{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"c8e0b143-0f66-4cb9-b848-10fb2929a64a","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. 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":"2015-11-27","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":"1907-09-05","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\/cranherald\/items\/1.0068939\/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":" .fni .:i ua\nDon't Forget the Firemen's Carnival with Attractions by the Nat Reis Shows, in CranbrooR Thursday, Friday and Saturday, September 12th. 13th and 14th\n\u2014\u2014_  _---_   _   v   _- v -ww- TI *\u25a0\u2014_ \u25a0 -v     a    t      ir-v\nHERALD\n  -__ =^\u00a3M\n'\\IUV.M    .\"..    Hit,7 Iv?\nVOLUMK  10\n^g^STl_  THIS I^AVERCOSTS Vor   NOT11INO,  AS IT ALWAYS HKINOS VOl   StlMlil\n1IIX\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nUUU OH HK. TI1HUTO\nB. t. WALKBR, PiMlJ'iit\nALfcX  LAIRD, O.n.i.l Hamf.\"\nA. H. IRK..AND, Sup.llu.,ad,ul III\nUrwitbu.\nKSTalU.IS.IH> !\u00bb\u2022\"\ng.up Capital, $.0,000,000\nTotal Assets, - 113.000,000\nbranches thro-ghoul CaMila, und In tlie United States and England\nA GENERAL HANKING I.IS1NISS TRANSACTED\nCOMMI illllAl   Atili I AHMt tl.T PAI'LII -ISC-UNIl Oi\nSAVINGS HANK DEPARTMENT\nD.pos.u ot $1 iinvl upwards received, and interest allowed at\neuri.nl rates. The depositor is sublet., to no delay whalavcr la\nllie withdrawal ol the whole ur anv portion of the deposit.\nCranbrook Branch,     -      P. C. MALPAS, Manager\nn\nAPPALLING DISASTER\nMANY KILLED AND INJURED\"\n$11,000,00 in ease ol Death.\nis 15.00 per week lor all kinds of Accidents.\nFor the small sum ol\nTwenty-five  Cents\nThe protection is so cheap that none can aflord to\nbe without It.\nI\nARNOLD & ROBERTS\nReal Estate CRANBROOK, B. C.\nInsurance\nJust received, a shipment ot *\nDR. WILLIAMS' FLY AND INSECT DESTROYER\nIt in a Liquid Compound llint wilt ilea tray linei-i*- mid Klles.\nIse i: mi your Cattle -ui.1 llogjt.\nUsu it ahoul your Poultry HoueeB.\nIt in gnnrnnteed to protect Horses ami ('utile Irom llieti a inl\nvermin; to kill Lire on Cuttle an.l Iln-*.-; lo ox terminate Poultry\nHouse Vermin; tn ormlicate lleil Hugo, Coekroiichea and like houae-\nlinl.l peati when UBed according in diiections.\nPut up ill 75c. and $1.50 patented screw top tins\nLABOR DAY A GREAT SUCCESS\nHEAVY RAINS IN THE MORNING\nDISCOURAGING BUT A BRIGHT\nAFTERNOON HADE ALL\nHAPPY\n11 looked badly tor Labor Day when\nI he si.it\"- heciuiio   cloudou*  ami ahoul\nleli o'olock  the  l.iin  llOflnn   In     eoiue\niluwn ui tnticiiis     li w.is just alter\nthe   Mains  hum   the easi,   west      ittiil\n Hi had   iniiii* in    and tho streota\nweie lined   wilh   profile.      Ralll,      nn,\nII was  nnt   a    mill,  it   was :i      IIimiiI.\nAnd how tlio hundred* lourrM    foi\nsli.'hi-i.       Into   hotels,   into stores,\nInto new   imildiiins    under construe*\nlinn, anywhere lo escape Irom     tlio\nfury   ni   ihe   elements.       Ami   Uio\nwomen    nml   children.      ll was lor\n(hum thai  Hie la-arts   ol Hie people\nwarmed     In   sympathy.     The men\ncould lake care nf theinsehes   hut  it\nwas  dl KerenI   with  Hie    women    and\nchildren.     Hut  in ap Iml! hour    lhe\nclouds liegflti ti) hmik away, nml   the\niiiulliliiile het-an tu grow moro ho|ie-\ntul lor the day.     And Ihey were not\ndisappointed, Inr SOOli Old Sol hrok'C\n,from lhe enviromneiil ot the lowering;\n, I'lmuls and kopt Ins promise with the\npeople In <ln ull Dial    he could     In\nmalic the   dav a   success.     Glorious\nNol.     Ry his kindly   act lie wrested i\nI victory from lite jaws nf defeat, and\nwhat promised lo   he it day     danV,\ndark and dismal, was turiiid lain nne\nnf     plea Kim*    sunshine    and   tropical\nwarmth.    Hearts that hail heen saddened and weary became Wythe   ami\nKaysninc, and the fathers and mothers, the sisters and brothers, the lovers and the   sweethearts,   who    had\ncome Trom Waldo, on the lower Koo-\ntenav, to the SkookumchucV on    tlm\nnorth, from the land ot the. pear and\nj the strawberry at    Creston to    the\nmountain   peaks of    lhe Wild Horse,\njfrom tlie coke and coal town ot Fernie, the great mining town of Movie,\nfrom ihe St.    Marys valley, the hilltops of Perry Creek, In fact from all\nover this   ureal   district     came hundreds ami hundreds of people to join\nI with the Labor   Day committee    to\njhavc a Rood time, to enjoy the meat\nannual day of rest, and to do all   In\ntheir power to make the day    a suc-\nleess,     And   bow- Ihey    did succeed.\nEverybody had n good time.    Everybody felt happy,      Everybody    was\nreedy and willing '*> torsive the lord\nof  the elements     for  tlie  unpleasant\ndiversion In Ihe morning when     the\nrain     came   down sn    bard.     Thev\ncheered   at     the  ball Ranie In    ito\nrisnji and A. Pollock, North star\nnull, Cranbrooli, first; J, McDonald,\nJ. Dohson and B. Hartsgrave, North\nStar mill, Crnnbrook, second.\nChopping conical\u2014A. Laraon, Yahk,\nfirst;   L'b.i*,.      Weatherbeo,   Creston,\niond.\n\u2022\u201e. Mnklm*;\u20140.     A. Johnson, .l,.[-\nj, tnst. .1      A. Johnson, .InHray,\nSawing\u2014 \\.  Larson and O,  I ai on,\nYahk, tlml;     M     Luiidqulst and (i.\nI 11.1 i.i \u2022].   Creston, second.\nDrilling\u2014Ed.     Tayloi    and    Geo.\nHunt, Moylo, Aral; Thos. Ma        and\n\"   I i--.nl.\" Movie, second,\nDaaelmll\u2014Cranl \u00bbk loam *\nHone it:i*l i.u'fs-\\|ni.i-\\ .Im i i   lie\nAr.ii Forirle aud Cranbrook\nTIIK BALL GAME\n\\ i.nts.\niti.IiiHlr\nnt*    npel\numl an*\nadded tt\nTHK\nMUlHIISTS\nDi-tpenHinj- in our specially\nJC.E.REIDC&CO.\n\u2022 I'll..sk 71 Olapenaln. la uur spe,.....,\n********************************************\n********************************************\nIHOW ABOVT A WATCH!\ni- x\nOur lines comprise all\nthe best watches manufactured, Call in\nand let's give you our\nprices.\nJeweler And\n(.riuHmte   OpIU-.nn\n|  W. H. WILSON.\n*******************************************\nPHONE St.\nI rrrrrv&roRb i!\nWe handle only Till: BI.S1\nPANCY AMI 31 AIM. 13 QROCI Uli.\nmorning. Tbey wenl travy nver the\nball came in the evening. They yelled Iheir   beads on    over the horso\n      They  urged on  tho men     In\nthe drilling    contests   hy their    enthusiasm.     They became partisan lit [   j;,\nlhc logging contests.    They bad their is   Wallers\nfavorites in lhc lumping ami the tool I-,-,-'. Millet\nlaces. And when il came to tbcj(\\ Whali-n\nhose reel race, and owing lo the\nmuddv streets mi.one was dissatisfied\nwhen the mailer was scttlc.1 hy cutting Hie money int.. ami tossing tor\nthe trophy    Which      Kernie won.      It\nwas \u00ab Rood naturert crowd, a    good\nnature.] day, and closed with a con.)\nim hired boxing contest  that violated\nno statues of tin* province of British\nColumbia against    prize fighting.    It\nwas a meat ilay and Uie Labor   Day\n.ommlttee an- lo he congratulated on\nHi.* manner it turned oul with all the\nhandicaps llial  prevailed.     The parade w.is not what the committee had\nwanted or expected,    hut ihe threatening weather proved a detriment.   It\nshowed, however,    that the laboring\nforces were organized iu the district,\nami they were aide to make a    most\nexcellent    show ing.       The hand     of\nhope, under the     guidance nf     Rev,\nHughes,   of   the    Methodist   church,\ncomposed of many    tittle girls    and\nii.'vs, was iui Innovation, and received\nmuch praise.    Lack nf space prevents\nthe Herald from giving mote of    the\ndetails, but below will ac seen    the\nilimit  ol    Secretary  While on     the\nwinners in the various contests:\n.1 ..'in was provide\nfm  a baseball gni\n0 ail Smith l-:.isi Kootenay,\nither hundred dollars was\nthis by tlie supporters of the (pime in !\nibrook, There were but lbreoen-1\nirics roi lhc match, namely: l-'erjile,\nWyelitTc ami Crnnbrook, ami this necessitated one of lhc teams playing\ntwo games, and it was decided that\nthe first game should start immcdl-\nnloly after Ihe parade ami Hit* third\nteam should play the winner ul this\ngame late in the Afternoon, thus giving time for the winners to rest up,\nThe mimes of lhe tlitre teams were\nplaced in a bal hy A. McCowan nnd a\ntoiniivltlee consisting of Messrs. Doyle\n.f Fernie, Yates of WyelilTc, and J.\nReed of Cranbiook, proceeded to draw\nfor Hie bye, with the result that\nCraubrook secured it, and Ferula and\nWyelilTc were called on lo play the\nrst game.\nIi was about one o'clock when Umpire Hates started the game mid Wv-\n\u2022lllfe went to bat hut failed to score.\nFernie succeeded in doing bet ier in\ntheir half, three men crossing tlio\nplate before the side was retired.\nWvcliRe again tailed lo score ift tin\n1 second, not withstanding the tact Uiat\nthe majority of the crowd were rooting for tbem, while Kernie chalked\nUp two more to their credit, and although they fulled to connect in the\nthird they secured two runs in both\nthe 1th and 5th and one in the Bth,\nmaking a total ol (en (luting tbo\ngame. In the third WyclilTo secured\ntheir first run but failed to connect\nagain until th- 8th, when they   .sent\nmen across the plate and repeated the act iu the Dili, but were\nunable to overcome Kernle's lead and\nihe game ended with the score 10-5 in\nFerule's favor, but bad the WyclilTo\npitcher been given the support he\nwas entitled to the story would have\nlieen diKeren!.\nTHE SCORE\nA.R. II. IL\n.... :.    i    1\nDiivev  \t\nHancock \t\n\\.  MoKellar \t\nF. Ooppl tiger ....\nK. Murphy .. .\nWorthinglon\nBattery\u2014Hancock\nWyclilTo\n11. Mait-in   \t\nli Lydlck   \t\n\\l. Wendell\t\no. Ilia tides \t\nRiimlc\nSlaple,\nBrando\nMines\nD. Yates\n.'.'. r,\n1\n'J\n... -I\nII\nI\nII\n_\n\u2014\n\u2014\n13\nII\nIU\nli.ilei\nA.B.\n11.\nu.\n. r,\nII\nII\n.   i\nll\n1)\n... .\n2\n1\n... 4\nn\nII\n.. i\nn\nII\n.... 4\nn\nI\n.... 1\n... 4\n0\n1\nII\nTHE CITY COUNCIL\nLOTS     OF     TALK     BUT    VERY\nLITTLE     BUSINESS    TI.ANS-\n\\CTI3D-THE    MAYOR HAD\nIlls CH H\nTla< city c.iini-il met in regulai\nsalon last evening wilh Mayoi Fin\nlay uud Altleiiueii .McCowan, llickeu\nhoUmiin, Ryan, Gill ami Fink pi. sun\nCitj Clerk Ho he i la and CH) Suliei\nt Thompson occupied I he-it regulai\nplaces.\nThe minutes or iln- previous meet\niug were uad and ndoptcd,\nA rouitiniiiic.it mu from Government\n.(\u25a0--hi Armstrong was rend, notifying Hn- council Hint the lockup i|ua\u00bb\ni.is would in* leased to the city at\na nominal rcnl   ami thai  Hn- charge\nInl   lulling i-.ue of government   ptlsOII\ni-rs should he (Illy cents a day.  Thu\nletier was received nnd filed.\n,   Moved tn   Alderman llk-t-i.iihi.iham\nid seconded bv    Alderman Hill ihat\nsum he iloiiatwl for     ihe eiiterlaln-\ni of the editors ou tho lath    of\nihis mouth,      Aldermen    McCowan,\nlliekenbolhum, Fink and Gin all expressed themselves lu favor ol    the\nproposition and the motion prevailed\nhy a unanimous     vote.        Aldermen\nFink and McCowan were Appointed js\nmouthers of the   reception committee\ni represent  the oltv council.\nMoved hv Alderman   Gill, seconded\nhv Alderman McCowan that Hie clerk\nhe liistruelcd to i.si; the aid of     the\ngovernment  ngenl  In stopping people\nfrom dumping garbagu nu any   place\njxeepi  the     public    nuisance ground\u25a0\nCarried.\nMoved by Alderman (till, seconded\nby Alderman McCowan, that the services of Street Cotiinvlssioncr Lamh\nhe dispensed with after Seplcmlici, 5,\nCarried.\nMoved by Alderman McCowan,\nseconded hy Alderman Hlckeubollmm,\nthai $213 lie advanced to Ihe Kink\nMercantile eompnny ou , account of\nmoney paid out for uniforms for the\nlire department, which will he later\nrefunded to the city.    Carried.\nThe monthly accounts, amounting\nIn $_,277.\"2, as npproved by the\nlllinnco committee, were passed hy\nthe council.\nMoved by Alderman McCowan.\ncomlcd by Alderman IllckeiilioMinm,\nUml Alderman Fink, who Is also\nhief uf the lire department, he sent\nis a delegate to the convention of\nBritish Columbia (ire chiefs to in*\nheld at Nelson this month and that\nhis expenses be paid. The mayor\nthought that Mil was enough lot ex-\niienses or such a trip, ami as Mr.\nKin': neither protested or voted, lhc\nnotion as suggested by the mayor\nirevailed,\nAfter receiving satisfactory explanation Hie amount ol $<> paid liy Alderman Hickcubiitbam for pound fees\nwas refunded on tlie motion of Alderman Fink, seconded by Aider man Gill.\nMdciman Hickcnhotluim nol voting.\nThe council then adjourned at 13\nand Ihe mayor went to his home at\nHie Sullivan mine happy.\n 4\t\nNOTICE\nMembers nf Hie Labor Day committee kindly take notice that lhe\nfinancial report will be presented at\nihe final meeting of Hie committee in\nIn* held    on Saliirdav evening, Si*pi\nth, at K.:tu in Mighton's hall.\nH.  White, Sec.-Tieas\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nImperial Bank ol Canada \\\nCAPITAL AUTHORIZED\nCAPITAL PAID UP\nREST\t\n$.0,000,000\n$4,830,000\n$4 530,000\nSavings Bank Department\nInterest allowed on Deposits from date ol deposit,\nand CREDITED QUARTERLY.\n| Cranbrook Branch: J. F. M. PINKHAM, Mgr\nArc ymi i\nOur Customers?\nIf uul it will pay ynu to U* one. We have the largest a.\u00abl\nIn'at stork nf l>ni*.*s. Stationery, etc., m Lhe Kootenay s.\nBuy where you\nCan Buy Cheapest\numl i_vt what you usk fur.\nWI-. NEVBK SUBSTITUTI;\n-l__f_t\u00a3\n4ficattie?\/ltchimz\nWHERE IT PAYS TO DEAL\nPernio\nHyi-lin\nMm,\nII   I\nPRIZE WINNERS\nwilli largost ropresonltilton-\ni in.   w  !\u2022'. uf M , Moylo\n\u25a0 \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0-\nrii.-iiif mil,mil\nII UIIKItllll'X .'..II. l.i\nonly the Choicest I..nes *\n, i :ii mii.i ii \u00bbb I'm\n-,,f fi\nii   CAMPBELL & MANNING\n****\nB1R.TH STONES\nThe SAPPHIRE is the September Birth Stone, and signifies Wisdom. Sapphires\nand Diamonds make a very\npretty combination for a ring\nor brooch.\nmn.\ninl Wnlrli ln\u00bbi,....|.ir furU. I' II\nll-.nvs S.'at l'l, * l.lvlaloll\nW\u00ab F.TATE\n\"THK JEWELER\"\nI \u2014 I\n********************************************  \\\n*        BEDS Springs        ^ '*\nMattresses     Comforters     Pillows\nRugs      Mats      Linoleums\nDresser and Stands Tables\nSOLD ON CREDIT\n. a..,ii   wilh hesi    general appeal'-\nani'i^-tltili'llialiotial      Assm-ialloii     ot\nM.i.hinists, c. p, i; , Crnnbrook,\nLargest hotly or emploftta from one\nIntlUKlrj and tiiiii, i-ai ij iug hannei \u2014\n11 rot her hood nl Carmen of America,\nr   I*   It , Cranbrook,\nliesl   hanin-i      Hi    patadc\u2014Hand     of\nHone Jiivenllo < nlon, Cranhrook,\n11.Jl mil.' jimiv i.tn*\u201411.'. hands and\numler\u2014Shi,   Rmnll'a pinto, llrat;   W.\nIlftidirel i k gre], BecomL\nIL.li  mile     Imlian   pony  raiv-Kd-\nwnnl   Mrvauilei      i Indian) Snowhiill,\nInsl, Si'Miionr    (Indian) While Face,\nsecond.\nHall mill-     Imlse luce, open\u2014Goaty\n&   Movlr's Ue.iu Swift,  llrsi,   Luke'ti\n(in-P-aii) Oharllo, Kooml,\nUio vaids foot race-II. 0. M. Wilson, Fertile, (list; II   Oallell, Feruie,\nsecond.\nHalf mile open foot race\u2014Win. Hains   (iiui a    t'o-) Cranhrook, first;\nl'iancis (Indian) ('rnuhiW', BOCOWl.\nUuiiiniit'. broad jump\u2014IL M. Wendell,\nWyclilTo, first; II, 0. M. Wilson, Kernie, second.\nItiinniDg high jump\u2014Hubert Campbell, Movie, first; C. I). Uraliicrd,\nKimberley, second.\nHigh pole vault*\u2014Uobt, Campbell,\nMoyie, Iii.si; (len. Mnimhaii, Cranbrook, second.\nI I'llltill)* the stint\u2014<len. Manahaii,\nCrnnbrook, first; Peter McLennan,\nCranlirook, second.\nUnion men's race, under .'lit years\u2014\nviCO, Manahaii, Cranbiook, lir*_r, It.\nM. Ueid, Creston, second.\nI'nion men's race, over 35 years\u2014\nW. .!. Flowers, Cranbroola, lirst; F.\nMcKenna, Cranbrook, second.\nBoys ruee, under lfi years\u2014Lionel\nLeask, Crnnbrook, lirst; Frank\nILelghtbauser, Marysville, second.\nI Boys race, under tit years\u2014Edgar\nHatidley, first; .Jordan Kuwler,\nsecond.\nt   Clrls race,     under  It! years-Bella\nCranbrook,    first; Sadie (Iil*\ni Cranbrook Co-Operative Stores, Ltd. ii\nTaylor, -\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u00ab,\nlis, Cranlirook, second,\n.   (lirls under in years\u2014Carrie Mooro\nCranbrooki, firsl; Vndu Boyter, Cran\nbrook, si-eond.\nKumiiiig hop, step and jump\u2014IL M,\nWendell, Wyclitl'e, first;     Geo. Mana-\nImn, Crnnbrook, second,\nI   Loading logs\u2014F. McKwen, 10. Har-\n38     7     5\n123 15U78U     U\n 'A--2-0-2 _.-l-u-u-\\\u2014 lu\nj\u2014,    U-U-l-u-u-u o-_-^    5\nbattery\u2014Wemlell and Martin,\nI mpirc\u2014 Jas. Bales.\nMtoough thu gatnc kelweeu Fct'iifo\nand Ciiiiioroui'  Had    been antiouucod\nloi  5 o clock    it was neater ii when\nihey got stalled, hut    it was     well\noiib   waiting lor   and the immense\nu-rowd Uml witnessed it were ol  the\nunanimous opinion that u was    the\nbest exliilriuou  uf baseball ever wit-\nnl    in  the    Knultuiys.      Feniie\nwab Brst to bul, bin retired iu uu_,\nwo,  three owlet and the I'luiitiiuoK\nouters lore up tho ground in    iheir\n\u25a0jluo, hut it Was shurl-lhid as Kciuie\nproceeded tu baud out a bunch ul the\nsame inetlieiiie,    ami  then Uie Keiniu\n|crowd   proceeded   lo   make    things !\u2666\nihutti.     Hut things   were just begin-\niig lu warm up and tlio llcut hall ui\nthu second resulted In another goose\ne-;g going  on   ihe hoard lor Kciuic,\nwliile iu     thu   lust half   Cianhruuk\nBiicceoded   iu    getting a    man past\nCau-lu-i  Whelan before being   retired\nand  lhc CratibiiHikitcs fchowed    Ibeir\nappieciuliou      in     a       most    up-\ninui'ioiis    manner.      In    the    thud\ntbo      story       was      reversed, Ker-\nti iu scoring        one, while\nI Oranbrook secured Uio cypher and the\n|g,um- wus tied und the supporters ot\nimih teams begun to realise the set-\nioiisut'ss ol the   strife ami lhe    way\ntbey   rooted    lur  their    respective\ntowns the next few Innings would du\ncredit tn u bunch nf Chicago \"fans.\"\nThe  (iniiili inning   tailed   to change\nlhe result,   both sides being retired\nwithout a    tun, but   in the tilth pan-\ndcinonium   was    turned   louso when\nCranbrook    secured     two inns after\nshutting their opponents out.    But lo\nland behold, no sunner were llm Cran-\n|hrnokitcs hopes raised to the sky than\nIhcy were dashed to the ground again\nas in Hie lirst half of lite sixth Fer-\niiiie tallied twice and then retired tbo\n[Cranbiook team so quickly that tbey\n;hardly reali\/.w! how it happened. Tbe\nseventh result wl In a goose egg    for\nboth and   in   the first halt of     the\neighth Kernie again secured two, thus\nplacing them In the lead for the lirst\ntime, hut Cranhrook    was out    lor\nblood nnd succeeded in (icing        the\niscuie in their halt.    The ninth opened with every member of Imth teams\njplaving ball tor till tbey were worth\nami the   rooters    making   a  racket\nthat was heard in Fort Sleele. Darkness was rapidlv coining ou    ami all\nirealized that if \"tbe tie was not lunla-\neu that inning lhc game would be   a\ndraw as, they wouhl he unable to see\nto play another inning.     Keinie did\nIheir best hut, were imnble Co score,\nCranhrook   came    In bal and before\nthey    realized   what   was Inippcnlng\n(Continued on pngo eight.(\n**\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\n\"notice to water and elec I\nTRIC LIGHT CONSUMERS    x\nCustomer, will please bear\nin mind that all accounU f\nare due on or before the 10th, Z\n. no discount belnn; allowed f\n2 alter that date. Ollice will Z\n\u2666 be open from 7 to 9 on even-\ni Iiik ot 10th.\nPlease brlnit hill..\ntk.NHKOOk ELECTKIC liiilll X\ntu. L.4.\nPabst! Pabst! Pabst!   *\nBEER\nJus. received a CAR ol PABST BOTTLED BEEK\nThe BEER of QUALITY.\n<_A L. McDERMOT\nWholesale Wines, Liquors and Cigars\n5 CKANBROOK. B. C.       -       \u2022       PHONE 17\nWATER SUPPLY CO. lid.\n********************** \\\nART\nIpictures\nAMD\nPICTURE\nFRAMItlGj\nBINNING\nTHE PHOTOGRAPHER\nSUCCESSOR   TO\nPREST PHOTO CO,\nWE      ,\nSPECIALIZE\nBRMICHtb'\nmoTO&Wl\n$550 22 BUYS\nDWELLING AND LOT\nOn Baker Hill\n__ 5EE\nBEALE & ELWELL\nCRANBROOK\nB. C.\nNOTICI'.\nNOTICI: TO ADVERTISERS\nMISS GREEN\nI (Iriitunti. Toronto CoiiBiTviitory of\nAny  person    having  mi    accourrl _hon_e. of 1     MbbIo.   Teaoher's Diploma)\nln-ilnsl    Uie  Ubor   Day commlttw     Hernfter copy tor thanues \u2122l     \u2022' - ......\n1 *   I Mini ......iml. I\" l'l.\"'\"    suin.-iadverti-emenl. must be in th* LESSONS IN^^PIA.NO AND rHEOm\nTelephone .oj\n|\u00bb niv lianils nol luli'r Hum Sattirilaj I Herald ofllcc by Tuesday noonolj\t\nn.T*ia o'clock,   iwnii, 7ili Si.|i.i-inlii-i.        . k   or A_s, w|||  not be;   Tlie mini who tackles uml |>i-rl.iiiis\n\"\u00b0 '\"Il \"wiiui, X'yf'.'rc,S.    [b. dreed without exception.     U'SS -P & \u00ab*\nreally in. TIIK CHANBHOOK HERALD\n1 SOCIETY AND J\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS !\naama^amaammaaamaamawaam*\nMurphy & Fisher,\nParliamentary,     Departmental    and\nPatent Ollice Afieiits.\nPractice Belore Kailway Commission\nCharles Murphy. Harold Kisher\nt'-lisriiNT LiiniiE No. Xi\nKNIOHTS   of   PYTHIAS\nCranbrook, B. C.\nMeets every Tuesday at 8 p. D>. at\nNew Fraternity Hall.\n... It. Henderson, K. nl It. * S.\nA. 0. Bowness, 0. C.\nVliltlni  brethren   cordially Invito'\nto attend.\n1.0.0 F. Key City ...it\nNo. II. Meets every\nMonday uiKkt at\nNew Fraternity Hall. Sojourning Oddfellow, curdlally tnvl.ei.\nUnas, Smith, !\u2022'. II. McKay,\nN. O. Sec'y.\niranhniul, Indie. Nn. .1*\n\\. I- 4 A. M.\nIt.-..il.i meet.n.\u00bb ul\nlh. lliliil Thiii.il.,\n\u201e! every  iiiuoth.\nVisiting nre.L.en welcomed.\nKdwnril Klwell, WM\nW. ft Attrldgu, Sec'y.\nCranbrook Aerie 967\nFOE\nMeet every   Friday     evening at r\np.m.\nChas. Smith, W.P.\nM. I.. Billings, Secretary.\nVisiiing brethren cordially invited\nLOYAL OUAN.il.; LODGE, NO. 11.71\nCHANBHOOK\nMeet at B. ul I.. P. Hall 2nd  and\nllli Saturday each month.\nVisiting brethren always welcome\nT. Boyter, Jas. ti. Larrigan,\nW. M. Sec'y.\nW. P. OUKl),\nBarrister, Solicitor, Etc\nCHANBHOOK.BHITISII   COLUMHI.\na************************'\n|      C. H. DUNBAR       \\\n*   Barrister, Solicitor, Notary   J\nJ Public, Etc. |\nS   Cranbrook,    \u2022    \u2022    IJ. C.   *\nt************************\u00bb\nDRS. KINU & QREEN,\nPhysicians and Surgeons.\nOffice at Residence,  Armstrong Av.\nOFFICE HOURS :\nH'urriiiiiiiis \u25a0 - - \u25a0 II llll to 10.011\nAfli riiouns - - - -2.(1(1 to   I .(III\nEvenings - - - - 7.30 to  _.:.u\nSundays, - - - - 2.30 to   4.30\nOUANHHOOK :: ;.-    B. C\nOK. F. E. KINO\nDENTIST\nOFFICE   HOURS:\nI) to 12 a.m.\n1 to   11 p.m.\n7 to   \u00ab p.m.\nOt.ice and residence iiii Armstrong ave\nCHANBHOOK        -        -       -     U.C\nOK. F. B. MILES\nDENTIST\nOFFICE   HOURS:\n0 to 12 a.m.\n1 lo   li p.m.\n7 to   B p.m.\nOfliee iu new Hi-iil llliick\nCRANBROOK        -      -       - 11. C.\n**********************\n: cuMMiNas & cn.nwiNus::\n; CIVIL  KNIIINHK..S AM.   IKIVIINION\nAUU B. C. LIND S-RVIiVORS\n:?rt0ii\u201e?H\u201e8 Cranbrook, B.C. 11\nH,   Y,   PARKtR\nCivil  Engineer\nRailway and Mining\nEngineering a Spcolally\nI'll.,iir   171\nP. o. Box li\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nFIRE    PROOF    SAFES * [\nNew nu.) Seenn.l haii.l. I'ami\niliun or Ameriean makes iilwuyii 11\nOil llllllli.\nIteferencea In Crnnbrook: Kink\nMercantile Co., V. Hydo linker,\nW. II. Wilton and 'ReiiPa Pry\n(iou-l* Store,   Address:\nP.  H.   JOHNSON\nP.O. Hox I.K):t       Calgary, Alta.\nDON'T READ THIS\nThe French Dry Cleaning process\nenahli'H us to clean mens pants, suits\nand neckties, ladles suits and skirts\nin such a way that Ihcy positively\nlook us good us new.\nWe are eiperienceil dyers uud cleaners, Uieretore, we do not require to\nsend anything down east, pr up west.\nEAST KOOTENAY\nDYE HOUSE\n______   LEASK,  Tailor\n********************** |\nTNE DEATH OF A\nPIONEER OF EAST\nKOOTENAY ******\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\n(Written lor lhe HcrnM hy R. U T.\n(ialluuith.)\nThere pa\nhospital o\nK. (\\ Dor\nnavs, who\n18(11.\nMr. Pore w\ntlme and his il\nsad, as his wife wh.\nI    away at st. Eugene\nSaturday morning last\n,i pioneer nf the K<\nme in ihe country\nfor\nonly ill fnr\nth   was particularly\nhad not seen him\nP.i\nliim ill,     anil\nlo       remove\nhospital  at   (\nHorso ctwk.\ncame from San Fran-\nm a visit, and found\nsoon it was necessary\nliim lo the\nraid.rook, from Wild\nwhere he had lived for\nmany years anil where he hatl a mill-\nei.il claim, whieh he had been developing for some time.\nIn his last brief illness he was at-\n1i-iiiI.nI by a lovlllfl and devoted wile\nami had iln* skillful nursing nl tlm\nSisters nf Charity, who did everything possible to alleviate his sufferings. Ho was buried on Sunday\nlast in lhe public cemetery at Crnnbrook and his renin ins were followed\nby a largo concourse ol friends,\nshowing the respect and esteem iu\nwhich lhe tlcceascil was held in the\ncommunity.\nA brief sketch of the life nf the late\nI\nnneer may not hu uninteresting\nRobert C. Dole, heller known\n\"Rob,\" bv all nld timers, was born\nin the west ot Ireland nf Irish-English parents, who were iu comfortable circumstances ami who gave him\nn fairly good education. lie came\nto America at an early age and was\nfor a time iu lhe [Santera Slates.\nI,Ike many others, lie was attracted\nlo California hy the discovery ol\nRo-ld, and reached there iu lhe 5(''s.\nlie miiietl successfully In manv of tin\niiorlheni camps iu California, going\nfrom there wilh the \"rush\" in search\nfm gold to Idaho and Montana. He\ni the Kootenay district ii\nIn lhe year 1S\u00ab3 some half-\nfrom llie F la Ulead country,\npaid'a visit to the district\nunwell tan period. Owing to a so-\ni* attack of malaria, contracted in\nMontana many years ago, his health\nis not us robust as I its many friends\nwould wish, still, the spirit which\nnever knew fear yet burns in his dark\n[grey eyes. Kvety old-timer vouches\n\u2022for It that Bob nine was a man who\nlb-new no fear. Fnr all that, he was\nlun fighting man; ou the contrary\nhe personally maintained order, and\nwhen oeeasioii required it, strictly\nenforced right and justice. As might\nbe expected of such a man, he permit led ti.. invasion of his own rights.\nThe slnry is (old, ami tint, denied\n[t*. by Mr. Dure, lhat on one occasion\nsome of his claims were jumped,\n(without any show nl authority, hy a\nshort 'Ki,tl~ \u00b0l men Irom Molilalia. II.* went\nup lo where the parly was worktini\nand, standing on ibe bauto, ordered\nthem oil his ground. He i.il.l them In\nwanted no shooting, bul if anv man\nin ihe eompanv thought he had ;L hetter right lo the claims Iban he\n(Dole) had. then let bim come up before him al ten paces and sottlo the\nmiestinn by a lb-lit in a finish with\nsix-shoolers. There was not a man\nin the crowd win. daled lo join issue\nwilh him. They lefl lhe claims there\nand then, and quilted lhe camp soon\nafter. When showing the nickel\npronerty to the writer, be bad oc-\ncas'on to get ;, heavy ladilvr up from\na shaft which hatl about a dozen foot\nof waler iu Ihe bottom of it. To a\nyounger man it would have been dit-\nliciili, bul to a man nf his age and\nstale nf health, it was nothing short\nnf a feat of dariiit; hardihood. It was\nbravely typical of lhe man.\nThe following facts wow picked up\nby the wilier during a walk over the\nnickel  properly and along the site of\nII Id lown of Wild Horse.\n\"lleforo 1 started from Walla Walla\nfnt Kinlay creek in the early spring\nnf 'ni, I had mined all over the\nNurlhwestern States,   iucluding Oall-\ni-aine  ti\nI Hfi I.\nbreeds\nMoulaiii\nand on their way lo the Coinmhk\nla'-es stopped at Finlny creek and\nafter prospecting for some tltnn, Ihey\ndiscovered good gold indications just\nabove the canyon, where, In a crude\nway, they washed out some five or\nsix hundred dollars worth, which they\ntook hack with them in Montana and\ndisposed of it at Missoula. The discovery was not long kept secret and\ntht;following spring a number or old\nMolilalia and California miners started for Kooteiiuy from the Flathead\nlley, amongst Ihe party led hy\nJack Fislrer, was It. C. Dote. When\nihey reached what is now known as\nWild Morse they camped a short distance from where Fort Steele now i.s\nand prospected from the mouth of the\ni-aiiyon and al Saw Mill (lat up lhe\nLTeek and on lo Ihe liars aud in tlie\ncreek good indications of gold were\nfound, so a number of ihem decided\nlake up looattoiis and work the\nground. Amongst them was Dote,\nwho was from that dale until 187.1\nIdentified with its progress und do-\nipinent. .lack Fisher located\nground on lhe east side of the creek,\nwhieh proved fabulously rich. Dnrc\nI others took up ground on the\nwesi side and after woihiig the bed\ntho creek successfully he altei-\nds joined with a number ot others\na Ird brought in a water ditch lo cov-\nIhu gravel benches, which, upon being prospected, proved a paying in-\nimeiit. Tbe richness of Wild\nHorse creek spread rapidly and about\nfour thousand miners came into    lhe\n try lo try their luck.\nIt. Q. Uoic mined on the creek until 1K72, wilh varied success, aud\nthru left fm the Cassicr country with\niiu* Price Bros., now ot Parsons'\nBridge, Victoria, where he opeiu-d a\nwayside bouse, whieh proved very\nremunerative. We afterwards set Hod\nSan Fraticlsco and took an active\npari in politics, and was appointed\nill|icriniciidcnt of the house of eor-\nii-l ion, which ollice be filled during\niis term with great credit. He\nifli-rward drifted to Arizona, where\nlie engaged iu the cattle business, but\nowing to sickness in his family and\nthe loss of au only son he decided to\nreturn to Sau Francisco, where he\nngiigcd in politics again and held the\nfllce of street superintendent and deputy sheriff. He afterwards went to\nMontana, where lie held a position iu\nlhe Butte smeller under Marcus Daly.\nfrom there going again to San Fran-\n>. but his old love ,,nd faith in\nlhe Kootinays lured bim again to\nWild Horse creek, where be has lived\nfni  Ihe last ]'. or IU years.\nIE. ('. Bore was a man widely\nknown for his mnny generous auts,\nKboral and large hearted, when he\nhad it, he was always ready lo\ne his hist dollar with a friend,\nspouse the. cause of anyone who\nhad a grievance that he thought\nhould be redressed. He leaves a\nwillow and daughter to mourn his\nloss.\nWhen the hisloiv of Kootcuay Is\nwritten lhe name iif Boh Bore should\nnol Ik- overlooked, a man who tried\nlo do his part in opening up ami\ndeveloping its mineral resources, and\nHOW that he is golm let us cover the\nfew faults he may have had wilh lhe\nbroad mantle of charity uad let our\nplayer be \"peace to his ashes.\"\n\"I the old pioneers ol IHt.l only   a\nfew remain.      They    were a     noble\nband of energetic    and fearless men,\ndid a great and good work    in\nforn\nIdaho, Nevada ami Oregon.    I\nhatl spent the winter of '63 in Walla\nWalla, and as soon as the weather\npermitted, my companions aml I, five\nof us, sot out for the new diggings.\nFrom Hie time we passed the place\nwhere Spokane now is, we never saw\nthe face of a white man. Trails\nthere were none. Men who were\nI rained to, as we were, could nolice where once a horse li.nl gone before. The Fiulays hud been over , the\nground, but we had toldaze our own\nHail wherever the forest was thick,\nover windfalls, through swamps, ami\nover and around all kinds of obstructions. We carried only the barest\nnecessities for our purposes, ami depended for meat on our rifles. The\nmischief of it is that you always find\nthat it s when you most want meat\nthat deer grow scarce, as if by magic.\n1 suppose il is the same with most\nthings we particularly want.\n\"No. We did not go near Finlny\ncreek at all. We rather liked the appearance of lhe crack iu the mountains which holds Wild Horse creek,\nand determined io give it a trial. Investigation proved it was all right,\nfurther prospecting showed il was all\nright\u2014bright witu gold. The world\nof today holds nothing like it. Never\nwill, either. It is uot iu il. See Unit\nspot there by the old Chinaman's\nlittle garden? That is where 1 first\nput up my stakes. 1 took out uf it\nSI, $r\u00bb, -.Hi ami $20 lo the pan of\ndirt, ami a pan will not hold over a\ndo\/en      -.omuls    weight \u00bb( gravel.      1\nwenl buck down the creek aud told\nmy partners what I had found. My\npartners, lhose who came with me\nIrom Walla Walla, were Len Harris,\nlack Carroll, known as \"Curly\nJack,\" Pat O'OomwU ami Billy\nWi teller, You will note lliut a couple\nof litem were, like yourself, Irish, We\ndecided lo slake a number of discovery claims the ne\\t day. When 1\nwenl up iu the morning a crowd of\nMontana men were digging away for\n11 Ihey were worth. I made Ihem\ngo away.\n\"Say nothing about Uiat,\" said\nAll. Dole. \"1 want no talk about\nIt was nothing. Sure, ihcy\nwould not light. That's all there's\nto it.\" Al any rate, we gut live discovery claims and bought live mure\nlifter wards. Those claims funned Uie\nground uf the Dure compuuy, as it\nwas railed. Where we are standing\nnow, though, us you can see, It is al\nprest ul only a dirty huddle ol Chinese shucks, crowded une against another, as ii Ihey hud not the whole\nbig, Wide gulch lo build un, was onee\na Hue town, with big stores, hotels,\nsaloons, aud dear knows how many\nhurdy-gurdy dance buuses. Ay, aud a\nteeming pupulutiou.ul men, uli men\nmind yuu, desperately in earnest in\ntrying lo get the gold out ol llie dirt.\nThe town was musUy built over our\nground. We had legal authority lo\norder lhc bouses to he moved on a\nthree day's notice. II they were not\nmoved we could pull tbem down us\nwe came to work the ground on which\nthey stood. Out ot this place, which\nwas the principal street\u2014if I can so\ndescribe it\u2014we took at least $500,-\nnuo. You see that corner? A saloon\nstood there once. It was there that\nYeast Powder Bill shot Walker iu a\ndrunken quarrel. Bill got out of the\ncamp iu a hurry. 1 followed bim. I\ngot the ilinii on luui and marched\nhim back. He was Hied by u jury\nof Hie boys, who acquitted him of\nmurder. I ordered him out of the\ncamp inside half un hour. He went.\nIt was heller lur him. I heard he\nshot two men in Bingham gulch,\nUtah, afterwards, Some say be became the head of Hie vigilantes of\nMontana- If so, I urn sorry for the\nvigilantes.\n\"Once we had u very nice young\nfellow here named Lawson. He was\nour policeman. He wus game as tbey\nmake them.     He was murdered near\nbringing to the notice nl the outside 'bis place   by a    scoundrel    named\nworld the vast resources of our wonderful Kootenay district. The hardships which these men endured very\nfew of the pronrnt residents can real-\nANOTHER SKETCH\nwent Ihis way, some went that; I\nheaded for Tobacco Plains, thinking\nthat the most likely way tie would\nmake for the States. I was not in\nluck, if i got my eyes on him, the\nruffian\u2014well, the boys who went to\nBonner's Ferry fell in with Mr.\nBrown and naturally shot him up to\nhis just reward.\n\"1 was the first man to put in a\nhydraulic plant on Wild Horse creek.\nRy tho same token, it was on the\nsite ol the nickel property, which we\nha\\*e just seen, that the first nozzle\never stirred dirt iu British Columbia.\nTlie pipe I used was similar to fire\nengine hose, but it was six inches\nin diameter. It was reinforced on the\noutside wilh heavy rope netting, so\nthat, it could resist a pressure ot\n-\"in -mumls lo the square inch.I never\nworked at such a pressure, hut wanted to make sure of my gear. T had\nit specially made tor me at San\nFrancisco, nml I need not say it was\nlenililv expensive between the cost ol\na serial style of plant to turn It\nmil ami Hie freight rates of those\ntimes. All the same, il paid tor itself ten times over,\n\"Bv 1X70 the Kulch had seen Its\nbest .days. By that dale it bud\nceased to be a poor man's camp, as\nthe shallow gravel had all been worked out. The general appearance of\nthings has not altered much since\nthen.\n\"In '70 1 wenl to Sau Franc\nwhere I enjoyed lite, even as I did for\nmanv a year after. 1 had money\nto throw to ihe birds. I did throw\naway a deal of il, mostly, I am\nproud to say, in helping'my fellow\ncountrymen, and the land tiuit gave\nme birth in her struggle against unjust laws. We can live but onee.\nThank Ood I have known Uio luxury\nof doing a fellow man a service of\nsome value, when friends were\nscarce, and dollars still scarcer. So\nmuch for the past\u2014Mis gone buck to\nHim who sent it.\n\"Speaking of what amount of gold\ncame out of Wild Horse creel., I put\nit al $15,000,000.\n\"I had the means of knowing, because I had water rights to soil, and\nso had inside Information o! what\nwas really got out. There was a\ngovernment duly Imposed, but It was\nevaded iu a thousand different ways.\nThe official figures are no where near\ntrue, nor lo they approximate the\ntruth by;many millions of dollars. I\nknow that men paid duty on probably\na lenth of what they got out of the\ndirt. Many never paid a cent. It\nwas pretty hard for the government\nlo keep check ou the output when the\nvery owners had more than they could\ndo to prevent wholesale robbery from\nIheir chums.\n\"As for the future, all I can say is\nthat 1 agree entirely with Rave flrif-\nlith in saying that 'there Is as much\ngold In the gulch as ever came out\n>f it. Y'ou see around mountains of\nuntouched gravel. There Is the Nfp-\naml-Tucki property on the other side\nf the creek. They have ground\nenough to keep the creek busy for the\nnext forty years. They also have\nthe control of all the water rights\nfrom Fisher creek to Brewery creek.\nAmongst the owners are Bave Griffith and Mr. Oalbraith, of Fort\nSteele. I have a fair share of untouched ground, too, hut nothing like\nwhat I had in early days. The Lily\nMay is a splendid property. Tlie\nipiattst In it runs as liij-li as -.limit, lo\nthe ton in free gold.\n\"I don't know, what is the cause\nif the dry rot, the death In life,\nwhich has Infested this wonderful\niimtiy of ours. It must he that\nIhe men of the present day haven't\nIbe grip and determination of thosu\nuieii I knew in Ihe early davs. What\ndo lliey do? If they haven't the\nmuscle to get at the gold, then I'm\nthinking they haven't the brains eith-\nit, to persuade people with more\npluck ami more money that the gold\nIS still here for the digging, delving\nnil hydra ul Icing. l tell you, tbe\nmen id the old times would get the\ngold out or else get the money In to\nwin il Irom the ground.\nCome down to tbe shack with\nme and bave some lunch. Another\nlime you must stay with me for a\nfew days, and I'll lie delighted to\ntench you something of Uie old channels of the Wild Horse which have\nnever l>een even touched.\"\nMountain air Is a fine appetiser, so\n1 wax only too glad In go down with\nUie old gentleman, and thoroughly\nenjoyed his hospitality. Some good\nday I hope to go hack and learn the\nsccrots of n gulch which turned nut\n$15,1100,000 in the good red gold in n\nyear or two of its infancy.\nDOCTORS in turn FAILED BUT ZAM-BUK CURED.*\nMagistrate F. R>sm_\u00bb.n, writing from hia residence, an Marouette S. Montrul __>\u2022\u2022\n\"I take genuine pleasure in informing you of the (Treat _oo_ 1 h.m derlmd'from \u00a3\u2022_._\u2022_\nFor man. year. I wa. troub ed with a seriom eruption of the .kin. which was _o_.__a.4___.\n*__j_*_*__ft_\u00bb___\u00ab_r^^\npernmiii'titn'llpf. Soiini mini buck I untie.I n, romr. froui\nf iklWlortlo illicit bv 7. mi link. .\"\u201et Itk't.'rmiiii'i. tttj-lvi'lJii.li.1\n' o-uw-,} Uuiii.li!*M**.l witb II.   Willi., cvorytlilu-* t*No 1 li-k-.l\nd\u00ab-t\u00abi'%pi-.*-.Tii'ii\"\"~i*:ill.'.l.ib-..l l.vl.ii'.'li..vtni.)|_iiti,ilir,.(.i,^\nIn my upii.loi. tl.i- Imlnit-liiHilil Ihu-ivm iiuh'o wl.luly kiin-v-i lli.ni\nIwul utliur HMll.-t'vri* lo try Ihl-i l-n-rlwil ).r iiVr. 1 liuvu noultj.rthi. |\n-lllVCI, \u00ab'I|il||',..\nrfZilitl-Hi,*;*,\nl\u00bb, AM) III till))\nyou pIlbllDllillJ.\n,...,, ,   .     \"UK. ItAHMlf\n, I'liililr.-ii. liuit Biin'aor ti\u00bbli'_>r .-|,il hi* *\u25a0\u2022*,\u25a0_, rat _ In\n.it in-.Mii-lli-..-..   All aton\u00ab wiil nivdk'ini) vendi-m wil\no <vliotmdhr.ilcuredo~i\na tliuHiui-hly fi.ir tent. _\n\"''\u25a0ni, \u2022AUrilicH, Nonpa \u00bbnd\n\u25a0\u25a0 'M'.i;.'i| M'i.mj.l.>t\u00ab*i_urt.\n>. n Uml my timrtonc* wUI\ni.ii.. I,.iter,   Vnurstruly.\nS'--V JiiKtlrii nf tho Peace.\n\u2022'.*. linn.,.-,, iMS,,;t ti|tn m\u201ed\nnl  f''\"'*l*<.v.nr[ir--,tt(w*r_m\nboie* dr lino,   ,(-, \u2022*. \/^\nfllMAGIST&Af\nBrown. Tbis Brown, it appears, was\nlying in Victoria jail under senleneo\nfor sidling whiskey to Uie Indians. In\nthe jail, at the same time, were certain white men and Indians awaiting execution for murder. The authorities could find.no one tti act as hangman. Brown undertook the job in\nconsideration of a remission of his\nFollowing Is a sketch of Robort' sentence. He did the work. Soon\nBore that appeared iu the Cranhrook after he officiated in a*similar scenc\nHeruld's Christmas annual three oil the Fruser river. People shunned\nvears ago: him, he    wns   rigorously boycotted. i\n' Mr. Robert I*. Bore Is, without.That country got too hot to hold)\nloubt, one of the most interesting him, so he started for WU-d Horse,\n[\u25a0haraeters to lie met with today In thinking he would not lie known here. \u25a0\nWestern America. He wns bom nt To help him on his journey he helped\nBirdhill, near Eenugh, Ireland, on the himself to two horses belonging to a\n'iiw\\ February, 18R5, and came to the Scotsman who lived near Colyille.\nStates when i|Ulte a young fellow. The Scotsman follow-il htm on here. \u2022\nLong as he hns lived in the west Lawson was ordered hy the gold\nhe still retains certain inflections of commissioner to go out and arrest\nspeech, which, to one whose ear is him. I told Lawson, who was my\ntinned to the rhythm of Ihe Irish friend, total* some men with him.\nnngue, stamp him as n true son of \"I'll fetch him in,\" said Lawson.\nthe Island ol Besliuv. .fudged hv his That was the last I saw ot him\nir name, he prnbnMy is a descend- alive. Soon after bis departure an\nnt ol some of lhe old French fami- Indian came in saying that Brown\nlies, many of whom settled iu and had shot bim. We at once brought in\naround Limerick aud Norlb Tipper- all the horses and blocked every trail\nary after the disastrous wars ol the  of   the country.     Some ot tlie boys\nWOMEN CLIMB CHOWS NEST\n(The Frank Pnper)\nTbo first women ever to attempt\nthe hazardous climb of the Crows\nNest mountain, lhc queen ot the\nHnckies, which was never climbed\nuntil three years ago, wero members\nif a party of seven young people who\nmade a successful ascent of the\nmountain one day last week. They\nwere the Misses L. Marshall, a\nyoung lady who is visiting at Reliance, ami wlio has jtilte a reputation as a mountain climber, and\nHelen Hatch, of Lethbridge. Tin\nparty was led by P. B. and D. BI.\nMcTuvish, the well known brothers of\nSernntnn Correspondence school\nfame, who nre members of the Canadian Alpine club and who are noted ns\niwo of the most intrepid mountain\nlimbers in the west. The other\nmembers of tho party were O. Hyde\nand the Rev. Alex. Gordon, of\nLethbridge, nnd Gilbert. Marshall,\nbrother of Miss Marshall, of Reliance. Miss Luclle Eckstorm, of\nLethbridge, and the Rev. T. BI. Blur-\nray, of Coleman, started with the\nparty and reached the mountain\nproper, above timber line, but the\nwork Ihere was found to he too severe for Miss Eckstorm nnd she was\nobliged lo drop out, Mr. Murray remaining behind with her.\nThe party left Coleman Momlay\nand proceeded to the McLaren lumber\ncamps at the foot ot the mountain\nwhere the members camped for the\nnight. An early start up the mountain wns made Tuesday morning and\nso strenuous was the work that the\ntop was not reached until after 2\no'clock in the afternoon. The work\nwas most arduous and a rope was\nworn for safety but to the credit of\ntho pluck and general climbing abilities of Uw ladles It 'is to be recorded\nthat the rope was not used even to\nassist Ihem. After depositing the\nnames of the party in a culm erected\nhy the Swiss climbers wiui made the\nfirst ascent tihree years ago, nnd partaking of lunch, the return trip was\nbegun, tt was after dark when tihe\nparly arrived back at the logging\ncamp for tbe night.\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Craubrook, B. C,\nintend to apply lor a Special Timber\nLicense over tlie lollowing descriheil\nlauds;\nCommencing at a post planteil\nabuut one mile north-west of thu\nmouth of Little       Lamb\nCreek ou the uorth line\nuf Lot 5-Hl\"!, running north Bill\ntbenee cast 4U chains, thence south\nIUU cliains, Uience west 41) cbains to\npoint ol commencement, and containing 1140 acres, more or less.\nTbe King  Lumber Mills, Limited,\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated August fi, PJU7. 21-lit\nCKANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OP KOOTENAY\nTake notice that Frank William\nGreen, ot Cranbrook. B. C, occupation, Physician, intends to apply for\na special timber license over the following described lands:\nNo. 1. Commencing at a post\nplanted about 1* miles soulh of St.\nMarys Kiver, 40 chains south ol\n\"S.\" Lot 33 and bounded on the\nwest by cast line 4592. thence south\n80 chains, thence cast 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains, thenco west\n80 chains to point of commencement,\nand containing 610 acres, more ot\nless.\nFrank William Green.\nDated July 15th, 1907. '21-Ct\nCKANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF     SOUTH DIVISION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nTake notice that I, Lester Clapp,\nof Cranbrook, B. C, occupation,\nHotel Keeper, intends to apply for a\nsiieeial timber license over the fuliowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe south-west corner of Block 0500,\nthence south 80 chains, tlience east\n80 chains, thence norlb 80 chains,\ntlience west 80 cliains to point of\ncommencement, and containing flit)\nacres, more or less.\nLester Clapp, Locator,\nNicholas Powers,  Agent.\nDated August 20,  1907. 23-flt\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT   OF   SOUTH DIVISION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nTake notice that 1, Lester Clapp,\nof    Cranbrook,    B.     C, occupation,\nlotcl Keeper, intends to apply for a\nspecial limber license over lhe following deseril-fd lands:\nCommencing at a post planteil nt\nthe S. W. corner ol T. L. 0001, thence\nsouth 1*0 chains, east 40 chains,\nmore or less, lo S. W. corner of T.\n9403, thence north 80 chains,\nthence west 20 ehains, thence north\n80 chaius, theme east tiO chains,\nthence north 20 chains, theuce west\nto place of commencement, and containing 010 acres, more or less.\nLester Clapp, Locator,\nNicholas Powers, Agent.\nDated August 24, 1007. 23 Ct\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF     SOUTH DIVISION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nTake nolico lhat I, Lester Clapp,\nof Cranbrook, B. C, occupation,\nHotel Keeper, Intends to apply lor a\nspecial timber license over the lollowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe north-west corner of Block 2798,\nthence west 80 chains, thence norUi\n120 chains, thence east to British Columbia Southern Kailway, following\nrailway in a southern direction to\nplace of commencement, and containing 610 acres, more or less.\nLester Clapp, Locator,\nNicholas Powers, Agent.\nBated August 10, 1007. 23-Ct\nWhen You\nCome to the Metropolis stay at the\nPalace Hotel\nStephens A Rockcndorf\nProprietors\nOpposite C. P. R.\nStation\nSi.oo   PER  DAY\nCalgary, Alta.\n*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022*;\nCranbrook Sash\nand Door Factory\nAll kinds of finish work, in\nway of dooit, windows, transoms, etc, Kiln dried lumber\nfor Inside work, Our work is\nguaranteed and our prioes are\nsatisfactory.    Screen   doors\nno-lib iml Dressed Lumlier\nFor Sale\nUNDERTAKING\nMODHRATG\nPRICES\nA SCIENTIFIC KIMOWMslXll: OF llll: BUSINESS\nCranbrook Co-Operative Stores I\n  LIMITED        1\nMiiiiiiiniiiiHniiMiimimiHiiiimii\nSOON COMING SURE\nAndrew HcPhco's Big  Eastern Show\nDownie's Uncle Tom's Cabin Co.\nUNDKIt CANVAS\nCRANBROOK\nwrg MONDAY, SEPT. 9\n50 People,   Two Bands,   tli'iiuiiu. Pack of Siberian Blood\nIidiiiiiIs.   Jubilee Siiigoi'S, Dnncers, Cuke Walkers.\nSEE\n( rxt'LK TOM AND HIS OX-CAKT\n1 MAKKSANDHI8PUNNYDUNKEY\nEVA AND HER PET PUNY.\n( OUR FINNY TOPSY.\nGRAND   STREET   PARADE   DAILY\n^^___ __________________________________________\nADMISSION - - - 25c. and 60c.\nIIMIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIHI\n**********************\ni \u25a0\nFOR   A   CHANGE\nPICKLED PIGS' FEET\nPICKLED PORK\nSALT SALMON\nSALT HERRING\nP. BURNS \u00abt CO., ltd.\nPHONE NO. to\n***********************\nU'licii ymir Friends visit Town, bring tli,-in to the\nI;   Saratoga Restaurant   ii\nOpposite 0. P. It. Depot.\nProprietor\n11\n**********************<\n!\u2666 \u00ab \u00bb\u2666\u00ab\u2666*\u00bb\u00ab. l)\u00ab\u00abt\u00bb>-\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb>H-\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab-*\u00ab*'\u00abl\nCranbrook\nHotel *** &\nUveal. Coalor. s Specially\ntiooS StiMli. Is Co\u00abb\u00ab..\u00bbo\nNum. to r.lli.mil .ml iltpol.   Hm mcoiuoioiI.-\nliim, fnt tht public un\u00ab|ba..\u00abl In Cranbrook.\nHot snd Cold Bath.\nHoggarth & Rollins\n Proprietors\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 i\n******\nI QUEEN'S HOTEL jj\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\nThis Hotel lias always boon tlio leader\niu its line, and will be kept up to the\nstiiiiiliinl. If you want to moot tlie\npeople, come to tho Queen's Hotel.\nII. t, STKI'HKNS\nlWlllHTOII I '\nii   Queen's Hotel, Calgary\n*******************************************\n\u2022 i\n11\n\u2022 i THE   -\"KANBROOK   HI'ltAUl\nii-r_%\nEVERY   BOX  of biscuits or\nsweet cakes  is  wrapped  In,\n\"Royal Blue\" and bears two\n\"*f   HH     crowns.   Insist on getting1\n'The Royal Blue\"  line.'\nMade    from' TAI-\nberta grown wheat.,\nThen, too, you may\nbe   sure   that you\nare getting the best cake'\nthat the modern science  of\ncooking can produce.   If your\ngrocer does not carry the Royal\nBlue line write to the factory'\ndirect for  a  trial   package at\nour expense.\nMention the grocer's name.\n-Ac.Tp\u00abyAT GWiAI-yAlMKlA.\n********************************************\n|Groceries and  Crockery!\nI lmve received a large shipment of TEAS, including\nBLUE RIBBON, MARIGOLD AND LIPTON.\nAlso a special line of ROYAL SHIELD TEA lit -Oc.\nJ. riANNING TvSN0I\nPHONE\n>7J\nTry a   Case uf\nKERRIGAN'S STOUT\nTwo Dozen  Pints   $2.50\nEipial  to Oiiiuiu.s'.   The fineat beverage on the market\nfor family ami table use.   Imparts vigor and\nhealth, and tunes up the liotly generally\nJAMES KERRIGAN\nBrewer, Craubrook,  B. 0\n********************************************\n********************************************\nX Head Office, Calgary Alta. Phone 57 |\n*   The Dominion Meat Co., Ltd.\nOood Creamery Butter in i lb. rolls\nOood Dairy Butter in Tubs\nFIRST-CLASS FRESH EGGS\n********************************************\n9 H\nICanadian Hotel!\nOne of the pioneer hotels of Cranbrook. Warm rooms, good meals\nand a bar stocked with the best\nI\n\u00a3j and a bar stocked with the best US\nfii\nn\nJoseph Brault, Proprietor \u00a3\nS\n*********************************************\nNew nn.l Sli'i.'tlv first t'lass Tm.UI'HOKR208ft     $\n*       Am,'iu\u2022an I'lau. .-..'... por day up\n\\   HOTEL ST. FRANCIS \\\nCms  II .utnky, Propriolor.\nCor. Seymour nn.l Oordovn Sis.\nOppoa.oO. I' ... siiui..,,\nVancouver, B. C. |\nA HORRIBLE CATASTROPHE\nTIIK   GREAT    QUEBEC BWDgE\nCOLLAPSES KILLING S\"> MEN\nQuebec, Aug.    80,\u2014From 80 to 80\nlives wen; Inst tonight by tbo collapse ol tlie Imlf-finlnbed eftwHlbVM\nhrhlgo over \\to St, Lawrence, nnw\nmiles above tin* city, and (our million dollars' worth ol steel Buper-\nstn.rluiv, mud\u00bb by tbo Phoenix\nBHilgo company, lies at Uio bottom\nof ito rivet t\\ twisted mass of strap\niron.\nTho disaster omirrnl at 5.-1(1 p.m.,\njust before the men wero to quit\nwork. Tlicro was no premonition ol\ncoming disaster, and no cause can so\nfiir bo assigned lor it.\nOne story is thai tbe collapse followed tin* approacb *>n Uio brhlge of\nii Im- live and   thrtr   cars Kidi-d\nwilh iron.\nTbere was a jK-mlle-an 1 r CM at\nllie   llllie.   Iml    lllis   IR   \"-oirsideletl   tli-\niiiii--, ami tin* bridge lus already stood\nvi'tv iiiiuli more.\nNinety men were working on Uie\nstructure at llie time. Some were\neiii-iu-eil in liVetlnK opowAIotM, while\notlrers were tiikiiifi dowij n hit* ti.i-\nveliii'*, elane.\nll was llie Roll thorn px I elision nf the\nbridge wll-lcb cnllnpswi, ami Ibis was\nrapidly iiearlnn the \/.en I tli nf the Immense steel arrb whieh was to span\nIbe river. For \u00abt\u00bbl feci frnm the\nshore' the massive steel stun*, tore\nreared an arch, wilh no supports hut\nthe piers from tlie shore, wliile the\noutward extremity was IMI feet\nabove the water.\nSuddenly those    on   Ihe   northern\nshore saw  tin d     of the Im It-arch\nbend down n little, and \u00bb moment\nlater the whole enoiinoiis fabric\nswayed and shot ont from tbe direction of the shore inlo the middle of\nthe St. Lawrence.\nThere were a few marvelous escape*-, but the aren't majority of\nthose on the .structure went'down\nWith it and nre still in the water.\nTen bodies have been recovered,\nTen others who were on the bridge\nwere saved, some badly injured. Oflo\nor two were miraculously saved.\n(if tlie dead recovered,,-the majority\nare supposed to be those of Indians\n'from Onughnnwagn, near Montreal,\nseveral of whom were employe.) on\nthe work.\nAmongst the dead are Mr. Burke,\nresident engineer or the work for thu\nPhoenix Bridge company; Carl Swau-\nsan, from Philadelphia: Messrs. Fast\nand Meredith, supposed to be from\nOhio, and the following residents in\nthe vicinity of Un- bridge: Victor\nHardy. Michael Hardy. .lames- Hardy, ,\nOallxto Hardy, .Joseph Boucher, two\nbrothers named Wilson, two named\nHazemaii, Henry French, two brothers naiinil Proulax, and lour men\nnamed Bin-tic, Bind, Bern id ry and\nNorton.\nThe survivors who went down into |\nthe river and were saved state that,\nwhen they came to Ibe surface of tlm\nwater the spectacle which met their .\n|l*a\/e was frightful, .Several bodies'\ncame with them to the surface, somo\ncovered with blood, others with\nWood oozing from tlio mouth and\ncars, while otlrers were unrecoj-niz-\nhie. I\nDarhticss prevented the work of recovering the bodies being successfully\nprosecuted 'tonight, but it is known\nthat many will lie found t\u00bb\u00bb be crushed lo pulp hetween the heavy steel\ni pieces of tlie bridge with which they\nwent to their doom.\nIt Is claimed here that the loss\nmust fall upon the Phoenix company,\nwhieh undertook to complete and deliver in perfect condition the superstructure of tbe bridge. Tho abutments and piers are perfectly intact.\nIn one respect .the structure was an\nexperiment, being the longest canti-\nlever in Ibe world, itainclv, one unsupported snail ol Immi feet. There\nwas still nearly 150 feet tn he built\nlo the side of tlie main span which\nCollapsed, and tin- wlmle of the Tr.fl\nfeel outside of Hie pier was over-\nhangfng lhe river without any apparent support, although il was snp-\nported overhead. This overhanging\nmass of melal has been considered all\nsummer to he one of ihe engineering\nfeals of the day. and was visited hv\nnearly all American and other visi-\ntors tn Quebec, The total enst or\nihe bridge wn's to to close up to Uti,-\n000,000, and already some (5,1)00,000\nti.nl hvn spent on it.\nIt is tlio connecting link between\nlhe eastern and western branches o(\nIhe new transcontinental railway in\ncourse nf erection liy the Canadian\ngovernment. i\nM-metliinf- novel and exhilarating wo\nrecommend anv morning at daybreak\nwhen the frost is on the pumpkin and\nthe mule .skinners have irrigated un\nwisely tho previous night. But, if n\nLs glaciers thev want, and refuse all\nworthless substitutes, they must no\nto New Denver, where tbey have one\ns;H<-i.illr adapted to the requirements\nof tourists. A hi-* advantage fiom\nthe point of many is\u2014that It v.vi to\nseen from the bar of Count Siege's\nhotel.\nffo celebrate Uie first anniversary \"I\nour birth next week. A year old!\nThat sounds hig, doesn't It? We feel\nas though we lead been a century\n-Alien we soliloquize upon the trouble\nwo have ribbed up. Thank goodness\nour conscious is normal Say!\nbow's yours? Please remit that\nIwo spot foi a birthday present. We\nnlc lavim- in a complete and well-\nnssorted Mm- of troubles foi  Uie new\nyear,    (let    in on    tlio im id floor\nnml have two dollars' worlh We\n-lie alsi. likely to tun a BOdul and\npersonal (very personal) column, and\nif ihal proves unsuccessful ft. shall\ncommit suicide or go lo llvi .i Nelson, li h iiiiniateii.il wlm, we're\nilcBpcrate,\nland, Ore. Several changes planlid\nby Hie Canadian Pacific between St\nPaul ami the northwest will also be\nworked out during Mr. Corbin's stay.\nIUne of thnse. is the shortening ol the\nrunning time between the Twin Cities\nand Spokane. \"'It is proposed to\ncut oil several hours.\" Mr. Corbin\nsaid, \"giving us by far the shortest\nrun, and this, wo believe, will bo\nthe means of popularising a route\n[which is already iu favor among\n[traveling men and tourists.\"\nTIIK   C p. It. IS HUSTLING   TO\nSUPPLY MOTIVE POWKIt\n(Calgary Herald.)\nThat reciprocal demurrage would\nnot assist in ameliorating Hi.* scarcity nt freight cars is the opinion of\na railroader from the east.\n\"It is not freight cars that the\nrailroads want for hauling power,\" ho\nlie. hired in all interview wilh a Herald reporter last night,\n\"I have seen a whole siding lull of\nfreight cars for days waiting for locomotives to haul them. Then up\ntill recently,\" he continued, \"there\nwas a great scarcity ul coal wlllcll\nput the railroad companies farther\nhack than ever. Tie result of this\nis that tlie farmer ami Shipper has to\nwait, for his cars, hut there Is also\nanother result. It means that the\nengines are overworked ami cou-\nseipieutly break down.\n\"lf some enterprising citizen,\" said\nthe railroader, smilingly, \"should\nstart up a locomotive const met ion\nworks he wnuld not only make a\nfortune but bestow an immortal blessing ou Hie community. There is\nnot a railroad in the whole American\ncontinent hut would give hiui all the\norders he wauled. At the present\nlime the hig locomotive building concerns in the States are full up with\norders for the next five years. They\ncannot take contracts at any price.'\nIn speaking of the way the C. P.\nIt. are handling Iheir system the\nrailroader remarked that the Canadian road was showing some of the\nAmerican corporations what could lie\ndone in times of distress.\n\"For one thing,\" he said, \"Ihcy\nwilt buy anything in the nature of or\nwhat looks like a locomotive even if\nbuilt in tbe year one. Within a\nweek the most ungainly and obsolete\nspecimen of mechanical ingenuity can\nbe turned into a mammoth loco.\nIt well repays one to pay a visit to\ntho Angus stops iu Montreal and see\nhow the C. P. It. are striving lo\nkeep ahead. Here tbey turn out 211\nfreight cars a day, twist and turn\ngreat pieces ol equipment like so\nmueh paper, Ynu will likely see In\nthe const ruction shop an engine that\nbas recently lieen condemned or\nthrown out of service by some other\ntoad. Two or three days the\nskilled mechanics can turn out a\n.treat monstrous engine, spick and\nspan and as sound as a hell.\"\nif The Cosmopolitan ii;\nIH 111III HHH UIU\nii-i iiiii i niiiii t in\n\u00bb#\u00bb*\u00bb#\u00bb\u2022-,\u00bb*,\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\nE. I. SMALL\nThe place where a\nman will return after\nstopping once.\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb***\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb**\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab\u00bbfHW\u00ab\u00ab**\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbi#i\u00bbi\u00bb\u00bb*\u00ab\u00ab\nITEM' FROM A LIVE TOWN\nFROM A LIVE NEWSHAPER\n(Snndon (B. <*.) Minim- Review.)\nClint\u00bb Clink' Clink' 'Come down\nou Vi.\" In every out of the way\nnook and corner the husky boys of\nthe town are socking it tn the granite. The hoy's rock driling contest\non Labor May Is- arousing much enthusiasm and rivalry among the lads,\nwlm are more concerned at present\nwith iui Iim* rock lh.ui \"Maw's k'ind-\nlin ' \"\nSchool Principal Nindle, of Kaslo,\nhas lui ii louring the Slocan with the\nview of securing candidates for high\nschool huiiois, and iu tbis capacity\nvlnlted Stlfftlon last Monday. Mr.\nNindle In for mod IIS that intending\ncandidates cau now be received at\na very economical basis.\now, hoys, il won't do. If you\nwant to put up a good show against\nIbe visiiing hose teams you've got to\nget in and \"drill.\" Of course ynu\nhave enviable reputations as firelighters and all that sort of thing,\nbut your reputations will look as\nsick as a skinned jack-rabbit if you\ndon't make a decent show on Labor\nDay. It's up to you. Stop ebiu-\nwaggiing and hustle some. Let's see\nIhe hose carls doing a lew stunts\nnext week.\nCock-a-4lootllodoo!!! Here we aro\nat Uie end of volume 1, and up to\nthe time of going to press have not\nreceived a visit Irmn tho sheriff.\nWho* ha* thought It? Cock-a-\ndoodle-doo!     Your sub. is dandle due.\nWhat would tourists give to ' see\nTowgood's :\u00abl-\u00bbtn;ng pack-train start\nwith supplies tor a mine? It' beats\ngoing to Bee a lump ot Ice on the\nsummit of a mountain on Kootenay\nlake whieh Kaslo and Nelson nre\nscrapping about. 'Pshaw' glacier\nnothing. One of lhe residents of\nSnndon threatens to demolish it in a\nwhisky and soda the first hot day.\nNow, it   tourists are looking.      for\nU.   _'. P.    WILL      IU SII   WORK\nFBOM COAST\nVancouver, Aug. 20.\u2014Tbo advance\nparty of _uu men have arrived at\nPort Kssiugton for the Pacific coast\nsection of the 0. T. P. it is intended lo have I ,UU0 men at work\nIhis fall. The hundred mile section\nfrom Prince Uupcri oast lu Kitsilas\nCanyon, where the Copper river joins\nthe SU-ena, is said to include the\nheaviest rockwork uf the entire line\nHum the Atlantic lu the Pacific, ll\nwill take two years in construction.\nTho canyon is the hegmu.ug ul a ttsu\nmile section, Kiiamaal tu lla\/.eltou,\nwhich Hie Foley, Bros.-Larson company is building. This is also heavy\nwork, requiring many tunnels, and\nwill take a year and a half umlcr the\nmost favorable conditions. Foley\nBros, do not intend tu change their\ninvariable policy ul engaging only\nwhite laborers.\nWork at Kitamaat will be in full\nswing in two weeks. Work in both\n.sections will be sub-let in divisions pi\nfrom oue to ten miles, continuing\nthrough the winter, whieh is regarded\nas tbe most favorable season for\nMasting. Tlie beginning of the\nyear will see construction in progress\nfrom end to end of these must dilli\ncull ol all sections. The most urgent problem remaining will he a\nIll-mile gap separating KUaiitaat from\nSkceiia river.\nMR. BOKUEN\nMr. Borden has made one or two\ntactical mistakes as leader\u2014notably\ntla- mistake of permitting himsell lo\nbe put in the invidious position ul a\nsalaried bcnoflclaiy of a government\nbounty. But upuu Hie whole he has\nworn well in his dlltlcull posilion.\nHe has earned the loyally ul bis\nfollowers lu the bouse and the respect ul all classes of Canadians, No\nman iu Canada iu public life, not even\nHm- premier, is molt- capable than Mr.\nBurden uf Hie exercise uf real statesmanship, He is Intellectually the\nbiggest public man iu Hie Conservative party, and in character one of\nthe best. In knowledge of Hie minute of political trickery ami skill iu\napplying it he may lie deficient; hul it\nIs doubtful il such knowledge and\nskill should he regarded as a requisite.\nol leadership; there is never any lack\nof men in any part who are capable\nol supplying all uf that sort of Work\nWhich is needed.\nMr. Borden has once led his party\nto defeat. He may do so again. But\nSir Wilfrid Laurier was a twice-beaten leader before he triumphed, and\nMr. Whitney, before he attained power, twice failed.\u2014 Hamilton Herald\n(lnd.)\n 4\t\nIMPKOVK    SOO-SPOKANE   SKH-\nVICK\nSpokane, Wash., Sept. 1-D. 0,\nCorbin, president of the Spokane-International Hallway company, has\ngone to St. Paul by way of Winnipeg\nto confer with officials ul tlie Soo*\nSpokane line concerning a n\u00abw train\nservice   between   Spokum. and Port-\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nWOOD FOR SALE '\nI have Becured machinery for\n' sawing wood, and uni now pro*\ns pared to contract for Wood of any\n[ lengthi iu large or small quan-\n. tilled.\nOut'OMown contracts solicited.\nFor further particulars address     J\nR.S. HcNEII LJ\nCranbrook, B. t'. J\n**********************\nJohn W. Wolf\nBoot, Shoe and\nHarness Maker\nOld shoes made new.   All kinds\nol repairing,   (live me a call.\nGeo. R. Leask & Co\nBUILDERS and\nCONTVACTORS\nOur work in our advertisement, Iml. w>\nput tbis ad in tlie lleralil to\neiiiplianize it.\nCKANBROOK, B. C.\nNear l-uwer IrniHlrnng Avenue.\nTKLKPHONI-: 111\nMONTY\nThe\nShine\nMan\nTlm place tu got your Shoos\nkept in proper uhapu,\nLaing's Barber Shop\nMcVittie & Laidlaw,\nMining Engineers\nand Surveyors,\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\n.1. '.'. I.All.l.AW, M.E.\nTHOS. T. WoVlTTIB, 1M..R.\nj J. EDGAR DAVIS\nBBIOK\nAND\nCEMENT\nWORK\nWI0MB115    CRANBROOK\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nRAILWAY\nH'.fiiSli CLASS.\nREDUCED RAILS\nKrom K\u00bbai\u201eru I'otnla on Halts Dally\nSKIT. I.T TO OCT, Sin\nMontrsa. $46.10\nOttawa $44.86\nDttr.lt, Windsor, London,\nGus.pti, Toronto,\nParkdals\n$39 45\nCo responiliugly Low Itatet from\nIntermediate t'olnta,\nSOO-SPOKANE SERVICE\nThe Finest on tbe Continent nn.l\nthe 1-antent between Spokane and the\nTwin CilieH.\nTbo Canadian Pacillc operate!\"\nStandard Sleeping Cart am! Tourist\nSleeping Cam un Two Daily Transcontinental traimi in each direction.\nFur ItatcH, KerjervatiuiiN ami any\ninformation deal red apply lo Local\nAgent, or\nB. J. COVLE      JOHN HOE,\nA. 11. p. \\., u. r. a ,\nVANCOUVKIl NKI.BON li 0.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nI READY   MADE  CLOTHING |\nIf you want Clothing thnt is \"(iilt Edge\" in name.\n\"Gilt Bilge\" in in itorial ami \"(lilt Eilm* in make,\ncall ami see our NEW STOCK of Ready Made\nChtliing, JUi\/T RECEIVED.   All Union Mado\nLeask Col Henderson\ni**********************\nWo liuvu thu following goods on linn.l ami will Iv pleased to\nsupply your wants:\nI'l.KTI.AXIJ DEMENT FIRE CLAY\nFIRE BRICK WOOD FIBRE\nPLASTER OP PARIS\nFIELD AND SEWER PIPE\nAND ALL KINDS OF PLUMBING GOODS\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 . i,    i\nJ. G. McCALLUM & CO. \"Ar^,\n********************************************\nFIFTH ANNLAL\nNELSON FRUIT FAIR\nNt-I.SON, ll.C.\nI Wednesday, Thursday, Fridav. X\nI    SEPTEMBER 18, iq'. 20, 1007    f\n\u2666 Larger and Better than ever\nSOMETHING DOING KVKKY MINUTE\nFree Shows Twice Daily. Mors,. Races.\nt'li.fip Excursion Rates ou all Transportation Lines,\nF,ir Information or Prize List, write\nli. 0. MORRIS, Secretary.\nI'd  Box '.i'i\n.'. W. BUSK, President. NELSON. B. C\n***********************\n^fiw\\a\\a\\wh****w*a\\ AAtfcpiWlw^lA#I^WPIW#l#l#lj^J;\n, aa-\nH.....ct.rtr, ol ,**\nRough an duresse. < \u25a0\u00a7\u25a0.\nLU-IBER and \u2022 fs\nDIMENSIONS \u00bb*\nAlso all  kinds oi ; **\nMOULDING* *||\n\"affray, Ryan and    \">\nCranbrook, B.C.      ! j.\nH..4 0ir.ee. \u25a0 Cranbrook     ! ->\n.***,      ************&\nm********** t ****w'w****^**m\nMSMSJ__i--8S_-_-C\nH L. CLAPP\nW. ROLLINS\nThe Wentworth\nClapp & Rollins,\nThe New Managers.\nDrop in and see us any time.   We are on deck 25 hours\nout of the 24\n*********************************************\nIT PAYS TO BE PARTICULAR 1\n\\V)ii*n yon loiy monts in hot weather. We pay\nparticular attention to tint- feature of onr buainesu\nThat is why |>m|i.c depend upon u*. for tho U-st ut\nthi., m-iisou nf tin.- year,\nCALGARY CATTLE CO.'\"Tr\" f\ni:B.H. SHORT <& CO.|\nI; The Painters and Decorators\n;;  Large Stock of Latest Designs and Colorings   \u2666\n; in Wall Papers\n!! ESTIMATES FURNISHED FOR PAINTI\n[ AU. WORK GUARANTEED\n:: Phone III      ARMSTRONG AVENUE  P.O. Box 33 |\nI ***************************** THE  CRANBKOOK  HERALD\n1(2.00 A YI'AI.'\nTIIK   PAPER   THAT   IS   HEAD   BY   TnE   I'KOl'LK\nSEPT EM B Kit 5,   1907\nC RAX II HOOK llKUAI.I)\nBy llie Herald   Publishing Company,\n' l.tiutted.\nTlm Herald is wur.li $10 a year. It\nlusts only 12. Nu mau Itt Soulh\nUus. Kootenay can al.mil to be without it, and everyone living outside ol\nu.e district, who is ItitiucsUid Iu llie\nprogress of this section, should read\nit. 11 publishes the news while it is\nsews, It is controlled absolutely by\nth. publishers. No uliiiue, party or\nIndividual dictates iis polity. It\ndou't try lo please the people. It s\ndesire is to publish a newspaper that\nwill be a credit lo the eommuiiity.\nSend iu your subscription and you\nwill  be  Ihauklul ever afterward.\nAdvertising rates tl pel inch per\nim.nil,, no more and no less.\nHeading mailer 19 rents per line\nto non-advertisers; Hi tents per line\nt\u201e tegular advertisers.\n.1 you desire Io reaeli llie people ol\nSouth blast Kootenay you must aii-\nv.nise iu Tlio Herald,\nThe Herald has a lirst-elass i job\nplant, and iis work is ol the best.\nThe Herald don't waul charity. It\nwants a square deal on your job\nwork. II we can't suit you in quality aud priee, kick, and send your\nwork lo some Cheap John house iu\nllie east that never spends a cent in\n(.'ranbruok.\n\\Z\u00b1\u00b1\u00b1*A\u00b1*\u00b1Q\nMOKE   THAN\n4,600 * Month\nTl.iM i- tin* guaranteed cir*\n.niIniIuu ul tin- Humid\nI'n'wri room nn.l Hili-i-ii*.-\ntioii Iim- open to Invent'!-*!!*\nlion by a.lveitl.HUH Hi any\nliuiu.\nThe Herald gives a. dollar\nin value for it ilollur In money. The advertiser bus the\nright to know ivlltll lit- in\nreceiving fur ins money,\n'I'lir. Ilenil.l in mu* paper\niii.it courts invent it .gut ion.\n^yyyyyyyijp\nround numbers, according to present prospect!-.\nThe only fault that- the Conservative's can lintl with Or. Pugsley, the\nminister in the Laurier cabinet, Is\nthnt at one time he was a Conservative.\nLabor Day    was fittingly observed\n'iu Cranbrnok Ibis year as usual.\nThai is a day Hint should be observed in ihis district. It is pre-eminently a labor district ami all that\nthe people ran ilo to observe the day\nsel   aside    for     labor is none     too\nThe Hindoos kept working on Labor\nDny, Those people would nevoc affiliate wilh Ibe white laborer In bis\nideas, his ambitions, bis desire to\nlive ns a white man should, if tbey\nwen. hen* for one hundred years,     ll\nnot in the blood.\nBorden's policy is not    an original\nne or a brave one.     11 savors    of\nthe cheese paring kind.\nYe gotta, think of Borden, whom all\nIm it is an lionesl  man, talking    of\npolitical purity on    the    same platform witb Poster and Fowler.\nWould not the idea that the Herald\nhas been advocating for so long, that\nis to put a case at the station for\ndisplaying tho products and ores of\nthis district, prove a great ad. for\nthe community? What is the matter\nwilh the people? The way to build\nup a city is to build up the district\nin which tbe city i.s located.\nThere Is said to he 2,000,000 American silver dollars in Canada. You\nIan search us. Wc plead not\nguilty.\nRemember the editorial convention\none week from Friday, (let ready\nwith tin1 glad mitt and the Cranbrook\nsmile. That is the best wav in the\nworld to receive guests.\nThe death of \"Bob\" Dure marks\nthe passing away of one of the early.\npioneers of the Kootcnays. And it\nwas lit tin-- that a tribute should he\npaid to bis memory through the\ncolumns of Hie Herald by that other\npioneer, It. L. T. Oalbrailb.\nI'.tv what debts ymi can instead of\nholding the money in your p.i.ket.\nThat is the hest remedy in the world\nfor .1 financial depression.\n->\u00bb V*i ** 3-3-3 MdflGC -.-.^iCti--. Cittfifc\n$ OBSERVATIONS   \\\ni HY TIIE OLD MAN. \u00bb\n*i a-\n***\u00bb*> aw* >\\* >\u25a0*\u25a0* $#.t,&iG&\u00a3 &&*\nThe following iiniii iiu- Winnipeg\nFree Press js un evidence as to tlio\ntendency nf the limes, and an excellent answer tn those Canadians\nwho would continue to boost the\ntariff ol Ibis country higher ami\nhigher, under llu* guise of an\n\".idi-i|i.aif\" i.l nil, thus assisting iu\nbuilding up    grenl fortunes for     the\nmanufacturers at tl xponsc ul   tho\nconsumer;\nTin- dun towards larlfl revision,\nalready apparent in Uie Lulled\nStale:,, will doubtless be accelerated bj the lessening of prosperity   111   the   Itepnhhe.        The    llilll\ni a till has synchronized with a\nperiod ol {-real prosperity and to\nit has been ascribed all tho credit.\nThe hollowness of ihese claims\nwill Iw! \\cry thoroughly revealed\nif a period uf partial commercial\ndepression ensues, as was the case\nin Canada in lsiis when the usi.-\nlessiiess of our protective system\nas a defense against world-wide\ninfluences in finance ami commerce\nwas established to ihe complete\nsatisfaction ol the electors of Canada. Already tbo call for tariff\nrevision is becoming sufficiently\nImid to attract attenn:  and unexpected voices are ioinlng in Uio\nchorus. Jacob H. SchlLT, the\nveteran hanker of New York iu a\nrecent interview published iu ihe\nNew York Herald, declared that\ntariff revision was necessary lo\ntho peace of the country. Says\nMr. Schiff: \"Nothing, however,\n\"will su thoroughly prevent the*\n\"building up of great monopolies\n\"and lhe accumulation of (he vast\n\"lotnines the existence of    whieh\n\"is at   the bottom of  lhe prevaii-\n\u2022\u25a0ing social unreal as a sound and\n\"sensible    revision      nf  (he   tariff.\nIt is rlghl thai American Indus*\n\"Iry ami   the American working\n\"iii.iii he protect nl ngninst undue\n\"foreign cnmpotlllnii, but  it can-\n\u25a0nol in- right to compel ihe American iniiMiiiii'i tn fi.iv ii vnsl \"pro-\n\"tit iu the rnniiiifactiircr where the\n\"laitei under a  eh lower tarill\n\"would he able to maintain liim-\n\"self Herein lies lhe principal\n\"remedy whtcli needs lo he applied\n\".( ihe causes whieh have brought\n\"about pies''lit rondillons aie tu\n\"l.e pcrmaneirll) eradicated.\"\nDave   Ellon,   nf    the Caidstoti   (Al-\nl-eriii) Star, Huts speaks ol the Press\nassociation convent ion which will bo\nheld in Crunbrook u week from Friday:\nThe A Iberia Dress convention\nmeets in Cranhrook on September\n13th. Every member of the\nfraternity should he there. There\nis no doubt but what the welcome in Cranbrook will he all\nthat the whole-souled Fred Simpson and the good people there can\nmake it. There is no doubt but\nwhat il will he ..ne nf the largest\nand best conventions held in lhe\nnewspaper interests in tbe west,\n(let the glad mitt ready Fred lor\ntbe boys    will he    there in good\nA liOKN UOOSTKK\nVictoria   Week:      Everyone    who\nknows (hippy Hill knows bim to be a\nborn booster, indeed it is doubtful it\nthe west has ever known his superior, at ibis typical western business,\nunless il be tbe redoubtable Jim\nWardner of halcyon days, who some\nlime ago crossed the great iW-\nvido, Chippy has no competitor, and\nwherever he goes be may be trusted\nto sound the praises of lhat section\nof llu west iu which Providence utul\nJus own irrepressible energy have lost\nplated hiui. lie bas just paid a\nvisit lo the Coast, and left behind\nhim in tbe columns uf an admiring\npress, a trail of splendor comparable\nonly lo that which lingers after the\npassing of a meteor or a comet. Having abandoned other more exigent and\nless profitable pursuits, he has now\nblossomed into a coal baron, bu\ni-owns\" the celebrated Hillcrcst\nInline, and ot course this mine yields\nj tho best coal in the world; far better than thai mined by the Crows\nNest company at Kcrnie, us demonstrated hy recent tests made, equally\nof course, by the United Stotes naval\nauthorities ut Bremerton, wherever\nthat may be. All his old friends will\nbe -*lad to hear of this; it was about\ntime that somebody discovered better\ncoal than tbat of the Crows Nest\nPass Coal company. Tbey have beld\nthe record far.too long, but all this\nis now a thing of the past, and iu\nfuture whenever anyone wants to Impress upon a confiding public, or a\nwealthy investor tbat be has the Al\neoal proposition, he will say \"it Is\nalmost as good a.s Ibe Hillcrcst\ncoal.\" Al any rate, there is tbis\ncomforting feature in connection witb\nMr. Hill's declaration; there will be\ni<> shortage of fuel in the west when\notice he gets his mine into working\norder.\nGOOD HACKS\nHorses Irom all over the entire\nnorthwestern country will be entered\nin tho races ut the Interstate Pair\nwhich will lie held at Spokane\nihis year, and betjer racing, as well\nas more ot it, should lie seen at the\ncoining lair than ever before.\nHorses which have never competed\nagainst each other will Ihi entered\nIhis year. Horses coming from the\nMeadows at Se.it11.*, from Montana,\nand from llrilisli Columbia will all he\nentered, and a larger list, of entries\nthan ever Indole will  result.\nAlready Manager t'osgrovc bus re-\nreived entries from race horses own\neis who have never lniuiv.bt Iheir\nhorses to lhe fair iu previous vears.\nSeveral carloads of horses will he\nshipped from Butte to try their\nmet Wo on the local track. Many of\nthe tinmen from Hie Meadows at\nSeal tie will also come here for the\nmeet. Even from Nebraska u nuin-\nliei of horsemen are already shipping\ntheir animals, ami wilh Ibis strong\narray of horseflesh, attracted by two\nweeks of racing and better purses\nI than ever Moro offered, It is safe to\n1 predict Ihal the meet this year will\nIm* one nf the strongest ever seen In\nlhe west..\nCASEY   AT TIIE BAT\n\u25a0 \u2666\t\nWOLD TIME   FAVORITE POEM\nWINCH NEVER LOSES\nINTEREST\nThe outlook) wasn't brilliant for the\nMudvillo nine that day;\nThe score stood tour to two,     with\nbut one more Inning to play.\n\\nd then when   Cooney died at first,\nand Itariows .Inl   (he same,\n,\\ sickly silence fell upon the patrons\nof the game,\nA straggling few    got up to go    In\ndeep despair.     Tlie rest,\nClung to     lhat   hope   which   springs\ndenial in the human breast;\nThev  tli.ni_.lit   if     onlv Casey     could\ngel  a  whack at  that\u2014\nWe'd  put   up even  monev  now     with\nCasey at the bat. '\nllul Flyiui    preceded Casey, as    did\nalso Jimmy Blake,\n-Vi,cl tbe former was a lulu, and   the\nlatter was a cake;\nSo upon that stricken multitude grim\niiielaiicholy sat,\nFor ihere seemed bul little chance of\nCasey's getting to the bat.\nBut Flyiui let drive a single, to   the\nwonderment of all,\nAnd Blake, the    much despised, tore\nthe cover off tho hull.\nThen when the dust had lifted     and\nthe men saw whut bad occurred,\nThere    was Johnnie    safe at second\nand Flynn a-hugging third.\nThen from 5,0(10 throats and more\nthere rose a lusty yell;\nIt rumbled through the vallev, it\nrattled iu the delli;\nIt knocked upon the mountain and recoiled upon the flat,\nFin- Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat.\nThere was ease iu Casey's manner as\nhe stepped into his place;\nThere was pride     in Casey's bearing\nand a smile on Casey's face.\nAmi when, responding to the cheers,\nbe lightly doffed his hat,\nNo stranger in the crowd could doubt\n'twas Casey at tbe bat.\nTen thousand eyes wer   on him    as\ntie nibbed bis hands  witb dirt.\nFive  thousand  tongues applauded   as\nbe wiped them un bis shirt.\nThen     while   the    writhing   pitcher\nground the ball iuto bis hip, ,\nDefiance '\u2022\u25a0learned in Casey's eye,     a\nsneer curled Casey's lip.\nAnd now the   leather covered sphere\ncame hurling through the air,\nAnd Casey   stood u-watehing it    In\nhaughty grandeur there,\nClose by lhe sturdy batsman the ball\nunheeded sped\u2014\n\"That ain't, my style.\" said Casey.\n\"Strike one,\" the umpire said.\nFrom the benches, black with people,\nthere went up a muffled roar,\nLike the beating of the storm-Waves\non ii stern and distant shore.\n\"Kill liim!  Kill the umpire!\" shouted\nsomeone    on the stand;\nAnd it's likely they'd have killed him\nhad not Casey raised his hand.\nWilli a    smile of   Christian   charity\nureal   Casey's visage shone;\nHe stilled the rising tumult; be bade\nthe game go on;\nlie signalled to the pitcher, and once\nmore Ihe spheroid flew;\nBut  Casey still Ignored it  and     the\numpire said:      \"Strike two.\"\n\"Fraud,\" cried the maddened thousands, and echo answered fraud,\nBut one scornful look from Casey and\nthe audience was awed.\nThey saw his face grow stern nnd\ncold\u2014they saw his muscles\nstrain,\nAmi tbey knew that Casey wouldn't\nlet that ball go by again.\nThe sneer is gone    from Casey's Up,\nhis teeth are clenched In bate;\nHe pounds with    cruel violence    bis\nbat upon the plate.\nAnd now the pitcher holds tbe ball,\nand now Im lets it go,\nAnd now Hie air is shattered by   the\nforce of Casey's blow.\nOil! somewhere in this favored   land\nthe sun is shining bright,\nThe band is playing somewhere   and\nsomewhere hearts are light.\nAnd somewhere men are laughing and\nsomewhere children shout;\nBut  there   is no   joy In   Mudville\u2014\nmighty Casey has struck out.\nWILLING TO SUPPLY THE PIPE.\nVancouver, B. C, Aug. 16, '07\n\u25a0 The Herald, Craiibiooto, B. C-\nI Ynur scheme for supplying Cran-\nbriNiki with an artificial lake by\nmeans of a siphon    from Moyie lake\ni is an excellent one.       The Dominion\n\u25a0 Wood Pipe company, of New Westminster, manufacture a double wire\nWound pipe for just such purposes aud\nwill he glad to quote you prices at\nany time.\n, Yours, etc.,\nJos. Dambrick.\nRambling Reveries\nBY A DREAMER.\nPLEASANT NEIGHBORHOODS\nOne's pleasure, after all, Is much\naffected by the quality nl one's\nUelgtthors, even ibiuiub one may not\nto on Speaking terms wilh theni. A\npleasant, bright face Is surely better\n(ban n discontented, erosn one; and a\nhouse that has the air of being in\nhabited is preferable lo closed shut\nters and unsocial blinds, excluding\nevery ray of sunlight and sympathy.\nWe like to see lhe glancing, cheerful\nlight through the window, of a cold\nnighti, or watch them, as evening\ndeepens, gradually, creeping irom the\nparlor to the upper stories of lhe\nhouse near us. We like to watch Hie\nlittle children going in and out of the\niloor, to play or to school. We like\nlo see the while-robed baby dancing\nup iiiul down at the window in its\nmother's arms, or the father reading\nhis newspaper there at. evening, or\nany of these cheerful, impromptu\nhome glimpses, wtilch, though we are\nno Paul Pry, we will assert go to\nmake a pleasant uelgbhdr to those\nwhn live for comfort Instead of\nshow.\nSiid, indeed, some mornings, on\nwaking, it Is lo see the blinds down\nand tlie shutters closed, and to know\n\u25a0 llial death's angel, while it spared\nour threshold, had eroKKcd that nf\nour cheerful neighbor. Sad to miss\nIhe white-robed baby from tbe window, and    see tbe   little coffin    at\nHILL & COMPANY\nHill & Co. Possibly in their Last Struggle\nTH E stringency In the money  market has affected the financial standing of all\npeople in business.   The banks of Canada and the United States are curtailing\ncredits and shortening; loans.   Hill & Co. are no exception to this rule,     liny\nmust raise money to meet the demands of their bankers,   ihat means that they\nMust Raise the Cash\nAnd there is only one way to do it.   That is to sacrifice profits and get below the cost\nmark.   To accomplish this we will put on the greatest Sale ever known in the Kootenays,\ncommencing\nSaturday, August 31st,\nand there will be no let up in cutting prices until the demands of our bankers are\nsatisfied. We have worked hard to build up our business, but the condition of the money\nmarket and our bank account make this sacrifice necessary to protect our interests.\nWatch for our prices in the windows and on our counters. The cash must come, and the\nway to get the cash at this stage is to give the people such bargains that they will feel\nthat they must buy. If this Sale is not satisfactory during the coming week, the knife\nwill go deeper, as we must raise the cash or lose all. We will not be undersold by anyone\nand we Invite comparison.   We have to-day the largest stock of\nLadies' and Men's Furnishings, Boots and\nShoes, and Furniture\nIn fact, anything that a lady or gentleman can wish for in the line of Wearing Apparel or\nHouse Furnishings. We realize now that we have bought too much on credit, forgetting\nthat there is a day of reckoning. But our bankers have reminded us, hence our chase for\nthe almighty dollar.\nWe quote you a few prices as follows, which will largely govern :\u2014\nMEN'S SUITS, reg. $18.00, will sell for    - - - $9.75\n\" \"   $12.50, \" $6.50\n\u2022'   $10.00, \" - $5.50\nBOY'S   SUITS,   reg. $8.00, will sell for     - - \u2022 $4.25\n\"    $6.00, ..... $3.35\nThe prices of Boots and Shoes will be cut in two. Men's Hats also to be sacrificed.\nIn fact everything in our store will be offered at prices never before quoted in the\nKootenay.   This Sale must appeal to the economical buyer.   Call and be convinced.\nALL PRICES QUOTEO  ARE  STRICTLY   POR  CASH\nHILL & COMPANY\nCRANBROOK'S\nGREATEST STORE\nnightfall borne Into the bouse. Sad\ntn see tbe innocent little faces pressed at eventide against the wludow\npane, watching for the \"dear papa\"\nwho has gone lo his long home.\nEvery man must patiently abide\nhis time. llu must wait, not In\nidleness, but. iu useless pastime, but\nin eousiautly, steadily tilling and ac-\nt pushing bis last, lhat when   the\noei-asinii .'nines lie may be equal to\nil.    The talent ol success is nothing\n ie than doing what you can    du\nwell, without a thought, ol    fame. It\nit e s at all it will come because\nit is sought after. It is a very in*\ndescn-et and troublesome ambition\nwhieh cares so much about what the\nworld says ol us; to lie always anxious about, the effect of what we do\nor sav; tu lie always shouting to\nhear the echoes nf our own voices.\nA CHAT WITH TIIK (URLS\nI heard somebody, perhaps it. was a\npri.de, .say tho other duy that fashionably iiccompllshed young ladies\nconsider it a disgrace to enter a\nkitchen or know how to make a\nloaf of bread. Now we know somo\nsensible g>.rls wlio do not consider\nthemselves disgraced if they are\nfound helping their mothers, and\nmoreover we know that what the\nabove mentioned prude snid Is true In\nmany instances.\nSociety at tbe present day -demands\nthat, girls shall he what they call accomplished; and to fulfill this demand\nHie mothers id Christendom teach\ntheir daughters that a knowledge of\nall that belongs to life's duties    at\nhome is not one of the requirements,\nlhat manuel labor must he consonant\nWitb drawing room cultivation. Ami\nso their lily hands slid idly over the\npiano keys; tbey wall\/ in Hie most\napproved style; simper a little Kieueli\nor German, quote poetry\u2014and society says Ihey are accomplished. Doubtless they are, aud hy-and-by, ns all\nmodern fashionables do, they win a\nhusband.\nNow is there one of their lin.isted\nuceoinpl shllienls that will help to\nmake or bless u home'* We kin\nlhat. music is pleasant,, and home is\nnot home where there arc no songs or\nsweet harmonies; but a knowledge of\nthe piano will nnt help a woman discharge tier wifely duties', and a\nsmat'tering nl French nr an ability to\nwait-* gracefully, will dn but little\nInwards preparing a palatable dinner'\nfor a bus-band when he comes homo\nhungry.\nModern girls have not |ess ahilitv\nban our grandmothers bad; the evil\nnil lies in the principles imbibed in\nearly years. It mothers will teach,\nhy word and deed, that idleness 4s nn\naccomplishment, then what may w\u00bb\nexpect? Where shall we look f0r\nthe true woman, the blessed homes\nIn Hie vears to come? The woman\nwho would fill life's station nobly\nnml well,'cannot learn too mueh.\nlf slie tails In her home she wtll bill\niu all; fnr there rest tho basis of her\nultimate success.\nKXCELSIOR-KUREKA\nNever In tbe history of any country, In any age,    has thcrs been such'\na mighty work before tto youth of\nour I.iiui us there is today* and we\nmi;;hl say never were yotllig men as\nIgnorant ol it and unlit leil (or their\nwork. Kadi om* wauls the other\nto low  Ibe hn.it while he i.t I .lies tlm\nlish. All Boom lo believe in luck.\nLet. us say to you, young men,\nIhal pluck wins moro battles than\nluck, Wishing is Ilia easiest way\nin the world lo gel a poor living.\nLooking lur Hie fortunate star to\nrise is like standing on lhe ocean's\nstrand waiting ami watching (or\nwealtleludch ships to come olier the\nsea that never \"put out.\" Wishing\nbrings a small income, and the laves\non it are enormous. Don't say the\nword owes you a living lllllll you\nhave earned mie. Idleness in boys\nami girls is fhe blackest curse of any\nland. Then* is just as .-real a work\nmid just as noble for Up Voting woman iis lor Ihe young man. When\nthe gills, in earnestness, east aside\ni.n* loose cloak id vain llcWeness, and,\niloimiii,*- lhe beautiful garments of\nlaboring purity, come forth from tbu\nsickly chamber of the \"accomplished\" asking \"What shall we do?\" and\nhearing the motto \"Woman's ability\nshall see light,\" then the boys will\nbecome more earnest, more temperate, more like men. Dear young\npeople be not afraid or ashamed of\nibor. Hard hand\nami   sun-burned\nUNCLE TOMS CABIN\nDownie's big Uncle Tom's I'.il.m\n,how, numhol'nig BI) people, carrying\nil 'bauds, a   genuine  pack id Siberian\nIiIimnI tlOUIlds, pomes, donkeys, ami SO\nj lollh,    Will      glVO  olli*     lllfjll   pel loi\nma nee t. tide t canvas in Ciaiilimok ,<u\nI Monday, Sept. tt,      This is wltlioul\nj ih-tihl   the  largest and      most   pel lei 1\norgan I\/nl T6m show Uml ha-, ovei\ntraveled thin or any othei country,\nAndrew McPhee, who is ihe sole own-\nei,    is  Willi   Ihe Show  hlliwell,   Which\nis a sufficient guarantee thai tin* performance will Im* Oral-class in every\nrespect, and fully up to Hie Mcl'hee\nstandard.\nf I rand street parade daily.\nAdmission 35c, and 50c. Allv\nstrong arms,\nfaces are honorable.\nTake \"Excelsior\" tor your motto,\n.i-nd if you are patient, In a few\nyears ymu can surely write under It\nthat other good word, \"Eureka.\"\nIIUI  ANTI ASIATIC PARADE\nVancouver, II. 0., Aug. 30.\u2014Fifty\neigihUmur labor unions nl the eily\nwill join In a hig anli-Aslatlc parade\nano! demonstration on Sept*. 7. Tho\nInternnit'innnl convention on the question of Asiatic exclusion will be held\nhere some t.me in September.\nJOE MARAP0DI\nSHOE SHOP\nItapairiuK a Specialty\nAiken! lihx-k, Crunbruuk THE   CHAN ROOK.   HERALD\nREALIZATION  SALE\nthi-\nE\nA\nL\nI\nZ\nA\nT\nI\n0\nN\n5\nA\nL\nE\nA FEW OF THE MANY SNAPS TO BE HAD AT\nTHE   SALE   OF\nREID & CO.'S 5T0CK\nA liooil Slarl in Hoys' Suits\ntiVlW BOVS' SI'ITS f\u201e\nI4.r,ii   \"\n13.00     \"\nH.i.i\n|3.00\nl-'.IHI\nOlid leil Hals\nItegular 11.00 nml >2.60 U.\u00abih\nsn,.: PKIOI5 $1.00\nMen's Huul Itargains\nAll Reduced excepting Bister's\nt_i per .cut. Dlatiounl)\nf.', uu SHOES for          11.00\n\u2022 loo     \u2022'     \"       18.20\n|:..oo     \"     \"     \u00bb\u00b0.i*\nRegatta Shirts\nSTIfF   UOSoMH\nRegular |l.25 anil 11.60\nSALK PRICE, EACH    75c.\nNegligee .Soft Bosom, Shirts\n    76o.\n  11.00\n  11.26\n11.00 ijnnliiy lor \t\n\u26661.25      \" \t\n11.50      \" \t\nCOLLARS, regular 25c. each, going nl\n:l for    25e.\nMen's Tweed Suits\nIncluding llu* tutnoua \" Kll-Keform.\"\nNu ill..' STUCK\nAt 33 ptr cant.   DI.count  Oil\nMen's Fancy Cotton Hosiery\nAl a Reduction of 86 per cent. off.\n\u00abc, HAI.K-HOSK lor, per pair 30c.\n;ir\u201e..          \"             '.' |.uir fur 55i\\\n25o,        \"           Inr, pur |mir -i'f.\nAmerican Collars\nt-I'ly Lilian.    Regular 26c. ouch.\n11,1,1 Sizes, lo clear, ul '.I lor '-'\u2022'\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\nLadies' Hat Sale\nTt, Remainder ol our Summer Slock to be\nCora. ou. I. H.I., aad la many cats (.nt-\nquarter, coal price.\nAll at $1.00 each\n\\Vure t'J.liO lo 1)0.(111\nLadies' P. D. Corsets\nThe I'. 1*. make, now lor $1.25 u pair\nLadies' Cotton Hosiery\nUnderwear\n25o   LADIES' VESTS for       ._        '-'.'\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nIV. LADIES' DRAWERS       . Si*\nsi,-.      \"        COMBINATIONS iOc\nWhile Shirt Waist Sale\nRegulai |l.25uuallty Im       \u25a0'\"'\nSI.60     \"   ti'ki\n12.00 anil 12.25 quality, now 11.50\nRI-ADY-TOWEAR (iOODS\nALL REDUCED\nOLOVES\nBLACK   AND TAN   LACE GLOYT.S\nHALF  PRICE\nDress Goods and Wash Goods\nAt Big Reductions\nALL CARPETS\nby Ibe yard must be eleareil nt ONI-.-\n'rHIKD OFF marked prleofl, These are\neheup lo lhose wlu> pur pope furnisliiii-*.\nNO GOODS EXCHANOEI) OK CHARGED DURIN.i SALE\nTHIS SALE WILL ONLY LAST FOR  A FEW DAYS LONGER\nBE IN TIME DO NOT DELAY\nBURNS BROTHERS\nREID BLOCK, CRANBROOK\nSUCCESSORS TO REIO & CO.\n********************** *********************;\n1.\nVISITORS ARE WELCOME AT ij\nG. T. ROGERS'\nii GROCERY STORE AND SHOE SHOP ii\n********************************************\n********************************************\nLUMBERMEN\nWill find our stock ot Mill\nSupplies complete Wo\nluivo  Hi.' facilities to till\nyour ,,nl,'r t'.\u00bbr\nBELTING\nwhen  yon villiI\nyon want it.\nit. :iml at.\nJ. D. McBRIDE\n,'RANIIRllilK, 11   C.\n********************************************\nMIGHTON'S\nCIGAR STORE\nCIGARS\nANU\nCIGARETTES\nWholesale nml\nRetail\nS. J. MIGHTON\nthi: Tim.uvoNisr\nShoes  from   M   to $2.75    al      the\nc. c. s.\nIt. Anthony, locomotive Internal!,\nceomyanted hy his sou Gordon, loft\ntoday fur Winnipeg for au holiday of\ntwo weeks. I!ii!*b McDonald, of\nl.elbhridge, is bote to take Mr.\nAnthony's place.\nMrs. 'l'l-sky, of New York, ami ber\nslcr, Mrs. Fred Ycamlli', ot Kindt,\nmet liere lasl Saturday anil remained    a lew days, the clients of   their\nousin, Charles Yeandle, before pro-\n-ceding to Kholt.\nFurnished house, three rooms, tor\nsale, in north pail uf town. $Hiti\ne.isli.    Mrs. Smoke. 23-tl\nA big line of beaters just iu, both\nsheet iron and easi. Suitable for\nshack or residence.\u2014Pa I more Hros.\nMiss Ethel Fink, nf Spokane, who\nlias been down to Indian Territory\nfor ihe past three months visiting u\nloot ber, arrived the first of tbe week\nfor a visit with her brother of    litis\nity, .1. I\\ Fink.\nIt. J. Blaok, of Fertile, passed\nthrough the city yesterday on the\nFlyer, with liis bride for Spokane and\noilier cities, There was a large dc-\nlegalfou of \"Bert's\" Cranbrook\nfriemls al tbe station to meet bim.\nMrs\nKlko,  vi*\n.It.ni*-  f.\nClu dee\n\\pply I.\nnere, n\n\"Kootenay\" range is slill   thu\n-Patmore Pros.\nI'hailes KHngensmltb, ol\nvisited with Mrs. T. Arm-\nfor several tlavs  Ihis week.\nbitneh\nW.\nc.\nLOCAL  NOTES\nPICKED UP    ABOUT   TIIE CITY\nBV ask IMI QUESTIONS OF\nMANY  PEOPLE.\nT   M   Huberts\niltiil Mo\naim\ntl   to H2\nFred Tale\nbiolher Km\nBay.    l.atei\n.   left\nKlie\nsteers tor sale.\nTavnton,  Wiudei-\n21-lt\nmipaiiietl   by   bis\ntoday for North\n.ill eii'lei   a sehool\nin  'I'i\nllln\nuutuetod\nThursday    evening,\nt. 7 30, bv the   Hev\nof the ('. P. It. have\ntune hour day     all\nTedloik   anil\ncoast by the\nCl.i 11,  spent     S I.l\\\nS|i.\n'   c\ntt.\nM   In\nul\nHi.\n\\\\   ll.inliiig  Will  nn.\nniv km.! of garden wo\nnl  t'.iipeiih't. id   Ellloka,   Moii\n* iii  the City on business.\nudeilake  lo      ilo\nuk or chores.\nMr. and Mis. .1. Itrault and family\nvlsilnl friends in Pineher     litis week.\nMr. anil Mrs. (leorge Iloggaiih paid\na visit  to Klko yesterday afternoon,\nW. It. Ross, of Fernie, was among\nllu* visitors from Feinii' last Monday.\nA. Metlor, lb.* well known mer-\neliaiil of Marvsville, was in town on\nMon*.' y.\nFl it Clapp, ol Spokiine, bus been\nliaiisaeting liusiiiess iu town Ito past\nfew days*.\nHorn\u2014On Mondav, September 2,\n1IU17, to Mr. and Mis. W. F. McFttr-\nlaiie, a son.\nMrs. Fred Kumuier lefl for Spokane yesterday for a few days visit\nwith friends.\nMrs. William Mowers. aeeoni pan led\nhy her mother and sister, arrived\nhome loday.\nMiss Cecelia MeConnell, of Waldo,\nhas iN-eii tbe guest ol the Misses Clint:\nthe past week.\nelatlvc\nMi    ,i\nliovwl\nibleiiee\nI.e..\nof ,Iaf-\nlaubinok\nli.\n0.   U. S.\nThe machinists\nbeen ^i.in nil ibe\nOVOI   llie sysleiu.\nMr nml Mrs. George\nli.iln lefl loday foi the\nSo.i Spokane rotito,\nMi. .md   Mts.    W.   nlle.un\nnn.   upon I   Monday   wilh  (\nand friends.\nI   Mis,   A    C    NelfH\nilo   111.>il   liaiidsoliie\n >  lt.il.el   hill.\nik A  Co   Blurted  today on    tbe\n.'<.ustliietli>ll   >.f   the   lesideiiee   ot     .1.\nKennedy ou Maker Mill.\nMrs. George It. Leask and\nyounger son lelt today for Spokane\nfor a tew  weeks visit.\nQuite a number of the ni minds ot\nthe eily went out last Sunday hut\n[nun.I game very scarce.\nMrs. .Inliii Leask desires llm Herald\no extend thinks in tin, party who\neturiu-il her lost brooch.\nGordon Sinn\nA   senii-e      will\nW.tlisli-itg   nexl\nS.-plellllh*!    131,1\nIt. Hilf-bes.\nThe nml hei and s'ister of I. II. Will\ns.ui lmve arrived from Wardner ami\nthe i.imih are occupying tin* residence\nformerly owned hv -i. It. Moe.\nTbe\nfamily of \u25a0). II Moo have brok-\neu up housekeeping and shipped Iheir\nfurniture lo Nelson preparatory to\n-toning  Mi    Moe .it  that place.\n(i W. Orchard, formerly manager\nof ibe Porto Hieo Lumber eompanv\nat Moyie, bul now rt resident of\nS|iok,iiie, was in town yesterday.\nIt   C   minting and     .1. IL Garden,\nIwo business men nf C.ilgarv. stopped\noff in Ci.,nl.i..,,l, the lirst of the week\nto Visil I!.      1   miming (or a day or\nSIMM's  from    JI   to  ti!.:,\"i    at\niC, 0. s.\nI Miss Kottmier left yesterday for\n| Kossland, where she has accepted a\nposilion in one of the largo dry Roods\nstores in that citv. Miss Kottmiei\nhas boon with VI. T. Reid A- Co. for\na couple of years ami her departure\nwas the source of much) regret on\nthe part of her manv friends iu this\ncity.\nF. Duffield returned this week from\nhis trip east, having stopped iu\nLey-bridge for a short lime wliile\nMoss Tale was iu Cranhrook. Mr.\nDuffield met wilh quite a severe accident while rubbing his thumb along\na pane of glass, the pane being bn.k-\n:n and inflicting a bul gash in his\nright hand.\nDr. Keith, wife ami baby, ol Coal\nCreek, accompanied bv Mis. Carter,\nmother of Mrs. Keith, arrived m tbe\neity yesterday. Mis, Keith ami\nmother will reside at tin* residence\nof M. It. King for a short time with\nIt A. Carter, as Ur. Keith has gone\nI.. En-derby, ll.    C, to locale and is\nUlinblQ In serine a hnllsc at this\ntune.\n.1. W. Robinson, nf Red Deer, arrived in the city last week ,iid will\nhe here for sevei.il days. Mr. Rob\u00ab\niiison says that Southern Alberta Is\nall nghl fm a good yield ami that K\nthe warm weallu't Keeps up, Northern\nAllien,, will make a splendid showing, 11 lias In-en some lime since\nMr. Robinson has boon in Cranbrook\nand his many friends here were pleased tu see liim.\nShoes from Jl to J2.7a al llie\nC. C. S.\nConstable Mollis was called to\nFernie yesterday. There is a rumor\naround tbat Mr. Morris may be called\nto that city to take temporary\ncharge of the provineial police work\nof that district. The Herald trusts\nihat it will only he temporary il\nMr. Morris is called away, as bis\nmany friemls in this city would surely enter a protest if the government\nhad designs upon him.\nMiss Green, of Victoria, a graduate\nnf thi*. Toronto Conservatory of\nMusic, has decided lo remain iu Cranbrook and organize a class of music.\nAlready Miss Green is meeting with\nunexpected success along this line and\nher experience with the leading teachers of the east and her work b.iih in\nCanada and the United States eminently (its her lor the responsible\nwork that she lias undertaken,\nW. T. Reid A- Co. desire tbe Herald\nto extend thanks to (tie people of\nthis city and district for the patronage given llie firm during the many\nyears that they have been iu business\nhere, mul also to express Hie hope\nUnit Uie people will do as mueh or\nmore for the new firm ot Burns\nBrothers, their successors in business, Vlio will do nil in their power\nto give their patrons every satisfaction,\nSltocs from U to $2.75 at the\nC. 0. S.\n\\. l). McDonald brought to tbe\nHerald ollice this week a magnificent\nspecimen of oats raised at the St.\nEugene Mission. 'I'he bunch brought\niu sIiwhI over live feet high and was\nwell ripened with a well developed\ngrain. Mr. McDonald also brought\n\u25a0in some very line samples of apples\nalso raised at the Mission. Tbis\nsimply adds evidence to what tbe\nlleralil bus maintained all tbe time\nthat this district will raise anyjthltis\nIII for Ibis kind of a climate, and\nthat is pretty nearly everything.\nHill <Y Co. will have a big opening\nnext Saturday, Monday and Tuesday,\nnf iheir new slock of millinery and\ndress goods. Mr. Hill will show\nsmiie millinery creations on that occasion lhat will surprise and please\nthe ladies, ami his dress goods will\nalso he attractive iu the extreme. In\nthis connection Mr. Hill wilt show\nUie ladies some glorious ideas in\nladles cloaks and coals, thai h.ive\nheen Imported direct from France and\nGermany. The ladies of this eily\nand district   should bear iu mind  the\n!   Shoos from   $1  to !.!.\">   ul\n.'. ... S.\nI   Air. Ii.,l|,l,    Nniilli,    U. I'., uf Na-\nthol\nMr. am. Mrs. William l'cltit left 'naimo, accompanied by Mrs. Smith\ni.n Tuesday fm Chicago, where Mr. Iimsscl through Cranbrook las. Sun-\n1'i'tiii will nitfml    .lie rimvriiti,hi nf iiu)' en route fnr Kernie.    Mr. Smith\nHi,- Brotherhood ,if Railway Carmen\n,.! America. Mr. nml Mrs. Potlll\nexpect t,. he absent ahnnl a month.\nMLks Reebe, nf Frank, was the\nguest ,,. Miss Gertie Hoik at the\nWentworth hotel the past week. A\ndance was given in lhe younc, lady's\nhonor last evening al the Wentworth\nami a largo number ol guests were\npresent,\n.1. ('. Reeil, who has been transferred In Medicine Mat as locomotive\nforeman, is iu town tod.iv lookine\nafter tlie shipment of his household\nmuni*. Mis. Ilenl and the habv will\nremain a few days the guesls of Mr.\nand Mrs. K. Home.\ninvestii_ntin_ the eoal and coke\nsituation lur Ihe purpose of getting\nposted brfore the next session of\nparliament. Mr. Smith i.s one of tlie\nstrongest members of parliament i<i-\nilay, and is a mail who is growing in\nstrength and Influence, (juitc a\nnumber of Mr. Smith's friends met\nhim at the station um. extended the\ngreetings of the (own .o him and\nhis most estimable wife.\n1.. 1. Drown, uu expert piano tunor,\nwho has just arrived Irom the east,\nwill remain iu tbe city for a few\ndays am. give his attention lu tuning\nthose pianos in Cranbrook .bat need\nbis attention, Mi. Drown says that\n,,    .     ,.,    . . ,.,       ...    .    lire   will    guarantee   every    nlecn oi\nJ'w    i ii     >    i'\"' V\"'\"'' ''\"!\"\u25a0\" 'i'i   work, and   Ihal he bas arranged\n, ot ' f 1e5S . '\"T\"*\"\"'\" ''\u00ab lo    plain, t'ranbrook    on his regular\nsummer at  Wyclffo, le    yoster- \u201e,\u201e,\u201e' tora_ln \u201e\u201e, ln nil, visil here\nfor Vancouver ami s,.,,l le     and   ,\u201e,,,\u201e.   U:m    Ulm,s ., veal.     Those\nwill proceoil lo Ann  Inr-\u2022 lluv|,^ ,_a os \u201e,\u201e,    ,\u201e\u201e, \u201e\u201e. a,\u201e.\u201e.\nto .\u25a0\"llllllli.; Hull      college     *,'\u201e\u201e    \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e    t.u\u201e    \u201e,,,,,      M-\ncourse nt tho university. Drown by    telephoning   No. 04,    at\n(>,,.. un oil heater, Jusl the thing; Ibe Cosmopolitan hotel, 11111I leave\nfor the bath room Ihese chilly even-1 word for hiui, or drop a cud at that\nings.    Wo have the   very best,\u2014Pit- address.\nmore Dlos. |   s\u201e\u201e,.s  (,,\u201e\u201e   \u00bb|   t\u201e  \u00bb_.:.-,    at      Ihe\nMr. ami Mrs. .1. Ericsson left lo- tl. 0. 8,\niv       for   the   coast     bv     wav   of I   .i-i.. r\nCalgary, where Ihey will place their  ,  ',''\n'\u25a0\"  and  Vera    I.   .   '\nMr\nHILL  *,   COMPANV\nOur Great Millinery and Dry\nGoods Display\nI.ailics! Wo desire to .extend un invitation to nidi\nnnd every one lu visit nut Millinery and Dry Gdods\nl.is|,lny mi Satunluy. .Monday uinl Tiii-sduy. the ith. '.'tli\numl lutli nf September.\nWo lielicve that this year wr lmve succeeded iu\nexcelling mir efforts in all previous years, and we will\nplace lur ynur inspection tiie largest and must up-to-\nilute lines nf Undies' Ready-i.-Wear Hate ever imported\nint.* .his Western country.\nIt is universally admitted that Pari, controls tlie\nworld's Millinery almost about ns effectually us .lie sun\ncoutrols the solar system.\nWe believe we ure ihu only merchants in Craubrook\nwho impurt direct frnm tlie fashion centre.\nCull and criticize our etTiirts.\nIndications in .he groat Centre of Fashion at present\nfavor the idea that there will lie little if any radical\ndeparture from the lines laid down fnr Midsummer lints\nin those intended for Lute Kail and Kurly Winter. At\nnil events, the changes wrought .luring the months of\n.luly uud Aliens, iu Millinery styles must prove uf considerable importance ns regards the future.\nAs seen by a competent authority, these consist in a\nvery decided heightening uf tlie crown, entailing new\narrangements nf trimming und a new method uf wearing\nthe hats in keeping with their higher crowns, and there-\nfure quite well adapted tu the coming season.\n'in exhibition with our Ladies' Huts, etc., we will\nplace before you mir Ladies' Cloaks ami .'uata. These\nwe have imported direct from France and Germany, and\nwe feel satisfied tliat iu this particular line as well we\nenn satisfy the must exacting.\nj     Kindly remember the dates-. Saturday, Monday and\n. Tuesday, Sept. 7th. 9th and loth.\nHILL A. COMPANY,\nC'raubruok'a Greatest Store.\nWANTED\u2014A girl to do general upon tbe statement of individuals fur\nhousework. Applv to Mis. Jas. II. mc ne\u00bbs. NeiUwi the correspondent\nt'.isl.il.,-. Hox :\",,' Cranbiook, D. C. ol \u00ab.e Herald ui lt_ lleiald wish lo\n2.-3t mate a mistake and    any correction\nMi\n(I.   II.  Thompson  will  receive.\n..ill _.   cheertu.l]      made ll    Ibe rtr-\n11,4-\nllll)\nfrom tber\nbur. Mich.\nnext Tuesday,  Sept.  Kith. I 'lu\u00b0l '\" \"\"^ 1U U\"-' Pt0P\u00ab sI''m-\nMr. llm rant, ol   Perry    Creek, has'   !'\u25a0 M- Cooper, w bo ba\u00bb Ix-cu    vvt,-\nlicon  in town  Hie past few davs. l\".'vl^. \"\"*  *\u00a3'   \"*\u00bb'  brand, ol    Ibu\nCaiiailian Hank ol Commerce fur two\nflank Hyniii spent a few days    in  jeats and a im.I, has received notice\nMoyie the   past    week in connection  ,a hi., Kaiistei tu tbt inspn-ioi s ot-\niviih his Iniik business. Iflee at\" Vancouver,     ihU i\u00bb _    gieat\nMis. .lohn b'ingal    Smiili left    for  promotion lui a young nui, wbo lui.\nfort Steele to spend a Week Willi her   been in tbe Ould.     _uen a \u00bbbuit l_e\niellll, Mrs. Clark. j ami  baa   _een  gncn      lu  Ml.   Cuupei\nMrs. V. A. Rollins will receive   at \".'\"P1!  I\u00abcamie be baa maUe _uod in\n..ie resilience nl   Mrs. Oeo. Hogearib Ims *ork.    ll a u\u00ab !'uui^ men wbu\nWednesday afternoon, September lit., '\"\u2022lk': S\"\"1 UV *\"= appreciated    in\n,,,,\u201e. ,    .     , busmess and Mi.    cooper is one   ui\nCharles   Patmore   of     Frank,    ac- tfcem      ^ \u201e     w      %^ u        ft.,\ncoin auietl by bis wn,- and dud   w^ h^        prosperit)  in bi, new plaoo.\nvisiting lus    nephews,     the Patmore p it; i\nbrothers of this city,-Trom Saturday     \"Monty,\" Uie shine man, bos    kit\nuntil Tuesday. | I'raahrouk and     \u2022-'\u25a0;.. lo llalcyoa :>\u2022>:\nllnirv   PptLil   Iia<i      iii.rehi.ihi      lb.-   il'IU,i-f> ur 3'Jll,t: oUlt'[  i\u00abPMt -Ol Ito\nll.nr-   nut    as    purcha.et'     the j^.,^,,, ,j( ^^ tttfaitb,    \"Mooty\" madf*\nMls. Oeorgo Urowu i.s.di-i.cc oi Bak- reputetion wHIe m Uie city\nor Hill nnd lake,, possession with his ^8ulie 0, ^ ^ rtiM artial8 ..^\n,amI,\/\u00ab ever can.*.- down    Uie Kouiena*.  ptKc,\nThe new government huildin**    will db  ttuii as m pfawioinen-t loot racer.\nsoon be ready for occupancy and   as ol lhe Utter reputation \"Monty\" was\nsoon as    the     furniture arrives     the very pi uud and never  Was guntv    ol\nprovincial and city olliclals will move ,,|, '  act tbat would jeopardize    his\nin. Blending as tbe     whirlwind amateur\n.Mrs. K. Dons will    remain in     lhe oot racer ol Western Canada,\ncilv until she has settled up tbe bus-,    ]- J0U waul to see the latest    awl\niness of ber late husband before   re- UUirh{ \u2022\u201e tht Wdy 0j drtsi trimmings,\nturning to California. so attract Ive, =o anialic, su pleasing\nW. K. (Jutd left yesterday for Spo- to    the eye,   that yuu   will witb re-\nkane to join Mrs. Guwl and children luctance turn away from one only to\nami Mrs. .1. O, Uummings, who  bave be enchanted by tbo next, then go u\u00bb\nbcon stopping there     tbe past     two Hill & Co. and see their latest   im-\nweeks. portatlons from hrai.ee.     There    is\nii*   ii     i   ...,;.   i i   .     wm trimming   there as    high as $12   \u00bb\nnui    has  bet:     icteni'd      on     \\\\ .       ?,.,, ,,,, J* ,:,.    ;,      -\nCranbrook either on Friday or Satin-1   Hill &. Co. have two car loads    o.\nday of this week. furniture on lhe way and more com-.\nAnnus .'. Nicholson, tho bright cor- !\"_\u2022, Mr.'Hill said tbat (k .smglit\nresiii.nil.iii ol the Herald al Crothers ,ri*'>. \" 1\"' slruek the market just\nmill was in Hu- city Tuesduv and \u00bbt the riSl,t Ul,,<-'. \u00ab*f\" *\u2122 \"ldm|-\nnalil uus oibee a pleasant fraternal lacturcrs were [eel I rig the strtngency\n,ajj of the money market _i,d     were ani-\nious to make sales.        '\u25a0! am afi.ud,\nI wu\nII\ntil\nul      Hi.\ni   Shoes from\n.'. 0. S,\n'   Mrs.    Procter   nml   Miss    Phyllis\nil'riH'lor lelt ou Tuesilny evetiitifi tor\nIheir     home   in   Stillwater,   Minn.,\nafler a plensiiiil visit with    Mrs. ...\nII. Thonips'oii.\nMaurice    Qua in    returned Tuesday\nliitm uu I'X'lendl'll trip lo eastern Cuil-\nIuilA   and     the    States.     Mr. ininin\nreliinml lust Sundnv ,\"\"ks i,s \" \"\"' ,r|l' \"K'''''''1 willi him\n \"in the fullest client.\nfrom    Spokane   nnd  will visit    bis\nlinearis for a sliorl time. I   ,|\u201e\u201elra n   Henderson, C. P. It. He\nGovernor Hanson, ot Wasa, puddled I Inspector, Irfl loilav for Kor. Wil-\nhis auloiuobile lhroii|>h Ihe mini to Ham, On... In meel his wife, who\nCranbrook on Labor Day. thus been visiting in Hie 01ilt Country\nW.  11.    Ileal t y     protests   against ''\"' 'be past few months,\npeople flshlnc III Hie lata nt the hack    Mrs. It.    II. Hnudiei reliirnnl    lo\niloor of Ins business place. |Miiyook lusl Sunilav afler an exleml-\nSlmes from tl In fl7!i al, Hie ed-visil lo her hirn.nr home lu St\nC. 0. S. il'itul, Minn,      Slie wus accompanied\nltcv. Hughes  will preach at Moylo bV her inolher, Mrs. iTnrsh.\non .Sumliiy   nexl,   ami Itov. Ilmilloiij   |>cv, Mcwelllna has eone lo Vernon\nwill occupy tin pulpit hern. | to ml Hie    pulpit   there    for a few\n.lames McNeil and Charles Yeandle weeks, Archdeacon l.eers will sup\nure ul St. Marys lake this week de-.ply lhe pulpit of Christ's church dur-\nplating the supply of trout. 'ing Itov. Klowidling's absence.\nwas\ndaughters,   Misses Klin\nin school ut    Vancouver.\nMrs   Kriitsnii will spend\nting Hie various cllles\nbefore their return,\nSpecial   arrangements\niiiiiile to make the hnrvei\ngreii'l success on lhe\nanil\nlevcral davs\n.f Ibe ..11.,'sl\nuie being\nI festival a\nInst.    All\nsmall lila\/f In     III.'\nat the       St.     Ku-\ngiiie hospital Wednesday morning, ami tbe dotiflrtme.it maile a run\nfor Hie premises, but the blaio\namoiinlisl lo nolhiiig The call demons! ruled one thing, however, uud\nIhal is Unit no time should be lust in\nplacing a hydrant at the hospital. If\nthis is nol done and a bad file breaks\nwlm ean assist by sending Irulb,    or oul before the hose could be stretch\noilier giirden    produce arc earnestly ,.,| ,|ml distance, the buildings might\nremiostcd to do so.    Tin. church will |\u201e. ifooined and perhaps some ol    Hie\nlie decorated nnd spisiul  sin    und s;,.|i burned.     Now is Hie lime     lo\nsinging will In1 rendered\nI,. I. Drown, an experl plntin timer\nWho bus jllst ull'iVnl     f 1 the east\nwill remain   in the  eily lor a   few\ndays am. give his attention to tuning c. C. S\nact   iu Ills mallei.     The loss lit lhe\nSi.  KuKcne hospital would be a snd\nblow to the whole district.\nShoes Irom   tl  lo tliii   al     Uw\nlhose pianos In Cruiiliroiik Unit nml\nbis attention. Mr. Brown snys that\nlie will guarantee every pleco of\nhis work, and thnt he Ims nrrnunod\n.o place Cranhrook on his regular\nmule hereafter nnd he will visit bete\ntwo or Hirer times a vear. Those\nhaving pianos Ihnl need Hie attention of an expert enn reach Mr.\nDrown by telephoning No. Ill, nt.\nthe    .'..suio|nilil,ni   hold, and   leave\nWord for hi >r drop a ca.il al lhat\naddress,\nNow Is the lillle In Ihilik about\nyour furnace. We handle the Sunshine furnace. The greatest success\nin furnace heating.\u2014I'atmole Dros.\n1.. I. Drown, au expert piano tuner,\nwho has just arrived from the east,\nwill remain in the city tor a few\ndavs ami give bis attention to tuning\nthose pianos in Cranhrook .hut need\nhis allenlioii. Mr. Drown says that\nhe will guarantee every piece nl\nhis work, and Ihal be bus arranged\nto plaee Oranbrook on his regular\nroute hereafter and he will visit here\nIwo or three times a year. Those\nhaving pi'.auns Hm. nml lhc alleii-\nt mu of an expert can reach Mr.\nI.rown by telephoning No. Ill, nt\nIbe Cosmopolitan hotel, and leave\nword tor bim, or drop a card at that\naddress.\n.Mr   an.l  Mis. .1.  Iv  Davis returned\nlast Saturday Iroi\nvery   pleasant\nhowe'.er,    that    I   bought    too freely\nid   Ml.   lllll.\n,,,s,   OM.i.1   . u,\u201e   a  \u2122,     ,,,-asa, ,            expilisivclv,'    Mid   Ml.   lllll.\nvacation a   Me .\u201e,,\u201e\u25a0, s Island bole ..,     ,               |v \u201e     , . ^^_ \u201e\u201e;\na    Waldo, an    tbey speak highly     pi k. \u201e, Cranbr0\"k \u201e\u201e. i,'.,,,.,,, \u201e( \u201e,y\nMi. McConnell\u00ab   cotiltesy and    able j.,,,',. b   {    mi   (U, d\u201e_ IllV \u201e\u201e\u201e\nmiiliiigeuicnt. |iruflls   ls wc,\u201e      T,la,  v.,11 sell     tbo\n.lames Hislop bus gone to Kelowna goods I have   bought.     1 am expecte\nto accept the posilion of principal ol ing the ears by tne   middle of    the\nIhu schools iu   lhat eily. and    Mrs, month and their   contents will open\nllislo|. will join him in a roiiple    ol   the eyes   ol tho    I pic nl llns dis-\nwei-ks.     Tho Helulil  wishes Ibe fain- trict.\"\nill over,    success In    their new loCa-\nli'on.\nTho Alberto I'i\nassociation will\nCranbrook a week fiom   to-\nPhere will lie a v;,m\u00bbI   re-\nIACI.I-: TOM\nUncle Tom's Cabin   eom-\niiniiiow.    There will lie a vfond   n^   a|iv   \u201e),,,.,, \u201eiVP ., \u201ejgi,t performaiice\npreststlnl .1   Uio quill drivers pro- 'Ml\\., ,.,,\u201evas (n Crarftrook on   Mon-\nsetll and the people ol ( ranbrook will   da\u201e   Sept. s, is said to carry     the\nsee Ihnl ihey have a good .lime.   No  .rratra1 lr\u201eu,K. \u201et genuine eaki^walk-\nlown can     do I limb Im  usiting    rs jn \u201e\u201e. lima,,,.*,;.    This part of tbe\nnewspapei  men. | cntertnlnmoB. alone   is welt    worth\nMr. [flettilennliig, the artist i,- win-ifi,. price nt admission, and they hav.\nilow dresser al .1. I). McUrule's store, , |HVI, creating a great deal ol'tavor-\nui'ade a glial hit for Labor Day with able comment everywhere. l\/ittle\nUio window prepared for tbat occa-|Miss Hackctt, who plays the part ol\nsion lie made an engine out of EVSi ,s a wonderful child. She is\nthe. various tinware articles sold in only 7 years of age, and Is very\nHie store and labeled it the first j versatile, and her singing and danc-\nKootenay Central lo teach Cra~-'lnr, specialty is one ot the most,\nbrook. It was a wonderful piece of pleasuring features ol the pcrfor-\nwuik nul nttracled an Immense mancc. A grand street parade will\namount ol attention. In* given daily.     Admission 25c.   and\nlioin Wardner 50c.\u2014Adv.\nA correction come\nio the   effect Hint thu    llorahl erred |\nus. week tn-taJJ\"-: ^l.VKJ'tat ',|;ltllv    ,'lli:l':K    HOTEI'    K\"l!\nAid gave a   ilaliie, anil slating    llial l KASK\nI lame     was given by Iwo gentle- ,    ,,,   ,      \u201e ,        ,,\nmen    Instead       With    lhe      great     Owtug lo ill Iw-altl. I will lease the\niin..mil of news given by Hie Wardner Hell) Cnvk hotel and ranch, or    lhe\n\u25a0orrestioirdenl it    is to be wondered hotel alone,    lor terms write ... A.\nthat moro errors do not creep in, as \"urge, (.'ranbrook, U. C, or call    at\nevery   correspondent    has to depend the hotel. THE   ORANlUtOOK-MHERALD\nl^>\u00ab-^\u25a0^\u2022^\u25a0^\u2022s-^'^^\u25a0\u00ab'^\u25a0^>^^\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0^\u2022^\u25a0^\u25a0s\u25a0^\u25a0^a^\u25a0^f*>\u00ab^^a\nNews of the District\naE___-g;\n__\u25a0__> fl_tii_j\nWritten by Bright Correspondents and Gleaned irom Newspapers\n\u2022^\u25a0sBsa^Bs_s_sBs_v_s>s\u00ab>_<\u00abvBsrvas\u00abs_s.>\n**********************\n- \u2122\n\u2666\n2 ELKO AND TOBAC\n|        CO PLAINS\n**********************\n(Krom our uwu correspondent)\nUlcssod\nale  Ih\ney\nIhu\nt\nexpect  notll-\ning (or ll\ned.\nley    sh\nall\nmil\nb\ne ilisappoiut-\nThose\npeople\ni    who\nn\nle so fond of\ngiving ad\nami    doc:\nvice sh\nl.i.   a\nDull\nird\n1   1\ni\nome lawyers\npaid fin il.\nThere's a\nlot ol\n|le\nupb\nii  lllis si-em-\n[ugly rile\nid    wm\nId\nII\niat\narc  always\nlooking 1\nul   llie\ndu\nrk\nSill\nle of   every-\n.liiug the\ny can\ngel\ntin\n\u25a0ir\noptics     on,\numl Ihe\nwav   i\n..un\ne o;\nf\nIhese i pie\ntwist   llll\n\u2022 trulh\nin\na\nva\niu desire    lo\nbesmirch\nlluioci\n'iil\n1\nlei\nsons     would\nS'llulllr   llll\ne   If ul\nW\n'e\nwere writing\nloi  \"Old\nMan\"\nSii\nll|lf\n.in\ns paper    he-\nlot,. Hies,\n,\u25a0 Sllll-I\nu-ai\nIs f\nvel\nsaw Hiiitisli\nColumbia, and we expect to be writing lor hiui when Ihese people wiil be\nMink inlo oblivion Ue eat well and\nsleep well ninl don't unity much.\nWe have hosts ol friemls ami few\nin.-lilies. Show us our enemies and\nwe will show vou specimens of Immunity with souls so small tbat tbey\nknow no nu.ie about lhe higher minds\naround tlmin than a bull frog knows\na Iron I an cugle. Sunn1 peoplu bate to\nsee others iirosperoiis and it's the\nj.ios|Ni'iiy the writer is enjoying Unit\nis the sore spot. Sidney Smiih, iu\nan afler dinner speech, said that, il\ntakes a surgical operation lo gel a\njuke into some people'-\" head ami wc\nwonder ri lhe people who Incited him\nlu make ibis remark moved into\n.south K.isi Kootcuay. As Charlie\nUelisler, ul Ureal ' Kails, Montana,\nsaid: \u2022The Ignorance ul the lower\nclasses is becoming alai'liiiug and the\namount thiii criticise the hii.o notes\n111 the Cranhrook (B.C.) Herald lot\nlhe purpose of trying tu hurt oui\nbusiness would make the hair tisi* un\na marble statue.\" As old Man\nSimpson says: every knock is a\nIn.usl, and the more you knock lhe\nheller we like you, Every mouth we\nsee our business and friends hioreiis-\n11 if*, ue have (lie assurance fiom 111-\nteiligeiil peoplu thai our terse room rifs have iicen enjoyed and wo re-\njoiee Uiat our time was not altogether wasted, and lu ito ignorant wc\ntender our humble apologies for taking up their valuable lime which\nmight have been spent in sorting\nspuds oi weeding onions. In onion\nthere is strength, ami a shut mouth\nis most becoming lo a d\u2014u Iool.\nTin* Klku school opened fur business\nAugust U7tii, with Mr, Myers, 01\n\\ icioriu, in charge. There were 2.)\nchildren in attendance. The new\nboard ol Uus toes seem tu be laiflug\na iieep interest iu Ito setiooi aim\nIhere Is every reason to believe llial\niiu; parents will assist tbe trustees\nami teacher iu bringing the school inlo the from rank. .\\o matter how\ngood Hit* leaeher may be, unless the\nparents lake a baud in the conduct\noi their children while ill scbuul and\nseeing tbey a I tend regular, they\ncan't expect to make Ihem scholars,\nI'.iienis do your duly, the trustees\nuijl do theirs.\nThe Moyie Lcalier, ol\npublished a compliment)!\nmt'iil for Kiwi lion's\nanil home - fed buco\nspecial men lion of his\nbut air tablets lo\nKlku.\n\\ugiisl Hh.\niv advertise*\nnative Hour\ni, making\nsugar cuulotl\ntoiirtsis visiting\nHilly McKweu spent a week camping and lishing out at Itock creek, and\nreports a splendid time antl lots of\nlish.\nMr. (ilea Campbell came lo Klko\nSunilay 011 a visit in bis wife, whu\njs visiting with Mrs. K. 11. Hul brook.\n.Ills. Saiibuij-, ot Klkmouth, uud\nher brother, were Klko visitors this\nweek.\nJohn .Smith, Hit* notorious piitecaL\n.nul limber cruiser, discovered a lake\nabove Kilo, full of spring water and\nrainbow trout, ami in all probability\nKlku will have in the near future a\nwitter power second to none iu ihu\nDominion uf Canada. put your\nX-ltuys mi Klko. It's only a ipies-\nllon of a few years when Uraiibrook\nand Kernie uili be suburbs of Klk).\nJobu Moll, ut ibe Hoffman house,\nuho owns considerable properly iu\nand around Klko, lakes tbe matter iu\nband and hires at his uuu personal\nexpense an oxperl civil engineer and\ngang of trail blazon, headed by\nJohn Smith, tn estimate,the possible\n\u25a0 nst of supply iug Klko with water\n,md the ranchers fur irrigation purposes. Klku to.l.i) is known as thu\nhunter's paradise, The head quarters\nin lliiiisb Columbia loi Uu* gamey\ntrout, the Switzerland of Snuib Enst\nKootenay fur scenery, and trom 11\nmanufacturers puint ol view we have\nthe  greatest     water   power   west     of\nNiiittnra Kails, the greatest body of\nmarl 011 earth, the most suitable\nstone fm cuke ovens and palatial\nmansions, the greatest point iu the\nworld fur pulp mills, tbo fruit hinds\nsouth will make it lhe best market in\nBritish Columbia uu account of its\nnearness to Alberta and the proline\npiovlnces, the Great .Northern and\nthe C, V. It. are nuw here, the Kootenay Central to come, the Koos-\nvillc-KIko electric line tn build,   and\nthe completion ol the Chicago, Hutte\nCjly and Klko Air line will make il\nibe' Winnipeg, from a railroad point\nnf view, of British Columbia.\nVou ean talk abuut your climate and\nseaside resort,\nBanana belts, orange groves, nnd all\nof that sort\nHut let mc    just post ynu, I've been\non the ground,\nAnd Elko's the finest that yon   ever\nfound.\nMiss Inez Moi brook, one of Elko's\nmost popular young ladies, left lor\nlliiluth, Minn., In Attend college,\nafler s|iending a pleasant vacation\nwith ber mother ami\niuiis to ber departure\nally entertained hy her hosts of\nnds tn card parties, soeial bops,\nbasket picnics, etc , and lu-r many\nfriend-- were at the station to wish\nher bun voyage when she left   via  the\nGreat Northern southbound Flyer lor\nthe far east. We wish ber every\nsuccess at school and hope she will\nreturn wiib honors to gratify lier ut-\nfictionale mother's every wish.\nFred Skelton and Bob Ski I beck,\nfor Washington last week for\npleasure trip,\nleft\nThe  Klko\ninitial  plciil\nSunday School held their\ni- We.lnesd.iV   August   3SUi\n1 Buy lies Lake. Mrs. Jot m Tod-\nhunter, Mrs. Moll. Mrs. J. McKee,\nMrs Kennedy and Miss M,.rv Tod-\nhunter had charge ol Thr affair uud\nWits ibe grealest success I rum\ny point ot view, (tie children liavo\nknown, The prizes, fruits, can-\n, catering and livery expenses\nWere All  paid for     oil! of the reserve\nfund, which speaks volumes lor   the\nmaiiageim'jii, \\vln.*h catiliol Ih* lieut\nno place in Soulh Kast Kootenay. No\noue was asVi.il for assistance, and the\nladies mentioned above have tbe\ngood wishes of everybody iu the district fur lhe independent manner iu\nwhieh they carried out every detail\nand made such a brilliant success of\nthe whole alT.Lir. The day was tine\n.md everything one could wish for\nand the children enthusiastic over\nthr* good time coming. The picnic\nleft Klko about III o'clock with Mrs.\nTodbiliiler, Mrs. Mott. Mrs. McKee,\n.Mrs. Kennedy and Miss Maty Tod-\nhunter in the first carriage and then\ncame Ihreo big wagons loudod with\nchildren, making iis much noise as a\nboiler factory iu full bloom. Several rigs, containing parents of tbo\nchildren and friends following in the\n1e.1t. The delirious cakes, buns,\nsandwiches, ice cream, etc., etc., going oul several hours ahead of llie\npicnic crowd. It was the biggest, the\nbest, ihe most sociable, the most Independent bunch of good nature thai\never met in Klko.\nA, F. Krapfel nud R. Kobcy, the\nhig game hunters, lefl Saturday lor\niln* Soutb Fork for n deer bunt. '\nT. (I. Proctor, foreign correspondent\nfor the Kootenay Valleys Land company, arrived in Elko Saliirdav night\nand left for lhc south.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666.\nt        WARDNER I\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666j\n(From our own correspondent)\nMr. II.    Lindsay     left last Friday\nfur  Hamilton,  Montana, tti spend    a\nfew days witb bis daughter.\nGotner Jones, ol the    C. N. P. L.\ncompany's   ollice    staff, spent    last\nThursday  in Cranhrook.\nNearly every one ot us is figuring\non having a Iim. time just ahead when\nwe gel all fixed, aud this vision is\njust iiihead of us* when We fall asleep.\nTo live in the now and enjoy the pre- |\nsent is the work of the philosopher.\nMrs. Peter I,uml, accompanied by\nher step-daughters Edith and Hazel\nl.umi, returned 011 Wednesday last\nfrom a two months' visit with friends\nin Chatham, Out.\nMrs. Sid. Brown spent last Wednesday iu Cranlirook on business.\n'I'he newspaper is a \u25a0iiW book for\nthe indolent, a sermon for the\nthoughtless, a library for the poor,\nanil nn admonlsher tor the lawless.\nIt may stimulate the most, iuilillei-\nent, but it cannot Ik* published without i-ost and sent free lo subscribers.\nThis is no joke.\nJames    Smith spent\nlishing at Fish river.\nlast  Sunday\nMr.\nand\nMrs.\nI.roley,\nof\nFernie,\n.pent 1\n1     ti\n-w davs\nlasl.\nWl'\nrk\nwith\nlieltils\nin li\nIWII.\nMrs. T. B. Johnson, public school\nleaeher, spent the holidays with her\nsisier, Miss M. Johnson, ut Michel,\n11. 0.\nNo matter what yon do, provided\n-ou do it belter than some one else\ncould dn the same thing, there's a\nwelcome awaiting you in the world,\nll was Emerson, we believe, who\nwbl; \"If a mail can write a belter\nLook, preach a bettor sermon, or\nmake a belter mouse trap than his\nneighbor, though he build bis bouse\nin thi- woods, the world will make a\nbeaten path to bis door.\" Try lo\nexeell, il's ,1 laudable ambition,\nMrs.\nJ.  Williams    left\nat  ber trlil home\nWilli\nMrs.\nTliesdii\nCranhrook.\nim- Willson.\nlasl Sunday\niu Montana\nlast\non  and  family left\nlake up her resldoiioi\nThey go to join Mr. liv\nwho is employed there\nstation agent. Mrs. Willson has been\na prominent citizen of Wardner tor\nsome lime, coming here Irom Brunt-\nford. Out. Her departure Is very\nmuch regretted,\nMrs, Osgoodc. of Spokane, who has\nlieen upending the past few weeks here\nwith ber parents, Mr. ml Mrs. II.\nLindsay, left for her home a few\nilays ago.\nWe want to say a good word for tlm\nman who meets his small obligations\npromptly. Thev are not as plentiful\nas they should be ami man needs encouraging. Most men will pay, but\nfewer will pay promptly. Almost\nany firm will testify to that, counting the time, postage, booking, nnd\nlike it. costs all some accounts arc\nworth to collect them, and still the\nman owing It to them is perfectly responsible in a financial way. It very\noften happens that tbe worst sinner\npilal but died several hours later\nwithout having regained consciousness. Coroner Bleasdell arrived on\nthe passenger 011 Thursday night and\nau inquest will be held today. Th*\nfuneral will bo Md Saturday afternoon, iutennetit taking place at\nMichel cemetery.\nThey expect to be away for a month\nor six weeks.\nChas. A. MacKay, manager of Uie\nCambrian mine, was in Cranbrook\nThursday ou business in connection\nwith his property.\n  James Cousins had his foot crushed\nlaiold Houten, a rope rider,   was quite badly while    working at    the\nfatally injured    on Tuesday morning 1st. Eugene and is now In the hosp.-\niu an accident in   No. _ mine.    The.tat.\nunfortunate man     was brought     to I 1    \u25a0\nFernie hospital and for a time hopes I'he report comes from Spokane\nwere en terUkl lied for his recovery, but that Tom Summers is getting along\nhe    passed away     yesterday.     Both  splendidly, and in all probability   the\n.legs ami   out- arm    had been broken sight of one of his eyes will be sav-\n'iiud he was fearfully injured about the ed.\nfrcshmenls were served by the ladues\npleasing programme followed,\nMr. Waterous was present and favored the audience with a solo, which\nwas givon in his usual pleasin;; man- 1,08? .am*\nusi^.i.HenT'mimirr'r '\"oi \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u2022 trrau.nici.^\nthe mosl Important features ol    Uie |\"J?\"\"..^.LiT1\" \u00b0    a   P\nprogramme    was a  couple    of drills\ngiven by sixteen little girls belonging\nthe town. These consisted of a\nmaypole drill and a flag drill. The\ngirls acted their part almost perfect -\nlv ami reflected much credit ou Mr.\nMeCiuinelt. who look this mutter iu\nbnml. The proceeds amounted to\nS'ttl\nMr    Ailnev,    iinliernian.  WAS called\nupon to assist tin* policemen of Cran-\nk during Labor Day.\nI billies\nVancouver\nIti oh.\nJewitt  left  last  week\nwhere be bits Secured\nMr. Jarvis,\nfeu davs ago\n.Molilalia.\nhead   snwver, left\nlo visit old friends\n..\u25a0sJie Hnlierts.-n left  la\nIndian  Head,   Mali.\nJ  Saturday\nMr, and Mrs. Thorp, ot Elko, spent\ncouple of davs this week in   town,\nbe guests of Mr. and Mis. (IIto Wisher.\nTh. .mas McTumucy, assist ant rook\nal the company's boarding house, left\nTuesday afternoon for Indian Head,\niiid after a sh.nl time be will visit,\nhis old home iu Toronto, Out.\nMisses Edith and Hazel Lund ns\nturned to Nelson on Wednesday morning lasl lo continue iheir studies at\nUn- Nelson convent.\nMr\nMrs.\nlefl  I\ntun\nlishing.\nami Mrs. Otto Wisner, Mr. und\nrhorp, ,,f Elko, and Ole Wistiei\nsi Monday afternoon for a\nweeks'     outing\u2014camping    nnd\nMiss Hazel  Bohart  left last,\nesduy morning.for Nelson, whei\n'ill al tend the Nelson convent.\nWod-\ne she\nIt.\nKtiihi\nII. Bohart was in Fernie\ny on business.\nAt tpiite a late hour Sunday night\nlhe town was thrown inlo confusion\nby hearing the whistle of the planing\nmill. People rushed out thinking\n(here was some building ou (ire, but\n1011 learned tbat the alarm was\nmuded to guide ,1 couple of men,\nMessrs. Samuel and John Rogers,\nwho bad got lost on a mountain near\nby. A search party was organized\nami went in search'of the stray-a-\nways, but without avail. The anx1\n\u25baus feats of their faiends were tjuiet-\n\u25a0d, however, when ul about 7 o clock\nin the morning the men came marching home.\nFred Le._rd was successful last Sunday iu shool iug a fine buck deer.\nWhere is Hoby? He took to the\nwoods you say. Well, don't be\nilarmcd friends, he will return soon,\nnow that the baseball game in Cranhrook is over. Our boys don't have\nto hide, they nre not afraid to   play\nuy team on the line.       Tbey    have\nhelped to    keep    Elko from disgrace\nthis season    already, but alas, Elko\nnever hear from Kernie now\non\nIhem    Labor Day.\nwere sold at   tbe\nCranbrook   Labor\ngnrding finances, since Cranhrook w\nllu* hi\/xlle   from\nGood-bye Elko.\nForty-one tickets\nlocal    depot      for\nDay.\narbor Day was very ijuielly observed in town. Places of business\nwere closed most of the day, most of\nour townsmen having gone to (.'ranbrook to enjoy the sports there.\nI FRANK I\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00a5\n{From The Frank Pauer,)\nThe Sanitarium is having a tremendous run these days. For some\ntime lhe house has been full to overflowing with patients, sonic of whom\ncame from long distances to take the\nbaths.\nGeneral Manager S. M. Moore, of\nthe ('\"Ml company, who went to\ntn Molilalia last week in search of\nminers, returned Sunday. He stales\nlli.it .Molilalia is far worse oil for men\nUni ll this country ami that every sort\nof Industry is hampered for want of\nhelp. Mr. Moore succeeded In securing    ijuiie a   number of good miners\nfrom among men wlm\nhim in Montana.\nJai\nthe Miners union.\nMessrs. Dighv & Wuble have finished\nthe cold storage plant for the C. P.\nK. at Letlrinidge. They commenced\nbuilding the station at Cr\u201ews Nest\nthis week. The station at Frank\nand line boarding house at Sirdar will\nlie commenced next week. They have\nout 1 act fm ibe Pacific Coal company's shop at Hosmer. The building will covet n space 40x157 ft.\nThe party of visiting British journalist s- wlio recently touted the\nDominion, presented George Ham\nwith a traveling case in testimony\n.f their appreciation of the way he\nhad conducted their tour. As Mr.\nHam refused lo allow tbe visitors to\nstop off at Feruie even for a few\nhours, although Mr. Chas. Richards\nurged it and explained how It could\nlie -lone without altering or delaying\ntheir programme, we can see where a\ntraveling case is more appropriate\ntor Mr. Ilam than a gold headed cane.\nMr. F. II. Hale, manager of the\nNorth American Land & Lumber\ncompany, 011 Wednesday aiternoon,\nmet with what might have been a\nvery serious accident, He was iu\nthe file-room of the company's mill,\nand noticed a piece nf timber from\nthe big saws going the wrong way,\nami stepped out of the door to give\ninstructions regarding il, when the\ncarriage struck bim on the left leg\nr the knee, knocking him down.\nNo hones we(e broken, hut Mr. Hale\nis suffering from a seven* br_i.se and\nbaking tip, and will be lame tor\nsome (lays.\nMr. Wilkisoti, of the Elk Lumlier\nconipanv, left Wednesday for the\nI'pper Klk valley accompanied by a\ngang of surveyors and an expert coal\njirosiiector. They will survey and\nprospect extensive biddings of the\ncompany.\nThe first snow storm of the season, lasting several hours, was enjoyed hy Michel's citizens last Tuesday, the surrounding hills are still\ncovered with snow, Our nimrods are\ncleaning their guns and making ready\nfor the hunt of big game.\nA, Cimimings, the Fernie surveyor,\nwas in Michel Saturday procuring a\naiuping outfit ami provisions for an\nxtended trip south of Crows Nest,\nwbero ho will survey and plot a large\narea ot timber and coal land for\nFernie capitalists.\nTlm Great Northern construction\ncamp just below town is a little city\niu itself, more than twenty tents having been erected to accommodate the\ncrews. Another camp will shortly Ire\nstarted at the rock cut near the\ncoke ovens. More supplies and material are arriving daily.\nTlie little girl of Mr. and Mrs.\nBrown had a narrow escape from\ndrowning in Michel creek Wednesday.\nShe was out picking berries with\nsome other children when she slipped\nand fell into the raging water near\nthe upper bridge. Jack Rushton, of\nthe Trites-Wood staff, was attracted\nto the scene by the cries of the children. Rushing headlong into the\nwater be rescued the little girl in the\nnick of time. Dr. McSorley arrived\non tiie scene shortly after, reviving\nthe unfortunate child after several\nhours of bard work. She Is getting\nbetter at this writing.\nAn explosion of gasoline threatened\nto put the Ledger out of business\nyesterday morning but luckily Uie\nbla\/u was brought under control before serious damage had been done.\nOne of the hoys saved the price of a\nshave on litis whiskers account but\nbad to make a corresponding outlay\nfor vaseline.\nTlie Kcrnie Lumber company this\nweek received a locomotive for use In\ntheir logging operations. It was\nunloaded near tbe government bridge\nacross the Elk, about a mile nnd a\nhalf nnrlli of tlie mill, and Is being\nmoved to the logging camps on moveable sections of rails and ties.\nLocal draymen are experiencing considerable difficulty In getting sand for\nplastering, brickwork, etc. The river\nis iiiiiiii higher than is ordinarily the\nease this time of the year, and all the\nold sand pits along Us banks are\nflooded lo such an extent that it Is\nalmost impossible to get good sand.\nMiss Ida I.lndell, the gushing lady\nbarber who once ran a shop lit\nMoyie, has written tn a friend hero\nto the effect that she is still single,\nnotwithstanding the report that gained circulation some time ago that sin-\nwas married and living in California.\nShe ds at present working at her\ntrade at Holdrhlgf, Nebraska.\nCRANHROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF    SOUTH  DIVISION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nTake notice that I, Abel Horsmau,\not Cranhrook, 11. 0., occupation,\nLumberman, intends to apply for a\nspecial limber license over the following described hinds:\nCommencing at a post planted about\nthree aud a half miles south of Curzon and about two miles east of the\nC, P. Railway, thence east 1(10\nchains', thence south 40 chains,\nthence west IfiO chains, thenco norlh\n\u202210 chains tn point ot commencement\nand containing fi40 acres, more or\nless.\nAbel Ilorsman.\nDated August 29, |!M17. 34-flt\nCRANBROOK LAND DISWCT\nDISTRICT OF    SOUTH DIVISION\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nTake notice that I, Abel Horsmau,\nnf Cranbrook, B. C, occupation,\nLumberman, intends to apply for a\nspecial timlier license over the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted\nabout three and a half miles south of\nCurzon ami about two miles east of\n0. P. Railway, thence east 1B0\nchains, thence north 10 cliains, thence\nwest IfiO chains, thence south 4ft\nchains to pnint nf commencement,\nand containing (lift acres, more nr\ntess,\nAbel Hnrsman.\nDaled  August 2fl,  10ft7. 24-fit\nIN THE     SUPREME COURT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nOF\nBetween:\nLenz\ntiffs,\n& Leiscr,     Limited, Plain-\n\u2014and\u2014\nJames A. McArthur, Defendant.\nTake nnliee that a motion will be\nmade on behalf nf the Plaintiffs herein, before Ilis Honor Peter E*. Wilson, Local Judfje, at Uie Court House\nat Cranbrook, B. C, on Tliursrlav,\nthe third day nt October, 1007, at the\nhour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon or\nso soon thereafter as counsel can be\nheard, fnr an order that the interest\nof the above named defendant lie sold\nunder the Judgments Act and Amending Acts to satisfy the balance due\nnn the Plaintiffs' judgment herein awl\nfor such further and other order ns\nto tbe said J udge may seem mete\nupon which application will lie read\nthe affidavit of William F. Gurd,\nsworn the 7th day ot August, lftt'7\nand the exhibits therein referred tn.\nDated tbis 7th dav of August, A. D.\n1907.\nW. F. Gurd,\nSolicitor for the Plaint ills.\nTo James A. McArthur,\n\u2014and to\u2014\nNelson Entwlsle. 21-2t\nNOTICE\nFrom and after this date I will\nnot be responsible for any bills or\ndebts contracted by Mrs. E. R. Mc-\nMahen.\nE. R. McMahen\nDated at Cranbrook, B.C.. Autmst\n22, 1907. S3\nW. R. BMtty, Funeral Dlnctor\nCranbrook B. 0, Phonr- Nu. I\nP.   Lund,\ntransact Ing\nnf   many\nbusiness\nbad worked lor*| metropolis this week.\nplaces,\niu    the\nwas\ncoat\nMcDonald, of the Union hotel,\nwas sum moiled before lhe police\nmagistrate last week on a charge of\nrefusing io assist an officer when called upon and was beld for trial at\nMcl.ei d iit ihe nexl session nf court,\niu bonds of $i.uiio. which he furnished.\nMr. McDonald admits having walked\naway when Policeman    Martin called\non him to assist In an arrest,    hut \t\nclaims that as there were other Me*,kins, Miss    Lawson,   Miss Robinson,\nDonald's near by he had nn means of, Miss McKenzie.      Tbe lady teachers\nEd. Kummer has lieen nppotnted\nsuperintendent of cement construction\non lhe new court house,\nThe eity is threatened by an epidemic of prosperity. However, keep\nlight on sawing wood.\nSchool opened Mondav with the\nfollowing stall of teachers: Mr. Palmer, principal; Miss Moody, Miss Per-\nknowilig he was the person railed nn.\nFERNIE\nI\n**********************\n(From tbe Fernie Free Prest.)\n... Romano, a young Italian, about\n18 years of age, met with a fatal accident early tills morning wliile attempting to blow out a stump near\nNo. 8 fan bouse at Michel.    He  had\nIMVO rentnl T.  II. White's residence\nuud will maintain   a home of    their\nown, living accommodations being no\ndilbcull  lo procure in Fernie.\n 4\t\n**********************\nI MOYIE\n(\"his   'particular is   Ibe nmn ln-st Iplaeeil ;l    heavy   charge of dynamite i\n*******        ^^^^^\n(Fretn thi Merle Leader.)\n\"Diol,\"    McClure Is now chef\none nl Ihe Soo-Spokane diners.\nable .o pay.\nThe social, under tbe auspices of Ibe\nLadies Aid, given in the Library hall\nunder be stump, and had turned I Mrs. Sehulie, mother of Mre. P.\n_K \u201e _ \"T . p.1.tVl_8,.,<!'7' V- anhnston, was nulle ill Iho first of\nin>! w,'s^\"\"ik l\u201eJJw_!_*_' *__  the week, but Is niw convalescent.\n,\u201e,.,,     \u201eh\u201elr 1      \u201e\u201e   \u25a0-_-.= .-\u25a0:\u2022\u2022  -.,..-..  bead by a piece ol wood, being hurled | ___\n\\!'\u25a0. ,.' , __'.\" 1\u2122\"\"\u2122\" evening last, was a sue- bv Iho explosion    wilh terrln. force.     Alban McLcllan anil son tlrue.  left\nMiss tin\/, was  eess in every particular.       After re- lie was at once taken to Michel bos- Ve.todayfMP.il_. _SwuS%mS!\nDrink Home Beet\nIt Is Pun\nIt It Healthy\nIt Is the Best\nFt. Steele Brewing Co\niiii amWaJ**m*mammm*majk\nCLINE'S POPULAR\nBARBER SHOP j\nIs now locate, in lit comfort- J\nable and attractive new qoar-\n_ ten in the Manitoba Hotel.\nThis institution b fust up-to-\ndate and it modemly equipped\nto do lust the best work in all\nbranches ol the tentorial art.\n*m******\u25a0.mull il\u00abl imi Halt\nCranbrook\nLivery *\u00a3\nGEARY& DOYLE\nProprittort\nlaw .nd driven furnished for su,\npoint la tht district,\nA. DOYLE, Maoagtr\nThe Truth About Scotch Whisky\nTfHK safest ami most refreshing of all I leverage* is Whisky and Boda.\ni Where wines nnd other Hliinulants are forbidden, Whiskv, diluted\n1     with Home suitable mineral or aerated water, ami prescribed l.v a\nphysician at ibe proper time, lias always a highly beneficial effect.\nScotch Whisky bas long been acknowledged tbe bent.   It lias almost '\nentirely BUpersexfed French Brandy ever tbe greater part of tlie world.\nTbis is owing to the skill and care which  have, of recent years, lieen\ndevoted to blending,   Malt Wbisky, l.y itself, unless very old, is heavy \\\numl 1111 pa lata bio, ami is extremely hurtful to the digestive organs when .\ntaken freely. -\nScotch Grain Whisky, however, being made from the llneni grains and ,\nmalted hurley, nnd distilled practically pure by modern appliances, is ,\nfrequently preferred. No stronger evidence of its purity can be given .\nIliun this, Unit nne nf the most eminent Professors uf Chemistry\nISugland bus used Cam I ma tlrnln Whisky for nearly thirty veins.\nThe blooding of Mall and tlrnln Whiskies lias within recenl years be\nreduced to a science, the result being a combination which avoids the *\nheaviness of ihe \" All Mali\" Whisky uml Imparls u distinct dellouey to\nthe Uluiul, uf course both kinds must hive uue. Nothing is harsher\nHum Mill Whiskv numntured,\n\"The London Wine\ndiscussing the recent c\nHplrll Trade lleconl,\" of Kid May, IBM,\nvi Hy u'i_iii.ling \"all mall\" Whisky, sitys\nnwvllwl Hun Hit\ni.il.i.'ii'.i ..., tin- cjtl\nnn.l mult I\nIglllltiOH HUIIIII liiin- 11 tin 1.\nin* >'\\ir.*iii.' im.\". ii wns,us tin*-\n..II mull \u25a0 uni. mini, loiifKiivm,.\n<Ii-sinil.lv,   I   ll.e Kuril,.!,  \u201e(l,\nWe are Proprietors of len Hcoleb histilleries, famous bo Iheir mill\nof drain ami Mult Whiskies, mul wc hold enormous stuck-, ol bulb kimld\noi spirits.\n\" KINO GEORGE IV.\"\nis a pure blended Ki'otch Whisky, guaranteed (or ftfie, quality .viol\nflavor. It never varies. It has obtained Mold Meduls l Hi. In*: t Awards)\nwherever uxhibUed in competition with oilier blends. Tor (ienertvl\nTable V_e il Stands without 11 rival.\nOBSERVE CAREFULLY  ALL LABELS, CAPSULES, CERTIFICATES ANU CORKS, AND THUS AVOID\nINFERIOR IMITATIONS\n\"KINU OEOIU1E\" WHISKY is known everywhere, hut should\nthere to anv dlHiculty iu obtaining it, please semi us a postcard for our\nnearest Agent's name and address.\nWe also sell C ALE D ONI AN, recognised as one of the best.\nDISTILLERS COHPANY, Limited!\nR. P. RITHET A CO., Ltd.;!\nSOLE  AGENTS ',',\nVICTORIA, UKI     IH COLUMBIA \u2666\n********************************************\n*\nFISHING TACKLE    That Will Catch Fish\nFISHING TACKLE |\nTHE ROOSYILLE CASH STORES\nFRED ROO, Proprielor.\nHardware and Builder's Supplies,\nHarness, Saddles and Fittings, Miners'\nand Prospectors' Supplies, Dry Goods,\nGent's Furnishings, Groceries, Fruit,\nFlour and Mill Stuffs, Raw Fur and\nProduce.\nThe Largest Assortment of Fishing Tackle suitable\nfor the District in B. C.\nIndian Curios, Specimen Big Game Heads, and Souvenirs of The Great West.\nA STORE WITH  A REPUTATION THAT\nWILL KEEP IT\nHEADQUARTERS\nELKO, B. C.\n\\    PHONE 50 P.O. BOX HI\nDEZALL BROTHERS\nBLACKSMITHS AND WOODWORKERS\nBloyclo Roruilrs ulwuva in atonic.   Mimlitnes for |mtliii|r nn I'.n.'.y\nRubber 'i'yrua, with Tyres iilwuya on liuml.\nWAGONS, CARRIAGES AND IMPLEMENTS\nl'l I. INE HO\nP.O. HOX III\nJ   B. C. Livery and Peed Stables\nGOOD HORSES ALWAYS TO BE HAD\n1\nh\nManitoba Hotel\ndan Mcdonald, hkoprietok.   cranbrdok, ii. c.\nHeadquarters for\nLumbermen\nThe Manitoha is centrally located ami has mm ol the hest-liniii-~roouis\ntn the eity.   The Imr is sii|i|i|icd with the beat ol Liquors uml Cigars\nf\n**************************\nRobinson-McKenzie Lumber Co., Ltd.\nSaw and Planing Mills\nAll Kinds Ol\nRough and Dressed Lumber TIIK   CltANROOK   II Kit ALU\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice that Peter W. Ninnes,\not Winnipeg, occupation, Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase tlm lollowlng described land:\nCommencing at a pnst planteil one\nmile west ol the south-west corner\nof Lot 4141, Group 1, thence north\n8(1 ehains, Ibence east 80 ehains,\nIhence south 811 chains, thence west\n811 chains to point ot commencement.,\naud coii tain iug tilt) acres, more or\nless,\nPeter \\V. Ninnes, Locator,\nPer Frank Fletcher, Agent\nDated July 4,  1.(07. IH Hi\nCRANBROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF KOOTENAY\nTake notice that The Ross Saskatoon Lumher Company, Limited, of\nLumher Manufacturers, intend to apply lor a special tllltb&r license over\nHit* lollowlng descrihed hinds:\nCommencing at a post planteil at\nthe N. W. miner ol l.ot 11209; thciia.\nuoith along the west line\nof        Lot       7791 tu      chains,\ntheuce west Kin ehains,\ntbenee south in chains, thenco   east\nHill chains to the place ol commencement.\nRoss-Saskatoon     Lumher    Company,\nLimited,\nPer Manley Hardy Craig, A bent.\nDated duly 24, PJU7. lil-flt\nCRANBROOK LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice tbat Albert Barnhardt,\not Curzon, B. 0., occupation, Rancher, intends lo applv for\npermission to purchase tbe lollowing\ndescribed land:\nCommencing at a post planted 4\nchains east ol S. W. corner ol Pre-\nKmptiou No. 1076, soutb ot Curzon,\nB. C, tbenee east 20 chains, thence\nsouth 45 chains, thence west 20\nchains, thenco north _ 45 chains to\npoint of commencement,' and containing 90 acres, more or less.\nAlbert Barnhardt.\nDated July 29, PJ07. 20-9t\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF KOOTENAY\nTake notice that C. A. Oaskill, ot\nKimberley, B. C, occupation, Lumberman, intends to apply for a special timber license over the following\ndescribed lands:\nCommencing at a post planted 30\ncliains north ami 50 cliains west ol\nthe south-west corner of Lot 187b\ntlience south 128 chains, thence west\n50 cliains, thence north 128 chains,\nthence east 50 chains to place ol\nbeginning, and containing 010 acres,\nmore or less.\nC. A. Oaskill, Locator.\nDated July 31, 1907. 20-0t\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT  OF   EAST KOOTEEAY\nTake notice that Grant Miller, ol\nWinnipeg, occupation, Gentleman, Intends to apply lor permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe south-west corner 20 chains west\not Lot 2310, Group 1, thence north\n80 chains, thence east 20 cbains,\nthenco south 80 chains, thence west\n20 chains to point ol commencement,\nand Containing 100 acres, more or\nless.\nGrant Miller,\nFrank Fletcher, Agent.\nDated July 6, 1007. 20-9t\nCRANBROOK   LAND   DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOt-TENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, ol Cranhrook, B. C,\nintend lo apply tor a Special Tlmbci:\nLicense over the following described\nlands:\nCommencing nt a post planted\nabout one mile smith -e.isl uf tlie\nmouth ot Tale Creek ou the east line\nof Lot 5402, thence running cast 100\ncbains, tlience south 80 chains, tlience\nwest HO eliains, tlience north 20\nchains, tlience west. 20 chains, tllCUCfi\nnortli 40 chains, thence west 20\neliains, Ihence north 20 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing lilll acres, mure or less.\nThe King   Lumlier Mills, Limited,\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator,\nDated August 5, 1907. 21-lit\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF  EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, ol Cranbiook, B. C,\nIntend to apply lur a Special Timber\nLicense over the following described\nlauds:\nCommencing nt a post about one\nmile south-east ol tlie mouth of\nTale Creek), on the east line o! Lot\n5102, theuce running east 40 chains,\ntheuce nortli 40 chains, thence east\n\u25a010 chains, tlience north 80 chains,\ntheuce west 40 chains, thence south\n10 chains, Ihenee west 40 cbains,\ntheuce south 80 (-liains to point ol\ncommencement, and containing 840\nteres, mole nr less.\nThe King  Lumlier Mills, Limited,\nA. 0- Wilmot, Locator.\nDated  August 5,  1007. 21 (It\nCRANBROOK  LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT   OF   SOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice that John George Poll*\nlune, of King, B. c, occupation,\nHotel Keeper, Intends lo apply fnr a\nSpecial limber license over tlie follow-\nr-jj; described lands:\n... Commencing at n post planted\nibout one mile west ul the K.Ik River\nm Uie north side ol Martin Creek;\nthence west 10 chains, theme north\nlllll chains, theuce cast 40 ehaiius,\nthence south lllll chains to place ot\noiiimeiiceinent, and containing 040\ncies, mole or less.\nJohn George Pouporc,\nDaled July 30th, 1007. 22-01\nCRANBROOK  LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT   OF   SOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice that John George Pouporc, o! Krag, B. C, occupation,\nHotel Keeper, intends to apply lor a\nspecial timher license over the f.Bowing descrihed lands:\n4.     Commencing at a pns-t planteil\ni the south hank ot Goat Creels\nabout two miles Irom the Elk river\nand on tbe south-east corner of\nTimber License No. 1210*; thenco\nsoutb 80 cbains, thence west 80\ncliains, thence north 80 chnins, tlience\neast 80 chains to place o! commence-\nnt, ami containing 640 acres, more\nor less,\nJohn George Poupore.\nDated July 31,  1907, 22-Ct\n\u00a3\u00a3___3_______E_\nSYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN HUME-\nSTEAD REGULATIONS.\nAny available Dominion Lands\nwithiu the Railway Belt in British\nColumbia, may be homustcaded by\nany person who ia the sole head ol a\nfaintly, or auy male over 18 years ol\nttge, lu Uw client ol oiiei|*iaiU*i\nsection ot 160 acres, more or less.\nEntiy must be made personally al\ntbe local laud ollice (or the district\niu which Uie laud is situate.\n'Hie homesteader is required to perform tbe conditions connected theie-\nwilh under oue ol tbe lollowlng\nplans:\n(1) At least six months' resilience\nupon and cultivation ol the land in\neach year (or three years.\n(2) II the lather (or mother, U\nthe lather ts deceased), ol tbe homesteader resides upon a (arm In the\nvicinity o( the land entered (or, the\niMjuiieuieuts us to resldeuee may be\nsatislied by such pet sou residing with\nthe lather or mother.\n<3) If the settler has his permanent residence upon (arming land\nouii.'.i hy bim in tbe vicinity ol Ut\nhomer. Lead, the requirements as to\nreeidenc* may be satisfied by residence upon tbe said land.\nSix months' notice la writing\nshould be given to tbe Commissioner\nul Dominion Lands at Ottawa ot intention to apply (or patent,\nCoul lands may be purchased at\n$10 per acre (or toft coal and 120\nlor anthracite. Not more Uian 320\nacres can be ucquired by one individual or company. Royalty at the\nrate o( ten cents per ton of 2,000\npounds shall be collected on tbe\ngrown output.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy ol Um Minister ol _* Interior\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT   OF   SOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice that John George Pouporc, of Krag, B. C, occupation,\nHotel Keeper, intends to apply for a\nspecial tinilier license over the follow-\n'iig descriheil lands:\n1. Commencing at n post planted\nm the south hunk of Martin Creek,\nabout two miles west o! tbe Klk\nRiver; thence south 80 chains, thenco\nwest 80 chains, thence n-orUi 80\nhains, tbenee east 80 chains, to place\nol commencement ami containing 610\nacres, more or less.\nJohn George Poupore.\nDated August, 3rd,  1907. 22-Gt\nCRANBROOK  LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF KOOTENAY\nTake nolice lhat Thomas1 Young, of\nCrnnbrook, B. C, occupation, Timber Cruiser, intends to apply tor a\nspecial timher hlcenso over the fullow-\n'ng described lands:\nCommencing  at a   post planted at\nthe south-west coiner <\u2022\ntheuce norlh 80 chains, thence east\nin chains, tlience north 40 chains,\ntbenee west 80 ehains, thence south\n120 chains, thence east 40 ehains to\npoint of commencement, and contain-\ng UIO acres, more or less.\nThomas Young.\nDaled July 2llh, 1007. 22-Ct\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nIISTRICT   OF KAST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that I, Struan George\nRobertson, of the City ot Nelson, in\nthe Province of British Columbia, hy\necupa-tton a Chuimnan,    intend    to\npply for n special timber license lot\nMin1 following described lauds:\nNo. 1. Commencing at a post\n|>lautcd 31 miles west of the junction\nof Martin Oreck and Elk River on the\nwest side    thereof,   which said junc-\ni.iti is about Hi miles noith of Mich-\nI, in tin* Province of British Columbia, marked \"Struan George Ruber t-\non's S. W. Corner\": thence north\nrIO chnins, Ihence east 160 chains,\nthen.00 soulh 40 eliains, thence west\ngill) dmtns to the point of commencement, and containing 040 acres, more\nor less.\nStruan George Robertson\nJuly 20th, 1907.\nNo. 2. Coiiimencing at a post\nahoul 160 cbains west of Struan\nGeorge Robertson's S, W. corner No.\n1 Limib; tlience north 40 chains,\nthenco eust 169 chains, thence south\nchains, theuce west 100 chains to\nthe |Hiint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nStruan George Robertson..\nJuly 20th, 1907.\nNo. 3. Commencing at a post\nabout 100 chains N. W. ol Struan\nGeorge Robertson's S. W. corner ot\nNo. 2 Limit; thence east 80 chains,\nhence south 80 chains, tbenee west\n80 eliains, thence north 80 chains to\ntho point of commencement, and\ncontaining 640 acres, more or less,\nStruan George Robertson\nJuly 20th, 1907.\nNo. 4. Commencing at a post\nabout, 40 chains south ot Struan\n(leorge Robertson's N. W. corner ol\nNo. 3 Limit; thence north 80 ohaiins,\nihem- west 80 chains, thence south\n80 chains, thence east 80 chains to\nKlic point of commencement, and\ncontaining 640 acres, more or less.\nStruan George Robertson.\nJuly 20th, 1907.\nNo. 5. Commencing nt a post\nplanted about 40 chains south ot\nStruan George Robertson's N. W.\ncorner of No. 3 Limit; Uience south\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains, Uience east\n80 chains, to Uie point of commencement, ana containing 640 acres, more\nor less.\nStruan George Robertson.\nJul* \u00bblb, W07. IMt\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Cranbrook, B. C,\nintend to apply for a Special Timber\nLicense over ihe following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted\nabout one mile west ot the mouth ot\nLittle Lamb Creek on the east line of\nLot. 5462, tbenee running east 40\nchains, thenco south 80 chains, tlience\neast 40 chains, thence soutb 40\nchains, tbenee west 80 chains, tbenee\nnorth 120 chains, to point of commencement, and containing 640 acres,\nmore or less.\nThe King  Lumher Mills, Limited,\nA. (J. Wilmot, Locator.\nDaled 8, 1907. 21-6t\nCRANBROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF SOUTH EAST KOOTENAY\nTake nolice tligt I, Henry F. I.an-\nileck, ot Gateway, B. C, occupation,\nRailway Agent, intends to\napply for permission.to purchase the\nfuliowing described laud:\nCommencing at a post planteil 4\nJ miles west, of ihe Kootenay river\nalong on the International Boundary,\nthence north 80 chains, thence west\nehains, tlience .south 00 ehains,\ntlience west in chains, thence south\n30 .chains, tbenee east 00 chains to\npoint ot commencement, and containing ti'Hl acres, more or less.\nHenry F. Landeck,\nDated July 2!Uh. 1007. 21-91'\nCRANBROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake notice ihat Elizabeth Bradley,\nol Winnipeg, occupation, Lady, ln-\ntemls to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlaud:\nCommencing nt a pnst, planled at\nthe south-east corner of T. Craban's\nland, thence west 20 chains, tbenee\nsoulh 30 cliains, Uience east to Elk\nRiver, Mieiice north along Elk river\nto point of commencement, and containing 70 acres, more or less.\nElizabeth Bradley, Locator\nPer Frank Fletcher, Agent.\nDated July 3,  1907. 18-9t\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNo. 1. Take notice lhat thirty\ndays after date we intend to apply\nto the Chief Commissioner of Lands\nand Works for a license to prospect\ntor coal and petroleum over the following 'described land, situate in\nBlock 4593, South East Kootenay\ndistrict, ti. C: Commencing at a\npost marked Herbert Morris' N. E.\ncorner post, planted on the west\nbank of the Flathead River aud\nabout nine miles north of the International Boundary, thence south 80\nchains, thenco west 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80\nchains to point of beginning, containing 640 acres, more or less.\nHerbert Morris, Locater.\nLocated this 13th day uf Julv,\n1907.\nNo. 2. Commencing at a post\nmarked Robert Ford's N. W. cornei\npost, planted on tbe west bank ol\nthe Klathead River and about nine\nmiles north of Uie International\nBoundary, thence south 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains to point of beginning, containing lilll acres, more or less.\nRobert Ford, Locater,\nLocated this 13th day of July,\n1907.\nNo. 3. Commencing at a post\nmarked Fred Ellis's S. W. corner\npost, planted on the west hank of the\nFlathead River and about nine miles\nnorth of the International Boundary,\nthence north 80 cbains, thence east\n80 chains, thence south 80 cbains,\nthence west 80 chains, to point of\nbeginning, containing 640 acres, more\nor less.\nFred Ellis, Locater.\nLocated this 13th day of Julv,\n1907.\nNo. 4. Commencing nt a post\nmarked Charles lleelige's S. E. coiner post, planteil on the west bank\not the Flathead River and about nine\nmiles north of tbe International\nBoundary, Ihence north 80 chains,\ntlience west SO chains, tlience south\nchains, thence east 80 chains to\npoint ot beginning, containing 6-tu\nacres, more or less.\nCharles Heelige, Locater.\nLocated this I3lh day ot July,\n1907.\nNo. 5. Commencing at a post\nmat keil Lemuel L. Langtey's N. E,\ncomer post, planted on the cast side\nol tbe Flathead River and about 11\nmiles north of tbe International\nBoundary, thence south 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains, thence nortli\n80 chains, thence cast 80 chains to\npoint of beginning, containing 610\naires, more or less.\nLemuel L. Langley, Locater.\nLocated   this   15th day    of   July,\n1907.\nNo. 6. Commencing at a post\nmarked Win. Fisher's N. W. corner\npost, planted on tbe cast side of the\nKlathead River and about 11 miles\nnorth of the International Boundary.\nthence south 80 chains, thence east\n80 chains, Uience north 80 chal|.sL\nthence west 80 chains, to point of\nbeginning, containing 640 acres, more\nor less.\nWm. Fisher, Locater.\nLocated this 15th day ol July,\n1907.\nNo. 7. Commencing at a post\nmarked Wm. Woodward's S. W. corner post, planted on the east side of\nthe Flathead River and about 11\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, Uience north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, Uience south\n80 cbains, Uience west 80 chains to\npoint ol beginning, containing 640\nacres, more or less,\nWin. Woodward, Locater.\nLocated this 15th day nf July,\n1907.\nNo. 8. Commencing at a post\n\u25a0marked Maud Langley's S. E. corner\npost, planted on Uie east side of the\nFlathead River and about 11 miles\nnorth of the International Boundary,\ntbenee north 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thenco south 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to point ol be\nginning, containing 'HO acres, more oi\nless.\nMaud Langley,  Locater.\nLocated  this     15th    day  ol    July,\n1907.\nNo. 9. Commencing at a post\nmarked Adolph Fox's N. E. comer\npost, planteil on tbe west bank ol the\nInternational Boundary, thence south\n80 chains, thence west 80 cliains,\nthence north 80 chains, thence east\nchains to point of beginning, containing 010 acres, more or less.\nAdolph Fox, Locater.\nLocated this Kith day ot July,\n1907.\nNo. 10. Commencing at a post\nmarked Wm. Batter's N. W. corner\npost, planted on the west hank of\nthe Klathead River and about 13\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence south 80 chains,\nthence east HU chains, thtnee notth\nHU chains, thence west 80 chains lo\npoint of beginning, cont.ut.iiig lilu\nacres, more or less.\nWm. Batter, Locater.\nLocated this 16th day i.l July,\n1907.\nNo. 11. Commencing at a post\"\nmarked Geo. Harris's S. U corner\n(lost, planteil on tlie west bank of\nthe Flathead River and about 13\nmites north of the International\nBoundary, thence uorth 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, theme soulh\n80 ehains, thence west 80 chains to\npoint of beginning, containing (llu\nacres, more or less.\nGeo. Harris, Locater.\nLocated this 10th day of July,\nA907.\nNo. 12. ('ommencing at a posl\nmarked John Parsons' S. I1;. corner\npost, planted on the west bank of the\nKlathead River and about 13 miles\nnorth ot the International Boundary,\nthence nortli 8U chains, theme west\n80 chains, thence soulh HU chains,\nthence east 80 chains lo point of\nbeginning, containing 040 acres, more\nor less.\nJohn Parsons, Locater.\nLocated this 161h day of July,\n1907.\nNo. 13. Commencing at a post\nmarked Alfred J. Hall's S. W. corner\nt, planted about 2 miles west ul\nthe Flathead River and about 13\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence norlh 80 ehains,\nthence east 80 chains, theuce soulh\n80 cliains, thence west 80 cbains to\npoint of beginning, containing 610\nacres, more or less.\nAlfred J. Hall, Locater.\n'.oca ted this 16th day of July,\n1907.\nNo. 14. Commencing at a post\nmarked John Grey's S. E. corner\npost, planted about 2 miles west ol\nthe Flathead River ami about 1\nmiles north ol tbe International\nBoundary, thence north 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chaius, thence south\n80 chains, thence cast HO chains to\npoint of beginning, containing 610\nacres, more or less.\nJohn Grey, Locater.\nLocated this 1Gtli day of July,\n1907.\nNo. 15. Commencing at a post\nmarked Hugh France's N. W. corner\npost, planted \u201e quartet of a mile\nwest of the Klathead River and\nabout 15 miles north of the International Boundary, thence south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains, Ihence\nnorth 80 chains, Ibence west 80\nchains to point of beginning, containing 640 acres, more or less.\nHugh France, Locator.\nLocated this 10th day of July,\n1907.\nNo. .G. Commencing at a post\nmarked Harry France's S. W. corner\npost, planted about one quarter of a\nmile west of the Flathead River and\nabout 15 miles north of the International Boundary, thence north Kii\nehains, tbenee east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence west 80\nehains to point of beginning, containing 640 acres, more or less.\nHarry  France, Locater.\nLocated this 16th day ot Julv,\n1907. 10-iit\nNn. 1. Tate notice that thirty\ndays after date we intend to apply\nto the Chief Commissioner of Lands\nand Works (or a license to prospect\nfor eoal awl petroleum over the\nfollow ine descriheil land, situate in\nBlock 4593. South East Kootenay\nDistrict, B. C. Commencing at a\npost marked Lee Proger's S. E. corner post planted about two miles\nwest ot the Klathead river and\nabout six miles norlh of the International Boundary, Ibence west 80\nchains, thence uorth 80 chains,\nIhence east 80 chains, thenco\nsouth 80 chains, to point ot beginning, containing 610 acres, more or\nless.\nLee Proger, Locater.\nLocated tbis 13th day <>l July,\n1907.\nNo. 2. Commencing at a post\nmarked Goldie Peeples N. E. corner\npost planted about 3 miles west ol\nthe Flathead River, and about six\nmiles north ot tbe International\nBoundary, thence west 80 chains,\ntbenee soutb 80 chains, thence eust\n80 chaius, thence north 80 chains, to\npoint ol beginning, containing 610\nacres>, more or less.\nGoldie Peeples, Locater.\nLocated tills 13tb day of July,\n1007.\nNo, 3. Commencing at a post\nmarked Win. McGuire's S. W. corner\npost, planted about 4 miles wesi ot\nthe Flathead River, an.l about six\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence east 80 cbains,\nUience north        80        chains,\nUience west 80 chains, thence south\n80 chains, to point of beginning, containing 640 acres, more or less.\nWm. McGuire, Locater.\nLocated this 13th day ot July,\n1907.\nNo. 4. Commencing at a post\nmarked John Hall's N. E. corner\npost, planted-about 2 miles west of\nthe Flathead River, and about 8\nmiles north ot tbe International\nBoundary, thence south 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains, thence north\n80 chains, thence east 80 chains, to\npoint ot beginning, containing 610\nacres, more or less.\nJohn Hall, Locater.\nLocated this 13th day of July,\n1907-.\nNo, 5. Commencing at a post\nmarked Wm. Devlin's N. E. corner\npost, planted about 3 miles west of\ntbe   Flathead   River,   and about 8\nmiles norlh of the International\nBoundary, tbenee south K0 chains,\nIhenee west 80 chains, thence north\nHii eliains, thence east 80 chains, to\npoint of beginning, containing oio\nacres, more or less.\nWin. Devlin, Locater.\nLocated    this    13th    day of    Julv\n1907. '\nNo, G. Commencing at a post\nmarked John Devlin's S. E. corner\npnsl, planted about 3 miles west of\nthe Flathead River, and about B\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence north 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains, thenre soulh\nSU cbains, thence east SII chains, to\npoint of beginning, containing 040\nacres, more or less.\nJohn Devlin, Locater.\nLnealed this 13th dav ot July\n1907.\nNo. 7. Commencing at a post\nmarked Franklin Thuiman's V K\ncorner post, planted about I miles\nwest of the Flathead River and\nabout 8 miles north of the International Boundary, thenco south SU\nchains, tbenee west SU chains, thenCO\nmu Ih SO chains, thence east 80\nchains, to point of beginning, containing OIO acres, more or less.\nFranklin Thurmnn, Locater.\nLocated Ibis 13th day ol Julv,\n1907,\nNo. 8. Commencing at a post\nmarked Arthur Perry's S. W. comer\npost, planted about 2 miles west of\nIhe Flathead River, nml about 8\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary line, theuce north SO\nchains, theuce east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence west su\nchains, to point of beginning, containing 640 acres, more or less.\nArthur Perry, Locator.\nLocated this 13th day of July,\n1907. 19-61\nEAST     KOOTENAY    LAND    DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF    EAST KOOTENAY\nTake notice that I, Mabel Landeck,\nif Gateway, II. C, wife of Henry F.\nLanded., intends to apply for pur-\nmission to purchase the following described land:\nCommencing at a post planled I J.\nmiles west ami 1{ miles north of the\nKootenay River, along lhe International Boundary, thence east 40\ntrains, thenco soulh 811 chains, thence\nwest 40 chuius, thence north 80\nhains to point of commencement, and\ncontaining 320 ucres, more or less.\nMabel Landeck.\nDated July 11 tli, 1907. 17-Ot*\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF   EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Cranbrook, B. C,\nintend to apply for a Special Timbei\nLicense over the following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted\nabout two miles north-west of the\nmouth of Gold Hill Creek, ou the\n.west line of Lot 5102, thence running\nwest 00 ehains, Ihence soutll 8U\nchains, thenco east 100 chains,\nttence nnrlh 40 ehains, thence west\n10 chains, thenco north 40 chains to\npoint of commencement and contain-\nin-- 610 acres, more or less.\nTho King  Lumber Mills, Limited,\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator,\nDated August 8, 1907. 21-Gt\nNOTICE       OF     TRANSFER     OK\nLKJUOR LICENSE\nTake notice that the undersigned\nIntends to npply for a transfer of his\nretail liquor license, for the Royal\nHotel, Cranbrook Street, Cranbrook,\nB. 0., to Frank B. VanDecar, of\nsaid Cranbrook, at the next sitting\nof the Board of License Commissioners, ol the City of Cranhrook, to be\nheld ou the I Ith day ol September,\n007.\nL. B. VanDecar.\nDated 7th August, 1907. 22-41\nCRANBROOK LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF KOOTENAY\nTake notice that Frank William\nGreen, of Craubrook, B. C, occupation, Physician, intends to apply for\na special timber license over tbe following described lands:\nNo. 2. Commencing at a post\nplanteil one mile east of the initial\npost ot F. Vi. Green's Timber Application No. 1; theuce .south HU\nchains, Ihence east 80\ncliains, thenco north 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains to point ot commence\nmeat, ami containing 01U acres, mure\nur less.\nFrank William Green.\nDated July 15th, 1907. 2l-Gt\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF KOOTENAY\nTake notice that The Ross-Saskatoon Lumber Company, Limited, of\nWaldo, British Columbia, occupation\nLumber Manufacturers, intend to apply for a special timber license over\nthe following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at\ntbe S. W. corner of Lot 4011; thence\nsouth 40 chains, thence east 40\nchains, thence south 80 cbains,\nthence east 40 chains, Ihence north\n120 cliains, thence west 80 cliains to\nplace of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nRoss-Saskatoon     Lumber   Company,\nLimited,\nPer Manley Hardy Craig, Agent.\nDated July 24, 1007. 10-01\nCRANBROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nIHSTHICT   OF   SOUTHERN DIVISION\nTake nolice that John George Poupore, of Krag, It. C , occupation,\nHotel Keeper, intind-; to applv for a\nspecial timher license over the following described lands:\n2. Commencing at n post planted\nabout lj in Ics west ol Elk River\nand .ibout two miles sou Ul of Martin\nCreek on the west lines of lands surveyed adjoining Elk Riven; thence\nsouth SU chains, thenco west 80\nchains, tbenee north SO chains, tbenee\neasi SO chains fn place of commencement, and containing 610 acres, more\n\u00bbr less.\nJohn George Poupore.\nDated July  .{nth,   19(17. 22-Ct\nCRANBROOK   LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No, L:\nMills, Limited,   ,,f Cranbroofa  H   c\nnfcnd to apply for a special Timber\nLicense over lhe following describe.!\nla tnls;\nCommencing at a post planted\nahoul nu    chain*     north   ol    Lamb\nleek, on lhe northern boundarv of\nLot 5102, running     west llu eliains\nhence south uo chains, thence east\nin chains, tbenee north 20 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, thence north\n20 chains, thence east 20 chains,\nthence north 20 chains to point ot\ncommencement, and containing 6*10\nacres, more or less.\nThe King Lumber Mills, Limited.\n...  ,   . ,A- n- Wilmot, Locator.\nDate;! July 20, 1907. 19-Gt\nCRANBROOK  LAND  DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OK  EAST  KOOTENAY\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No, 2.:\nTake notice Hint The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, .if Cranhrook, B. C,\nhtend lo apply Tor a special Timbei\nLieeuse over ihu following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a past planted\nabout 60 chains norlb ot Lamb\nCreek, on the northern boundary ol\nl.ot 5402, running west HU chains,\n'hence north SU chains, thence east\nill chains, thence south -10 cliains\nIhenee east 40 chains, thence south\n10 chains, thence west 10 chains to\npoint, of commencement, and containing 610 acres, more or less.\nThe King Lumher Mills, Limited.\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated July 20, 1907. 19-61\nCRANBROOK   LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT  OF   KAST  KOOTENAY\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No. 3.:\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Cranbrook, B. C,\nintend to apply for a special Timber\nLicense over the following described\nlauds:\nCommencing at a post planted lit'\n\u2022 hains west of Lamh Creek, cm tbe\nwest line ot Lot 5462, running along\nsaid line south 40 chains, thence west\nUiO chain-, thence north 40 chains,\nthence east 100 chains, to point ot\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nThe King Lumber Mills, Limited.\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated July 23, 1907. 19-6t\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No. 4.:\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Cranhrook, B. C,\nintend to apply tor a special Timber\nLicense over the following described\nlands;\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe south-east corner of King Lumber\nMills, Limited, Timber Location No.\n2, ou the north boundary of Lot 5102,\nrunning east 20 cbains, thence north\n2U chains, thence east 20 chains,\ntheuce north 20 chains, thence east\n20 chains, thence north 20 chains,\nthence east 20 chains, thence north\n20 cliains, thence west 130 chains,\nIbence south 40 chains, tlience east\n10 chains, thence south 40 chains to\npoint ot commencement, and containing 010 acres, more or less.\nThe King Lumber Mills, Limited.\nA, G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated July 23, 1907. 19-61\nDISTRICT OK KOOTENAY\nDISTRICT  OF  EAST  KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No. 5.:\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, ot Cranhrook, B. C,\nintend to apply tor a special Timber\nLicense over the following described\nlands:\nCommencing nt a post planted at\nlhe north-west corner of King Lumbei: Mills, Limited, Timber License\nNo. 0200, running north 80 chains,\nmore or less, thence cast 80 chains,\nthence south 80 chains, more or less,\ntheuce west 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nThe King Lumber Mills, Limited.\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated July 15, 1907. 19-6t\nCOAL AND  PETROLEUM  NOTICE\nTake nolice that thirty days after\ndate I intend to apply to lhe Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a license to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following des**\ncrlbcd land, situate in Blocs 4593,\nSouth East Kootenay District, B.C.\nCommencing at a post marked A.\nMcl'hee's S. W. corner post, planted\nabout 2 miles east of the Klathead\nRiver and about 8 miles north ot the\nInternational Boundary, thence north\n80 chains, thence east 80 chaius,\ntlience south SO chains, thence west\n80 chains to point of beginning, containing 610 acres, more or less.\nA. McPhee, Locator,\nLocated this 29th dav ot June,\n1907.\nNo. 1. Take notice that thirty\ndays after date we intend to apply\nto the Chief Commissioner ot Lands\nand Works for a license to prospect\nfor coat and petroleum over the following described land, situate in\nBlock 4593, South Kast Kootenay\nDistrict, B. C: Commencing at a\npost marked Ella Whipple's S. W.\ncoiner post, planteil on the east side\nof the Flathead River and about 4\nmiles norlh of the International\nBoundary, thence north 80 cbains,\nIhence east SU chains, thence south\n80 chains, thence west SO chains,\nto point of beginning, containing 040\nacres, more or less.\nElla Whipple, Locater.\nLocated this 17th day of July,\n1007.\nNo. 2. Commencing at a post\nmarked (lust Smith's N. W. comer\npost, planted about one-fourth of a\nmile east ot the Flathead liner and\nabout 0 miles north of tho International Boundary, thence south 80\nchains, thence west 80 chains, thenco\nnortli   80   chaius,      thence east     80\nhams, to point ot beginning, containing CtO acres, mure or less.\"\nGust Smith, Locator,\nLocated this 13th day ol July,\n1907. '\nNo. 3. Commencing at a post\nmarked Albert Connors' N. w. comer\npust, planted about li miles east of\nthu Klathead River and about 5\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence south 8U chains,\nIbence east 80 chains, thence north\n50 chains, thence west 80 chains to\npuiut ot tyegfauing, containing oio\nicrcl, more or less,\nAlbert Connors, Locater.\nLocated tbis 13th day ol July,\n1907. W4{\nCRANBROOK LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, of Cranbrook, B. C,\nintend to apply for a Special Timber\nLicense over the following described\nlands:\nCammencing at a post planted\nabout one mile north-west of the\nmouth of Rabbit's Foot Creok. on the\n(west line of Lot 5402, thence running\n(west 100 chains, thence north 40\nchains, tlience east 160 cbains, thence\n| south 40 chains, to point ot com-\nI meiicemeiit, and containing 010 acres,\nmore or less.\n\u2022   The King  Lumber Mills, Limited,\nA. G. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated August 3, 1907. 21-6t\nCRANBROOK  LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF EAST KOOTENAY,\nSOUTH DIVISION\nKing Lumber Mills, Limited, Timber\nLocation No. G.:\nTake notice that The King Lumber\nMills, Limited, ol Cranbrook, B. C,\nIntend to apply for a special Timber\nLicense over the lollowing described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted about\none and one bait miles south of\nLamb Creek, running south 40\n(hains, thence east 20 chains, thence\nsouth 20 chains, Ihence cast 60\nchains, them-e south 40 chains, thence\nwest GO cbains, thence north 20\nchains, theuce west 60 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chnins, thence east 40\nchains to point of commencement and\ncontaining 640 acres, more or less,\nhounded on north, west and east\nsides by Lot 5462.\nThe King Lumber Mills, Limited.\nA. O. Wilmot, Locator.\nDated July 18, 1007. IMt\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNo. 1,      Take notice    that thirty\ndays alter date     wc Intend to apply\nto the   Chief Comuiii. io hit oi Lauds\naud Works lor   a license \\o prospect\nlur coal and p_Uoi.-u._a un tbt. lollowing described Uud, satiate in   Block\n4693, Suuth Ea_; Kootenay District,\nB. L.;    Cuuiuienuug at m post wark-\ned    S.    Avery's   \u00a3>. \\\\. comer post,\npl_ait-.-d about 2    miles west ol   the\n*'lathe-ad     Rivet and   about ii miles\nnorth ot the lnter_atiou.il Boundary,\nihence north mi ciuins, ______   east\n80 chains, thence south au chains,\nthence west au chains to point ui be-\ng.-iniig,   containing Li'j acres, more\nur  less.\nSarah Avery, Locater.\nLocated   Uos   Uu   day   ul   July.\n1907.\nNo. 2. Commencing at m post\nmarked Lather Bluet's northeast corner post planted ahoul 2 mik_> west\nuf tbe Flathead River and about 3\nmiles Lur tn of the lutetnational\nBoundary, thence suulh fiO chains,\nthence r.t_i au chaius, thence noun\nau chains, thence east su chaius io\npoint ot beginning, containing b-tu\nacres, more or less.\nEsther Block, Locater.\nLocated Uis 7tn da> oi July,\n1907.\nNo. 3, Corniueucing at a post\nmanual Mik_ Sinclair's N. W, curner\npost planted about z miles west ut\nlue Kuu.-.-ad Rivet and anuut ,. miles\nnorth ui tne International Buunuaiy,\nUience suutn au chains, thence e_t>b\nau chains, tbenee nuilh au chains,\ntbenee west au cbains, lo puiut ul\nBeginning, containing oiu acres, mom\nur less.\nMike Sinclair, Locater.\nLocated     this   Un   u*> oi   July,\n1907.\nNu. 4. Commencing al a post\nmarked JIu.h McGuire's N. E. corner\npuai, planted about three miles west\nol Uie Klathead River and about -i\nmiles not lb ol the luteruatiunal\nBoundary, theuce suutb bu chains,\nIbence West au cnsins, Ibence uurtu\nau ehains, thence east 80 chains lo\npoint ot beginning, containing t*iu\nacres, mure or less.\nHugh McGuire, Locater.\nLocated this 7 lb day ul July,\n1907,\nNo. 5. Commencing al a post\nmarked Rose McUuire's N. E. comer\npost, planted about 3 miles uesl uf\nthe Klathead River aud about I\nmiles north ut lhe International\niJ.ijiiin._i), theuce south au chains,\nIhence west au chains, Ibence norm\noo chains, Uience easi au chains to\npuint ut beginning, cunlaimng OIU\nacres, more or less.\nRose McGuire, Locater.\nLucated this J _u day ut July,\n1907.\nNu. 6. Commencing at a post\nmarked Lizzie Devlin's N. E. corner\nposl, planted aboul 2 miles west of\nthe Klathead River and about %\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence south Su chains,\ntbenee west 80 cbains, Ihence north\nso chuius, thence east 80 cbains to\npoint of beginning, containing lilu\nacres, more or less.\nLizzie Devlin, Locater.\nLocated this 7 th day ot July,\n1907.\nNo. 7. Commencing at a post\nmarked Mary Devlin's N. W. corner\npost, planted about one mile west of\nthe Klathead River and about three\nmiles north of the International\nBoundary, thence south 80 cbains,\nthence east 80 cliains, thence north\n80 chains, thence west 80 cbains to\npoint ol beginning, containing 610\nacres, more or teas.\nMary Devlin, Locater.\nLocated tbis 8th day ot July,\n1107, IMt THK ORANBttOOK   MKHAI.D\n************************^\nThe \"Your Money\nBack If You Are Not\nSatisfied\"   Store\nChildren's\nReliable\nClothing\nand\nFootwear\nat\nActual\nCost\nS1!!!!W3-f***wi\u00bb\u00ab*-;pjFf^\n.:^^m^mf^ms*m*w\narm\nt- ij \u25a0 I nu\nChildren's\nReliable\nClothing\nand\nFootwear\nat\nActual\nCost\nYou\nlabel in\nYou'll Come Again; Take Our Word\nFor It\nWhen you come into this store for a\nCampbell's Suit or Top Coat, you are\nwhere your interests are fairly considered.\nWe believe in good clothes.\nWe give our customers values that will\nbring them back again. And we stand\nready to make good anything that is unsatisfactory. We know that after you have\nworn our Clothing you will want more of it.\nYou'll like the good style, the good taste,\nthe good fit; and you will be more satisfied\nwith the good service.\ncan't make a mistake in buying our clothing, because there's a\nevery garment to guarantee \" Money's worth or money back.\"\n4mfi^\n<Sfowhjto$\nYou Can Depend on Campbell's Blue Serge\nYou know how it is with most serge\nsuits. After a few weeks, spots begin to\nshow, the blue becomes dull and sometimes\nturns to purple, seams wear white, the collar\nsags, and the shoulders wrinkle.\n\"Campbell's\" Blue Serge Suits\nstay blue. Rain won't spot them, sun won't\nfade them. The color is fast~a beautiful\nshade of dark blue that retains its rich\nappearance after a long season's wear.\nWe ask you to see these suits, examine\nthem, and remember that they bear the\nCampbell label to guarantee not only the\ncolor, but also the wear\u2014the satisfaction of\nevery garment.\nSend Your Clothing\nTO OUR TAILORING- DEPARTMENT POR\nRepairs, Cleaning, Pressing\nand Alterations\n**********************\n~0PERA HOUSE;:\nrorif  mo uts\nCommenclit\n!SATURDA\nSEPT. 71\nSATURDAY NKIHT:\n<< Down on the Farm \"\nMONDAV NIUHT:\n.. Wedded, But No Wile \"\nTUESDAY NIOHT:\n\u2022\u25a0 East Lynne \"\nWEDNESDAY  NIOHT:\n\" Prince ut Liars '\u00bb\nUP-TO-DATE   SPECIALTIES\nPRICES 50c\u201e 75c. $1.00\nI'ltin al Beuttia & Atolii-cm'.\nOrut! Stora\n,t.\nTOBACCOS\nDon't chew the rag.   Best\nchew\nQUEEN'S NAVY\nCHEWING TOBACCO\nAnd Smoke\nMIGHTON'S\nPERIQUE\nMIXTURE\nS. J. MIGHTON\nTHE TOUACCONIHT\nchirmingly attired In white silk not'not nml a man in town who woulil\nover silk, with embroidered ml ana admit Uml he hud seen the contest.\nonrogo blossoms, rant Into Hid room Out there were <tuil. u number win,\nloaning upon tho arm o her brother would-have much preferred to have\nand stepped forward lo her place by given Uio $2 i\u201e the |i,n,r or to their\nIhu groom. -Miss Lilly Finniss act- wives, than in throw away on such\ned us bridesmaid und was gracefully a fake us was presented on ihat oe-\nattirrd in crepe do chene with picture easion, By llie way, it might bo\nhat of plucked heaver, relieved with mentioned that Mulllu won on points.\nviolets and roses. Both UlO bride At least thai i.s tho way it looked In\nand bridesmaid carried shower bon-.tlie hutiitoo.lcd audience\nipiets, tho former, one ol beautiful\nwhite loses anil lillies of the valley,\ntho latter one of pink e.unations. At\nllie conclusion of the service, whieh\nwas conducted by tho Rev, Robort\nHughes, pastor i,t the Methodist.\nchurch, Mv. uml Mrs. Manning wero\nthu recipients of sincere and hourly\ncongratulations, and Tho certificate\nw'jis Bipod hy .1. I-'. Campliell and\nLilly    Finniss.       'I'he happy party\nII  sat down     In breakfast, which\nhad heen tastefully prepared by Mrs.\n... P. Hiirhcroft, and shortly after\nleft on     llie   Flyer     for lhe Coast\nlilies. Tlie farewell     at   the llopol\nwas an eIoi|nent, testimony to the re-\nguril whieh is gonornlly fell for   the\nnewly married pair,\nhandsomely gowned\nhomespun traveling\nIn mulch.\nThe following is a partial list of\nihe many presents: Mantle olock,\nMr. ami Mrs. .1. F. Iliichcrotf; marble\nclock, lire brigade; silver curd receiver, Mrs. |\u201e Murphy, Port William,\nIlni.; silver dinner hell, Miss Murpliv,\nI'm I Willi Out.; silver butler dish\nMr. and Mrs. 15. Sherman, Cardinal,\nOnt.; silver butler knife, Mrs. A. C.\nAnders,,11, Cardinal, Out.; silver\ncream ladle, Mr. ami Mrs. P. I.\nBackus, Port William, Out; ease \u201e(\nsilver knives anil forks, Mrs. (I. I.f\nliol, 1'lescnlt, Ont.; siller sugar\nslioon, Miss Elliott, I'lesioll, Ont.\nsilver embroidery   scissors, Miss Id\nThe brlito  was\nin u  navy    blue\ndress, with bat\nElliott,\nI'resoott,    Out.; half ilozci\nsilver t\n;i spoons, Mrs. 0. P.   Arm-\nstrong,\ntlie Son,    Ont.: eyelet    om-\nlirnidcri\n1 center piece, Mrs. 11. Scott,\nOttawa\nOn..; linen lalile elolh     ami\nnapkins\nMr. anil Sirs.  II.     E.  Man-\nnlng, X\nH.; sofa cushion,    Miss Mav\nCouko,\nWinnipeg,   Man.: live pounil\nmild pii\nre, Mr. and Mrs. (',. W. Maa-\nning, N\nB.; silver     tea Simons,  Mr\nBLOWN UP BY DYNAMITE\nLARS KlIIC BI.IIOREN   \\ VICTIM\nOP AN EXPLOSION ON I'ERRY\nCHEEK\nLasl Saliirdav afternoon Lars Eric\nUcrgren was inslanlly killed ami liis\niiophow, Axel Bcrgren, was slightly\nInjured hy an explosion of dynamite\nin a cabin on I'pper Perry Creek,\nwhere Ihey lind none lo do some\nwork on the claims acquired hy Hon\ntuuu\nPrank      l.y 1\nThe cabin  was\nked and Ihe escape\nsimply a marvel,\n>. llm\nProm\ndls-\nrushod\nI and Mrs. W. T. Reill; cul glass cream\nand sugar. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Simp-\nsou; embroidered center piece, Mrs.\nI J. Harris. Camroso, Alta.. silver\n.sugar shell, Miss Fisher; silver inar-\nmalado jar, Mr. c. M. Finniss; cut\nglass sugar howl and cream pitcher,\nMr. and Mrs. W. F. Tate; hand painted plate, Mr. W. DcBeck: hand paint.\n[ ed chocolate sel, Mr. R. Aiken; nut\nI howl, hand painted,  Miss M.  Enkins:\nMcKay\nmonths\nplolcly '\nnephew\nlhe slorv     told liy  Ibe nephew, who\nhas recently   arrived    Irom ihe old\nCountry, ami was secured by llie aid\nol an Interpreter lor the llernld,   If,\nseems ihal Erie Bcrgruu, delirium ol\nseotng if some ol lhe (use and    caps\nIhal looked old would wnrk nil right,\nplaced a cap oil a sliorl  piece \"' fuse\nand lighting the Imai threw il\nlhe cabin onlo llie an I sm\nlance awav. Then bolh ll\nhack lo lhe cabin. There are Iwo\nrooms, and one is used for sleeping\nanil coi.kilig, while the oilier loom is\nused lor a slot'fl room, In the store\nroom was a box ol dymimilo that\nhad been |tlst sent up lo Uie claims\nhv Mr. McKay, and about 8M slicks\nnf dynamite lying on a table, winch\nwas old am. had been unpacked for\nsome time. The two men attempted\nlo close the outer door but an axe\nwas ia llie wav and thev hurried on\ninto the other room, Erie taking a\nposilion on the one side of the stove,\nUiat nearest to the door, and Axel\ngoing lo the other side. 'I'he cap Of\nIhe fuse exploded to be followed by\nan awful explosion ot all the dynamite lusl on the other side of the\npartition. The log shack seemed to\nbe raised Irom its very foundation\nand then collapsed Willi the two\nhuman hemes beneath. When Axel\nined    his    senses   he was lying\nSEPTEMBER WEDDINGS\nPATTERSON-LEITCII.\nOn Wednesday morning at 10.SO\nthere occurred a vc*7 pretty wedding\nat the Presbyterian church, when Mr.\nE. I, Patterson ami Miss Hhoda\nLellch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nArchibald l.eileh, were united iu the\nholy bonds of matrimony, Rev. 0.\nMain, pastor of the church, officiating. There were no invitations issued, and lhe. wedding wns a\nquiet one and onlv relatives and a\nfew Intimate friemls of the family\nwere present. The altar of thu\neliun-li was most artistically decomtr\nI'd wilh hanks of flowers,' ami in\nthe center hung a beautiful flora]\nwedding hell, beneath which tlio\ncouple stood during ito coremoiiy.\nPromptly nl the appointed hour the\nsweet strains- of the familiar wedding march nil.*.I lhe church ami .indoors of Hip left aisle opened to\nadmit Hie wedding party. In the\nlead was Ihe bride on llie arm of her\nfather and Immediately behind was\nthe bride's sister, Miss Ella t.eilih.\nAt, the altar they were met liy the\nKiooin accompanied bv Mr. ... K.\nLeltch, brother of the ' bride. Tlio\nmarriage service of the Presbyterian\nehureh was carried oul ami lhe happy\ncouple were pronounced man and wife.\nThen those present arose as Hie\nwedding party slowlv marched out to\nthe lobby ot the ehureh, where they\nwaited for the carriages and to receive the congratulations of their\nfriends. The bride wns dressed in a\n_ traveling suit nf blue pnnama eloth\n* \u25ba j witli blouse of cream lace ami a hat\n, * 'of blue mohair with blue wings, rib-\nz~ .bnn and   velvet, and carried n   bou-\nsilver rake plate, Miss Bul yea:\nglass water bottle, Mr. .1. I,. Walker;\nsilver nnt set. Mr. and Mrs. W. B.\nMeFarlane; salad spoon and fork, Mr,\n;i nd Mrs. W. TT. Wilson; bronzed\nI candle holders, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.\nlleid; w;lter bottle anil tumblers, Mr.\nMrs. .1. I*. Fink; biscuit jar.\nLilly A. Finiiisj;: quartered nak. bed\nroom suiie, Mr, ,T. F. Campbell;\nSinn, Mr. E. A. T.von; cut glass lion\nlion dish. Miss Ward; cut glass bon\nMr. Nnt Harrison; silver suirar tonus,\nMiss Connolly; hand painted water\npitcher, the bridegroom.\nLast Saturday nt the home, of\nMrs. Connolly, n kitchen shower was\ngiven in honor of Hie bride\nwhen many useful articles were\npresented, and also numerous adviees\nrelative lo the management of a\nhusband. Mrs. Manning will ho\ngreatly missed by the Methodist\nchoir, where she has efficiently noted\nas organist  for a  considerable time.\nMr.  Manning is a  member of     Ibe\nfirm of Campliell A Manning, ami    is\nrecognized as    nne     of Cranbrook's\nsterling young business men.\n, 4\t\nLABOR DAY A SUCCESS\n(Continued Irom page one.)\nUie   floor,   covered wilh\nand   shattered   logs, hut in\nipiet of while roses. The bridesmaid\n\u25a0 * ; looked very pretty in a gown of old\n; J, \u25ba rose crepe de chene. large white bat\n,<' I and carrying a bouquet nf pink roses.\n, ,''iThe bride nnd groom reached lhe\n,,,,'station just In time for the west\n11, ..hound train and were met hy a large\n$| number of friends, who gave Ihem as\ncheerful a farewell ns pounds of rice,\nunllmiled packages of eonfetll and old\nshoes could do, added lo which were\nmanv more kind words of congratulations. Mr. nnd Mrs. Patterson will\nspend n few weeks visiiing Coast cities and on their return will make\nIheir home in the bountiful eollnge\n.hat Mr. Patterson has ready on\nBaker Hill, and will be at, ' home\nafter November 1st.\nThe groom. Mr. Patterson, has been\na resident of Cranhrook for a number\nof years, having heen with different\nfirms fn the capacity of bookkeeper,\nand hy his ability and close ui.eulion\nto business became a partner in the\nFink Mercantile comnany. one of the\nlargest firms in Ibis par. nf .he\ncountry, and Is now bookkeeper and\nsecretary of lhat comnany. The bride\ncame to Cranhrook when the family\nmoved to this offy from Oak Lake.\nMan., nail has heen a great favorite\nin church nnd social circles. Some\nIwo years ago she returned from\nToronto, where she had been for some\nlime perfecting her musical oducn-\nlion. nnd hns taken a prominent part\nin all musical en.er.uinments in Ibis\noily since thnt time, nml for a number of monllis wns leader ol llie\nchoir of Ibe Presbyterian church\ntwo men were out. Then M. Miller\nlined mil a luil grounder and heat it.\nI,, first, and while Uu- pitcher was\nbusy securing Iwo strikes off thu\nnexl halter stole second ami thiol,\nThings looked desperate. Two men\nwere' out and two si tikes registered\nagainst the third, when Miller suddenly maile a rush for homo while the\nhall was in lhc catcher's hands and\nwhen Whelan started out to meet bim\nhe made a rush for third and Whalen\nthrew lo thai base, hul Ihe baseman\nmissed it and pefore the hall could be\nreturned Miller had crossed lhe plate\nand lhc day was saved. Then pandemonium broke loose and lhc enthusiastic admirers of Miller threw\nbim up in lhe air nml veiled their\nbeads oh.\nTHE SCORE\nA.B\nFernie\ns. Walters \t\nW. Miller \t\n.'. Whalen \t\nc. Davcy \t\nA. Hancock) \t\nN. MoKcllnr \t\nP. Copplngcr ...\n-. (lillispce \t\nC. Worlhinglon\nII. R.\nn l\ni 2\ni\nn\na\no\nn\nn\nl\nBattery\u2014Coppfngcl\nCranhrook\n1! I  \t\nSullivan \t\nFullon \t\nBurton  ....\nrilhson \t\nJorgensen \t\nJohnson \t\nMiller  \t\nBollock  \t\n37    C    r>\nand Whalen.\nA.11. II. R.\n  1\n  1\n.in\nBattery\u2014Sullivan nnd Reed.\ni 3.. 4 r> n 7 r I.\nFernie . n-n-i-nn-3nan- r,\nCranbrook     .1-1-11II 2 IIII 2-1- 11\nUmpire\u2014Jon, Bairn.\n..ml\nregain\n. .down   on\nut hoards      ,   ,   ,,\nsuch a wav lhat he escaped death nt\nfatal Injuries. One eye was badly\nInjured am. the wrist on one arm.\nand several severe bruises all over lus\nbodv. Crawling out of the mass (ll\ndebris Unit was piled over bun Erie.\nturned to look tor his uncle, and\nsaw that he was covered wilh Heavy\nlogs and hoards and seemed to lie\ncrushed anil mangled. Hurrying In\nthe blacksmith shop near al hand.\nAxel secured a pick and with this lie\nlore oil the lugs in frenzied fear, yel.\nhoping lhat he might be able to save\nhis uncle. At last be got the man\nimalc bodv clear nmlldrew it out\nthen saw thai death bad come\nstandi- to the imtortunnl\nNothing more could lie done n\nfering as be was himself,\ndown Ibe trail eleven miles lor (IHI\nTown where lie cave notice of lie\naccident and was himself driven lo\nIhe hospital here al Crnnbrook and\ntreatment'. Parties tnnn hern\nwen. to Ihe claim Ihal night and\niked afler Ihe bodv nnd on Monday\nil, was brought In lown. The lun-\ncrnt was held on Wednesday afternoon nt lhe Presbyterian church. Bev.\nMain   oflicialing.    and     the remains\nwere Interred in Ihe    local  nelery.\nFlic Bcrgrrn was well known\nIbrnttghollt the dislriel. ami was- a\nman familiar with the handling of explosives. The nephew knew nothing\nif Uie work and was stmnly ns-\noelnted willi his uncle in the work\nlater ul Movie, Mrs. Martha Mont,\nsister al Moyie, Miss Maltha Monk,\nwho was employed at the Kootenay\nhotel, and whn al tended the funeral.\nThe nephew was released trom the\nhospital todav and is still wondering\nover liis wonderful escape.\nmallei suf-\nstarted\nPROFESSIONAL\nOne morning, when Bclus ( hoalo\nwas still in England, his clerk informed him lhat a gentleman had\ncalled and wanted bim lo underlain\na case. \"All! and did yon collect\nthe regular retaining fee?\" \"1 only\nonlleclcd 25 buinens, sir.\" The regll-\nlar fee was fill guineas, ami Mr.\nChoale said: \"But that was unprofessional; ves, very unprofessional I '\n\"Bul, sir,'\" said the clerk, apologeli-\ncally, and anxious to exonerate bin.\nsell Irom the charge, \"I got nil\nhad.\" \"Ah!\" said Mr. Choale,\na different expression, \"that\nprofessional.\"\u2014Ex,\nhe\nwith\nwas\nWATCH LOST\nf.ost, ladies gold watch, hunting\ncase; monogram \"J. R N.\" and In-\nscriliod Inside. Reward 11 returned\nto lliis office.\nThere   were   manv     presents    and ''\",'\"\",\",\ntheir henuty testified tn the high is- did splendid\nteem iu which    the bride niul groom \" '\"\u25a0 \"' I'tali\nwere held by Iheir friends. nrcoiid game.\nTHE FOOTBALL (IAMI.\nII took two gnmcfi between Movie\numl Crnnbrook lo settle Ibe question\nas lo which lown was Ihf best,   and\ni and ai\nI'i.nibi\nlif tl, teams\n,\u2022 worthy of\ninlq won the\nMANNINO-HUCHCROPT\nI   Two of    Cranbrook's most popular\nyoung    people were made    man and\nTHE BlIXINfl CONTEST\nfn llie evening there wns n boxing\niiinli-st between Barney Mullin, ot\nwife cu'rlv' Wodnosdny morning\u2014,Crows Nest Puss funic, and one\nMr. t. R. Manning and Miss Maude , \"Kill\" Parker, a has been from Spin\nE. Haekerolt, nt lhe residence ot the kiine. 'I'he leust said about' this\nbride's brother, Mr. J. P. Hiieh- 'exhibition the belter, tor It, was fakey\ncroft. The ceremonv wns witnessed trom stnrt lo llnisb uml lias settled\nby a few intimate friends onlv. A agnin lhe ipieslloit of boxing contests\nfew minutes pasl eight the.groom ar- in this lown tor n long time to come.\nrived, neennipnniiil bv Mr. .1. F. The game was kepi up inr fifteen or\nCampbell, who did bis duties as liesl slxlocn rounds, and then the rolorco\nman with marked abilii v. These said lhat .I was time to ipiit. No\nwere soon utter ioinod hy lhe gucste. one In the nudienee differed Willi tlm\nand as Mrs. .1 P. Hueherott rendered referee nml the crowd got up and\na portion ol the heautitul wedding walta.l out. Tliey did no. say much,\nmarch    bv    Mendelssohn,   lhe brlda, in fact in thirty mlnules you\nCLAMAN CONCERT CO.\nThe Claman Comedy Company a-\ntracted a large audience to Ihe llica-\nler on Tuesday night, to witness Iheir\nopening performance, \"Down on the\nFarm,\" and lhe eompany certainly\ndeserved lhe good reputation which\npremled it. Miss VunTassell, as\n\"Wildcat,\" won the hearts of Iho audience ul once hy her sprightly ways\nand clever acting. Mr. Claman was\nalso very good as \"Uasdehauni,\" lhe\nfunny Jew. The specialties given hetween .lie acts and during lhe piny\nwere the best ever seen in High\nHirer.\u2014High River Times.\nTla- above mentioned company will\nniniiiir ul the new opera bouse thr\u2122\nnights commencing Saturday, Scp-\nlember 7th.\n\"STEWARTS\"*\nThe lasuling Fruit Slot,'\n1'KKSKI.VINd l'KARS ANU\nCI.AB APPLES\nVery Choice\nIIAZI.KWOOD  .OK t'RKASI\nSTKWAKT'S PINK 0HOCOI.ATK8\nHUGH STEWART\nrhoii- 75 AriiintroiiK Ave.\ncould\n**********************\n\u25a0 i\n\u2022 i\n\u25a0 i\ni \u2022\n11\n\u25a0 i\n11\n! \u2022\n' \u2022\nI '\ni i\ni\ni i","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. 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Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1907-09-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/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]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1907-09-05 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. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}