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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2016-08-30","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1911-06-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xkelownarec\/items\/1.0184944\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ^s^fi^ssm^s^^mssm\nt5T_.*B*'-.__r*_\u00bbe ,-rt -i.\u2014_ sss&a. jrzj^vsrt. ^^j__i*-^y-rrptfsSr\u00ab^\",\". sr y?jAWr_- rtKr-iw\n\"BSft\ntmgm&\n;\"^F7\n(-?      iiy^ 15*1911\nAdvertise\nAnd   the   world   is\nwith you;   Quit and\nyou stand alone.\nCirculation Highest,\nRates Lowest.\nTtTeGrch^rd Qrty  of\n;    3rLtl5hQolam}?im\u00b1.\nVOL. III.   NO 28.\nwm$\nJob Printing\nSpecial Facilities for\nEi e.c u t iin g High-..\nClass Half-Tone and\nGeneral Letterpress\nWork.\n.-*\nW\nKELOWNA. BRITISH COLUMBIA, THURSDAY. JUNE 8, 1911.\n$1.50 Per Annum.\nH_\nMeeting of City Council\nPool Room License   -   Suggestion to Establish Nursery for\nShade Trees in the Park\nA meeting of the city council\nwas held Saturday evening last with\na full attendance. The minutes\nwere adopted and the following\naccounts passed:\nF. W. Bowen. work in Park ...'.'$   8 75\nJohn Collins,       \u201e \u201e     12 00\nH. H. Millie, telephone, etc     14 15\nH. H. Millie, work on Harvey ave.,\nas per contract  275 00\nT. A. Woods, work in Park    63 60\nG. F. Teal, sal. for May  100 00\nMorrison-Thompson Go., supplies.. 165 15\nG. Dillon, teaining         ! 00\nW. F. Bouvette, \"Watering streets\n,      for May.........    30 50\nA letter was read from Mr.\nChas. Harvey, who stated that he\nhad made an examination of the\nfoundations of the Lakeview Hotel\nand had found same in a very unsatisfactory and unsanitary state.\nThe. letter was referred to the\nHealth Committee and License\nCommissioners.\nA letter was also read from the\nLayritz Nursery Co., offering to\nsupply shade trees fbr the use of\nthe city from 25c. up.\nMr. R. B. Kerr, who was present,\nsaid that some time ago he had\nappeared before the council with\na request that the license of Mr.\nJ. B. Whitehead of tlie Pool Room\nshould be cut down. There had\nthen been some talk of a by-law\nbeing 'introduced to regulate the\nlicenses in the city. He,Jtiad not\nseen anythingcof it yet. and as it\nwas getting near to the time when\n.the licenses wojiid\"be; again payable, and there 'Was hardly time to\nget a by-law through before; that\ntime, he would like to know what\nthe council would do in the mattter.\nMayor Sutherland said the council certainly: had, intended introducing a by-law, but in the pressure\nof other matters it had evidently\nbeen forgotten.\nAid. Jones suggested that the\ncommittee had better at once look\ninto the trade license by-law as\nthere might be other changes\nwhich would be needed.\nMr. Whitehead's-case, said Mr.\nKerr, was a special one, and he\nwould like to have something Bone\nbefore it became necessary to pay\nagain. It was a hardship on Mr.\nWhitehead that he should have to\npay $30 foe his license,\nr. Aid. Jones pointed out that .the'\nlicenses did hot expire until July\n15th, and there;was ample time to\nget a by-law through before that\ndate. j\nMr. Mansell, representing the\nHamilton Mschinsry Co., waited\non the council.   He stated that he\nhad made with the parties from\nwhom they had purchased the last\nlot of shade trees. Had any provision been made for supplying\nthe places of those which died.\nHe had noticed that quite a number\nof those recently planted were not\ncoming out. Would the city be\nexpected to pay for these ?\nAid. Dalgleish said that the\nunderstanding had been that the\ncity were not expected to pay for\ntrees which were not right.\nIt was likely, said the mayor, that\nthe money would be refunded for\ntrees which had died. Aid. Jones\nsuggested it might be advisable to\nget the street sprinkler to water the\ntrees occasionally.\nAid. Dalgleish announced that\ntwo or three teams had been busy\nduring the week with plow and\nscraper on Wilson street which was\nnow in fairly passable shape.\nAid. Dalgleish also brought up\nthe matter of the weigh scales on\nBernard avenue. He would like\nto see these removed before any\nstart was made at fixing up the\nmain street. They were quite an\neyesore in their present position.\nHe had taken the matter up with\nthe owners, Messrs. Crowley & Co.,\nand Mr. Buckland had stated that\nthey were ready to remove them\nif they had to. In that case, how-\nevei, they, would not instal them in\n\u2022ny other place. Mr. Buckland\nhad suggested that the city -purchase the scales and place them in\na convenient place for the public\nCoronation Day\nJune 22nd General Holiday\nThroughout Empire\nThe Royal proclamation making\nCoronation Day a public holiday\nreads:\n\"Whereas Thursday, the twenty-\nsecond day of June, in the year of\nour Lord 1911, has been fixed for\nour Coronation; and whereas we\nare desirous that the said day\nshould be observed as a day of\ngeneral thanksgiving and rejoicing\nthroughout Canada;\n\" Now, therefore know ye, that\nwe have--decided, by and with the\nadvice of our Privy Council for\nCanada to appoint and set apart\nThursday, the said twenty-second\nday of June, as a public holiday,\nto be observed as a day of general\nthanksgiving and rejoicing .by all\npersons throughout bur Dominion\nof Canada, all of which our Joying\nsubjects and all others whom these\npresents may concern are hereby\nrequired to take notice and govern\nthemselves accordingly.\"\nBotanical Survey of\nthe Province\nBy direction of Hon. Dr. Young\nminister of education, a government\nenterprise which'must have most\nimportant scientific and educational results will be shortly initiated.\nThis project is .. complete botanical survey of the province and will\ninclude the preparation of an herbarium for the provincial university at Point Grey. Mr. G. K. Mclean, C. E., landscape architect has\nbeen placed in in charge of the\nwork by the Government. He will\nhave the valuable, assistance in the\nfield of Mr. John Davidson, formerly assistant professor of botany\nin Aberdeen University, Scotland.\nPretty Wedding in the\nPresbyterian Church\nSPENCER-McCRAE\nKelowna Public School\nhad just sold a street sprinkler to\nthe Vernon council, and as he had\nheard that the Kelowna council\nwere considering the purchase of\na sprinkler and other road machinery, he would like to submit prices\nand particulars of his firm's manufactures. The matter was referred\nto the Board of Works.\nReferring again to the question\nof shade trees for the city, the\nmayor said they had some 30 acres\nin the Park,, part of which were at\npresent useless. It might be a good\nidea to utilize some of this land as\na nursery jbr shade trees. The\ncity might procure the trees quite\nsmall find let them grow inthe\nPark until large enough fojr use.\nThey had. plenty of water available\nand the trees could be left in the\nnursery rows until required. j\nAid. Cox agreed that this would\n' be a good plan and might save the\ncity considerable expense in the\nfuture. Shade trees, said the mayor\nwere different from fruit trees in\nthat they-required to be headed\nhigh. Imported stock was often\nfumigated so much that when -the\ntrees did start to grow, they often\nstarted near the ground, and thus\nquite a time was lost before they\ncould be allowed tb head out.\nIt was decided to refer the suggestion to the Park Committee ior\nconsideration.\nWhile on the question of shade\ntrees, said Aid. Cox, he would like\nto ask what arrangement the city\nuse.\nAid. Jories suggested that it might\nbe a good thing for one of the\nlivery and feed stables to acquire\nthem. . In most towns the livery\nstable had such-a convenience.:\nSome discussion took place on\nthe best location in which to place\nthe scales on their removal from\nthe main street. A resolution was\npassed that the owners be requested to remove them, the question of\ntheir disposal being left over for\nthe present.\nA. report was passed from the\ncity assessor on the extension of\nSt. Paul street through to Bernard\nAve., and through the south 81 feet\nofblock'38 map 362. The .estimated cost of the extension was\n$3,000. \u201e\nFormal resolutions were then\npassed \"that the council deem it\ndesirable to make the above extension by way of Local Improvement, and that the extension be\nadvertised as required. .\u201e w __:\n~ Aid. Copeland reported that the\ncommittee had now got -the Park\npretty well cleaned up. They had\nburnt over all the sloughs and\nmade improvments. It was not\nnecessary to spend much more\nmoney this year except in cutting\nthe grass. He suggested that the\ncouncil visit the park to inspect\nthe work which had been done.\nThe meeting then adjourned until Saturday, June 10th.\nLacrosse Schedule\nFollowing is the schedule bf the\nValley league for the forthcoming\nseason:\nJune   I   KeTowna v. .Vemon\u2014Verflon.\n\u201e    7  Vernon v. Armstrong--Armstrong\n\u201e   15   Vernon v. Kelowna\u2014Kelowna.\n\u201e 20 Armstrong v. Kelowna\u2014-Kelowna\nJuly 'I    Kelowna v. Arm.\u2014Armstrong.\n\u201e   12   Kelowna v. Vernon\u2014Vernon.\n,,; .19.  Armstrong'v.-yerhpi^-Ve\u00bbnoa.v\n\u201e 27 Armstrong v. Kelowna--Kelowna\nAug. 2   Kelowna v. Arm.\u2014Armstrong.\n\u201e . 9 Vernon v. Kelowna\u2014Kelowna.\n\u25a0 \u201e 16 Armstrong r. Venten\u2014Vernon.\n..,.\u201e   23   Vernon v. Armstrong--Armstrong\n7 The second match in the above\nschedule was played at- Armstrong\nyesterday, resulting in a win for\nVernon by 4 goals to 2.\nThe Kelowna team has arranged\nto play an exhibition game with the\nPenticton \u2022 boys this afternoon at\nPenticton. They ate making the\ntrip in L. Hayman s boat.\nBoy Scouts Capture\nHold-up Man\nWho Shot Red Deer's Chief \"\nof Police\nHONOR LIST FOR MAY. 1911.\nSenior IV. \u2014 Winnie Jones.  Will\nMcKeown,   Bernard McKeown,\nStafford Cox.\nIntermed.\u2014IV.\u2014Annie McLennan,\nEverett Faulkner.\nJunior IV.\u2014True Davidson, Louie\nEvans, Ruby Raymer.\nSenior III.1\u2014Dorothy Evans, Willie\nBradley, May Wilson. ,\u00bb\u00bb\nJunior. HI.\u2014Dorothy Forrest. Mabel\nFrench, Violet Tutt.\nSenior II.\u2014Geo. Sutherland, Vivian\nJones,  Norman  DeHart,   Mack\nCopeland.\nJunior II.\u2014Geo. Pettigrew, Marsh\nDavidson.    Judson    Copeland,\n. Alma Wilson.\nSr. I. (A)\u2014Terence Crowley, Emma\nRutledge.     Clifton     Ferguson.\n'   Evelyn Fletcher.     , ' ^\nSr.1. (B)-Ray ElliotV Vera Law-\nson, Dorothy Francfc, Kathleen\nMcKenzie, Marian Hinaley, equal\nJunior I.\u2014Lloyd Day, Eileen, Pearl\nDowning, Eva Collins.\nSr. 2nd Primer \u2014 Harrys Bawtinheimer, Henry Tutt, Jack Davy,\nLizzie Wilson.\nJr. ,2nd Primer\u2014 Emile Marry,\nAnnie Wilson, Clarence Josselyn,\nGladys Hall.\nSr. 1st Primer \u2014 Violet Dillion,\nBessie Haug, Muriel Scott, Kathleen Hinks.\nClass D\u2014Willie Birch, _ Winnie\nLangley, Alma Bawtinheimer,\nLeslie Mawhinney, Martha Burn-\nside.\nA very pretty wedding\u2014the first\nto take place in the new Presbyterian church\u2014was solemnized last\nTuesday. The contracting parties\nMr. W. Crichton Spencer, brother-\nin - law of Dr. McNaughton, and\nMiss Elstet McCrae, lately arrived\nfrom Glasgow, Scotland. The\nbride was supported by her sister\nMiss Kathleen McCrae, as bridesmaid, and Mr. G.'Stiel], cousin of\nthe bridegroom acted as best man.\nThe church was handsomely decorated with ferns and white flowers\nand a full choir under the leadership of Mr. J. N. Thompson were\npresent, with Mrs. F. Davis at the\norgan.\nPrecisely at 2 o'clock, the bride\nwho was prettily, attired in cream\nsatin with pearl trimmings, and\nlace scarf, entered the church on\nthe arm of her father, the organ\nmeanwhile pealing forth the strains\nof Mendelssohn's 'Wedding March*\nThe choir then sang \" The Voice\nthat Breathed O'er Eden,\" the congregation standing meanwhile.\nThe knot was tied \u25a0 by ' the Rev.\nA. W. K Herdman after the ritual\nof the church of Scotland.\nAfter the benediction, a handsome Bible was presented by the\nclerk of th* session in commemoration of this being the first wedding\nto take place in the. new church,\nand appropriately referred to by\nthe pastor.\nA move was then made to the\nvestry where the signing of the\npapers took place.\nAfter the service a reception\ntook place at the home of Dr. Mc-\n!.Naughton, the happy coupl* leaving later by automobile for Vernon,\nen route for the coast, where the\nhoneynioon will be spent\nMr. and Mrs. Spencer on their,\nreturn will take up residence on\nthe K. L O. Bench, Where a new\nhouse is rapidly approaching completion pn Mr. Spenser's property\nthere.\nBig Sawmill Fire\nat Revelstoke\nThe    Bowman   Lnmber  Company's plant and mill at Revelstoke,\ntogether with between 600,000 and\n700,000 feet of storage logs went\nup in smoke last Tuesday night in\none of the most spectacular fires\nthat ever visited the pity.   Strenuous efforts  were-made to  keep\nthe fire from spreading among the\nlogs and dry timber, which were\npiled up around the building,  but\ndespite all attempts fires started to\nright and left, and while the firemen were busy at these the flames\ngained such headway among the\nlogs which were piled  thirty  or\nforty feet high, that it was impossible to quench them.\nThe mill and plant are valued at\nfrom $40,000 to $50,000, and employed a.force of between fifty and\nsixty men, as well as a large num-,\nber of cruisers who will be temporarily thrown out of employment\nWhether the Dominion Sawmills &\nLumber Co., Ltd., which recently\nabsorbed the Bowman Lumber Co.\nwill rebuild is a. question. The\ndamage is said to be fully covered ~\nby insurance.\n5<\n*il\nExpress  Rate\nReductions\nMr. Cross, of the Vemon road,\nhad the misfortune to lose a valuable horse this week. The animal\nwas out at pasture, and put its foot\ninto a hole in the ground, breaking\nthe limb. The horse, which was\none of a team valued at $600 had\nto be shot.\nMrs. P. Dumoulm left Monday\nmorning for a visit to Hamilton,\nOntario.\nTwo men were sent up to Kamloops during the weelp for supplying liquor to interdicted peisone.   .\nMr. and Mrs. D. Brown moved\nout today, having rented a small\nhouse for the summer near Crawford's Fajls.\n, The Fire Brigade war canoe\ncrew are bent on carrying off the\nhonors at this season's regattas.\nThey are putting in a good deal of\npractice and are rapidly getting\n{into shape.\nMr. George Bell. Chief of Police\nof Red Deer, Alta., was shot by a\nmasked highwayman last week\nand may die. George Munro, a\ntailor, and a printer named Grant\nwere on their way home when a\nmasked man poinded a gun at them\nand ordered them to hold up their\nhands. They did so. * The police\nchief came on them suddenly and\nmade a daah^at the robber, who\nturned and fired, the ball going\nthrough-the officer's abdomen.\nWithin six hours of the shooting\nthe boy scouts of the town rounded up Arthur Francis Kelly and\nthe police think they have their\nman.\nAfter a visit from the Rev. J, W.\nAitken. Kelly admitted his guilt\nand penned a letter to Chief Bell\nasking his fogiveness, saying he did\nnot mean to shoot him, but only\nfired to scare him.\nATTENDANCE\nNo. on roll Average\nDiv.  I.        26 24.40\n\"   II.       42 37.81\n\"   IU.       40 29.95\n\"  IV.      45 36.73\n\"   V.       39 30.14\nGreat Waterways\nTangle Gets Worse\nTotal_,.. _!92159.03\nAttendance Percentage\u201462.8\nLaw s Delays in Spain\nSpain may lay claim, surely, to\nthe most tardy justice in die world.\nWhile Admiral Cervera was in\ncommand of the squadron in Cuban\ntyeters, a commander and a lieutenant had a- dispute on one of the\nSpanish warships. The lieutenant\nwas promptly locked up, transferred to Spain and for twelve yean\nhas been waiting for his trial to\nbegin, in the military prison of\nMadrid. The first sittings have\njust been held.\nThatthe Doukhobors tntend to\ntrek to British Columbia, leaving\nnothing behind them but their\nreputations, is shown by the appearance of an advertisement asking for bids for the purchase of\ntheir brickyards at Yorkton, Sask.\nThe plant is a large one, with a\ncapacity of 50,000 bricks per day.\nA special dispension lias been\nissued by the Pope for Roman\nCatholics in the British Empire, removing the ban against eating meat\non Friday, June 23. on account of\nth= coronation festivities.\n, The Canadian Mineral Rubber\nCompany was recently awarded\nthe contract for thirty-six miles .of\nstreet paving in Victoria, the largest\nindividual contract of this nature\nwhich has ever been awarded.\nThe company expects to have six\nhundred men on its Victoria payroll, with a wage disbursement of\nat least $3,000 per day, within the\nnext few weeks, and to complete\nita undertaking within one year.\nSix hundred medical graduates\nof McGill University are in Montreal\nta ing part in the opening of the\nnew million dollar building of the\nmedical faculty. His excellency\nEarl Grey performed the opening\nceremony.\nClaims for damages aggregating\nmore than $2,000,000 \u00abtfe being\nprepared for filing against the\nProvince of Alberta in connection\nwith the Alberta and Great Waterways case. The whole> matter gets\nmore and more complicated. At\npresent the province is suing the\nRoyal Bank for fhe \u00a36,000.000 of\nA. and G. W. money deposited\nwith. it. It has also taken action to\nget possession of the remaining\n$1,400,000 deposited with other\nbanks. So far as can be seen at\npresent, the struggle'will be a long\none, especially with the added\ncomplications.\nThe officials of the transportation >\ndepartment of the Canadian Manu-^ Ay> ,'\nfacturers Association have received;?* *f> \\\na notification from the DpminionV7\"7 y\nRailway Board that the schedule of \"\u00b0'\nminimum tariff charges h^been^ yyt\napproved. HTiis schediie twill be . '^jjj\nforwarded to the\" companies -andr^,,7|\nto the association at-once, ilttake* '**\nin^H weights for 100 pounds and'-\nless- \"This makes it ettvef about<-\n95 percent of the express business *\nin Canada, as the larger portion qf ^>\nthe exprese matter ranges frbm five\nto twenty-five pounds. The rates\nare graduated on distance \u2022 and\nweight. Special rates1 are' wiped\nout andN reductions are- made\ngeneral te-.go into effect Jan. I.\nNew Gold Coins to\nbe Issued Shortly\nThe Canadian Mint will, in the\ncourse of a short time, turn out five\nand ten dollar gold pieces* for circulation. Designs are now being\napproved by the imperial authorities, and as soon as approval is received the coins will be minted.\nThe Yukon and White pass railway is dropping money at the rate\nof $100 every day for failing to\ncomply with an order of the railway commission, to cany out which\nthey were given until June 1st or\nsubmit to the above fine. The\ncommission ordered the company\nto reduce its rates between Skacp>\nway and White Horse, and to file\na new tariff before June 1st\nThe first trip of the new \" Vancouver express,\" from Toronto to\nthe Pacific Coast withput changd\nwill be made tomorrow.\nGlasgow University has conferred\nthe degree of LL.D. upon Sir Wilfrid Laurier and other representatives of the overseas dominions.\nHuge B. C\nLumber Combine\nA huge lumber merger is under\nway at Cranbrook. English capitalists, it is understood, are arranging\nto acquire the Fast Kootenay Lumber Co., the Baker'Lumber Co.,\nthe King Lumber Co\" the Standard\nLumber Co., the Rock Creek Lumber Co., and other concerns, with\nhead quarters at or near Cranbrook.\nIt is said that the.- interests seeking\nto acquire these lumber companies\nhave a working capital of $20,-\n0u0;0G0rwd^ifthendeai is^puV\nthrough they purpose establishing\na couple of hundred retail yards on\nthe prairie.\nsi\n^\u25a0m r\nSouth African Expert to\nInspect B.C. Diamond\nMines\nMr. G W. Thompson, a diamond\nexpert of Kimberley, South Africa,\nhas come to British Columbia and\nwill make an exhaustive examination of Olivine Mountain, in the\nSimilkameen district Where diamonds have been found.\nSince  die1 announcement   was\nmade by Mr. Chadee Camsell that - v c\ndiamonds had been found in rock' \"^. j.\nfrom Olivine Mountain, a great deal .<   ''\nof interest has been taken in thet,, ;,?\ndistrict   A short time ago; it wis ;*t]\nstated that the diamond expert of X.yy\\\nTiffany's, New ; York,   had   pro- *\u00a3\u00a3$\u00a3\nnounced    the   British   Columbia\nDiamonds equal to any in quality.  . (t, .\nMany claims were  located, ijt.]''Xf^\nOlivine Mountain, and excitement' f?$a\nwas caused in Princeton when il >Bll\nbecame known that Mr. ThomDiMMj.. ''\nhad came half round the earth to;\ninvestigate the discovery.   His re-      ^\nport will be awaited with interest \"\u2022m'tm\nBIRTHS\nPOOLE\u2014On Sunday June 4tlw to , ^\nthe wife of A. Poole, a SK>m. -' a.\n\"It The Orchard Citq Record.\nf huradaij, Jun\u00bb 8\nThe Kelotona Land\nand Orchard Co.,\nLIMITED.\nRESIDENTIAL LOTS\nIN THE CITY\nCadder Avenue       Abbott Street\nWillow Avenue\nFIVE ACRE LOTS\nWITHIN ONE MILE OF CITY '\nLIMITS\nOn Easy Terms\nTEN ACRE LOTS\nON THE BENCH\nUnder Irrigation and Domestic Systems\nCALL OR WRITE\nK. L. 0. Co.'s Office, Keller Blk.\nSUMMER SPRAY\nNICO-SOAP\nKills instantly, Green  and  Black _<4phis,\nThrip, Caterpillars, Bark Lice and Scales.\nPut up in  lib. tins, all ready for use.   No   trouble\n*      . to prepare.\n\u00ab_> 11  i\nDOId   Dy~\nTHE MORRISON-THOMPSON\nHARDWARE Co., Ltd.\nThe Cleaning Device for Every Home.\nHIOCITI I 'C      \" Cyco\" Ball Bearing\nDltDOlliLJ-i O    CARPET SWEEPER.\nWeighs but 5J pound*, opermtet by m mere touch, clean*\nthoroughly without injury to carpet* or rug*, taiie* no duit,\nalways ready, no burden to carry from room to room, and i* the\nonly efficient cleaning apparatus that i* offered at a price within\ntha purchasing power of everyone.\n. BISSELL'S Ball Bearing Sweeper excel*' all other cleaning\ndevice* in the work it doe* in the sewing room, dining room, or\nwherever there is a miscellaneous lot of litter to gather up.\nThe \"BisselT pick* up without effort what othe?\ncleaner* cannot gather, such a* lint. Urge crumbs,\nmatches, thread*' ravelling*, scraps of paper and  cloth,\n,etc\u201e etc.\nThe \"Btuell\" gives the maximum sweeping efficiency al the minimum cost.\ni\n\"CycO\" Ball Bearing \"American Queen.\" - H25\n\u201e        \u201e \u201e   Grand Rapid*, nickel - $3:75\n\u201e    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022\u00bb\u2022, ,\u25a0;..\u00bb     \u00bb        \u00bb    \"WW1 -*3,25\nCyco Bearing, Universal     -   -   -   -   -   - $3.00\nKELOWNA FURNITURE CO.\nTown and Country\nMr. N. D. McTavish returned\nMonday from Vancouver.\nExaminations for McGill matriculation start next Monday. The\nlocal examiner is the Rev. D. J.\nWelsh. Four candidates are writing, two in Kelowna, and two from\nouteide points.\n., Mr. and Mrs. Downing left Tuesday morning last for Indian Head.\nThey will be absent for three or\nfour months.\nMr. Robertson and daughter and\nMrs. Jas. Harvey, sr., left Monday\nfor Indian Head en wute for Ontario.\nA big consignment of machinery\nhas just been received by Messrs.\nDalgleish & Glenn for the South\nKelowna Land Co. The shipment\nincludes a twenty horse power\nportable gasoline engine, a rock\ncrusher, cement mixer, and pumping plant. These are being moved\nout this week for use in the company's irrigation construction work.\nThere will be no local telophone\nservice^next Sunday owing to the\nfact that some alterations are being made at the -central office. A\nnew switch-board is being installed\nwhich, by enabling a second operator to be employed, will do much\nto relieve the congestion which is\nat present experienced during the\nbusy hours of the day.\nMr. J. S. McDonald, general inspector of Government Telegraphs\nis in town again this week. He\nstates that he has taken up the\nmatter of night lettergrams *.vith\nhis department and has every\nreason to believe that Kelowna\nwill be granted that privilege.\nMrs. W. T. Ashbridge will receive on Wednesday next the 14th\ninst. for the last time this season.\nThe W. C. T. U. will meet next\nTuesday afternoon, June 13th in\nthe Baptist church. All members\nand visitors will please remember\nthe date. Fruit, flower, and delicacy mission work will receive\nspecial attention at this meeting.\nD. H. Rattenbury has sold to\nRembler Paul, Esq., that fine 10-\nacre orchard on K. L. O. bench\nformerly owned by A. E. Ba3'ley\nat a handsome figure. Mi. Paul\nhas recently returned from a tour\nin Washington and Oregon and\nreports that orchard properties in\nthose districts are selling as high\nas $3000 per acre.\nIn connection with the Farmer's\nInstitute, a lecture is to be given\non Monday evening, June 19th in\nthe Ellison district school house by\nMr. J. R. Terry, the provincial\npoultry expert, ah \"Practical Poultry Keeping.\"\nMrs. D. McMillan returned Tuesday from Greenwood, where she\nhad been accompanied by her son\nJack, to attend the funeral of her\nsister. .\nMr. John E. Todd has been\nawarded the contract for the construction of the plank sidewalks\nfor which tenders were invited a.\nweek or two ago.\nMr. Baker, of the Vernon Fruit\nCo. came down Tuesday to renew\nacquaintances in readiness for the\nseason's operation. He says things\nare looking particularily bright,\nwith good prospects for a big vegetable crop.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Armstrong and\ndaughter left Monday for Winnipeg\narid the east. They were accompanied by Mrs. R. F. Morrison and\ndaughter, who will spend the\nsummer iii Eastern Canada. Mr.\nArmstrong will return the early\npart of July. Mrs. Armstrong and\nMrs, Morrison will not return until\nfall. Mr. R. Morrison went as far\nas Sicamous, returning Tuesday.\nKelowna. will entertain Vernon\nlacrosse boys here next Thursday,\nJune 15th, when they are confident\nof being able to reverse the score\nof the last match.\nMr. W. R. Trench journeyed to\nArmstrong or. Wednesday to\nreferee the match, Armstrong vs.\nVernon.\nMr. D. H. Rattenbury, has a few.\nchoice lots left in that very desirable\nsub-division of his, directly opposite\nthe residence of Mr. D. Lloyd-Jones\non Ethel street, which he is offering\non easy terms. -Following are\namong the number who have purchased, although on the market\nless than two weeks: Mr. D. Lloyd-\nJones, Mr. I. Mawhinney, sr., Mr.\nD. D. Campbell, Mr. John M.Crbft,\nMr. John Bitten, Mr. D. B. Smith,\nMr. Wriri. Latigley and Mr. Cdlin.\nThe uniform success that has attended\nthe use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cfiolera\nand Diarthaia Remedy ha* made it a\nfavourite everywhere. It c*n always be\ndepended upon,   for sale by all dealers.\nIDEAL CITY.\nWonderful  Changes   Predicted  By  an\nEnglishman  of  Note.\n\"Light and energy will be conveyed\nby electricity. Gasoline and oxygen\nwill supply heat. Liquid air will keep\nup refrigeration in every larder. In\naddition to heat' radiators there will\nbe cold radiators, which, will enable\neach house to! be kept at the required\ntemperature.\"\nSuch is the beginning of some most\ninteresting predictions concerning our\nfuture .that were recently made by Eugene Hanard at the international town\nplanning conference held in London,\nEng. Mi. Hanard'a forecast of what\nthe ideal city of the coming years will\nbe like is well worth reading, even\nthough one may be a trifle skeptical\nconcerning some of the great things\noutlined.\n\"By this power,\" he declares, referring to control of temperature in\nour dwellings, \"it will be possible to\nprovide in each house one or more\nhealth chambers closed by close fitting double windows and doors in\nwhich the overworked occupant on\nhis return from town will find all the\nhygienic conditions which now he can\nobtain only by taking an annual holiday.\n\"Glass verandas of various shapes\njoined together and with covered footpaths, according to standard models,\nwill shelter pedestrians against rain,\nand the normal height of buildings\n\u2022\u00bbwill be exactly the width, of the street.\nThe roofs of houses will be platforms\nupon which small flower beds and verdant shrubberies could be laid out, as\nthey would be the landing stages for\naeroplanes.\n\"When this progress shall have been\naccomplished tlie physiognomy of\ntowns will be changed. All .terrace!\nwill have become landing stages for\nflying automobiles. Aviators will be\nable to fly from one terrace to another,' starting and landing as they please.\nThe natural consequence of this new\nstate of things will be that each\nbuilding will have to be furnished\nwith big elevators capable to raising\nmachines when-they are ready to start\nand taking them back to. the garage\non their return. Houses of this description will also be used to house\nmotor cars- s\n\"Finally the town of the future will.\nbe traversed by large radiating thoroughfares, occupied partly by raised\nplatforms continually, moving, which1\nwill insure rapid communication between the different ones. These plat,\nforms will be terminated by large re-,\nvolving crossways at the intersection\nof the main roads!. Large,parks and\nflower gardens as residence and-pleasure resoTts will be laid out in various\nparts of the town.\"\nMatrimonial Catechism.\nQuestion\u2014What is marriage?   ;\nAnswer\u2014Marriage is an institution\nfor the blind.\nQ.\u2014Why do -some people never,\nmarry?     -\nA.\u2014Because they do not believe in\ndivorce.\nQ\u2014When a man thinks seriously of\nmarriage, what happens?\nA.\u2014He remains single.\nQ.\u2014Should a man marry a girl.for\nher money?\nT   A.\u2014No. But he should not let her\nbe an old maid because she's rich.\nQ.\u2014When the minister says, \"Do\nyou* take this woman for better or for\nworse?\" what does he mean?\n' A.\u2014The bridegroom's family construe it one way, and the bride's family interpret it another. It is very\nsad.\nQ.-^-When a man says he can manage his wife, what does he mean?\nA,\u2014He means that he can make\nher do anything she wants to.\nQ.\u2014When a child is smart and\ngood, to whose family is it due?\nA.\u2014To the mother's.\n: Q.\u2014When a child is bad and stupid,\nlo-whose family is it due? -'\nA.\u2014We refuse to answer.\n7Q.\u2014Is it.POBsible for a married man\nto be a fool without knowing it?\nA.\u2014Not if his wife is alive.\nA Thirst For the\" West.\nTha* the glamor of the \"Wild \"West\"\nstill sways the youthful mind is borne\nout by a remarkable story told at Bristol oae day lately when Thomas Burt,\nseventeen, who said he was from Lon:\ndoii, was remanded oh a charge of\nwandering with a boy of fifteen. A\npolice officer said lie fouud the lads\nwearing spurs, one having his.fixed,\nupside down. They said \u2022 they were\nhorse trainers, und were going for two\nhorses they had bought. Eaoh had\nan.ftirgun, revolver in case, bowie\nknife, masks, und a complete outfit of\nhighwayman, and \"penny dreadfuls.\"\nThey said they were going out to the\nWild We&t and had equipped themselves with money stolen in .London.\nCost of British Elections.\nThe recent general elections in Great\nBritain and Ireland cost $8,760,000.\nThe cost to the candidates wafe 16,481,-\n910. In addition, there were extraneous expenses footing up close to |2,-\n500,000. Nowadays numerous societies\nand leagues, such as the; Free Trade\nUnion, the Tariff Reform League and\nsocieties specially advocating this and\nthat measure, send out battalions of\nspeakers, engage halls and flood the\ncountry with leaflets and posters.\n4    Might Have Been.\nin honor of the eventful day of\ngraduation from, a cooking school, she\ngot:up &Utt\\e Spread.       J\n\"Yes, I've got the loveliest diploma,\" cried the fair graduate. .\"It's\non sheepskin parchment, with a big,\ngold seal. I cooked that dish you are\nejting.  Now, just guess what it is.\" ;\n\"Is it---or\" the young, oynic paused\nimpressively, \"u it the diploma,\nPeggy?\"\n.-\u2014\u25a0.HI.. ,.     ,|, |    ,    ..      \u201e I.    |    ,4-\nNickel Theatres Get Pipe Organs.\nIn the Northwest moving picture\nhouses are becoming large purchasers\nof pipe organs for use in their establishments. ' A company recently installed eight pipe organs in the five\nand ten-cent houses in one city.       \u2022\u2022\u25a0\nSoon Burst.      . '\nLots of people nre bubbling over\nwith enthusiasm but bubbles don't\naccomplish much.\nWe Beg to Announce\nTo the people of Kelowna and Surrounding districts that we have\nsecured the Agency for the following lines:\nTHE CHAS. FAWCETT Mfg. Co., of Sackville, N.B.,\nmakers of the Famous \"Peerless,'' \"Victor\" and\n\"Victoria\" Steel Ranges.\nMARTIN SENOLIR Paints and Varniihes, guaranteed\n100 per cent, pure\nPARKYTE  SANITARY  CLOSET   and   ROWE\nSANITARY LAVATORY.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINES and attachments.\nNo. trouble to show our Goods and give Prices.\nSatisfaction Guaranteed or Money Back is our motto.\nE. C SCOn & Co.\nKELLER BLOCK,   KELOWNA.\nR. A. COPELAND\nS. C. RICHARD, D.V.S.\nKelowna Livery\nAND\nHORSE EXCHANGE\nA good supply of work\nhorses, driving and saddle\nhorses always on hand for\nsale.\nWe guarantee every horse\nsold as represented.\nWe are prepared to pay\ncash prices for good sound\nyoung stock.\nOur Livery is complete.\nGood horses and equipment.\n\u25a0'.-\u2022  Phone 25.\nLeon Avenue, Kelowna.\n.r\nLarge Quantity of\nCOTTONWOOD FOR SALE\nIn ten cord lots or over.\nW. HAUG - Kelowna, B.C.\n 7. . :-    <Phone 66\t\n, .\nJ. M. CROFT\nBootmaker.\nAll kinds of Repairs\nBERNARD AVENUE,\nKELOWNA.     .\nKELOWNA WEST BANK\nSTEAM FERRY\nPrices Quoted to Any Point\non the Lake\nFerry to Bev Creek every Friday.\nL HAYMAN\nBox 68   - -   Kelowna, B.C.\nWE CAN SELL YOtf&S\nFRUIT FMM\nWe have clients who will be interested in your\nproperty. If yoia want t<a sell, pyrites full description\nand particulars, giving lowest cash prices, also terms\nWe will list your property with\n_ I if\u2014WHMillli..l__.r.lM.\u00bbi.iW.iii. I II  \u25a0 !>\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 n_n_.Hi. \u25a0 I  WWB^i^WMWyWwfc^WM^pji , .;'.'.\nour Montreal and Ottawa offices\nif attractive.   \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0' -   *   -    -   -\nAddress:\nC* A. & H. H. MacLeay,\nCentral Okanagan Lands, Ltd.*\nKelowna, B.C. Thursday, June 8\nThe Orehard Citq Record\nCwt Worm\nMedicine\nThe cut toorm'8 haoe\naltoays been here and\nprobably altoags toill be.\nIf you toish to be ahead\nin the game, start the\ntreatment early.\nParis Green\nor\nArsenate of\nLead\nMixed with bran & sweetened\nwater, and scattered over the\nland before the crop comes\nup will do deadly work.\nI\". it.\nr\u00abn\u00bbi\nICo.\nDRUGGISTS and STATIONERS\nKelowna,     B. C.\nPHONE 19\nJ. A. Bigger\nBUILDER and CONTRACTOR\nPlans and Estimates Fcrnished\nResidence,   10  Lawrence Ave.\nPHONE 95\nDAVIES & MATHIE\nLadies' and\nGents' Tailors\n.   PENDOZI STREET\nRepairing and Pressing\npromptly attended to.\nSutton's Seeds\nORDERS TAKEN NOW FOR\nCut Flowers\nCarnations\nChrysanthemums\nViolets\nH. LYSONS\nKelowna. Greenhouse.\nA \"Want\" ad. in the Record\nis a sure dividend-paying\n.   investment.\nD. W. Crowley Co.\nKelewoa Ltd-\nWholesale & Retail Butchers\nGoods delivered to any part of\nthe City\nWe give our prompt attention\nto mail order*.\nPhone 12\nTHEY MIGHT BE WORSE.\nModern   Coiffures    Not   In-  It   With\nt   Those Once  Popular.\nWhen it comes to hair-raising effects the coiffures of our present day\n\u2014no joke intended\u2014are difficult to\nbeat. At.least that's what the average man hinks when in the theatre\nor music hall his astonished and bewildered eyes take in the \"effects\" on\nall sides of him. Nothing, he would\nswear, ever looked more wonderfully\ncomplicated and in many cases more\nunbecoming than the queer arrangement of tresses in which many a woman takes pride. But this is not the\nonly age of queer coiffures. According to Dardin, when the wife of\nCharles VI., of France, put on a two-\nhorned head-dress \"the women of the\ntime vied with each other as to who\nshould wear the most handsome head-\ngear peaked like a steeple, and tho\ntallest horns.\" On the Paris Opera\nHouse being burned down in 1760,\nthe feminine residents of the city\nwould hear of nothing in coiffures except \"burned opera house.\" The\ncomet of 1773 gave its name to a headdress of flaminp colored ribbons. The\n\"Iphigenia coiffure\"\u2014\"a wreath of\nflowers surmounted by a silver cres-\neent, with a long white veil flowing\nbehind,'\" was suggested by a singer\nwho wore the costume at a performance of Ghieck's Iphijrenie en Aulide.\nA swallow, pursued by a hawk, fell\nto the ground on\u00ab day on a Pont\nNeuf, and straightaway an enterprising modiste launched \"the swallow\ncoiffure.\" The visit of a Chinaman\n'to Paris brought in an era of pointed\nshoes and hair arranged \"a la Chtn-\noise\"; the arrival of an unwieldly\npachyderm fluttered the whole French\ncapital witl) a mania for caps \"a\nFelephant\" or \"an rhinoceros.\" Under Marie Antoinette -the hair was\ndressed \"butterfly fashion.\" or the\nladies affected such coiffures as\n\"spaniel's ears,\" \"milk-sop,\" \"cabriolet,\" \"mad dog,\" or \"sportsman in\nthe bush.\" In the revolutionary\nperiod advanced French women wore\nbonnets of \"tlie three orders,\" \"Bas-\ntile\" bonnets, and \"6oiffures a la\ncitoyenne.\" Since the revolution the\nhead dresses of women have gone\nthrough a vari\u00bbty of changes\u2014from\nthe \"chapeau empire\" and the Parisienne of 1814\u2014the latter an immense\nbonnet thrown forward and upward\nlike a coal seiittl'_\u2014to t!r. voluminous\nbonnets of the restoration and the\nhooded bonnets of 1848; from the\ncapacious yet graceful Gainsborough\nto the tiny toque scarcely visible on\na lady's head; from the lace-trimmed\nbonnets of two generations ago to the\nveil-hung round hats of our own time.\nTake Their Art Seriously.\n\"With a Paris courtourier the creation of every new garment is an inspiration. It is not a mere cutting\nand slashing away with scissors, or\nthe reproduction of a model-that has\nserved for a hundred other worn\"!..\nEvery new dress is an individunl\nthing. The French love their art,\nand they make that their principal\nobject in life. It is the same with\nthe French milliner?. They nre not\nsatisfied that their names should be\nassociated with any old thing; it\nmust please them before they even\nbegin to consider whether it will\nplease their customers. When a\nFrench milliner is designing a new\nhat and finds that it won't go right,\ndo you know what she does? She\nputs it into what she calls the observation room,\" and leaves it there\nfor a while. Then she devotes her\nattention to something else, and tries\nto forget the hat she has been working on. But from time to time she\ngoes back and observes it, until one\nday there comes a flash of inspiration,\nand\u2014hey, presto!\u2014the one thing that\nwas \"needed to make a perfect creation has been found.\nEvery Virtue Has Its Vice.\nOut of desire to better our condition comes the greed of wealth and\nthe hoggishness of the millionaire.\nOut of sex love comes lust; out of\ninstinct of self-preservation comes\nbase selfishness; the feeling of self-\nrespect pushed a little too far becomes\npride and vain glory; faith degenerates into credulity, worship into idolatry, deference into fawning, firmness\ninto hardness of heart, self-reliance\ninto arrogance. The danger that\nthreatens repose is stagnation; that\nthreatens industry, greed; that\nthreatens thrift, avarice; that threatens power, tyranny. Everywhere ar\u00a9\nthings linked together. Every virtue\nhas its vice, every good has its ill,\nevery sweet has its bitter, and the\nbitter is often the best medicine.\nChanged His Position.\nIn a certain police court an exuberant footballer of the town was brought\nup on a charge of riotous conduct.\nThe magistrate inquired what position the defendant held. \"He'b a professional football player, your worship,\" said counsel. \"He playB outside right for his. team.\" \"Yes\u2014ah.\nHe does, does he,\" said the magistrate. \"Well, then, wc must change\nhis position. He'll be left inside for\nthe next month!\"\nAnd That's Some Oold.\nAn apartment-house dweller claims\nthat the janitor of the building in\nwhich he lives is the meanest janitor\non earth. \"He never gives us enough\nsteam during the day,\" said the complainant, \"and at night the conditions\nare simply awful. Why, I frequently\nwake up and hear my wife's teeth\nchattering on the bureau.\"\nOne of Her Necessities.\nMaud\u2014Jack said when he proposed\nthat he could give me only the necessities of life.\nEthel\u2014And what did you say?\nMaud\u2014I told him that one of the\nnecessities of my life was a husband\nwho could supply me with the luxuries.\n(\nMight Seem Longer.\n\"Do you think buttermilk will prolong one's life, Col. Soaksby?\"\n\"Ahem! I have no doubt, Miss\nPlumper, that if a person had to drink\nbuttermilk every day it would make\nUI_t.M$ai..j8P*W.\".-\t\nHER  HOMEMADE  HAT. W% q f  y Noies_\nli Brought a Proposal That She\nPromptly Turned Down.     #\nThe bohemiaus were making merry\nln the dim lit studio discussing the latest novel tbat oue of tbelr number was\ntrying to write, the brutal editor who\nhad refused the best article ever written\u2014a masterpiece of tbe host\u2014bemoaning the nonlntelligence of the art\ncritics, execrating tbe mercenary theatrical manager and utterly repudiating the general public\u2014tlie vast horde\nof the Philistines. By way of diversion\nthe painter of pastel portraits said to\nthe bachelor maid:\n\"That's a charming bat you have on.\nWho else would know enough to combine turquoise and old rose? You have\na genius for color. What a pity you\nonly write!\"\n\"Glad you like my hat, anyway. J\nmade It myself. I trust It will only\nenhance Its merit ln your eyes to know\nthat It cost me but 50 cents.\"\n\"Impossible!\" screamed all the bohe-\nmlans with one breath, ceasing their\narguments in order to take notice of\nthe vastly becoming creation which\ncapped the bachelor maid's brown hair.\n\"Fifty cents, did you say?\" asked the\nman who once wrote a poem\u2014aye, and\nhad It published. Then rising, placing\nhis hand above his heart, bowing low\nand solemnly, he said: \"Fair one, will\nyou. be my wife? All my life I have\nbeen looking for a woman who could\ntrim her own hats for nothing. Pray\nbe mine.\"\n\"Nixie!\" scoffed the bachelor maid\ncruelly. \"All my life I have been looking for a man who would be willing\nand able to pay $50 for my hats.\"\u2014\nNew York Press.\nConducted by the Ladies of the Kelcwna branch\nof the W.C. T.U.\nFIGHTING  LIFE'S  BATTLE\/\nOf Things That Must Be Done Tackle\nthe Hardeat First.\nI know a very successful man who\nearly In life resolved that no matter\nhow hard anything might be or how\nseemingly Impossible for bim to do he\nwould do it if the doing would prove\nof value to him, says Orison Swett\nMarden In Success Magazine. He\nmade this the test and would never\nallow his moods or feelings to stand\nIn the way of his judgment He\nforced himself in the habit of promptly doing everything, no matter how\ndisagreeable, If ft would further his\nadvancement\nPeople who consult their moods,\ntheir preferences or their ease never\nmake a great success in life. It Is the\nman wbo gets a firm grip on himself\nand forces himself to do the thing that\nwill ultimately be best for him who\nsucceeds. The man who goes through\nlife picking out the flowers and avo^fl-.\ning the thorns In bis occupation, always doing the easy thing first and\ndelaying or putting off altogether If\npossible the hard thing, does net develop the strength that would enable\nhim to do hard things when necessity\nforces them upon him.\nIt is pitiable to see young men and\nwomen remaining far below the place\nwhere their ability ought to have carried them just because they dislike ta\ndo disagreeable things until compelled\nto. The best way always Is to tackle\nthe hardest things first\nTern Public For Him.\nHe was a mild mannered little man,\nshort, with gray balr and spectacles.\nIt was noon on Washington street\nand, as usual, the crowds were shoving and pushing to get somewhere.\nThe little man was trying to worm his\nway through the crowds.\nA well dressed woman, accompanied\nby. a small boy, was mixed up In the\ncrowd. She wanted to cross the street\nThe boy stopped to look in a window.\nThe lady reached down and grasped\na hand, saying, \"Take my band, dear.\"\n\"Not right here on the public street\"\nshe was startled to-hear some one reply.\nLooking down, she saw that she was\nclasping the hand of the very inoffensive little man, who seemed to be\nmuch confused and embarrassed.\n\"Sir,\" she said haughtily, \"I don't\nwant you. I want my son.\"\u2014Boston\nTraveler.\nThe New and Old Geology.\nIn Its early history geology presented two schools\u2014one Insisting on a doctrine of \"catastrophes,\" the other on\na doctrine of \"uniformity.\" The former regarded the changes which have\nmanifestly taken place ln our planet\nas having occurred at epochs abruptly,\nwhile the other school, reposing on\nth a great principle of the invariability\nof tbe laws of nature, Insisted that affairs had always gone on ln the same\nway as they do now. It is hardly\nnecessary to say that tbe latter theory\nbas driven the old theory of catastrophe completely from the field.\u2014New\nYork American.\nAll Fixed.\n\"I think I'll propose at the party tonight.\"\n\"No, you won't\"\n\"Why won't I?\"\n\"My sister knows the young lady In\nquestion, and it hns been arranged for\nyou to propose at the ball next week.\"\n-, Kansas City Journal.\nRestaurant Repartee.\n\"Tea or coffee V\" demanded the bw-\ntling waitress.\nHe smiled benignly. \"Don't tell me;\nkt mo guess,\" he whispered.\u2014Brooklyn Life.\n ,  <\nWhere the 8hoe Pinched.\nCrawford \u2014 Does   your   conscience\ntrouble you  for losing that  money?\ntiabshaw\u2014No, but my wife does.   You\ntn ;\\ It was her money.\u2014Judge.\nThe fewer desires the more peac*.\u2014\nThe Board of License Commissioners in British Columbia has decided to exclude all women from\nsaloon premises and hotel bars.\nThis is wise and right, because the\nbar degrades women and opens\nthe door to their destruction. It is,\nhowever, equally true that the bar\ndegrades men as well women,\nand opens the door to their destruction. What will the advocates\nof liberty say about such legislation ? Ought not women to have\nrights as well as men ? Is their liberty not as sacred as that of their\nbrother ?\nWhat have good men to say\nabout this discrimination ? Is it\nnot as important to save men from\nruin as it is to save women ? If\nwomen ought to be kept out of\nbars, ought not men to be kept out\nas well ? We have now legislation\nprohibiting the sale of liquor to Indians, prohibiting the sale of liquor\nto drunkards, prohibiting the sale\nof liquor to minors, keeping women\nout of bars, prohibiting the sale of\nliquor on many days, and nights,\nand evenings, and mornings.and in\nmany places, for the simple reason\nthat under these conditions the\nsale of liquor does harm. Every\nman possessed of common sense\nknows that under other conditions\nthe same business does harm. Is\nit not as wrong to degrade and destroy those who are strong as it is\nto degrade and destroy those who\nare weaker ? Is it not as wicked\nto do this destroying and degrading at 6 o'clock on Saturday evening, as it is to do it at 8 o'clock on\nSaturday evening ?\nWould it not be wiser, better and\nmore effective, to abolish the bars\naltogether? The Victoria 'Daily\n'Uimcs gives the following information concerning the new British\nColumbia regulation:\n. The question of women and saloons was brought before the License Commissioners by a letter\nfrom Judge Forin, who stated that\na rancher from Thrums had come\nto him with a complaint that his\ndaughter, two men and another\ngirl had been frequenting a saloon\nand hotel and were supplied with\nintoxicating liquors. At the saloon\nsaid the letter, the writer was informed the girls became upon one\noccasion intoxicated and there,\nwith their companions, acted in an\nunwomanly manner. Judge Forin\nsaid that he saw no legal remedy,\nbut expressed the.opinion that he\nhad in all probability averted tragedy by persuading the irate father\nfrom harming one of the men in\nquestion, whom he, the father\nclaimed was responsible for his\ndaughter's downfall. He asked\nthat an investigation be made by\nthe commissioners into the matter.\nA letter from C. W. Young, chief\nof police, giving the facts of the\ncase, was also read. The chief reported that the occurence complained of at the saloon took place\nabout 12:25 on the morning of\nApril 14. Constables Reid and\nMcLeod saw the two girls and their\ncompanions in a box at the saloon.\nThey were talking and laughing in\naloud manner. At 1:30 one of\nthe girls was taken sick and was\nconveyed to the kitchen. She was\ntaken to her home from the hotel\nby the police. The other girl also\nleft with her companion.\nThe mayor said that as far as the\nhotel was concerned, one of the\ngirls, not the daughter of the\nThrums rancher, was employed\nthere and that under the law, in\ncommon with any other man or\nwoman, had a perfect right to obtain either food or drink. With\nregard to the saloon, the proprietors of that place had recently\nequipped their kitchen and fitted\nup two boxes for the use of patrons\nrequiring a light lunch, which they\nsupplied. There was nothing illegal\nin either men or women being\nserved in these boxes with food or\ndrink though it had always been\nunderstood in the citv that no\nwomen were allowed actually in\nthe bars. In the case under notice\nthe parties had not gone into the\nbar but into a box which was quite\napart from the bar-room and entered by a separate door.\nAs a means of preventing an\noccurence of similar nature in\nin future he suggested that the\nboard make a regulation that no\nwoman should be allowed on any\nsaloon premises. Neither the hotel nor the saloon had broken any\nlaw, repeated the mayor, but it was\nnecessary to take some step as that\nwhich he advocated. He had\nthought at fiist that it would be a\ngood plan to prohibit boxes, but\nsuch a course would work a hardship on certain places and he\nthought that such a course should\nonly be taken if further trouble oc-\ncuired.\nA resolution to exclude all\nwomen from saloon premises and\nfrom hotel bars was passed.\nP. BURNS & Co., Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nMEAT MERCHANTS\nFresh Meat Daily\nFull supply of Hams and Bacon\nFresh Fish in season\nW. LUDLOW, Manager\nKELOWNA\nPhone 135\nFOR SALE\nTen-roomed House and five acres of\nland. \\ bearing orchard, 1 \\ pasture.\nStable and buggy shed,. Nearly 700\nfeet facing good street. No irrigation\nnecessary. For terms, apply owner,\nBox 257, Kelowna, B.G\nAUTOMOBILES\nand MOTOR BOATS\nbacked by a reputation which is the envy of the trade.\n%%\n*' 4\n* H3\nLS3\nM3\nI\n*y\nCall and see the stock carried by\nS. T. ELLIOTT\nAgent      -        -       Kelowna, B.C.\nICE FOR SALE\nDelivered anywhere in town\n1c per lb.\n^pply\nA. R. Davy,\nPhone 137\nRESTAURANT.\nGood meals to be had.\nCloses Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 9 p.m.\nMisses Laidlaw.\nCorner Water St. and\nLawrence. The Orchard Gity Record\nThursday, June 8\nIT'S QUEER HOW THEY EAT. BURDEN-BEARING WOMEN. PUTTING THINGS IN BOOKS.\nThe Oyster's Beard, the Woodpecker'*\nTongue, the Dragonfly's Digestion.\n\"The way some creatures eat ia certainly enough to interest even a more\ncurious person than I,\" said the man\nwho likes to talk about nature and\ntlie manners and customs of nature's\ncreatures. \"For instance, what do you\nthink of a thing that eats with its\nwhiskers?\" f\n\"I am speaking of the oyster, and\nmy reference to its whiBkers is simply\njocular, although I in fact mean its\nbeard. The oyster eats with its beard.\nThe beard of tKe oyster, so called, is\nreally its mouth, its jaws, its teeth,\nits paJate.\n\"You and I wouldn't care to have\nsach a combination of gustatory activity in our beard, but the oyster gets a\ngood deal of enjoyment out of life with\nthat comprehensive attachment just\nthe same. I have a psychological\nfriend who declares that even death is\na pleasure to the oyster; that parting\nwith life between the bon vivnnt'.-\ntoeth, it expires in ecstacy. I hope\nmy friend is right. If he is 1 will\ngive mortuary delight to a, dozen\nLyuchhavens this evening, if 1 can\nget them.\n\"Then consider tlie woodpecker.\nTap, tap, tap, he says, clinging to the\nstem of the tree. His, he says, turning his ear to the bark and listening.\nHa, ha, Mr. Grub! He heurs you foolishly moving at the sound of his tap.\nKatty-te-tap! Tatty-te-tap! R-r-r-r-rap!\nE-r-r-r-rap! Like a drum beating in\nthe morning.\n\"Straight to the mark, true as drill\nor augur, goes that unerring beak.\nQuicker than either drill or augur it\ntaps the spot it is aimed for.\n\"But the straight, sharp beak eau\nnever follow ihe frighten.J grub in\nits eccentric tunnelling. It doesn't\nhave to. The woodpecker has a tongue,\nlong, round, flexible, sensitive and\nbarbed like a Fijian's sj>ear. A thrust\nof it at the larvae trail, a transfixed\ngrub\u2014\u00ab morsel for the crimson-crowned bird's palate, well earned and never missed.\n\"Whatever it may be that the lobster and the crab, rapacious, never\ndainty, are eating, they always see\nsomething else that they want and\nean't wait until they have masticated\nthe first before attacking the second.\nBut they don't give up the first, not\nby any manner of means.\n\"Nature humoring this rapacious\nbent, has fitted the lobster and the\ncrab with teeth in their stomach, an 1\nthey .swallow their half masticated\nfood and finish the chewing procuss\nwith their stomachs, while they ssize\nand chew the other thins that ha-? attracted then i. Lobster? nnd crabs\nhave no teeth in their mouths. They\ncnew with tiieir c;;i.\\s wnal they have\ntime to, and hand the unfinished job\ndown to their stomachs to do the rest\nof the chewing.\n\"The grasshopper i-n't a clii-.ken, although it lays eggs, but it has a gizzard as a chicken has, except that the\ngrasshopper's gizzard has teeth, sharp,\nhorny teeth.\n\"The butterfly has a delicate and\nbeautiful little pump inside of itself,\nwith which it pumps neotar from the\nflowers. The dragon fly's appetite is\nnever satisfied, although that amazing\ninsect, with its 50,000 microscopic\neyes, eats continuously from daylight\nuntil dark, capturing thousands upon\nthousands of flies aud other noxious\ninsects during the day. But the digestive apparatus of the dragonfly is such\nthat all it takes into its long stomach\nis digested instantly.\n\"The patient ox and it3 sweet-\nbreathed kind crop the grass all day,\nbut never know they have been eating\nuntil the food they have bolted has\npassed leisurely through three stomachs and is fired back at them f.om\na fourth one in the shape of the familiar cud, which they chew and chew,\nstanding in the shade, pondering and\nwhisking flies or humped up in the\nbarnyard, shedding snow.\n\"Yes, we are queer, queer creatures,\nall of us, brute and human. And\nmany of us are queerest when we cat.\"\nA Motor-cycle Parade.\nThe Curbstone club members were\ndiscussing the speed of motor-cycles\nwhen the ancient carpenter, who had\njust come in, joined in the conversation.\n'\"'\".\u2022liking about motor-cycles,' he\nsaid, \"I took a count of them in front\n,,1 my house itic other evening.\n\"I \"noticed that a continual string\nof them seemed to be coming by the\nplace, so I started in counting.\n\"By the time 1 had reached 987 I\nmade a peculiar discovery. I happened to notice by a mark of the tire of\nthe wheel that it was the same motorcycle that I had been tallying.\n\"The rider went so fast round and\nround the block that I mistook him\nfor a parade.\"\nSetting Her Right.\nOn one of the corners of a busy\nthoroughfare sat nn old man blind\nund minus one leg. A sympathetic\nlady who was passing stopped and\ngazed at him in pity.\nFinally she approached him and began asking him questions. She asked\nhim if he were married, how many\nchildren he had, where he had worked\nlast, how he had met with the accident that had incapacitated him for\nwork and a thousand other questions.\nFinally the unfortunate one beennie\npeevish. \"Madam,\" he exclaimed\nharshly, \"you may think this is an\ninformation bureau. It is not. It is\na collecting agency.\"\nTreadmills.\nWater mills were used in the time\nof Julius Caesar, ln Roman times\nslaves were condemned to the corn\nmills, which were propelled by tread...\nAfterward cattle were used. In the\nthird and fourth centuries there were\nas many as 300 cuttle mills in Rome.\nRussia's Airship Fund.\nRussia has' appropriated nearly\n$1,000,000 for n complete army aeroplane equipment, the largest sum ex-\npended for the purpose by any Government.\nActs  Not Words.\nThe silent lay of the hen discount!,\nthe noisy notes of the rooster.\nIn Italy's Mountainous Districts Carry\nEverything on Their Heads.\nIn Italy, as a most of the old world\ncountries, the men even in the humblest classes will not carry a load of\nany kind if it is possible to get out of\nit. For that reason the burden-bearing\nis done by the patient, obstinate and\nmuch abused donkey and the women.\nIn the interior of Italy, where the\nplains are, and in Venice and about\nthe famous lake region all burdens are\ncarried on the back, in long baskete\nlike those used by tlie German peasants. These are supported on the\nshoulders by loops through which the\narms  are thrust.\nIn the mountainous district of Italy,\nnear the coast, the women carry\neverything imaginable on their heads,\nand they arc straight and supple, with\nn wonderfully free and easy carriage.\nThe result of carrying loads on their\nheads, even from childhood, is a decided contrast to the women burden bearers, where baskets are used. The latter women are bent or round shouldered. \u25a0*\nIn the mountains the women use a\npiece of woollen or cotton cloth, generally a laree neckerchief, which is\nfolded diagonally and twisted into a\nround, soft ball. They wind this into\na round mat and place it on top of\nthe head. On this they carry anything\nfrom an empty basket or a kettle uf\nwater to large pieces of furniture. An\ninteresting sight is a woman trudging\nhomeward at night after a long muscle-trying day's work of chopping\nwood or felling trees in the forest, her\naxe in one hand and with the other\ncarefully balancing on her head a\ngood-sized tree, the branches of which\nare dragging behind on the ground.\nIn the tiny little villages parched\nhigh up in the mountains and reached only by a narrow, rough cobbled\npath which winds and climbs in aimless manner, the burden-bearing women need to be very strong. Daily,\nno matter how hot the sun ot how severe the storm, they toil up and down\nthose rugged i.dni.-., with building material required in the villages, or the\nneeds of their own or their neighbors'\ndaily lives, or what they sell in the\nnearby towns ba'i.nced on their heads.\nWould Have Done For Him.\nThe lady in the offside corner seat\nof the tram ear possessed a truculent\nair  and a discolored eye.\n\"Funny thing any one can't take a\npenny ride without everybody glarin'\nat 'em,\" she remarked, fixing a small\ngentleman weariug gray side-whiskers\nand a somewhat ru\u00bbty top hat witb\nher normal opr7. The small gentleman suddenly became interested in a\nsoap .advertisement.\n\"If any one can't 'ave a black eye\nwithout Tom, Dick and 'Arry askin'\nquestions things a.e comin' to a pretty\npass,\" continued the lady!\nSilence, allied with soap advertisement study, though eminently discreet, was ineffective.\n\"You, I'm a tukin' to.\" The lady\nprodded the small gentleman's knee\nwith her umbrella. \"Bin settin' there\nthis last ten minutes, you 'ave, won-\nderin' if my 'iisban' give it to m^.\nIf it'll ease yer mind, he did. Is\nt.ie're an>i_iing else?\"\n\"Madam,\" the small gentleman\ncommenced, \"had I been your husband\"\t\n\"I should a-got off at the cemetery\nwith a wreath \"instead o' goin' on ter\nthe 'orsnital with a visitor's ticket,\"\nsnapped* the lady, \"and the wreath\nwouldn't a-been expensive neither.\"\nPoison Bearers for War.\nKrupps, the German gun manufacturers, are always on the lookout for\ni\"ventio-s and improvements in anything in their line. Their most recent\nexperiments Have been with a new\nprotective device commonly known by\nthe inelegant name of \"stinkpots.\" It\nis a large metal globe filled with a\npowder which expands into a deadly-\ngas when the shell strikes. Each sh-dl\ncarries 160 pounds of powder. The\ng;uoe is jiioUiiieu on a metal bar,\nwhich fits into tlie barrel of a small\ngun and is attached in such a fashion\nthat when the powder discharge is\nmade the bar is jolted loose from tha\nglobe und the poi^m-bearer goes hurtling through tiie air alone.\nWhen the gun is pointed at an angle\nof 45 degrees the shell carries 1 500\nfeet. This is relatively a short distance, but the weapon is intended for\ntrench defence only, and when thus\napplied will prove most effective.\nA New Difficulty.\nA young cotton worker and his wile\nhad been married only a few months',,\nbut it was quite apparent to the wife\nthat her husband s affection for her\nwas on the wane. John developed a\ntendency to stay out lute at night,\nand now it was early morning, when\nhis wife heard u violent knocking at\ntne door, \"\\.iu. . tlu-rer\" asked \"lit!\nfrom the bedroom window. \"It's me,-'\nreplied John meekly. \"I've just come\nfrom the meeting. We huve bee.i\nconsidering the present strike.\" \"Oh,\nhave you? Well, you can sit on the\ndoorstep and consider the prcs.-nt lockout!\" was the retort.\nSound   Proof  Booths.\nA German engineer has invented a\nmeans of shuttins out sound from the\ntelephone booth. lie iines the walls of\nthe booth with ._.otullic plates, sucii\nas tin, aluminum, etc. This lining\nhus oroved so enec-tual that tie inventor advises architects to use it on\nthe inside wall of homes. The system\nhas given such good results that it\nhas been adopted by the telephone administration of Berlin.\nWords  Passed.\nJudge\u2014You say that words passed\nbetween the acv-used and his wife.\nDid you hear vWuit they were?\nWitness\u2014No; I didn't hear them,\nbut I saw thorn.\nJudge\u2014Saw them?\nWitness\u2014Yes. They were in the dictionary that l-.-j throw at her.\n..          .  r\nLacks the Essential.\nInventors are constantly adding\nimprovements to the typewriter, but\nnone of thr,in has been able to turn\nout a machine that will spell correctly.\nA   Habit  Once  Condemned   Is  Shown\n\">   to Have Some Merit.\n\"1 onca had a prejudice against a\nhabit indulged in by some otherwise\nsensible people\u2014the hab-; of putting\nthings in books,\" says the writer of a\ncharming article in The Atlantic\nMon'.hiy. \"1 mean pressed flowers,\nChristmas cards, locks of hair, kodak\npictures, and all such tokens and\ntrinkets. I could give logical reasons\nfor my disapproval.\n\"Thus 1 argued, and like Horatio,\ndid in part believe. But now I come\nas a sinner to repentance. It seems\nto me that I shall not merely look\nwith approval upon the habit I formerly disliked, but that I myseli shall\nsome day go to my treasure-boxes and\ntransfer their precious contents to\nbooks 1 may never again open.\n\"My change of heart came in this\nwise. A dear friend, dying, bequeathed to me her small library. I wondered when I first touched the volumes\nif I should ever be able to regard them\nas mere books, or to read the gayest\nof them without sadness. The loved\nname was written in a delicate, old-\nfashioned hand on every inside ccver.\nliut sull more sadly remindful were\nthe mementoes and keepsakes lying\nbetween the pages; for my friend had\nput tilings in books. In nearly every\nvolume l found pressed flowers, re-\nniembraiiee cards, or the notes and\nquestions of the student and teacher,\nail rumiudii _\u2022 me of the friend who\nwas gone. And yet, when I came upon pieces of late, soft curls of a\nbaby's hair, strips of yellow ribbon\u2014\nher iu von te color\u20141 telt that 1 could\nhear her speak and see her smile\nagain. 1 welcomed all the little keepsakes; for in no other way would my\nfriend have left me so much of herself.\n\"One evening 1 took from among\nthese gift books the translation of the\nIliad, wishing to rest my mind and\nperhaps iearn a new thing. Idly turning the leaves, 1 dislodged two folded\nletters, slightly yellowed by time. I\nopened them\u2014and what to me then\nwere the grievous woes of heroes, the\nschemes of gods and goddesses?\"\n' The two letters were from A. Bron-\nson .-\\lcott and John G. Whittier, the\npoet.\n\"No more of Hector and Achilles\nthat evening! Here was metal more\nattractive. All my arguments against\nthe habit of putting things in books\nwere doubly proved\u2014and then forgotten. What matter if my attention was\ndistracted, and poor old Homer was\nneglected. What matter if the two letters had been lost in the Iliad for\nperhaps a quarter of a century? It\nwas not for me to object on that\nscore, since there the letters lay, in\nmy hands. 1 saw that I could not\nmaintain my miserable little prejudice airainst a habit capable of bringing me such delight. 1 was ready to\naccept the whole system; nay, even to\nadopt it. Perhaps an unconditional\nsurrender was not required as my pen-\natuc; I admit it was very illogical, for\nprobably I shall never again find such\njare treasures between the leaves of\naiiv book. But there is a blessed state\n,,f \"mind when one throws logic to the\nwind and gives allegiance to a cause\nright from the heart; and I was in\nthat state of mind.\n\"Yet in s;>ite of my own conversion\nI shall attempt no proselytising. This\nhabit of putting things in books is\nadmirable only in those who practice\nit unconsciously and indiscriminately.\nCommonness would rob it of all its\ndelicacy and charm. I would not\nwish to see it become a fad, or the\ncornerstone of a sect. But for me there\nis no escape. The message is written,\n'Enough has been said; the thing is\nto do.' I have just found twojour-\nleat clovers, and I go to place one of\nthem in my newest copy of \"Hamlet\"\nand the other in the Iliad, with the\ntwo  fine  old letters.\"\n, -.\nMust Pay Balance.\n\"Wake up, cull,\" says the burglar,\nshaking the man by the shoulder.\nThe man wakes up\u2014and jumps up\ntoo.\n\"Wha-what do you wa-want?\" he\nasks.\n\"I went troo dis hou-e las' week an'\ngot $10 an' a bum gold watch,\" ex-\n; !-iini\"! tii\" bnrchir, \"an' de papers\nsaid dat you said your loss was 5100\nun' joolry to de amount o' $500 or\n$oU). '\n\"Ye-yes.?\"\n\"Weil, nuke good, sport. Me pard-\nuer dat was watchin' on do outside\nmade mo cough up de difference between what I >n<t an' what you said\nI got. Now you've got to make good.\n- You can't beat me dat way.\"\nChew Tea In 81am.\nIn Siam they chew tea in place of\ntobacco. They call it mieng. It is in\nii plug, like chewing tobacco, and has\na villainous s'nell, due to the fermentation it has undergone. The tea\nthat the Siamese emphjy for chewing purposes is a very coarse, rank\nplant. It is gathered like ordinary\ntea, but.the lenves, after being compressed into plugs, are buried for 16\ndays. They ferment during burial\nand on their resurrection are very,\nvery fragrant, indeed. The Siamese\nboatmen chew tea, the 'rickshaw men\nchew it and even the litterateurs\nchew it. They say it makes tbem\nwork better. \u2022\nA Wonderful Dress.\nIn the South African pageant at\nCape Town a wonderful drees was\nworn by one of the performers. According to The Cape Argus, Miss\nBosman wore a flowered brocade dress\nwhich her lineal ancestress brought\nto the Cape from Holland in 1740,\nexactly 170 years ago.\nTheir Punishment.\n\"Johnny,\"  said   the   minister, reprovingly, as he met an urchin carry-\ning a string of fish one first-day afternoon, \"did you catch those to-4ay?\"\n\"Ye-cs,   sir,\"    answered    Johnny.\n\"That's   what  they   get for  chasin'\nworms on Sunday.\"\na    \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nBoth Ways.\n\"Tell me,\" said he newly-rich lady,\nas they were discussing pointe of pro-\n.iU!K_i-.uui, \"do you say 'the Rhine*\nor.'the Rhone1? 1 hear it both ways.\"\nPROFESSIONAL AND\nBUSINESS CARDS\nJ. F. BURNE\nSolicitor,\nNotary Public,\nConveyancer, etc.\nKELOWNA, :: B.C.\nR. B. KERR\nBarrister\nand Solicitor,\nNotary Public.\nKELOWNA. :: B.C.\nC. Harvey, B. A. Moorhouse,\nB.A.. Sc, C.E.. D.L.S.. B.C.L.S..\nand B.C.L.S.\nHARVEY & MOORHOUSE\nCIVIL ENGINEERS and LAND\nSURVEYORS\nKelowna,    B. C..\nPhone 147. P.O. Box 231\nRICHARD H.  PARKINSON\nBRITISH COLUM11A LAND\nSURVEYOR.\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nP.O. BOX 137\nKELOWNA\nDr. J, W. Nelson Shepherd\nDENTIST\np. 0. Box me\n'Phone SO\nCorner Peneozi Street and\nLawrence Avenue.\nCLIFTON\nNURSING AND MATERNITY\nHOME\nMrs. LAWRENCE, Graduate Nurse.\nGlenn Ave., Kelowna, B.C.\nPhon* 134\nCOLLETT BROS.\nLIVERY AND DRAY\nHorses bought and sold on commission. Dray meets all C.P.R.\nboats. All kinds of heavy team\nwork. 'Phone 20.\na*.\nJOHN CURTS\nCONTRACTOR \u00abc BUILDER\nPlans and Specifications Prepared.\nand estimates given for publicBuild-\nings.Town and Country Residences\nJOHN CURTS. KELOWNA\nPHONE No. 93\nMONEY TO LOAN\nOn improved property also other securities\nG. A. FISHER\nROOM 4 KELLER BLOCK\nFire, Life, and Accident\nInsurance.\nTHOMAS. P. HILL\nBANKHBAD,\nPlanting, Pruning, Spraying\nEtc.\nP.O. Box 174, Kelotona.\nW. T. ASHBRIDGE\nCIVIL ENCINEER\nAuoc. M\u00abm. Can, Soc C. E       Gr\u00bbdu\u00bbto Toronto\nUnivtrnty\nWaterworks and Scwarai* Sy\u00bb..m\u00ab. Pumping and\nLighting Plant*, Concrete Con-\nKELOWNA.\n\u25a0traction, ate.\nB.C.\nA, J. CLARKE\nARCHITECT\nArchitectural Work, Designing, Estimating and\n. Superintending\nP. 0. Box 817 Kelotona.\nGeo. DAVIS\nBARBER SHOP\nHaircutting, Shaving,\nShampooing, etc.\nBERNARD AVENUE\n(Bouch's Old Stand)\nThe woman of to-day who has good\nhealth, good temper, good aente, bright\neyea and a lovely complexion, the result of\ngood living and a good digestion, wins the\nadmiration of the world. If your digestion\nis faulty Chamberlain's Stomach nnd Liver\nTablets will correct it. For sale by all\ndealers.\nVO,* ^___Mf_0-V    M_3\\\u00bb -\"SWrfW    ^_\u00a3_\\*^_tr__*_V    W_>*__\u00ab!V_0_f    W^iV\nS&>_W\u00bbir7?   (4g}A3P\\T\/*    (42\u00a3jrF\\&*Z   (Q&A&rtffit   GsSjt\nWs&^siL .vl_P\u00bbl& jpSKeS sJMsMm. sll!\nWe have exceptional facilities for\nthe production of the best\nkinds of\nCOMMERCIAL\nPRINTING\nGive us a look in, or phone 94.\nEecorb\nJOB PRINTING DEPT.\nHaving lately opened up business in\nKelowna, the\nTHOMPSON\nDECORATING\nCOMPANY\nare prepared to undertake large or\nsmall contracts for\nPainting,\nPaperhanging,\nand General\nDecorating\nWe can give you the benefit of wide experience m\nevery branch of our business in Winnipeg and\nother large cities.   If you appreciate\nClose Figuring and Prompt Service\ngive us a trial order\u2014we know it will\nlead to more business.\nResidence: . Lawson Avenue\nP.O. Box 473        -        Kelowna\n1 rt&TsSSsfii^^\n- U___.___ta__.l_Mj\nThree Days More.\nTime's Up.\nAll's  Over.\nUMP GO THE PRICES\nDown, Down, They Go.\nThe Last   Three Days of Unloading Sale dt\nSATURDAY,\nJUNE 10.\nLAST  THREE  DAYS  OF  A  COLOSSAL  EVENT.\nWe are going to finish strong, SATURDAY, JUNE 10th. We will sound the revellie for quick action in shopping for the\nLAST THREE DAYS. The last days as well as the preceding days will be big with opportunity to those who come to\nCALDER'S Store. We promise you that some of the very best things in the store have been kept to the last. We haven't\ndisappointed before;  we won't begin now.     We will have an extra staff to handle the crowds.     If possible, shop in the\nMORNING.\nEvery article in the store marked in plain figures.\nRead the prices, don't miss a single item.      Think of your present needs, and anticipate .your future wants.\nA hurricane finish.    The last three days will sweep everything before them, and play havoc with W. B. M. Calder's stock.\nIt's no use, you cannot stem the torrent of its irresitible bargains.    It means money in your pocket to  attend.    Come,  expecting big values.    Don't miss the savings, they have been great throughout the Sale, and the last three days we will give\ndeeper cuts.    Some unusual surprises await you.\nNot surprised, but durnfounded    Read the Prices:\nLADIES' TOP' SKIRTS\n23 Ladies' Lustre Skirts Black, Blue and\nGrey, all this season's buying. A late\nshipment, sold the Regular way for\n$4.50 to $5.00\nLast 3 Days $3.20.\n17 Ladies' Top Skirts in Serges, Panamas, Sicilian, Lustre. All the latest\nshades to choose from. Reg. $6.25 to\n$700\nLast 3 Days $4.35.\n27 Ladies' Up-to-Date Skirts in Broadcloth, Panamas, Sicilian, Lustre and\nSerges.   Regular $7.25 to $8.00\nLast 3 Days $5.85.\n11 Ladies' Top Skirts, all the latest\ncreations.   Skirts that will please you\nLast 3 days $6.65.\nAll other Ladies' Skirts will be cleared\nout at correspondingly low prices for the\nLast Three Days.\nLadies' Underskirts\nLadies' Watered Moreen Underskirts,\nnicely made and very serviceable. Reg.\n$3.00 to $3.50\nLast 3 days $2.20.\nLadies' Silk Finished Watered Moreen\nUnderskirts, large range of colors to\nchoose from.    Regular $4.50 to $5.00\nLast 3 days $3.45.\nA very choice line Ladies' Underskirts,\nome of the best. All colors, handsome\ny made.    Reg. Price $5.25 to $6.00\nLast 3 days $3.85.\nDUST AND RAIN PROOF COATS\nLadies' silk finished Rain Proof and\nDust Coats, something you should not\nbe without.\nLast 3 days $9.95.\nA much better line of Ladies'\nSilk finished Rain Coats in different\ncolors.    Goods that please you.\nLast 3 days $12.45.\nThe Best we carry and good enough for\nthe most canny buyer, a handsome garment.    Regular $25.00\nLast 3 days $16.85.\nLADIES' PARASOLS\nWe have 26 Fancy Parasols left\u2014something you should not miss. Don't get\nsunburnt when you can buy a parasol\nworth from $|.25 to $2.00 the\nLast 3 days for 95c\nDRESS MUSLINS\nAND VESTINGS\n60 pieces of New Dress Muslins, Vest-\nings and Organdies must be sold.\nWorth from 20c. to 35c.\nLast 3 days 15c\nLADIES' WHITEWEAR\nLadies' Waists,\nLadies' Night Gowns,\nLadies' Corset Covers,\nLadies' Drawers,\nLadies' White Underskirts\nAll these goods in endless varieties, all\nnew and will be cleared the L_ast Three\nDays at Prices that make you wonder\nhow Calder can do it.\nLADIES' WASH BELTS\nWe will sell the balance of our Wash\nBelts at one price for the Last Three\nDays. Here is your chance. Worth\nfrom 35c. to 60c.\nLast 3 days 25c\nREMNANTS\nAccumulations of odds and ends during\nour sale have been gathered together\nand will be measured up and ticketed\nand be at your disposal the Last Three\nDays. Remember this includes all the\nOdds and Ends. They must be sold\nThe Last Three Days.\nEMBROIDERY & INSERTION\n15 hundred yards of Embroidery and\nInsertion.   Worth from 20c to 35c, to\nclear the lot we will sell the\nLast 3 days for 1 Oc.\nCorset Cover Embroidery\n150 yards of Corset Cover Embroidery.\nA special lot\nLast Three Days at Half-Price.\nAll-over Embroidery\n125 yards of All Over Embroidery,\nBeautiful designs. To clear the lot we\nwill sell the\nLast Three'Days at Half-Price.\nHi\u00abMHI^M^i^HlH[MMM_aM__\n130 yards of All Over Lace and Net,\nThursday, Friday  and   Saturday,   the\nLast Three Days at Half-Price.\nMEN'S CANVAS SHOES\n35 pairs of Men's White Canvas Tennis\nt_>noes, ivuuuci uO_.es, manuiactur\u20acu in\nEngland.    Regular $2.25 to $2.50\nLast 3 days $1.75.\nAll lines of Men's Shoes\nwill be sold at a final Clean\nup Price for the Three Last\nDays. Come expecting\nsomething good and cheap\nand you won't be disappointed. All the Best goods.\nMen's White Duck\nand Flannel Pants\n45 pairs Men's White Duck Pants. Come\non boys, you all play Tennis, go Boating\nor Camping! Sold everywhere for $1.50.\nLast 3 days $1.15.\nThe balance of our White Flannel and\nFancy Striped Flannel Pants, all new\ngoods.   Get a pair.   Worth up to $3.50.\nLast 3 days $2.25.\nMen s Summer Underwear\nMen's Balbriggan Underwear for summer\nwear.   Regular $1.25 per suit\nLast 3 days 85c per suit\nWorking Shirts\n200 Men's Working Shirts, all sizes and\ncolors.   Worth from $1.25 to $1.50\nLast 3 days 80c\nMen s Outing Shirts\nWe have about 150 of these Shirts. Full\nrange of sizes. Worth from $\/.25 to\n$1.50.\nLast 3 days 95c\nMen's Dress Shirts\n300 Men's Dress Shirts, .Soft Bosoms.\nWorth from $1.25 to $175^\nLast 3 days 80c\nBoys' Suits\n40 Boys' Suits left, good serviceable suits\nfor school or Sunday suit.   Come on,\nboys, they are worth from $4.50 to $7.00\nyours the Last Three Days for $3.45.\nHats\nour Men's and Boys'\nMen's\nThe balance of\nHats.   Worth from $1.50 to $2.25, will\nbe cleared\nZ^ast 3 days for $ 1.00\nSaturday, June 10th, Last\nof Calder's Unloading Sale.\nTHE EVELY SALES CO., IN CHARGE. The Orchard City Record.\nThursday June 8\nTHE ORCHARD CITY RECORD\nPublished eoery Thursday at the Office,\nKelowna. B.C.\nJOHN LEATHLEY, Editor.\nSubscription $1.50 per annum.\nTo United States $2.00 per annum.\nAdvertising sates upon application.\nThe provincial inspector of fruit\npests, Mr. Thos. Cunningham, is\nmaking the most energetic efforts\nnot only to keep orchard diseases\nand pests from entering the province, but also to eradicate those\nwhich have already risen to vex\nthe soul of the British Columbia\nfruit grower. The importance of\nclean orchards is of course an elementary principle in fruil culture,\nand the necessity for thorough\nspraying, though a little more\npreached about than practiced, is\ncoming to be regarded as a sine qua\nnon in the production of high grade\nfruit, free from blemish. And the\nall powerful reason for its general\nadoption is that it means dollars,\nto the grower. On any orchard,\nthe difference in returns from a\nstrictly number one crop, and one\nshowing a large percentage of culls,\nis so enormous that it needs no\nother argument to persuade the\ngrower to spray.\nBut to be effective spraying calls\nfor no  inconsiderable  knowledge\nof the nature of plant diseases and\nthe life histories of fruit pests.     In\nsummer spraying  especially,   time\nis an important factor in   the   successful combatting of some of  the\ninsects   which   attack    the    trees.\nThese may pass in   a  few  weeks\nthrough the  successive  stages   of\ngrub, pupa,  and   moth,   and   war\nmust be waged upon it at its  most\nvulnerable period.    This  is   often\na matter only of a few   days,   and\nto spray at any other  time   would\nbe a waste of energy and material.\nThe best  time   and   manner  of\nspraying, the strength of spray used\netc., can   only  be   determined  by\ncareful and   tedious  experiments.\nBut experiment is costly for the individual farmer.    He should therefore watch   with   interest  the   experiments which are being conducted in the district under the authority of Mr. Cunningham.    Mr. S. M.\nMoulton and Mr. Coupland brought\nin last week a power spray outfit\nwhich will be in operation here for\nsome five or six weeks. Tlie outfit\nwill be run in the orchards of 1.\nW. Stirling, S. C. Cosens, Cameron's, and others. The work is\npurely of an experimental nature,\nand careful records will be kept of\nevery detail connected with the\noperation. Later on the results\nwill be observed and the effect of\napplications at different times and\nof different strengths will be noted.\nMr. Moulton is leaving this week\nfor Salmon Arm where he will install a similar plant, but Mr. Coup-\nland who is an orchardist of considerable experience in the Western States will remain in charge,\nand will, we understand, be pleased\nto receive a visit from anyone interested. It is hoped to make the\noccasion educational in manj' ways\nand there are few who could not\nlearn something of up - to - date\nspraying methods from such a\nvisit.\nB. C. Fruit Exhibited in\nCanada Only\nNo Fruit for Old Country this\nYear\nWith the announcement of the\nappointment of Mr. W. J. Brandrith\nas exhibition commissioner for\nBritish Columbia during the forthcoming season, confirmation is obtained of the report given circulation some few weeks ago that it is\nthe intention of the provincial\ngovernment this year to confine its\nexhibition activities to the Dominion of Canada, not being officially\nrepresented at the Old Country\nshows of 1911, although numerous\nboards of trade and district and cooperative fruitgrowers' associations\nwill privately and semi-officially\nuphold the high prestige obtained\nby British Columbia at the English\nand Scottish fruit shows of the past\nfew years.\nThe principal places at which\nBritish Columbia will this season\nbe represented by comprehensive\nfruit exhibits are Winnipeg, the\nscene of the Canadian Industrial\nExhibition to be held July 12-22 ;\nBrandon, the Inter-Provincial Fair\ncentre, July 24-29 ; Regina, where\nthe Dominion   and   Saskatchewan\nProvincial Fair is to be held from\nAugust 1 to 12; Edmonton, the\nEdmonton Exhibition Association's\ndisplay centre, August 15-20; London, Ontario, September 8-16;\nand Toronto, for the Canadian\nNational Exhibition, extending from\nAugust 26 to September 12. This\nlatter is everywhere admitted to be\nnow the largest fixed exhibition\nattraction of all America, a record\nattendance having been scored last\nseason when 1,250,000' persons\npassed through the turnstiles.\nThe new exhibition commissioner\nwho acted as assistant last season\nto Commissioner Bullock-Webster,\nis now completing arrangements]\nwith all the leading fruitgrowers\nthroughout the province for daily\nshipments of the finest selected\nBritish Columbia fruits in their\nseason to the various exhibition\ncentres above named. With the-e\nconstantly arriving accessions to\nthe permanent exhibit, the commissioner will be in a position to\nalways have the British Columbia\ndisplay fresh and attractive, building up its quality daily as any\nportion begins to show signs of j\nstaleness or deterioration. In addition to the fresh fruit, which will\nof course be specialised, the display for these eastern exhibitions\nwill include a large collection of\nbottled fruits and also of British\nColumbia's forest wealth.\nThe   three   most  important   exhibition centres on the list for 191 1 j\nare    Winnipeg,    Regina,   and   of j\ncourse, the great Canadian Nationa'\nExhibition at Toronto.\nANGLICAN\nSt. Michael and All Angels' Church.\nHoly Communion, first \u00bbnd third Sunday, in the\nmonth at 8 a.m.; second and fourth Sundays, after\nMorninc Prayer.\nLitany on the first and third Sunday..\nMorning Prayer at 11   o'clock j   Eveninc Prayer at\n7:30.\nREV. THOS. GREENE. B. A.. Rector.\nPESBYTER1AN\nKnox Presbyterian Church, Kelowna.\nMorning Services at 11 a.m.; evening service.at 7:30\np.m.   Sunday School at 2:30 p.m.\nWeekly rray*r Meeting en Wadnesdays at 6 p.m.\nBanvouHn Presbyterian Church.\nAfternoon service at 3 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p.m.\nREV. A. W. K. HERDMAN, Pastor.\nMETHODIST\nKelowna Methodist Church,\nSabbath Service at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nSunday School at 2:30 p.m.\nMidweek seivice Wednesday at 8 p.m.\nREV. J. W. DAVIDSON   Pastor.\nBAPTIST\nKelowna Baptist Church, Ellice St.\nSabbath Servicesat 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nSabbath School at 10 a.m.   All welcome.\nWed . 7.30. Rev. D. J. Welsh, Pastor.\nKelowna Aquatic Association, Ltd,\nPrices of Season Tickets:\nSingle Lady '. ...$4 00\nSingle Gentleman  6 00\nDouble, to include husband and wife and children\nunder 14 years of age, when latter are accompanied by an adult ticket holder    7 50\nDouble, to iuclude any two specified  members  of\na family residing together    7 50\nAdditional members of a family holding a  double\nticket...'.  3 00\nAny non resident desiring to become a ticket holder for a period less than the\nfull season, may become such by being introduced and nominated by a season\nticket holder and paying the sum of $2 per month.\nBathing Scale of Fees:\nUse of Dressing room only 10 cents\nHire of Costume  10    \u201e\nHire of Towels, each  5   \u201e\nHire of Boats:\nRATES: 25c. per hour for the first two hours j  15c.  per  hour  for  each\nsubsequent hour.   Maximum charge for one day, $1.50.\nIt is worse than useless to take any\nmedicines internally for muscular or\nchronic rheumatism. All that is needed ia\na frceapplicnlionof Chamberlain's Liniment\nFor sale by all dealers.\nM0DERM WOODMEN  OF\nAMERICA\nKELOWNA CAMP 14398\nLodge meetings held in the old School-\nhouse 1st and 3rd Monday in each month.\nP. BROOKE, _Clerk.\nFERTILIZER\nBlood  and  Bone,\n$30.00 per ton.\nA. R. DAVY,\nPhone 137\nKELOWNA HOSPITAL.\nDonations of vegetables, fruit, dairy pro-\ndue?, eggs etc. will be gratefully received\nI at the Kelowna Hospilal.    If more conven-\ni ient same may be left at the shop of Messrs.\nCrowley  Co ; Ltd.\n\"HOSPITAL INSURANCE.\"\nThe Kelowna Hospital Society have an\nInsurance in force which they wish to\nbring before the notice of the public.\nFor tlie sum of $10 bachelors or married\nmen may obtain a Hospital Insurance\nTicket which entitles the holder to Free\nHospital Attendtvpce for one year from\ndate of issue for any sickness or accidents\nexcept contageous or infectious diseases,\nwhich are not be admitted to the hospital.\nApplications for tickets or for further information should be made to the secretary, Room 1, Keller Block, or P.O. Box\n275, Kelowna, B.C.\nCAPTAIN BRINO\nStandard Bred Pacing Stallion No. 30,233.\nRECORD   -   2.07 1-4\nThe Pedigree of Capt.   {F}riho  has  been  examined by  the\n'Department of Agriculture, which certifies\nthe stallion to be of pure breeding.\nWill Stand During the Season at Bouvettes' Livery.\nTERMS: $30 to insure, $15 payable at time of service, with\nreturn privilege if mare proves not in foal; $25 for the\nseason, payable July 1st; single service, $15.\nPasture for mares at $2 per month.    All mares at  owners  risk.\nELI JOHNSON, Owner, Kelowna, B. C.\nSATURDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS.\nIt is our intention to offer SPECIAL inducements to  the  \"Week-end\" shopper.\nYou will find  many seasonable articles specially priced at oui  Saturday and Monday Sales.\nYour Shoes!\nDo they Fit ?    Do they Wear well?\nDo they Look well ?\nIf not, let your next pair be\n\"WalkOvers\/'\nWe are sole agents for this famous\nShoe.\nSTYLE,   COMFORT,   WEAR.\nSaturday and Monday Special,\n60 pairs Men's Working Boots,\nBlack and Tan Grain leather,\nsolid throughout,\nRegular, $4.50,\nSaturday Special, $3.50\nDress Muslins.\nMany dainty cool patterns to choose from.    Regular 25c\nyard, Saturday and Monday Special, 15c.\nOver sixty patterns to choose from.\nLadies' Hose.\nLadie's Fine Cotton Hose in colors, blue, black, chocolate\nand white, regular 25c, Saturday and Monday\nSpecial, 2 pairs for 35c.\nMen's Hose.\n400 pairs Fancy Socks, in all combinations of colors,\nregular 40c. and 50c,\nSaturday and Monday Special, 25c\nPhone 22\nLEQUIME BROS. & Co.\nEstablished 1850.\nPhone 22\n^jejraj V-\nDALGLEISH & GLENN\n\" The Mighty Reo.\"\nThe car with the get-there-and-back\nquality.\nwait until you haye seen a Reo\nbefore buying your automobile.\nROBIN HOOD FLOUR\nIS DIFFERENT.\nImpress upon your minds these two special facts:\n\u25a0v.     Robin Hood Flour must satisfy you in two\nfair trials, or you can have your money back.\nIt is the guaranteed flour.\nRobin Hood Flour absorbs more moisture\nthan other flours, therefore add more water\n.when you use it, and get a larger whiter loaf.\nOats, Bran., Wheat,\nBarley and Oat Chop\nFresh Clean Stock, Just In.\nBuggies, Cutters, Wagons,\nBob-Sleighs, etc\nLH.C POWER SPRAYER\nDo your own and other spraying rapidly, cheaper, and\nmore effectively.   Do all kinds off odd jobs with the\nengine\u2014pumping, sawing wood, feed grinding, etc. y-\nDALGLEISH & GLENN,\nDealers in Farm and.\nOrchard Implements\nPendozi St. and Lawrence Avenue^\nPHONE 150\n.. THE BEST FENCE IS THE CHEAPEST.\nIt doe* not pay. to ate inferior fencing material.\nThe GREAT WEST it unequalled for quality and strength, and Km no\nsuperior on the market   Made in heavy ondTnedium weight* and any .heir\n,\"   Price* given'fer Fence* Erected Complete.\nI* -\nHave you tried the new Prepared Roofing?   \"DUKSBAK\" ROOFING\nMake* a permanent and efficient job. '    It i* made from the famous\nTrinidad Lake Asphalt, and it bound to give satisfaction.\nA. E. CLARKE, Rutland.\nR. G. REED\nPhone 11\nR. W, BUTLER\nPhone 120\nKelowna Manufacturing\nmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmuummmmmmmmmmmmmma^mmm\nFuneral Directors and Embalmers.\nIV\u00ab hao*y i lar6e oontignment of the lakesfc lines o*\n7       PietureMoudingsJUSr IE     7     '-\nNow ii your tim\u00ab to get all your Picture Framing\ndoneFat prices that DEFY COMPETITION.\nSatisfaction Guaranteed.\nOff ice Phone, 86\nThe-Allan Steamship Co. are to\nerect large offices in Winnipeg.\nLast month was the wettest May\non record in Winnipeg.\n! 00,000 mugs, with portraits of\nthe King and Queen have' been\nprepared, for presentation to the\nchildren who will be entertained\nby His Majesty at the Coronation\nfete, Crystal Palace, \"June 30th.\nTwenty-two tons of ivory porcelain\nwere used in their manufacture.\nThe historic Derby run on tlie\nEpsom Downs last Wednesday\nwas won by J. Joel's Sunstar, the\nfavourite.   There were 2 7 starters.\nSir W. S. Gilbert,, the famous\nlibrettist, met a tragic death last\nweek by drowning. He was attempting to rescue a lady bather\nwho had got beyond her depth.\nQueen Mary's crown has just\nbeen completed. It is according\nto her own design with an elegant\nlace - like tracery of holly in\ndiamonds, the Kohinoor being set\ninthe centre. The crown weighs\nnineteen ounces, the Queen, having\ninsisted that it should not exceed\nthe weight of an ordinary hat. It\nwill be used only at the coronation.\nAfter that ceremony the gems will\nbe dismounted and used in separate\narticles of jewelery. The King will\nwear his father's crown.     7\nAvalanches which have, piled\ndrifts and debris - a hundred feet\ndeep on the unprotected tracks will\nnecessitate an expenditure of $30,-\n000 at least by the G. T. P. in\nclearing its new line out of Prince\nRupert.\nT. P.' O'Connei says that the\nveto bill .is so certain of being\npassed that little interest is now\nbeing taken in it in Great Britain.\nThe single tax. idea promulgated\nby Henry George, in so far as it\napplies to the exemption of im-\nimprovements from taxation, has\nbeen adopted by the New Westminster city council; arid will be\nenforced this year. This decision\nwill result in an increased tax on\nland in order to meet the estimated\nexpenditures for the year. As a\nconsequence the tax rate has been\nfixed at 30 mills gross or 25 mills\nnet on land, only. Last year, and\nfor many years previous,.the tax\nrate\\ of the city was 24 mills on the\ndollar gjrogs and 20 . mills, net\nImprovements up to a certain proportion were taxed, however.\nThis .year the rate will be 30 mills,\nbut a discount equal to 5 mills on\nthe dollar will be given if the taxes\nare paid before August I. The\nexemption of improvements from\ntaxation will, it is believed, stimulate\nbuilding the city and discourage\nthe holding of unimproved property\nfor speculation purposes.\nNew Westminster was horrified\nlast Saturday by a brutal murder\nby Harry Jobes, a machinist helper\nwho-shot his wife twice through\nthe head, killing her instantly.\nAlthough the total population of\nCanada will be known some time\nin October, the tabulating and analysis of the population figures and\nof the extensive information asked\nipr in regard to trade, industry, etc.\nwill keep the census bureau busy\nfor about three years.\nHalley's cornet was observed at\nLowell Observatory on May 31\nprobably for the last time until its\nnext swing toward the earth, as\nmoonlight now interferes. The\ncomet is now beyond the orbit of\nJupiter, and farther from the earth\nthan noted in any previous observation. '\u00ab\u2022\u25a0.;\nThe first day of the staking of\nthe census brought to light an error\nin schedule seven which gave rise\nto difficulties both' locally and all\nover the Dominion. The mistake\nis one made in the census office\nwhich has issued a bulletin to all\ncommissioners correcting the blunder; but it will cause the first day's\nwork to be gone over again so far\nas this schedule is concerned in\ncities.\nNews ofthe Valley\nA part of Penticton's water supply was cut off last week by some\nunknown persons starting rocks\nrolling from the top of some cliffs\nunder which the flume passes.\nSections of the fluming were carried\naway, and it took a gang of men\ntwelve hours to fix things up. The\npolice are looking for the humorists\nwho caused the trouble.\nPenticton's Aquatic Club is endeavoring to raise $5,000 for a\nnew pavilion.\nThe rate of taxation, for Penticton has been fixed fbr the year at\neighteen and three-fifths mills inside the fire limits, and eighteen\noutside. \u25a0\u25a0*\nRutland News.\nThe bible class of the Mount\nView Sunday school met on Friday evening, June 2nd at the home\nof Mr. W. H. Fleming, to reorganize and elect officers and teacher\nfor the ensuing year. The officers\nelected were, Pres, Willis Schell;\nVice_-Per9., C. Leathley; Secretary,\nJ. B. Craig; Treasurer, John Fleming. Rev. Vance was unanimously\nchosen as teacher, and Mr. Blenkarn as assistant. Mr. V. Dilworth\nand Mr. Colclough, Lookout Committee.\nThe election of officers for the\nSunday school followed; A. E.\nClark, being re-elected for another\nyear; Miss Flossy Dilworth was\nelected as secretary-treasurer, and\nMrs. V. Dilworth, organist.       ; .\nA very pleasant evening was enjoyed by those present, who all\njoined in a hearty vote of thanks\nto Mr. and Mrs. Fleming for their\npart iri making this little gathering\na success.\n __, cough ia not,dangerous when\nthe cough is kept loose and expectoration\n\u00abV bjr giving Chamberlain's Cough\nRemedy. It haa been used in many\nepidemics of this disease with perfect\nsuccess.   For Mb by all dealer*.\nMr, A. R. DAVY\nwill hold an auc?\ntion sale of Houses,\nciiy lots and land, on\nSaturday, June 24.\nFurther particulars will be announced later.\nAll inquiries to be addressed\nto die auctioneer.\nDr.  MATHISON\nDentist\nKelowna,    -\u25a0>-.-   -    B. C.\nWATCHES\nAt this tint* of the year we are\nespecially recommending our\nSeven: Jewel Silveroid Regina\nWatch, for dusty work.\nPrice $8.00\nThey have stood the test.\nJ R KNOWLES,\n\/ette\/erand Optician,\nKELOWNA  -  B.q.\nA. R. DAVY\nAuctioneer\n20th CENTURY SBOE .\nREPAJBING STORE\nNext door to Crowley's Butcher Shop\nBring your old comforts and\nhave them fixed up as good\n\"as new.\nAgent for Okanagan\nLaundiy.-\nThere is one medicine that every family\nshould ba provided with and especially\nduring tha summer months; viae, Chamber-\nIain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.\nIt i\u00ab fcimoat certain to be needed. It cost*\nbut a quarter. Can you afford to be with'\nout it >   For sale by all dealers.\nSde entrance Raymer's Buildingl\nAH kinds of Shoes and Leather Goods\nDyed and Polished.\nJohn Blanem.\nRough and Dressed Lumber.\nShingles. Siding, Doors, Windows,   7\nMouldings, Etc\nKelowna Saw-Mill Company, Limited\nytf&\n;'\u25a0\u2022#\u25a0\nHOUSE FOR RENT in Parfdak\n\u2022    Containing 6 rooms, Gty Water, etc\n$2S pet Month\nINSURANCE.\nFire, Life, Accident, Employers* Liability, Plate Glass\nMORTGAGES NEGOTIATED\nAgreements of Sale Purchased.\nHEWETSON & MANTLE.\nii;\nSituated within One half mile of town; and being\nabout loo feet above the lake, it commands a boauM-\nfoi view oil the .town, kk\u00ab a^ *urroundins couatiy.\nIdeal Fruit Soil Abundance of Water.\nClose to Town and Market\nThere is only one GLENMORE. fli&n^l|*^. ~\nportumty of selecting\"\"a few acre* of&u deau&U\nproperty. -..-\u2022-=-\u25a0...\u25a0- \u25a0.\u201e..\u00bb....,        \u25a0\u25a0;..\u25a0\nIf you wish a cheap building lot or an acre of land call on u* and w\u00ab will\n\u2022how you our cub-division\ni  WOOfiLAWN  \u00ab   ^\nJuat four block* from the centre of-the town.    Price* low.   Terms e*\u00aby.\nmonthly payment* if *o de*ired.\n7^ Eire Insurance\nWe represent only the best board companies.\nThe Central Okanagan Lands, Ltd.\nKELOWNA. ac\n'7.;'vr..\nUnder New Management.\nThe Blackwood Livery Stables, recently\ncarried on by A.,K..:JDaivy,;:;.i8 ni&w\nunder new management     I H\nNew Rigs fiiiid Teams have beeni\nadded, and everything conducted\nin first-class city style.\nPrompt and careful attention to Jail\norders for livery or express.   &x\n\u00bb\"\u25a0*\u00bb\u00ab\nBOUVETTE & iS\nKELOWNA, B.C\n\u2022..-.-\u2022'\u2022':'i 'AA'!\nyyym\ny*'A$\n>ypi&\n-is\nA*\u00a3l0\n\u25a0$$&&\u25a0\n'ycf-^y.'.\nmM\n*77i$s\n\"'Ayy\n''777p^\n\u00a3____' The Orchard Gity Record\nThursday, June 8\nA Profitable Suggestion\nFor Choice Groceries  at Lowest Prices\nand Quick Deliveries go to\nTHE\nOur Goods are always fresh  and clean\nand you cannot afford to miss our\nweek end Bargain Day\nWatch our price tickets\nEvaporated Milk 20 oz tins 2 for 25c.\nBest Creamery Butter, per lb. - 35 c.\nGenuine Norwegian Sardines tin I Oc.\nYellow Corn Meal 101b. sacks - 35 c.\n\"Puro\"  the great pancake   flour   2\npackages for 45c\nOatmeal and Cucumber toilet soaps\n6 bars for 25c.\nHeadquarters for Choice Fruits and\nGreen Vegetables. Delicious Ice\nCream always on hand.\nTry some.\nGOTO\nK. F. OXLEY\nPhone 35 Phone 35\nm*\nStore open every evening for Ice\nCream only\nWedd\ning\nThey May Not Be Quite So\n*   merous as You Imagine.\nNu-\nGUESS AS TO THEIR NUMBER.\nPresents\nhave  in   abundance\nwe   are   now in   a\nWe\nand\nposition to show you some\nvery attractive and exclusive pieces of\nSilverwear\nand\nCut Glass\nIf it is for a friend at a\ndistance our case goods\nare easily mailed and very\nmoderate in price.\nDrop in and give us the\npleasure of showing you\nour up-to-date stock.\nW.M. PARKER & Co.\nWATCHMAKERS & JEWELERS\nP.O. Box 315 - Spedding Blk.\nThe People's Store\nPhones:  Grocery, 214    Dry Goods, 314     Office, 143\nSomething New in Confectionery\nA Trial Shipment From\nChampion Davis & Co\nCandy Manufacturers, Bristol England.\nVADTtTTltTQ\nv r-u. \\ii_i i xju_i>-j\nIncluding among others the following^\nAssorted Fruit Gums, Lemon and Orange\nSlices, Fruit Allsorts, Cream and Jelly\nLozenges, Cream Lunch, Cokernut Cubes,\nAssorted Fruit Creams and Cokernut Mushrooms.\nGood, Wholesome, Pure, and Toothsome.\nWe want you to try them.\n40 Cents per pound.\nTHOMAS LAWSON, Ltd.\nHeadquarters for the Economical Buyer\nThen Do Some Thinking and Figuring\nand See How Far From Your Guest\nYou Come and Incidentally Learn\nHow Many Folks You Don't Know.\nDid you ever have tho experience ol\nwalking dowa Mulu street with u man\nwho is running for office? All the time\nhe is bowing.right, und left to people\nyou meet Several limes In a block he\nwill slop to shake hands wilh au acquaintance.\n\"You seem to kuow every oue,\" you\nsay to him almost enviously.\n\u2022'That's right.\" he replies, not without some pride. \"I guess 1 do know\neverybody worth knowing.\"\nYet how many people does he know?\nflow many people do you know yourself? Did you ever try to figure it out?\nWhat proportion of the people in the\n.'nited States do you know? Certainly\nyou don't know the ouu-hu'udreth part\nof them. Even the president of the\nUnited States doesn't and couldn't if\nhe kept traveling all the time, making\na host of new acquaintances every day.\nTo know the one-hundredth part of\nthe people In this country would be to\nknow in the neighborhood of a million\npersons. No; it is perfectly safe to say\nth:.I there is no person in the whole\nworld that knows a million other persons wall enough to call each of them\nby name. Think what a million means!\nSuppose you said the names of all tbe\npeople you know as fast as you could.\nIf you could enunciate twenty names\na minute you would be doing mnrvel-\nonsly well. Even at that rate, working\nsteadily eight hours a day, it would\ntake you nearly four mouths just to\nname the people you know There isn't\nn memory in existence that would hold\nn million names.\nWell, do you suppose you know a\nhundred thousand? Let's see; that\nwould be about one-fifth of the population of Rhode island. Imagine your:\ntself sitting in the railroad- station at\nProvidence watching the people corne\nthrough. No; that is hardly a fair\ntest, for unless you live in Providence |\nyou do not know as many people there'\nas In the city in which you live. Sit\nin your own railway station and count\nI lie people coming through. No matter\nhow well known you are or how many\npeople you know, you cannot help but\nlie impressed with the fact of how\nmany people there are that you do not\nknow. If you kuow one in u hundred\npersons you kuow far more than the\noverage.\nLet us try to get at it in another\nway. You make on the average, say,\ntwo new acquaintances a week. Of\ncentre there are weeks and weeks that\nyou make no new acquaintances at alL\nand then there are times, such as pic-\nuic week and vacation week aud\nchurch fair week, when you meet a\nlot of people, so that two a week is a\nfair average. You have been meeting\npeople, say. for twenty-five years.\nThat's 2.500, Isn't It?\nIs it possible that you kuow only\n2,500 people? You thought the number would be far more than that?\nBut hold on. You don't know nearly\nthat many. There are lots and lota\nof people whom you knew twenty\nyears ago that yon don't know now.\nYou cannot even remember their\nnames or what they looked like.\nJust sit down and try to remember\nthe names of all the boys and girls\nthat were in (he same room in the\npublic school with you. You cannot\nremember half of them or a third of\nthem or a fifth of them. It is safe to\nsay that of every two persons you\nmet in all your life you have forgotten\none. The chances ore that the number of people you know by name is\nnearer 1,000 than it is 2,000.\nOf course a preacher with a thousand members lu his church Is expected \"to know them all by name. But\nall the same you will find bim saying\nto bis wife:\n\"My dear, who was that young lady\nwho spoke to us just know?\"\nIt Is business, too, for a merchant to\n\"remember all of bis thoasand customers, but very few merchants are able to\ndo It. Possibly some of the politicians\nand public lecturers may know a cou-\nple of thousand persons by nanie, but\nvery few other persons know tbat\nmany.        .m\nIf this estimate seems too low it Is\neasily disproved. All you have to do\nIs to take pencil and paper and begin\nputting down the names of your acquaintances. Start with your own\nfamily aud then put down your cousins\nand your second cousins and your\nwire's relations. Then put down the\nnames of the people you know In tbe\ntown you used to live ln and the peo-\nJ *ple you know socially. Follow that up\nwith the people you know in business,\nthen\u2014 *       _\nBut you can't dispute these figures.\nIt is too much trouble to think of all\nthe people you know. You'll never do it,;\n-New York World.\nNOTICE\nPublic notice is hereby given that .under\nthe authority contained in section 131 of\nthe \"Land Act,\" a regulation was approved\nby the Lieutenant-Governor in Council fixing the minimum sale prices oi first and\nsecoiid claes lands at $10 and $5 per\nacre respectively.\nThis regulation further provided that the\nprices fixed therein should apply to all\nlands with respect to which the applications to purchase were given favourable\nconsideration after the date of said regulation, namely April 3rd, 1911..\nFurther notice is now given that by virtue of a regulation approved by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council on the 10th of\nMay, 1911, that that the regulation dated\nthe 3rd of May, 1911, be held not to apply\nto applications to purchase vaacnt Crown\nlands which were received by the Assistant Commissioners of Lands on or before\nthe said April 3rd, 1911, and with respect\nto which the required deposit of fifty cents\nper acre had been received by said Commissioners on or before the said April 3rd\n1911.\nROBT. A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Minister of Lands.\nDepartment of Lands,\nVictoria, B. C, 16th of Man, 1911.\n2 Cents per word, first insertion and\n1 Cent per word each subsequent\ninsertion, minimum 25 Cent*.\n- PIANOFORTE PUPILS _\nMr. Harold Tod Boyd now receives piano-;\nforte pupils at ,the studio. Trench Bloclfl\n(Front room). Address box 374. Post offic\nPUBLIC SERVICE ACT\nThe qualifying examinations of Third-\nClass Clerks, Junior Clerks, tad Stenographers will be held at the following places,\ncommencing on Monday, 3rd July next:\u2014\nArmstrong, Chilliwack, Cumberland, Golden, Grand Forks, Kamloops, Kaslo Kelowna, Ladysmith, Nanaimc, Nelson, New\nWestminster, North Vancouver Peachland,\nRevelstoke, Rossland, Salmon Arm, Slimmer land, Vancouver, Vernon and Victoria.\nCanidates must be Britian subjects between the ages of 21 and 30, if for Third-\nclass Clerks; and between 16 and 21, if for\nJunior Clerks or Stenographers.\nApplications will not be accepted if  re\nceived later than the 15th June next.\nFurther information, together with application forms may be obtained from the\nundersigned.\nP. WALKER.\nIlegistrar, Public Service.\nVictoria, B. C, 27th April. 1911.      aP27\n-7 FOR SALE\n160 acres of good fruit land, 2J mile*\nfrom Kelowna and J mile from school?\n20 acres cleared, the rest is free rroiVj\nstones and easify cleared. Small housejl\nstabling for 6 horses also chicken hous\/l\nand other outbuildings. For further\nparticulars apply to P. O. Box 448 Keii\nowna. IO-tf#v\nNURSING\nExperienced,  moderate  terms.\nMrs. C. Pitt. Rutland.\nAddre.\nTO RENT\nMorden's house, six rooms, with or with!)\nout land.   Apply G. E. Boyer. 16tf\n*      FOR SALE\nMr. Boyer Snr. has 5 or 6 small, but vera\ndesirable Properties for  sale,  situated  if\nand just outside the city limits. I7tf\ntent Wanted   -\nGood condition and size.   Address Record\nOffice.\nHOUSEKEEPING,\nBy week or month.   Apply Box Wj  Rec\nord Office.\nBarred Rock Eggs\nFronv healthy, vigorous, bred-to-lay stock:!\nkept in open front  houses,  summer  andj\nwinter.   Eggs per setting, $2,3 settings tot\n$5. C. E. Weeks, Benvoulin.    19\nRESTAURANT.\nGood meals to be had.\nCloses Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 9 p.m.\nMisses Laidlaw.\nCorner Water St. and\nLawrence.\nICE FOR SALE\nDelivered anywhere ir. town\nI'c. per lb.\nA. R. Davy,\nPhone 137\nROOMS AND OFFICES TO LET\nModern, hot water heating, .electric   lighti\ncity water.     Apply  Morrison Thompson]\nHardware Co.\n^ FOR SALE OR TRADE\nMagnet Cream Separator nearly new, also]\n200-egg Chatham Incubator. I. Duggan,)\nRutland. x>\nMANHATTAN BEACH\nLot for sale.   Apply C. C. Josse.yn.   25tf A\nWANTED\nImproved Fruit Farms for clients in East-1\nerh Canada. We will list good propositions in Montreal and Ottawa. Will inspect fl\nwithin ten days, and can make quick tales\nIf you want to sell, write full particulars!\nCentral Okanagan Lands, Ltd., Kelowna,3\nB.C. 25\nTENT FOR SALE ft\n14 x 16, with boarded kitchen, at rear, furnished. Price $65. Apply Methodist Par-,\nsonage, Rutland. x\nFOR SALE\nThat very desirable property composed\nof I 1-4 acres of bearing orchard, fronting\non the south side of the Vernon road just\noutside the city limits. On the property\nis a comfortable seven room- frame house\na commodious stable and poultry house,\ncarriage shed, etc. A well of good spring\nwater.and.pump, right at kitchen aoor.\nThis property will be right on the projected car line into the city, and is not subject to the excessive city taxes, and is\noffered for sale at just about the value of\nthe buildings alone, on easy terms. $2,250\nonly five hundred cash aud balance\narranged to suit purchaser.\nThe above property is also offered  to\nrent on very reasonable terms.   Apply  to\nowner on premises, or to P. O. Box  365.\nS. BARBER\nFOR SALE\nGood young spring pigs.   Carsarso Bros.\n- 26-9\nWANTED\nYoung men's washing to do at  home,\nApply Box 303, Kelowna. 28-9pl\n\u2014 \u2014;\u2014: :\u2014_ ____\/\/\nWANTED\nParties wishing to dispose of stable manure^\nthis summer, please address P.O. Box 337 J\nKelowna. 28-991\nFOR RENT\nCottage in Glenn Avenue.   Apply Record!\nOffice. xl\nA Hat and a Head.\n\"Now, if you follow uoy advice;\"\nsaid one business man to another as\nthe wind emij.li. tbe hat of the latter\nfrom his heud\u2014\"If you follow my advice your derby will stay on In any\nwind that New York can produce.\nWhen I buy a new hat I beat It over\nthe gas jet, and while It Is still warm\nI put It on and let It cool on my head.\nThe result Is a perfect fit Try It and\nbm.\"\u2014New York Sun.\nS.GRAY\nPortrait\n\u25a0 The only wealth which will not decay Is knowledge.\u2014LangforiL\nStudio    open\nThursday, Friday, and\nSaturday.\nLandscape and\nPortrait\nPhotographer\nLargest Studios in the inferior\nPortraits by appointment\nPendozi Street\n\u2022Smith Street\nKelowna\nPenticton\nRowcliffe Block\nERSHINEI CAMPBELL\nBuilders and\nContractors.\nPlans & Estimates Furnished\nResidence, Park Ave.\nP.O. Box 75.\nIf your business is\nnot worth advertising,\nadvertise it for sale.\nn-twmmwimnnXiOTTrfaaic","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Kelowna (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Orchard_City_Record_1911_06_08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0184944","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.8880556","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-119.495556","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled The Orchard City Record from 1908 to 1911-11-16. Titled Kelowna Orchard City Record from 1911-11-23 to 1915-01-14. Titled Kelowna Record from 1915-01-21 to 1920-09-30<br><br>Print Run: 1912-1920<br><br>Frequency: Weekly","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Kelowna, B.C. : John Leathley","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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":"1911-06-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1911-06-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Orchard City Record","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]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}