and wild west parade of Yankee Robinson and Texas Bill, the event does not take place until hle.h\nnoon. Promptly at tbat time the\nparade moves, then all tbe outs! le\nfree exhibitions arc Riven at the\nshow .rounds. For those who come\nin early there is plenty of amusement, however, and it is advit-mble\nwhen convenient, to come in as early as possible.\nOnly American There\nMiss Oretta Borup, daughter of\nLieutenant Colonel H. I). Borup, will\nbe the onlv amerlcan who will attend\nthe wedding of Princess Victoria\nLouise today, according to a special\nBerlin dispatch published at Wew\nYork no Wednesday. Miss Borun went\nto school with tbe Emperor's daughter in the exclusive Kalserin Auguste\ninstitute in  rotsdam.\nA Notable_Suggestion\nLord Norton haa written to The\nLondon Morning Poet to suggest\nthat the United Klncdom, the United States and Germany shall enter\nInto what he calls \"an international\narhltratlon convention,\" and that\ntliey should agree to n reduction of\narmaments and comhlne to enforce\npeace throughout the world. Lord\nNorton says that a heavy resronEi-\nliility rests u\u00bbon the statesmen of\nthe three nations to find a way to\nbring about such an achievement.\nThe suggestion ls timely. Lord Mor.\nIcy ls shortly to visit Berlin, and,\nalthough it is said that his visit is\npurely n private one, there is hardly\nany doubt connected with the rflorts\nbeing put forward to bring about a\nreapproachement between Great Britain and Germany. The very Interesting announcement is made that\nthat the British Government will no\nlonger interpose any oMectlon to Germany acquiring a foothold in the Persian liiilf. This satisfactory trend\nof iilliiirH synchronizes with the effort\nbeing made by Mr. William J. Bryan, United States Secretary ol State,\nto promote an arhltrarlon convention.\nIt is unlikely that, in the event of\nsuch a convention ta Lord Norton\nproposes becoming an accomplished\nfact, France would have any desire\nto hold aloof. .The two gren*. obstacles in the way ot disarmament\nare the antagonism between Germany\nand France and a belief by the former that Great Britain does not wish\nhcr to have \"o place in the sun.\"\nGreat Britain can easily remove tbe\nlatter and it ought not to be impossible to overcome the former.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nCorporation of the City of\nCranbrook\nNotice of Local Improvements\nSecond Scene of \"Pantrs By \"\nThe Big Circus\nThe Yankee Robinson circus is just\nas big as it can get. It has three\nrings and two elevated stages\u2014and\nthat is as large as any circus can\ngrow in this day and nge. The en\nUre performance is given in the three\nrings and the stages\u2014is presented in\nsuch a manner that no matter at\nWhat angle you are seated in the canvas you can see every act\u2014sometimes\nfifteen of them gong on at one time\n-wltb perfect caFe. The Wild West\nperformance takes place on the race\ntrack, so that every part of this performance pnsees you from two to\nthree times..\nThe big ahow will appear at Crnnbrook Mny   9th.\nLIC.UOK UOBNOS  ACT\n(Section   53).\nNOTICK IS HBRBBY OIVBN tha\non 'bl 1 Ot ti day of June ii-Xt, appli\ncation wll'  be made to tbe Huperln\n\u25a0end-lit of po'ice for thc transfer o\nthe licence for the sale of 11 Tor by\nwholes I., in and upon thc premises\nDown as the  \"Mo le Br:wcry\" sit\nntc at Moy'e, II.  ('., fro-n the sat\nuremia h   lo  the   premies on  lot 21\nGroup 1, ad'n'n'ng ths City of I ran\nl;roo\\ D. 0.\nDated tlii.   ICth dn   of Mav,   1913.\nMueller & Hesse,\n^ fit lTo|d\u00abr*\u00bb o' the |*C\u00abnce,\nWanted\u2014Cedar Poles\nTHNIIKIIH wlll ne received hy the\nundersigned up to Mav ai for tin\nl i('o'\"lng iratorliils to i'c shipped to\nNutiil Hliilii.n on the (I. P, 11., or\n\"\u25a0'lnlrl nn thn 0, N. II. wl'Iiiii IIO\ndnys of awarding of contraet:\n'I'lV 21 lo it polos, i, Inches a', top.\n3 111, foot lu.li'ii, 7 Inches at top.\nPoles uii ill lie i>o mil, reasonably\nnl Might, peeled cedar. Mark all re-\nlilies to this advt. \"Tenders fnr\npi I ia\" ninl nildi-CHs to\nDISTRICT FORESTER\nao-at Cranbrook, B.C\nNOTICE If\nHBRBBY GIVEN that\nin pursuance\nol a\nresolution  raised\nlu  Council assent\n,leil    on thc   28th\nlay ol April\n1013,    the    Munici.ai\nCouncil  of the\nlorporation  ni th.\nCity of Cranbroolt,  inttn a to cnn\nstruct the following work:\u2014\n\"A   10 foot cement sidewalk on\nthe East\nSide\nnf   Clock   90,   on\nthe enst\nhli\nwest side nf Bloc\n89, the west si\nle of Ulock   88 and\nthe south\nside\nof Ulock   88, from\nthe west\ncorner of thc Block   to\nthe west side nf the allev,   and on\nthe south\nBill\"\nol Uloci   89, und\nnu   the  south\nside of Blor'<   00,\nfrom  the\neast\ncnriur  nf   the al-\nley.\"\nThe Lnnds tn h*\niminedlatilv bene*\nlite.l by the said wnrlts and Improve\nnun's are ,ts\nfnllnws:\nBloolt,\nLot.\nFt. f*rontfl ;e\n88\n1\n2,1\nSS\nI\n122'\nss\n\u25a01\n28\nKS\n:i\n26\nM\n'\n86\nSS\nT,\n2.1\nSS\nr,\n2.1\nSS\n7\n2.1\nH8\n8\n2.1\nSS\n0\n21\nSS\n10\n21\nSS\n11\n25\nSS\n14\n21\n88\n16\n25\n88\n16\n2.1\n88\n17\n26\n88\nIK\n26\nss\n10\n121\nBlock,\nLot.\nFt. Fr.iutn^e.\n80\n1\n2.1\n80\n1\n122*\n89\na\n25\n89\n3\n2.1\nM\n4\n2,1\n80\nr.\n126\nSO\nr,\n1211\n89\ni;\n25\n89\n7\n25\n89\n8\n25\n89\n0\n25\n89\n111\n2.1\n89\n11\n2.1\nSO\nin\n25\n89\n18\n2.1\n80\n1*1\n25\n89\nir.\n86\n80\nHi\nH             12 ft li in.\n89\n111\nN             12 ft. 6 In\n80\n17\n25\n89\n18\n26\nSO\n19\n124\n8$\n80\n26\n89\n30\n25\n80\n31\n2.1\n80\n32\n26\n89\n33\n26\n89\n84\n26\n89\n80\n80\n89\n89\n80\n89\n80\n89\n89\n89\n89\n89\nBlock.\n00\nOil\n01)\n0(1\n00\n00\n01)\n90\non\n00\n91)\n37\n38\n39\n40\n41\n42\n43\n44\n45\n46\n46\nLot.\n28\n20\n30\n31\n25\n25\n2.1\n26\n25\n25\n25\n25\n25\n25\n122*\nFt. Frontage.\n112\n25\n2.1\n25\n2.1\n25\n25\n26\n88\n31\n36\n36 2.1\n37 2.1\n,18 25\nOil 39 25\n90 40 2.1\n90 41 north 9\n00 41 south 16\n90 42 25\n00 43 25\n00 44 25\n00 4.1 25\n90 41! 25\n00 46 122'\n\u2022\u2014Cn Louis Street.\nAND NOTIOB IH HBRBBY OIVKN\nthut the report nl tho City Bnglneer\nmnl Assessor made In pursuance o\nIlu* Lor-i.l Improvement (lin.rnl By-\nLaw is open for Insre-tlon ut the olllce of the City Clerk at the City\nHall, Cri.uliroo', B. C, during oltlce\nhours, uud that It Is the Intention\nof the Council to mu.o auch usiasa-\nment upon said lund or real property immediately benefited for th.;\nworks or improvements as In the\nsnid report sot out and for the\namount set nut in auch report.\nAnd further ta tc notice that all persons concerned are hereby notl.lej thai.\nunless the majority of the owners ol\nthe land or real property to he aa-\nseescd or charged in respect of such\nwork representing nt loast one-hull\nIn value thereof, petition the Council\nagainst such asscssmtnt with llfteon\ndays after publication of tbls notlco,\nsuch worka shall be underta en and\nproceeded with hy the Council and\ntbe costs thereof nssossed against\nthe property nllectiid us provld d for\nby the by-law In thnt behalf i nl by\nthe snid report and resolution.\nDated tbls 16th dny nf May, 1913.\n. T. M, ROBERTS,\nao-at. City Clerk. T_li PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nf III 1111111III IUM II *Y* It l-l III III IIIII IH*t\nProfessional   Carbs\n anb\t\nCobge   Hotices\nEn,-\u201e*,*,*\u201eH,I llllll III11 M I ****** 11 IU nn mi..\nMcVITTIB  ft   PARKBR\nP.L.S.   ft, C.B.\nORANBROOK,    ...    B.O.\nW.   V.  OURD\nBarrister, Solicitor, etc.\nORANBROOK,    ...    B.O.\nHARVEY, McOARTBR, MACDONALD\nand NIBBHT\nBarrister!, Solicitor! and Notaries\nMoney to Loan\nImperial Bank Building\nCRANBROOK,    \u2022    Britiah Columbia\nJ.   T.   LAIDLAW,\nMining Engineer and B.O.\nLand Surveyor,\nP.O. Box 236 Phone 818\nORANBROOK,    ...    B.O.\nDrs.   KING   ft   ORBBN\nPhysicians and Surgeons\nOffice at Residence, Armatrong Av*.\nOffice Hours:\u2014\nForenoons - - 9.00 to 10.00\nAfternoons - - 8.00 to   4.00\nEvenings 7.30 to   8.80\nSundays 8.30 to   4.80\nCranbrook,    -    -    \u2022    \u2022    \u2022    B.O.\nF. Ai. MacPherson\nUNDBBTAKBB\nNorbury A.m.. Neat to Clly Hall\nOp.n Day and Nljht PhlnUI\nW. R.  BEATTY\nUndertaker,\nEmbaln.tr,\nFuneral Dlreotor,\nCRANBROOK. B.O.\nPHONE 348\nCranbrook\nCottage Hospital\nARMSTRONG AVE.\nMatron:    Mrs. A. Salmon\nTerms on Application\nPhone 2S9 P. O. Box 845\nFrank Dezall\nAgent for\nDeering & McCormick\nMowers & Rigs\nBicycles for Sale.\nAll Repairs Done at Reasonable Cost.\nWorks:     Opposite Depot\nTHE CRANBROOK POULTRY AND\nPBT STOCK ASSOCIATION\nPresident-O. R. Bheppard\nMeets regularly on the Flrat Friday\nevening of each month.\nInformation on Poultry mature\nsupplied.\nAddress the Secretary\u2014A. B. Smith\nP.O. Boi 8.12, Cranbrook, B.O.\nPHONE 340\nANOIBNT ORBBR OF FORESTERS\nCourt Cranbrook No. 8943,\nMeet ln Carmen's Hall, on   2nd and\n4th Thursday of each month.\nJ. McLAOHLUN,   CR.\nLouis Pearson, Bee, P.O. Box i\"18,\nVisiting Brothere Cordially Welcomed\nOVERSEAS    CLUB\n(Oranbrook Branch)\nMeets   ln   the   Carmen's  Hall 2nd\nand 4th Tuesdays ln every month, at\n8 p.m.   Membership open to British\nOitlMDI.\nB. Y. Brake, Pres.\nL. Pearron, Secretary\nBox 618\nVisiting members cordially welcome\nORANBROOK   LODOB   N\u00bb. 84\nA. F. ft A. M.\nRegular   meetings   on  the\nthird  Thursday   of   every\nmonth.\nVisiting brethren welcome.\n. B. Miles, Worshipful Master.\nJ. Lee Cranston, Acting Sec.\nROOKY MOUNTAIN CHAPTER\nNo. 128, R. A. M.\nRegular meetings:\u20142nd Tueeday In\neach montb at eight o'cloek.\nSojourning   Companions   are   cor\ndially invited.\nXx. Comp.\u2014A. C. Shankland, B.\nOranbrook, B.O.\nKNIOHTS    OF   PYTHIAS\nOranbrook, B.O.\nOrescent Lodge, No. 23\nHaiti every Tueeday at 8 p.m.\nat Fraternity Hall.\nA. Hurrle, O. C.\nF. M. Christian, K of R. ft S,\nBl. A. HIU, M. F.\nVisiting brethren cordially Invited\nto attend.\nI.O.O.F., KEY OITY LODOB\nUo. 48\nMeet* every Monday night\n\u25a0t Eew  Fraternity   Hall.\nSojourning Oddfellows cordially Invited.\n, B. Stephens W. M. Harris\nN. O. Sec'y\nPBIDB    OF    CRANBROOK\nCircle No.  188\nCompanions of the Foreet\nMeett in Carmen's Hall, Second and\nFourth Thuraday ol each Month at\n8:00 p.m., aharp.\nMra. L. Whlttaker, O. O.\nMrs. A. B. Shaw, Bee.\nVleltlng  Companions  cordially welcome. 86tf\nCranbrook      Lodge\nNo. 1049\nMeets every Wednesday at 8 p. m.,\nin Royal Black\nKnight's Hall on\nBaker Street\nF. W. Swain, Dictator\nR. S. Garrett, Sec'y\nINDEPENDENT ORDBR OF\nFORESTERS\nMeet! in Royal Black Knlghte Hall\nBaker Street\nMeets every 2nd and 4th Thursday\nol each month at \u00bb p.m. aharp.\nMra, L. Hayward, Ree. Sec.\nOeo. Ladils, chlel ranger\nVisiting brethren made welcome.\nP. O. BOX 904\nCranbrook\nPlumbing,   Tinsmithing\nand Heating Co.\nW. P. JOHNSON . PROPRIETOR\n25 Years Practical Experience\n5 Years -Inspector of Nuisances\nPlumbing and Sewerage Expert\nfor Swinton, 30,000 Population\nREPAIRS   A  SPECIALTY\nEverything- in Tin and Iron Made-to Order\nBlower Systems, Mines, Ventilation Experts\nHOT AIR FURNACE, HOT WATER\nAND VACUUM STEAM HEATING\nESTIMATES   CIVBN\nWorks: Edward Street.,       \u2022       Cranbrook\nDon't Pay to Borrow\nThey used to say \"Nobody loves a\nfat man.\" Gee whiz\u2014a fat man, be\nhe egostlcal, bombastic or stubborn\nis a physical paradise compared to a\nman who is too stingy to buy his\nhome town paper, says the Philadelphia Press. Just read this story\nfrom the Mahahoy City Daily Record, and Bee what happens to\nstingy man:\nA man who was too economical to\ntake thiB paper sent his little boy to\nborrow the copy taken hy hia neigh-\nbor. In his haste the boy ran over\na $4 stand of bees, and in 10 minutes looked like a warty summer\nsquash. His cries reached his father, wbo ran to his assistance, and\nfailing to notice \u00ab barbed wire fence\nran into that, breaking it down, cutting a handful of flesh trom his anatomy and ruining n 84 pair of pants.\nThe old cow took advantage of the\ngap in the fence and got into the\ncornfield and killed herself eating\ngreen corn. Hearing the racket, the\nwife ran out, upset . a four-gallon\nchurn full of rich cream into a bask-\net of kittens, drowning the whole\nflock. In tbe hurry she dropped a 87\nset of false teeth. The baby, left\nalone, crawled through the spilled\ncream and into the parlor, ruining a\nbrand-new J20 carpet. During the\nexcitement the oldest daughter ran\naway with the hired man, the dog\nbroke up 11 Betting hens, and the\ncalves got out and ate the tails off\nfour fine shirts.\nDISTRICT OF BAST KOOTENAY,\nFERNIE  DISTRIOT\nNOTICE is hereby given that slit\n(60) days from date I intend to l,p-\nply to the Minister of Lands for &\nlicence to prospect for Coal and Petroleum over the lollowlng described\nlands situate in Lot 459*1 Southeast\nKootenay, British Columbia'.\nCommencing at a post planted nl\nabout 20 chains East of ithe Nortli\nwest corner of Lot 11140 anil on*,\nmile North oi the International\nBoundary thence South 80 chains,\nWest 80 chains, North 80 chains and\nKast 80 chains to point of commencement,\nLocnteil this 241 b day .if March,\n1913.\nKiehard Helm,' Locator.\nJames Fisher. Ageut.\n20-9t.\nDISTRICT OF BAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE  DISTRIOT.\nNOTICE is hereby Riven that si* y\n(CO) days from date I intend to np\nply to the Minister of Lands lor a\nlicence to prospect for Coal and Petroleum over the following described\nlands situate In Lot 4C.93 Southeast\nKootenny, British Columhla.\nCommencing at a post planted nt\nabout HO chains East ol the Northwest corner of Lot 11140 and olio\nmile North ol th. International Boundary, thence North 80 chains, West\n30 chains, South 30 chains and East\n80 chains to point of Commencement.\nLocated this 24th day of Msrrh.\n1913.\nEdward E. Md'lintock, Locator\n.lames Fisher, Agent.\n20-9t. \t\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE  DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby Riven th it -in\n(60) days from dute I intend to apply to the Minister of Lands for a\nlicence to proB.icet for Coal nnd Petroleum over thi following desert<ed\n'ands situate in Lot 4698 Southeast\nKcotenay, British Oolumbla,\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Southeast corner of Lot 7401,\nii*nee North 40 chains, East about\n0 chains. South 40 eh tins and West\nabout 70 chains, to point of com-\n'iicncement.\nLocated this 24th dny of March,\n1913.\nT. O. Procter, Locator.\nJnmes Fisher,  Agent,\n20-9t.\nuaaauusasiiussusue.\n\u2022 A. WALLER\nXA80N-T\nSteam Boiler,  Furnace,\nand Septic Tank work\n\u2022 ipecialtj*\nCoat and itook estimates\nfurniihed un application.\nI    A-Mrau 1 P. O. lei IM, C-aabi...\nOnly 3 Ring Circus Coming\nTHE ORIGINAL  organized team\u201473rp annual TOUR\u2014wow *.t.\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby given that six'y\n(60) days from date I intend to apply to the Minister ot Lands for a\nlicence to prospect for Coal and Petroleum over tha following described\nanils situate in Lot 4593 Southeast\ncCcotcmvy, British Coliniaia.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Southeast corner of Lot 7401,\nhence about 70 chains South, East\nabout 70 era ns, North about 70\n\u2022halna and West about 60 chains to\n,ioint of commencement*.\nLocated this 24th 'lay ol March,\n1913.\nT. Q. Procter, Locator.\nJames Fisher Agent.\n30-9t.\nDISTUICT OF EAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE  DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty\n(60) days from date I intend to apply to the MinlBter of Lands for a\nlicence to prospect for Coal and Petroleum over the following described\nlands situate In Lot 4593 Southeast\nlacotenny, British Columbia.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Southeast corner of Lot 7337,\nthence South 80 chains, East about\n10 chains, North about 20 chains,\nEast about 50 chains, North about\n50 chains, and West about 50 chains\n:o noint of commencement.\nLocated this 24th day of March,\n1913.\nT. G. Procter, Locator.\nJameB Fisher, Agent.\n20-9t.\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty\n(60) days from date I intend to i p-\nply to the Minister of Lands for a\nlicence to prospect for Coal and Petroleum over the following described\nlands situate in Lot 4593 Southeast\nKootenay, British Columbia.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Southwest corner of Lot 7286\nthence 120 chains North, 400 feet\nWest, 120 chains South and 400 feet\nBast, claiming all ground lying between lots 7286, 7285, 7137 and 7136.\nLocated this 22nd day of March,\n1913.\n.lamps Fisher, Locator.\n20-9t.\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY.\nFERNIE DISTRICT.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that sixty\n(60) days from date I Intend to apply to the Minister of Lands for a\nlicence to prospect for ('oul and Petroleum over the following descri .ed\nlands situnte In Lot 4593 Southeast\nKrotcnay, British Columbia.\nCoiniiieiicinR at a post planted at\nthe Southeast corner of Lot 7397,\nthenco North 80 chains, Kast 80\nchalns, South about 20 chains, West\nabout 10 chuins, South at-out 40\nchains. West nbout 20 chuins, South\nabout 20 chains and West about 50\nchains to point of commencement.\nLocated this 24th day ol March,\n1913.\nT. O. Procter, locator.\nJames Fisher, Agent.\n20-9L\nOFFICIAL ADMINISTRATORS\nACT\nNotice is hereby given that on th*\n2nd. dav of Mav,   1913.\nIT   WAS ORDERED BY Hla Honor\nOeorge H. Thompson, En-., Judge ot\nthe County Court of Bast Kootenay,\nYOU PAY WHEN CURED\nDrs. K. & K. TAKE ALL RI8K8\ntr   NO NAM\u2014 OR PHOTOS USED WITHOUT WUTTBI CONSENT    \u2014.:,\nNERVOUS DEBILITY\nThAuruta of young and mldillMgfld mm wo annually swept to a pwmMui. ttrat*\n\"   '   lailMfttiMM. EictMM and DUo. DUt-M*.   U you hft\u00bb any \u2022>( the M*\n nynipf-iiiii cmmuU iu Srfof- It la !\u2022\u00bb lata.   Art you Mr-rout Mil weak, df-ipon\ndoiitauilKl'rtiii.y, KiMwki Mora Mm eyea, with dnrk circlet under thom, weak buck*\nEniURb\nwir\nkidney* Irritable, palpitation of tht heart, baaliful, dreamt aad Iowa, pediment In urine.\nplinpleiion Iha faue. uvea minln-ii, hollow cImtUn. careworn eipreaalon, pour memory,\nllfclfM, dUiruitful, lack eaerny ami itrcni;tb, li.-.-d mornlnRH, rmtlent tit;*MH, (.-ha.iKe.ibla\nmood* weak manhood, preuiuLura decay, bouo palua, balr looae, tort throat, etc\nYOU WILL BE A WRKCK\nOm New Methed Treatment cnn cure you ami make a mnn of you.  t|nder Ita Influ\nence the brain iwcuiiieiactive, the blood purified, no tbnt all plmphu, btot-'hr-aau-l ul.erg\ndliappeor, tiie ntM-ft* become atrong oa kUh-I, k<> that imrvoiiituwu, Ijaahfulneai and dee*\nKnuWy vanlah, the eye lx>i>omi>sbrlffht, thu face full and clear, energy r-'iiirim lo tbe\nilV nml llm moral, pliyitlcnl and aeiunl nyntoiiii are invigorated; oil drain*, oi-iue-no\nBions vlinl wnate from llm iyituu. Jion'tletqiuwka ami fakir* rob you of your bard\neeruud ilu.ta.-i.   We will ture you er ne pay.\nEVERYTHING PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL\nREADER*  Vo matter who Ima treatoi) you, write foraubom-stoplnlou Free el Ckarge.\n-ookaFra*   \"The Caldan Monitor\"  (Illimimted) \u2022\u00bb Sacret EHmmm ef Mea.\nQUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT SENT ON REQUEST\nDrsKENNEDY&KENNEDY\nCor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich.\nAll letters (rom Canada must lie uddreaied\nto our Canadian Correspondence Depart-\ninriit In Windsor, Ont. II you desire to\nsee us personally call at our Medical Institute iu Detroit aa rvc set* and lrr.it\nM palMata in our Windsor oflices which arc for Correspondence und\nLaboratory lor Canadian Inn-Incus only.   Address all letters ss follows:\nDRS. KENNEDY * KENNEDY, Winds-*. Oat\nWrite for e_g___Mjegj.\n-NOTICE\nENORMOUS\nTHREE RING CIRCUS\nUNITED WITH\nWILD WEST\nAND CONGRESS OF\nROUGH RIDERS\nEXHIBITON UNDER IHE LARGEST\nCANVAS EVER CONSTRUCTED  -*-\u2022*\u2022*'\n3 Rings.   * Elevated Stages.\nIOOO People.\n8 Trains, ol Cars,\na Herds Elephants.\nOl.000.000 Invested.\nS4.700 Daily Expenses.\n300 Circus Artists.\nS Parades on Show Day.\nCapt. Hu.k's Sea Lions.\n10- Kuyal r.kiii J.purw Treepe.\nGreatest I'iding Sh.m entaru..\nTexas mil's Co.. buys.\nSioux Indians.   Cowgirls.\nMexicans.   SJn-Eulees.\nIS _liowg> I-'or One Price.\nKONGO.\"   LARGEST   ELEPHANT   ON   -ARTH-UR6EI. THAN   JUMBO.\nROSS MSHCRUFfS HIQH-SCHOOL  HORSES |  OREOTEST HilllM;   SHOW EVER ORCHNIXEU\n&*__&&Btm*$_iii\n_>*r <r^*-.-_?r! '\u25a0:\nTEXAS BILL'S WILD WEST\nAND   ROUGH   RIDERS\nEXCURSIONS\nOn all Railroads\nTo thu Double Show\nBUCKING HORSE TOURNAMENT.\nALBERT DAVEWrOjT, WORLD C11AM.-I0\\ RIDER.\nCotoaaat Collection of Wild animal*.\nOLDEST CIRCUS ON EARTH TO-DAY\nFINEST HORSES EVER EXHIBITED.\nBlack Diamond. The Ball-Room Horse\nROYAL TOKIO JAPS-Thrilliiin Acrobat\nTHE   PARADE   TELLS  THE   STORY.\nTHRU Ulatlnct SHOWS   unit pniCf.\n\"KOIN-.GO\"\nLARGEST ELEPHANT PN EARTH\nlarger than Jumho.\n_ WO MILES OF parade: daily], PMitlvely ivlth Ynnkcf Rnblnron\ny .\u2022.\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022:\nWILL.   POSITIVE*!\n4\nCranbrook, Mon. June 9th\nLARGEST CIRCUS TO EVER VISIT B. C.\nthat James A.Arnolil.Ofllcial Admlnls\ntrator lor tlmt portion of the County\not Kootenny inclmleil in ths Elec*\ntoral Dlstr ct ol Oranbroolt he Administrator of nil nnd singular the\nestate of rliiuli's Wiitson, ileceiiKril\nIntestate. ____\nBvery person Indebted tn the sniil\ndeceased is required to make payment forthwith to the undersigned.\nEvery person having in possession\nelects belonging to tbe deceased Is\nrequired forthwith to notily the\nundersigned.\nEvery creditor or other person\nhaving any claim upon nr interest\nin the distribution ol the estate ot\ntbe said deceased is required to send\nbefore the 13th day of Jun;, 191:\nneit, by registered mail addressed\nto the undersigned, his name and\naddress and thc full particulars ol\nhis claim or interest, nnd a statement of his account nnd the nature\nof the security (If nny) held by him.\nAfter the aald last mentioned date\nthe Administrator will proceed witb\ntbe distribution of tbe estate having\nregard to those claims only ol whlcb\nhe shall have had notice.\nDated at Cranhrook tbls 2nd day ol\nMay,   1913.\nJ. A. ARNOLD,\n2<Mit Olllclal Administrator.\nLIQUOR LICENCE ACT.\n(Section 48).\nNOTICB IS HEREBY OIVBN thnt\non the 20th dny of Mny next, application will he made tn the Siiperln\ntendent ol Provincial Police lor thc\ntransfer ol tbe licence for thc sule ol\n'lquor by retnil In and upon the pre\nmises known as the \"Wardnor Ho\ntel,\" situate at Wardner, llrltlsh Columbia, from Robert 11. Ilohart. to\nFrank Carlson, nl Crnnbrook, llrlliali\nColumbln.\nDated this 18tb day ol April, 11113\n(Signed) R. H. HOHAI'T.\nHolder ol Licence.\n(Signed) FRANK 0ARL8ON,\nAppliennt for transfer\nin-fit\nby subsection (1) of section 7(1 of the\n\"Water Acf as nmonded have been\nfiled with the Comptroller ol Water\nRights at. Victoria mil with tho Wn\ntrr llnrorilei- nt Oranbrook, D.O,\nObjections to the application mny\nhe filed with the Comptroller of Water Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoria.\nDated at Fernie this lf.th day ol\nApril,   1913.\nW. T. HAYNES,\nIB-It Agent, ol tlm Applicant\nWATER ACT.\nNotice of Application for the APhrov\nnl ol Works\nTAKE NOTICE that. Aleinnder Mc\nDougall will apply to tho Com|itrol\nler of Water Rights for the approval\nof the plans of tho works to he con*\natructeil for the iitlllzntlon of thr\nwater from Fairy Creek, which the\napplicant is, by Water Licence No\n1626, authorised to tnke, store, and\nuse for Pluming Saw Logs, etc.\nTbe plans and particulars required\nSYNOPSIS   OF   COAI,   MINING\nREGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nIn Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the North\nwest Territories and in a portion of\nthe Province ol British Columbia,\nmay be leased for a term of twenty-\none years at an annual rental of fl\nan acre. Not more than 2,560 acres\nwill be leased to one applicant\nApplication for a leaBe must ti.\nmade hy the applicant in person to,\nthe Agent or Sub-Agent of the ills-\ntrict In which the rights applied for;\nnre situated.\nIn surveyed territory tlic land must\nbe described by sections, ur legal subdivisions of sections, and In iinstii'-\nveyed territory the tract applied for\nshall be staked out by the applicant\nhimself.\nEach npplicntlon must lie accompanied hy a tee. ut $6 which wlll be\nrefunded' If the rlghtB applied for are\nnot available, hut not. otherwise, A\nroyalty shall lie paid on the mer\nchantahle output of the mine ut tbe\nrate nf five cents per tun.\nThe person operating the mine ahnll\nlurnlsh the Agent with iworu leturiw\naccounting for tho full quantity ol\nmerchantable conl mined and pay th.\nroyalty thereon. If the coal mining\nrights are not holng operated, such\nreturns ahould tie furnished at least\nonce a yenr.\nThe lease will Include the coal mining rights only, hut. Hie leasee may\nhe permitted to purchnse whatever\navailable surface rights may he con-\nsldnred neccHsiiry for the working ol\nthe mln.. at. the rate ol flu ml an acre\nKor  full   information   application\nshould be made to the Secretary nl\nthe Department of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any Agent, or Sllb-Agonl of\nDominion Lnnds.\nW.    W.   CORY,\nDeputy Minister ..f the Interior\nN.ll.\u2014Unauthorized   publication   of\nthis advertisement will  not he paid\nfar. Jan. Itb-tt\nTIMBER  SALE  X34.\nSEALED TENDERS will he received hy the Minister ol Lands not later\nthan-fioon on the 13th day of May,\n1913, for the purchase of Licence N'o.\nX34 to cut 7,198,217 leet ol timber\n180,897 railway-ties, 4'8,291 mine-\nprops, SBC cedar poles, and 2,721\nposts on lands within Lot 4591,\nOroup 1, Kootonny, near Moyie Lake.\nThree years will ho allowed for the\nremoval of this timber. Particulars\nof Chief Forester,  Victoria,  B.C.\n12-9t\nTIMBER SALE X38.\nSEALED TENDERS will be receiv-\ned by the Minister of Lands not later\nthan noon on the 1.1th day of May,\n1913, for the purclinso of tbe timber\nin a flume 9,i;4.> feet in length, situate on lnnds within Lot'4591, Group\n1, Kootenay, near Moyie Lake, Three\nyenrs wilt ho allowed lor removing\nthis timber. Particulars ol Chief Forester, Victoria, H. C. 12-9t\nORANBROOK   LAND   DISTRICT\nDistrict ol South-ait Kootenay.\nTAKE NOTICK that I, Tbomaa\nChriBttan, contractor, intend, tnlrty\ndays after date to apply to tbe Minister of Lands for permission to purchase the following descrlhed land:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted on\nlhe East, hank ol the Moyie river,\nnear the southeast corner of lot\n10106, thence east 20 limine; tbence\nsoutb 411 chains; thence west 20\nchains; thence north 41) chains to\npoint of commencement.\nTHos. CHRISTIAN, Locator,\nA.  B    (lll.M'E,  Witness.\nDated. March 29. 1913. 14-'Jt\nORANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT.\nDistrict  of  South-East Kootenay\nTAKK NOTICE thnt John Hoary\nLisiner of Crnnhrook, B.C., occupation laborer, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the lollowlng described  lands:\u2014\nCommencing at a posl planted at\nthe South-west corner of Lot 9687,\nOroup I, Kootenay District, thence\nwest 20 chains, thonce north 40\nchains, thence east 20 chains, thence\nsmith 40 chains to the point of\ncommencement and containing 80\nacres more or loss.\nJOHN   HENRY  LISMER.\nDated Marcb 28th, IMI. M-.t THE PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK. 1$. C.\nIn the Treatment\nCOLDS\nCOUGHS\nSORE THROAT\nBRONCHITIS\nTONS][LITIS\nLARYNGITIS\nScott's Emulsion is\nnature'*' nourishing,\nrative-food; prompt,\nsure and permanent.\nRely on SCOTT'S and\ninsist on SCOTT'S.\nTHE WIFE'S CflCDIT\nA Lawyer's Views cn a Woman.\nRight to \"Dush\" Her Husband\nIf there is oue tiling more Limn another which giveB Eotno austona moments to 'the young married mun, il\nla that nf the wife's right to pledge\nhis credit, and tti-n limit of such right, i\nEverybody knows cases which have\ncome under their persoual notice\nwhere the husband is a steady, hardworking fellow, and tho wife Is a\nthoughtless, extravagant person,\ntho inevitable consequence beiug\nthat the man is ruined,\nTho way to avoid thin is well worth\nknowing, and i-j in addition very interesting and instinctive. First of\nall, it is a mistake to suppose that a\nhusband is ..sponsible for his wife's\ndobts. He is not, unless he has In\nsomo way allowed Iter to pledge his\ncredit. This he may do In several\nways. For Instance ho may tell ills\nwife straight out to buy things on his\ncredit, and in that event ho i| Ihi bio\nfor all she does buy.\nAgain, If ho pays to? tilings she has\npurchased on credit, it is regarded by\nthe courts an equivalent to a promise\nto \u2022the tradesmen to pay future hills\nas well. Therefore, If a hu--.ba.id\npays ono bill which has been run up\nwithout his knowledge or permission,\nhe should, without fall, forbid tiis wife\nto do It again, and tell tho tradesmen\nDot to glvo her credit for the future\nMOTHERS NEED\nCONSTANTtfRENGTH\nTo Care for the  Growing Family\nand Her Household Caret\nWhen thero is a growing family to\ncare for and lho mother falls ill, It\nis a serious matter. Many mothers\nwho nro on tho go from morning to\nniiilit whose work apparently, ia uever\ndone, heroically try lo disguise tliolr\nsufferings, and keep an appeaVauco of\ncheerfulness before their family. Only\nthemselves know how they aro dls-\ntrossed by headaches and backaches.\ndragging down pains and nervous\nweakness; h iw their nights aro often\njrioapisu, anilI ihey arise to  n  nawl ie'-faliy'resp'orBrbtefoT'tho'proPerraSi\n.'.\"?*\u2022    sh \"0,\"iers b!\"\"\"   \"\",'     anything of in**, subjoot.    The latter\nWHEN JACK PALL* IU\nThe sad Sid* ef \u2022 Lift on tht Oetan\nVVavt\nlit loue-L ftverlshly In Ui dutow\nbunk ln CTt dlui-lit, cvll-smtlllng\nfo'o'e-Ie. Above and below ana\nnround lilm art similar bunk*. Some\naro occupied. Of others, the owneri\nare sprawling on tht floor, gossiping\nand swearing In foreign tongnti ot\nplaying cards.\n'l'lili la how the sailor on board an\nocean-going cargo steamer finds himself situated when he falls sick ot any-\nllilng but an Infectious disease the\nsymptoms ot which nro easily recognised by a liuman, for a cargo steamer\nls not compelled to carry a doctor.\nAs a result tlio only person to tleclilo\nwhether a snllor is malingering or\nreally IU is llie captain, who, thou\ntbat ibeso sufferings aro usually duo\nto a lack of good nourishing blood.\nThey should know that the tiling\nabovo all others  tliey need to give\nis generally the ease.\nAs a rule, u mtilor ultl delay reporting sick until ilie liiBt moment. On*\nreason Is tlint bis males are Inclined\nthem new health and -Hreuglh Is rich,! t0 believe that lis tl anxious to shirk\nred blood, ami that among all_ inedl-! llU \u201e.orlt| \u201e\u201e,, ,. \u25a0\u201e\u00a3.. *.,,\u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e .\u201e ,,.\ndone by ihem.     The oilier reason Is\nlliat most BGa ,-apin!nn luiio one stock\nclues there is none can eoual Ur. i\nWilliams' Pluk fills for their blood-\nmaking, health restoring qualities.\nKvery suffering woman, every woman\nwith a home und family lo earn for\nslic nlil giro these pills a lair I rial, for\nthey wlll keep ber In health and\nstrength, and make lier work easy.\nremedy -a powerful dose of salts \u25a0\nwhloh quite possibly nuiy mnko Ilia\nuomplalnt considerably worse instead\nof better, '   And you have not to take\n  ihose abominable salts, whothor you\naV*aln,\u201eamandesM\u201e_iwite^\nleaves her without   mouey   or   food,Lj0 wn^ j, qjtjnied. for them      Mis  '    \" **\u25a0'\u2022\u2022'\u25a0 \"ot 1'\u00b0 forgotten that lho\nclothing and lodgings for her-cilland ,,,,,\u201e.,, ->\u2022.-__, .\u201e ca-:i,   Oni .   Bays*   \"\"\"\"'\"''' '\"\"\u25a0\"\nthe children, then she   inuy   obtain  \u25a0\u2022,Viiei. in. second child was bom  I\nthings on credit, mid her husband wlll   lvn,  .\u201e -,.,\u201e>,  \u201e\u201e\u2022  \u00bb\u201e\u201e  l](,,ul .,,.,.  ,\nhave to pay; at least, he Is liable for | ,.\u201euM ._,.0a|y \u00ab,\u00bb\u2022\u2022, \u201e,..-., .*,, lwm\u201e\nQuaint Old Wedding Id...\nthe amount.     Tbls particular law ls\nJust the same lu Scotland as ln Kug-\naptaln's position is very ditllcult, lf\nbe ls nice and sympathetic, and ever\ni.ady to grant absence from work, ho\nwlll havo ball the i reW laid up with\nIndefinable maladies.\nAnd. on the olher lund, If lie fulls\nto recognise that a man Is really bad,\nand death or a serious Illness reauliB\nMy baby wa* small und wink also\naud cried aud worried night uud day\nuntil I discovered thai the child was\nstaniug. us my nurse had turned a\nmosi\n\" SU.lVegaViVkinV;''iheni.'''nVliiai'l\"\"l,J''<'' I\" \u00bb'hloh he bus recolved uo\neffects were noticed In lhat  instruction \t\n  began to thrive, ai mj muse      \u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022)  \"alter ol experience will toll\nbans on his first appearance on tne coniracieu ey my wire, conn*. **._\u2022 uegau to Improve, and baby slept bet- '\"\" fmu\" of sickness at sea that\n\u25a0\u2022redding morning. This was eup-i Knowablt.\" ter and naturally, it was not long would oomlderably etartlo the average\nBOied to secure hie love and loyalty, l Notices of '_\u00bb kind are really until I began to feel the improvement landiman. There was the case of\nand to make her happv for ever. ! nothing at all, They do no good myself, aud ! dally gained new an Irishman, who, In the oourae of a\nIn Vorliahlrs tho old eupentltloni whatever, and ltga',> (hey do not itrength, and baby waa growing very voyage from San Frabolico to Liver-\n * \u25a0\u2022- ! alter the position one iota.     Often| roiy and fat.     I continued using the| Wed asked tor exemption from duty\nSuperstition never clustered round\\ land.\nany episode ot lite more than that of;    One often sees in the columns of  (Uu-vlng, as my nurse Had turnee. at-i  - ,        -,~ \u25a0;-\t\nth* wedding-day, especially In olden ; newspapers  the  bold  advertisemen:   mos* to water      My husband gol mo *** *\u25a0\"\u2022\u00ab happens, he can baldly be\ntimes. ' ! -*1*-- runs something like   this:    \"I,  a supply of Dr   Wiilianis' Pink Pills   \"\"nied tor Ignorauce   of   a   diilleult\nThen It waa customary tor the bride John Knowabtt, ot 20, Wisdom Street and I l>ei '  \"\"'\"'\"'  \u25a0\u25a0'\"'* **- ' \u00bb\"-i.\u2014i ....\nto present her future husband with a Such-a-town, hereby give notice that! beneficial\nbunch ot rosemary, tied up wllh lib- I will not be responsible for any debts j rav cblj<l\nhone  on his first'aopearance on the   contracted by  my wi.e, Selina Also  begau to\nThe Bull Moos* Parly believes in U 'oman's Suffrage and vlhtr appeals to women.\nNo   lianl work\nabout \"Black\nKnlgUt\", A few\n^^^^^^^ rubs bring  the\nlOc-STOVE POLISH-lOc.\nNot a powder or\na li,it'll cake. -\nbut a soft paste,\nready to use.\n-arty neneves in 11 Oman's .iu\/jrage ana oi\/ur\nBlack Knight\nshine.\nStill abounds that nothing more un-1 liter tho position one lota. Utteniroiy and fat. 1 continued using uie ; j\u2122*\" \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb=>\nItlokv could happen than for a newly* j tbey are pnt In to score off U e \u00ab te ''.::\u2022 while I was nurilng him and because h\nmsd'e bride to leave the church by a What Is tire bee*, thing for a hue* found myself with all the vigor nt, >''\u00ab\"\u25a0 H>\n\u2022\"liferent door from that by which she, band to do, (hen? good health, and able lo easily do my   'ng, compi\nftfferent door from tha*.\nentered.\nAuother quaint custom, for\n!    \u2014 _       ourse is to niaks the wife I housework, which had beeu so great\na regular weekly allowance tor house-J a drag on me before.      1   am   uow\nthertTls no known origin, Is that prac-< keeping and clothing, and ask ier not uever without Pr. Williams' Pink Pills\nHied la some of   the   Midland   aud   to buy anything whatever on credi' \u2022 :e house, nnd take au occasional\nXortliem counties. TIilB ls to ring If ihe husband does this, and the wife ' dose wben I feel tired. 1 can strong-\nB merry pea! of the church bells at lire ' should run up a debt or two on credit' ly recommend these Pills to all nnrs-\nfirst reading of the banns of an Intend-; then the tradesman wiii :un a risk [ng women, especially lt weak or run\nlog matilmonlal couple.     It is called   of losing his money, because the bus- down.\"\ntho spur peal, which In old Anglo-; band will net be liable for one penny*: Sold by all medicine dealers or by\nBason means simply \"ask.\" piece of these debts. f mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes\nOf course, it Is well known tbat It;    The writer has known eases of the  for '-.50 from Tho   Dr.    Williams'\nIs the height of luck for a bride-to-be   kind Just mentioned, but the husband   Medicine Co., Brockville, 0:.:,\nto dream of fairies the night before   lias spoilt himself by a slight lack ofl \t\nliio actual ceremony.     So much was   caution.     When the bill came lu to Quite Satisfied\n'his idea believe ln, that many girls him, he lias treated lt with contempt.: , .minlne ,t0i*v of Iwrninr inumi\nwould peruee fairy tales before going and pitched it Into the warper [ ukyn0\u201e'^^.J\u2122f*R puP 1 u fep vh g\n*\u00bb \"eel-. , basket  unopened  and  uncared-for     | ,\u201e',\u201e, ques*'tJott. \u201e- VJ <v.lmJln. &\n_ |    lhls is a inisttibie.     It ougut to bc! ^.j\nThe llev. It. r. Tyson, known as! answered ut. once, and the example1    And \u201et_ded   the   class   for\n. .-    -.  followed ot an Irishman-needless to   _,_\u00ab_,,\u201e.,,  ,.\u201e,d  t,\u201e., \u201ea!kli:  n.\nsay\u2014who received a strong letter de- am[\u201eer\nFREE OF LUMBAGO\nB_\u00ab-u\u00bb He Took GI N PILLS\nMr. II. A, Jukes ot Winnipeg writes:\n'*! li\u00bbveheru\u00bb sufferer from *Hiubai[0\nfor aotun years past, I met your Mr.\nKilt and Ue adviser! me lo take GIN\nril.T.H. I have been taking them at\nintervals during the early part of the\npresent winter, and up-to-date have bad\nno return of my old tro^lfl--in fact X\nfeel I ft ter than I have for yeara, and\nthink that my old enemy has vautshed\nfor good and all.\"\n, 50c. a brjr, 6 for fa.jo. Sample free if\nyou write National Drug and Chemical\nCo. of Canada, I.iuiltfil, Toroutu,    1 -30\nIt. r. Tyson, knowp\ntha carpeftiter-paraon, ia superintending tlio erection of the now Taylor ., \t\nMemorial M-etbodlflt Church at New manning payment of Buph a debt. Ho\nVork, ami will do much of the car- replied *\"!_, ol    .8:,    Slr\u00ab\u2014J   r\"Lurn\npenterlng work UlmaeU.     lie waa a fTLfcuIrtIoif! \"!    'l'P \"no-ien,:'1 and\nbuilder be!oro ha becamo a minister. ! T deslre t0 a,lfl lbat l trcat !t wltb -\u2022\nhad B^veVe point* ln hia'\nwas accused of malinger-\nipelled lu continue bis dutloa\nmul when his less litei'ally gavo way\nunder him, ho was left unuoticed for\nsome hours.\nOn being carried to Uie hospital at\nport, ll^o doctor found that iio wus suf-\nfering from gangrene arising from neglected frostbite, and both his logs\nhad to be amputated. Tbls would\nhave bepu avoided if he bad received\nproper treatment when tho pain flrat\nstarted.\nThe worst part is that, oven If ihe\ncaptain do\u00a93 realise that tho man is j Clever Business Men\nreally ill, ihe most lie can do is to j The ability to seize an opportunity\ngrant exemptlou from duty. lt Is wlien tit presents Itself Is a useful bus-\nImpossible for him to glvo tiie invalid' ines-j asset.\nanything like proper and efficient Tlio following Ib an instance of how\nmedical attention. disaster was turned to good account\nTlio groat majority of cargo steam-  by a French cloth manufacturing con-\nWANTED\nLadles to do plain and llRht sewing at homo, whole or sparo time,\ngood pay; work gent any distance.\ncharges prepaid, send stump for full\nparticulars. National Manufacturing\nCompany, .Montreal.\nMlnard's  Liniment  Cures   Diphtheria\nVe.*..\nHow many sides has a circle?\nTwo, said tho student,\nWhat aro they?\nWhat n laugh ln the class tbe si ti\ners are undermanned. When one\nman falls Bid. his loss is immediately\nfelt, and if two more were taken from\nduly to look after him, the ship might\nwell become unuavlgable.\nHandkerchief Esperanto\nIt may not he generally known that\nlout contempt.\"     Although eharact-\n_,M^^yrC,\".l|',i,'9!,|t'l1'.'!;^-,.t.nI*'' r1*'* a_*ver\"prod.,c-.d whan be said\nBollier aUoT*An ln-H!o and nn outside:\nIt. sounds strange to talk of marry*\nii::!:;l Ki;:Mrewv!._\u2122\u2122hatn w.;i|n* ^to ^smde,u: -^ ^0^10\u2122. m**\n>ramon pra( ut e j cars ago. _ it uas, attended lhQ luoral phUoa0phy C]a8B( r    Sh(mM a n,..n m. damsel ])resB thfl\nfalso? added, -Wol!, you would hear | handkerchief against tbo lips, lt slgnl-\ncern. Tbls concern actually doubled Its profits through a balloon disaster near Rouen. In this disaster the\ncar of the balloon had broken away.\nThe aeronaut and his elder son were\nthrown downwards; but tho son had\nNo Use\nIn the telephone office there was one\ngirl wljo was always late in the morning.\nTime and timo again lhe local manager requcatod her to be more punctual; but ber tardiness still continued\nuntil lie waj moved to use desperate\nmethods.\nNow, Miss -, said he, as he eame\nto her exchange board ono morning\ncarrying a packago In his hands, I\nhave a little scheme that I hope will\nInduce you to arrive at tho olllce In\ntime, I havo bought this line alarm\nclock for you. Please promise me\nthat you will mako proper use of it.\nThe young woman promised, and\ntho first night sot the alarm at the\nrequired hour for rising tbe ne.xt\nmorning,\n.\\t the indicated hour the clock set\nup a tremendous Whirring, loud\nenough to awaken tho whole house\nHut tiie sleepy Httle lassie turned over\nIn bed, and said in hcr sweetest tone:\nLine's engaged; please call f.galn.\nAn Enormous Appetite\nAn amusing story cornea to us from\nthe capital of ono of the amall l\u00bb M-man\nprincipalities. Tho Orand Duke\ngavo a big masked ball, at which\neverybody had to appear In fancy\ndress or in a long domino cloa'c.\nIn one of the rooms of the palace a\nwell-stocked buffet had beeu arranged,\nand tlio waiters soon began to comment upon tlio unusually hearty ap-\npetlto of ono guest, duly mas ted and\ncloaked, who consumed largo quantl-\nbeen caught by a hook that pierced I ties of food nrd wine.     It was ob*\nhis coat.                                                served that alter several minutes of\nHe was carried in this way for some' eating and drinking he would leave tlic\n       the\nLittle Willie's grandmother had\nbeen telling him Bible Btorios, his\nfavorite being that of Daniel in the\nlion's den.     At the ago of four bo1 before the Married Women's Property I\"!\nwas taken to a circua   for   a   timo I \\ct of 188\u00b0 '  - _______\nWhon lhe Jiuii-tamer pul lii** head In-   ' Tn con torn elation of law tliehusband   k'('lmvH there on   varIous   subjects   iie?, that they wish to become acquaint\n\u25a0    -- :.\".,    __._.__ I Did you ever hear one on cause and  ed with one another.     To let it. fall\none. and the husband\nThen,   If   the   bride\n, he gleefully screamed: j owed nny debts before marriage, ihey      \u201e\"!,  \u201e,.  .-\nmat knock, spots   off | dovolved on the  newly-married   bus* caiJ8e7\nto the lloa'e mouth llttlo Willie's o..-ian(] Wifi\nqjtement knew no bounds.   .lumping [ KaJi n,.,; (,)u.\nup and down\nUii. my!        ^^^^^^^^^^\nDan I el I j iinnd, and he liad to pay Lho piper\n'  ' I Tilts led in somo extraordinary fanes\nA    Thorough    PHI.\u2014To clear lho  being enacted.\nStoma oh nud bowels of Impurity and:     Women wbo were overloaded with\nIrritants la neoesBary when tholr aot-| debts actually got rid of them by mar\nu\u201e- no. u-.a. \u201eAii !-.->   \u201e\u201e\u201e  \u25a0_.-. witi. I \" ha?ak*rcuIe' language <*Y.*i6 V,     ' mi!eB aild at lHRt cam<- safely to the   buffet  and    disappear    among\nv-    '     * lii      t P ^SKI\u2122 Tfi\u00bb   ta e\u00abtr\u00abmoly \u25a0IpPte. \u00bb\u00bb w\u00ab?l \"-V0111* around.     His coat was re-purchaeed danceri, only to return again ln a\nwhat followed.      rhe examiner hav-| th0 mnguage of exceeding excellence | by the nmk(,r3 aIld lumg in [ho ghow., slim<t Umej hu appotlto apparently as\nwindows with a full description of how; strong us ever,\nit saved the wearer's llfo. |    Aftor i-,0 jiad pa|d a number of via*\nA Welsh miller bad lost- a sovereign! it8 t0 the buffet the head waiter bo\npiece in a bin of flour, and nfter spend- j came uneaav, and called the attentio\noffocl'.'\n\"CORED   BY  A   BULL\"\nMany a farmer has boon\nseriously Injured by vicious\ncattle. Don't run rli-lts.\nDehorn yours with tlifi\nKEY8TONE DEHORN ER\nQuick -\u2014easy \u2014bumauo \u2014\ninakoa clean, aharp cut from\n4 sides, (.'oats littl.-. WilUi\nfor tno booklet.\nR.  H. McKENNA,\nfin   Itobert   St.   Toronto,   Ont.   Mention\ntills  pnper.\nCANCER\nBook Tree.    A implo\nHomo   Ircitmeol removed\nlump fromtt.il Udy'fl breiat\nOld toreo, ulctra  ind\n(rowthi cured.    Deocribt\nrtnr (ronble | wt will irad book un-i teatimooiulf.\nTHS CANADA CANCER INSTITUrS, Liwitbo\n10 CHURCHILL AVE., TORONTO\nCOMING EAST THIS WINTER?\nAfter tho busy Reason ls over, pack\nup and come oast and spend threo\nmonths in one of our schools. Business education wlll help you to win\nout. It costs but llttlo to got It.\nWrite us for our new curriculum nnd\nplan to let us help you. Address VV.\n11. Shaw, President, \"Shnw'fl Schools,\"\nToronto, Canada.\ngo before\nVes.\n(live me nn Instance.\nA man wheeling a barro\n'i'he examiner proposed\nquestions.\nI is i\" Bingo further, and means, \"Shall\n! we bo friends?\"    If held to the right j j,\"j[._'\n, cheek the answer is Yes; to the left\ncheek, No,     But Bhould either hold\nIt in both hanls, It simply shows indifference.\nHowever, by holding It In tbe left\nore . baud, the lady who dues not wish to j \u00a3 Jj; jffair'oltte gold piece.     His\nI jjd any further in tho matter speaks,  BaIe_ troblet, Ux ,. \u201e.\u00a3_,. 0? 80%ml\"-'\nthough dumbly, tlio words, I wish to   waB     Id many u \u2022 J     ^\ning liianyhoursjn unavailing marehj of one~of'tiie Court officials tothe eat*\nfor It, told a friend of ids misfor*\n\u25a0erhaps II will turn up in one of tlic\nsacks, suggested tho friend. Whereupon tlio miller waa seized with a brilliant idea. Via advertised his loss\nin the local papers, offering a reward\nBoys Who Did Thingi\nSome of tho greatest\nJon Is irregular. The pills that will rylng Rome pool1 bankrupt, imprisoned\ndo ibis work thoroughly uro Purine j for debt. Theso men did not. mind\nlee's Vegetable I'llls whlrh are mild  whether Ihey wore liable for hundreds\nJn action but mighty in rosulls. They or thousand*,, and the   wife   usually \t\npurge painlessly nud erfeciiv.-iy, and paid Lho husband a lew pounds fori in the world have boen made by youth\nwork u permanent, cure. They ran tbe protection of his mime, aud then Und if, will always bo so in human\nbe used without fonr by tho most deli-1 sho  would  snap hev angers ui her history      David  the sweet singer of\nottoly constituted, as there   nro   no baffled creditors, and gaily set about Israel' was a she-herd a noef and n  \u2014 \u2014-.- - -   . 7   _ ,.\npalntul effects preceding thetr gentle] incurring fresh debts. geuerkl before he was twenty,' and n ?\u00bb sives permission to be followed.\nThe law which eettled and removed' king at. the age of eighteen. Raphael!' ubb !'* ^Ti_Bt -^A^lftiSi *Z\ner had practically completed   his ' life- - Ration f love,   while   drawing   itl\n  \"a work ai the age of thlriysoven.   He     tf1 the liands is one of  nteuse\ndid no grent artistic work after Iha ' JWUte:  , Wrapping it round  he first\n~  ! age.     lames Watt, even ns a hov, as: ' fl*w.^ oltens au engagement, round\nGave Him Away j ho watched the steam coming out of j tn\u00b0 miud,e J11'Bt\"'' ma-'\u00abaBe-\n1 get rid or you. ()n\\ on lho other\ni hand, if she folds the dainty bit of\nI cambric, it signifies her wish to speak\n] Again, she may hold it at the Oppo-\nj site corners, which means just Walt.!\ni By throwing it over her right shoulder\nof bis sovereign,\nHard and soft corns both yield to\nHolloway's Corn Cure, whlob is entirely safe to use, and certain and\nsatisfactory in lis action.\nopetaUon,\nBobble\u2014My dance, 1 think!\nMadgfr\u2014Vtn sorry.    It's   Dune\ndanee.\nBobble\u2014Oh, that's   all   right!\n! this sorl   'if thing deserve\n1 title ihan tho colloquial one\nI hass.\"\nbough) you from hliu tor two shillings,\nHer  Father  Scored , (\nMiss Rosy Nohall had just returned iondent wh^sends\nfrom a finishing school and had evi- ponaenl *no H,mls\nden tly fulfilled all that was required I\nof her In (ho scholasbic line.\nSho and her fa! her were sitting In\nthe dining-room.\nThat air\u2014, remarked her relarlvp.'\nFather,    dear,    Interrupted    Rosy,\nIt's vulgar lo sny   that   nlr.      You]\nehould say tnaf something hcr''', or\npreferably, Just Uiat.\nit Is refreshing to hoar a telephone' ll'c teakettle- saw in It the new world\nstory nowadays thnt does not. Blander j \u00b0 'necha ileal power made possible by\nThe   corrcs-i   ir\"    ^ element turned and driven by\n^^^^^^^^^ is proud of the\nability in tell a telephone joke without casting refleotlons on harmless\nyoung maldons who servo the publii\nWell, tbls ear\u2014, commenced her\nfather; but he wns cut short again.\nNo father, smirked tlio dutiful\ndaughted. Thai's Just ua vulgar Vou\nmust avoid him ii expressions a* this\n'ere\u2014\nfather became Irate.\nIa-ook here- my girl, sold lie, I'm\ngoing to say what I menu. That, air\nIs bad for tills ear of mine, and I'm\ngoing to abut tho window!\nAnd after that Rosy laid no more,\n85,253 Miles an Hour\nBeen  out for a stroll\u2014eh? Well,\nn simple appliance. | mid bow far do you think you havo\nCortes was master of Mexico before  travelled?   Perhaps you   will   reply\n_  he was thirty-six.     Schubort died at  that you haven't walked fast, aud you\nclthe age of thityr-one,   after   having! have only been three miles or so.\nso willingly, hut Is sorry the man con-1 composed what may perhaps be called      But wait .1 minute.     Vou know that\nIn some ways the most entrancing the earth turns onco on its own axis\nmelody ever written. Charlemagne In tho course of twenty four hours.\nwas mauler of France and the great-1 Taking tho circumference of the earth\nest emperor of tbo world at the ago of at roughly :M,000 mile**, during your\nthirl). Shelley wrote Queen Mah ! hour's strolling you have covered one-\nwhen lie was ouly twenty-one, and twouty-fourtii part of tbls distance-\nwas a master of poetry before ho was * i.e., 1,001* miles.\ntwenty-live. |    Again, the earth travels round the\nPatrick Henry was aide lo slinpe tho I sun once a year.    Ii completes a olr-\nrevolutionary history of a new conn-[ole of 578,000,000 miles.     Divide this\nbefore he was thirty, nud aston-j by 805, and ihe result by IM, nml you\nwaa ihen iu bis\nI cerned can on\nItobluson.\nRobinson, 11 set\nii}) the other day.\nj    Don't wait dinner tor me this 0'\n1 ing. ho said. I shall bo detained\nboast, of tiie  name\nrang his  w|fei\nUtter Ignorance,\nV noted Kansas City charae.l\nclinging to a lump post ono Sunday\nmorning when a rjranger cam.* along\nand nuii\u25a0.-\u2022.*\u25a0 -<1 blm:\nSir, Inquired the stranger, can you\ntell me where the Second Presbyter-\nIan Church lb*\n.Mister, answered the weai. one,\nT don't even know where tbe First\nPresbyterian Church is!\nbusiness, deal\nVery well, answered Mrs. Robinson\nin a tone of voice that sounded genuinely regretful; bul business la busl-.\nnes-!. I suppose, Wlftero ure you now?  f1?' -:~   ...    ;,       _\u25a0\u25a0   .  _     -*\u25a0-.--\u2022 \u2014 -______.\n\u25a0   - - 1 inu the world by his oratory before he   will find thai In tho hour you have\nwas twenty-sis years old,     At  the  travollod iu round figures 60,000 miles\na no ot twenty-four Ruskin had writ*      Btill there is more.     The sun and\nton '\u25a0.Modern Painters\"   and    Bryant  the surrounding pianola aro passing\nwhile still a boy of litgh-SChool age,   through space all the time at the rate\n^^ had wrltton \"ThanatopBia.\"      Roborl   of 18,860 miles nn hour.\nOeorgo aa'd ho would: whal did she ' H,iniri wl*\"\"' Bomo   \"f   lllH   B^ateal 1    Bo, altogether,   during your   lillle\n1 wanl to r.i 0* '     He put hli .inner In ' wngH while he wns u ploughboy,        . stroll, you have travelled sotnotlilug\n> hli other ear and listened attentively   like 85,863 miles,\n\u25a0fw  nn tho familiar voice asked: him lost tn connection wiiii the '\t\nUow can yon keep youi mind on tho j Piiush  mercantile  marl no hist  year'    An act, nono the less brave for be-\nHobitiS(\u00bbu  HHld  li ^^^^^^^^\noffice, of course, and added that it\nwhs a very busy day with thero,\nIt's too bid thnt you hum to work\nso hard. Qeorgo, his wife observed;\nbut. teil me something\nA Cry From Western Canada\nThere's u loud complaiut  from  tbe\nfarming men\nIn tho land of the western sun,\nKor there isn't ft wife for ono iu ten\nThey say, nnd ihey can't get on,\nUnless some    vessel    witli    crowded\ndecks.\nHer topsails soon shall furl,\nAud land a load of the other sox\u2014\nA load of assorted girl.\nTho cry   rings   out   or   a thousand\nthroats,\nIn piteous minor chords;\nAs a hustling cablegram it floats\nTo thc hind of tho House of Lords,\nIt says: Don't scud us your woollen\ngoods,\nTho sons of your bankrupt earls,\nVour calico stuff or your patent foods,\nHul. semi lis a lot of girls.\n(iirls to Iron and girls to cook,\nWho haven't got time to cry;\nWho'll give us 11 sympathetic look\nIf we can't digest tholr pie.\nSo don't bo sending us useless things\nIn return for our gold nnd pesrlH,\nBut send us a ton of wedding rings,\nAnd n hundred tons of girls!\nIng capacities of the gueBt. The official agreed to stay beside tbo buffet\nfor a few minutes, and euro enough\nup cunte thc guesh again. Ho wus\nserved with food and wine he ordered\nnnd after anther hearty meal ho was\nJust about to turn away wltcu the official stepped forward.\nKxcusc me, sir, he said, hut may I\nsee your card of invitation to tbe ball?\nTho other became greatly agitated,:\nand the card not being forthcoming,\nthe official said, sternly: I must ask\nyou, sir, to remove your mask and\ncloak.\nSeveral peoplo bad now paused to\nwatcii the \u00abcuuc. and when ttie hungry\nman bad unwillingly slipped off his\nmask and cloak a ripple of laughter\nwent round. Thc guest turned out to\nbo ono of tho soldiers of the guard\non duty in tho hall below!\nTho soldiers had. found a domino\nand mask lying in the hall, and they\nhad boen putting them on one by one\nso as to bo able to go boldly into tho\nball room and havo each a good feed\nai the buffet.\nh'i U\u00bb CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, lad DJ.ST I10MK\nOYE, mm can b-iy-Wlij' you -fon't even have tu\nknow what KIND of Cloth ynurCooda are made\n--f.\u00bbs-- MUuketj ar* Imp\"*-) hi a.\nS\u00abnd for Era* Color Canl, Story Booklet, and\nBooklet giving rat ulli of llyelni over olher oolOM.\nThe JOIINSON-HICIfAROSON CO., Limited,\nMontreal. Canada.\nllo\niw oan yon keop youi mind on ino 1 p...ish mercantile man no last year     ft\" Iir|. \u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0*' ,\"r \":rn \u00bb\u25a0\u00ab*' \u2022\u00bb\u2022 .<\u25a0 1   - -\u2022\n1 whei irehestra Is playing totalled 1,021, of whom only twenty- Ing distinctly novel and   Ingenious, Is linlle*\nAlexander Ragtime? , *,,\u25a0\u25a0<   ..\u201e.,. passengers,     Tier.' woro was porformod by Policeman Lowe,  lofcrm,\n\u2014  I nearly ijfiO.000   seamen   engaged   In  with iho co-opi-railou   of   Policeman\nCourt Newt I British morohanl ships. \u25a0 Mallon, of the New Vork City Forco\nFrench Post 0(11 ct-s wlll lu future he\novided officially with stamp tnolst-\nulug appliances, un innovation which\na balled by tho Press at a hygiene\nThis\nMy\nIt would be a grea\nlovo our nolghbor !f his hobby were\nnot chickens and ours wero not ft\nbeds.\nMr. Browning (pompously)\nla :i gr--ut day for us a. home\ndaughter comes oui tonight,\nMrs, Diggie (surprised) -Yon don'l\nleal easier to  H:|'' ri\"' m*8tor* s\" \",,\"ri \u25a0\u25a0'-\u2022 husband;\nh -'a been In for a month,\nsh\"\n1 don'l ear - much foi  1 .in\nCLEAN   HANDS\n:;    'll.*  -Why not?\nShe    i\".,.,.;i'i- - j   .  I *.,   ',1 \u00ab]i. tan-\ni -I..-1I \"II Ilio lllll. .\ni 111\nBlbm\nBlmm\n19c \u25a0 Tin.\n\u00bb.,.*.I.Uh... tool -on .HI, a \u2022 \u201e-.,. 1-tll.tl,,.\nIMAri.th.oiiiaiNAri.il i hbht ihm.\noi.KAriati   wiii rmor. .........t .i.iu.\nttaSkata,\nW   N. U. 922\nmailer ..f fur!.. Mm Tiaii--\nJtlllri    nil    '.tllfl    Mlllwfiyrf    IO\nPor (iin'-'limn tu\" charge,\nam about two*tlilrda or n penny wt\nmlloi aocond lonly a little Inferior),\nk*\u00ab than n halfponny fo; the (llelanco\nwltll.* ir yon eoro to iiHk >i Lhlrrl-claa,\nJniirnry jou KM your four inll.tii for\n11 penny. Even thi, u \\u- iiciRiii o(\nextortion when compared with lho emigrant rato. Thin worka our ul\naomethlng like n Hiiilllni: r-,r n linn\ndn\"t mllca, and if iho emlgranl _o,\nnoi poaamm tho ahllllng Iho Uovorn*\nlll.-liI will I. nil It lilm.\nI|, Hi,.mi 11 woman whon hiio'h innr-\nilid expeel her hiiahoud to toll hor\nhis bualnesi nfTuiihv\nShe \u25a0 I don': know, hut n woman ex.\nTi.-.-irt a iihiii to lulk liii.-inonfl when\ntto'n coiirlltiK her.\n j .\\ li\u2122 win raging In Broome Street\n ,,, and two mi*,1 mi Mi.' alxlh (lour werol\nA , otaohmoni or soldlora wae iiiioui ,.,,m,.MuK \u201e\u201e _,. nre-e-cape unable to\n0 attack Lho enemy, who awnltod \u201e, ,.,- -,\u201e\u201e,.. nlli Bmo|to Mow,\nloom drawn up In battlo order. A J,,,,,,,,, \u201e,\u201e, ,,,\u201e,.,, 0b\u00abervlng them.liur*\naea-oned old aergonni noticed - youtif , , ,\u201e .,,\u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e. \u201er \u201e\u201e adjoining build-\njoldler froBh Iron, homo visibly ul \u25a0 \u201e,\u201e, \u201e,.,\u201e\u201e\u201e \u201e,\u201e ,.\u201e\u201e\u2022 of Ml(. ,\u201e\u201e.\u201e.\nfooted by the uoarne8H or Hi** coming\niibI.i      Hla faco waj pale, hla toolh |\" \"iviSiibii then -elzod Lowe's anklea\nto\nQhattorlng nud hla knees tried\nknock eaoh other oul, n was sheer\nnerrousneai, bnl the sorgcant thoughi\nlt wan downright funk,\nTompkins, ho whispered, Is n iromb-\nIIiik yo aro for your own dirty ekln?\nNo, no, sorgeant, said   Tumpklns,\nIllllklllK   11   litlllo   llll.'llllll   In   llllll  liln\nihaklng limbs I'm Irembllng for\nI'm. .'nouiy. Thoy don'l know Ton.ii>\nIiIiih Ih horo.\nAuthor- Why, nil Hint hook wlll bo\nroad with pleasure whon Dlcliem mul\n'lhnckoray aro rorgotton,\nI'nlillHh.'i    I don'l dmil.l  II. Iml  wn\ncan'l wnn ihnt. loim for rcBtilis,\nBack to Hi-! Old llrh.alilr\nThe Olrl l\u00bb this thesmalleil Hiving\nlog porih H'l.'il yuu havo?\nTho Clorlt-Yea, iiiIhm.\nTin* Olrl Vim iin- sure jou limen'l\nany for Just two pot'Bonj\"\nNo, misa.\nTlien I'll Uke n hiuntiiucl:.\nIng Qfto,\nMalloi\nnml ihoiinii nl mosl nhoiii'ii by iii\" rising Biuoko, In. nmimgod tu grasp thai\nmils ul tin. Ilre>o8oapo and Inatruotod j\niin* men to climb ii'i his body, Tho\nfoal wa 1 aocouipllshod lu Bnfoty mul j\nMallon thou pulled his companion\nri mn bin trying iiohIiIoii and limy lied\nqr i|iilrlily hh jiOBBlhlo to the mifiily of\niim iii.xi roof, nnd thonce to tho\nih.* Blrcol,\nYour Hon, h.-.IiI lho profoBsor, litis\nboon laboring undor n inlBiipprchon*\nhIoii.\nWhal' \"viImIiiii'iI tin- llllllllllo hul\nhonbsl imi' ni, with Joi In his Milne\nVo don'l in.in II'.'\nMoan Wjlttt?\nThnl llerl lias hi'on workln'l\nSure\n11 htijH hero thnl 11 cow In New\nVorli catches Ilsh with lln lull, snld\ntlm old funny. I don'l hi Hove It,\nWllttl 1.1 rial of Hsh could a nnv niii'liT\nSuckers, replied the ohoorful idiot.\nTakeGood Cafe\nOf The ColU\nIt's cheaper to misa cells than to\nhue horns. But It's costly If you lost\ntliocolta. Keep n liolilo of Ktiii.tnll'a\nBpavln Curo lmwly. For thlrtv-flve\nyoara bun proved lt tho aafe, rollnble\nremedy for spavin, splint, curb, ring*-\nbone, bony growtliu and lameneit\n(rom olher causes.\nKcnddllsSpavinCure\nPRESERVING TIE8\nTill .Villi-.:-, OiL\nDfii. l\u00bbiti, I'Jll,\n\"I h\u00bbv 1 niiM ti \u2022\nl-Mvln villi *i\u00bbif\nN|\u00abflfi''i.fa, ntid iw\nlm\u2022* tt.in( a on iH-\nti!l\u00bb-r wll* (imt in\n\u2022iiln, I iu I1.al.l7\nrTn-M   wllli   jwur\nf, wi-inni,\nlUtntU* -\u00abbr|l.\nA*v.1iuf|t*t for rt\u00abt\n1 '.tj t-f7-A TmUM\nm,.iii* iimir vt\nDr. B. $. Kei-Un Cem^Mf    W\najiMfctirt Vt.\\U, Vtrm\u00bbmt. U. \u00bb\u2022 *\nWould Save Canadian Railways Vait\nSuma Yearly\nThoro wero 1:1.88:1,770 orous-tloa\npurohftBod in Canada lu mil. according to BtatlatlCfl oompllod hy tliu I-'or-\neatry Branch of Uio Department of\ntlio interior,\nThli in nn Inoreaioof 4,40!i,ROft (18.5\nper cent) ovor thn ntiuihor pun-liaH-'U\nin litU\u00bb. Tin* Inoreaia la largoly due\nto railway comtrttotlou, which wtut\noipeoially noticeable U\\ tho Woatorn\nProvlnoei on tho now trantieontluont-\nnl linea. Tho rApliLRomniit of (Ioh on\nexlnliiiK Mil'.'k umountod tu about\n10,000,001).\nKlKlitccii hinds of wood wore uied,\n\u2022luck plno fltnndliiK llral in Importum-i*,\nnumerically, with about 40 por cent of\nthn total. Taiiuiruck Hlood aocond\nwith fltmn.-t 19 per rout, and Oouglaa\nfir with 11 per cent and hemlock with\nVI per cent occupied third and fourth\nplace* reaped ivoly.\nThe iiveruK'-' prion of ties In 1011\nwan ;iu centH, one cunt more than ln\n11.10. Southern plno tie* at $1.10 imported from tho United Statea were'\nthe most expensive, nnd aprtice lies\nat 2.i oontfl wore tho clioapeat. The\nBiiv.n Mo in lncreaBlng In favor, evi*\ndeuily. UK 70 per cent, or 'A per cent\nmoro Ihan !\u2022* 1910, wero the proiuct\nof the mill. Sawn ilea coat, on tho\naverage, 41 conta a piece, or 4 conU\nmorn Ihuu hewn ties, whllo in 1910\ntho hi-wit Ilea wero the moro expensive hy :t oenta,\nOnly 800-200 Hen, or 1,0 per cent of\nt.ho total numbor purc)inH{td wero given\nprepel'VatlVO treatment. Howover,\nUi Ih U pmcllonlly a clear advance over\n1010, Two troubling eHtnhliHhmonta\naro now in operation. On lho nver-\nnito, the ti'i'iilnu'iit of Mom prolongK\ntheir Uf\" by ton years, It hi ostl*\nmuled that nl leaat HM) million feet,\nhoard (heanuro, could ho unveil annually tbrougb lii I-i proceie.\nWHAT'SAT THE BOTTOM\nOF KIDNEY TROUBLE\nThoro nro many camma hi tho bottom\n\"f an attack nf lefdnoy trouble,\u2014ovor-oat-\nIiib, ovor-drltiklng, heavy colda,\u2014theae\nami othor caueea often causo lilneaaoa\nauch n\u00bb kidney trouble frall-stonea, kid-\n11 i.y.ntoneB,   Ki'iiv.-I,   liniiliaK\".        Hut    i.'i\nmatter what le at tin' bottom \u00abf tho dls*\nunto, there Ih now \u00ab euro unll \u00abi\u00bbf.' curo,\nono iimt ids quickly nn-1 wiil.out full.\nTnat remedy la Bauol, whlob ip ni ready\nWt>ll Iim.wn In tlio nit-dlt'iil iirrifubitli.u \u00ab f\nCmuuln iih wi-lt oh in tlmiit-nnitH <>f cu'-\nfon'i'B from tin* olBeaBe niitnul almvu.\nOn.- H'lnnlpi'K imly wlm tti W--I1 nml wldn-\nly krmwn, wim ourea <>f iiiill-HinDo-- bv\nHANOI, nfter Buffering f'*r 13 yean.     Bn\nHint, fni wiih h1h>, llml Hln* Iiiih ncnt tn iih\n11 littie- innitlit-r nf pi'nplo tn tin r-ll-v.-.t\nof Miiillnr (-onipluliilk*.      We do not enrn\nwhero tin- reader nf tiii\u00ab imraKinph re-\nHlilin, wn <un Klvo lilm rn- lii-r iintiii'H nnd\nli.lilii'iiHfH nf iMMipIo In  IiIh own  luwn nml\nlooatliy wbo lmvo been cured by sanoi.,\nWh will iilnn Rlvo tho nnmo ntid iidrtr.-n\nof tlu- Imly referred in. wtmm f-nnipl*iiit\nhad trniil'l.-d hcr for Hindi a lona poilnd,\nand whn Ih now completely cured,\nHANOI, In inmiufni-tiiri-d only hy thn\nHANOI, MANUFACmilNt. COMPANV\nOF CANADA, LTD., 977 Main Hlriiei.\nWlnnlpoK. Vav Mil.- hy nil dnw.clnli or\ndirect from tliu nitiuufnctiirrtn nt ft .09\npar bottlo.\nSANOL IS SAFE AND SURE I\nA l.'illilni; rlnclt Iiim Ihvii plni'i'd nn\ntin* IkiH-rlc-t lit Hrrllii. ItiRtcnil of\n\u2022liiiiiin; iinrliiilli'iilly Ilio clack cnlln*\nout l.lio nxncl I Inn. ovory qtiartor nf\nAn hour lu it rt.'ni' liiminn vnlcn. ths\nnu'i'limil-m cnn ho no iiiljuntod t'.nl\nthi'n<* fttrignnceniflntd cotuw nt n cor.\ntnln time and rnnllnuo ni:\u00bbln nut'\nmatlcnlly yftpi* n utltiiilntod Intorinl.\nMrn. Fltzliriiwii (to lier IiiihIiiiiuIi- -\nDo you remember ileur, tbat heforo\nwe wero married you nlweyn offoreil\nme your left arm?\nnizlirown\u2014Yee, 1 wnnteil lo lmvo\nmy right hand freo. You nee 1 lu.d\na lover'u fear that eoinrono would try\nto ,take you from 1110, und 1 hIm -i> ,i\nkupt It lu reuillnoKH for defence, ,\nSirs. Fltzbrown-.lnw Hwoet! nut\nhow Ih It that now yotl ffonorully otter m\u00ab your right arm?\nKltzbrowu\u2014-Well, I am not no afin!d\not IobIdk you iih I waa.\nCyprus, under n convontlon of IF\"?,,\npnya nn Htiniuil trlbilto of $800,000 to\nlho Sultan of Turkey.\nA recent. Pnrlliituentiiry comma of\nI'lfiitlnnil und Wnl.'H kIiowh Huh oxolti.\nalvn of t.ho Unlvornlllon, there nn* 408\nrarllamonlniy nreim. \u2022\nHoiine'iRonla lotting furlllllll d\nhoiiMt ai n rem eiceedlng Hoo tt year\nIn tbo United Kingdom mint lain nut\nan annual license coming $10,\nIn Kranco, the nvorngo iiminl vV'OI'If.\nIng hnura per week ol the liuliimrlal\npiipulatlnn urn 117 per lent, of limit\nIn l'lnglund. THK WOST-Tr-TOT;. CRAXTmOOl-T. V. c1\n5 INDIAN S\n,.Magneto,...$280\n..Magneto,,\n4 H. P.\u201e\n7H.P.\u201e\nCaih Prices F.O.B. Winnipeg\nTerms\nSee  your   local   dealer  .ind   lie\nwill sell yon on terms no doubt.\nWrite Tor catalogue anyway.\nCONSOLIDATED   BICYCLE   AND\nMOTOR CO., LTD.\n189 Notre Dame, East.     Winnipeg\nWhen Baking\ner* yoil ni caredd nliotit the *\u00bb1t ynu tiie, ns\nyon sue a!i<mt iiic flour or baUtmi powder 1\nPoor ult will ruin :t taking, Jitlt an mively\nat mar 11 mi'. In Uio kitchen uud un the\nUtile, use lite lino, nutt- b&\nIT  PAYS TO  BREED  FOXES\nPower of Vegetable Growth\nA tar macadam pavement strvtch*\niiitf from lhe school of gunnery at\nSHtfeburynesa to tho sea is at present\nin a state of- violent silent eruption.\nAbout a fortnight ago the surface became covered with what may be culled \"blisters,\":raised a Utile above the\ncommon level, which attracted much\nwonderful attention,\nthey brood foxes in Prince Bdward Is-!    Jj\u2122 jnoli of theae, in a few days\ni_\u00bb\u201e      ^ i- \u2014,,.\u201e\u201e,..., *,.\u201e. ,i  \u201e..-'a series of crack \u2022 appeared, extending\nthemselves in rays from a centre. Fin-\nMany of the  Animals  in  Prince  Edward Island.\nIn some countries the fox is hunted\nand killed for sport, hut if you killed\na fox in the Canadian Province of j\nPrince Kdward Island you might, wipe\nout three or four thousand dollars of\nthe assets of some    citizen.       For |\nlaud. It is estimated that there are\nabout 500 foxes on the various ranches in lhat province at. ihe present time\nund Oharlea Dal ton, a member of the\nLegislature, said recently that, last\nyear $250,000 had changed hands in\nthe fox business.\nThe success which has attended\nsome bleeders of foxes bus caused\nvery many others to go into the ranching business, and there are before Hie\nProvincial Legislature, now hi session\neight or nine bills Incorporating fox\nranching companies. While the particular fox is sought to produce what\nis called the black fox, it is really the\nanimal known on the London fur\nmarket as the silver gray, it was\nthe pell of a fox from Prince Kdward\nIsland that brought the world's record\nprice, $2,900, in tbe London market\nten years ago,\nally came up a broad, soft shoot,\nlooking extremely welt pleased with\nitself and Us work, which proved Io\nbe so old nnd well known a friend\ni:k the thistle. At this moment there\naro hundreds nf those bold intruders\nshowing defiantly through the pavement., affording a most interesting 11-\nlustration of the power of vegetable\ngrowth.\u2014London Globe,\nI'd I avo you know Mrs. Blythe, said\nAirs. King, lhat mv brother was a\nbanister of the law. Mrs. Blythe\nturned up lier nose scornfully. A lig\nfor your banister*., she retorted, that's\nnothing. I have a'brother who Is a\ncorridor in the navy.\u2014Satire.\nSardines and Sprats\nThough tbey are   totally   different\nThe explanation of the high price j species of tish. sprats are sometimes\npaid for the skin of the so-culled black\nfox Is that tiie quantity otlered on\nthe London market has fallen lu 30\nyears from 2,000 to about 300. Two\nyears ago the number offered In London wus 900 skins, and On per cent\nof them brought $500 each.\nSo Important has the Industry he-\ncome In Prince Edward Island that\nthe Government is regarding it with\nnu eye to revenue, and is is suggested\nthat a tux of $10 on each fox be lev\nsold as nardlues, and few people\nknow of lite distinctions hei ween\nIhem. Briefly, a sardine is a young\npit chard. In its Immature state It,\nlives in the warm waters off Ibe\nHhores of Prance. Italy and Spain,\nthough occasionally it is found not far\nfrom Hie coast of Devon and Corn-\nwill. The mature pilchard, Is, however, a well-known Cornish ilsh. Ou\nthe other bund, a sprat  is a sprat\nWOULD FALL\nIN A FAINT\nWhen She Attempted to Work, so Exhausted Was the Nervous System\nThe Feeble, Wasted Nerves Were Re-\nstored and    Revitalized by\nDR. CHASE'S\nNERVE FOOD\nThe  President of Switzerland\nThe  President of Switzerland   ls\nso hedged about by tho Constitution\nthut. except for otlicial purposes and\nto facilitate the exchange of courtesies aud of amicable understandings\nwith foreign nations, he has no more\nstanding than the other six members ,\nof the council of which ho forms a\npart.     He is elected for one year, has !\nno official residence,   and   his   chief i\nbusiness is to sign the documents of:\nthe Bundesrat or Council of   Seven.,\nHis salary is, In our money, equal to\nabout $..,000 a year, and ibere Is no-\nprovision for private expenses, such !\nas traveling or entertaining.     He is'\nexpected to live in the capital of thej\ncountry during the.year be holds ofllce.     His associate members in the '\nBundesrat get $3,000 a year, and they\n. are elected for Ihree years, their votes\nhaving the same force as that ot the\nPresident,\nterrible       As a rule Ihe President of Swil\/et-\nand    Us ! land is before election a member of\nsufferer | 'his council, and is elected    to    the\nhigher otlice without opposition;  but\nin   las;:  be had a rival, and  ihough\nhe won in the election he was unable\nto   support   what iu  his  country  Is\nNervous   Prostration   Is  i\ndisease to all    who    under,\nsymptoms.     At. times    the\nslight exertion tho dreadful helpless*\nless returns and all strength and vitality seems to leave tho system.\nThis letter from Mrs. Martin very,\nwell describes the terrible condition   looked upon us au affront, and com\n(|\u2014JF\npip.i\n\u25a0     :;1I !\nilliS' HSiSiBIHlBlffll\nMOST PERFECT MADE\nlf       MAKES LIGHT\nWHOLESOME BREAD.\nREFUSE SUBSTITUTES\nIn which many a sulTer.V duds her\nself. Sho also tells bow she regained health and strength by using Dr.\nChase's Nerve Pood after all oilier\nireatmenls had failed.\nMrs. Edwin Martin, Ayct's Cliff,\nQue., writes:\u2014\"Before I began UBing\nDr. Cbuse's Nerve Pood I was in a\nterrible condition from nervous exhaustion and prostration. Dizzy TOBACCO AND CIGARETTES ARE\nspells would come over ine    and    I\nmined suicide before his Inauguration.\nIn this connection it mlghl he well\nto note, too, that Switzerland Is the\none country on the globe whero it\ncosts nothing to die, us in certain\nenntons rich and poor are buried at\nthe expense of tho State,-Harper's\nWeekly.\nWhat is your idea of classical music?\nWell, replied Mr. Ctimrox. I don't\nprofess to know much about it. Hut\nit always seems to me that when a\nman writes classical music he simply\ntakes a tune and bees how much lie\nimi muss it up.\nGIVEN    AWAY\nwould fall to the floor. The weakness was so great that I could not so\nmuch as sweep lhe floor without faint\nDURO\nTRADE MARK REG.\nSheathing Paper\n\u2014a high-grade paper, odorless,\ntasteless, free from tar,\nwaterproof, exceptionally strong\n\u2014will not tear. A durable\nand effective Interlining for\nwalls, floors and ceilings.\nExamine DURO carefully at\nyour dealer's, or write for sample\nand Booklet to the (5\nSal. Canadian M-Ru'.ctur.ra\nTHE STANDARD PAINT CO.\n* ol Cula, Limited.\n-Unlr-al. tvlnnlDef, C.t|.rj\/. V.ic.f r.\niiiid the uiiiall speolmons one Bees in\nieil. producing 'something like $6,0001 the shops are fully 'grown nsh. Sprats I Ing, but Hip nerve food helped  me\ntm the present estimated fox popula-1 are caught in enormous quantities off! after the doctors fulled.     It lias done\ntlon of the Inland ranchers, lour coasts and in Norwegian wuter\".\nNot every man who Rets a pair of i In France there are no fewer than\nfoxes, whether of the silver gray or 170 factories engaged lu llie trade of\ncommon red variety, is on the high preparing anil.tinning sardines. To*\nI'oad to fortune One of them may i wards the middle of the eighteenth\ndie. or their progeny may die, or they | century, at Nantes, sardines were first\nmay be stolen. Mr. Dalton says thai i pr.'pared In olive-oil and packed in\nfl.,000 worth of foxes were stolen I barrels, nntl there are no fewer than\nin his district last year. As much as one hundred and sixty-one different\n$7,000. and, it is suld even more, has methods of cooking this dclectabi'.\nbeen paid for a desirable pair of fish. Enormous exportation* ot sar*\nbreeding foxes, dines nre made annually to Aujira-\nAn Illustration of the  uncertainty j lia and South Africa.\nof the Industry  when conducted byi \u2014>\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nbeginners is found iu Hie story of one\nman who one day found in the fox\nenclosure a litter of seven pups, but\nthe next time lie saw them they were\ndead. Another lost a litter llirougli\nI unwise feeding.\nI'ox ranching has spread from\nPrliice Edward Island to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. A company\nincorporated in New Brunswick has\ndlst*ministers, two physicians, an!\neditor, a school Inspector, two mer-\nchants, two manufacturers and several larmers.\nWRITE FOR\nPROOF\nPURIFICO\nCANGER\u00b0\/.ND*Tl)MOR\n\u2022MUHHuttnuwhi PuriflM \u20ac\u2022.. trligekvrg, flat,\nDR. UI.UOTT, SPECIALIST. PRI-\nYRte disease.-, aud drink habit.\nWrite 81 Queen East. Toronto.\nWhin Your Eyn Nnd Can\nTry llurlnt Ey* Rawed.r. No Smarting\u2014Feel*\nmnn\u2014 A--t\u00ab Quick..?. Trv it Jor R\u00ab\u00abl. Weak,\nWatery Ej\u00ab* and UrauulatM _yeU.li. lllu*\ntraied Book lu each PM-kAfo. Harlue la\n(vinpuuii-lftd !>\/ tnr OcmlUla-not a \"Patent Med-\nlailn*\" \u2014but mod In \u25a0iiecf\u00abfiil Ptayiklant- t'rao-\nS\u00bb for man-* jtmn. \u25a0)*->* dedtcattd to th* e.>\n* awl told br Drag!lit i at Ko and Km Mr BottIA\nurioa Ufa bh-ala AmpUo TntM, _\u00a3] art Ma,\nMurln* Ey* flemtdy Co* Chicago\nWaltz Composed in Prison\nTbe principals in tbe Haverdn\nmurder case, a Hungarian cause eel-\nebre, bave been employing tbelr time\nin prison In musical composition.\nMarie Haverda, wbo was tried for\nhaving instigated ber lover to murder\nber mother in order to Inherit ber\nTort nne, has published a wait\/ entitled the \"Mini\" from prison.\nA n t on   Voider,   the   lover,   who   is\nundergoing penal servitude for killing\nFrau Haverda having obiained   permission  of the    prist-'']    authorities,\ni sent a large bundle   of    manuscript\nRoosevelt the Phrase Maker music to his lawyer, with tb% request\nThe strenuous life, the square deal, < tbat. a publisher be found for It. All\nthe larger good, mollycoddles and the compositions are of a cheerful\ni weaklings, tbe predatory rich, unde- character. Another man tried for\njslrable citizens, civic righteousness, complicity In the crime is composing\n1 deliberate and  infamous    mendacity,  an operetta.\u2014London Standard.\n' and  beaten to a  frazzle  are only a _\t\ni few of Roosevelt's  many    contrlbut- Clever Willie\nions to the expansion, if not to the      ...      ...      . .   \u25a0   , ,\nenrichment of   our mother    tongue.'    ^ippincott's: A \u00ab\">S\u00bb looklDg man\nNine tenths of   these   have   sprung TO*?   he tll0me ,of a fnllei,ia11 \"'\nspontaneously to hla lips in the course ; a ft ****** clt> aml. seeinK   \u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u2022\nof a speech or a dictation;  the rest ] 8r?\u00bb\"d hul a small boy named Willie,\nli-we been thought oui with more'or  \u00ab\u00ab  ,0  '\"'\"\u2022    \"  >*<?\u00ab '\"\"'\u00bb   te\"  me\nless car* wliere he bas wished to e*  $\"?? ffuJ ^ther keeps his money\npress a particular shade of meaning. nt knock your top-knott off au after-\nThe universality of tbeir use has not \u25a0 \u21228 eal f*r-      ._   .......        \u201e    ,..\nobliterated Irom the minds of the pub- j \u201e %****  don l  saitl ,? I1,lp; .    ^ ou \"\nlie  tbeir  association   with   their  hl. I \u00ab'\u00bb<! \u00abH the money we ve gotiu an old\nven tor, aud his faculty  for putting\ninlo terse terms so many Ideas which\ni coat In the kitchen.\nTwo minute.*, later\nbruised   and\nwonders In building up my nervous\nsystem- I can do my own housework now and washing, and feel tbat\nthis great medicine has been a Godsend to me 1 think it is (be best of\nm-Mlicines.'*\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50e. a box,\n6 for $2.50, at all dealers or Ed man-\nson, Bates & Co., Limited. Toronto.\nExtermination Of Rats and Mice\nIf  it  were  generally   known   that\nthere is no troublo to rid    a bouse,\nAt the \"Made in-Canada\" Train\nThe exhibits on the \"Made-ln-r-.n-\nada train, wblcb Is new louring W.st-\nom Camilla, are op* i ing tba ej'.-s of\nthousands or vhltors. .Many of rs\nare too prone to be-little our own goods\nand to consider that the word \"imported\" covers a multitude of virtues.\nThoso who go to see the \"Made-Iu-\nCauada\" goods on the \"Made-ln-Can-\nada\" train discover tbe fact that the\n\"iMade-iu-Canada\" is a mark of honor.\nAn exhibit, which is doubly Interesting to the men is that of the imperial Tobacco Company of Canada\nLimited, the largest manufacturers of\nUncle (leorge- \"What! Hate all yonr\nlessons? Come, now, you don't mean\nlo say you bate history? Niece\u2014Yes,\n1 do, To tell yuu the truth, uncle.\n1 don't cure ;t bit whal anybody ever\ndid.\u2014Punch.\nForgotten so Soon\nSmall Boy\u2014Please, I want lho dootor to come and see mother.\nServant\u2014Doctor's out. Where da\nyou come from?\nSmall Hoy---What! J\">on*l you know\nme? Why, we deal with yon. Wa\nhud a baby from here only last week!\nbarn^-rYny buUdlng of rats and'm'K j ^H?**.*?,? n,_\u00b0nl!l!:\\.!ilaCC0S' and\nby the use of Gillett's Lye, it is\ndoubtful If the article could be made\nas fast as it would be used for this\npurpose alone. The process connected with using It is very simple, the\nplan being to sprinkle a Hltle of tbe\narticle in ant' around the holes mude\nby these pests in floors, partitions,\net.-. In addition to this It is well\nto use a thin piece of board about a\nfoot square, or even smaller, and\nmake a complete circle of the Lye\non the board about a quarter of an\nInch  deep,  and   inside of the circle\nplace some meat or cheese.     In en- \t\ndevorlug to get, at the bait the feet i r . ~   7\nof the rats and mice will be burned j cauae and ErTecl\nand the whole colony, whether large. Look heah, duttah; I've takon\nor small, will immediately disappear 1 >ouah advice and tried a cautah\nfrom lhe premises. | wound the park hefore breakfast, but\nThe plan is worth trying, but (be 'ir doesn't do my livah a bit. of good,\ngood   kind\u2014Uillett's   Lye\u2014should   be]   _Ml!      lm **.-*a>d tbe good effects\nprocured.      Ilefuse  the many  cheap\ncigarettes in the Dominion.\nTrue to their reputation as liberal\nadvertisers, the Imperial Tobacco\nCompany of Canada Limited arc presenting visitors lo the \"Made-in-Can-j\nada\" train, with attractive souvenirs\nand samples of brands that Western\nmen like\u2014namely \"Black Watch\"\nChewing Tobacco, \"Shamrock\" Quality Hlu\u00a3 Smoking Tobacco. \"Old\n('hum\" Pipe Tobacco, \"Meerschaum\"\nCul Plug Smoking Tobacco. \"Player's\nNavy Cut\" Cigarettes. \"Sweet Capor-\nal\" Cigarettes and \"Columbia\" Little\nCigars.\nParson\u2014So your busbaud la sick.\nMaybe he has been throwing hlmsolt\ntoo heavily Into his work. Mrs, Casey\n\u2014Not on your loifol Ilo's been tbrow-\ning bis wu-urk too hlvlly Into him.\nThat's what's the throuble wid blm.\nHe's .. bartinder,\u2014Judge.\nThe city nephew was showing his\ncountry uncle the town from a Beat\nin the opeu-alr street car.\nYou don't often g-'t a chance io\nrldo on a street car uucle, saitl ihe\nnephew.\nNo,'said unci'1. I don'l belie..' I'vo\nrid on a street ear since wo got utir\nnew automobile.*  Argonaut.\nCommander Sponsom - Christen\nhtm as you will, my dear, but. remember he's ouly a baby and not a dashed battleship, and I won't liavo the\nparson breaking champaign bottles\nover his little head.\u2014Life.\nPrior In tho year 3GTi7 tea was very\nrarely sold in the United Kingdom,\nand tbeu only at from $;)0 to $10 per\npound.\nBibbs\u2014Nothing is lost through po-\n\u2022illetiess.\nDlbbs\u2014I don't know; there's your\nseat in a crowded street car. -Boston\nTranscript.\nAt birth Hie pulse of a normal individual beats 133 tln.es per minute\nat the age of thirty, Tu times,\nPeople think i married you for your\nmoney What makes ihem think\nthat? Your looks, 1 suppose.\u2014Houston Post.\nThere is a crisis coming In China.\nI told ray wife a as soon as I saw ih-n\nnew cook handle the dishes. -Baltimore American.\nPostcards, chiefly Illustrated ones,\nto the number ot\" 109,500,000, were sent\nthrough the Swiss post olllce ladt\nyeai--\nWilli tn annual rateable value of\nover six millions sterling, Westminster Is greater Jq this respect than t.ia\ncity of London.\nNobody    ever  recovered    a    \"Inst j\nnerve\" by retracing   the    path    ou , 1\nwhich he lost it. | \\\nler Legacy Did your liiiBband\nve you much? Oh. about otic** a.\neki on tho average   -Judge.\nFourteen  per\nalbumen.\ncent of  llie\nEg   is\nWh.jt are your politics?   I'm a Republican.   Which   section?  \u2014Detroit\nIniiiatlons and   substitutes.\nWe All Would\nOld man. we want you lu our cleanup campaign.\nAll right.\nWell, name your preference Committee ou dumps, alleys or brickyards.\nWhat would you llko to clean up?\nI'd like to clean up about a million\ndolla rs.\u2014Courier-Journal.\nLh!\nof the canter before   breakfast,\ncounteracted by tbe bad effect of tbe\ndecanter after dinner.\u2014Tatler.\nlay inarticulate in the thought of other I -\u25a0\u25a0t.tered wreck was pitched through\nmen, has added vastly to his power thf.?\u00bb\"' (i0?!' \u00b0r W!l.e? \u00bb.omo aml\nof touching their sympathles.-Francis 'Ba r n.!*?.\u00ab\" ,pi' aml bI*\u00bb^(l\nK. l.eupp, in the June Atlantic.\nA Neat Coin Trick\nTske two plus, one Jn each hand,\naud pick up a coin with them by\npressing ono to each side of the edge.\nWhen you have got it firmly held,\nblow on the coin, and it will revolve\nrapidly- A coin with a rough edge\n\u2014a 50 cent piece, quarter or dime\u2014is\nthe best to use. A dime, because the\nfigures on it are smaller than on the\nother pieces, can be made to spin so\nfast that It looks as IE It were spherical lust-cad of flat. The trick Is\nvery easy to do, although It may\nlook hard. All that is needed is\nsteady hands.\nMaud Muller ou a summer's morn\nHeard the toot of an auto horn,\n\"aee!\" said Maud, \"ain't ho going fast\nAnd then ahe thought of the sighs and\ntears\nThe judge hud caused hcr all these\nyears.\nSo sho set   her   teeth   and    never\nflinched.\nBut took his number and  had  him\npinched.\"\n\u2014Worcester Academy Begonia.\nMlnard's Liniment used by Physician)\nTwo egga of the great auk wort*\nsold recently In Loudon, one al 150\nguineas, as agslnsi an auction price\nof ISO gulit-Ms (Mime yearn ago, and\nlh\" other for 140 guineas. There are\nnow iu existence eighty skins and\nseventy lliree egg-i of lhls extinct Mea\nbird.\n\"theatre for Clean-minded\nA minister, head of the Investigating Committee of the Toronto Vigilance Association, attended a theatrical performance and Included in his\nreport verbatim statements of some\nthings Bald ou the stage.     When he\nThat kid's loo smart, said lite man.\nN-iver said a word about tho old man\nbelli* Inside of tbe coat.\nThe Only Way\nAn elder, while baptizing converts\nat a revival meeting, advanced with\na wiry, sharp-eyed old chap Into the\nwater,     he asked the usual question.\n\"Let us nip this monster in tbe bud\nbefore It overwhelms us as an oncoming tidal wave!\" shouted the young\npolitician,\n\u2022Perbai-s\" said au experienced\ncampaigner in the back of the hull,\n\"ll would be better to smoke It oui\nof its lair before it becomes a festering canker.\"\u2014Judges Library.\ngave out his report, h? was arrested *bel*SPl ,Uere W a',y T,Wh?\non a charge of circulating improper \u00a3\u2022 .fiSj-8\"? bnf sm ^i1'\"1 not\nliterature. And yet it goes-'m the j be admlnlatered. After a pause\nstage. No wonder lhe theatre, aiV \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0 Powerfi -looking man who was\nlosing patronage. Most people are 00.kil? I\"1? > \u2122> \u00ab\"\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab. \u2122er,\nclean In mind and do not wish to be ,lo\u00bb 'J\u2122* to \u00bb*\"*\u00ab* t\\ ^T b,f\nbefotlled'. lt would pay some thea- j m?s8' bn ' Jank to my t,,a* * 9 '?\ntre in every big town to maintain such an,0< 8lnner \u2122 ^ ft1h1old of-\na standard that it could proclaim itself '\"id that one dip won't do him any\nuo ih,* 11.-.a\"ra f,--- tut. ~i--ti-tni,iAaA 1 Sood', you'll have to anchor him out\nas the theatre for tho clean-minded,\naud or comae. Justify the claim. -St.\nPaul Despatch.\nIn Line\nWhat makes you think the baby Is\ngoing to be a great politician'.' asked\nthe young mother, anxiously.\nI'll tell you, answered the young\nfather* Confidently; he eau say more\nthings that sound well and mean\nnothing at all than uny kid I ever\nsaw.-Cleveland Plain Dealer.\nyou'll Have to anchor\nlu dee., waler over ntght\"\u2014Life.\nThe fact that corporal punishment\nIn ill'-conraged In Ihe public schools\nor Chicago Is what led Bobby's tracker to address tbls nolo to the boy'a\nmollier\nDear .Madam. -1 regret very much\nto haw to id) you Ibat your sou Itobert Idles nwny his lime Is disobedient,\nquarieim 'lie nud disturbs the pupils\nwho are trying to study their lessons.\nII * needs a good whipping, aud 1\nstrongly recommend that you give\nhim one     Your., truly, Miss Blank.\nTo this Bobby's mollier responded\nan follows: Dear Miss Blank,-\u2014Lick\nhim yourself, 1 ain't mad at him.\nYours truly. Mrs. na sii.\u2014The Youth's\nCompan Ion\nDOIJDS\nKIDNEY\n\/\/, PILLS\nSIN\u2014,\/'\nV,1 Kl0Nn <-',.\n\u2022 ,'U, 'Hl''r*l-*.\u25a0''\u25a0 V\/\n!''_   \",<-HT b   Ol\\f,' ',  .\n-Senator Rayner was condemning the\nargument m a political opponent.\nThis man, he said, misunderstood\nme. lle ml:'understood me as completely as iii > little boy misunderstood the ear trumpet.\nCine Sunday morning In church, as\nIhe hymn was beginning, he saw a\nmin lake a-i ear trumpet from his\nbosom and clap It to bis ear.\nOh, ma, look, he whispered excitedly ht Ills moth01*. Tlml there gentle-\nman niusl be go In;, lo play by ear! -\ni.os Angeles Timet..\nSUM had a profit\nThe new drug-clerk had just filled\na pre-1 rlpttou for a woman customer\nfor which he charged her $1.10. After\nher departure thle clerk discovered\nthat the dollar was a counterfeit.\nlie went hurriedly to the proprietor\nand Informed him of the fact.\nMow about the ten cents'.' asked\nthe proprietor\u2014Is that good?\nYes, sir. answered the clerk, that\nseems to he all right.\nWell, said the proprietor, don't worry about tt\u2014we still make a nickel.\nBoy, lake these llowers to .Wis*. Bertie. Hi.hoo, room i:'.\nMy. iir. you're tbe fourth gentleman\nwot's sent her flowers to-day.\nWhat's that? What the deuce! Who\nsent lho others?\nOh, they didn't send any names.\nThey nil said. \"She'll know where\nthey came from.\"\nWell, here, Inke my card and lell\nher these are from the same one who\nsent the other three boxes.\nLike Old Times\nSingleton\u2014What's ibe matter, old\nman? Vou look as If you'd been making a night of it wllh Ihn boys.\nNowpop\u2014You've struck il! The\ntwins kept me up till It o'clock lhis\nmorning.\u2014Besl on Transcripi.\nHer   Family\nAn nrllst wbo occupied a studio on\nlhe top floor of a large building was\nalways friendly with the woman who\ncleaned bis rooms.\nHow many children have you. Molly? In1 asked one morning as she was\npolishing the floor.\nIt's slveu I have. sir. thank ye for\naskln*. It's lucky I am. sir, bless\nVm. I have four be the Ihlrd wife\nof me second husband, nud three be\nth\" second  wife of me first-\nAre you going to forgive your\ndaughter for eloping With the son of\nthe great trusl magnate?\n1 don't, know yet. U will depend\na good deal on whether the young\nman's father's attorneys succeed in\ngetting the Indictment quashed or\nnol .\u2014Chicago Record-Hera Id.\nI suppose your object In conducting\nelections is io find nut which Is the\nbest man. Yes, replied tbe plain citizen. But I'm afraid we've drifted out\nof lho course. Tbe debates seem lo\nbe directed exclusively lo discovering\nthe worst man.\u2014Washington Star.\nWorms cause fretfulness and rob\nthe Infant, of Bleep, the great nourishes Mother Craves* Worm Uxter-\nmlna-or will clear the stoni.ieh and\nIntestines and  restore h.-.tltiifiilu.'ss\nExternally or Internally, ii Is Good\n-When applied  externally by brisk ^\t\nrubbing, Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil op- j -\u2014-\u2014;\nens the pores and penetrates the lis-      Husband of Militant Suffragette (to\nsue as few liniments do, touching the j j\"8 seoretary,\u2014Take lhis note around\nseat of the trouble and immediately  t0_my vv\"e\u00bb Pjpn\u00bb\u00a9.\naffording relief.   Administered Intern-     Secretary--Certainly.     sir, At\nally, It will still the Irritation in thowm,fln er~*-an lrt st\"-' Stopping?\u2014Har-\nthroat  which induces coughing and nera Bazaar.\nwill cure affections of the bronchial i ^~\t\nlubes aud  respiratory organs.     Try\nIt und be convinced.\nThe Voice\nDn you believe In ttie voice of Hl*3 | atail_T**lIerc ''ittlld'\nThe Officer Took no Chances\nThe Prisoner\u2014There goes my bat.\nShall 1 run after it?\nPoliceman Casey\u2014Phut? Huu away\n| and never come bad*, again'.'      Vou\nrun after\npeople?\nYep, replied  Parmer   Corntossol;\nwhen some o' these candidates who\nwant lo do all the talking will give\nIt a chanco to be heard.--Washington\nStar.\nhut.\u2014Everybody's,\nyour\nTruthful Story-Teller\nWilliam had been west with his\nmother, and had enjoyed lhe trip In\nthe glass-botlomed boat. lln was\ntelling II to a little friend.\nYes, Edgar, were COUld see the fish\nlaying on the bottom of the ocean.\nLying, dear, put In his mother.\nNn, I'm not, mollier, he replied\nstonily.\u2014JilWge,\ncooks\nlohslcr\nMrs. Post\u2014Have   yoii   any\nwho can make mayonnaise,\nNew burg, and croquettes V\nProprietor or   Intelligence\n(proudly)\u2014Lots of Vm.\nMra. Post (sadly)- Bring me one\nof the olher Mud. i'vo got dyspepsia.   Harper's Bazar.\nOlllce\nClerk\u2014Cau you lot me off to-morrow\nofternoon?    My wire wants mo to go\nshopping.\nEmployer\u2014Cerlalnly not.\nClerk -Thank you very much, sir,\nYou ate very kind.--London Opluluus.\nW. N. U. 903\nA horror is where something dreadful happen1) to a number nf people of\nJ whom the newspapers have portraits\n_ ready. --Buck*\nWhn\npnrlaul\nWell\nVictim's Sarcasm\ndo you consider the runs! Im-\nevoill iu the history of 1'arla'.'\nreplied lhe tourist, who had\ngrown weary of distributing tips, ko\nfar us flnuncliil prosperity Is concerned. I should say Hie discovery of\nAmol'lcn was the making of tills\nlown.- -Wiisliliiglon Herald.\nBaffled\nThe person who n'dvcrllsod for \"a\nmnu who Hpeuks Gomv.li and under-\nBland a horses\" was satisfied with ihe\nwording at bin udvcrHsemenr until\nIhe first, applicant nrrlved. \"Veil,\"\nsuld tho would-be stableman, soberly, scratching his bend, \"I schpenks\nShalrmaii all 'Iglldt, but I don't know\ndot I cnn understand dOSo horses*\nVnat laitgqiilchcH  to tey schpeak?\u2014\nChristian Register,\nNothing   Serious\n1 henr your wife hud to be carried\nhome yesterday.\nVes. she had to be carried.\nNothing serious, I hope. What\ndoes the doctor say?\n\\Ve have called in no doctor, The\ndressmaker says she made the gown\na trifle loo tight.\nPhrase    Illustrated\nRagged Rogers\u2014Hear about Ousty?\nlie picked up a quart er, gol  roarln'\ndrunk an' the judge sent hliu up for\nninety days.\nFrayed Phillip (iee! Dat's What\nyou might call trouble from an unexpected   quarter.    Boston  Transcript\nI wanl you to build ma a fiishloiiablo\nhome.\nHave you any special ideas as to Iho\nstylo of house you want'.' asked the\naivhllecl.\nNot exactly. I want one of thoso\nmodern places. Vou know the kind\nI mean\u2014oue with a living room ton big\nto keep warm, and a kitchen loo small\nto cock In.\nMINAUD'S   LINIMENT  Is  the only\nLiniment asked for at my store and\ntho only ono we keep for sale.\nAll the poople use It.\nHABLIN  PULTON\nP! 'iisntit  Buy, C.B-\nOur New Perfection Broiler\nIs pleasing many women. It enables the housewife to broil\nas well on the New Perfection Stove as over a coal fire.\n*   ,#\nIt  ttt\u20ac& oil tht hiw-t. II   '^n(* \u00b0' C0UT*e -f\u2122 vt l*miliaT with lite\nIt cooks ev^ly.     \u00ab \\\\  NcW Pcr\/fect JOIX\nft broili both sides at once.\nIt doesn't smoke.\n^t-_____m^-\\x    ii\nll imuch i convenieace all the ye_t\nround, ll will btkf, btoil, io*\u00bbt and tout\ni'lrt it well \u2022\u2022 a regular coal range.\nAil lo ice ttie New Pe-fecltM Stove it your\ndealer-. It ji httndtumr!-- finkhrd in \u25a0ktel, with\n\u25a0.\u2022Un--. lop, drop thflvei. lawel racti, er.. ll hai\nlone, en-nelei., tltfqOf\u2014t-JxiM cfuMMn, Ma*-*\nwrth I, 2 or 3 tuirntu Krae Coo-Bool will.\nevery atove, Cook-Bool alto fi'**1 to a\u2022 y\u25a0***\u25a0\u2022*\naeadinf 5 testa to covet merlaf coat.\nTHE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY. Limited\nThe British Government's plum for\ndevelopment of aviation con I cm pint u\nthe establishment of a dentrnl tiytin:\nschool on Qsllshury Plain, ai which\n17!) imiiii:; win in- Instructed annually, of whom fifteen are to bu civ-\nlliu ns.\nThe free lodglUg-ltOUSO III Iloiljo\nWnrd. Toklo, Imih boused 855,000 per-\ns IRS since H-i liiHt il nt Ion eleven years\nUK\". Most of lite lodgers have been\nmen between the a_es of twciily and\nforty.\nLive lues fti\" allowed lo pABfl by*\nletter or parcel post wll hln Hit\nUnited Kingdom, provided Ihey am\npacked In lultablu receptaclcj,\nLidy I didn't know your Iilili- hoy\nwore glasses, Mri.. Miiillh.\nMrs. Smith- Well, yer see, miss,\nthey belonged to Is porn farver ami I\nthought It. was u pity lo waste 'cm, \u2022\nBystander.\nExpOftdllurO upon lho navies of (III\nworld last yeur totalled lib mllllom\nlUnjnji\nSeventy ions Is Ilio weight of Ilu\nnew ludder o( tlic nuw lluur Aoult\naula,\nDo yon expect to BOlld your boy\nto college?\nYos, Afler the bard studying be\nIs compelled to do lu high school I\nthink It Is no mon- Ihan right thai\nlie should have a fow years of play\nbefore bn goes lo work -Chicago\nJtceord-llerald.     '\nDootor\u2014What make*1 you think the\nboy isn't normal?\nMother Kvery thing. lie wns 16\nyears old last June, ami > ol lie doc-Tut\nthink he knows more than lint father.\n-   Philadelphia Itecord.\n'Captain1' said u wealthy passenger\nwho was about to take bis tlrst 1 rip\nacross the ocean, \"i understand UiIh\nship has gol several .valor-tight com-\np.iilmentH?\"\n\"Ven, sir,'1 wns the reply.\n\"Captain,\" the pnssoiignr went on\ndecidedly, \"I want one of those com\nparttnouts I don'l cars whal I' cosisl'\nLondon Telegraph.\nIWantYouto\nHaveMvNew\nThere arc morn Hum six thousand\nknown langungoi and dlnlccts.\nNO MORE CASTOR OIL\nMn, Mnin IIiibhoII, Qrnmim, Min,\nhiij-h : \"I havo tiH.-il HiiI'v'h Own Tub-\nintn in plaod ot ctutor oil nnd now\nli Ih nu moro iiii. I imiiii not do\nwithout lho Tflblol*, tli.-y nro won\ndorftit. (Vhonovor baby l\u00ab fovorlsli\ni p;lvo him iho Tablets nntl tlio rovor\niii'ini iUtmpp-.''>.'H, i iiI'miM koop tlii'in\nIn iho liouio nnd rooomnioinl thom to\nmy trlondi.\" Baby'a Own Tablotn\niio nol ci'ipo. Thoy arc oimy io tnko\nlinil abiolutol** safe, Thoy aro noM\nby iilSfioliU detltraor by mall at tt\nconta n box from ','tio *)\". \"'IHlnmn'\nMvdlolua Co., Ui-ockvUlv. Out.\nGianaryM\n\"I have * moniy-saving invention\u2014\nhandy granaries to allow field threshing over your farm. Move them about\neach year. You cave long hauls at\nharvest time. In\nspring you scatter\nsmall straw stacks\n\u2014no burning of\nstraw.\"\n\"TIi-h grtfitrli. com. In compact\nbundle:'. A boy on let up and bolt\none tnfethir in a few boure. Four\npeillu -h'l protect the eja'tn. Separator\ndelivery into a .pout on the tide or\ninto roof manbote -aaeea work ilui-\nln;; tbte.hina. Your crain ii protected\nfrom vermin, wet and thieve., *J Sell\nit when you are ready, loading direct\nfrom the Rranary into your wagon,\nor luiwiiiK il. No musty or heated\n(rain, *|(..*t my granary and be Independent of elevator, for eelllng.\nSell at the highest price, nn'mnltrr\nhow long you ntore your grain.\nThe Pedlar Granary prulcc's you.\"\n\"Write mr f\u201et n,v i\u201ek,u,.i    n .lm-, lm.. prnAtable my\nt.ittitiirv I, rvrt. nn  M|r  nuartei hrtlofl I.Hit     I -r\nII  [01  1913.   Tli, n\u201e\u201ek |>||, ,,|  ,\u201e\u201e ,|on<y (,\u201e v..i, \u25a0'\nThe PEDLAR PEOPLE Limited\nWrit, tat Bo\u201et.i n, it OSHAWA. ONT.\nWINNireO   OALQAIY   EDMONTON\n7r,l.,,n,l..rrtM.    l.u.nHM      mMIUV,\ntAI-.ATOON .s   MOOSE JAW tFTBHiSOE\nIlr.wtrl.la Mr. *VI\u201e!l\u201erkA atarlatt       Ut llllll It, ti.\nMany\nSizes\nISO\n200\n300\n400\nBOO\nMO\nu]\n1,000\nImpeHel\nn\t\nI'.ill M r-\nOuarRtiteed,\n\"M, IU hii'MIOfaawr,.!*.'..\nIn. ,Iau. AIM wllhaul da...\nIr ,!,.<...1 Ma,w.l,.w..ar...\nI... Rn \u00bbl*\u00bb wanl.u. Int.-\n>ula.l,'t.ha.t.|a,ul f.,rt,.n,|\naillof u atlarh. 41. i;,a\u201eai -.\"\nDirect your inquiry to the Pedlar place nearest you.   They will \u00ab*iawe,* yotl\npromptly ond   aave you time. _\n\u2022Tht   Padlar   Qranary   It   fireproof.   Think what that meant!\" THE  PROSPECTOR,  CRANBROOK,  B. C.\nAuditorium\nMonday,\n-       May 26th       -\n1913\nENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY\n\u2014 One Night Only -\nRomantic Daring Run Riot\nDepiction in Life of the World's\nGreatest Detective\n'TETROSINO\"\nShown for the First Time\nDirect from Sherman Grand\nCalgary\nPRICKS\n10c and 25c\n\u2014m\nBook News\nSI.SO each\n\"V\" vs. Kyes.   By the Author of \"Queed\"\n\"Smoke Bellew.\"   By Jack London.\n$1.25 each\n\"The Mind the Paint Girl.\"    By Louis Tracy\n\"Stella Maris\"    By William Locke.\n\"Murder Limited\"    By Ranger Gull.\n\"Bobbie, General Manager\"\n\"Blue Anchor Inn\"\n75 cts. each\n\"The Dop Doctor\"\n\"The Trail of the Lonesome Pine\"\n\"The Wild Olive\"\n\"The Prodigal Judge\"\n\"His Hour\"\n\"The Garden of Allah\"\n\"The Shuttle\"\nBEATTIE-MURPHY\nCompany, Limited\n\"THE REXALL STORE\"\nLocal News\nPICTURES! piUTURBBI There art\nall kinds of pictures, moving pic\nurea and otherwise?, the others an\nthe ones wc are most interested in\ntc tlu pie.itMtt time- Kllby Framet.\n. IctureB.\nJ. Taylor of Moyie, was in town\nMonday.\nMrs.  J. F. Brett, ol Wasa, was iu\ntown Thursday.\nT. B. Tuill of Lethbrldge, was in\ntown Wednesday.\nA. N. James, of Calgary, was in\nthe Olty Tuesday,\nPolice Magistrate J. Ryan has gone\nto Calpary on business..\nJ. Laurie drove over to Fort\nSteele Monday on business.\nKILBY      FRAMES      PICTURES\nMrs. Jordan, of Invar-more wan a\nCrnnbrook  visitor Thursday.\nMr. ami .Mrs. A. C. Bowness motored to Fort Steele Tuesday,\nC. A. Giant of Montreal, wan a\nKUeBt at the Cranbrook Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. F, Johnson, of Moyie\nwere  Cranbrook   visitors  on   Monday\nMiss Stapleton\u2014DreBsmaber-*-Axm-\nBtrou-R Ave. Phone   444. IMt\nE. Blum en thai, of Scotland, was\nregistered at the Cranbrook Tuesday,\nMr. and Mrs. M, McCarthy, ol\nCreston,    were   Cranbrook    visitors\nMrs. R. ll. Mordoek ol Oalgary\nwas a Cranbraok visitor ,,n Wednes\nJa>\n\"BOB'S    PLACE\"  for  OIQARS\nand TOBACCOS\nJames Bates of Bull River was\n1 transacting business at Cranbroo.*.\ni Thursday\nMrs. QeorpQ James and children of\nj alaryevllle attended the circua at\n|  'ranbrook  Monday,\nThe Western Onion Telegraph Oo.,\nj  .ill observe Sundav hours on Satur-\nj  lav 24th, Empire Fay.\n|     W.  B.   McFarlane leaves today  for\ni Victoria   on business.    He    will   be\ni.wav about  ten days.\nWant a Wedding Ring?\n\"Passors-By\"     it*\u00ab-i\u00bbHHiiHuiiiHH>i\u00ab-iiiMiiiiiiiiuiiii;;\nYou can get the best In weight ard\nworkmanship here for little money\nand any other kind of Rings at a\nconsiderable reduction. We have\na large assortment of very fine\nJewelry aud precious stones and\nwill be glad to have you call nud\ninspect them nt your leisure. There\nwill be no pressure to buy unless\nthe goods tempt yon to rlo so.\nRAWORTH\nBROS\nJewelers & Opticians\nfor Sale Rents & Wants\n\/OR SALB\u2014Two Poorless Brooders,\ngood as new. J, i.artsldo, Cran\nbrook,   I hone Ranch. 15-tf\n\u25a0 li SALE\u2014Two 5 roomed plastered\nCottages, $800,00 each. Terms.\nPnone 318, Ed. Shackleton,\n16 5t\n\u25a0^ i ^. l-l 11 111 i-IMU 11 H. Hi hh. 11111111 M M 11 *.\nGIVE HIM HIS HEAD\nand Uo hiiu \\*a if your horse\nwears a nut of harness of our providing. Don't bo afraid ol tjtraps\nbreaking- etttohtng ripping or\nbuckles parting. Our hat ness\nIsn't built tfiat_way.It is built\nfor service and plenty of it. It\nIs no more like mail order\nharneBS thim polished Steele in\nlike tin. We sell real harness\nnoi pictures of it,\nW. M. PARK & CO.  ij\nPhone 10.9     Cranbrook, B.C.\n^.m.a*..|.[..-..[,.j,.I..H,.|,.|..I,.|..w..w...|\np.o. Box 443 ;:\nM. B. King of Vancouver, was in\nown this week on business connected\n\u25a0 tth the Kin.: Lumber t-o.\nKILBY     FRAMES      P..TURES\nStudies in express ou\u2014The fa'e?\nsen at the Edison a'most anv old\nven.ng v.hen there is a   101 show.\nMr, and .Mrs. E'aul Har.dley and\n.hildren of Marysville, were in town\nMonday,  attending  the hig circus.\nChicago and Boston have just a\nhalf dozen perfect babies. You can\n..nd more than that number in Cranbrook.\nSeeds, seeds, seeds, we still have a\ngood assortment\u2014Cranbrook Trading\n\/O.\nMr. and -Mrs. P. Matheson, and J,\nA. Macdonald motored to Mr. .Matheson's ranch on Wednesday, returning\nin the evening.\nMnlcolm Mclnnes of Crows Neat*\nwaa in town Thursday. Mr. Mclnnes is ono of the pioneer lumbermen\nut East Kootenay.\nLiberal senators in caucus have\n-greed to reject the naval hill. \\.on~\nder lf this information is the cus;.\nof the present activity In local Liberal circles.\n\"BOB'S   PLACE\" for CIOARB\nand TOBACCOS\nCHEER UP!\nG RASS ami (iKEEN\nA P P L E S will grow again.\nHot weather ;ind Flies will\nlie here any day now.\nLei    vis    .ittend    to    voui\nScreen  Door\nand\nWindow Screens\nWa its\nPHONE  78\nClosed To-day\nMr. ami Mra, I*'. Kuitrmor lelt. on\nTuesday fnr a til I to tho const, On\ntheir way, th\u00bbv will look several aid\nfriends In Trail anil KobbIiiiuI. pro-\ncecding trom there to Vnnroiivcr. Mr.\nKummer In onn of two representative! which Crtioont  Lodge No.   _,\nOf   llll'   l.l'.ll'l-   of   KnlglllH   ol   I'ythl'IB,\nwill hav-. representing them al tholr\nOrand Loilgo to bt held In Vtucouviir\nil-i_l   lata\nF. Parks & Co.\nHardware and House\nFurnishings\nCRANBROOK,      -      B. C.\nMrn. H. B, Christian and Mill B.\nMills, mother and aunt, resn.ctlvelv\nLf Tom and Frank Christian, anl\nMra. J. rioberts. of thin city, ar\nrlvod from QrJmiby. Kn\u00bbtaid, 01\nWidneidp   \u2022! iit's local,   Thev both\nroport Imvln? made a radtnl Jour\nii-v und are dnllirhted with the nnw\nQXperiflhOfl throm'li whlcb Ihey have\nputt intHHi-d. They are both KoIuk\nto make Oranbrook their future\nhome. Tbe reunion wm a happy\nOM\nA large number of people fi'o.-n\nPurt Steele, Marysville. Kimberley,\nMoyle, and other towns in ths dlntrlct, were at Cranbrook Monday at-~\ntending the hie circus.\nMr. and Mrs. A. O. Bowness left\non Wednesday morning for Oalgary,\non a visit to their son, who is\nat college in thnt city, and who is to\nhave his  examinations this  wee.-,.\nOn Empire Day Nelson will have\na hard time to carry off baseball honors in a game with Kaslo. Spokane\nwill send four crack players and\nCranbrook two to help the Kaslo\nhoys win,\nKILBY     FRAMES     PICTURES\nBORN\u2014At the Cottage Hospital on\nSaturday, May 17th, to Mr. and\nMrs. J. K. Livingston, a son.\nBORN\u2014At the Cottage Hospital on\nFriday, May 6th, to Mr. and Mrs.\nR. S. Garrett. -\u25a0 daughter.\nMftVor IJownesH entertained n huge\nnumber of children at the auditorium\n>n Mctiday, The moving pictures\nwere excellent, and the * kiddles,\"\nBome four hundred th ruurll; appreciated   the  efforts    of  the   Mayor  in\nheir behalf.\nArrangenunts air being made for\nthe openin\u00bb of the flolden-Spillinn-\nBbane section of the Kootenay Central railway ou June 1st. After\nwhich a mixed train wilt run over\nthis 7ft miles of the new line three\ntimet each  week.\nB tNTfilO\u2014 Spring Hear Hides hy the\nCranbroolt Taxidermist. 1'. O,\nBox   513, Oranbrook, ID-tit\nIR S vi,]-: Two Peerloes Brcoler.\nalso 2-22S egg Peerless Incubator\ngood as new, J. Gartatde, CrRn\nbrook, Phone Ranch, 15-t\n'OK SALE Oottago uu Dewar Avr\nCash or terms. Apply W. M<\nCready.  Box   897, City.        20-3\nPOR RENT\u2014Rooms in moder\nhouse. Phone 37*1, corner Et*\nward Street nnd Lumsc'en Ave.\nTHE PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE\nthrough the\nFarmer's Institute\nTs offering substantial assistance to any ranchers desir'ng to\npurchasa pure-bred male animals\nfor improvement of their stock in\nBulls, Hams, or Boars.\nFull Information cun he obtained by applying to\nS. MacDONALD\nSecretary! Farmers'\nInstitute,\nTo-Morrow May Never\nCome\nYOU MAY fully ntend to insure to\nmorrow! How do you know tharo\nwill he a tomorrow\u2014for you? Insure\ntoday, Don't wait beenvss of your pre\nsent Inability to carry a large\namount; a smnll policy if. better than\n.ona. Besides, while you are wait\nng, the cost is Increasing! Take o,ut\n:i policy for BOME amount in Tlr\nVflltual Life of New Yor\": now, v-hll-\nvou can get it. The more convenient\ncn-urn, for which so mnn\/ wait, may\nnever come to you,\nHAZLEWOOD & MORRISON\nLocul Agents,\nHanson Bullrtfn-r. Cranbrook, B. ('.\nP.O. Box,   574. Telephone, 458\nA o&bby. \u00bb tmtnp. a mother aad\nher loving child, a wealthy bachelor,\na man servant, the pampered daughter of an historic English family and\nthe careful chaperone of a well regulated English household are some\nof the characters nresentcd in C.\nHadden Chamber's four act comedy\nthe attraction at the Auditorium on\nMay Slat. No play of recent years\nhas attracted more cennent fiom critics and public than th s 1 test wort\nfrom the pen of the in n who gave\nus a decade a o \"Tha Tyranny of\nToars.\" \"Passers-By\" wrs t'rat sth\nIn London at the Wyndham tleatr\\\nwhere it r. n for over a year and a\nhalf and wa* tho reig-ifii' success iu\nNew York nil last season at t*e Cri-\n\u25a0orlon t'hoiitre, where it was present\n3d hv Oharlea Frohman.\nj, O. Dennis, of Edmonton, waa tn\ntown Thuraday.\nMoyie,   waB   in\n\"Petrosino\"\nFor one night only will he prosev\n\u25a0unted the most dramatic and thrill-\nn\u00bb motion pictures over s' own h re\nihen Sid Bluementhal bring, to the\nVuditorium next Mondav e tn'ng,\nMay 28tb, in the soonefl miitouii Ing |\nbe murder of I Iflllt, Joieph Petro-\nlino, the New Vo-k det-e'i\/c nt Pal'\n\u2022irino, It\/ilv, when be was set ir on\nover a year ago by members of the\nBlaok Hand BOOlCty who Imd f llow-\n\u2022<l  hirn  from  America.\nMr. Hr inn. nth;il, who olTerfl the\nvlf-WH. h'ivh Mi't it was niress ry to\nobtain th\" cons-rot of Mrro I otro'lno,\nwife of the Into det\/c'lve, h< f rn tho\nviews Oil)Id he o' tal \u25a0\u2022 d. No 1 .ss\nthan 112.000 was OpfUt In tbln direction ftlcmt, it Is a Id.\nAmong the BCOD'B ihn-n are the\nmarch of the great New Vor Police\nForce nt the fun-irnl v hi h fol owed\nthe b'lnMDt bnck to Am-rica of P\"-\ntroilno's body. POpllxr \u00bbrlces wll\nprevail at thi Auditorium theatre\n-tarlAf tbi run of thnt plotum,      ,\nATTENTION!\nBlitkh Columbia Timber Holders\nA wealthy eastern corpora-\ntlon is in iim marl'el for never.\nnl well located bodies of timber\nin south -eastern B, C. MUST\nBE NEAR railway transport*.-\nlinn, good lutfglng chance and\nfire risk\nSmiil full Information of your\noft'oring giving quantities, do-\nla ledestlmaies, stumpage prices\nuud maps in Box i'tii) 21 4t\nLESS BOWEL TROUBLE\nIH CMMROOK\nCniiilini.ik ptfoplo lmvo fmitul out\nthat A SINOliB lii'HI'l ol Hlmpln\nliuehtliorn hurk, i:lyciirilin, etc., nil\ncoiiipouiidoil In AdlW-I'lM, thc G\u00abr-\nnmn Imwi'l mnl Htuiiiiicli rcniody. rc-\nIIhv.'h cuiiHtlpiitlnii, Hour Btnmnch or\ni-n\" on the Htunmili 1NHTANTI.Y.\nThin nlmplc mixture Imcnmo fnuioii*\nby curing npponillcltla and It nntl-\nBcptlclzcn the dlgottlvo orgnnn nnd\nilmwH oil tlm ImpurltloB. It Ih nur-\nprlllng bow tjlJIi.'KLY lt hilpi. THU\nm\u00bbtti*-Mun*hy 0\u00bb IMt\nM>,   ,1.   llounur   ol\ntown ThurHilny.\nIt. A. Smith ol MiiryH.'illc wnn In\ntown Wuilncnilny,\nJ. T. Chipholm, o( Vnncouver, w:'n\nIn the Olty Thursday,\nJ. HoIikoii, of Kernie, wna In the\nI'ltv Pii'lnv on liiisl*nt!Hn.\nW, Wentworth, ol Jnllray, wan In\ntho citv ETrlday on biiBinegs.\nMrs, ,1. H. King returneil (rom n\nSpo nne visit on Hundnv taut.\nK1I.11Y     FRAMBS      PICTURBS\nO. B, OrelRhton, ol Mo'ie, wnn In\nthe Citv Thursday on business.\nBlinore and Chester staples motored in (rom Wyclifle ou business.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred. Wnson are visiting  friends nt  MacLeod  this week.\nMr. and Mrs. Ohas, Gill, of Seat^e\nwore ('ranbrook visitors on Tuesday.\nR. P. Stowed, of HoBton, Mass.,\nwub a guest at the Craubrook Mondav.\nStenographer wnnted. Apply Box\n905.\nB. llilev, proprietor of the Yah',\nHotel, spent Sunday last in Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. J. JarvlB, of Bow\nIsland, Alta., were Cranbrook visitors Monday.\nMrs. H. K. Mather and daughter,\nof Fort Steele, were Cranbrook visitors on Wednesday.\n\"BOB'S   PLACE\" for OMARS\nand TOBACCOS\nAt the Bdlson theatre tr night aprc.\nlal features will be shown a. 1 able\nto holiday observers.\nA large party of active workers of\nthe Liberal narty motored to Fort\nSteele Thuraday evening.\nT. T. McVittie and A. B. Fenwick\nof Fort Steele, were transacting bus\niness at Cranbroo't Thursday.\nSpuds, the very beat, 11.00 cwt.,\n95c cash\u2014Cranbroo'-. Trading Co.\nWm, Oreen went to Klmbrrley on\nMonday, he has accented a position\nwith the Sullivan mining company.\nThe railway comm<s~ion ba \"ing\ncompleted Its work in Vancouver,\nwill hotd Its next sitting at Victor\nia. \t\nN. Burdette of Marvsvi'le book-\ndeeper for the Sullivan Mining Com\nrany, was in the city Friday on com\npany business.\nKILBY     FRAMBS     PICTURES\nFred, Coffey, manager for P..Burns\n& Co. was at Feme this week, attending a el-tlng of the superior\ncourt, as Juryman\nThere ls a great demand for a go id\nball team, a lacrosse team, anl fo't\nball teams, the summer even'n 8\nwould be much enjoyed by everybody\nIn the City.      \t\nOn Sunday afternoon the new In\ndustrial School at the rt. Eugene\nMission wl I be dedlc t d by the\nMost Reverend Archbishop T. Casey,\nD.D., of Vancouver.\nMrs. A. Naslund, of Wvellle, was\nin town Monday, Mrs. Naslinl lost\na sunburst set with pearls, the Under wi'l be rewarded hy leaving the\nsame at the Prospector office.\nI-nBt vrnr the Canadian PaclPc railway company served about 10,\u00abOD,\n000 meals on its Ir ins ad steamships, and its hotels. The a er ge\nwas more thnn   30,000 meals a day.\nKILBY     FRAMBS     PIOTDRBS\nA number of Llbernls motored to\nKlmberley on Tuesday. Among these\nfaithful were J. Kennidv, Oeo. Utv:-\nenrth, Dr. Miles, C, H. Ward, T. H.\nRoberts, B. Paterson, W, Nesblt and\nT. fl. Olll.\nThe Ladl*s Auxiliary ot the Young\nMrn. Club 11*1.1 a business meeting\non Thursday the 15th for the pun...so\nnl electing officers for the vear. The\nfollowim- o.llccrs were elected: President, Mrs. J, McNabb; Vice President, Mrs. O, Hogarth; Secretary-\nTreasurer, Miss L. Cartwright.\nHAS Three Rings Full Of Acts.\nThe Princejf Tonight\nA vast amount of mon-y was spent\nin producing \"Thc Prince of Tonight,\" ci>niln< to tbe Audi'o-i m\nTuesdnv, Mny 27th, there are three\nacts and four scenes in t**is g-or-\n..eoiis cxtravngnnin. Tha nrst ae n-\nls that of tho farro'S hotel \"The\nllreii'-ers,\" nt I'i'lm Beach, Florida,\nnresen'lng the i-l-as'int surroundings\n\u2022f thnt famous r-aort where e ry\none h*iB moniv. Tho B\"i* \u2022>>\u25a0\u25a0 acneof\nthe snme net is the tra*.afnrm'i(lon\nplctiirlnr th\u00bb> mvthleal Ivd of T.uni-\ni\"iilii, sbowln\" bowlldrrlng ejects.\nThi s'Tind act takes tlic auditor\nbuck to Palm Beach showing -n 'li-\nhornte house l*o*t durln*. an \u2022..\u00bb>\u00ab,n\"\ni.l  tlio Wntor Fete,  ''hlh t**e th'rt\nPB''   1'lBt   \"Ct   Is   <he   t>\"B   \"'t   O\"     O'\nlawn. It la In this act that 'h*> e'-\npr*rl'\u2014l nKeets \u00b0ro *h*i m*at *.'lUla*lt\nof anythlnv over att-.nvt'fl on \" ro\\d\ntour. Tlm rntlre nrodurt,''n Fll ho\nproduced in thia citv e'a'tlv ns presented during Ita loag stay la Ohlca-\n\u00bb**\u25a0\ni! Auditorium:!\n;; SATURDAY,\nMAY 31st\n1913 ;:\nGeo. W. McGregor Company\nPRESENT i\nBy Special Arrangement with Charles Frohman J\n1 The LONDON and NEW YORK  humorously human >\ncomedy drama success '\n\"Passers-by\"   !\nBy C. HADDON CHAMBERS I\nwith ;\nSelected English Company from London )\nFirst Canadian Tour\n16 Months at Wyndham Theatre, London\n6 Months at Criterion Theatre, New York\nPRICES-      SOc.   $1.00,   $1.50 j\nSeats on Sale at Beattie-Murphy's Drug Store i\ni\n* \u2022H-HHHI'I'HIIIHIM-. --H-t*** .H* 111IIII M 111**\nJ   ARE YOU   J\nPROTECTED '\nINTERNATIONAL\nCasualty\nCompany\nSpokane - - Washington\nAssets over $700,000.00\nInsures Against\nAccidents, Sickness\nand Death\nReliable, Prompt, Safe\nHazlewood & Morrison\nGeneral Agents      -       Cranbrook,  B. C.\nP. O. Box 574 Hanson Building Phone 458\nMrs. H. White will not receive\nagain this season.\nFresh Fruits and Vegetables\u2014Tho\nCranbrook Trading Co.\nA large number oi Indiana were lu\ntown Thursday enroute to Ht, Kugene Mission,\nAt the Edison Ih-atre tonight .pec-\n\u2022al fat*rea vill be so.n suitable\nto holiday occasions.\nThe Yan'iee Robinson circus will\nshow ln Cranbroo't on June 9th and\nthere wlll be afternoon and evening\nnerformances.\nA large number of Born-rs Ferry\ncltizena will viait Creaton on Vic or-\nia Day. A return visit wl'l be made\nby Creatonltea to the Ferry .Iry on\nJuly   Fourth.\nThe annual bill In a'd of the Diamond Jubilee Hospital waa hell list\nni\u00bbht at Fort Steele. There was a\nlarge attendance, a consld ra .le\nnumber of CranbrooWtes b 1-g re*\nsent, the music excellent, and a ren-\neral good timo was en.'oyed by all.\nW.   W.   KILBY\nPRACTICAL    PICTURB    FRAMKR\nARMSTRONO AVKNUB\nP.O. Boi mi OBnhrn-.it   a r*\nSalvation Army Hall\nHanson avenue\nCaptain IT. J. Carruthers\nLieutaaant W. Cooper\nSunday Servlcee\u2014\nI 11 a.m.\u2014Holiness Servloe\n3 p.m.-Blble Class\n3 p.m.\u2014Sunday School\n| 8 p.m.-Salvation -.enlca\nTueaday, Thursday, and Saturday,\nservices at 8 p.m.\n*,<\nUP-TO-DATE\nin evory dotal 1\nare our muthnds\nof hirtrultiiro and\nMODERN\nPHOTO-\nORAPKY\nWo take partln-\nulur pains in jki--\ning tlmsi; who sit\nfor un and chooie\ntho most artiatio\nlighting.\nThnn overy pro-\nco-b of develop-\nmiuitandlinishlng\nreoaives p:iin--\n(aklng uttuutlon.\nIligll rlll-M llii'lll-\nihIb only am oh-\nBiirvod in our\nstudio.\nMake an ap>\npninttnimt with iih\nanil haVI' \u00bbIIIIIu\nI'll.. tOg I'll |l h B\nniiiile here.\nThe Star Photo Studio\nP. O. Box 527\nBaker St    Cranbrook, B.C.\nBranch at Blairfflora, Alta.\nCatholic Church\nSunday*-Low hum at 1:10 a.m.,\nUgh masa, lo:U a.m., Sunday school\nfrom I to 3 p.m., Roaary and Bene-\nttctlon at 7:10 p.m.\nMondays and holy daya of obligation\u2014Maaa at 8 a.m.\nWeak days-Maes at \u2022 a.m. at tba\nhospital.\nP.Plamoadoa, O.M.I.\nMethodist Church\nPaator\u2014\nRay. W. Blaoa Dunham\nMorning worship, 11:00 o'clock.\nBvening Worahlp 7:30 o'clock.\nPresbyterian Church\nPaator-\nRar. W. Kalman Thomson\nMorning Ser lea   nt   11\/0   A. M.\nHu*.',(*>\u2014The \"\"ae*   \"'\u2022'\u2022*\nSunday Sehool and Bible Class at\n3 p.m.\u2014Young people Invited.\n\"lib -c'\u2014f'o d in en l'n .\nflelprtloi   *-v Q\"ar\nMid-week Hervlce Wednesday I p.m.\nBible Study.\nBaptist Church\nPaetor \u2014\nRev. f>.  HI   \"PV    ij\nMorning service at 11 a-m.\nSubject\u2014\"Laughter 'a the Wilderness\"\nSunday Sc'inol\u20143.00 p.m.\nBVenlni' e rlres at 7.30 p.tn\nSub)rctr~\"The W^t of ,*oiner.\"\nThe e enng err Ice will a a Mr-\nvice of aong. All ara corllally Invited.\nih.. ua   1 a     r\u2022    ' ,\nobner   il at lhe o   nig of   h\nng.    An   iavitatloa ie extended to\nall.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. 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Grace","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1913-05-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Prospector","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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