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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":" l*Ti\u00bb!\u00bbtive Library\nApril l(4f\nTHE CRANBROOK HERALD.\n<:. '''CTOB't^\nVOLUME !>\nOBANBllOOK,   ltlllTlSU   COLUMBIA.   Till liSDAY,   .IAMAKV 21.   1901\nNUMBER    II\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nPaid-up Ctpital, $10,000,000.   Reitrv* Fund, $4,500,000\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\n\u25a0I. I. WALKER, G.ii.r.l M.,,.,., ALKX LAIRD, km*. Oml MlMf\nBRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA, AUD Of\nTHE UNITED STATES AND ENGLAND\na itMfil lutlm, ku.ta.ii Irtmtctts. AcctunU ma, St 1.11K see\nnail Willi all kcuiihn al this lank.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nDtpmlL of $1 aud iipwardi. received, add Interest\n\u2022amnt rain,   ilia depusltm- la subicist lo no delay\never In th* withdrawal ol th* whole *r aav\npurlluu ul tlia deposit\nCranbrook Branch,\nF. C. MALPAS. Manager\nImperial Bank of Canada\n:: Caiptal Paid Up. $4,515,000. Rett Account, $4,515,000\nCapital Authorized, $5,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE      \u2022\nD. R. WILKIE, President.\nTORONTO, ONT.\nR. JAFFRAY, Vice-President\nBranches in Prorinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatche-\nwan, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.\n; ; INTEREST allowed on Savings Accounts FROM DATE OF\nDEPOSIT ut current nites and credited half-yearly.\ni! Cranbrook Branch \u2022 J. F. M. PINKHAM. Mgr. i j\n********************************************\nThe  Employers Liability Act\nrenders you responsible for many things.\nProtect Yourself\nby taking out a policy with us. We have\njust received the iippointmeut for a very\nstrong company, and can give you exceptional rates.\nARNOLD & ROBERTS\nReal Estate\nCRANBROOK, B C.\nInsurance\n********************************************\nj What You Leave With Vs\nfinds tU way back again to you, What von p-pend with tar\naway houseo is most likely gone (or good mid all. Every dollar spent on Jewelry out ol town makes ytu, us uud everybody\n...r snent   \u201e,\nelse Just that muel\n|HH\u00bbrer,\nA   REQUEST\nBriii)*; n* the in nil order man'-* proposition, and wt-i will nhow\nyou how easy ii lb\" lor us to duplicate It, It will worth your\nwhile ill prove this foe yourself.\nW. il. Wilson, Jeweler and Optician j\ni*******************************************\nThe Big Stick\namong ranges li t he KOOTENAY RANOE. It ha*\nthe biggest sale In the\ncountry. It Is Ihe STAY\nSATISFACTORY RANOE.\nFor Sale by\nPatmore Bros\nArmstront Ave.\njWATCH   TALKS!\nYour watjh may run If a jewel is cracked, or broken\nand it may keep fairly good time. The pivot revolving\nIn such a jewel soon cuts and frequently breaks, thus\nincreasing tbe damage ami tlie cost of repairs. II your\nwatch   is   varying, it will pay you to have it \u2022 it mined\nSATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED\nWM. F. TATE & SON,0\nOFFICIAL   WATCH   INSPKCTOB8\nFOB TIIF. C T. R.\nJEWELERS   end   OPTICIANS   ('Rows nkst pass division\n*********** **********************\n\"We shall haul down the British ensign from the suit\nat Government buildings and run up the Red Plag in its\nplace.\" -fir. Hawthornthwalle at the Grand Theater, Vancouver, last June.\n\"No alliance with those revolutionists who would destroy our system ol Government and haul down our Hag,\nbut on th* contrary co-opcrntion with that great body of\nlabor which would reform abuses in a constitutional way.\"\n-J. A. (-MCDONALD.\n********************************************\nA GREAT\nGATHERING\n\"The treatment of the Cranbrook District by the I*lc-\nBrlde Government was neither fair or Just.\n\u2022\u2022It Is laid that the Kaien Island scandal forced Bob\nGreen out of the cabinet, and that Dick rtcBride was In\nthat deal as much as Bob Qreen.\" -J. H. KING.\nKing Rally Largest in\nHistory of District\nM'INNBMAIES ELOQUENT SPEECH\nEnttHisiasm Runs High and Liberal\nSpeakers Receive Vociferous\nApplause.\nThe Liberal rally held in Went-\nworth hall on Thursday evening last\nwas undoubtedly attended hy the\nlargest number of people ever gathered together at a political meeting in\nEast Kootenay. When chairman J\nO. McCalluui called the meeting to\norder every seat in the house was\ntaken and the hall was packed to the\nvery doors with those standing,\nDr. J. H. King, the candidate tor\nthe Cranbrook riding, was the lirst\nspeaker, and, il one is to judge Irom\nthe interest with which be was listened to by all present and tlie\nfrequent bursts of applause, the impression created was that the district had made no mistake in their\nselection of the representative three\nyears ago, and that that selection\nwould be confirmed at the coming\nelection by an overwhelming majority. Nearly the entire speech was\nconfined to local needs and conditions\nand the earliest manner of the doctor In dealing with them convinced\nall of his sincerity, lie clearly outlined tbe unfair manner iu which the\nMcBride government had dealt with\nthis riding, in retaliation lor his\nelection, and explained that while ho\nhad used all available means to convince the government of our needs,\nthe benefits derived had indeed been\npaltry when the amount of revenue\nthe government had received from\nthe district was considered. He\nalluded to the well known tact that\n.1. A, Harvey, the Conservative candidate, had long controlled the patronage ol the district, ami that it\nwe had not received Justin- !.lr.\nHarvey was the proper person to\nblame lie tht-n explained his position on the smelter bill and explained that when this bill was first\nintroduced by Mr. H.iwthornthwiute,\nthat not only was the conditions of\nthe province unfavorable for its passage but thnt it bad turn sprung\nupon tbe members without a\nmoment's notice a nil Hint no time\nother opposition members considered that the bill\nshould he turned down until an\nIntelligent Investigation of Ihe conditions could lie made ami an effort\nput forth to bring the smelter owners and employees together on the\nsubject. This view proved correct,\nas immediately, after the adjournment of the legislature, through Mr.\nMacdonntd's influence these meetings\nwere brouglit ahout with the result\nthat the eight hour dav was put in\nforce. At the next meeting of the\nlegislature the bill was again\nIntroduced, and was heartily endorsed and voted for by Mr. Macdonald\nand the majority of the opposition\nhut was Wiled on its second reading\nthrough tbe influence of Premier McBride and three members of the cabinet, Messrs. Tat low, Fulton and\nPotion. Mr. Kine closed his address\nby stating that if elected he would,\nIn the future as in the past, put\nfortb his utmost efforts to obtain\njustice for this riding and promised\nt-ha-t- if a Liberal government was\nreturned there would be no doubt of\nour obtaining the same.\nMr. Harvey was the next speaker,\nand instead of relying on facts tor\nan argument resorted to ridicule in a\nvain effort to offset the facts advanced by Pr. King. Mr. Harvey\ntook up lb* allegation that he controlled the patronage of this district\nand made a ludicrous attempt to\nprove thati if be was to be held responsible for the government tailing\nto deal justly hy the Cranbrook riding, he should be given credit for\ntbe -benefits that had accrued to our\npeople without regard to whether the\nt^vftrnnent bad been Influential In ob\ntaining them or not. Mr. Harvey's\nsarcasm fell Hat and after a malicious attack upon W. W. B. Mclnnes\nfor entering this campaign he closed\nwith an attempt to holster up the\ngovernment's attitude in tbe Kaien\nisland, Midway & Vernon, and Columbia & Western deals, by repeating\na few of the pet phrases enunciated\nhy Premier McBride and \"thirty-live\ndollar!, a month\" Bowser, at their\nrecent meeting here, and which they\nrepeat at all meetings held by them\nwithout variation.\nMr. Kelly was then called [or but\nbeing absent, S. Macdonald look the\nplatform in his behalf aud denounced\nthe Herald ami Or. King for assert-\ning \"that Mm people responsible for\nMr. Kelly's candidacy were Socialist,\" and stated that tbe accusation\nwas false. Mr. Macdonald also\nberated the \"red Hag\" Socialists and\nannounced that he was not, in any\nmanner in .sympathy with their principles and that in his opinion labor\naud capital should go hand in hand.\nMr. W. W. B. Mclnnes was then introduced by the chairman ami for the\nnext hour ami thirty minutes devoted\nhis lime to such a powerful and\nmasterful arraignment of the McBride government that the large\naudience was moved to freipient and\nprolonged applause. After u brief\nand satisfactory explauaUo . of his\nreasons for resigning tl^e governorship of the Yukon to enter provincial\npolitics he Uirncd bis attention to\nthe claim that McBride saved British\nColumbia from bankruptcy, \"This is\nthe most nonsensical trash, British\nColumbia has never been and cannot\nbe bankrupt. How qould it be with\nall this wealth of natural resources\nand grand opportunities. No; that\nband of amateur financiers were taken by tho throat by a bunch of bankets ami frightened into borrowing\n$1,000,000 at 5 per cent. Think of\nthis. Why 1 know fanners ou Vancouver island who can borrow money\nfor less than this. Then so far from\nbeing in the financial straits that\nthey pretend, they have not used half\nof this sum yet, aud you are paying\ninterest on this money, though half\nof it lies uncalled for. ' So much for\ntheir financial difficulties and the\nbungling manner in which the McBride government handled them.\"\nThe British Columbia Southern\nscandal was next touched on it trenchant terms, Mr. Mclnnes explaining\nbow the McBride government has refused to make the railway company\npay Uie taxes it should pay. Had\nthe government collected those tuxes\nit would have been entirely unnecessary to pass the Iniquitous assessment act which increased everyone's\ntaxes 4*i p. c. on real properly and\nMill per cent, on personal propertv,\nwhereas a great and r.cb corporation\nhad been allowed to shirk and dodge\nits obligations. The amount that\nshould have been paid by the railway\ncompany was more than enough to\nmake ii unnecessary to Increase the\ngenera, taxation.\nThe government, declared the\nspeaker, had been most unbusinesslike and he instanced the tremendous\ntracts of very valuable timber in the\nnorthern part of Vancouver Island\nwhich were being given away to\nspeculators at but a fraction of a\nreasonable price\u2014lo speculators and\nnot to tbe men who would develop\nit\u2014to the speculators who bough!\nonly to sell again at a profit. Millions of dollars worth of timber\nbad thus been practically given away.\nMr. Mclnnes said that he believed\nthat a good business administration\ncould so handle the resources of the\nprovince that it would soon not be\nnecessary to levy any taxes.\nThe matter of \"better terms\" is a\nsimple one. Years ago the provinces\nentered into a partnership. Now, as\nmight have been supposed, as the\nyears have gone bv, il bus been found\nthat things have hot ran as smoothly as they might, and have from time\nto time required adjustment. This\nsimple matter of a- business adjustment was taken up again a short\ntime ago, McBride alone, of all the\npremiers who gathered, went alone.\nOlder premiers went with ministers\nto assist them. It may he that Me-\nBrhte knew that he had no man in\nthe cabinet fit to take with him.\nHe did take a newspaper man with\nhim and he went to send out to the\ncoast bulletins as to the great hero\nMcBride was making of himself. One\nwould have thought that he was reporting a prize fight. No such thing\nwas going on there. No more dignified body of men ever gathered in\nCanada than those who were there nt\nthat conference. Thev were there to\ncalmly consider the claims of each\nprovince and fnirlv nword to each\nwhat was fair to each. Now. McBride, either because he did not\nunder\u00bbtand the case he had In hand,\nor  because he had no desire to   do-\notlier than raise an election cry,\nbungled the whole matter. Then,\nwhen he had found that he could not\nrun Uie whole show, did he retire in\na dignified manner? Did he act as a\nsin teaman should''    No.     Ho rushed\nout,      slammed   lhc    (loot   behind bun\nand at once began to accuse bis\nbrother premiers ol having treated\nhint unfairly and ol being dishonest\nNow, when you think of Ibis, you\nmust acknowledge thai so long a\u00bb\nhuman nature remains as it is, Me*\nIirlde has put himself out oi court\nlurever so far as better terms aro\nconcerned. He has accused the only\ntribunal from which better terms\ncan come, of being dishonest. Ho\ncan never again appear before them\nami hope for consideration. It will\nremain for a Liberal leader like Mr.\nMaudouald to go, us premier of British Columbia, lo a new conference of\npremiers and there, bv uu able, and\nstatesmanlike presentation ol the\nclaims of British Columbia, get what\nWe are so clearly entitled to.\nReferring to the relations existing\nbetween the McBride government and\nthe C. P. R. and with the government's efforts to divert the attention\nof the country Irom that guilty connection, Mr. Mclnnes alluded io the\nnotorious refusal of the McBride government to tax the C. P. K. East\nKootenay lauds, to say nothing ol\nUie iniquitous grant ol bou.iuju acres\nuf land to the C. P. R. in the Columbia & Western grant. In detail the\nspeaker went into this giant show-\nlug that it was not a new matter,\nthat the road bad been built and\nrunning for years, and that lor nil\nthese years the C. P. It. bad been\nbegging and importuning succeeding\ngovernments for the lauds, livery\nprevious government had refused, bm\ninstead of forcing the C. P. It. into\nthe courts to prove its contested\nclaim to the lauds, the MoBrlde\ngovernment deliberately handed the\nlauds over. Then be showed how thu\nmeddling interference of Minister of\nRliaiico Tatlow, had stopped work\non Ihe Midway A- Vermin road, Ihe\nonly possible explanation being that\nthe Midway ,v Vernon would he a\ncompetitor of the C. P. It. In the\none case everything had been done\nfor the C, P. It., iu tbe other nothing\nWas done hut lo stop the building of\nIhe railway, and that because it was\nnot the C. P. It.\nAt the close of Mr. Mclnnes1 speech\nthree rousing cheers were given for\nKing uud the Liberal parly and the\nmeeting was closed by singing the\nNational Anthem.\nLEADER AT REVELST0KE\nHOUSING    LIBEBAL     MEETING\nHELD ON SATURDAY.\nRevel stoke, .Jan. 21.\u2014\"The most\nsuccessful political meeting ever held\niu Revelsloke,\" was the verdict of\nLiberal and Conservative alike after\nthe great gathering in the opera\nHouse on Saturday night at which\nLiberal leader .1. A. Macdonald was\nheard in a masterly elucidation of\nhis parly's policy and a telling and\niiicotitrovertrble arraignment of the\nmisdeeds and blunders of the McBridu\nadministration. Of the meeting held\nhere by McBride and Bowser a week\nago, local Conservatives have boasted\nthat it was a success that neither\nMaedonald nor any other opposition\nspeaker could equal. As a matter.\nol fact it was totally eclipsed by the\nMacdonald meeting, not only in the\nmatter of attendance but iu enthusiasm and appreciation of the points\nscored in a masterly speech.\nThe meeting was.presided over by-\nMayor Brown. E. A. Haggen was\nthe' first speaker and he devoted himself principally to telling criticism of\nlocal matters, showing how shamefully the constituency had been\ntreated in public works despite wild\npromises just prior to the last election aud then Lefeaux, the Socialist\nlook his turn, making full use of the\nchalice to propound lhc usual Socialist propaganda. Candidate Frank\nCayley spoke but shortly, making a\nmanly and effective appeal for the\nvotes of his hearers. He was given\ni splendid reception. Leader Mac-\n\u25a0loiiald spoke upward of an hour and\na half during which he was constant\nly interrupted by outbursts of applause us be made point after point\nii his most efieclive style, All the\nmain issues of the campaign wore\ntouched upon at more or less length\n.Mr. Macdonald spoke very strongly\non the question of irrigation, show\nlug bow the government had so completely neglected its plain duty and\nhad iu fact not even made the mat let\nan excuse for its usual promises\nuntil the opposition had come out\nwitb its clear cut policy.\nMr. Tom Taylor, the Conservative\ncandidate was on the platform and\nwas given full opportunity to speak.\nHe received a very good hearing bul\nfailed in a labored attempt to\nanswer Mr. Macdonald's scathing\ncriticism of McBride and bis government.\nMr. Alex. Henderson, of Vancouver,\ncloned the meeting in a characteristic\nlighting speech which aroused Uie\ngreatest enthusiasm. He confidently predicted victory for Cayley, and\nwas answered Willi cheers. The\nmeeting has confirmed the confidence\nof the Liberal wotkers here who\nstate now that Cayley'a election is\nassured.\nBLAZE AT MOYIE.\nMoyie, .Jan. 21.\u2014Tbe Far to! block\nwas burned here Saturday, the lire\nstarling about 2.30. The building\nand furniture belonged to Miss\nMamie Farrell, and were valued at\n$2,600 and $400 respectively. The\ninsurance on the building is $1,200\nand that,on the furniture $200. The\noilier occupants of ihe block had no\ninsurance and their losses arc as follows: W. If. F. Crosby, entire\nstock in store, $1,5110; W. L. Lucas.\nSHOO; Harold Chapman, $150; K. I).\nStinson, $75. The four persons last\nmentioned lost clothing, books and\nother personal effects to the extent\ngiven. Oordon Monkhons got his he>\nlongings out, but they were badly\ndamaged by water. The fire is said\nto have started in tbe rear of W. II.\nCrosby's stort.\nI Why Cough to ThcCoffin?\nTRY\nDr Scott's Prescription No 99\nor, Cold Cure Tablets\nThey  do   the   work   and arrest   the   most\nstubborn cold.\nBeattie & Atchison\nWhere It Will  Pay You to Deal\nWHERE\nGOODS\nThis Week We Wish to Call Your Attention\nTo our Grocery Department. Vouwillfiml our stoi-k complete\nin entry respect. Iii Inlying our watchword has been GIVE IS\nTHI-) BEST.\nAny li.ul goods will  be promptly replaced or   money   will\n1m* refuttiliil.\nCAMPBELL & MANNING\n**********************\n***********************************\nIt pays to recognize the place to get your\nHardware Supplies\nwhere you get the most for the least money.\nThis way ladies and gentlemen.\nJ. D. McBride\nHARDWARE\n********************************************\n********************************************\n\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc'\u25bc'\u2022'\u25bc'S' fVfffffffffffff \"\u2022\nOpen Again for Business\nA complete new stock of WINES,\nLIQUORS and CIGARS just to\nhand. Can fill all orders for Hotel or Family Trade\t\n<lA. L. McDERMOT\nWholesale Wine Merchant, Phone 17, Cranbrook\n********************************************\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nCALGARY,  ALBERTA\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\nThis Hotel has always been the leader\nin its line, tinil will Ixi kept up to tho\nstandard. If you want to meet the\npeople, come to the Queen's Hotel.\n; Queen's Hotel, Calgary \" ' ST\nBPHENS,\n**************************************++*\u201e;\nMUSICAL\n'\nMiss A. 1,. llilluiii, t'-iicl\nor of\ntho pinnnforte Terms mo\nli-rntc\nArmstrong Ave     CffcVl\n\"*4\nMRS. BENT, NURSE\nMjtcrnity Canes a Specialty.\nAddreBs :\nGeneral Dtl-very, Cranbrook, B.C THE CUANBR00K nERAI.I)\nKOOTENAY VALLEY   COMPANY\n20.000 ACRES\n*********************************&!+ *^^\u00ab\n***********************\u2022****<>**************\n|!\n, \u201e,\n11',,\nI XI\nI XI\n, II,\n, \u201e I\nOil\nOil\n11,1\nIXI\nIXI\nIXI\nIII I\n, ,11\n, \u201e I\nIII I\nIII I\n, 1.1\nIIII\n1,1,\nValley, Kits\n\u2022 iy pick .\nwill\ntlieseleoteil Inmla In tl\" lieantlfnl Koolentty\n\u25a0tmv. It. C, extending from Canal Klat to\nr sale ut from ,:t In II\" |wr acre.\nThe Kootenay Valley'ie of .Unsurpassed Fertility\nMatchless Climate and the Most Picturesque Situation West of the Rooky Mountains.\nTlie lands present ovary feature ol usefulness, including lltn*\ntared benoltes, brushy fiats, mundi, prairie inn! meatlow. The\niirusiiv Hum, marsh nml meadow lands consist i,f iltiop, black\nloam i the bench land being a sandy loam, splendidly adapted\nfor fruit culture. Where irrigation may 1',' necessary ,m the\nlieuuhes, water can he had from the mountain creeks llowiiig f rom\nthe Rookies into the Kootenay river. The lands ore fully surveyed anu some of Hi* lots have liven mili-iliviili'il into. Fenced\n[units ol iilmtii so Korea ctich.\nTho purohsae price will Inoltlde tho timber, which can I* aold\nby tin purchaser without, any liability to government or other\nroyalty. The timber will in many oases 1 * than realise tho purchase price, and wllllnultoases materially recoup tho iiinmiui'invested. Logs can ho driven ontlie Kootenay river, which touches every lot save one. The main wagon roiid through the valley\npusses over or oloae t\u201e each Int. ami the proposed Kootenay Central railway will parallel the wagon road. - The C. I'. If. in ijnile\nconvenient to the lands.\nFor further particulars apply to\nT. 6. PROCTOR, NELSON, B. C.\nOr to Joseph Ryan Cranbrook, B. C.\n*********************\t\n********************************************\nCranbrook\nHotel & s\nQuests Comlorl a Specialty\nflood Stabling is Connection\nNearest to railroad and depot.    Has accommodations for the public unequalled In Cranbrook.\n{  llol snd Cold Baths\nHoggarth & Rollins\n Proprietors\ni>\u00ab4) 0\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\nDEZALL     BROTHERS j\nB. C. Livery and Feed Stables j\nBlacksmiths, Woodworkers and Bicycle Repairers    i\nW'.Liirilii Cirriajji an! Dir'tii Implements for Sale       j\nCRANBROOK,   B.    C.\nJ   Shop Phone 50 P. O. Bix 144 Birn Phone90\nI   l-I-l   I   111'I   I' I'l' 1   I   I   I'l' I  I'|   |   I'l .lull I 1 l|-H   1   tMllI-tMi-I-l-MMl-t-t-t-   '\nTry a   Case ol\nKERRIGAN'S    5T0UT\nTwo Dozen  Pints  $2.50\n13 jtutl to Union us'   Tin. fin nt beverage   on   the murke\nfor family uud table use.    Imports vigor nnd\nhealth, and tones up the body generally\nJAMES KERRIGAN\nBrewer, Cruiilirook   B. C\n1 f | in 1 |.l,,|.|.|.l.| I III l-l-i-M Mil Ml Win III till 11\n**************************\nI\n*\nManitoba Hotel\ndan Mcdonald, proprietor,   cranbrook, b. c.\nHeadquarters for\nLumbermen\nTho Manitoba tl eentrally loe-nted uml ban tne of the heitdllllngrooinfl\nin the city.   The bar in r>ii|i|i|ie.l with the lient of Liquors nnd Cigars\nYVvvv>^-V\u00ablrvVV4VlVy\u00a5VlPiPVV\u00a5Vl\n***\nL. 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\nNominations Made Saturday\nConst iuiciicv-ltctiiiiig Member\nAllln\u2014Dr. Young (Con.)\t\nAlbornl\u2014Wm. Mnnson (t'on.) \t\nCnrlboo-J. Murpliy (Lib.) \t\nJltil Scut\u201411. .tones ll.ib.) \t\nOhllllwack-C. Mtiinii (Lib.) \t\nCollllllbiii-W. ('. Wells (Lib.) \t\nI'niiiiis-ll. Grant (Con.) \t\nCowlchau\u2014J. N- Evans ll.ib.)\t\nI'taiiliriKik-lir. King (Lib.) \t\nDelta\u2014John Oliver (Lib.) \t\nivwilni'v-U. McBride (Con.)\t\nEsqulmult-C. E. I'oolcy (Con.) \t\nr'ernie\u2014 W. It. Hoss (Con.)\t\nGrand Porks\u2014Geo. Frascr (Con.)\t\nGreenwood\u2014I. K. Ilrnwn (Lib.) \t\nIslamls-T. W. I'aterSon (Lib.) \t\nKamliHips\u2014F. J. Ktilton (Con.) \t\nKiislu-li. K. flreen (Con.) \t\nI.illooet...A. McDonald (t'on.) \t\nNaiiaiiiio, J.W. llnwthointhwaite-(N)\nNelson\u2014I. Houston (Con.)\t\nNewcastle-P. Williams (Soc.) \t\nNew Westminster\u2014T. Gilford (Con.)...\nOkanagau\u2014P. Ellison (Con.) \t\nlievclstokc-T. Taylor (Con.) \t\nRichmond\u2014F.I.. Carter-Cotton (Con)\nRosslitnd-.l. A. Macdonald (Lib.) .\nSnanieli-H. Tanner (Lib.) \t\nSiinilkillliceli\u2014L. W. Shatlnrd (Con.\nSkeeno-C. W. I). Clifford (Con.) ... .\nSlocan\u2014Wm. Daviilson (Lab. Soc.) .\nVancouver\u20141\u2014R. (1. Tatlow (Con.)\n\"      2-C. Wilson (Con.) \t\n\"      3-.I. K. Garden  (Con.) ....\n\"     l-W. .1. Dowser (Con.) ....\n\"     fi\u2014A. II. It. Macgowan (Con)\nVictoria\u2014l-R. I.. Drury (Lib.) \t\n\"     2-W. G. Cameron (Lib.)\t\n\"     8-.I. D. McNiven (Lib.) \t\n\"      4\u2014It. Hall (Lib.) \t\nYale\u2014Stuart Henderson (Lib.) \t\nYmir\u2014H. Wright (Con.) \t\nLiberal\nConservative\nJohn Irving\t\nII. Itrewster \t\n11. .luues \t\n.1. Yorston \t\n0. W. Munro \t\nW. C. Wells \t\n.1. 11. Dennett \t\n.1. N. Evans \t\nDr. King \t\nJohn Oliver\t\nIt. Jardine \t\nJohn Jardine\t\nWin. Dicken \t\nill. W. Gregory ...\n'(I. It. Naden \t\nT. W. I'aterson ...\n|,l,  D. Swanson ...\nJohn Keen \t\n'M. Kagleson \t\nII. Sheppard \t\nDr. G. A. II. Hall\n11). Thomas \t\nF. W. Howay \t\nDr'. Macdonaid \t\nIt. Caley \t\nJ. W. Weart \t\nJ. A. Macdonald .\n.1. Picrcy  ...\nSmith Curtis\t\nDr. Kergan \t\nA. II. Docks-leader\n.11. 1*. McLennan ..\nT. F. Ncelnttds ....\nA. Henderson \t\nI.I. W. Dell. Farris\niW.W.B. Mclnnes. .\n11. L. Drury \t\nW. G. Cameron ...\nJ. D. McNiven \t\nK. Hall \t\nStuart Henderson\n1. Fred Hume\t\nSocialist, Labor or Independent\nDr. Young\t\n!Wm. Matison \t\nC. Wilson\t\nF. It. Campion ....\niS. A. Cawlcv \t\n111. (I. Parsons ....\ntl. Grant \t\nW. II. Haywaid ..\n[J. A. Harvey \t\nF, J. .Mackenzie .\nli. McBride\t\n0, E. Poolcy \t\nW.  II. Itoss \t\nB, Miller\t\nE. (I. Warren \t\nA. E. McPhllllps\nF. J. Fulton\t\nN. McKay \t\nA. McDonald \t\nDr. O'Brien'\t\nI. Kirkpatrick ....\n\u2014. Cairns\t\nT. Gilford \t\nPrice Kittson \t\nThos. Taylor\t\nF.L. Carter-Cotton\nL. A. Campbell .\nI). M. Kberts \t\nI.. W. Shatford .\nW. II. Lord \t\nWin. Hunter \t\nII. G. Tatlow ....\nJ. F. Garden\t\nA. II. Maegowan\nW. Bowser \t\nDr. McOuire \t\nli. McllrMe \t\nIt. B. Thompson\nJ. Behnsen \t\nF. Davy \t\nChas. Semlin\t\nJas. Scliofield ....\nJ. Cartwrlght (Soc.) \t\nDr.\"w.\".i\" Curry\",'...'.'.'..,'\".,','.'.\nT. E.'kei'ly\"..!.\"..'.'.'.','.'...','.'.'.'.'..\nW. Moore (Soc.) \t\nJohn Mclnnes (Soc.) \t\nE. Dynes (Soc.) \t\nW. .1. I.edingliain (Soc.) ,\nJ. W. Ilawttiornthwaite (Sue.) ...\nF. Phillips (Soc.) \t\nP. Williams (Soc.) \t\nI. S. Itaiiiey (Lab.) \t\nJ. W. Logic (Soc.)\t\nW. Lefoaiis (Soc.) \t\nA. F. Berry (Sue.) \t\n\u2014. Win'kicr (Soc.) ............ ........\nWin. Davidson (Soc. Lab!) \".',\u201e'.'.' .',\nF. WllHamn (Lab); A. 0. Perrv 1\nIt. P. Pcttiplcce (Roc.) \t\nA. Stehbings (Soc); R, Kingslrv\nK. If. McVetv (Sue.) \t\nJ. E. Dilbheriv (Soc.) \t\nDr. Ernest Hall (Lab.) \t\nA. Johnson (Lab.) \t\nJohn Houston (Ind. Con.) \t\nRobinson-McKenzie Lumber Co., Ltd.\nSaw and Planing Mills\nAll Kinds Of\nRough and Dressed Lumber\nGRANT FOR JAMAICANS\nCANADIAN     PARLIAMENT    HAS\nVOTED PRELIMINARY\n(50,000.\nOttawa, Jan. 18.\u2014At the opening\nol the house this afternoon, Mr.\nFielding said: \"Mr. Speaker, be-\nfore you proceed with the orders ol\nthe tlay, 1 would ask the couscut ol\nthe house to make a statement as to\nlite matter which was mentioned by\nthe right honorable the prime minister. A tjucstiuu was asked with regard tu the disaster iu Jamaica.\nOwing to the breaking ol the cable,\nit has been found very dillicult lo\ngel any oliiciai iuloiiuatioli and we\nare dependent almost entirely ou\nnewspaper reports. There seems lo\nuc no reason, however, 10 duuut thai\nthe disaster is a very great one,\nthat there, has beeti a large loss 01\nHie, a very great dcsiructlou ot\nproperly anil consequently very mucii\nutstress. We limn, lhat, withuui\nwaning further lur olhuiul iutoruiu-\nlion, it will be the wish ul thu parliament ol CuuuUa lu lake imuieiu-\nuto steps lo express iu a tangible\nway the sympathy ot Ihe Canadian\npeople with lueir hreiuieu 111 Iuc\nivest Indies hy Ihe making ol a suo-\nstanliul grunt. As lu what the\n.luiuuui Simula he wc are uul prepar-\nl'U al this luuiucul 10 say mure man\nmis, mat we will take lhc usual\nsums lur asking the assent ol parliament lor a gram 01 \u00bbju,iitiu a\nnisi step, nun uie uuUerslanUing\nlual il lurlher iiiiuruialioli sltou.u\nallow lliul tlie uisas.cr is 01 sucn\ncuaraelcr as lo make the uncus\ngreater, we shall ask parliament to\ntuu.uuu, making ,iini,uuo II uccc-\n.iijipliiuonl it with another gram ol\nsary, Intormaiiou nas reuuiied\nmat a steamer is about 10 sail from\nilulitax Lu Jamaica aud the pruprle-\nlors of tue line, Messrs. 1'ickioia\nuiat-k, bave generously oUeteii to\nconvey tree ol transportation\ncnaiges, auy provisions which lhc\nCanadian guvernuieut or people may\nwish lu send, instructions are being\nsent 10 lhc collector 01 customs\nilaiit'ak, who fortunately is a man\nlauilliar with West Indian conditions\nHaving been tor many years connect\ni-il with West Indian trade, to make\ninquiries Hum well informed people\nas lo what il may he desirable 10\nsend, and lo purchase at once whatever provisions are available and,\nin lhc opinion ol those whom he may\nconsult, arc suitable lor the needs ul\nIhe peuple uf Jamaica. An endeavor\nwill be made to have these, logelhcr\nwnh a supply ol tents liolu Uie null-\nliny department ut Halifax ready lor\n\u25a0latuaiea tu-morrow.\"\nAir. 11. I.. Uorden said: \"1 am\nsure there will be uu ijissentiiig voice\nin the house lu lhc proposal of the\ngovernment. It seems that the disaster has been even more appalling\n111.111 we were inclined to think a\n(lay or two ago, and the action\nwhich the government and parliament will take will, 1 am sure, commend iisell to tlie people ol Canada.\nIt might not be uut of place also to\nexpress the appreciation which 1 am\nsure all of us feel at tlie prompt anil\ngenerous action which lias a I readv\nbeen taken by Ihe president and congress of the United States relative to\nthe disaster.\"\nSantiago, Cuba, Jan. 18.\u2014The\nsteamer Thomas Brookes has arrived\nhere Irom Kingston with 17 refugees.\nThey paint a horrible picture ol the\nen bast roplie and confirm the reports\nid the destruction of the principle\nbuildings, The pilots do not dare to\nenter the harbor owing lo the\nchanges in the channel. The Macli-\nado cigar factory, in which many\nCubans were at work, crumbled anil\n125 ol them were killed.\nLondon, Jan. 18.\u2014A special despatch from Kingston, dated Jan. 17,\nsays: \"The recent earthquake was\nmore serious than any which had occurred 1 in Jamaica for two hundred\nand fifty years. The first shock was\nsiicweded by 15 or 16 shocks. The\nwooden structures stood well but-the\nbrick houses collapsed wilhin a radius of sin miles. The immunity of\n250 years led the Jamaicans to forget that they are within the earthquake \/one and they have been building brick houses. But lor this, there\nprobably would have been no loss of\nlife. There has been no tidal wave.\nThe defences at Port Royal were\ndestroyed and the pallisades broken\nthrough. Black mud is coming to\ntho surface. The conduct 0! all\nclasses is admirable.\"\nIS    CORBIN     LINE   ABOUT    TO\nMERGE?\nREPRESENTATIVE   OF THE    C.\nP. R. AT NELSON, IS SLATED\nFOR SPOKANE.\n(Spokesman-Review.)\nThat tlie Spokane-International\nwill be taken over by tlie Canadian\nPacific within the next lew mouths\nis the story which gained some circulation in railroad circles yesterday.\nWhile it cannot be divulged, the\nsource of the report is such that\nonsiderable credence is generally\ngiven it. The iuformatiou coiecs\nIrom persons iu close touch with the\nahairs of tlie Canadian Pacific uud\nhaving close relations with Canadian\nPacific officials.\nIt is known that under the traffic\nagreement between D. C. Corhili ol\nlhc Spokane-International uuid the\nCanadian Pacillc officials, covering a\nperiod 0! 40 years, it is stipulated\nthat no American line can acquire\ntitle to the Spokane-International.\nThere seems to be some question\nwhether the Canadian Pacillc can\ndirectly own railways in the United\nStates. Mr. Corbiu is in Ihe east\nand could not he seen regarding the\nrumored absorption.\nFrom the same source comes the\niulortiiatiun that the Canadiau Pacillc will within the next two months\nupon ail ollice in Spokane, aud that\nJoe Carter, now general passenger\nagent of the Canadian Pacillc at\nNelson, B. C, is to be placed is\ncharge 0! the ollice. Carter is one\nol the best known railroad men in\nthe northwest, and it is argued that\na man of his standing would not be\npicked lor the Spokane ollice were it\nnot that he will be slated tor the\nmanagement of the Corbin road, 11 it\nis taken over by the Canadian Pacific.\nTbe same informant states that In\nBritish Columbia and in Canadian\nPacillc circles the Corbin road is\nknown as tbe Canadian Pacillc branch\nto Spokane, and ft is generally expected that it will eventually become\na Canadian Pacific property.\nVANCOUVER SENSATION.\nALL BUT   TORY   NOMINATIONS\nPROTESTED ON TECHNICALITY.\nVancouver, Jan. 19.\u2014All seventeen\ncandidates previously announced lor\nthis district llled nomination papers\nto-day. Barrister Marshall sprung\na sensation just at tbe close ol the\nproceedings by protesting all save\nthe Conservative nominees on tbe\ntechnical ground that the papers\nread \"City ol Vancouver electoral\ndistrict\" instead ol \"Vancouver City\nelectoral district.\" Returning ol-\nllcer Parkes refused to entertain the\nprotest ami ordered the usual poll.\nGRANIIY COMPANY PAY LARGE\nDIVIDENDS.\nPROFITS    DURING    THE   YEAR\n1000 WERE t2,UI0,7SI) NET.\nLate advices Irom New York say\nthat the Granby company ol the\nBoundary, B. C, has during 1906\nearned approximately $2,130,780 net,\nor $15 on each new share, par value\nMini. During tlie year lour dividends\nol 3 per cent, each were declared,\ncalling lor the payment ol 11,620,000\nleaving $510,780 either for new construction or to be added to the surplus account. Net surplus on June\n.10, 11106, was $2,547,738.\nThe company's output in the 13\nmonths just ended was 111,7711,0110\npounds ol copper, for which an aver-\n!age price of about 19,278 cents was\nreceived, comparing with a production in the fiscal year ended June 30,\n1908, ol 1(1,939,004 pounds, sold at an\naverage of 17.78 cents per pound.\nA. B. W. Hodges, the company's\ngeneral manager, speaking of the\nfurnace equipment, says;\n\"We have eight blast furnaces, and\ntwo ot them are large ones. We\nhave three of the six small furnaces\nnow enlarged and hope to have the\nother three enlarged some time in\nFebruary, which will make our daily\ncapacity anywhere Irom 3900 to 3300\nIons, or about 1,000,000 a year,\nwhich will give us a copper production ol Irom 25,000,000 to 30,000,000\npounds a year.\n\"We also have increased our converter plant by another converter\nstand, having three now, and it gives\nus a converter capacity ol 30,000,000\nto 35,000,(100 pounds a year.\"\nTHE RELIEF OF DEWDNEY.\n(Nelson News.)\nWhen Premier McRride introduced\ninto tlie legislature his remarkable\nhill lor the \"relief of Dewdney,\" an\nemphatic protest against the injustice\nthreatened ratepayers throughout the\nprovince was promptly entered by\nthe Liberal opposition. But the\nmeasure was carried through the\nhouse in spite of every effort made\nby J. A. Macdonald anii'liis supporters to procure its defeat. It is\nnoteworthy at the present juncture\nthat it has never received very\nhearty support Trom the Conservative\npress, either at the time ol its\nenactment as law, or since it has become one of the issues of the present\ncampaign. The silence prevailing 011\nthis point is signilicatil, lor it is as\ndirect an admission of condemnation\nas could well be expected from parly\njournals.\nThe whole principle ol the measure\nwas indefensible. Dewdney, in its\ncorporate days, at the request ol lhc\nowners of low lands, borrowed a\nlarge sum ol money lor dyking purposes, with the explicit understanding that the owners whose lands\nwere improved should be specially assessed until the whole amount of the\nobligation, principle and interest,\nwas repaid. Shortly allerwanls\nDewdney defaulted. The ratepayers\nrefused to elect councillors, aud the\nmunicipality was thus left for years\nwithout a responsible head. As\npayments on the loan were not met,\nthe interest rapidly mounted up until the whole sum owed hy the municipality on this score alone reached a\ntotal of $30,1100.\nThen the creditors, unable to deal\nwith a council that did not exist,\nwent to the government iu the hope\not inducing it to assume that debt,\nand pay them their money. The government consented, much to their\nsurprise, and equally to their delight.\nHut, in planning a solution of the\ndifficulty (a solution which was alter-\nwards given legislative effect in tlie\nDewdney relicl bill) It struck at one\nof the first principles of administrative justice, namely, that people who\nhave no part, cither directly or indirectly, In contracting a liability\nshould not be taxed for its liquidation. The government compounded\nwith the creditors for $25,000, paying $10,000 out nf the public treasury arid arranging to raise the\nbalance by a special assessment on\nall lands in Dewdney, whether improved, or unimproved, by the dyking operations.\nOn the surface, this settlement does\nnot seem such a had one. and no\ncasual critic would find fault with\nany of its features save that breach\nin Hie principle of justice named\nabove. But there is a darker side\nto the stnrv which has yet lo he\ntold. The men who profited bv this\ntransaction were, first, the creditors\nof Dewdney municipalltv; and second,\nthe owners of the low land reclaimed and Improved bv the dykes. Had\nthe latter been struggling farmers,\nthe government would have deserved\ncredit for going to their assistance\nat the expense ot the general public\nBut they were not struggling farmers. For the most part, thev were\nspeculators, whose holdings had been\nincreased In value from tl per acre\nto from $50 to $190 per acre. Thev\nhad profited in large measure bv the\neons! ruction ot the dvkes, and were\nwell able to meet the llahllllv which\nthey themselves had contracted. But,\nthey had sufficient influence with\nPremier    McBride to induce him    to\n;'\u00a3!'..\u25a0. a nrt \"'    ,tleir h'xt debts\n(debts they were better able to pav\niktSh     ,wrj\" ,MJr ra,i*bors on    the\n(\u00a3\u201e '\"n*1\" adjoining) onto tho\nmoulders of every ratepayer in British Columbia.\n[Such a transaction surclv cannot\nhe defended nn onv score' No\nwonder the Conservative press Is\nnumb; and no wonder the settlers on\n'he high lands of Dewdney arc   con-\nI suiting lawyers to see if thev cannot\nescape tne payment of the special\ntaxes levied on them hv the govern-\nS?J 1\" VF '\"Improvement works\nbehalf \u201er Iheir more wealthy neighbors of Ihe rich, low <lvl;<rl lands adjoining. The action taken bv McBride in the \"rellel ot Dewdnc'v\"-a\ntiiisnomor, since the relief was' onlv\naccorded a part nf Dewdnev-practi-\n\u2122'v    amounts   to taxation without\nbis confiscation ot E. * N. 'i\u201ends at\nthe dictation of Mr. HnwMiornth-\nwaite, and indicates how far he will\ngo when political expediency on the\none band, or the demands of clamorous and greedy friendB on the other\nurw him to move along lines directly\nantaeymistlc 'to all rules ot justice\nand fair play. *\nSKIN COVERED\nWITH SORES\nDEFIED  ALL    REMEDIES FOR 7\nYEARS,   AND    DOCTOR SAID,\n\"Mi CUHE.\"\nYet  Zam-Bnl.  Has Completely Cured\nSo powerful nre the healing es-\naences in SSam link thgt In some\nc.im'.s which li.ivr ix*i*ii pronounced\nbeyond relicl they havo worked com-\npli'it* cure! Surii an Instance is just,\nreported1'Irom Invcrmay, Sask, Mis.\n.1. M, McCormlck, ol that place,\nsavs'     \"About seven yeava ago    my\nface brqko out in rough   hTotchca.\nwhich'*'burned and Itched and smarted\nin turn almost beyond endurance\nI commenced ' io try every known\nremedy I could go! for Ince ami skin\ntioiihii-N. Soint* of them gave a\nlittle relief, si ii i ir none, but no mat\ntor how much 1 used them, as noon\nns I went out tin* trouble started all\nover again. I consulted doctors, ami\nthey told mo lliora waa nbRolulely no\ncure for me, but that 1 should Imvo\nto wait until  l outgrow th.' disease\n\"Finally my luialmnd sent fur a\nsupply i\u00bbf Znin-Buk. We npplled a\nsmall sample to n small patch of tlm\ndisease.*'-To tun delight the portion\ntreated with Zam link very ipilcloly\nhonied. We then obtained n proper\nsupply, ami ln-jj;.i]i I hi* '\/am-link\ntreatment. I am now delighted to\nslate thai after having used n few\nhoxi's, 1 am free from the old trouble\nami completely cured.     I will ncvor\nlit* will I  X.im HiiIj in the bouse   as\nlong as I live, and to all who arc\ntroubled witb skin diseases in uny\nform 1 would say, wnste no time in\nobtaining a supply of Zam-Duk.\nSince proving it in my own Case, 1\nhave obtained a supply for an old\nlady who had nn ulcer on her leg for\n30 years. Three h'ises wen- sulli-\nclent to close the wound.\"\nZnm-Buk cures cuts, burns, bruises,\nsealds, ami all skin injuries, as well\nns skin dlsenscs. Applied to eczema, scalp sores, pimples, poisoned\nwt Hinds, children's rushes, ulcers,\nboils, abscesses, itch, sore back,\nfestering and discharging wounds,\netc., it acts like a charm, Its antiseptic Ingredients kill all germs and\nproven) inflammation nnd festering.\nThen its he.ilinu powers come into\noperation and build up new, healthy\ntissue. All diuiruisls sell Znm-Buk\nat fifle. per box, or ohtainahle from\ntlie Znm-Buk Co.. Toronto, [or price,\nli boxes for  J2.50.\nA STANZA  FROM BURNS.\nJohn Burns, England's labor cabinet minister, was asked hy an American woman to contribute something\nto her autograph album. Mr. Burns\nkept the album three days and then\nreturned it with the following original stanza:\nBorn in struggle, renml in strife\u2014\n' Agitator all my life.\nBlessed in health\";  my only wealth\nMy aiu guile wife.\nCORPORATION OH THI; CITY\nOF CRANBROOK\nEXTRACT FROM  POUND AND\nDOG TAX BY-LAW.\ni No person shall allow any horse,\nmule, hull, ox, cow, sheep, goat, pig\nir other cattle or poultry to run\nat large within the city, otherwise\nthe same may be impounded and the\nowner thereof is liable for damages\ncaused.\nAny person may Impound nn animal\nfound running at large. The line to\ntbe poundkeeper for every animal is\nus follows:\nStallions, $5,011.\nOther horses, mares, geldings, fillies or mules, Jl.liu each.\nBull, $5.1)0.\nCow or other kind of cattle, $2.00.\nj Boar pig, $4.00.\nDig, sheep or goat, $1.00.\nFowl, 25 cents..\nThe poundkeeper may also collect\n$1.00 for impounding any animal and\n23 cents .for impounding auy fowl,\nand for feed may charge as follows:\ni Horses and mules, $1.00 per diem.\n, Other cattle and swine 50 cents.\nFowl and geese, 25 cents per diem.\nIf tbe animals are not redeemed the\npoundkeeper  will  proceed  to sell.\n, There shall lie a tax on nil dogs of\n$1.75 and on all bitches $5.00.\nIt is the duty of the owner of\ndogs to procure a tug from the City\nClerk, otherwise the dogs will be impounded and unless redeemed will be\nsold or destroyed. Tags must he\nplaced . on dog's collar so as to be\nplainly' seen.\nin addition to the above charges,\nany person guilLy of an infraction ol\nthe by-law is liable lo a penalty ol\n$100.00 ami costs or two months im-\nprisniunciit.\nT. M. Roberts,\nii \u25a0 City Clerk,\n\u2666 \u00ab\ni?CLINE*S   POPULAR j\nBARBERSHOP\nis now located in its comfort-\nt able and attractive new quar-\n? ters in the Manitoba Hotel.\nThis institution is just up-to-\ndate and is modcrnly equipped\nI to do iust the best work in all\nt branches ol the tonsorial art.\n+\u25a0\t\nWhen You\nCome to the Metropolis stay at the\nPalace Hotel\n5tephcns & Rockendo. I\nProprietors\nOpposite C. P. R.\nStation\n$1.00   PKR   OAY\nCalgary, Alta.\n-1-I-1-1-I\"I-H-1-1\"I\"1-1-I\"1-M-1\"I\"1\"I'\nI Cranbrook   Foun-1\ni        dry and\n| Ma chine Shop::\nMcKinnon & JohnstoB *j*\nProprietors\nWe nro prepared to\nilo nil kitiils of repair work heavy ami\nlight, iiiuke castings,\nturn shafts, etc.\nSYNOPSIS OK CANADIAN HOM&\nS'l'KAD HrltlKLATIIINS.\nAny available Douuukia Lands\nwithiu the Uailway Bolt is Unlink\nColumbia, may be bumestcaded hjr\nany person who is tbe sole bead ol a\nlaruily, or auy male over IU rears of\nage, to the extent ol ouc-ipiai let\nsection of lliu acres, more or uess.\nEntry must be made personally at\nthe local land ollice lor the district\nin which Uie laud is situate.\nThe homesteader is required to per\nlorui tbe conditions conuccted tbcre-\nwitk under one ul the lollowiug\nplans:\n(1) At least six mouths' residence\nupus aad cultivation of the laud in\neach year lor three years.\nW II the lather (ur mother, II the\nfather is deceased), ui the homesteader resides upon a farm in the vicinity ol the land entered lor, the re-\nquileiuciils as to resilience may In\nsalislicd hy such person residing with\nthe father or mother.\n(3) II tiie settler has his pcrma-\nucut residence upon laimiiif, laud owned by him iu the vicinity ol his\nhomestead, tbe rcijuiiciiicais as to\nresidence may he satinUcd by residence upon the said laud.\nSix mouths' notice in writing,\nshould be given to the Ooiniulssiouer\nof Dominion Lauds at Ottawa ol intention to apply lor patent.\nCoal lands may be purchased at 510\nper acre lur soft coal aud S2U lor\nanthracite. Not mure than 32(1\nacres caa be acquired by one individual or company. Royalty at the\nrate of ten cents per ton of 2,(100\npounds shall be collected on the gross\noutput.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy at law liialstar ul law Interior\nScientific    Horseshoeing   a J\nSpecialty\n\u25a0loH\"IiiM-li'l\"l-lll'H'Hl\"l-l-l'\nCranbrook\nLivery &\nGEARY & DOYLE\nProprietors\nTeams uml drivers furnished for suv\npolut in the district,\nA. DOVLB. Manager\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER B. C.\ndeceives both ladies and gentlemen\nas resident or as day students. Hal\na complete commercial ur business\ncourse. Prepares students to gain\nTeachers' Certificates of all grades.\nGives the four years' course tor the\nII.A. degree, and the first year ol the\nschool of science course, in affiliation with Toronto university. Has a\nspecial \"Prospectors' Course\" lot\nminers who work in B. C.\nInstruction is given in art, music,\nphysical culture and elocution.\nTerm opens September 17th, DHltL\nFor calendar, etc., address \"Columbia College, New Westminster, B.C.\"\nCranbrook Sash\nand Door Factory\nAll kinds of finish work in\nway nf ilimrs, windows, trunnions, ol'-. Kiln ilrii-il liiiiilmr\nfur inside work. Our work is\ntftitiruntOGtl ami our prices urn\nsatisfactory,   Horeuti   ilm,rs\n.{(Highanil Dressed lumber\nPot Sale\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby Riven that fit*\ndays niter date I intend to apply to\nI lie riiiif Commissioner ol Lands\nami Works at Victoria, lur permission lo purchase the following described kinds situate on the easterly\nsiilc uf Goat Hiver Canyon, adjoining Die northerly boundary ol hit\n812, group one, mole particularly\nilcsurihed us lollows;\nCommencing at a point on tho\nnortherly boundary of lot 812,\ngroup 1, distant Hi chains west trout\nflic most northerly angle ou the\neasterly boundary ol the said lot\n812, thence north 211 chains, thence\nwest 2(1 chains, more or less, tu the\nright-nl-way of the Canadian l'acillc\nHallway (Crows Nest Branch),\nthence following the easterly boundary ol the said right-of-way in a\nsoutherly direction 20 chains, more\nor less, to the northerly boundary ol\nlot 812, group 1, thence easterly tol-\nlowing said northerly boundary 20\nchains, more or less, to the point,\nol commencement, the whole containing 40 acres, more or less.\nT. W. Leask.\nDated this 24th day ol December.\nUUU. ta-it\n- THE  CRANRROOIv   Uml A I.I)\nUndertaking and Embalming\nFunerals directed from private houses, churches or our\nown parlors.   Firstclass undertaker In attendance \u25a0*\u00bb *\nGranbrookGooperatiYe Stores\nRambling Reverie*\nBY A DREAMER.\nas a tiger dunks blood.\napathy, the cruelty ut li'\nbegot when bride ami am\nI utterly. Would that ou\n,could strike deeper, seek ti\nwell as Iced, encourage\nllrntalili.\nii.ls, arc\niiiioii die\ncharities\nlium.iiii\/i'\nnd reatri-\n> all\nluui l\n.ORDERS YANKEE\nKINOSTI\nTARS 01 T nl\nThe iool destroys lus own health Irmrte as well .is clothe. Wc\nwhile drinking to the health ol oth- oi us apt to gather out skin\ners. lus,  hold    our  noses   atnl avert     nut\n  eyes while    vie hand out nut     gat-\nGOOD WORDS FOR GIRLS. meats ami out btc.nl. Blessod be the\nYour mother is youi best Irieinl. soul that is Inspired enough to gc\nHave nothing to du with gnls who down into tin- shadows and lend     .1\nBRITISH GOVERNOR    RESENT!\nTIIK PRESENCE UK MARINES\nON .MISSION OK MERCY.\nI SOCIETY AM)\n!        I'kOl-USSIONAI. CARDS\nmitm\u00bbiniiiiiiliiniiii.\u00bbu\u00bb\u00abs\u00ab\u00bb\u00abim\u00bb>>\nIII The Cosmopolitan::\nEB. SHALL\nMattfer\n' \u2022###\u25a0####-\u2022-# *Jt'######<f\nsnub their parents.\nTell Uie pleasantest tilings you\nknow when at meals.\nDo not expect vuui brother 10 he\nas dainty as a girl.\nExereist, and never try to look as\nil you were delicate in health.\nIntroduce every new acquaintance\nto your mother as soon as possible.\n' Don't think it necessary to get\nmarried. There is plenty ol room\nfor old maids, and they ale utteti\nhappier than- wives.\nEnjoy the pleasures provided lor\nyou by your parculs to the fullest\nuxlsmt. 'They will like that as a reward better than any other.\nMost fathers are   inclined to over-\nindulge their    daughters.    Mate   it\n1 ' ' impossible lor your lather tu   spoil\n\" ; you ay fairly    returning his devotion\n, ,1 , and affection.\n1 \u201e       Never think you can afford to    he\n1 11 1 dowdy.at, home.     Cleanliness, hair\n,. . ' \"    well dressed, and a smile will   make\nman will return after j 8: $jjg j^K,?;1*'\",,ie \"\"* \u00b0'a\n, , \u201e |     Do not quarrel with your brother\nStODDinS* OnCC. , \u201e i do not preach to bim and do     not\n>i i and do not expect him to be     your\n\u00bb\u2022 servant, n.or let    bim ex|ieet you tu\nbe his.\nDon't call your mother \"old\nwoman.\" rVeioIten hear that from\nyoung men. Stop ami think how it\nsounds. . Old lady is bad enough,\nbut the \"old woman\" applied to her\nwho gave you life and nursed your\ninfancy, is rude and unkind. Once it\nwas \"Mother, I'm hungry, mother\nmend my jacket, mother put up my\ndinner\" and many such things, and\ntnottoer would spread the bread with\nbutter and stow away the luncheon\nwith her heart brimming with affection lor you. Now, is she the old\nwoman?\nThe  place  where a\nhelping hand\nTo be very poor, and\nvet carry a el\n\u2022ar life and keep alive\nambition and I\nope is like soaking   to\ns-*t    .i    white\nrose growing in    the\nbosom of a co\nl pit,\n********************************************\nIF YOU WANT\n\u25a0 i\n! i clothing that is \"Gilt Edge\" in name, i\n11 \"Gilt Edge\" in material, \"Gilt Edge\" in \\ \\\n\\ \\ make call and see the new stock of Ready\n\\ \\ made clothing just received.    All Union\n:; Labor.\n; LEASK & HENDERSON KFlors\n********************************************\n********************************************\nDominion  Meat  Co., j\nWe are slaughtering it cur lotul of extra prime\ncuttle this week: setul its your orders. We guarantee the quality of our meats.\nDominion   Meat Co., i\nftsMtttffitMfifigBfitfifi^^\nXeaMno Business\n1)0U8C8 of tl>av\\>8-\n*)[{[\u00a3   Pot Smelter gin?-\nMarysville has\ncome into her own.\nThe town now hit\na perinttuent payroll. Tbe Herald\ncan heartily en-\nilurse the following\nbusiness houses;\niM\u00abM\u00abAaaaii5aiii)9a\u00abaiiBiitM*iif\nI Central Hotel 2TE.\nHANDLEY \u00ab COLE Proprietors Marys valley,\nloing Room service the best.\nThe place to stop when visiting- the Smelter City\nimmmmmmmmm\nThe\nRoyal\nA. P. Chenette Proprietor\nHas been recently refurnished and is now we ol\nthe best hotels in the district.   Headquarters for\nthe people.\n^wtKjmmmmitiVimiKWilKIKWifKimtt\nMarysville Drug Co.\nWe carry a complete stock ol everything in the,\nDrug and Stationery line. No need to send away\nforyour foods.\nAPPRECIATION.\nAt a receut marriage anniversary\nan appreciative husband thus addresses his wile: \"To you, my\nwife\u2014as 1' review the past I am\nminded that through all these years\nyou bave , been a true, faithful and\nloving mother, ever ready with a\nword ol encouragement in the darkest hours, always willing to bear\nmore than.your share ol life's burdens, making many sacrifices for my\nown aad pur children's happiness and\ncomfort, a\u00abd I feel that surrounded\nby the perplexities and vexations ol\na busy Hie 1 may have failed to show\nto you my appreciation of your many\nvirtues.\"\nSuccess supposes conditions and\npreparations for it\u2014the energy, sell-\nabnegation weight brings brawn aud\nbreadth and dignity, strength, wisdom and skill. We cannot iiimp\nsalely into success; we are likriy to\nget hurt and fall back disheartened\nto where we belong. Some try to\nsucceed by jumping into their lather's shoes; but these shoes do not\nfit, and causes the youth to walk so\nawkward that he generally makes a\nIool ol hiniselt.. Nearly everything\nol real worth has to be ranted: To\nbe appreciated ami judiciously appropriated, our possessions must have\ncost their value. The toil and\nstruggle and plodding that brings\ngain, brines also the mature experience, through discipline, and hard\nknocks thaj make up stalwart inau-\n, hood and permanent success.\nNOt; \"THE OLD MAN.\"\nI Boys, when you speak ol your\nfather don't call him \"the old man.\"\n01 course you are older now tlian\nwhen you were taught to call him\nlather. You are niueh smarter than\nyou were then, you are much more\nmanly looking, your clothes lit you\nbetter, your hat has a modern shape\nand your hair is combed differently,\nin short \"flyer\" than you were then.\nYour lather has- a last year's coat,\na two-year-old hat and a vest ot still\nolder pattern. He can't write such\nan elegant note as you can and all\nthat, but don't ,call him \"the old\nman.\" Call him lather. For years\nhe has been rustling around to get\nthings together, he has hecn held lo\nthe thorny path ol uphill industry,\nBird the brightest hull of life has gone\nfrom him forever, tint, tic loves you\nthough he goes along without saying\nmuch about it, therefore, he is not\nso ungrateful or so inconsiderate.\n\"A wise man inakoth a good father.\"\nj .   HAPPINESS.\nIf you would Increase your happiness and prolong yum lilc, forget\nyour neighbor's faults, forget the\ntemptations. forgot the faultfinding and give little thought lo the\ncause that provoked it. forget, the\npeculiarities of your friends, ami\nonly remember tlie good puints that\nmake you fond ol thorn, forget all\npersonal quarrels, or histories that\nyou huve heard by accident, and\nwhich il repented, would seem a\nthousand times worse than they are.\nBlot out as far as possible, all the\ndisagreeable, things ol life; they will\ncome but ,ttiey will grow larger as\nyou remethber them, and constant\nthought ol the acts of meanness, or,\nworse still, malice, will only tend\nto make you more familiar with\nthem. Obliterate everything disagreeable Irom .yesterday; start out with\na clean sheet lor to-day, and write\nupon it lor' sweet memory's sake\nonly those things that are lovely and\nlovable. . .\n,THE POOR.\nI   The cold weather of the week that\nis past has wet us all to thinking ol\nthe poor.    We wonder to how many\nol us tire ... weary .dreary phase ol trie; it will compare favorably with\nhopeless poverty is i anything more anything at several times its price,\nthan a romance. | Sitting in our for Uie small sum ol one dollar ami-\nwarm and ... comfortable homes, by a-half It brings every week lor a\npleasant Urea wihli luxurious beds year the best articles Mint appear\nwatting to reccivei our well fed during thf week In the leading Brit-\nbodies, we can have nn more com- ish, American and foreign publlca-\nprehension ,of wha.t grinding poverty tions. Of course it appeals to the\nmeans than,an angel in (tie lull glory thinking element in each community,\nol paradise can know of the deepest those who want to know what the\ndepths of. hjtvdcs.,.. Think ol Itl No world thinkers are thinking; but\nfuel. Absolutely none. No bed, these will find it as full of rare en-\nbut piled up.rags; little children wall- tertaitiment ns of wisdom. It is ab-\nIng with .\u00abold ..and hopeless with solutely world-wide in its Interests\nhunger; closets bare as old Mother and has no axe to grind. The 1111-\nlluhtwrd's;. smells that reach high mi.il subscription includes mini\nheaven in if\/heir foulness. And in CARICATURED, a most entertaining\nttieir depth ol poverty, to which even review ol the past year.\nour imaginations can scarcely des- Sample copy tree of charge to any\noend lies a lurking curse like the wild address. Tbe annual subscription\nbeast in ,ita. lair. Tho sordiduesa ut price is tl.fili and th. publishers are\npoverty tats oat the soul ul a man John Dougall & Son, ol Muntic.il.\nIt. .1. O'nONOGHUE DEAD.\nDOMINION PAIR WAOE OFFICER\nPASSES AWAY AT Ills HOME\nIN TORONTO.\nToronto, Jan. 10.\u2014D. .1. <!'\u2022\nDottoghue, Dominion [ail wage ol-\nlicet, died at his home tills morning\nas a rciull ol illness contracted at\nferine. II. C, while there in connection with the strike.\nD. J. O'Donpghue was one ol the\nmost active and able men associated\nwith the labor movement ol Canada.\nHis name is a good indication ol the\nnationality he belonged to, nnd he\nwas never backward in asserting his\npride in and patriotism towards his\nbirlhlattil. He was born in the\nCounty of Kerry, August, 1844, and\nwhen not more than eight years ol\nage emigrated to Canada with his\nparents, and settled at By town, now\nOttawa. At twelve years he found\nhimself at the head oi a family ol\nmother, brother and two sisters,\nhaving the misfortune to lose hy\ndeath his father. Alter some harsh\nexperiences as a bread winner, he\napprenticed bimsclt to the printing\nbusiness. His active temperament\nfound employment in spare inonicnVs\nin St. Patrick's Literary society. 11 s\nself-education was not purely ol u\nmental character, athletic sports,\nespecially Ihe use ul the gloves, were\nnot neglected.\nReceiving the nomination of the\nworking people, he was elected to\nrepresent Ottawa in lhc legislature,\nin 1874, and at tho general election\nul 1875 was again elected. In 18711,\nlie was offered, hut declined, nomination by both parlies, and was dcleiit-\nod. While in the legislature Mr.\nO'Donogliitc was an unswerving supporter ol labor legislation, such as\nIhe Mechanics' Lien Act, Master ami\nServant' Act, an act exempting $35\nof workman's wages Irom garnishee,\nand others, lie was seconder uf the\nlirst resolution ever offered In that\nbody on manhood suffrage, at elections, a proposal which lie has lived\nlo see an accomplished reality. Owing largely to his trades union\nprinciples, the Irmlt of his employment became verv circumscribed, ami\nthe spring of 18811 found him working\nin Toronto, with which city he has\nsince bren associated. Here he became attached to the Knights ol\nLabor movement, and lhc trades\ncouncil, and was secretary to the\nlegislative committee of that body,\nlie was always a strong advocate (it\ntechnical education, nnd bus repr\ntented the Toronto trades council t\nthe technical school bnnrd ol Unit\ncity since its creation in 18811, and\nwns also chairman ol said hoard\n1807.\nKlIIRs ,\nllllllllill    IL,\nstricken Ki\nrupt .xn,l |i\njcujucncc ol\ninjection i\nan sailors\nIcariiig tlie\nJamaica, Jan.\nvis' mission ul\nllgslon    calm-   I\n. inf.it conclusio\nGovernor Swi\ni the presence\nengaged in the\nAllien\n-ok     ii\n\u25a0uy\n.ick,\nid mil\nmil succoring\nstreets, guarding pro\nsaid\nKill,\nUie   wuuiiiii-i! all\niiiii.itiug iu a letter to th\nperemptorily retjuestiirg lor\nto rc-cmliark all parties which Ira\nbeen hinded. Admiral Davis wu\nSjrca-tly shocked and uniuitl, ami pah\ni formal tisii tu Governor Swctleti\nham io-d.iy, Itilormlicr him thai tn\nUnited Slates battleships Mlssoul\nand   Indiana   and ihe gunoout tuna\nloll would sail tills aflcluuuli.\n*lo Uie Associated   press ho\nthat    immediate     compliance\nuovernor swettenham's request\ntne oiny course consistent witu    uiu\ndignity oi tlie Cluted States.\niuc Inchon between me governor\nami the admiral began with Uie arrival ui tlie American warships, wheu\nlue governor oujeeied to the tiring ul\na salute in his nunur uu tlie. ground\nthat the citizens might mistake tue\nllllllg lor a new earciquaKc. tic also\ndeclared there was no necessity lor\nAmerican aid; that his government\nwas tuny able to preserve oruet\nlend iu the wounded and succor\nHomeless.\nMurphy A: fisher,\nParliamentary,    Departmental\nPatent Ollice Agents.\nPractice Bclore Railway Commission\nCharles Murphy, H.iruld Kislicr.\nLiiiu.i; Nn. X',\nof   PYTHIAS\nCrbsi km\nKNIGHTS\nCranbrook, H. C.\nMeets every Tuesday at  8 p\nNew   \" \t\nm. at\nFraternity Hall\nT. M. Roberts, K.R.4S,\nJ. A. Arnold, 0.0,\nVisiting   brethres   cordially tamed\nto attend.      \t\nI.O.O.F.    key City Lodge\nNo. 41. Meets every\nMusdav night at\nNew fraternity Hall. Sojourning Oddfellows cordially Invited.\nMcVittie & Laidlaw,\nMining Engineers\nand Surveyors.\nCRANROOK, B. C.\nI   THOS. T. McVITTlE, P. L, S,\nI J. T, LAIDLAW, a.   b.\n.NOTICE.\nNotice is hcicby giu-u that au ap-\n\" plication \\wll be nude iu the Legis*\ntunic Assembly ut Uniish Coluutbia\nlicit scat\nucorporale the\nging Railway\npuller  to  build,\niiu, lot an Act lo\nEast Kootenay Lug-\nCompaay,\"     wiui\nCOUSlmct,   :.....!.Uiu\nH. McKay,\nN. O.\nlint\nDUKE AND DUCHESS AGREE.\nMARLBOROUGH   CASE NOT    T\nCOME TO COURT.\nLondon, .Ian. is.\u2014The conferences\nwhich have been recently going on\nbetween relatives and others concerning the differences between the\nDuke ami Duchess of Marlborough\nhave resnlted in an arrangement hy\nwhich their affairs will not he\nbrought lielorc the courts, and\nseparation will be effected -without\npublicity. This was largely brought\nabout through the. intervention of\nroyalty, which is desirious ol averting public proceedings involving the\n.indent ducal house. The following\nis believed to embody the most    e\nential features of the arrangement:\nThrough the intervention of the\nMarquis ot Lansdowne, the duke's\nuncle, tlie duchess has been induced\nto take a position favorable to an\nadjustment. The duki- and duchess\nwill live apart, the duke retaining\nBlenheim palace and continuing to\nenjoy the 1100,(100 a year settled\nupon him hy the duchess' family,\nwith the custody of their two sons\nfor six months each year, the control of their education until they become of age and the choice ol their\nprofession\nOn the other hand, the duchess will\nenjoy the use ol the Marlborough\nfamily jewels, nml will have prefer-\ncnec as a duke's wife, with the right\ntu take her sons'with Iter to anv\npart ol the continent during their\nholidays, but without Interfering\nwith their studies alter the age of\n11. II is also said thai the agree-\ninenl exacts that the boys shall not\nto taken tu America for an extended\nperiod until they reuch the age to\nchoose a place ul residence for themselves. The younger boy, Lord Ivor\nCharles Spencer Churchill, has been\nill at Blenheim with measles).\nMrs. Oliver P. Belmont, who has\nbeen with the duchess lor five weeks,\nhas done her best to further an\nunderstanding between her daughter\nand the duke. She is still with the\nlormer at Sunderland house, whero\nMrs. Hcluiont is also staying.\nWORLD WIDE ARTICLES.\nWEEKLY REPRINT OF\nARTICLES AND CARTOONS\nFROM LEADING JOURNALS\nAND REVIEWS REFLECTING\nCURRENT THOUGHT OF\nROTH HEMISPHERES.\n'World wide' is a marvel ol interest\nami cheapness as a high class celec-\nroionto, Jan. 21.\u2014The trouble between uovcruoi Sweeuiutiam, ol\nJamaica, anu Admiral Uavis, ui Uiu\nuntied states, is creating much cutu-\nimait here, i-resHlcut Byiuu r.. Halter, ot tue u.iuk ul Commerce said lo-\nuuy:\nif the news received exposes the\nwhole situation, 1 uiinlt il is a ease\nal unfortunate inability on the part\nut uovcriior swceiciiiiiiin lu up|>icui-\naie one ul lhc most Irlonuiy acis uf\nwo Lulled suites Ims siiuwn to\ncnglaiid. Them may, ut course., be\nsumo unexpected circumstances    be-\nIWl-en tlie lilies Hull ma) .liter me\ntacts as now set tuitli, nul, i du\nnut ttiiiik there is. i Uilnk\ngovernor was annoyed at ret\niiurul Davis lauding and .setting up\nills Hug wnbuiii some lonuulitics ut\nicd tape.\"\nNew York, Jan. 21.\u2014The ilcclin.i\nlion of Sir .lames Alexander Swcel-\neiilliilu, Mtc governor ol Jamaica, lu\naccept American alii has resulted in\nihe departure ol tne American war-\nships under commander Keat Admiral Davis. It is also learned that\nswcclcltliain has refused the ollci ul\nihe United states war department tu\n,1'itd lii.utiii rations tu Kingston, li\nis reported that the city council ,.1\nivingsloii met alter the incident became known and at once disapproved\nthe English governor's action it\nnot only sent a letter ut regret lo\nHear Admiral Davis, hut asked bin,\nlo reconsider his decision to leave\n\u25a0iml lo remain with the American\n\u00bb-iii|is, us every aid was still urgent\niy needed. Admiral Davis replied\nHint lie had no alternative but tu go\nin accordance with the desire ,,t the\nconstituted authorities.\nEnglish newspapers comment ot\ntlie incident is unanimous in regret\nting the occurrence and iu expressing\nthe hope that the good relations\nexisting between the United states\nand Great Hritain will not be endangered thereby.\nLoudon, Jan. 21.\u2014After a confer\n(.'lice to-day between the ollicials    ol\nif colonel ollice, the latter cabled\nGovernor    Swcetcnliam   ol Jamaica\nSo i\"? ,'ersl0!' ot th<! situation\nwhich led to the withdrawal of Rear\nAdmiral Davis' warships Irom Jam\naica on Saturday. Nothing has been\nreceived Irom the governor concerning any phase ol the incident up tu\nnoon and his report in reply to the\nspecific request of the colonial office\nis now anxiously awaited. No persons were more surprised at the ac-\nJf\u00b0\u00bb 2 Governor Sweetcnham than\nthe officials ol the foreign office who\nlearned the first particulars through\nthe press.\nW. T. Haynea,\nSec'y.\n(.raotironk Loegt, No. j.\na. f. *:a. m.\nRegular meetings on\nthe third Thursday\not every month.\nVisiting hretk.en welcomed.\nS. H. Huskies, Sec'y.\nM. A. Beale, W. at.\nCranbrook Aerie 967\nFOE\nMeet every Wednesday evening   at\nI p.m. in B. ul L. F. Hall.\nDr. Cuthu Aerie Physician\nP. 0. Ilux 28!\nChas. Smith, VY.P.\nM. Ii. Billings, Secretary.\nVisiting brethren cordially invited.\nLOYAL ORANGE LODGE, NO. 1871\nCRANBRUOK\nand\nMeet at B. ul 1.. f. Hall 2nd\nlib Saturday each mouth.\nVisiting biethico always welcome\nT. liiiyter, Jas. E. Larrrgan,\nW. M. Sec'f.\nMISPLACED MUSTARD PLASTER\nThe story ot a misplaced mustard\nplaster and tile consequently losing\nol a goodly portion of cuticle by a\nwell known knight ol the grip,     as\ntold    by   Conductor     ul th,-\nNorth Coast Limited, is well worth\nretelling and is also illustrative ui\nthe uld saying that \"A woman away\nIrom home is a woman without .1\nhead.\"\nThe story, which is vouched lur, is\nthat a very dignified and rotlited appearing lady and her husband wore\noccupants uf the sleeper on the North\nCoast   Limited   on a    trip hotw i\nButte and this city, a lew days ago\nin common with a number ol traveling ,'llleli.\nDuring the early part uf the lilglil\nthe lady in question was compelled\nto arise and administer t\u201e her husband who was Buffering with intense\npain. She sought the aid ul the\nconductor ami with cloth Irom the\ntrains medicine chest and niusiaid\nfurnished by the chel ol the diner\nwas able to concoct a powerful\nmustard plaster.\nArmed witli this powerful pain killer she made tier way back to the\nsleeper and placed the plaster on lite\nhack ol, as she supposed, her husband, who, it appeared, bad dropped\ninto a sound slumber. She then\nsought the ladies' dressing room to\nremove all vcstagis ol the plaster\nfrom her bands.\nWhen she returned to her berth\n(lor she found the right one this\ninnel Iter husband Inquired, amid\ngroans ul pail,, -.is to the wlicn-aljoiiu\nul tire plaster. She replied that she\nhad already applied it tu the ailing\nport ion o[ his anatomy ami with a\nwoman's persistence succeeded iu\npersuading him that what she said\nwas so and the alliictcil man dropped\noil to sleep.\nIn the early hours of Ihe next\nmorning the occupant of the next\nberth awoke with a smarting pain\non the back, investigated and found\nthat he bad acquired a mustard I\nplaster but had lost a considerable\namount 1,1 cuticle. With sounds ol\nmullleil rage he dressed and made tho\nrounds nl lire car in a vain attempt\nto (mil which otic ol bis Icllow drummers had perpetrated tin- practical\nami vile joke upon him. He swears\nthat la the future In will always demand an upper berth .-Spokesman-'\n\u00bbReview. i\nW. F. (lURD,\nBarrister, Solicitor, Etc\nCRANBROOK,BRITISH COLl'UBI.\nHARVEY & McCARTER,\nBarristers, Solicitors, Etc.\ntlaiell Block Cranbrook. B.C.\nJ      C, H, DUNBAR       |\nI   Barrister, Solicitor, Notary   \u00ab\nPubuc, Etc.        ;\nCranbrook,    \u2022    \u2022    B. C.   I\nPhysicians and Surgeons.\nOffice at Residence, Armstrong Ave\nOFFICE HOURS :\nForenoon. \u2022 . . . t.U M   11\nAtternswss . \u2022 . \u2022 1.30 to ISO\nEvenings . . \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 t.tt to I.J\u00ab\nCRANBROOK :,    ::    tl    ::    B. C\nDR. F. E.KINQ\nDENTIST\nOFFICE HOURS I\nI to 12 a.m.\n1 to   I p.m.\nI to  \u2022 p.m.\nOffice aad residence oa Armstrong avs\nCKANBROOK, B. C.\nDR.\"F. B. MILES\nDENTIST\nOFFICE HOURS l\nI to 11 a.m.\n1 to   \u2022 p.m.\nI to  I a.m.\nOBee la new Rekt blocs\nCRANBROOK, B. C\naud operate a In.c ur lines ut rail-\nfay ul sundald ur other guage,\nii Last Kootenay district, tu\n,c operated b> su-am, electricity   ur\nan)  oli,el punel, lui the luriytlig   ul\nIruigut, passengers aua express u\\ci\nlue iul,utwl,b routes.\nl.   inum a   puiul     uu the Crows\n,1'St   I'asb      blaiitu  ul    Ibc   LauaaiaU\n1 aauc ftailwuy, al ui near wucre\nlac said railway crosses Lut jaua,\ntjlulip 1,\niaj lu a point ua the suutnerif\nsiuu ui Rock Creek, a distance nut\ncik.ueuin\u00a3 niteoa miles, passing\nluluu\u00a3u l.uis ait>, 3ig( ijjpj- and SHI,\ntuuup 1, auu adjaccut lanus.\n(Oj lu a puiul at ul near wueie\nhe Kootenay River is iatarseetetl by\ntlie  llilcltutlulul   buuudaiy,  lulluWiUft.\ncourse tuiuusi. Luu at, aw auu\nUau, uiuup 1, auu thence tu liuiu\nCreek aua    iuiiuwuuj the said ciec*\nuu the saio tkootenay River: ui\niuiu auy puiut uu tne Said luulc to\niuc saiu souuiern uiiuiuus   thereof,\n.un a rigui oi exteaston uuiuiciiy\nui westetty up eucn ui tue branches\nUie said Gold Creek, tu tue iiuuroe\nut iuc iauic respectively.\nICJ Aulluell) Ul^u^a Lots JUi.\nHi, daj, 313, Jl- anu all aua intervening ur adjacent iabjs.\n- i.,J Mum a puiul al ul v.1111-\nlu   tout   miles   casi ui run   Steele\nIUUU1UU uu  Uc    a\u201e.a    LTuws      .Ncsl\nRailway westerly, a distance ui   nit\nmiles, with   oia^ucj, lu   the   uuuu\n\u25a0u suutu, Lot exceeding three miles.\nvbj   .NuiUiciiy uu the north-easter.\n1>  side ul the said Cluws Nest Kail-\n, a distance nul exceeding    mice\nnines.\nFrom a polLl uu the said Cluwa\nNest liailv,.,)   between sidings kauwu\nss Lutu ami bwausea.\nu,   Te uae ur muic puinu distant\nut muic    Uuu tea    uiius easterly\nHum the point ul commencement.\nIbj following tbe luulsc ul the\nJpper Mujic Rivet and tbe branches\nUctcvi tu a point abuut six miles\n-cat ul tbe easterly limit ul Lui\n.jy-, l\u00bbiuup 1, and ulbcl blabcb hue*\not exceeding ten uiiles. in leugth.\nitith puwci tu connect with and\ni-tci ii.lu laumiig arrangements with\nt..e Canadian Pacific Railway, ui auy\nOther laiUay situate neat plupused\nrailwa, ui any pail tbtreut ana to\n'-i.stii.ct sid.\u00bbj,s at sui|j connec-\nrti.i-iic Irum auy pcrsuu,\nbuuy     corporate,\nDons,\ngovernment\nfciauis ui land, moaey\"or other\nsets in aid ul the construction ol the\nsa,u uuueiukliig; wuu puwer tu\ntuastnicl ana upmaic telegraph aad\ntelephone tines lur the purjiusc ui iu\nbusiness a^a iyi tue public, with\npower tu uwa ical estate tur ngbl-\not-way and utner purpuses and to\nu*b, use and operate water powers\nloaicbict iu tbe road lur ianw\u201e,\nand utber puipuses aud with sucn\notjcr puweis anu privileges as are\nUsually give:, to railway cumpaaies\nJatcd at   Cranbrook,   U.   c, this\nUlird day ul JJectuibfcl, A. D. IS06\nW. F. Gurd,\nas.it Solicitor lor Applicant*\nJohn W. Wolf\nBoot. Shoe and\nHarness Maker\nOld shoes tnade.new.   All kinds\nol repairing!,   (live me a call.\nGeo. R. Leask & Co\nBUILDERS and\nCONTRACTORS\nOur work in our ailvprticemeiit, tint w\u00ab\n-ml thin a.) in Uie lleial<t,tu\nemphatri-te it.\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nSVnr I\/iwer irmStrong Avenue.\n\u2666   A. W. McVittie   j\nDominion and Provin- j\nci-il Land Surveyor, i\nH. H. McVittie\nGeneral Agent\nTIMBER, MINES and\nLANDS\nCRANBROOK,   B.   C.\nUMBKH .SUTiCL.\n.Notice u Ucituy gr.cu Uut tbirty\ntl-i)ii isiifci cuatc i mteaa to appiy w\nUc iioit. titiei Comiuuiium-i ot\ni-AWii ami Works tor a specuu\niitcuke tu cut .it.u earry away lun-\ntrt-r Iron. Uie ioUowiuji; atw;riirtfa\nuuas, titiute in buulU k*a*i h.ool*>\nuay:\nComaeiiCicg at a point ttv\nctiaiu. uiai ol tjjfc i\u00bbouiu-(-*ii\u00bbt coruw\noi lot cjoo, group l, ibeu-e east su\nk.-a.-.iua, tL-jia'.e boiiti au cLuum, tueuvv\nWCbl   flU     iMalLh,      UiCOCt   t\u00bb0UlU        fiU\nCDamii  to    puibl   oi coameucenieut,\nlouuinui bat acres, moit oi itaa.\n2, Commtiicm'.; at a point 120\ncitauia vast ol tne \u2022ouu-t-.ai corner\noi lot -i-JH, group 1, tnenct- east tu\nuwinji, Utncc kuutn 5U ofcaiw., liitott\nwtit au cuain-t, tnencc nunn bii\nciiaim-i, io point ot comuitncviaeut,\ncontaining fe40 atrt-b, mult: of let*.\nJames Kubter.\nW.    F.    Gurd,   Solicitor,      Cranbrook.\nliated al   Cranbrook,   B. C,    tbib\n2\u00ablo day ol .November, A. D. 1906.\n37-6t\nTIMBtK NOTICE.\nNotice is Lereby given ttiat thirtj\n(Ja>'b ui It t date 1 Intend to apply to\nibi* Cliief Commlulonei oi Landb an\u00abt\nWork** lor a t>pecul llce&H lo cut\naiitl entry awa> uustiei liom tbe tol-\nturviiig o .t.uuf-j UnJii i. tSoulb Kabt\nKootettay:\n1. Commencing at a post planted\ntu chain* *>ouib and bo cflaini c^si\nul mile pobt No. ly, on tbe easterly\nlimit ol Lot No. 4iUJ, gioup 1;\nthence norlb ib'b cbainii, east 40\n\u25a0.-nains, soutb 100 chains, west 40\nttuins to tbe place ot beginning, con-\nUimiig btu acres.\nWilliam Higgius.\nDated     the (Jib   day oi December,\nA. D. iyoti.\n2. Commencing ut a post planted\n40 cnaint> suulb and 120 cbaint, east\noi mile post No. 10, on the eusteily\nlimit of lot No. 4.r\u00bby2, gioup 1;\nthence north 200 chains, thence easl\nIO chains, south 60 cbaius, west   40\nhains, south 140 chains, west 20\nchains tu the place ol beginning, containing Md acres.\nWilliam logins.\nDated    the 8th  day   oi December,\nV D. 1907. 38-5t\nLOGGING  HORSES FOR SALE\nEight teams ol well-nroken logging\nbursas. luur tu nine years old.    Six\nol these teams weigh Irom 3UU0     to\n31110 pounds per team.\nApply to\nWARNOCK AND flOI.RTEU\nPineher Creek, Alta.\nSt\nBOOKKEEPING.\nLos.\nIv W. Lnac, B. Acct., will reoetv.\nprivate pupils lor Instruction la\nI agraaosd acenuatlaa. teadiag to . tie-\n{'     ree ut B   Acct, I'. A.     Himni No.\n     , Koyal koW, or Address Bo- 76. THE  CRANBROOK  HERALD\nTIIK   l'AIT.Il   THAT   IS   READ   I'.Y   TIIK   l'KOlM.K\n('RANBROOK  MKliAI.I)\ntty Um Herald   Publishing Company\nLimited.\nt^ \/<2tt*\u00bb\n\u2022v*-**-*\\\nEditor and Manager.\n| OBSERVATIONS    |\n** BY THE OLD MAN. \u00ab\nfurther land grant,\nsure to do, whei\nstand on the propi\nDoes Mr. Harvey stand for tho\nattitude of Mr. McBride on the\n51,000,000 subsidy for the c. 1'. K\nlino from Spence s Btltlgo, ih.it was\nkilled by i be solid notion ol the opposition .nut three honest Conservatives!\nVote ''kilt and you will elect\nKing; .ttid a Libera I government.\nIt looks more than over like King\n.inU victory,    lu fact it is a cinch,\nThe Conservatives arc now busy i\ntelling what they will do in the fu-lj\nture, if elected.        That is their cry '\n.ill over the country.\nProbably Uie greatest political\nueetlng ever held hi the interior was\niiui held ut Nelson last .Monday\nlight.    The opera housu was packed,\nl   least   two    hundred   people     were i ,   :,,.    -,.,.  \u201e \u2022 ,    .\nmliiig, and n large number    were 5j?; ,    \"\u00b0\u00a3rWo lsu lJftkiB\u00ab1 tKn,!K\nniiu.inu*.    Mr. Mc-Ishr^''    l'llks-       .'!\u2022' l\u00ab petBtetenily |\nOne good     Conservntive In Nclso\ntillable to gl\nnines was never lu better loriu, and\nibe manner iu which he handled the\n.socialists whs a marvel, lie took up\nihu McBride administration, and basing his comments upon the record ol\nluu legislature alone, punctured the\ni.uhble ol McBridu's pretensions iu su\neffective a manner, thai even his\n..pponeats cheered him io uu acho,\na was .i marvelous meeting, uud at\nlie close many were heard to say\nthat it made dozens ul votes fur Dr.\n, kill.\nWhere Is Dob Ureeii? Where Is\nCharley Wilson'.' Why did they resign irom the MeBridu cabinet'.1\nsolthei Mr. MeBridu or any ol his\nspeakers on the platform have y,et\u00bb\nattempted tu answer these questions.\nWhy is this? Is there some tiling\na rung?\nThe records show that it was D.clJ\n.McBride and not ihe Liberal parly\not British Columbia who bus had\nnegotiations with the Uraud Trunk\nI'acific,\nJ. A. Macdonald has the confidence\nol Liberals, Conservatives and Socialists, nu matter whether they vote\nlor him or not. The whole province\nlecognizes In that gentleman one\nwho has ability and integrity, and\n.is premier who would do all that is\npossible fur the province.\nJ. A. Mnedonuld will he premier\n.liter February -, and the Cranbrook\ndistrict will have a member who is\nwith the government, and who will\nwork lor the Interests of tbe Cranhrook district.\nThere is no longer any doubt but\nthat the Liberals will win iu the\nprovince. Thai will he a big thing\nfur the Cranbrook district. Everybody will be benefited, laboring man,\nbusiness man, prospector, in fact the\nwhole population oi tbe district.\nIt is 23. skidoo, fur Harvey. j\nThe ballots will all he counted this\n.lection.\nAsk yourself, before you mark your\nballot, who it Is who wants Harvey\nelected? is it the laboring man?\n\\'ot hy any means? No, No! Is\nit the corporations? Well, th y are\niiis strongest supporters. Why;\nMr. Voter, you can answer this qucs\nIf Mr. Harvey can build the Wardner bridge after his election (the\nsaints forbid) why did he not build\nil during all the years that he bus\nheld in tlie palm of bis\nLand the patronage of the government for the Crnubrook district?\nNo, Mr. Harvey, the McBride\npromises don't go any more in this\ndistrict.\nTo judge properly ol a candidate,\none must fake his nctlons in every\nday lire when there is no election on;\none must size up his dealings with\nIns fellow man from duy lo day,\numl month to month. It' is not the\neamlldate wo must judge, but the\nman ns we have known him in years\npast. It is impossible for any one\nto jump into ihe arena and in u few\nshort weeks Iool the electorate.\nEvery candidate must stand on the\npersonal record tli.it bo Ins created\nduring his associations for years with)\nhis fellow men. The laboring man\nin this district is not a fool. Tho\npleasant smile, ihe cordial hand\nshako, the fullsome (lattery from the\nman who had little io do with\nhumanity until he sought political\nr.ivors goes for naught, it Is the\nestablished record of the man that\ncounts with the voter. That is why\nso many men of this district are\nrallying to tbo support ol Dr.\nKing. They know the num. They\nknow that he never look the advantage of a living soul. They know\nI hat red blood Hows through bis\nveins, and from a heart that has\nalways heat for humanity. They\nknow that his time and his money\nWas iii ways ready for the needy.\nThey know thai campaigns made\nno difference in his treatment of the\npeople. They know* that to him Ihi\nrich nnd the poor have always been\nalike. They know that in the practice ol his profession the payment of\nilic bill was Ihe last consideration.\nThey know that in Dr. King the poor\nman, tbe laboring man, the well-to-\ndo man, were all treated alike when\nihey came to bim. That is why the\ndoctor has the sympathy, the con-\nlidenoe and the support ol the grcal\nmasses in this district, and that is\nwhy, coupled with his ability and h s\nintense desire to advance the best Interests of the people of tills district.\nWith no thought of personal sain,\nthai he will he returned by n much\nlarger majority lhan he received   be-\ndodging the errors his administration\nhad made, and il takes a good talker to do that.\"\nGovernor Mclnnes is doing good\nwork all over the province, and his\ntelling blows are counting with the\npeople,\nVote fur King uud have the member from this district with the govern men t.\n.Mr. Bowser did not so to Phoenix\nwiib Mr. McBride, The chief assistant ol the premier who had declared that \"$35 a month was enough\nfor any working man,\" evinced no\ndesire to moot the 700 miners of\nPhoenix.\nThe record ol the\nin the house in slant\nBride ndmlnlstrntii\nand thin, is    like a\nthree Socialists\nlag by tin* Mc-\ni through thick\nwet blanket on\nlhc     caiididucy  ol    Mr.   Ilawihurutll-\nwullc's followers in Ibis campaign.\nMr. McBride was afraid to discuss\nthe Fhithcnd i-ucsiiou at Grand\nForks, where the people were mulcted out of thousands of dollars hy\npaying for licenses to lands for\nwhich they* could not secure titles.\nHe was asked to explain the matter\nbut dodged tbe issue.\nDr. King is making a winning\ncampnign, and the people of this\ndistrict are rallying to his support\niu a manner that is extremely\ngratifying to the doctor.\nThe war will soon be over.\nWhere is Boh Green? Who has\nbeard his dulcet tones in this campaign? Ami yet, when be resigned,\nthe Conservative papers were full of\nwhat he was going to do on the\nstump for Mr. McBl'Tdc, even to touring the province with the premier.\nMr. McBride is  talking like a los-\nIf there is a laboring man, a business man, a clerk or anyone, aside\nfrom those who have been direct\nbeneficiaries of the government's coffers, can show bow any act of tho\nMcBride administration has benefited\nthem, let him speak up.\nThe McBride party is riding over\nthe province on special trains and\nspecial bouts. It costs money to do\nthis unless they are furnished' as a\ncompliment  to  the administration.\nCranhrook has elected an excellent\ncouncil, and ihe affairs of ihe city\nwill he in safe bands the coming\nyear. The Herald extends congratulations Mayor FlnhiJ, and\nAldermen Fink, McCowan, Ryan,\nHickenbotham,  .Inctawm ami (till.\nWatch Cranhrook grow.\nWhat has Mr. Harvey, ns tbe dispenser of patronage for this district,\ndone for it? Every man should ask\nhimself that question before ho\nmurks his ballot.\nThis is the year ili-it you are voting for your pocket.\nThe Kaien island deal is a hard mil\nlo crack for ihe McBride speakers.\nKeep boosting  Cranbrook.\nDon't lose your temper in Uie battle\nof ballots.      It  don't pay.\nJ. A. Macrlonnld, ihe peerless trader ol   the    Liberals, has I n    met\neverywhere by unprecedented enthusiasm Mr. Macdonald will make a\n.jront premier.\nThe   Same\nToday  and Tomorrow\n20th~ CENTURY  CLOTHING\nALWAYS   THE BEST\nI\ni\nBach suit gives the wearer a\nstriking individuality\u2014an indefinable something different than\nthe rest, an appearance that the\nclothes were made for that particular man and no other. There\nis not a firm from Winnipeg to\nthe coast that carries such a\nlarge stock of clothing. We\nalso have odd trousers of this\njustly celebrated 20th Century\nbrand, and can fix you in that way\n,jM\nTies for Men\nthe latest New York creations.\njaja\nTics and Collars for Ladies\nNothing newer, nothing nicer.\nDress Goods\nDressmakers in attendance who\nknow how\n.*-\u25a0\n(\u00a3\u00bb-!$\u2022\nFurniture\nif'-you have not visited our new\nfurniture store on Baker street,\niu the Kink Bros.' old building,\nyou have made a serious Christinas mistake. There is a glorious place to get\nJust What You Want\nTake advantage of the opportunity\nHILL & COMPANY\nCRANBROOK'S\nGREATEST STORE\n\u00ab1\nMr. Ma\nilonald has\non.icil as\nid       oiht\n-\u2022.'ii misled   and   Hint    iu      future    campaigns   such\nthe tacts,    and  dirty luetics will not be resorted to.\nCrnnbrookites The above is so palpably false   that\nIhe impressionj il     is   a    surprise   lo    all   ili.il  any\n1 because they wen- present nnd editor would allow it lo appear in bin\nk purl in iiu* convention thai they publication, let alone giving it a\ne instrumental In Mr. Kelly be- prominent position in his editorial\nling 11 candidate. Hut such is columns. Mr. Bowser, iu his speech\nmt the case.     Mr. Kelly is the can-, here attempted to misle.nl his heur-\neoi\nWe\nlb\nand   wa\ncalling\nWestern Canada\nhe world.\nis the granary   of\nfo\nVote for Ihe man whom you know\nwill look nut for your interests, and\nnot consider his own in legislative\nnotion.\nif tho Mcflrhlo government would\nhappen to be returned, and the Columbia and Western would nslt for   a\nEvery man owns bis own vole. Declare thai ownership on February '-,\nwhen you are alone in the polling\nbooth with vour pencil ami your\nGod.\nMr, McBride, in endeavoring to\nshow that be and Bob Green bud\nmade a grenl bargain for the province, iu the Kaien island deal, shows\nhy a map that they retained one\nfourth of lhc townsite for the prov'\nince. They did nothing of tbe kind.\nA law passed several years ago did\nthat.\nThp Liberals will have a safe\nmajority in the next house.\nThe Cranbrook district cannot\nstand for .1 Socialist member who\nwill take his place under HaWthom-\nihwaite, even if the candidate has a\n\"Labor\" label in this campaign.\nuloimed by\n'cderat  <\noiivcnto\nbo celled\nlie   lhc   !>\n,'Ml\n.* pre\n1 tin\nporl   '\ntern Federation    of\nselected days    prim\nthe convention, and\nof   the   Herald    was\nIhci.il of tbe Western\n1 (several days prior  to the\n1) thai I lie convention would\nand   thai   Mr.   Kelly    would\nmince. Further than this\nlombers ol labor organlvai-\nIdei is oi Cranbrook) who\n>ni at the convention,   and\nsed to the nomination ol\n;ts a labor candidate who\nny wav he connected Willi\nhave since staled openly\nsaw the trend of matters\nivenl ion and refused to stip-\nKellv, Further, when it\ntlu consideration thai everv\nso-called labor candidate iu the Koo-\nleimvs and the bounrinrv is n mem-\nhrr of the Western Federation of\nMiners ii heromrs more apparent\nwho is responsible for Mr. Kelly's\ncandidacy, and we therefore contend\nthai the people responsible, as\naforesaid, are Soeinlists, as at a\nrecent meeting of the Western Federation a resolution was passed cn-\ndorsint' socialism and iis principles.\nAnd another fuel in sulrstnnlintion ol\nthe claim is Hie fact that Mr. Le-\nhency. Ihe principle speaker for Mr.\nKelly in his campaign, is following\nthe same lint; of ntumenl and\nenunciating the same principles us the.\nsneakers furnished hv the Western\nFederation for the Sboinlisl candidates in other districts,\nDr. King, il is said, told a\nCranbrook audience Monday\nnichi thai ihe British const f-\nllifion (in the Dr.'s opinion)\nenlilled every naturalized\n_^^^_^^^^^__^^^^_^^^^^_ Chinaman   and   -lap  ffl  vote,\nIn his remarks at the Liberal I Perhaps it would if Dr. King\nmeeting Thursday night last Mr. S. wns relurned nn \u25a0 February\nMacdonald     accused   the   Herald     of 3ml,        Rul   we    me   not   yet\nuttering a falsehood when it asserted burling our eyesight studying\nHint lhc people responsible for Mr, Chinese\u2014Movie Leader.\nKelly's candidacy were Socialists. If the above is n fair sample ol Ihe\nMr. .Macdonald is'one uf Cranbrook's \"clean\" campaign being waged In-\nbest citizens, a hard working and Mr, ilnrvev and his supporters the\nHiscieirt'lous mechnnlc and would not. electors should voice their jusl in-\ninientionally do an liihtsllco to any- dlgnntlon hv turning thi' Conserva-\none.    But in this particular instance live candidate   down   so thoroughly\nbelieving that the Dominion\ngovernment hud al tempted lo inter-\niiii' with our franchise laws aud\nin suppoit of his claim read extracts\nIrom official communications Irom\nOttawa hi regard in an entirely different matter. Dr. King, was not\npresent when llvese letters wcro\nrc.nl. hit on entering the hall was in-\nfor I id tin   fuel, and, after asking\nMr. Bow ler if such were the case,\nmil rccoivlng an alirm.itive answer\nhe in.i.fe ihe following statement;\nThe Domli Ion governmoirl under the\nVrliclcs ..f Confederation has no ii-rht)\nl tetf-rc in any way with franchise laws \u00ab f any province, and\nIiui 1 he (King) wns Willing lo leave it\nIn Ihe people of ihe province whether the Chinese and .laps should\nvote.\" Furthermore at the Liberal\nmeeting ihe following Thursday night\nDr. King reiterated ibis statement\nami declared that he, personally,\nwas decidedly opposed to the Chinese\nor .Jnp having the right 1o vote, 11\nMr. Smyth wishes to retain tbe fair\nname he has made for himself by\n\u25a0iis newspaper work in this district,\nhe will lose no time iu retracting the\nfalse st a lenient appearing in his\npaper an I will make his apology lo\nDoctor King as public us he did the\nvile slander.\nDr. King held meetings at Fort\nSteele, Marysville ami Kimherlcy\nihis week and if the reception be is\nreceiving nl Ihe various points in tlm\ndistrict is uny criterion be will receive a magnificent majority at ihe\n'lolls on February 2.\nPKOVES A BOOMERANG.\nTORY     C1TAT1GF,   AGAINST   L1B-\nF.IULS RECOILS ON McBRIDIS\nVictoria, Jan. 22.\u2014The liislory    of\ngovernment was no attempt ut coercion, but merely a notification ol the\nbusiness agreement made between the\nDominion and the G. T. P. by which\nthe Dominion government,,' with ihe\nconsent ol the Indians, sold the lui\nter's right ol possession to tbe G\nT. 1'. The application was made in\n1001 anil representatives of the company discussed the price and terms\nwith Indian agent Morrow and tbe\nIndians in 11105. The company was\ninformed that unless the provincial\ngoit\u25a0rument waived its revisionary\nclaims, u title would not he given,\nnml ou 2nd April, lOOfl, tbe B. C.\ngovernment was asked it such claim,\nwould be waived. It replied that it\ncould not favorably consider Die suggestion. On being so advised ihe\ncompany stated th.it it was prepared\no accept the properly on the terms\ntiered bv the Dominion and made a*.\ncclarotloti to take title Irom the!?1\nDominion without recourse 'in tlie\nease of establishment of the claim\nlor revision. In August, llMiti, thr\nIndians executed the surrender of\n1.1,510 acres, being portions of Kaien\nisbnd and Dighy islands and part ol\nthe mainland. The terms were:\nPurchase    price $7M per acre   and\nsatisfactory    settlement     for Iirdianjf't'rit, interest Isccnlred in ihe (niTh-\nlaims for'   gardens,     etc., fifiv pcr^voming appearing of the* troupe     id\n\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666< \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666?\nMcBride and  rlawthornthwaite,   Harvey   and Kelly.\nA vote for Kelly Is a vot\u00ab for Harvey, Hawthorthwaite\nand fleBride.\nA vote for Harvey is a vote for McBride and\nHawthornthwaite.\nnivcrsaiy   of    the birth     id Robbie  DEPUTY RETURNING OFFICIOUS\nBurns,  Scotland's immortal  bard, bv\ngiving a splendid conceit ami    dan-e APPOINTED,\niu   Ihe      Wetitworth   hall. On   this \t\nlime-honored    occasion     when Scots\nthe   world     o'er arc     adding fresh     Tho deputy  returning oRlcuVi    tor\n:Jusiie to his name,   Cronbiook,    not\ntK'hi\nthe negotiations in which the Grand\nTrunk Pacific sought to purchase a\nportion of the Indian reserve at Port\nSimpson, Dighy and Kaien island\nnlaees the transaction in a light very\ndiHorent to that attributed to it by\nihe Conservative pres-s. There was\nnn invasion of provincial rights in\nihe mailer and the Dominion\nernment's application    to the\ncent, to he paid to the Indians, men\nand women, of twenty-one years mid\nover; the balance to be funded and\nand interest paid annually for the\nmaintenance and improvement of the\nvillages nf the Indians. The company hns since paid $1(13,202.5fl, This\nis the whole story of tbe sale of 'n\npart of tbe Indian reserve tn the\nrailway company.\nPIRNS'  ANNIVERSARY  CON\nCERT AND DANCE.\nThorn was a lad was horn in Kyle, \u25a0\nBut  whal'nn day, an whnt'nif style,\nI doubt it's hardly worth my while\nTue he sue nice wi' Robin,\n(he ton\n1 Hod\nCrutihi\nI, has    prepared n    pro-\n\/oriby of this event. No\ntime mu trouble has been spared hv\nthe Chief of the society, Mayor Find'- \"Cock, Wm.\n'lay. and scciclary Alivineiuy, to\nfniMic everything a-.BUcedss.\n: Tho, fatuous \"Scotch Haggis\" will\ntali\" -'in prominent part iu the pro-\ngVi^pjyu*:      \"Warm,     reck in,     rich.\nelection have been ap-\nfollows:\nk-M.      A. Deale,    C.   A.\nBush, W. Hay ward, U.\nOur   monarch's   hindmost year    Tin I\nane\nWas five and twenty days begun;'\n'Twns then a blast o' Jaminr' win'\nBlew hansel iu on Robin.\nHe'll line misfortunes great nnd smn'\nBut aye a heart nhoon them it';\nHe'll be a credit tae us a'\u2014\nWe'll u' he proud o' Robin.\nThe    candidates     for fins district|\nhave appointed    their agents as   foi\nlows:\n..--_ n-----_^\u2014M- ('* H\u00bb Dunbar for Dr. King.\ngov-     The Caledonian   society is to cele-I   \u2022'\u25a0 A. McDonald for T. ly. Kellv.\nB.    C.I brain     to-morrow   evening,  the an-     CajF^Ragers; for...I. A.  Harvey.\nIllffJiinrwl dancers (Thr McCowans\nami McCnllums), n good reception is\nassured them us thev are nn enter-\ntaiumeiil  in themselves.\nThe vocal pari is iu tbe bands .of\n-tlm amies! tfllenl of Ihe city as seen\n%.,'lhc nwiowicetucnt. The Cran-\nW'ook bunfPhm's- are l;o have a hand\nin tbe selebrution by playing a few\nselections.\nThe dance, which Will follow, will\nlo the first of its kind iu thi' city,\nriie grand march bended In lhc so-\ndoty pipers wilt ),(. ,i spectacle\n.violin- of everv citizens' presence.\nI'he events nf the bonspiel for this\nevening will:'he a ncellod so as to\n(tllow the curlers to make \"Roof and\nrafters dirl\" wi' glee, All that re\nliialnp'flow.is for (.'ranhrook's ejii-\niin\\x*'\\n turn nut ami enjoy a \"nicbl,\nwi' the Scots.\"\"\nMofiatt ^^^^^^^^^\nWusu\u2014P. \u2022-Jensen.\nVnhk-J. S. McCartney.\nRyan-ChnB. Smith.\nWattahurg-A., E. Walts.\nKimhcilev-W. A. Whitmorv\nMarysvlllo-O. Delaiigee.\nWaidnel-A    Sheppard.\nMovie-F. .1. Smyth.\nFoil   Steeh-Robcil   Little.\nCANDIDATES '.AGENTS.\n\"THE PALM\"\nCANDY KITCHEN\nLady Caramels\nPeanut Brittle\nMaple Cream\nTurkish Nougct\nMarshmallows\nAssorted Nuts\nSalted Peanuts\nTELEPHONE  NO.   If! thi; cRANnnooK iieuajj)\nnt    Moylc\nis\nAnnual January Sale\nEverybmly looks forward to ottr ANNUAL JANUARY SALE.\nwhen every one nei'iln to niiike e;u:li ilollilr go as far as possible,   it's :i\nIt's  \u00ab irreul lu'lp to econo\ni IMPORTANT SALE, Ik.\nSUITS I   SUITS!   SUITS!\neottllnail to any otia il6|iartinont, and no matter what yon want, there's A DISTINCT SAVINli I.N I'.l i'lNU\nIT IX JANUARY AT IlEID & CO.   Note a low ol the (allowing prices i\nLADIES' FLANNELETTE\nNIUHT OOWNS\nBeantlfullv tritnmad with lace\non Collar OuS.   Assortsrl colors,\nslightly damaged.   Regular price\n,1.86 and |1.M,   Sal.' i \u00bb . Uc.\nChlHrca's flsinelcit.   Drifters, as\nsorted, regular UOe., lor        45c.\nAny Suit up to tltt.iHi,\no'tltir than \"Kit-He-\nform,\" for -\t\nAny Suit from (10.00\nup lo SIs.ihi (or\t\n$4.95\n$9.95\nA SNAP IN BLOUSES\nAll Fanoy Silk Blouses, Lustre,\nFlannel an,l Flannelette Win-in\nwill lie sold at\nUS PER CENT. DISCOUNT\nThese Suit* nro all wall TIHMJIKI1\nnml in.nl,' l,v il,,' rami makers, stlclt in\nW. It. .lolitimm .V Co. ami .lo'llt \u00bb.\nIV, k A In\n.lllvi'lj iioiioiiiIs ,'linm.i.l.\nupruvul ui snli' I'll,','..\n-nt\nODD PANTS\nHeavy Twill  Hslllai  Tweed, oitra\nj.,,,.,1   Wnrkiim   I'atltS,   reiiulai\nJll.rjO anil s)i).00, for -   H**\nI In. Tweed snd Worsted Dress Pssts.\nall sites, regular M.no, (or  U SO\nHan    Jlclntosl\ntown to-day.\n: .1, A. Compton, ol Crcston, visited\n' Cranbrook Tuesday.\nII   r.   Cumtnlngs, ol Nelson, is   iu\n: Cranbrook on business.\nu   li  Walker, ol   Nelson, Is \"i tl\n| a l.'iv day. iti town this   week.\nj   Geo, A. 1..-H-ii- v. !- Irom Crcs-\n-..-:  ieveral days tbe no l wrek.\nI t; I. UcCreo ul Man \u25a0 111, was .,\ngucsl ..I tin- Royal huti   t'rl lay Inst\nI Miss t'.iilm and Mis T T. Me-\n] \\'iiiii- were Cranbrook visitors today.\nThe   wile ol\n,'i'iion (orcman\nring illness\niiiili-r   has   \u25a0\nWilliam\nin Wardr,\nsi   M.i,,-.:.\nMl'll.Ulll'T.\n\u25a0I, died   nl\ni   .i,l.-i      .i\nniUis.   Mr.\nOl    I li,'\n.lU'Illt'lll. i\ntill\nI tills, OUT MIR OUR Hill I: (IF IS.\nORESS SHIklS\nRegular pries \u26661.00, (LIB and\ntl.,10. A big bargain if yon need a\na shirt,\nREID & COMPANY\nCRANBROOK.\nB. C.\n**********************i\n< \u25ba         \" ROOr, MON, suop \"\nG. T. R. TEA i\n! '    If you want to do justice to your\n, ,     sweeping line a\n;;  \"G.T. R. BAMBOO HANDLE\n;;        CURLERS' BROOM\"\n, ,    Light it,h feathers, yet ho tightly\n, ,    boiiii.i that not a straw comet.\ni >   loose,\nCURLERS' PUBBERS\n1    At the rati* uf Hpeed you can wiehl\n* out light brooms you will require\n* to tie w-11  shod.    Our meilium\n1   weight TAP SOLE RUBBER in\n,    just what you need.\nis   to   lio   tin1  only           |\nliijuiil ri'fri'sli-                <\nttll'llt  IISIll                           . i\non the                    |\nIce,                     ''\nKii'[i away trorn drink, tliut't, fl\u00aby,       i ,\nTlmy will makeyoiirpoorheadditsy    ' '\nAnil kwp your two leu. busy                   , ,\n.V. can lie.  Drink Tea.                     , ,\n-O. T. K     , ,\n\u25ba ^^K      t^kr*     ^^fc             \u00bb                   Fancy and Staple Groceries    < \u25ba\n'    1 \u00ab         I         K   AOA1*G   antlCMukury.Mltti, uluvei    o\n> V^\u00ab      *%  \u2022    IVvgvl O    bootu A Shoeu. Craiibruok.\nll. E\nTaylor, of\nto attend\nKimherlcy, Is in\nthe Laboi mect-\nChus. Finch, id     Marysville,\nnsacting\nweek.\nMr,\nbusiness In town\nwas\nthis\ni mi pit\nSCHOOL BOOKS\n- AND   -\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES\nWe Have Them-Just What You Want\nC. E. REID C& CO.\nThe   Druggists\nMIGHTON'S\nCIGAR STORE\nCIGARS\nCIGARETTES\nPIPES\nTOBACCOS\nWholesale and Retail\nS. J. MIGHTON\nCranbrook, B. C.\nTENTH\nANNUAL\nRossland\nWinter Carnival\nFIVE  DAVS\nFeb. 12,13, 14, 15 and 16\n& Grand Trophies and $3,000 in prize*-.   Two bands In attendance\nHOOKEY\u2014International ami I utor-Provincial Championships\nSNOWSHOEING\u2014Championship of British Columbia\nTOBOGGANING\u2014A miles mintitetlowii the\" ZIP\"\nSKI-ING*\nSKATING\nHorse Racing\nJumping and Racing.    Championship of Canada\nRACES   For Championship of British Columbia\nOUKUKQ   A Provincial Bonspiel\nMasquerading, Tngs-of-War aud other interesting events\nReduced Railway Ratea on all linos.\nJ. B.C.KUASKR, Pros. God Snv\nFor tnrther particulars apply to\nHie King E, ADAMH,\nLOCAL NOTES\nPICKED UP    ABOUT   THE CITY\nBY ASKING Ol'ESTMNS OF ,\nMANY PEOPLE. j\nWin. Carl In, ol Port Steele, is in\ntown to-day.\nDr. .1. \\V. Collin was down from\nMarysville Monday last.\nTom Leask was up from Crcston\nseveral days this week.\nJ. A. McDonald was down from\nMarysville Monday evening.\nAirs. Whitehead, of Movie, was a\nCranbrook visitor Tuesday,\nI,<1ST\u2014Bet ween Wen t worth hot el\nand -station, crescent shaped pearl\nbrooch. Finder  please leave      at\nHerald office.\nChas. Farrel, of Moyie, was in\ntown a couple of days this week.\nW. Van Arsdah'ii, ol Fort Steele\nwas a Cranhrook visitor Tuesday.\nDavid Brecken ridge was down from\nWasa a couple of days the lirst of the\nweek. \u25ba\u25a0\nFengnn\n-ille a    C(\ndown\nof days\nfrom\nthis\nSdL\\is&ges\nIN FUTURE, wc will be able to turn out all the\ngood, clean, and wholesome sausage, of every kind\nthat is required. We always did put up the quality\nbut fell short on the quantity. Our new machincr which\narrives this week, and an expert sausage maker coven\nthe difficulty.   Phone your orders.\nP. Burns C& Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 10 CRANBROOK, B. C.\nl*M.\nMarys\nweek.      ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n.1 II. Doyle, of Marysville. was\ntransacting business In Cranbrook\nyesterday.\n,1. A. McDonald, of Nelson, wns\ntransacting business In Cranbrook\nthis wtvk.\nLOST\u2014\u2022Between Cranbrook and\nWattsburg, a parcel. Finder please\nleave with -ins Neill, ut Wattsburg,\nor at Herald ollice.\nMrs. Wm. Cameron has been confined to her home several days with\nan attack of grippe.\nM, B. King has bee:\ntho liOUSC several days\ntack of rheumatism.\nW. II. Griffith, of Hit\nher company, bus lieen\noral days this week.\n.1.  P,  Fink  IWi   Friday last for\nshort visit  wilh Mrs. Fink a\nchildren at the coast.     ^H^^^^^\nMrs. George Bremner has been suffering from an attack of urip the\npast few days.\nGeo. Geary, ll. Mathers nml Dan\nMtinro, ot Fort Steele, were register-\nd at   ihe     Cosmopolitan Saturday1\nconfined\nwith an\nnt-\nAdolpb Lutn-\nln tovtn sev-\ntht\nMrs. L. H. VaiiReeur, who\nsiting ut the coast    tbe\nreturned home Tuesday;\nWE CARRY\nX What you want for the camp, the bush or the t\n\u2666 shop.   Our *\nSTOVES\nX are of the best makes, and our prices are right f\nt down to a fair basis.\nJ. 0. McCALLUM CO.\nTHE HARDWARE MERCHANTS\n(M^MHI\nlust.\nMr\nhave been V\npast month,\nafternoon. ^^^^^^^^^^^^\nRev, B. G-wwl field will preach his\nfarewell sermon next Sunday morning ami evening. All friends are\ncordially invited. j\nLOST\u2014Tuesday night, between\nMethodist church and Baker Hill, a I\npair of eyeglasses. Suitable reward\nfor return to this office. *   J\nMr. and Mrs. 0. H. Marsh and!\nMr. and Mrs. R. B. Benedict, of\nMayook, spent a couple or days with\nCranbrook friends this week. I\nConductor McBurncy and Engineer\nKillens, who were-hurt In-the wreck1\nnear Wardner two weeks ago bave\nrecovered sufficiently to be around\nagain.\nServices will be held in the Methodist church as usual next Sunday, the\npastor being in charge. Evening\nsubject, \"The Present Election\nMethods.\" All are invited. Song\nservice commences at 7.30.\nNOTICE-Mr. S. H. Hadley,\npioneer of Stillwater, Minn., has\nmoved his barber shop to Spokane\nand will open up at 609 First Ave.,\nwhere he will be pleased to see old\nfriends. Mr. Hadley is -stepfather to\nClarence Washington, musician.   44-4t\nPat Leahy, a C. P. U. fireman,\nwhile attempting to take water at\nMoye Saturday night, had the misfortune to slip Irom the tender to\nthe ground and wns injured about\nthe head. Although rendered unconscious Mr. Leahy was not, seriously\nhurt, but returned to Cranbrook next\nday and appears none the worse for\nthe accident, with the exception of a\nbadly discolored ogtlc.\nnd Mis. S. A, Inglis, ol Jaf-\nfray, were guests ol the Royal hotel\nWednesday.\nFrancis McCoimcli, of Baynes Lake,\nspent a few days in town this week\nvisiting friends.\nA. F. Kruplcl, nener.il\nthe North Sl.u Lunih\nwas up from Elko Prlda;\nFUR RENT-A furnished house\nApply to Derail Bros. 39-tf\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Stuart\nSaskatoon,   were visiting Mr.     and\nMrs. S. J. Mlghton the pasl week\nThe Eagles of Fernit* intend holding\na inasojuerado ball on the evening of\nSt.   Valentine's day,  February  11th.\nHarry Wright, tho ox-memhec for\nthe Ymir district, was in Cmnbrook\na couple of days the lirst of the\nweek.\nI). Ii. Yates, manager ol the\nStaples Lumber company, left Saturday on .t business trip to Winnipeg.\nCranhrook has been crowded with\nsi rangers this week, and the beds in\nthe hotels have been working double\nshifts.\nDon McKay is one of the many\nCraubrookites who have been suffering from an attack of grippe the\npast week.\nWANTED\u2014Situation of any kind.\nIn town if possible, but we want lo\nget  to work. Address  A.   Barbel\nand G.   Booth, care of Royul hotel.\nConstable Joe Wilson, who bus\nbeen confined to St. Eugene hospital\nfor some time, was able to return to\nhis home at Crcston Tuesday.\nWilliam Kidd, one of the popular\nminers on North Star hill, came to\nCranbrook Wednesday for the purpose\nof having some dental work done.\nMrs. A. Leilcli and Miss Khodu\nLeitch have both been under the\ndoctor's care the past few days, .suffering from slight attacks of grippe.\nThe St. Eugene mine and mill at\nMoyie after a shut down of about 10\ndays for an account uf cold weather,\nslur tod up again last Tuesday night.\nLOST-Two $lu bills between Imperial hotel and Scotty McArthur's.\nReward will he paid on return of\nsame to Imperial hotel.*\u2014Robfcrt\nCray.\nWilliam Kemp, an old timer ot the\ndistrict died last Wednesday of general debility. The luiierat w|Il take\nplace to-morrow (Friday) at l p.m.\nfrom Realty's undertaking parlors.\nWANTED\u2014Men lur all Mum, of\nwork. Address the Ferine Lumber\ncompany. 39-tl\nChas. FylTe, city ticket agent\nfor the 0. I*. R. at Feruie, wns in\ntown a few days the past week re-\nRoving one of the operators at the\nstation.\nLittle Mazle Small, who has been\nconfined to St. Eugene hospital with\ntyphoid fever, for some weeks, was\nsufficiently recovered to be brought\nhome Sunday.\nS.   J.   Mlghton,  Cranbrook's  popular cigar and tobacco merchant, was\nconfined to    the house   several d,\nthe past   week  with a severe attack\nof grippe,\nMr. and Mrs. K. .1. Peltier and son\nWhfrid arrived from Brandon Monday evening for a few days visit with\nCranbrook friemls and leave to-day\non an extended tmu ol the Western\nStales and Old Mexico.\nJ.   Ci   Brewery    was in town    a\ncouple of days last week, having just\ncome up from his     ranch near C\nley, where be bad been confined     to\nbouse a couple of weeks with\n.'iui look p\ns uudertnkii\nDu\nel\nhi\n>ds\nM.'\nlallitii\nwas killed |,\nBvllle the latter |i\nlast week. The bud) was shipped tu\nLiudsuj. i it.' . iii interment. Tlm\ndeceased was well known in this\ndistrict who will learn with regret\nof bis untimely death.\nIt. .1.   Burde, m ws   edltoi ol    H\nVictoria Colonial,   who accompanied\n1'iemicr McBride on lus tour uf   Ui\nKootenai a i-. it.,\nectlon. Ten u\nDick visited the\n< oliiiubia, but 111\n\u25a0iay.1 on  tin*     promie\n\\ 'box cai oi   thu i\".\nenough foi him.\nCleveland Uuncan, i\nLeask, at Crcston, i\nTuesday while luking\nto the' mill. Thu\nhim   underlie\nU.i\ntin\nhelp arrived he bad expired.\nin  friends\ns shipped\nburial.\nngcr in\ntwelve years    ago\ninterioi ot British\ndid not ride those\nmiei s innate car.\nruad* were    good\n,,  lenmster lor T.\nn,  was killed     lust\nload of logs\ndeign   upset,\n11 li   .uul before\nThe de-\n.i ml had\nThe body\nMissouri,\nol\n11 Crcston.\n.,  Wotherbj\nArthur Chappell, the brakeman kiil-\nled lu the unforlunulu accident two\nweeks ago, carried $51)1) insurance\nwith nn accident compaiij represented by Messrs. Arnold i\\ Roberts. It\n[s needless to stale that the payment of tne pulley was promptly\nmet, us are all policies handled by\nthis linn.\nPeople living iu this section can\nfed Uianktul that they have hud\nnothing horse man Uiu cold weather\niu contend with tne past lew mouths.,\nnit residents of the prairie have been\nvastly more unfortunate, as in\naudition lo lhc extreme euld they\nnave siiiieicd severely [ruin numerous\nsnowstorms and bl-MZards, and in\nmany instances thousands of dull.us\nWorth of live slock have su&ei'cd\nuntil iii these storms,\nThu coroner's inquest over the\ndcutii ot A. L. ChuppeR was resumed\nlu-iiuestiay      ami      completed WIS\nallonioou, ami after ine eviuenco una\nail iu tlie following uunmmuus verdict was rendered by the jurors;\n\"Ue find that A. L. Cunppell euuio\nlo ins utMiii one mile anu a quarter\nwest ot jucksoii on Uiu Urows iSest\norancii of uie t.'. p. It, m u rauwuy\nuccincnt al u.li) ou tne mornuig oi\n.January lltn. Alter bearing an the\nevidence of Uie witnesses we eonsltter\nilial no blame can ue attached lo lue\nnam crews or Ueapatcners, who acted uiua-i Uie present lutes ot tue\ncompany. But in our opinion we\nliiui a serious detect in uie existing]\nrums governing trams lunmiig unaer\nslow orders and would suggest luat\ntrains receiving slow orders should\nuc run on what is kuowu as Uie\nuloek .system.\"\nUtttKAL RALLY\nThere will be a big Liberal rally\nheld m Wcntworth hull on,Wednesday\nevening, January 30Ui, at which Dr.\niving and otlicis wilt speak. Don't\nforget the date and bear in mi ml\nthat everyone is cordially Invited tu\nbe present, regardless ol political belief. A cordial invitation is extended tu the opposing candidates to\nbe present and participate iu the\nmeeting.\nCARD OF \"THANKS.\nI wish to express my hearty thanks\nto the citi\/ens of Cranbrook lor tbe\nhonor bestowed upon mo when they\nmade me their unanimous choice for\nmayor for the ensuing year.\n.lames  Finlay.\nthe kTIET aT^onspeil\nNotwithstanding the fact that tbe\nweather, the C. P. K. train service\nait.i the coming election proved serious handicaps, the bonspiel opened\nMonday morning promptly at\no'clock and has been carried on ever\nsince with unceasing fervor. At the\nopening only two outside rinks,\nGreenwood and Phoenix, were present, but three Nelson rinks and a\nRossland rink arrived on Monday's\ndelayed train. While the weather\nwas so warm Monday uud Tuesday\nas lo cover tlie ice with water, no\nuue was badly discouraged and the\n' roarin\" game was good-naturedly\nkept going. Iu all six outside rinks\nare present, composed ns follows:\nGreenwood \u2014 Wilson, Bunting,\nJohnston and McMynn.\nPhoenix\u2014Svrschan, Campbell, Mor-\nrin nird McMynn.\nNelson\u2014Holding, Booth, Fox nnd\nForm. Deacon, Jones, Richardson\nand Wallace. Oulmetto, Bunyan,\nCarrie ami Walley.\nRossland\u2014Armstrong, Squire, Watson and Ral e.\nThe lirst event started was the all\ncomers competition, in which Cranbrook had to cuter a rink fur each\noutside rink, and was won by the\nvisitors by a score of 74 to 41, the\nrinks playing as follows:\nMB\nsevere attack of grippe.\n\"Dick'' Frnser, who has been confined to bis home with lumbago for\ntbe p.ist week, is able to be around\nagain. Mr. Frascr has lost considerably     in   weight as a    result, and\nWANTED\u2014Work at anything. Have\nhad no experience in lumber camps,\nbut are willing to get in and drill at\nanything we can get to do. Both\nunderstand horses. Address Arthur\nPierson or George Hobdeu, care of\nHerald.\nsays it was the worst attack he  has\never had. ,\nWilliam Stewart, of Moose Jaw,\nSask., and Harry L. Loyd, of l)wen\nSound, Out., are spending a few\ndays visiting with W. D. \u25a0Luidlaw,\nof the Fink Mercantile company.\nWilliam Stewart is a cousin of Mi.\nLuidlaw.\nA Conservative rally will be pulled\noff at Wentworth hall next Monday\nnitcht. W. A. Macdonald, of Nelson,\nwill be the chief spellbinder. He\nwill explain the \"Whvfore of tbe\nwbyness,,lof the McBride administration.\nDon't forget the Burns anniversary\nconcert and dance at Wentworth hall\nto-morroW (Friday) evening. Spec-\neial preparations have been made for\nthe occasion and the Caledonian society have left nothing undone to\nmake the event one of the most suc-\ncessluLIn the history of the town.\nWANTED\u2014Situations for two men\nas engineer and firemen, good references; twelve years experience; sober\nand reliable. Apply at Herald office. 40\nThe Pacific Loan company's drawing went to E. B. Nobles, engineer,\nNew Westminster, contract 5IB. Mr.\nNobles is now eligible for a loan of\n$1,000 at less than 2 per cent interest, or he may sell his loan privilege\nfor a bonus of $125. For further\ninformation apply to W* Pender St.,\nVancouver, B. C. \u2022\nThe annual ball of    the C.   p. R. ^^._\nQuadrille club was held in Went-! In the phiyofi amongst the winners\nworth hall last evening. The hall Walley beat Roll; McNicoll beat Mc-\nwas prettily decorated for the    oc- Mytmj Forln bent McMynn, ana In the\nion ami there were a large num- final Forln won out from McNicoll.\nHer present, and the occasion was] Notwithstanding the fact that the\nmost thoroughly enjoyed hy all. Tbe CrantWook rinks are nearly nil cotu-\nC, P. R. club has made an enviable posed of new players and that none\nreputation for tlie excellence ol their of them had any practice to speak\ndances and the one last night was no of, their staying has been rernarkably\n  good, and while tfcey may uot    sue-\nALL COMERS.\nVISITORS\nCftANBItOOK\nC. Wiliwn\nW. F. Attriilj-e\nII. Uuntins\nM. A. Bcalo\nS. M. .Inhnston\nJ. W. Ww*1\nW.G. McMynn. skip. 11\nB. H. Short, iklp\u20141\nA. Slrachan\nF. E. Kinft\n1). V. Cumpboll\nA. I.. McDermot\n.1. A. Morrin\n!'. McAl|>!n\u00ab\nG.I*McNlchot,ik-..16\nD. J. McSweyn, Hk..\nHotdlng\nBlllingi\nBooth\nManning\nFox\nMcAlpIno\nJ. A. Forln, Hk 14\nrutrwire, fk\t\nF. Duacon\nMcDt-rmot\nW. H. Junes\nAtchltton\nW. Richardson\nPennon\nJ. H. Walli.ce. iV\u2014-14\nTut*. Hk \t\nF, Armatron*r\nRoberts\nJ. Sfiuires\nKing\nA. W. WaUon\nCameron\nE.A.Rolf, Hk 10\nRogers, si\t\nJ. OuimctU\nRollins\n,1. Bunyan\nBowne*n\nA. Carrie\nJackson\nA. T. Walley. ek ----8\nRyan, \u00abk 1\n71\n4\nexception to the rule.\n-r.il ii) ImliliiiK any ol tin- principal an    atl'oitili\nii ,s lull',   they  llttVC imlliinj;  \\u    In- (troutrtl       L.1\nis'i.iin,-,! ,,[ Iii tlie record ilii'y    liavo isl about l.jl\nI'leratis .ii Uie Imsi- ol ill.' ilcbi n\n!\u2022 the Nelson   rinks where 1  wu\ntho |irin,Ipal I'veiiis in-iiii  hi pro\n;     Ir,l.uil.lllt\nkill  ii  li.nl In-\nmi hum  Ih.-I.ui\nI |,  I\nthe lei\n.' lii.u\ntil St   III      Hi,\nlu    the\nit  viit'iiV-\n.-SOIIIO\nlu\n1 .      the\nii . liuly\nI   can\nTin' liill'ow li'.'\nluui   l.'.i'liue I've\njoirrg tu press:\n,11 go I\nHi\n'SUlt   111\niii- time\ntv\n(111 WU I'll M.I.KNtii: CUP.\nb    then\nlliston\n^^^ lied slow. ^^^\nui i was beared. Tula is a\nice U i graft, everybody alt-\nit ... ii inii yotu humble\nand I guess that he would\nil iime wi n anj \u25a0\u25a0; eni . i.\nalso appears to be made\nvt ry quickly li* re. Tho common\nevents are one ui two murders per\nweek, .t holdup at least every night\nand .i divon \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 ii c q month. Tiie\ncity is a bus) bive at present, but\nowing to the long rami ive have had\nit in not a pleasant place io be in\nal present. Men have i ome iu Irom\n..il pal Is ol the world, mostly\nmechanics, consoinjcntl) living has\ngone up. Material is still shun,\n' \u25a0.- ; mg the call for it, but,\never) thing w ill be good In ihe spring.\nHundreds ol buildings are springing\nuj' on every band and the thousands\n\u25a0.\u2022I mi:. working on a fine day Is indeed ,t sight it. see, Most of the\nlargo structures are built of brick\nuna stone, but steel structures and\nreinforced concrete buildings .ire in\ngreat evidence. The Chronicle buildings arc completed and occupied.\nThe Call buildings are being rapidly\nrenovated and will be ready (or business about June next. Most of the\nbusiness from Market street has been\nremoved to Fillamoie and Van Ness\navenue. Tlie whole oi the Chinamen left Frisco and located ova .a\nthe city ot Oakland, which is also a\ngrand citj and building up rapidly,\nli.- population has increased from\nI',t'Uu   in nine months.\n| Oakland be.\nnut)\nFrUo\n.-I\nCURLING   ASSOCIATION\nTROPHY.\n*~ w\nliii\nOLIVER ct:p.\n't   \u00a3\nWALKERVILLE COMPETITION.\ns I\ne E\nIm\nCRANBROOK1TE\nANGELES.\n'07,\nLos Angeles, (.'al., Jan\nDear \"Old Man\" Simpson:\u2014\nI am just sending you a line to let\nyou know that I am still on the\nearths crust. Ross Carr and myself arrived at Frisco on third ol\nDecember, 1906. and alter some\nlittle difficulty we got diggings and\nsettled down to see Frisco. The\ncity was an awlul sight at that\ntime, the skeletons of most of the\nbuildings were still standing and\nwere a menace to pedestrians day and)\nnight, until the morning of December\n10, 1900, when the city encountered\na terrible storm of wind and rain,\nwhen many workmen were killed and\ninjured. The board of works then\ntook the matter in band and pulled\ndown, or caused to Ik* pulled down,\nthe remaining walls which were dan-\ngenerous to the public. At about 10\nm. I wns passing the ['. S. mint\nOn 7th street, when one ol the skeletons was- blowu.   down aud -apiuktu-d\nhalf ol the iradc\ner she will hoi\nseen. We tanve\nfor the last Ii ui\npleasant it ma)\ndoes nol appeal\nus who have t<\nleft Frisco ou lb\nhad a splendid '<\nbarn, which c\nbuildings and w\nand arrived at.)\ning a very be\nus tx*atu:g\nfour hours\nill to pit\nces toi\ntaken\nwheth-\nWo\n1\nCage to s.utia Bargains     some    line\ntderful brick yards,\ns Angeles, port dur-\nstoriu, winch   kept\noft\" the port loi twenty-\nThis is .ndeed a lovely\nthe\ncity, it lias the remainder\nplaces I have seen skinned .ill to\npieces for beauty and .it present has\nFrisco's complaint (plenty of ram.)\nOne thing 1 admire hero is the busi-\ni.t's men s mode of doing business,\nwhich la strictly on business principles, and everyone appears to have\ntbe happy knack ol letting the affairs\nof bis ucigttbo! alone, while acutely\nlooking after his own affairs. I\nmust now conclude my letter to\nyou and ;oin with my Irlend Ross\nCan In wishing you and Mrs. Simpson every success, and accept our\nkind wishes lor the continued prosperity of the Herald. 1 remain,\n>ju:s truly,\nJ,  Edgar Davis.\nCOUNCIL MEETING.\nThe lirst regular meeting of the new\ncouncil was held Wednesday evening\nwiia Mayor Fiodlay in the chair ami\nAldermen Ryan, McCowan and Oill\npresent.\nA petition sigried by a number oi\ncitizens was presented by W. B.\nBsirdgeit requesting a amendment reducing the amount of line iu ukj\npound by-law. un uiutiou this pe*\nlition was laid on '<\u25a0'\u2022\u00ab: tunic dutil\nthere shouiu bt a full attendance of\naldermen.\nThe mayor then appointed the ful-\niuYwiig committees fox the enduing\nyear;\nFinance\u2014Fink, McCowan and Hick-\nnhotham.\nWorks and property\u2014Ryan, Jacl;-\non and Gill.\nHealth\u2014McCowan and Gill.\nFire and    police\u2014Fink and\nJack-\nand\nTaxation    committee\u2014Ryan\nHtckenbotham.\nThe mayor then inquired as to\ntiie comliiion ul the city s finances\nami was informed by the city cleuc\nthat the lire hall fund had bet-n overdrawn to the extent ui $62.50; ol\nIhe sidewalk fund there was still on\nliand a balance ol 12,240.48; municipal building fund on hand JC, 141.82;\ngincral fund (1868.53.\nAlderman Uyan then slated that\nthere were a number ol people in\ntown whose water pipes were frozen\nup, and stated that ll the electric\nlight company wen- inclined to thaw\nthe pipes uul .by electricity they\nwuulu be unabic lo do ao, \"^ since\nthe def.-at oi tbe franchise by-law,\nii wouiii I** illegal for them to string\nmore wires even foi temporary use,\nwithout special permission of the\ncity council. Aldei m in Ryan explained that al pre ent ihe electric\nlight company could not thaw pipes\na.-, the> bad no transformer for the\npurpose, but that they had one on\nthe luad and when It arrived the permit granted ly thi council would enable them to use It. It was moved\nby McCowan, seconded by (inl ih.it\npermission be granted the electric\nlight company to string temporary\nwires for thawing p poses. This\nmotion was carried, Alderman Ryan\nbeing  excused  from  voting.\nThe council then adjourned.\nROSSLAND WINTER CARNIVAL.\nFeb. 12-16.\nThe Canadian !'\u25a0 ciflo Railway announce an excursion rate of lare and\none-third for the round trip for the\nabo\\e event from Revel stoke,\nFernie and all inter\nmediate and branch line points.\nTickets on sale Feb. 11 to 16, good\nto return till Feb. 18.\n\"Stewarts\"\nTIIK   LEADING   FRUIT   STORE\nriiKSII I'm Its. CHOICE CON-\nPECTIONERY, FAX! V CALIFORNIA\nOI1ANOES. AND LEMON'S, JUMBO\nBAXAXAS, MALAGA ORATES, FRESH\nUATlis, SMYRNA l'lns CHOICE LATINO APPLES, CALIFORNIA   CELERY\nHUGH STEWART\nPhone 76    \u2022     Armstrong Ave. TUB   CHANBKOOK    USUALU\njMfr-wste.w^ca-.-.^w**-^ \\\nNEWS OF THE\nDISTRICT    v*\nTaken\nFrom\nThe\nHerald\nExchanges\n(ooil exhibition     \u00bbl\nMMsisMmaMsjM*''\n.ilih-\nMUYIE\niKrun Th. Moyie r\u00bb\u00bbil\u00abr.)\nST   EUGENE IS IDLE.\n,.| Iras turnnl at Uie\nlot i week.    '\"\"'\"\u00bb\nhas\ne I'm\nwin\nSt.\n; the\nbem\nof\nloekey\nI ween\nTin'  un\nI In'     M.i\ntell,   '\n\u2022li'iiil\ns|,lli\nill,\nunit'\n.1.11 s\niiiiiu-\nr two\nI'lu- company is rn\u00bbMiM\nellorl to procure coal,\nshut\nnl thi\nol\nlow\nmen\nt mly\nnull\nthe Spok-\nliatupiilly\nl.mi-in- mm\n.,.,\u00bb, 15 J.ivs tin- coropai\n\u201e    secure only \u00ab\u00bb\u2022--, ,,\n,ml were it not tor lie   suppl)\n,\u201e.,l ili,-v hail on hitiiil \u2122\niinilii havo been shut down \"\u2022\n,veeka .ito.\n\u25a0verv posslbk -        -,   .\n,\u201ed it is not anticipate! the\n\u201e, will be lor any sr-at length ol\numl probably l\"r only\nlonger.    Very lew\nleaving       the    \u2122\"1\n'   t.Tiiiv   illtv     carloatls\nwerehauicd tbtouRh Mnyi.-ai.il taken\nilown Into the Stall's ov\".\n iiiii'iiiiiiii\u00abiiiiii'     rnis\n,aires tho pcopc Indignant, as tliey\nSuTve \"ho British Columbia needs\n,,,\u201e,,, ,\u201est lie supplied before ship-\n,,\u201e,\u201es art- made out nl the country.\nw 1'. Philllpps lias returned Irom\nSeattle, bui Mrs. I'hlllipps will \"\"\n,\u201e.\u201e\u201e ,\u201e', the const lor the wtoter.\nilcnnlc Smith, assistant in tne\npnst ollice, spent a couple   ot\ndays In Craniirook during  the week.\nPercy Large returned to Moyie yes-\nM lav Iniiii Cranhrook where In was\nin the hospital with blood poisniiiiin\nin his right arm,\nMis I! Campbell and daughter re-\n\u201e11'lll.,i \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e. last Saturday from\nVancouver. She was accompanied by\nher two sisters, Mrs. Ihivin and Miss\nKiln Held, who were on their way\n...isl, but siiiiiiird oh in Moyie lor n\nit'iv days. .. i,,\nDaniel Mncdonald, who sliirlilh\nsUlrbed n Inral hotel man lasl\nSaturday night, was given a prel m-\ninarv hearing before justice ol the\nni'iii'i' E. A. Mill Wednesday afternoon anil was bound over to u|i|M-ar\nMore Hie county court at Cranhrook. The victim ol the affray was\nnot very severely Injured, but his\nissailanl's Intention wns evidently\nlo kill him Macdonald is a miner\nand worked for a short lime up on\n> In- hill.\nMis:\nMovie\nFBRNie\nwhich stood\nHull    mi\nlulgeil\ngrand '\nset nii-iii'\npinying\nteam  ri\ngoal,\nnl Coleman\n; in,' score,\n I     tin-\n-ii one,  anil\n\"s'crltiiiiiago 'i ( place below\nills wiui.- the Marli'oil play-\ni- Rood sink -handlers they lull nil  in  ituliwilii.il     and\nilaiul plnysi     wilh the    con-\n' that      lhc line combination\ndisplayed   by the Coleman\n'sultotl    in scoring goal alter\n\u00bbh.i I\nI toll.\nWAKDNElt NEWS.\nROOll\nI hat\nKnl-\n(Frm Mm r.r.i. Km. Him.)\nOn Saturday A. .1. Mott left for\nToronto, where he will be married\nlo.M iss Lamb, who is well known in\niliis city.\nH'rank Chambcrla'n, a popular\nvoiing niiin of this citv. met with\nterrible death Saturday morning\nHie M\u201e K. & M. railway. Frank\nwas a brakoman on the mine roatl\nand while coming down with a train\nload ol coal at 1 o'clock in the\n.iioruiiiE he slipped bclween two cars.\nHis body was caught by the brake\nlicnms niid was dragged all the way\nto Pernio, his lantern, lound near\nCoal Creek, indicating where the ac-\nliilent hail occurred. It is supposed\nthat tin- deeeased lost his looting\nwhile selling a brake, through the\nsnapping of the chain. The marks\non the next ear showed that he\njumped, and apparently had a good\nfooting, hut he over-balanced and lei!\nhack between the cars. The body,\nwhen released, was lound to be horribly mangled. It was taken to the\nundertaking parlors oi Scott & Hoss,\nwho took charge of the funeral arrangements. The funeral on Monday from the Roman Catholic church\nwas largely attended. Deceased.\nwho was oiily lit years ol age, was\nllie son ol Mrs. IVI.aurier. He was\nii fine specimen ol physical manhood\nand was well liked by those who\nlinew him. The impicst, which was\nliegtin on Saturday, will be continued\nnext week.\nMessrs. .1. tl. f'litnmiiigs and Albert Cttmmings will form a partnership in the early spring, with orliees\nhere and at Cranhrook. The former\nafter his return from his honeymoon\nI rip to California will reside in\nI'rantirnok. Albert, who recently\nsecured his P. I,, s. papers, left this\nweek lor Kingston to complete hi\nifiiii in the civil engineering course\nat Queen' suniversitv.\nMi. nnd Mrs. II. E. Martin were\nl-'ernie Monday and Tuesday, guests\nat tlie Niiininee. Until were formerly residents of this city, the latter\nbeing Miss Edmonds at thai time\nThey weir on their wav to lladistv,\nSask., where Mr. Martin takes\ncharge of the construction nf a railway bridge for Mr. Norman E. Ilrn-\nh-y. This bridge is a big aflair and\nuill employ inn men until the middle\nnl .Inly.   '\nTlie town has now enjoyed\nuue of the political rhetoric\nis going the rounds jusi now.\nowing Ur. King's eminently successful meeting of Friday night, the\nlabor candidate ami Ills henchman,\nMr. Lelii-in-v. addressed an audience\nIn the hall on Saturday, Their remarks were mainly confined to a\nvain attempt to refute Mr. King's\nstatements of tlie previous evening.\n\\n opportunity was given lo supporters of thi- Libera! or Conservative parties lo address lhc meeting,\nanil Mr. Hunt, in the Liberal lnler-\n\u25a0st, responded with a very able\nspeech, remarking thai il anyone was\nflitilled lo llie labor vote ill was Dr.\nKing; thai it was by Ihe labor vote\nhe was successful before and it\nwould he llie labor vole Hint would\nput him iu again. Tliere was nn response on heh.ilf of the Conservatives\nwhich was lather signillenilt.\nTin- new pinning mill will lie running iu about a fortnight anil when\ncompleted w-ill be one nf llie finest\nmills in Ihe province.\nAt a meeting of the Mountain\nLumber Manufacliirers's association,\nIll-Id ill Nelson last week. Mr. Lund\nwas appointed prest-lcnl fur Ihe eur-\nithi year and is lo he congratulated\non this recognition of his ability ami\npnpiitntity.\nMr. W. .1. Montgomery returned on\nSaturday from his trip In Ontario\ngreatly benefited hy his holidays.\nThere seems lo he quite an\nepidemic nl la r-rippr- in Hie fnwn at\npresent, owing probably lo Hie\n'\u2022haiict-able weather we have been\nhaving. Among Hie sufferers from\nthis disagreeable malady is Mr. Lund\nwho has been confined In tlm house\nfor several days.\nHie\nlliese\nlit  111,-\nABOUT YOUR HEADACHE\nvot   MUST AttKEE IN TH1S:-\nTlmi headache does not necessarily\nmean there is anything wrong with\nyour head! That being so, you must\nlook to some other organ for the\ntrouhjto Is tbe ache in Uu* forehead,\nnml does it erase it you press iff\nThat is neuralgic headache. Is il on\none Mile of the head only'.' That is\nloctors eail \"megrim.\"\nonus arise from lack of\neg torn, Is youi headache genera) and accompanied by\nsickness to tout breath or constipation' Tli.it kind ol headache is due\nlo liver ami stomach disorder. Nine\nheadaches in ten arise from these\ncauses. There are two methods of\ntreatment, **'\u00bb' is to take htsuhu'hw\npowders. This is like trying to escape pain by taking chloroform. The\nother is to correct the organs which\nby their dctaiig-'inenl are causing the\ntrouble. That is the Bileaii way!\nBileans cure headache by their hene-\nficlal operation on the digestive system, the liver and the blood. Correct these properly and you will have\nno more headache.\nMrs. K. G. Illaek, of 3li It lev ins\nPlace, Toronto, says: \"1 suffered\nacutely from headache. The attacks\nwere most violent aud made me so ill\nI could hardly do anything. The\nheadache was accompanied by digestive trouble, heartburn, and constipation, and it seemed as if I were\ngoing from bad to worse. Until 1\ntried Bileans 1 was able lo get anything which gave me relict. Bileans, however, acted like magic.\nThe) not only cured the headache\nhut also relieved me ol Uie indiges-\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that siity\ndays after date 1 intend making application to the Honorable Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the foi-\nlowing described hinds:\nCommencing with a post planted\nat the north-west corner of lot 7008,\nSouth East Kootenay, thence running north twenty chains, thence\nrunning imsI twenty-five chains,\nsouth twenty-five chains, west twenty-five chains to place ol commencement.\nA. K. Kraptel, Elko, B.O\nDated January l.Mh, l!.f>7.    44-\u00bbt\nNOTICE.\nn the matter of the Act respecting\ncertain works in and over certain\nnavigable waters, being Chapter 22,\nIt. S. 0., 1886.\nNotice is hereby given that one\nmouth after date an application will\nbe made to the Cover no r-in-Council\nhy Hales Hingston Hoss aud Joseph\nWhitehead1 Boss, carrying ou business\nnt Elkmouth, in tiie province -of\nBritish Columbia, under tbe firm\nname of Boss Bros. & Company,\nunder the provisions ot the above\nAct for    permission     to    construct\ndams, booms and other improvements for logging and saw milling\npurposes in Kootenay tltiver in South\nEast Kootenay, British Columbia.\nThe plans ol the works proposed to\nbe constructed and a description of\nthe site thereof have been deposited\nwith the Kenistrar of Land Titles at\nNelson, B. 0., and wilh the Minister\nof Public Works at Ottawa, Ontario.\nW. F. Gurd,\nSolicitor for the Applifiitits.\nBated at   Cranbrook, It. i\\,    this\n42-5*\nWORLD'S\nGBEATEST\nQUAKES.\nEABT1I-\nttou, heartburn and constipation. I\nhave proved that a lew doses ol Bileans will remove the most violent\nheadache, and as a cure (or const!'\nnation they are absolutely unequalled. No family should be without a\nbox ot Bileans oil the shelf.\"\nBileans are purely herbal in their\ncomposition and are also tree from\nalcohol. They are a cure for all\ndigestive ami liver disorders, cou-\ntipnliou, piles, debility, anemia,\nblood impurities, colds aud chills,\nihuemulisii). wind spasms, female ailments ami irregularities, sallow com-\nplexlon (due to bile iu tbe blood),\ndizziness, etc. All druggists sell at\n.\"die. u box, or may be obtained post\ntree from the Bileau Co., Toronto,\non receipt of price. t> boxes for\n$2.50.\nW. It. Butty, Kuntml l\u00bblrecu>r\nCr*iibn\u00abk B.C Phoaa No,\nDrink Home Beet\nIt is Pure\nIt It Healthy\nIt Is the Best\nFt. Steele Brewing Co.\nTIMBER NOTICE.\nTake notice that thirty days after\ndate we intend lo apply to the Chiel\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at\nVictoria, B. C, for a special license\nto cut and carry away timber from\nthe following described lands situate\nin S. E. Kootenay:\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe south-east corner of lot 331,\nthence east forty chains, thence\nnorth forty chains, thence west forty\nchains, thence south forty chains to\nplace of commencement, containing\nItiO acres, more or less.\nMayook Lumber Co., Ltd.\nBated llie 12th day of January,\n1907. 43-51\nBLAIRMORE\n(From The Blairmore Times.)\nIn spite of the fact that the lack\nof ears and the extreme cold weather\nhas curtailed the output ot the\nFrank mine at least 300 tons per\nday, still it Is maintaining an output of over fiOft tons. The new\ntipple, which has a capacity of\nI too tons per day, is giving the best\nof satisfaction. This property now\ngives employment to over 200 men,\nwhich will he increased as soon as\nshipping facilities on tbe road improves. The main entry is now in\non the coal a distance ot two miles,\nand never before in the history of the\nmine has there been so large a tonnage of Qoal block-en nut, and it is in\nj position to at any time largely in-\n.-reuse its output.\nThursday evening the rink was\nopened here, and many skaters from\nboth Blairmore and Frank took advantage of it tn enjoy a skate. The\nrink this season is much larger than\nformerly, and the dressing room\nmuch more comfortable than in former winters. Manager Spence.r\nLewis has it now In first-class shape,\n.ind is deserving of a liheral patron-\nage from the public. It is Intended\nthat this rink will be used In common by both Frank and Blairmore.\nas the former town has given up the\nidea of piittinr- in a rink this season.\nIt is the intention of the management to announce    a carnival short-\nly\nThe hockey game played In Cole-\ntnan on Wednesday    evening was    a\nEarthquakes are among tbe most\ncommon phenomena in the world,\nscientists est Imii ting that Irom\ntwenty to fifty occur on the world's\nsurface every day. Fortunately\nhowever, the vast majority of them\nre very slight. The most destructive recorded in history are recorded\nbelow:\nfi.'l A. I).\u2014Hereiilaneum and Pom\npcii practically destroyed by violent\nshock,\n1115\u2014Four Asiatic, two Grecian ami\ntwo Gala t Inn cities overturned.\n358\u2014Nicodemiu destroyed with all\nits inhabitants.\n557\u2014Thousands perish in China.\n724\u2014Over 500  towns   destroyed\nSyria, Palestine and Asia, awful loss\not life.\n1137-At Catania, Sicily, 12,000\nin the ruins.\nU5K-In Syria,  20,000 perish.\n1181.-A Snlahrian city and nil its\ninhabitants overwhelmed in the Adriatic.\n12I.H\u2014 In Cilicia, 00,000 perished.\n1456\u2014Naples, 40,000 killed.\n1531\u2014Lisbon, 30,Ouo burled in city's\nruins.\n1596\u2014Thousands perished in Japan.\n11182\u2014Port Roval, Jamaica, destroyed, 3,000 lost.\n1033\u2014Fifty-tour eil ies and towns\nand 300 villages destroyed in Siliev,\nHin.nun lives lost.\n1703\u2014 Jed-do, Japan, ruined, 200,-\n000 perished.\n1718\u2014At Algiers, 30,000 dead.\n1731\u2014Pckln,   100,0(10 swallowed  up.\n1746\u2014Limn and Cnllao demolished,\nis,mm buried in Ihe ruins,\n1754\u2014At Grand, Cairo, 40,0)10\nperished,\n1755\u2014Ka scba n, North Persia,\nlestroyed, 40,000 killed,\n1755\u2014Lisbon practically wiped out\nwithin eight minutes. Upwards of\n50,000 persons perished in the ruin\n\u25a0mil by being engulfed by a tremendous seismic wave. The shock was\nlelt iis far as Scotland, and many\ncities Buttered severely. In Moiico\nmore than 13,000 persons lost their\nlives.\n1750\u2014Bnnlbec,  in Syria, destroyed,\n20,000 dead.\n17H7\u2014All the country Irom Santo\nFo to Panama shaken, 40,000 (lend.\n1812\u2014At  Caracas, 12,000 lives lost.\n1822\u2014Aleppo destroyed with 20,000\nof its inhabitants,\n1842\u2014At Cape llavtien, Sanlo\nDomingo, two-thirds of the town destroyed, 5,000 dead.\n1857-Over 10,000 killed in Calabria.\n1868\u2014Many towns iu Peru and\nEcuador wiped out, 25,000 perished.\n18fll\u2014In Japan, 10,000 dead.\n1896\u2014Northwest of Japan, 1,001\nperished by earthquake, and over\n10,000 by attendant seismic wave,\n1626\u2014Thirty towns near Naples\ndestroyed, 70,000 killed.\n1667\u2014At Sehamaki, 80,000 perished\nin shocks within three months.\n1906\u2014 In April, San Francisco, California, nnd other adjacent cities\nwere devastated. Ma uv kil led.\nValparaiso, Chili, was partially destroyed and thousands killed.\nFOLLOWED  INSTRUCTIONS.\nI met Rev. Charley crossing his\nmot Iter's grounds one morning, and\nbe told me this little tale. He had\nbeen out lo Chicago to attend a\nconvention of Congregational clergymen, and had taken his little son\n(Harriett Ueechcr Stowe's grandson)\nwith him. During the trip he reminded tbe little chap, every now\nand then, that he must he on his\nvery best behavior Ihere in Chicago,\nlie said: \"We shall be the guests o.\na clergyman, there will be other\nguests\u2014clergymen and their wives\u2014\nand you must be careful to let those\npeople see by your wall* and conversation that you arc ot a goodly\nhousehold. Be very careful about\nthis.\" The admonition bore fruit.\nAt the first breakfast at which they\nate fu the Chicago clergyman's house\nhe beard his little son say in the\nmeekest and most reverent way to\nllie lady opposite him: \"Please\nwon't you, for Christ's sake, pass the\nbutter?\"\u2014Ex.\nA WONDERFUL CLOCK.\nany\n\"Papa, you could make most\nkind of a clock, couldn't you?\"\nClockmuker\u2014\"I  think   so, my son.\nWhy?\"\n\"Make me    one that   will run the\nbases after three strikes?\"\u2014Ex.\nFALSE!\nDentist\u2014Women are much more\ncareful with their teeth than men.\nPatient\u2014I guess that's right. My\nwife locks hers up every night.\u2014Ex.\nFOUND HER OUT\n\"Twice a day for two weeks he had\ncalled. Each time the servant declared the young lady was not in,\nbut he knew she was deceiving him.\nBut to-day he hud tlie proof. He\nhad seen her through the window.\n\"At last 1 have found you out!'\nhe hissed a.s he turned upon his\nheel.-Ex.\nLAND NOTICE.\nTake notice that sixty days alter\ndale I Intend to apply to Uie Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at\nVictoria for permission lo purcksm\nIbe following described land* iitu*t*t\nin Soutb East Kootenay:\nCommencing at the south-east coiner of lot 7316, thence north 40\n'bains, uhenoe east 80 chains, thence\nsouth to Wm. Paoli's north line,\nthence west 80 chains, aiong Wm.\nPaoli's line aud the Great Northern\nrailway track to point ot commencement, containing 320 acres, more or\nless.\nW. R. MacKay.\nDated at Elko, B. C, October 34,\n1906. 34-96*\nPOLITE.\n\"You can't do any good work in\nthe world without offending somebody,\" said Congressman Longworth\nin an address. \"The man who\nmakes no enemies is the man who\ndoes no good.\n\"Some men but tor this tear ol\nmaking enemies might accomplish\nsomething. As it is, they iwnind\nme of the dying man who was too\ncautious even to make his peace with\nProvidence.\n\" 'Do you renounce the deril and\nall his work?1 the minister said to\nthis man.\n\"And the dying man replied in\nweak, hesitating voice.\n\" 'Please don't ask me ot that.\nI'm going to a strange country, and\nI don't want to make myself\nenemies.' \"\nPERT PARARRAPIIS.\nPerhaps G. Washington's taxes\nweren't very high.\nWhen you are down don't advertise\nthe fact.\nOne of the compert&alions ot\nstupidity is that it doesn't know\nthat it is stupid.\nDoing the little ray ol sunshine\nnet is all right it you cun get some\none to guarantee a salary.\nWhen a man is spending Hme\"at\nthe seashore it is superfluous lor him\nto tell you what else he is spending.\nBeing on your dignity is impressive if it isn't funny.\nWhen a\nwife he\nof.\nhusband is dependent on    a\ns apt to be well taken care\nTHE SECOND INNING.\nChancellor James R. Day, of Syracuse university, in a discussion ' of\nthe craze for athletics that sometimes becomes too rampant in the\nuniversities of America, said with a\nsmile:\n\"Why, I know a young clergyman\n\u2014he had been an excellent first\nbaseman ut college in his time\u2014who\nafter reading a portion as he closed\ntlie Bible one Sinrdny morning In the\nbaseball season:\n\" 'Here endetb  the second Inning.' \"\nIt Is pleasant to go away from\nhome just to experience the Joy of\nreturning.\nExperimental knowledge has no veneer upon it.\nThe girl   who isn't looking tor\nhusband     is the   most   apt to    find\none.\nThe work be doesn't do is enough\nto make a lazy man happy.\nFlattery is never turned down ii\npresented discreetly.\nBeing constructively honest seems\nto be about, as near as some men can\ncome to it.\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY\nCRANBROOK\nPublic notice Is hereby given that\nall licenses due the City for the ensuing  six months are now due  and\npayable at the City Clerk's office.\n43-lt Thus. M   Roberts.\nIF!\niui\nMISS        MANSFIELD,      STENO\nOHAPHER AND TYPIST, WILL\nDO     WORK    AT    MODERATB\nPRICES.\nFor particulars Call up 'phot.  No.\nC8 between the hours ol 9 ..in. ud \u2022\nni., or   'phone    No. 60 .Iter oBoa\nours.       All    order,   will   r\u00abc-i\u00bb\u00bb\nprompt attention.\n3\u00bb C.   .1.  MANSFIELD.\n**********************\nIF VOl) WANT\nA SNAP IN\nA SECOND-HAND SAFE\nTAYLOR OR MALL, ADDRESS\nP. II. JOHNSON, CAU1ARV ;\nP.O. MUX  IIHM\nAlWNT Foil HALL BAKU CO,\nif\nOil,\nKeep Posted\n* \u2022\u00bb\nOn Matters That Interest You\nYour local paper ii a neeeuitj\nto you, financially and locially.\nBut a NEWSPAPER OP OEN-\nEEAL CIRCULATION, contain-\nisf tbe latest new, of Ul* world,\nii equally neceuary to you. The\n\"up to date man\" will provide\nbimielf with tbeie two etiential\nfeatures of progreu.\nIn THE TWICE-A-WEEK\nSPOKESMAN- REVIEW, Spo\nkane, Waab., will be found tbe\nrery latest newi of tbe world, iti\nmatter including information on\npolitia, commerce, agriculture,\nmining, literature, ai well ai tbe\nlocal happening! in the itatM of\nMontana, Oregon, Idaho, Wiih-\nington and tbe province of British\nColumbia. In addition, iti column! for women, iti popular\nicience article!, iti ihort and con.\ntinued stories, IU \"Amwen to\nCorrespondent!\" and \"Puule\nProblenu\" combine to form a\nhome newipaper that at |1.00 per\nyear can nowhere be excelled.\n*)   ITS itnVKHT-.ll.NU   Vtl.UK.     '\nParti.p> you h.v. ...m.tliliis to a.ll\u2014.\nfarm, a Lain, farm mai'liln.ry. Tut, may\nwlnh te Iniy aiiinattitns. 'I'll, b.st |iuii,lli|t\nway lo oummulilcat. with p\u00abtn|,la win, wl.b\nI. buy or aall I, by InaiTlln. a .until ail\nvartlaamatil  In  Th. N|n,kMmati H.vt.w.\nPartner., .liiilttiim. lunilnTiii.n and Rill,\n,r. tak. Ilia TWIi'E-A WIIKK.\nIt you wlah to taaili liuitlnaaa man Hlid\n\u2022awcom.n, uae til. DAILY or Sl'Nl'.lT\n\u2022POKklSatAN-ltHVIKW.\nTHI TWIOK-A-WHUK nATKH   IKK\ni aach Iniartlon.  t'mi\n18Words!H\n24 Words! Ilih;\nTUB   SUNOAT    AI.ONK\nTti  itnta  per  llita etch 1ii.eill.ri,   ,'uui.i\n\u2022ta  wt.r*li to ft  Una.\nADDRKSS\n^    THI   \u25a0rOKKSMAN-HKYIKW,\nSiwhww, WMb.\nWrite, your *.**. plainly, tnclo-lnr; \u25a0mi.tm\nll   \u25a0tAiniia   or   mutioy   older   for   numlx-i-   ut\nISMriluui   deilttd.   tntl   \u25a0Into   wtiellior   yui\nwish   \u2022<.**    imuM   la   tfJlf,  \"\"\u25a0'-\nKverybody knows that Coil Liver Oil U a wonclt\nfle-.li |>ruthuvr, IF you can take it.\nNuboJy ihnihts th.tt Iron is the greatest enrichi\nthe blood, IF you can ili^rst it.\nIt is well known that l'bo\u00abphorus is tho (deal n\nand brain tonic, IF it is properly administered.\n\"IF,\" ah! there's the rub.\nHut everybody does not know that Coil Liver\nIron uml Phosphorus have nt last been combined in\nan emulsion sc\u00bb palatable that anybody can take it.su\neasily assimilated that the smallest infant can ili^e*.t\nit without difficulty and so perfectly and scientifically\nprepared that tlie value of the original Ingredients is\nenhanced fourfold.\nThis emulsion is known a.s\nFERROL\n(Iron and Oil)\n\" FERROL \" has wiped out the \" IF.\"\n\"FERROL\" has brought the wonderful and universally recognized virtues of Cod Liver Oil. Iron and\nPhosphorus within easy reach of the multitudes who\nneed them.\n\"FERROL\" is the only perfect emulsion of Cod\nLiver Oil, because it is the only one that contains\nIRON and no emulsion is perfect without it.\nThat is why  FERROL  is an  unequalled  system\nbuilder.\nFERROL it not . patent mystery-   nit Formula is freely published,   li Is pit\nTIMIIKR NOT1CK.\nTake notice that thirty days alter\nutt* wc iiitt-u-t to apply to the Chief\nCommission*1.\" \u25a0>! Lands umt Works at\nVictoria (oi a s|n-clal licimse to cut\nml carry uway tlmlier from the foi-\ntiwjiif, ilcsmWit hunts iu South Kant\nvoolonay:\nCommunotng at a post planted st\nUu* f.ouUi-wi'Ht corner ol lot 3553,\ngroup 1, Knutt'iiay     district; thence\nmi Hi I iti chains, thence east 56\nchains, thence north U'O chains,\nmorn or less, to the southerly limit\nnl Mit-hiti'l Kelly's pre-emption No.\nHSJH, thence westerly along said\nBoiitherly limit of said pre-emption\n:\u00abi chains, more or less, to the\nsun th-west, corner ol the satd preemption, thence north forty chains\nto the southerly limit ot said loi\n3553, thence westerly 20 chaim to\nthe place of licKlnning, containing\n(tin acres, more or less.\nThe Standard Lumber Co., Ltd.\nW. V. Gurd, Solicitor, Cranbrook,\n11. C.\nluted the 12th day ol November,\nA. 1). limit. 38-ftt\nthe bell riiy-iicui.!..    ll ii etulutscl by the itio-st cm\nproatinent HospiLiU, Sanitariums, etc.\nuent Medical Journals,   li\neribed by\n\u201e.,1 in tl.e\nBeattie & Atchison Druggists, Cranbrook\nLAND NOTICE.\nSixty days after date I Intend to\napply to the Honorable tbe Chief\nCom in iss i oner of Lauds and Works,\nVictoria, for permission to purchase\nthe following described land iu Soutb\nKitst Kootenay:\nCommencing at * post planted\nabout one chain south uf the south\ncorner post of Lot three hundred and\nsixty-three (3t\u00bb3), thence north about\ntwenty-eight t-d) chains, thence east\nabout three (3) chains, thence south\nabout twenty-eight (23) chains,\nthence west about three (3) chains to\nthe place ot commencement.\nll. K. Qreen,\n.1. Lynch, Locators.\nHiited the 6th day ot December,\n1900. 38-9t*\nORGAN AND PIANO SALE!\nMORE   BARGAINS\nOur \"Clean-Up\" Sale dispised of many of the Pianos nml Organs wc\nailvertine.1, hut we nt ill have a numl-cr of Instrument!) mi luui 1 that have\nbeen taken in exchange for\nMASON &  RISCH  PIANOS\nWe are bsc rill dug these at prices below what we allowed for them\nWe must have the warehouse room for now stock, llereareufewspeclals\u2014\nEVERY\nEVANS' PIANO. Mahogany cane,\nin suod L'uniJitiiin. Nn. 5G, may tie(\nbouflit fur \u25a0\nDOHBRTY 0IIGAN. 6 Octave,\nWalnut Parlor Com, with bcvt-l-\nInl Kr\u00abieh Plato Mirror, u ht\\n.l-\nHmt instrument In fiplfiulitl\norder, No. 03\t\nEARHIIFPOKUAN. WalnutCtwo.\nhlfb back, 5 octave, 3 seta rv*\\\u00bb,\nlOMtopa,   Mothproof.   Nu. 7 \u2014\nWESTERN COTTAGE OROAN.\n6 octave   parlor.  Walnut caw.\ngood aanew, No. B 11-\u2014\u2014\t\nDYER BROS.'OROAN, 5 octave,\nWalnut, bevelle.1 mirror, hitfli\nLurk. No. 08, a goat] . i.- ,'. \u2022   -.\nONE   A   BARGAIN\n$200\n90\n60\n70\n60\n[(ADEN & SONS' SQUARE\nPIANO, originally noltl for W00,\nNo. A 5, now i-lteml for -.\nA NO EI. US   On\nPlayer. N... Pi), v\nicstral\n.s ;:i-i. i\nlinMINJON ORQAN.fi feel liii\nGoclavea, 1! set* reeits, 7 Btni\nVox Human!, etc., No. 9\t\nOAVIS UPRIGHT PMNO, 7 i\nlaves.   Walnut   Cuae,    N\u00bb.\noffered for\t\nMASON & RISC!! PIANO, Ma-\nh'.Kaiiv. Style S. T t-*i octave*!,\noverstrung, a ivully fir-it rate\nI'mnu. was SAGO, Nn. 12, can in-\nbough I fur\t\nPIANOLA, Walnut Cane, i\u00bb*rf,'i*l\ncondition.   No.  I'l',   was S'tnu,\n$125\n150\n30\n40\n350\n225\nWe have a few other hargnuiH ami will send full list on application,       -J\nWe will take any of these Instruments buck at full value, ue partial\npayment on a new .Mason t\\ KU'ch Piano.   You can't go wrong,\nMason & Risch Piano Co., Ltd.\nntulion'ii Bay Block      Nlil.Sl IN, B. 0. P. (). Box (tlfi\n******* **********************\n;|| Distillers Company,   imited ||||\n::: CALEDONIAN LIQUEUR SCOTCH 7YEARS OLD \\ ;\n;;;; in wood <><>\n:::: KING GE0R6E IV. SCOTCH 10 YEARS OLD ::::\n. >< i\nIN WOOD\nD. V. L Scotch 12 Years Old\nIN WOOD\nill; USEDBYALLCONNOISSEURS\n,,. >\n,,.\u00ab\n, ,i >\nJR. R. Rithet & Co., imited |i\nSOLE   AGENTS\nVictoria, British Columbia\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\n********************************************\ngH>\u00bb\u00bbi\n: Christmas Photos\nYour folks at home\nwoul.l rather have\nyour picture than\nanything else, Hetter\nhave il taken early as\nthere is ut way* a rush\nthe   last   few weeks.\nPrest Photo Studio\n********4**********+4*\nCOAL and CASH\nI will Imve my winter supply\n>>f Coal iti a few tlnyn. uud aui\nreatly tu take onltirs. I will\nhave\nBankhead Hard Coal $8.75\nSoil Coal 16.75\nList winter I was out of Coal\npart ot timo. This year I pro-\npuKii lo keep 11 good supply oil\nhand, ami will sell\nFOR CASH ONLY\nW. E. WORDEN\nCITY TRANSFER  CO\nW.H.BOLTON\nTHE PAINTER\nlit- tint's iiiihIi'iii work\nin 11 modern manner\nWinn vim want paint.\niiu: ilei'oriitiug, |NS|H-r\nliatiK'iiiK\nSEE  BOLTON\nFURNITURE FINISHING\nASCIALTY\nWOOD FOR CASH\nAT   THE LOWEST PRICE\nI have the finest lot of\nWood over put iu this\nBi'i'tion. Any length,\nwill deliver on   onler,\nALSO\nAnything iu Stoves and\nimy old thing to fix up\nyour house.\nJAS. McARTHUR\nTHE SECOND HAND MAN TIIK   t.'UANIHUMlK    IllCliAI.I)\nll|\u00bb\n! said the cook;\n\"As I go ' by the book'-\n\"1\nI said\nQooril\nThe Cranbrook Herald\nAND\nWinnipeg Daily Free Press\nONE YEAR\nfor\n$3.25\nONE YEAR\nfor\nJ\nust think of it! The Herald is well\nknown, and so is the Free Press, as the\nleading Papers in their respective fields.\nBy reading the two anyone can keep\nthoroughly posted on the local news of\nthe district and the news of Canada and\nthe rest of the world.\nThere is One Condition\nTo take advantage of this extraor-\noffer, you must be a new subscriber, with subscription paid; or an\nold subscriber with your subscription\ni one year in advance.\ndinary\npaid i\nLimit of Time\nThis offer will remain open only to\nMarch 1, \\ 907, No subscription\ntaken after that date for this unprecedented price.\nNow is the Time to Act\nIf you are not a subscriber of the\nHerald, subscribe and get the best\nweekly in British Columbia and the\nbest daily in Canada for the small sum\nof $3.25 a year.\nIf you are a subscriber of the Herald,\npay your subscription to the Herald one\nyear in advance and secure the Daily\nFree Press for only $1.25 more.\nThe long winter evenings are here\nand this is an opportunity of a life time.\nRENEHBER\nIHE   CRANBROOK\nHERALD\nAND\nL'lfflSM]\ntho   military    pn\nhe   solved   unless\n' form oi universal\nAlfred Lowe, a well-]\nplavt'i, .mil a member\nHill Rovers team, h\ntwenty shillings and (\nmonth Imprisonment\nStaffordshire, foi    ass,\nBullock, a      tiiimliv\nteam, at a matoti\nlast.\nWalter Lees, the Suirey cricketer,\nami (i. W. Ayers, a former Surrey\nand Essex player, have been made\nlife governors oi the Richmond (Sui-\nie>) Royal hospital in recognition yider\nol their services In the promotion Aot, t\n<il tin* annual cricket match on Rich- siring\naged forty-seven, and a woman of Lady Stirling-Maxwell, Colonel J.\n'thirty-nine, had married, ami repair-'Smith Hark said he became more\nled almost straightway to bhe work-1 convinced every year Lliat we would\nhouse and entered into residence not succeed in getting a propel\nthere as inmates. One member was I lighting force in this count i) without\nin tavor ol ejecting the pair, but the'some torm ol compulsion\nchairman, remarking thai both were SUrlhrgrllaxwcll also exjj\na little weak mentally as well as bvliei i\nI physically, said it was really D would\nmatter for parliament. adopted\nnnwn fooUiall ,   |vice-\nol the Hurst!   A number of    influential gentlemen\nis been    lined have started an organization to    be '\nists, or    one known   as   the    Central Emigration\nat     Sedgley,  hoard with the object ol encouraging I\nultlng Joseph land assisting in promoting the  emf*\nan opposing grntlon of desirable and suitable |ier* i\nsons from the United Kingdom     to\nBritish   colonies.    The hoard's  machinery will he open to all classes ol\ntlie community desiring to settle   m\nthe colonies, and ii is especially hoped that the services ol the board may\ntie of    use to   disttess   committees\nthe    Unemployed   Workmen's\nOfi, and other puhlic bodies de-\nput into effective operation\npa\nbv\nNovembei loth\nmond Qroon    lot    the benefit ol the tlteir statutory powers relating\nhospital. emigration.       The following gontle-\n\u2014    \u25a0\u25a0 men have already    Joined   the board'\nTwo post office officials, earning Sir Clement Kinlocfa Cooke (chalr-\n\u00a3150 and \u00a3171) a year, were sued by lutii), Lord Hindlip, Sir William\na money lender at the Southward Chance, Hart., Sir Edward Stern,\ncounty court, London. A friend ol Lieut.-Gen. Sir Edwin Collen, Sir\none of thorn said that most civil Charles Bruce, Rev. II. Russell Wnke-\nsurvants were constantly in tlie field. Hon. R. B. Wise and Mr. Har-\nhauds of moneylenders, nnd Judge old Boulton, with Mr. Edmund Stone\nWillis said that when lie was in Nor- as honorary organizer and secretary,\nfolk     he* was     constantly   having -jhe  offices of   the hoard are at 70\nto commit i civil     set-  and 71 Temple chambers, London.\napplications\n'.'ants.\nMiss Braddou's hooks arc much\nsought after hy convicts in gaol.\nInfluenza is very prevalent in London, aud many society functions have\nhad to be abandoned.\nAbout a million pounds is spent in\nsalaries every year at theatres iu\nthe West End of Loudon.\nA Birmingham churchman admits\nthat dancing may lead to evil, \"hut\nso may anything, even church-going,\"\nhe adds.\nThe last census returns showed\nthat in England and Wales there were,\nsome 27,701) women engaged as barmaids.\nThe three chief perils of motorists,\naccording to Lord Montagu, are\nchildren making mud pies, lovers in\nlanes, and drunken men.\nThere are at least five firms busy\nat work constructing flying machines, even the automobile houses\nare turning their attention to it.\nAt the end of December Ihere were\n766,570 persons in receipt of relief in\nEngland and Wales. As compared\nwith last year, this is a decrease of\n11,785. j\nDuring the past week primroses\nhave been gathered in several parts\nof Devonshire, and a pear tree is in\nfull bloom in the garden of tlie\nGrand hotel, Torquay.\nA sea captain named Wenlock has\nbeen elected mayor of Brlghtllngsea,\nKssex, the ceremony taking place in\nthe church helfry according to immemorial custom.\nThe entente    cordisle comes pretty i\nhigh when     reduced to pounds, still- I\nSCOTLAND.\nThe Inscription on a tombstone in\n.in Edinburgh cemetery reads:\n\"Erected by his surviving widow.\"\nA Scottish National song assocla-\nI tion has been formed for the purpose\nof promoting Scottish song iu the\ncommunity.\nI Dundee has ^now raised \u00a322,5(10 for\nn technical college, ami the city Is\nto get a similar sum Irom the\neducation department.\nI Three patients of the Morniugside\nlunatic asylum, Edinburgh, escaped\ndrowned. One patient, a woman,\ndrowmod herself iu a shallow pond\nIiu the grounds. Another, a man,\nI was cut to pieces on the railway.\nThe third returned.\nI An outbreak of fire occurred in tho\ni institution for orphan and destitute\nI girls, Westland Drive, Whiteiuch,\nGlasgow, and a portion of the building was destroyed.\nThe Salvation Army have arranged\nto open a branch of their emigration\ndepartment at tiie Scottish headquarters, 202 Hope street, Glasgow,\nexclusively for emigration business in\nScotland.'\nThe death look place at Dunnlast-\nair, Perthshire, a couple of weeks\nago, of Mrs. Burton, widow ol Mr.\nJ. C. Bunion, of Dunalnstalr, who\nwas lor many years chairman of the\nCaledonian Railway company.\n! While retiring to rest, apparently\nin his usual health, recently, Mr.\nAlex. Gilchrist, Balleraiu, one of the\nbest known farmers in Kiniyre, dropped dead on his bedroom'floor. He\nwas in his fifty-first year.\nA   picture    recently sold at Aher-\nllttgs and pence. The Lord Mayor f]mi for a \u00a310 note has been cleared\nti|i and found to be the work of Jan\nSteen. a Dutch artist who flourished\nabout 300 years ago. The picture\nhas gone up considerably in value by\nthe discovery.\ni\u00bbf London's recent visit to Paris\nsaid     to have   cost   the   gay     city\n.CM 10.\nThere nre     nearly     Sun  theatres\nmusic halls and    concert halls within\na ten    mile radius of Charing Cross; '   j|PVi\nthirty  years     ago  there    were only   senior\nforty-five theatres, and practically no  Church\n\u2022I\nmusic 'halls.\nAnthrax has again made its appearance in Mid-Cheshire, three sheep\nin a herd of over one hundred on a\nfarm at Vale Royal, Norlhwich, being affected. Tlie animals were\nslaughtered and the rest put into\nquarantine.\nGeorge Kit\/pat rich .lames,\nminister of Bristo V. P.\nEdinburgh, has died, alter  a\nlingering illness, at his residence,\nEast Saville terrace, in the seventy-\nfirst year of his age and the thirteenth year of his ministry in Bristo.\nI After having l*en in existence for\nnearly half a century, Patrick passenger wharf, Glasgow, was    closed\ni recently.       The Cycle       Trust\nsome time ago decided io widen the\nriver at this point, and the wharf\nis in consequence to be demolished.\nThe Queen was a successful competitor nt the Birmingham dog show.\nUcr Ucrzois ass Ilka carried off the,\nfirst prize and other honors, and her i The Scottish Patriotic association\nChow Chow, Sandringhara Loot Choo, has been voicing the national scnti-\nw.is marked \"reserve.\" , mont   regarding   the Borestone    at\n'  | Hannockburn and its claims    to   be\nMr. George Woolward, who for the   preserved from the encroachments of\nlast twenty-live years was the mace-\nbearer to the Windsor corporation,\nand who was a familiar figure in all\nthe state functions iu which the\nmunieiuality was concerned, died\nrecently.\n\u25a0lames and Annie Godfrey, man and\nwife, were lined at Wlilesdcn for using bad language. Only having .sufficient money between them to pay\none fine, the wile at once s;iid: \"All\nright, Jim. I'll do ihe time with a\ngood heart, like n mood wife si mild.\nSo limn, my Old dear, and look alter\nIhe kiddles until I come out.\"\nA woman who npji\nMniylelmne police cm\nmice from the poor box\nrecommendation from\nShe    was questioned,\nthat   she owed      the  la\nand intended     t<\nt  fo\nt the\nassist-\nhauded up a\nher landlord.\nit ml confessed\nid lord money,\nhim some     of\nwhat she expectoti to receive. Thu\nmagistrate ordered a policeman to\nInvestigate her circumstances.\nColor-Sergt. James Gregory, a\nCrimean hero who has died at Taunton, had seven sons and four daughters, of whom (en were six feet high.\nSix of the sons were in the army at\nthe same time. Queen Victoria, not\nlong before her death, sent him a\nletter expressing gratification with\nhis long service and the number of\nsons he had given to the army.\nTHE WINNIPEG DAILY FREE PRESS\nFOR       d\u00bb5   ^C       A\nONLY    *P0*LD    YEAR\nF. E. SIMPSON, Manager Herald\nthe miner, the builder, the tramway\npromoter, and the tourist who sharpens his dirk on it after the kissing\noperation is over.\nA mysterious case of poisoning is\nreported from Cumnockt, where Miss\nMcKerrow, niece of a retired farmer\nnamed Lennox, took ill on Friday\nevening after eating a piece of shortbread, and soon diet) in great agony.\nThe cake had been received anonymously by post, and appears to have\ncontained strychnine. A relative\nmimed Thomas M. Brown has been\narrested on suspicion.\nMr.   Bernard   Partridge.    In    his\n, Punch cartoon, deals picturesquely\nwith the incident of the Scots Greys.\nThe drawing Is entitled \"The Horse\nThief.\" Mr. Haldane., wearing a\nilmarnock bonnet, and mounted on\na grey horse, is galloping down the\nroad from Scotland to England.\nClose at his heels runs Lord Rose-\nbery In the uniform of a trooper or\nthe Greys, exclaiming: \"He's awa'\nwi' ma horse! An him a blither\nScot!\"\nThe Presbyterv of Tnverary entertained Rev. Neil McMichael, minister\nof Craigish, at dinner in the Argyll\nhotel, Lochgilphead, on the occasion\nof his jubilee as a minister of the\nChurch of Scotland Mr. McMichael, who was ordained hy the Presbytery of Kiniyre on November 2(1,\n1866, and who was inducted to his\npresent charge on July 25, 1860, was\npresented with an illustrated address\nami a silver lamp bearing an appropriate inscription.\nThe Middlehorough stipendiary magistrate in sentencing n man named\nPatterson to three months' hard\nlabor for stealing n bicycle which\nhad been left outside a cafe, commented strongly upon the practice of . \u25a0\nleaving machines outside shops, and I Major Houstoun and Mrs. Hour-\nsaid that in future cases of the kind   toun, of Johnstone Castle, are     at\nAt the close of the forciiooi\nvice recently, Rev.     Mi. Willi\niiu*     niLuml.cn*    of    Edzell\nchurch, electrified  Ins heaiei!\nli mating that evening services would\nIn- discontinued until  turthei   notice,\nand itt.ii- ihe congregation would have\nto consider how best to augment his\nstipend, which he deemed to be  con-\nIn.ibly  below  what   it ought  to he\na popular    holiday rosorl    Mko\nilzell.      The substance ol  the foliation  was that,  unless his stipend\nM Increased lie would only   preach\n\u25a0 sermon a week.\nUy the death of Mr. Imrie Bell at\nhis residence in Croydon there has\npassed away a well known Scotch\nengineer who was specially Identified\nwith bridge Work not only iu tho\nWest of Scotland, hut also in India.\nHe was born In Edinburgh seventy\nyears ago, and after being educated\nin the high school there served an\napprenticeship With a Leith engineer\nand millwright, being subsequently\narticled us a pupil with Messrs. Uell\nand Miller, a Glasgow firm of civil\ningliiccrs, of whioh he subsequently\nbecame the chief, lie was associated with several engineering works in\nthe i West of Scotland, notably with\nbridges, one of the latest and finest\nbeing that carrying the Great Western road over the river Kelvin, completed in the early tin's. He retired\nfrom business about eight years ago,\nand since then has resided in Croydon, where, after an illness of six\nweeks, he died on the 2lst ult.\nBy the death of Colonel Alexander\nWilson, of Bamiockhurii House, there\npassed away one of the great,\npioneers of the volunteer movement\niu Scotland, ami one whose Interest\nnml connection with shooting was of\n.iu international character. About\na year ago Colonel Wilson had a\nserious   illness,     uud although     his\nHung constitution enabled him to\npull through, In* never quite reeover-\nd his strength. His death occurred\nunexpectedly, however, for ou the\nprevious evening he had been enjoying\nthe company of friends in his own\nhouse. He was head of a large\nbwcod manufactory at Hannockburn,\nwhich has been iu existence for about\nISO years, and for a long period the\nWilson family were the makers ot\nthe tartans for the Scottish regiments. Colonel Wilson was connected with most of the local\nhoards, aud was a strong supporter\nof the Free Church. Banuockhuin\nHouse lias had many distinguished\nvisitors, and one of the rooms, ol\nwhich the colonel was genuinely\nproud, once sheltered \"Bonnie Prince\nCharlie.\" Not only in his own district, but throughout Scotland, the\ndeath of Colonel Wilson will be genuinely regretted. He was seventy-\nfive years of age, and is survived hy\na widow and grown-up family.\n\u2022 i ten yens of age at Florence in\n1858. He taught liei drawing, and\ni opitl in uftci years to nuke tie) his\nwiie. In 1872 she decided thai it\nwas impossible. Religious dlflereu-\nres weiu among the obstacles. She\n,fll into ill-health and died in 16.j.\nihe death oi Rosin was the greatest\n..n.'i oi Ruskin s life. He suffered\nmuch irom sleeplessness aud had un-\niiaturull) vivid dreams, lb- came\nuto contact with spiritualism, ami\nicUeved that lie Had ueUutl) sceu thu\nvim ol Rosie.\nTlir general report of Uie National\nll...thi b uispectois on the slate ui\nnational education during the school\nyeal li)05-li, opens strangely enough,\nwith tlw duel inspectors report on\nthu training colleges tor 11)04-5, says\nthe. Freeman u Journal, Dublin.\nWhy a uiue Book Issued m November\ncould nut bung the information it\ncontains up to Jul*, is not explained.\nTho report ui lilU-i-5 shows that the\ntraining colleges were still suffering\nfrom the low giade ui candidates now\nbeing attached to the service ol Irish\neducation. \"The failures ou the pan\nol the men were again very numerous,\" we icad, \"due largel) iu inferior candidates having lu be admitted,\" \"The number ui applicants\nfur admission, always comparatively\nlimited, was still further noticeably\nreduced, so thai lu some ut them\nall who i'a.-..-..-d the entrance examination had lo Uu taken and, iu others,\nseveral places were left uutilh-4.\"\n\u2022\u2022owing lu the rather low standard\not uttuinmeuts of the Kiug s scholars at entrance, it is impossible to\nspare more time lor their purely\nprofessional work (practice ul teaching without encroaching uu ihe time\nrequired for general culture.\" This\nis the effect oi the pulling down oi\nllie teachers' salaries.\nhe would order the parties to\nalt the costs of the proceedings.\nIRELAND.\nThe Golden Jubilee of the Right\nRev.   Mods.    MeCartun, P.P., V.O.,\nwas recently celebrated in Dromore.\nAddresses were presented, and subsequently the members of the socle-\nt ies who presented the addresses\nwere entertained to dinner I by the\nuionsiguor.\nWilliam Manna, a well known Belfast grocer, Was killed instantly\nwhile attempting to stop a runaway\nhorse. The galloping animal\nknocked him with great violence\nagainst an iron pole supporting the\ntrolley wire, inflicting terrible injuries upon him. Several other persons were injured before the .animal\nwas finally stopped.\nBananas grown in the Duke of\nManchester's gardens at Kylemore,\nCounty Galway, were on sale in the\nDublin fruit market recently. They\nare fully equal lu size to the Jamaica\nfruit.\nThe wives of two brothers named\nDonelly, of Droghoda, have each given birth to male twins. The\npaternal grandfather and grandmother and great-grandfather and\ngreat-grandmother of the twins are\nstill alive. The four boys aie to be\nchristened Matthew, Mark, Luke and\nI oh n.\nA strange will suit, which had occupied Mr. Justice Madden aud a\njury for four days, has just been\nconcluded In Dublin. Mis. McPar-\nlaud, widow of Terence McParhiud.\none of the leading merchants in\nNewry, sought to set aside his will,\nwhich, while leaving great sums to\ncharities and to friends and relations,\ncut her nff with a shilling. The\nevidence showed that Mr. McParland\nhad accused his wile ol misconduct,\nbut the widow declared that he was\nmad from jealousy. The jury found\nthat the husband's suspicions weiu\nwithout foundation, uml the will was\nset aside,\nMr.   John    Byrne,     the   Goodna,\nQueensland, centenarian, who celebrated his 108th birthday on June\n10, 1006, was horn in the Loughs of\nthe Seven Church, County Wicklow.\nand there is not the slightest doubt\nthat he is a marvel, says a writer in\nthe Queensland Times. He has'been\na resident of the Uedbank and Goodna districts lor over fifty-three years,\nhaving arrived in Moreton Bay in the\nship America on January 11, 1853.\nI called in to see the veteran].! little\nwhile hack. Fie was very feehlc, but\notherwise enjoying himself\u2014smoking.\nWho can wonder at him heinu feeble\nwhen he is\u2014108, not out! I wish\nmy old friend many happy returns ot the day. Two years ago\nMr. Byrne walked in the St.. Patrick's Day   procession in Ipswich,\npay   present at Cyprus, and arc taking an j distance of about two miles, and un-\nIinterest lu tlie condition of the come- Mil recently he   was one of the most\nI tery where many of the Black Watch active   members   of   Father Ilynes'\nFrederick Stratford, nineteen years sleep\u2014the first person Interred   there congregations at Goodna.\nold, a butcher's assistant, who   was  being Sergt, McOaw, V. C.    A pro-1 \t\ncharged at the Highgate police posal to build a house near the bur- Mrs. John La Touche, whose death\ncourt with embezzling \u00a32 18s. 7d. of lal place, which would have some- is reported from Dublin, in her\nhis employers money, pleaded that what destroyed the surroundings, 1ms eighty-first year, was the widow of\nhe had been eating \"more than he ln-eit nipped in the bud hy the gal- Mr. .John La Touche, D.L., of Harris-\ncould afford. He denied that he had lint enthusiast, who has purchased) town, Coun'y KHdare, and the\nbeen betting or drinking, and the the ground, and is to have it planted mother of a young lady, Miss Rose\nwith shrubs. Lucy    La  Touche,    who largely  in-\n\u2014\u2014 ffuenced Ruskln's later years and was\nAt the annual gathering of the a great sorrow in Ins life. Miss La\nFirst Lanarkshire Royal Engineers Touche is the \"Rosie\" of Buskin's\n(volunteers), when the prizes won \"Practenia.\" She was Introduced\nduring tbe year   wtift pitwnted   hi to Russia when gh# was a little girl\nPERT PARAGRAPHS.\nYou can't always tell whether a\nman is able lu,raise the wind by the\nimount ot blowing he does.\nA man can't help taking chances\n.oi net lines, because some lolks are\n\u2022anil \"easy marks.\"\nThe chronic toucher loves lo keep\niiis hand in\u2014ihe other fellow's\npocket.\nIt takes a lot of faith to make a\nwoman lecl bumble when she is wearing a new dress.\nTan seemed iu the harvest field\nis nol neailj so aristocratic as tan\nacquired on the goli links.\nTlie one-menl-a-day fad is never\npopular with the man who can afford\nhut one.\nA man with no music in his soul\nmay still run a phonograph hall Uie\niilglit because he dislikes the neighbors.\nIt is a strong-minded vegetarian\nwho does nol fall when the fried\nspring chicken is passed.\nIt may do all right tor a savage\nrace, but no refined nun will eat dog\nif lie knows it.\nWHO ARE you:\nOf course it riles you through     and\nthrough\nTo have a clerk get gay with you,\nV man you're certain cannot get\nOne-half'your salary, and yet\nHe acts   as   though  he owned      the\ntown\n\\nd has the nerve to call you down.\nBut don't let that yom temper mar,\nPerhaps.he don't know who you are.\nWhen the conductor on the train\nWill not allow you lo explain,\nRut wants to put the blame on you\nBecause he missed you going through\nAnd says    you tried to beat     your\nway\nAud didn't really mean to pay,\nDon't rise and throw bim iioiu    the\ncar;\nPerhaps he don't know who you are.\nWhen the policeman swings his club\nAnd   gruffly    says, \"Move on,     you\ndub,\nOr I will land you in the jug.\nDon't call him, then, a hired thug;\nDon't    answer him, \"The street    is\nfree,\nAnd part of it belongs to me,\nHut quickly hie yourself afar;\nPerhaps he don't know who you are.\nHow can the man with but two eyes\nKnow you are good and great    and\nwise?\nYou do not bring your pedigree\nAlong for every one to see.\nThe multitude can't understand\nIhul   once siKKik your hand.\nAnd that your father saw   the czar,\nPertiaps they     don't know who you\nare.\nHOW TO LIVE LONG.\nProfessor Boyd Lavnard, ol    London,    England's leading author     of\nks on hygiene, gives these twelve\n >s for those who desire to live   a\nhealthy and long life:\n1 Avoid every kind of excess, es-\npeeially in eating and drinking.\nIn. not live to eat, eat to live.\nSelect those aliments most suitable\nfoi nourishing the body and not\nthose likely to impair it.\n3    I k   upon ftesh  air as    your\ntiest   fri.-nd Inhale its  lite-giving\nixygen as much as possible during\nthe dav, while at night Bleep with\nthe bedroom window at the top for a\nspace of at least four or five inches.\nFollow this out even in the depth of\nwinter n i- one ol the great se-\ncrets of long life,\ni Be ' lean both in mind and\nbody. \"Cleanliness is next to\ngodliness \" it is a fortification\n.gainst disease,\n5, Worn not lllir grieve. This\nidvice may seem cold philosophy and\no be easier to give than to follow;\nnevertheless I have known persons of\na worrying disposition almost en-\ntirelv  break  themselves  of  it  by     a\nimnle effort of the will. Worry\nkills. ,    .   .\nti. Learn to love work and hate\nndolence. The lazy man never be-\n:omes a centenarian.\n7. Have a hobby. A man with a\nhobby will never die ol senile decay,\nle lias always something to occupy\ncither mind or body; therefore they\nremain fres-h and vigorous.\nS Take regular exercise in the\nopen air. but avoid over-exertion.\n9. Keep regular hours, and insure\nluffloient sleep.\niu. Beware uf passion. Remember that everv outbreak shortens lile\nto a certain degree, while occasionally it is fatal. ,\n11. Have nn object in lite. A\nman who has no purpose to live tor\nrarely lives long.\n12 ' Seek a good partner in lite,\nhut not too early.\nmagistrate declared that it was   the\n1 first, plea of overeating that he  had ,\nheard.     Stratford was remanded.       |\nIt was reported at a meeting ot tins\nScarborough Guardians that a   man,\nBOTH WENT.\nJohn Ingalls, the crop expert, had\nb(vn describing some of his foie-\ncasting methods.\n\"You see,\" he ended, laughing,\n\u2022'these forecasts don't seem so remarkable when you once know how to\nset about making them. The result, no doubt, is wonderful enough;\nyet the method ot obtaining it is\nsimple.\n\"Simple methods give always the\nbest results. You know the story\nof the parlor maid and the two\nyoung men?\n\"Wei!, a certain clever parlor maid\nhurried to her young lady one evening and said breathlessly:\n\"'Oh, Miss Fanny,'both young\nyoung gents you are engaged to has\ncalled, and they're in the parlor together, and somehow they've found\nout you've been false to each, and it\nlooks to me as if there's going to be\nsome  terrible  trouble.'\n\" What shall I do? What shall I\ndo?1 Miss Fanny moaned, as her\npowder puff dropped from her nerveless fingers.\n\" 'I'll fix it,' said the clever maid\nafter a moment of deep thought\n'I'll go and say you're crying your\neyes out because your pa has lost\nall his money, then you can keep\nIhe one that stays.\"\n\"'Good,  good\"   Miss  Fanny cried\n\"The maid withdrew. Some minutes passed. Then she returned with\na seared, awed face.\n\" 'Hoth gents are gone,' she said.\nVIGILANT BOBS.\nIn   the    barber shop   the scissors\nclicked merrily away, and the   barbel's dog lay on che floor close   bo-\nirdc the   chair.   looWng   up intently\nill    the time at   the   occupant who\n,vas having Ins hair cut.\n\"Nice dog,  that,\"   said the    customer,\n\"lie  is.   sit,\"   said   the  barber.\n*Hc seems   very   loud ol watching\n.ou CUt   hair.\"\n\u2022It aiu'i ih.it, si:.\" explained the\nbarbel, smiling. \"Sometimes l\nmake a mistake and take a Utile\naicce off ^ customer's ear'\"\u2014Ex.\nHOW HK GOT IN.\nU. Peter setUn1 at de gate;\nNigger passim by-\nit. Petei up an  sex ter him:\n'How did jet come ter die?'1\nGo ax de man whut belt de gua\nA pintin' at dat roose';\nlo ax de dog whut belt my loot,\nAn' wouldn't turn hit loos'!\"\nAn, so,\" St. Peter set ter him,\n\"Y\"ou wm kotvh in de ac'?\"\nDat nigger tnrnt an' looked ai him,\nAu   'spon's     \"Hit is a Iac'1\"\n'Down in de pit den you mus' go,\nFci stealm' uv dat hen!\"\nDat   nigger    scratch his haid right\nhard,\nSt. Peter had him den!\nBut d'reckly liftrn' up his arms,\nHe Hop 'cm on his side,\nAn' 'zackly like a roosier crow\nThree times out loud he cried!\nSi. Peter bur:g his haid wid shame-\nHe 'mtmbeied uv his sin,\nAn' grabhin' up a great big key,.\nUv let dat nigger in!\nA FEW STRAY SHOTS.\nMost every girl is warm-hearted in\nthe aunituer time.\nThe reign of the coquette is of few\ndays ai.d lull ul troubles.\nIf more men were sturdy oaks more\nwomen would be clinging vines.\nThe only thing more foolish than\n-Id leu*--;-, is the reading ol them.\nLooking at it the other way, the\n.ua is setting on some portion of\nBritish Columbia every hour in tbe\ntwenty-lour.\nThe proper place for a crook is in\na ^'traitjacket.\nKISSED THE HIRED MAN.\nA lady suspected her husband ol\nkissing the hired girl and resolved to\ndetect bim In the act. Cue evening\nshe passed quietly into tbe kitchen.\nThe lured girl was out and the kitchen dark. The jealous wile took a\nlew matches In her hand, placed a\nihawl ovei her head, as the hired\njirl ufit-n did, entered tire back door\nind immediately she was seized and\nkissed and embraced in an ardent\nmaimer. With heart almost burst-\nthe wife prepared to administer a\nterrible rebuke to the faithless\nmouse and tearing from his load\nembrace, struck a match and stood\nlace to face with\u2014the hired man,\nHURRAH FOR WIDOWS.\nTom\u2014I hear Fred is ruar:ir>d, I\nalways thought he was too timid tor\nnything ol that kind.\n.Jack\u2014Oh, he married a widow,\nTom\u2014A widow! Where did he\nmeet her?\nJack\u2014He didn't meet her at all.\nShe overtook him.\u2014Ex.\nMAIL CONTRACT.\nSealed tenders, addressed to the\nPostmaster General, will be received\nat Ottawa, until noon, on Friday,\nihe 8th day ol February, 1U07, for\nthe conveyance of His Majesty's\nmails, on a proposed contract for\ntour years, once per week each way\nbetween Cranbrook and Golden, from*\nthe 1st day of April next.\nPrinted notices containing further\ninformation as to conditions of proposed contract may he seen ami blank\nforms of tender may be obtained at\nthe post offices of Cranbrook, Golden\nand intermediate offices, and at the\noffice of the Poet Office Inspector.\nPost Office Inspector's Office, Calgary, Alta., Dec. 28, 1906.\nA. W. Cairns,\n41-St       Post Oilict Inspector. THE   CRANBROOK   HERALD\nAND STILL SOME\nWe still have a few  of these SNAPS at   prices\nbelow stated.\nThey are -join** fast.   \" ALL MUST GO.\"\nMEN'S $12.00 OVERCOATS for  $ 9.00\n14.00 \" \"     10.50\nrr'rus'i\nll      r          if     l\n(fiA\n\u2022'1          rfT\n1\n1\nuy\n1\n\u25a0ll 1\no\n15.00\n20.00\n30.00\nu\nIt\n\" 11.00\n\" 15.00\n\"     24.00\nBOYS' $ 9.00 OVERCOATS for\n10.00\nMEN'S    6.00 PEA JACKETS \"\nBOYS*     5.50 REEFERS\n4.50\n3.50\n5.00 MACKINAW COATS 4.00\n5.50 \" \" 4.50\n6.00 \" \" 5.00\n7.00 \" \" 5.75\n$6.00\n7.00\n4.75\n4.25\n3.75\n2.50\nMEN'S\nMKN'S    $2.50    STUB-PBOOF\nIfl'lililMfS fur        $1.75\nMKN'S    $3.25    STUB-PROOF\nRUBBERS for     $2.50\nMKN'S    $4.00    STUB-PROOF\nRUBBERS fur $3-25\nMUX'S    $,l.2S    STUB-PROOF\nRUBBERS for    $3.50\nHi )YS' $1.00 HEAVY RUBBERS\nfor        .75\nBl )YS' $1.25 HEAVY RUBBERS\nfur        .95\nMKN'S $1.75 LINK!) GLOVES\nfur    $1.20\nMKN'S $1.5H LINED GLOt\/ES\nKor     $1.00\nMKN'S $1.25 LINED MITTS\nFor .'..        -K\nMEN'S $1.00 LINED MITTS\nFor        .<>5\nMKN'S 75c LINED MITTS\nKor        .50\nMKN'S 600. LINED MITTS\nFor 25\nMENS' $1.50 LUMBERMEN'S SOX for\t\nMENS' $1.25\nMEN'S $1.00\nM EN'S 75c.\nMENS $8.00 SWEATERS for $2.25\nMEN'S $2.0(1 \" \"       >.50\n$1.10\n.95\n.75\n.60\nMKN'S $1.5ii SWEATERS for _   $1.15\nBOYS'     .65 \" \" -       .<0\nMEN'S $l.im SKATINti BOOTS for $3.00\nHOYS' $11.00 SKATINd BOOTS f\u201er $2.15\nThese Goods MUST BE SOLD before FEBRUARY 15th, Stocktaking Day. Make\nyour money work overtime by buying from a Thoroughly Reliable House Thoroughly\nReliable Goods bearing Fink's Thoroughly Reliable Guarantee.\nOur Goods are\nQUARANTtED,\nMONEY BACK\nYOU ARE\nSATISFIED\nDEFENDING KAIEN ISLAND\n(Victoria Times.)\nThe Colonist cannot underst a nd\nwhy the Grand Trunk Pacific people\nshould have conducted their negotiations with the government for the\nacquirement ut Kaien Island through\nintermediaries; but it intimates that\nthat is ol no concern to the public\nil the bargain was a good one iu the\ninterests ot the country. That is a\nvery convenient way ot disposing ol\na very disagreeable, not to say unsavory, matter. It is the only attempt we have ever heard made lo\nexplain why the Andersons and Lar-\nsen were commissioned by. tlie Me-\nBride government lo convey the harbor and tow unite ol Prince Uupert lu\nthe railway company at a profit lo\nthemselves uf thirty thousand dollars, a profit which would have been\nmuch larger if the Grand Trunk Pacific officials had been so easy to work\nas the government was.\nThe assertion that the Grand Truulj\nPacific Kailway company preferred to\nconduct their business through Intermediaries is intended to create Ihe\nimpression that Anderson *v L'o, approached the transcontinental railway)\nand were commissioned by the olli\ncials ol that company to acquire the\nterminus for them. This is an insinuation, we are sure, that Messrs.\nHays and .Morse will consider anything but complimentary. Whether\nihe Andersons lirst secured the property and then offered it to the railway company, or whether the Andersons managed to convince the railway company that, they had strong\nconnections and could exact special\ntreatment from the government, does\nnot matter a great deal. The important fact Irom the public point of\nview is that the Andersons uud Larson were the principals of the transaction. They acquired the land Irom\nthe government, the government by\nsuppressing all outside knowledge of\nthe order iu council for a year or\ntwo, until such time as the notorious\nsyndicate had staked most of the pub-!\nlie land adjacent to the port at\nwhich they knew the terminus would\nbe, proved in the most practical milliner probable that when the Andersons claimed they hail a control of\nthe strings which would secure thorn\npreferential treatment they were\nmaking no vain boast.\nThrough the government, which has\nnow assumed full responsibility tor\nthe  Kaien  island     affair\u2014and ' which\nhas admitted is indefensible bv\nthrusting away the principal actor iu\nthe deal\u2014cannot explain why the\nterminus was transferred to the\nGrand Trunk Pacillc through two\nsuch peculiar intermediaries, the public in genera! has had a fairly shrewd-\nidea in regard to all that, has been\ngoing on in the Lands and Works department since the late commissioner assumed control of it. Mr. Green\nhas probably been taught a very\nvaluable lesson by his experience.\nHut although one ol the transgressors lias been punished In the only\nmanner possible, it will not relieve\nthe others of their responsibility to\nsay that while the business was conducted in a manner that cannot be\ndefended, the province has not suffered at all, that although the price\nfor the land and the waterfront was\nlow, it must be remembered that the\ngovernment reserved one-fourth of all\nthe property for the benefit of the\npublic. The government did nothing\nof the kind. Tlie reserve was made\nby statute of the legislature. The\ngovernment could not have given\naway the portion of the property reserved by statute to the people if it\nhad tried: as it would assuredly have\ndone if its hands hair not been tied.\nIts care lor the Interests ol the\npeople was shown by the manner in\nwhich the water frontage was disposed ot. Premier McBride points\ntriumphantly to the provision iu the\ninstruments' of transfer which says\nthat the length of the water front\nblocks shall not he \"less\" than one\nthousand feet as proof of the transcendent wisdom of the government.\nThe blocks may be made from one to\nfive thousand feet in length under\nthis provision, but it was the evident\nintention to convey the impression\non the mind of the premier that under it the blocks would have to be one\nthousand feet or less, and that therefore the province would have ample\nopportunity for the selection ol its\nshare.\nIn whatever light this Kaien island\ndeal is regarded, whether we look at\nthe peculiar manner of its transfer\nor at the peculiar agency through\nwlilcrh it was transferred; whether\nwe consider the terms upon which\nit was conveyed to the band by the\ngovernment or the terms upon which\nthe hand conveyed it to the railway\ncompany, the transaction hears the\nclear impress or crookedness, dishonesty and intrigue. It is absolutely indefensible, antl no man or\nnewspaper imbued bv the desire to\nuphold only that which Is of good report in connection with government\nWill attempt to defend it. We cannot expect the ministers upon whom\nthe responsibility for this crime\nagainst the people must rest to acknowledge that It was an unclean\ntransaction; hut if thev are wise, and\ntheir organ has nnv particular desire\nto see them placed in the smallest,\npossible minority when the new\nhouse meets, they will avoid the\nsubject of Kaien island ns much as\npossible.\nB. C. WILL BUILD CARS,\nMILLION      DOLLAR      COMPANY\nORGANIZED IN VANCOUVER.\nVancouver, .Ian. 18.\u2014A new and\nimportant industry was launched hero\nto-day with a capital of a million\ndollars, under the name ot the\nB. C. Car Co. It's object will be\nthe building of shops for the construction of freight ears, etc., to fill\nthe great demand in this line. Tin\norganization includes A, C. Flumor\nfell, ,1. O. Woods, F. Buscombe,\nRobert Kelly and others, and Canadian and English capital is behind\nit. Located at the seat of raw\nmaterial, the new industry will fill\nlong felt, want of the railway's, and\nthe incessent public demands arising\nfrom car shortage.\nAs a result of the failure 'of the\nrailways to provide transportation,\nthe Hastings mill has now thirty\nmillion shingles on hand that cannot\nlie moved. The Hastings mill announces additions to its shingle mill\nnnd also the construction of a new\nsawmill on the inlet at a cost of one\nhundred thousand dollars, lo he\noperating is May.\nKILLED HIM\nFrederick Bolton, a\nLock-port   man. w a a\n& Btruok on the arm by* a\nPlymouth Rock rooster,\nand   neglected  the\nw >und-     Blood poinon\naet in and he died within a week.    The air in\nfull ot  disease genua   and\npoisonous microbes, and no\nop 'UHure.nocut.nocoldcrack\n\\v   la Bafe If neglected. J net think!   A box\n, \\\\   of 'An o Buk might have saved Bolton's\n\\ \\ \\  life] Zam Buk'sgerm-kUiintzpowernu\nl     been proved to ho greater than  that'\nof crude oarlHIo acid!   -Just imagine\nHiK'li power! Vol \/,iiiii-Buk is p'iiiuhhH'\nAppllo t to a wound or sore it first kills\nall w,-nil's and  prevents  blood poison\nsuppuration and festering.    Then its\nhealing  powers come   into\noperation mi* it builds up\n\u2014 ,lb       new healthy tissue. Whether\n7        on outs and wounds or on ul\n-s*w-\u00ab<d^       oera or diseased sores, such as\no, ss. un, etc., just as etttictive.\nHealing, soothing and antiseptic all in one,\nZAM-BUK  CURES   BLOOD  POISON\nKv.-n  wliuii   I.I I  poin-ii  Inn. abend*.   \u00bba\\   in,  ftuu-Hllk ll mill juM   -.-.\nefleelive, Miaa Smhlliiuti.u, ul lluiitsvillc, M-nt.), tmy*i :- \"1 had -. aealded\nhuh whinli went th.' wiontj waj mid buunii lo hwbII very badly. Thu pain fmni\nItwua terrible and when I went to thu uwtor ho said it wus bluod pol-mii, Fur\nto tuonilis I was very bad tvithit, I tried all aorta \u00ab>\u25a0 reniedltw, hul euuhl nut\nget .-I'M-. Ulan; nothing (.feme. One .h.\\ in the-Imuae of a friend Ztttu link\nwits recommended in inu On nu friend's recominundation I n*ipli\u00ab-.l some Ktiin<\nlink that aiiino night, but K wm more to pleaae her than heoaiiae I hud mueh\nfiitib in it. T<> ihj liiteiipeniiipi'lsu when I awakened iiexl inoiittiig my arm\nwhs nmolt .'tilti'i*. 1 thereupon obtained a supply of Zam-Buk and mntimteil\nwilh Old trenlmtmt regiihuly, In Hire weeka Ihe arm wan quite well, and 1\nI...*.** never fell am irnee ul pain from il alueo, li ix now some moutlia iluee it\nwan unrud,   u that it is cvlduut the cure is poi-ninnei't.\nSince that time my friund'a hiisl-nnd cut his arm.   Tint wound ulao turned\nI., blood [loison.    \/.am link way applied ami hi his case ulsu oompletoy euro.il\"\nWHAT ZAM-BUK CURES.\nFREE BOX\nSend ie stamp ami naiuo\nof this paper to \/am \u25a0 Hn k i'. i .\nToronto,  ami   fl'<'*'   trial  Iii.I\nwill be mailed you.\nMight have been saved by\nSi JSt\niCanadian Hotel!\nJg One of the pioneer hotels of Cran- J2\ng{ brook.   Warm rooms, good meals g|\n{-j and a bar stocked with the best \"3\n1 B\nIJoseph Brault, Proprietor!\nBt\u00bbsa&fS00ata@s\u00bb'SBi9&iaMHMisniK\nIX THE    SUPREME   COURT    OP\nHltmsil COLUMBIA.\nTIMBER NOTICE.\nIn Hie matter of the Companies Act\nand    Amendments\u2014-and\u2014In      tho\nmatter ol the Cranhrook Elcctrlo .\nLight Company, Limited.\nNotice is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to\nihe I luu. Chief Commissioner of\nLands and Works for a special Timber License lo cut and cany away\ntimber from the following described\nhinds, situate in South East K'ote-\nNotlee is hereby given that ap- commencing at the north-east cor-\npllcntion will he made to the Su-ncr of Harold Darling's timber\npromt- Court of British Columbia on license, thence east HO chains, thence\nMonday, the 1th day of February, south tit) chalis, thence west 80\n1007, at     the hour   of 10.30 o'clock, 'chains, thence north 80 chains to the\nin the forenoon, ill the Court lion\nVictoria, It. C, tor an order confirming the alteration made to the.\nMenornnduni of Association ol the\nabove mentioned Company by ihe\nspecial resolution of the above mentioned Company passed nt a general\nmeeting of the said Company held ou\ntbe 15th day of November, I'lOG,\nnnd subsequently unanimously continued at a meet inn of the shareholders of the Company, held on the 20th\nday of November, 1000.\nAnd notice is also hereby given\nthat all creditors who wish to object\nto the said petition must file their\nobjections with the Registrar of the\nSupreme Court of British Columbia\nat Victoria on or before the 1st day\nof February, 1007.\nVV. P. Curd,\nSolicitor for  \"The   Cranhrook  Electric Light  Company, Limited.\"\n43-3t\nAUCTION SALIC.\nOP     VALUABLE   HOTEL PURNI\nTl HE AM> EFFECTS,\nAT   MARYSVILLE, It. U,\nUnder and by virtue or the power\nof sale contained in a certain Lrusl\ndei*d made iu pursuance of the\n\"Creditors Trusl Deeds Act, LOO I,\nand ummdlng Acts\" and which will\nhe produced at the time ol sale,\nthere will he offered for sale hy public auction, on\nSATURDAY, THE 20TII DAY OP\n.JANUARY, 1007, AT THE\nHOUR OF ONE O'CLOCK IN\nTHE AFTERNOON, ON THE\nPREMISES AT THE FALLS\nVIEW HOTEL, MARYSVILLE,\nB. C, BY .JOHN HUTCHISON,\nAUCTIONEER,\nthe following property, namely:\nAll   Ihe  stock     iu    hade,      I \u25a0.,\ncigars, etc.    Bar    fixtures   ami tur-\nIlishlllgS in Ihe .said hotel, and also\nall furniture, cupels, liuilroom\nsuites, etc., therein, belonging lo the\nestate John Frederick Drlnglo,\nThe furniture, carpels, etc., to he\noffered lor sale nro of excellent quality, and have only been Iu use a\nshort time.\ninspection of tho above properly\nmay he made at any time ou the\npremises.\nTerms of sale: Twenty per cent\nof the purchase money to ho paid at\nthe time of sale, payment of bnlance\nto he arranged at time of sale.\nFor further particulars and     conditions of sale apply to\nALBERT   MUTZ,   FERNIE, B. C,\nAssignee,\nOr to   Harvey,   McCnrtcr   A    Mno-\ndonald,   solicitors     for   As-ignce,\nCranbrook, B.C. 43-ltt\nplace of     commencement,   coiilai.uug\ntil li acres, more or less.\n.las. Warnock.\nW. F. Quid, Solicitor, Cranbrook.\nDated at Cranbrook, B. C, this\ntwenty-eighth day ol November, A.\nI). 1900. 37-5t\nNOTICE.\nUul.lie notice is hereby given that\nthe British Columbia Southern\nRailway company, did, on the 2nd\nday of October A, D. 1000, deposit\nin Nelson Land Registry Office al\nNelson, in the Province of British\nColumbia, in accordance with the\nprovisions of the Railway Act,\n1003, plans, profile and book ol\nreference, as No. 521 \"Y,\" showing\nthe revised location of its Yahk\nbranch as located Irom Yahk on the\nsaid railway In the Province of\nBritish Columbia, to the International boundary, mile 0 to mile 8.57,\nto be built under authority of 02-03\nVictoria (l)om), Chap. 55, See. 2.\nDaled at Winnipeg this 27th day\nol Deccmbei A. D. 1900.\np. MoPhorson,\nAflat. Right Ol Way and Lease\nAgent.. 41 2t\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nEXCURSION RATES\nROSSLAND\nWinter Carnival\nFARE AND ONE-THIRD\nFOR ROUND  TRIP\nProm Revtlstoke, IVrnle mil\nall inlerniedliile anil liriinch\nline ,\u00ab>i.\u00bbts\nI in mile Keliruury   II U>  Hi\nLimit\u2014February 18.\nFor .li'iuili'il Information, n|i|.lytn\nj.ii'lll llyi'lilH.\nB. J. COYl.E      J. S. CARTER\nA.tl. I'. \u00bb.,\nVAN. llliVKIt\nI). I'. A ,\nNELSON, B.u.","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":"1907-01-24 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. 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British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Cranbrook Herald","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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