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B. C. JUNE 8; 1907\nC. B. Hume & Co., Ltd\nStores at Arrowhead and Revelstoke.\nUhe Seal of\nCertainty\nExamine the accompanying\ncut closely and the SLATER\nshoe  trade  mark.   Be  Bure\nand look for it on the next\n\\ \u25a0 . pair of Shoos you buy.    You\nV r,oom-F.,\\H.Wh.lt-Sr.v\/H '\/      .,, ,.    , \u2022, ,, .\nv \"\u201e\".., .\"7* \/  will hnd it means something\nyuu art* certain to hnve a thoroughly good shoe if yuu have n\nSlnler. Fur fool comfort, ense and Shoe economy wear always\nlhe SLATER SHOES,\nThey cimio in Calf, Goodyear welt, new shapes. This is a\nshoe libit lakes a superior polish\u2014a middling heavy manly boot\nnt per pair $4 50\nA superior Vici Kid llluclier, rational shape. Tliis is a very\ndressy and soft, light Summer Shoe, a thoroughly good shoo lor\nOres? wear Goodyear well\u2014at per pair $5 50\nCoronn Colt, the finest quality of patent leather produced\n\u2014no fear of cracking or chipping, the aome of shoe perfection lor\na beautiful line dress shoe buy tliis $Q 50\nBISCUITS\nThree of the best brands of Fancy Biscuits you could\nchoose from.\nHCNTI.KY\nBiscuits,\n& Palmer's\nMcCormick's Biscuits.\nFoley,   Lock  & Larson's Biscuits.\nAll  these biscuits have\narrived this week and are j$\nfresh from the Factories.\nTHE LATEST\nTELEGRAMS\nEx-Judge Henderson for Yukon\n\u2014Control of Fisheries-Lacrosse and Brutality-Financial Depression.\nVANCOUVER, .tune 8\u2014Mr. Alexander\nHonderson. who for several years was\ncomity court judge tor Vancouver, has\njust been ottered and has accepted tho\nOommissionershlp ol the Yukon. He\nleaves tor Ottawa today to conier with\nthe government,\nVictoria, Juno 8.\u2014A proclimntinn\nformally placing the Provincial Fish-\nerics Act -t 11)01, as amended nt (lie\nlast session t.t the Legislature, on (be\nStatutes nf the Pruvince, has been\nsigned and appears in this week'-*\n'ssue ol tl.e \"(lazette,\" and takes ed'ecl\nimmediately.\nMadrid, Juno 8.\u2014The supreme\ncourt lias declared ilsell competent In\ntry the suit ol the heirs ol Elena San\/,,\nthe singer, against, the heirs ul King\nAlfonso XII.\nVictoria, June 8.\u2014Sergt. Cavin,\nSergt, Carr and Ounner Fisher of tlie\nFilth regiment, members ol the llisley\nteam, Btarled t\u00bb day for Ihe nld ouu\ntry The shooters lett by tl.e Charmer\nand there wa' a large crowd at the\nthick to wish them luck.\nMontreal, June 8.\u2014In view ot\nrecent brutal lacrosse exhibitions al\ntbo National grounds, Maisonneuve,\narising out ot which the Shamrock\nplayers are being prosecuted criminally\n\u2014the town council has decided to\nadopt a by-law prohibiting anything\nin the way of brutal sportsand authorizing the chief of police to stop such\nexhibitions if be deems it advisable.\nGenoa, Italy, June 8.\u2014Trading on\nthe local bourse was suspended tn-day\nowing to the heavy losses involved in\nthe in-nlbly settlement amounting to\nabout $2,>i0t.,000.\nCITYCOUNCIL.\nC. B. Hume & Co, Ltd\nSTO ES AT ARROWHEAD AND REVELSTOKE\nPi iTi iTi iTi iTi iTi iTi '*' *** '** **\u00bb '\"\nn ij,' *!,' *V *V *lf 'A' *xf %L' IX' \"X N\n| CARPENTERS' TOOLS jj\nBUILDERS' HARDWARE\nSupplies, Belting, otc.   Stanley's and Starrett's\n'ools.   Simt.nils' und Shurly and Dietrich High\nGarden Tools in great variely.\nSRATORS, ICE CIIEAM FREEZERS.\n, etc.\nSuwn.il\nMechanic*''\nGrade Siuvb.\nREFR1C ^^^^^^\nPaints and Oils, Kalsomine,     ^^^^^^^^^^^\nPlumbing, TiiiBuiitliing and Electrical Departments*  in\nconnection.\nEstimates given.   Job Work Done.\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention\nv        Convenient Olliees for Rent Upstairs.\nI LAWRENCE HARDWARE CO., Ltd.\nt Dealers in Hardware, Stoves and Tinware, Miners'. Lumbermen's\nand Sawmill Supplies, etc., Plumbing and Tins mi thing.\ntti A .4*. \u25a0*>\u25a0 At A \u25a0\u2666. A A \u00bb\u2666* \u00ab\u2666\u00ab A \u00bb*fr* \u25a0\u2666\u25a0 t^t \u00ab*K .\u2666. \u25a0\u2666\u00bb .*K .\u2666\u00ab .T\u00bb A At JTt ,\u2666. A\n*w im trt iw iw iji ijji ix* \"X 'X X X 4> V X 4* X A X \u25a0* X X *X X X \"X*\nCOUNTY COURT\nThe lollowing cases were disposed\nuf on Wedncsd.y last before His\nHonor Judge Forin:\nRex v. Jim (a Chinaman)\u2014Charged\nwith shooting a horse belonging to\nWing Chun -. Prison, r elected speedy\ntrial and pleaded \"not guilty.\" C. K\nGillan prosecuted and J. M, Scott defended the prisoner. Prisoner was\ndischarged as there waa no evidence\nadvanced identifying tbe horse which\nwas Bitot.\nLux v. MoCalVry-On 1500 note.\nAdjourned to next court. McCarter\n(or pbiinlilT, Gillan ler detendant.\nW, Akitt v. Big llend Lumber Co.-\nAction t -i damages for a broken leg.\n.Ilidgment found tor $500. From this\njudgment delendants have given notice\nof appeal. J.M. Scott lor plaintiff, G.\nS. McCarter for defendants.\nNortheyv. Bowman Lumber Co.\u2014\nAction lor $1,000 damages and an\ninjunction to prevent cutting limbor\non plaintiff's pre-emption near Camborne. The delendants set up a\ncoiiiiltiriiclii... [or $1,1100 damages tor\ncutting dono by plaintiff on tbeir\ntimber berth. A survey having been\nmade it was lound that tbe plaintiff\nwas trespassing instead ol tho delendants, and his action was dismissed\n.villi costs and judgement was enteral\nfnr tbo dolcnds.it company for $300\nand costs. VV. I Briggs lor plaintiff,\nG, S. McCft.tor (or defendants.\nOtmoltl v. Yida (Japanese)\u2014$lfil 15\njudgement, was given lur tho plaintiff\nfur full amount. (I. S. McCarter (ur\nplaintiff, W, I, Briggs I..r dels...la.it.\nBourne Bros. v. Voitli\u2014$51 judg-\n...out lur plaintiff.' VV, I. Briggs lor\nplaintiff, G. S, McCarter lur defendant,\nRaquitti v. Nicholson\u2014Action lor\nrent and possession.    Judgment tor\nI $20.   G. S. McCarter lor plaintiff, W.\nI. Briggs for defendant.\nANOTHER 'FRISCO QUAKE\nSevere Midnight Shocks Create\nPanic.\nSan Francisco, June 7\u2014Al 12:21!\nyesterday morning San Francisco and\ncities almut the bay werc shaken by a\nsevere cnrtluiuftke, The shock was\ntlie severest, since the disastrous trembler ol April lllth last year. Tbe\ndamage was limited to the breaking of\ndishes un shelves and the destruction\not a low tottering walls in the burned\ndistrict, In the resideuce dislrict a\nnumber ol people rail into tho streets\nin their night clothes. Along Golden\nGate avenue a genuine panic prevailed.\nSeveral hundred women rushed into\nllie street in their night clothes, Throe\nwomen WBre treated lor nervous shuck\nbut no one suffered injury so tar as\nreported. Tl.e earthquake was in tlie\nform of two sharp shucks, the second\nfollowing while the earth still tren.l led\n[run. tho first. The coming of the\nshake was announced by rattling\niviiiilo.vs and swinging chandeliers.\nThen came an abrupt jolt and then a\nlessoning tremble, followed by an..ther\nquick jolt and a gradually lessoning\nol motion, Oakland, Berkeley, Ala-\n...eda, and other bay cities reported a\nshock exactly liko that lelt here.\nReports bo lar received indicate\nthat thu shake was lelt at least as far\nsoutl. as Santa Cm\/., 125 milos down\nthe const,\nThe regular meeting of the City\nCouncil was held last night with\nMayor Brown and all the aldermen\npresent. The minutes ol the last\nmeeting were adopted as read.\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nFrom chief of police reporting lire\nalarms working 0. K \u2014Filed.\nFrom G. Lenibke requesting leave\nol absence. Referred to Fire, Water\nand Light committee.\nFrom No. 1 Fiie brigade re marking ol hose, tlie r.fe I for additional\nhydrants, lire alarms, and rubber\nboots, Aid. Abrahamson said that\nthere was only one alarm box in tl.e\nlower town which was insufficient\nAid. Howson urged that a complete\nequipment ol lire alarms and hydrants\nshuuld te installed throughout the\ncity. The matter was relerred lo the\nFire, \\Vat\u00bbr and Light committee\nFrom Harvey, McCarter and Pink-\nham re claims nf Mrs. Taylor for\ncompensation fur loss during the\nquarantining ol her house for diphtheria cases. The claiin was Ior $209.\nThe council felt that legally tbey were\nnot obliged to pay die claim and a\nresolution was passed hat Harvey,\nMcCarter & Pinkliani be advised that\nthe council did not hold themselves\nliable for th claim and declined tn\nsettle it. The report of tl.e Public\nWorks committee wae presented and\nreceived, detailing the proposed sheet\nwork Ior the year. The report was\nc.ueliilly considered and each item\ndiscussed belore passing the council.\nThe work covered the city sidewalks\ngenerally.\nA report Irom the Fire, Water and\nLight committee re repairs to No. 2\nlire ball was considered; the repairs,\nincluding painting, plastering, chimneys and general work. A resolution\nwas passed adopting tlie report\u2014the\nrepairs to cost $375.\nFor unfinished business tlie application ot C, J. Aman, assistant city\nclerk, lor a raise in salary ol $5 per\nmonth was considered, the council\npassing a resolution fixing his salary\nat $80 a mouth and $10 per month (or\njanitor work Thc accounts were\npassed and the meeting terminated.\nFASHIONABLE  WEDDING\nA Very Pleasing Event Takes\nPlace at Arrowhead.\nA very Interesting and banpv event\noccurred at the Alexandria Hospital,\n:V: row head, on Wednesday, June 5lb,\nwhen Miss Hectoiia McLean, the\nmatron ol that institution was married\nto Mr. \\V, R. Reid, ono ol the moBt\npopular and influential merchants of\ntbe town. The Rev. Mr. McColl, B.A.,\npastur of the Presbyterian churcli\nofficiating. Tlie bride who looked\nvery charming in a navy blue travelling suit, was attended by Miss Nesbitt\not Revelstoke, and the groom was ably\nsupported by Dr. J. H. Hamilton.\nThe many costly and beautilul\npre-enls t-stified tu tbe very high\nesteem in which both are held.\nAn g lln.se present werc noticed\nMr. and Mrs. Brown, Mr. anil Mrs.\nYoung. Miss White and Dr. J. II.\nHamilton, ol Revolstoke. Mr. and\nMrs. Luckinan, Mr. and Mrs. Geurge\nB, Campbell, C.ipt. and Mis. Fraser,\nMr. and Mrs. Wallace, Mr. and Mrs.\nLightburne, Mr. and Mrs. Cameron,\nMr. and Mrs Geo. Reid, Dr. and Mis,\nElliott, Mr. Cayley, Mrs. Bain, Mr,\nand Mrs. Kirk, Mr, and Mrs. Haigb,\nMr. and Mrs. Warner and Mr. and\nMrs. Fox.\nThe happy couple left by lhc 4 p.m.\ntrain, amid a shower of rice and good\nwishes of all, for Revelsloke en route\nto tbe Pacific coast. Upon their\nreturn they will occupy the beautilul\nnew liuuse whicli Mr, Reid has built\nand where Mrs. Reid will be at home\nto her many friends in July.\nTbe lollowing io a list ot the\npresents:\nThe groom's gift to bride was a\nb. .niti.'til pearl and diamond pendant,\nand tlie bride's gilt tu groom was\na set o( handsome diamond cuff links.\nGroom to bridesmaid, a dainty gild\nbracelet, groom to best man, gold\ncuff links. Big Bend Lumber Co.\nBet of fruit knives, Bet of alternoon\nknives and forks and a set cl fish\nknives and forks. Dr. Hamilton, set\nuf pearl handled silver fish knives and\nforks; Mr. and Mrs. George B. Campbell, set ot Blag horn carvers; Mr and\nMrs. George Reid, cut glass dish, Mr.\naud Mrs. Stevens, silver cake dish;\nMiss Nesbitt, silver cake dish, Miss\nWhite, silver Iruit diab; Miss Sharpe,\ncut glass silver top pepper boxes:\nMiss Muore, silv.'r card tray; Miss Mc-\nFarlane, clock; Mr. and Mrs. Brown,\nsilver Iruit dish; Mrs Bain, alternoon\ntea tray, Dr and MrB Elliott, brass\ncandle sticks; Dr. Sutherlan I, cut\nglass Iruit dish; Mr. and MrB. Lightburne, cut glass Iruit diab; Mr. and\nMrs. Cam' ron, silver Iruit dish; Mv.\nand MrB. Cayley, sugar basin, milk\njug and spoon holder; Mr. and Mrs.\nWallace, triple plate glass mirror;\nMasters D.ck and Douglas Wallace,\nBeer Stein; Rev.Mr. Johnston,dnult -n\njug; Mr. and Mrs. Kirk, Vases; Mr.\nand Mrs. Warner, sal ul bowl, lork and\nepooo; Capt. and Mrs. Fraser, cut\nglass dish; Mr. and Mrs. Fox, cut\nglass water bottle; Fred Buscuiuhe\ncut glass water bottle; Mr. and Mrs\nHaigh, band painted teapot cusy; Mian.I Mrs. ll-.wl, cut glass sugar basin\nand milk jug; Mrs. Whitebread, silver\nbutter dish; Mr. and Mrs. Donovan,\nraised silk centre piece; Mr and Mrs\nDewar. centre piece; Mrs. McDonald,\ndoyle,; Mr. and Mrs. Young, silver\nfru.t dish; Mr, 0 Wood, stuffed owl;\nMrs. Kilpatrick, candleabia; Mr..A. E.\nKincaid, cut glass salad bowl.\nCONFESSED TO\nAWFUL CRIMES\nWEST KOOTENAY LUMBER\nDiabolical Story of Harry\nOrchard Told in Witness\nBox\u2014Sickening Details of\nCrimes Committed.\nBoiBE, Ida.,  June  7.\u2014Harry  Orchard, the mail   who  says   his   true\ninline is Albert llursi.ly, who assassinated dinner Governor Frank Steuiun-\nberg at  Caldwell  on  the  night  of\nDecember 80, 1005, resumed his gruc\nsome story as a witness against Wm.\nD Haywood, secretary.treasurer ol the\nWestern Federation o( Miners, in the\ndLtriot court yesterday morning. The\n(enrsonic relations ot  live years ol\ncrime was not finished yisterday. The\nclimax came today, if,  indeed,  there\ncan be ft climax   mure  terrible  than\ntlie one already re.died in the  narrative told l.y the witness.   Tho.story ol\ntbe crime  with  which   Haywood  is\ncharged is a revelation to the peoplo\n...f tliis country, if the  Btory   told   by\nOrchard is true    In his confession on\nthe   sl.an I    yesterday   Orchard, or\nllnrsely, without telling  any  ol  the\nearlier history of bis lite, without revealing the reasons tbat caused him to\nchange  his  name, without a word ot\nllie wile whom be is known   to  havo\ndeserted, or of his father and mother\nand grandmother back in tlie old days\nin   Canada,  plunged at once into the\nnarration ol   what be lias done since\nearly in 1880 when as a worker iu the\nCoeur d'Alene,  he  first  joined  llie\nWestern Fedeiaiiuu of Miners,    ll is\nnut lo be supposed that bis misdoings\ncommencid with ihe lighting of tlie\nfuse that  blew   up   Bunker  Hill  at\nWardnermid hurled twu nien tu death\nbin tuday he told ol the last crime ol\n.ill, when, on a stormy night,  as  the\no'd year was dying, he set a I omb and\nblew Frank Steuneiibcrg to his death\nwil Inn sight ol his children and within\ntlie bearing of liis wife.\nOrchard, this morning, resumed his\ngruesome confession. He said Petti\nbone paid him $12.1 after the Bradley\nbomb episode, and Baid he was glad\nBiadloy's eye*, were blown out. Haywood called f-.r Uuvernor Peabody's\nassassination \"by any means.\" Haywood called fur tba murder ol Frank\nHearn, t.t tl.e Colorado Fuel and Iruu\ncumpauy, and ior the assassination o!\nDavid Muffat, ft Deuvei banker. Orchard waB asked to kill JudgeGoddard\nof the supreme court of Colorado.\nIHt.hone gave Orchard $100 \u00bbs he set\nuut to kill Governor Peabody at Canyon City, Colo.\n1'ettibune and Orchard prepared a\nbomb for Judge Gn bbert, of the Colorado supreme emu t. It killed an inline-nt inin named Wally. Haywood,\nPettibune and Orchard conspired to\nmurder Ad.ulM.it General Sherman\nBell, ot Colorado. Haywood called tur\nthe death ol ex-Governor Steunenberg,\nFred Ur..dl..y, who, according lo\nOrchard, was blown Irnin his own d ior,\ninto the street and feaifully hurt by a\ncrude bomb placed by Orchard under\ntliu mat in lhe early morning. Bradley\nis now siting tlie San Francisco Gas\ncompany, it is said, (or personal damages resulting [rom the explosion\nwhich be claims was cn .soil by escaping gas. It iB p issme lint Bradley\nmay be called by die dofenoo tn relme\nthe testimony ol Oichard. Fnd\nMiller, one of the counsel fur the defence, is said to be in San Francisco\nand it may bo that he will secure the\npresence ul Mr. Bradley.\nWE ARE NOWREKOTTOR BUSINESS\nIn Our New Store in the Burns' Block.\nJUST ARRIVED\u2014New Stocks in Every Department\nFRESH  GROCERIES ,. ,    , ,      ,  ,.,\u201e\n-   -   \u2022   \u25a0 ick of high class goods-quality\nHARDWARE,   ETC.\nA  fresh,\nguarante.\nA Hue assortment of Enamel and Granite,\nTin nml Woodenwnre, Heavy and Builders\nHardwaie,   Mining' Supplies.   Hose,   Lawn\n-ii n  '.\\.,,]s.   Screen limns\nStoves. Ranges,\nRevolvers   and\nin the Province\nWe carry ft fui\nline selection of\nMowers and all Garden '1\n..ml Win.lows.    .M.-t'li.iv's\netc.   liilles.    Shot    Guns,\nAmmunition.\nCHINA AND GLASSWARE\nOne of die bc-t assortments\nTea, Dinner nnd Toilet Sels\nline of Hotel Supplies.   A\nHichCut Glass.\nSILVERWARE AND CUTLERY\nWe carry a fine stock nf these goods.   Just\nask for what you want.- WE HAVE IT.\nTelephone -37. \t\nI BOURIsTE BROS.\n^\u25a0\u25a0S\u00abMMBMW>M>M>I.^MMWM>\u00bbM>MaWMIl\u00abMMSlS\u00abW-*-^M\u00bb\nBUILDING SITE\nThree Lots on Fifth Street, thc\nonly good site now on the\nMarket north of Sixth Street.\nPRICE $850\nGOOD TERMS.\nY. M. C. A. MEETING.\nMovement for Raising $10,000\nfor Improvements and\nLifting Debt,\nA meeting ul directors and uthcrs\ninterested in the Y.M.C.A. was held\non Thursday night. It. Howson was\nin tbe chair and C. It. Saycr, Western\nTravelling Secretary, the chief Bpcak-\ncr. The meeting had been called tor\n;he purpose ul arranging tor a plan ol\naction lor the purpose of raising $10,-\n000 for tbe construcsion of additional\npromises and ler lhe paying off ui the\npresent debt of about $5000 Some\ndoubt rested iu the minds of many\npresent as to the chances of raising\nthat amount. Mr. Lyons said that he\nwould interest thc trainmen in the\nmovement, and representatives (rom\nthe C.I'.R. shops also ottered their\nco-operation, lt was decided that tbe\nscheme should be oni.-.1 out as lar as\npossible and entered upun in a keen\nspirit, and lhat the committees appointed should report every night un\nthe results ot the day's systematic\ncanvassing. Tho merchants and\nbusiness men are takinj an active\npart in tlie movement and the dire.:-\ni tun are sanguine ol success.\nMills Work at High Pressure\nto Supply the Market.\nOwing to the rapid ii.llux uf immigration into the Northwest, and tbe\nconstantly increasing demand for\nlumber of all kinds, both in the city\nand outside points, sawmills in the\nRevelstoke district arc working at\nextreme high pressure tc supply the\ndemand, iu fact it may bc Baid that\nthis year tlie profits ol this branch ol\nindustry will be considerable. Revol-\nBtoke people aro at tbo present time\ndisplaying great activity in cruising\nand locating large tracts of timber\nand lor many years the city ol Revelstoke will be an important lumbering\ncentre oi the Kootenays.\n    *^\u00bb   \u2014\u2014\nNEW RAILWAY\nEDMONTON, June 8.\u2014Capitalists arc\nInterested iu the oonstruolion ot a\nline of railway running uortli and\nsuuth between tbe Grand Trunk\nPacific and tbo mainline ol tlio C.I'.R.\nto the east ut the Rocky mountains,\nCapt, B.J.  Saiiiulors, a surveyor,\nhas just returned lo Edmonton from\na five weeks' trip iu  the  .........tains.\nHe states that lie is not at liberty\nto say who is projecting tlio rood, but\nsaid there was no question as to the\npracticability ol constructing it.\nCaptain Saunders is very anxious\nIor tlie woltare of the romalnlt ir of the\nparty, fuur in number, who le't Rocky\nMountain house by boat lor Edmonton. 'They Bhould have arrived in\nEdmonton on Monday but nothing\nhas been hoard ol them.\nWOODMEN ATTENTION!\nMembers ol Mo'intain Viow Camp\nand visiting Woodmen will attond ftt\nthe lodge room at (1:45 o'clock on\nSunday evening, June Oth, to attend\ndivine worship at Knox church.\nBY ORDER.\nOn June Ist. Lethbridge became a\ndivisional point ol tbe C. P. lt.\nSUICIDE BY HANGING\nDemented Foreigner Takes His\nLife in Prison Cell This\nMorning.\nFrank Norman, a Finn, who had\nbeen confined iu (be provincial jail\nsince yesterday alternoon Iur drunken\nbehavior antl vlolenoe in the streets, j\nwas lound, at an early hour this\nmorning, banging [rom the window\nol his coll, strips of blanket and bedding being used. Tho gaoler immediately intormed tho provincial constable, and the body was taken down.\nLite bad evidently been extinct lur\nseveral hums, Norman had been\nacting strangely in town tbe .day\nprevious, having caused Turpross'\nteam tn bolt by striking the burses,\nwhicli dashed madly away and were\nnot stopped until tbey reached Malay's\nranch. Wlien arrested and taken tu\ntlie gaol he was quiet cnutigb and\ncreated no dialurbai.ee even while\nengaged in liis subsequent suicidal\noperations.\nAn inquest is lieing lield on the\nbody.\nWESTERN PRODUCTS\nB. C, Samples Perfectly Pure.\nThe civic health department has\nreceived a report Irt.tii the Dominion\nauthorities on one, I tho must extensive testB of butt r ever made by the\npure [ond section ul llie Inland Revenue Department. Eight hundred\nand sixty-eight samples, collected\ntrom all parts ol the Dominion were\nanalyzed.\nFrom British Columbia twelve samples were taken, and in every case the\ntests pronounced the product unadulterated The samples which tailed to\ncome up to thc standard were all Irum\nEiiBtorn Canada, eight (rom Quebec\nbeing found adulterated, while five\nIrum Toronto\ndoubtlul class\nGent's Furnishings\nBoote and Shoes, Etc.\nAGENT   FOR\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\nfirst St. Op.\nIH\u2014MW\u2014Wn\u2014\u2014     -\u25a0\u25a0\u2014     \u2014 \u25a0   \u2014 ..............           . _.     .\nImperial Bankof Canada\nHead Office -Toronto, Ontario.\nHrnuclios it. lhs Provloouol Manii..!.... Albsrla,Biiltatohewa.\nBritiih Colombia, Ontario, (.untax-.\nOapltal Paid Up\nReserve Fund\nI), ll, Wilkie, President\nHon\n\u2022 4,700,000.00\n\u20224,700,000.00\nli. ,1 ai-tk.vy, Vice-President,\nA General Banking Business Transacted.\nDrafts sold available in ..II parts of Canada, United States and\nEurope.   Special attention given to Collections,\nSavings Department\nDeposit.- received and Interest allowed at current rale Irom date\nof opening account, and compounded four times a yenr.\nRevelstoke Branch, B. C.-A. E. Phipps, Manager.\nORBY WINS DERBY\nR, Croker's Irish Colt Captures\nBlue Ribbon of English\nTurf and $32,000.\nLondon, June 7.\u2014Richard Croker's\nOrbjr, ridden   by  Johnny  ReilT,  an\nAmerican  juckey,  won   the    Derby\nstakes of $84,600, the Blue  Ribbon  of\nthe turf  at   Epsom  on  Wednesday.\nThe distance was about a mile and a\nhall,   One ul the largest crouds in the\nhistory ot the turt witnessed the race.\nteii,  wiiutj  uvo     Richard Oroker'B well liked Orby,\nwere   placed  in  thclliy Ormcout uf Rhuda 11 was bred in\n1 Ireland out oi an  American dam.\nCruker, belore removing to England,\nwas buss ul New York's Tammany,\nlie has been a prominent ligiire in tur!\ncircles in England tor seveial years\nanil has bad Derby candidates every\nyear since bidding Farewell to the\nAmerican lurf,\nThere were several foreign entries\nwhich wereitrongly tipped and backed.\nBcuzonion ran Bteond and Slievo\nGallion third.\nALL WANT HOMESTEADS\nPmxi'i: ALBERT, June 7.\u2014A Irce\nlight marked tlie scramble Ior homesteads at I'rince Albert. Forty-six\napplications have been entered lor\nhomesteads at Vorkton, 13 1    1 1 .\"   ES.\nlticlutitig postage lo Kngland, United s:.\n...f.-..\nIly the year itiir,- igl. post. Mb I     si.Vf\nHalf      \"        \"     I..\".\n,-    M.  -        \"    I.f,\nJ i.i   RlXTLs'G promptlyosecutolit reason\n.- \u25a0:.--.\nI'KKM- -1 .-'..   S,:li-cni,'.i\u201ei.* v-aj'ulill' in .wl\n\u25a0\u25a0MM\n7Th\/>     fir\\\"iil--'ll^<*>i*'-iIS   Ihcschcine.   It has been deeided thai\nZ J S, ..II,3nUs:,,XltllC>-  $!...\"* uwi.l la- asked   ir  and  com-\nl\"l II.blll.il WEDNESl IY AMI SATL-11 , , ,   ,\nmy sl iiiiltles  have  lien   I. r. ed   Ir  t 0\nkevilstoks. ac. purpose ol canvassing tbo whole city,\nit being the i..tention 11 the direct.u-s\nto give a membership ticket lor the\nbalance of the year tn every subscriber\nover a certain sum. The eon ing\nweek will see Iho Bystomatio canvassing by tbe committees, res..lis being\nposttd up each night in a public place,\nriie scheme is a laudable ono and will\nnot only directly benefit the patrons\nol the Y. M. C, A., butgive Revelstoke\na leading place in lhe associations ut\nthe world, Mr. Sayer, the t.nvelling\n-m--m ai v, is actively helping it. tho\nscheme and !:as the inteiest ot the\ncity at heart.\nt movement of such public and moral\ninterest should receive tho support ol\nRevelstoke as a whole and tho ... ney\ngiven will be well spent.\nI .ittl..H.-|vSI.hNt.'h* Invited on ...alter* of\npublic Interest. CommunlcatlouB ... Edl\n:or uiu-- be aoooniptuiled l.y oanio o.\nwriter, not ntxeasarily lo pnbfical n  hnl\n,- . -. Idem \u25a0 of good faith.  . Drresj 1. n\"\n-hould he brief.\nTHE MOLSO\nN\n3\nBANK\nliici.ri-.ralt.'l hj\nAcl \".1\n'nrl\ni na.it, I87\u201e\nII EAI\nOFFIOE,\n-\nMONTRHAI\nw\nll, Mm .\nv M.u-i'iiHits.is-,\n.1 IHKS I'll.1...\n'le*.\n1', fil'l\n-nil\nS.\nMu\nII. I'lvviN.i, Vice-Pres\nADVERTISING   HATES.\n\u25a0. :    enl* per -\u25a0 in-.rii\"ii.\nenupei line - ,\nMeaaureo enn N'on  , eljl-l    - inakeoiic\ninelij.    Slor.    ind   -   \u25a0   ll     -i'u \u25a0 \"\u2022\n... per month.\nPreform!  |  -Hi        - \"'\u25a0\n....    fl  ..      \u25a0\u25a0: . .:\u25a0: Deaths,\n'\u2022 .-..;...\u25a0\u25a0 .        \u2022 - -mm>,\nLaud  ,  -    -   -- \u25a0 ulvCTIIsemcnL.\n-..\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 \u25a0       -.. lent.\nWanted \u2022-..\u25a0-.\nIg,     \u25a0 .     *   '     M. ,li-\n'.        .1 !\u25a0\u2022 M ll.-.-.\n.. \u25a0 .-\u25a0 ,,,.:. 11 words rn-\n......     . .   .   \u2022    10   .. nl*.\ni    , .  . lii.- ..:...:.-.n....'. aei-!\n,.-:,. and Kiiilay u.\n,.. | .,'\u25a0\u25a0.. -. -.. in good display.\nMURP1\nBarristi K!\nIV & FISHER\n, Solicitors, Etc\nRAILWAY COMMISSION,\nliii.ni  lu grappling will, ibo\n0 T T A W A\nr'arliamentary,   Departmental\nand Patent Office Agents\nPractice before Railway\nCommission.\nTill-\nIn . i-\nimportant question ..( telephone rules\nxpress  cl-argea  an.l tho whole\n... -.: west, rn transportation lho\nCummissinii   lias just  now\n.ml .\nprohlcu.\nItailway\nL Wl U N 11 Ci ft v L u\nCapita! paid up. $3,000,000\nReserve, $3,000,000\nin  (It\niila .tnd   Ac\nInterest credited four times a y-\nii.; deposits, unlil tin ther notice.\nW, II. PRATT, Mummer,\nat current rate\nII parts of lhe\non Savings\nHkvei.stckf., B. CJ\nTake notica llnl lii.ii-.-iv UIU....! Hewlrtoke,\nll..-., Minor, Intend. I,.applv lorn biiui-I.i1 ll.ulwi\nlieoi.-u ..v.-r llio (..ll.... in, .li-s.-iil.nl lands\n-ili.fili' in tliu Lillu'.i'l llislri.-t:\ncilia al ii nasi planted at tlio Bouth-\ni-i.iia-r ..f I'.L. SS-J8 aiiil market \"Andrew\nus S. W. corner poet,\" tlience running north\nhaias, ..fist a. chains, si,uth   it... clialns,\nI.  C\nA SAVING OP\n25c. to 50c. on the $\t\n| .vcsl .a dial is t.. point..(rointnenconient utnl con\nCAN UK MADE ON ! UUnlna 010 lu-rea moro ur less.\nYour Grocery. Clothing\nbated May Iill.. 1007.\n\u2022L   L'onunoncluii al a p..*t planleil.... tin: west\nae .if .lie in.nli I..I-I. i>( N.,a,iiai'llivi-r'.l.i.ii|. I.v..\n I.s north ul T I, SJ-i7.iiiiii ...arn-il \"Andrew\nDrygoods and Shoe Bills f^**-\nHY DEALING WITH t'S\npost \"tlienco r........u.i\nsouth su chains, east si.\nChas. Murphy.\nIIauiii.ii Fisiieii\n, . Il.l.AN & KI.i.HI'l'T.\n., Solicitors, Etc.\nM. ii...ci i.iki: n.u,\ni..-. ifi.i.in-i-.-.\nII\nARVEY,\nMcCARTER\nAND PINKHAM,\nBARKIS 1K11S, SOLICITORS, KTC.\ni.i-,'-;m-     Im 'K1UAI.   Uank  1.I.OCK,   Rkvel-\n'STUKK, B, 0,\nMoney to loan.\nOffices: Revelsloke, H, I'.; Cranbrook, 11. C.\nQuo. S. McCarter,\nV. M.  i'lNKIlAM.\nKevelstoke, li. C.\nJ. A. Haiivev.\ni ri.tii uo I.. li. C.\ns\nJ.M.Scott I.L.I. W.LBrlnga,\niCUTT   AND   BRIGGS\nHai rioters, Solicitors, Etc.\nMoney to Loan\nsolicitors for molsons h.vnk\nFirst Street. Revelstoke, B.C.\nA. M.I-'Al.l.ANK\n.!AS\nAS-A'.Ki: a CHEMIST\nysol all Ores,  Sample, by mail or cxpreat\nreceive prompt attention.\nTerm. Moderate.\n\u2022    \u2022    Box .32 Kaslo\nH. C\nnOBERT SMITH\nJA\nProvincial Land Surveyor,\n;.Mi..e Suiveying\nEngineering\nMrivKNZIE AVENfK.\nBox loo, Revelstoke,\npDWARD A HAGGEN\nMINING ENGINEER\n(Memliei American Institute of\nMining Engineers).\nMember Canadian Mining Institute)\nRevelstoke, B. 0.\nMine Management, Examinations\nand lieports.\nReports compiled. Plans and Blue\nPrints uf Land, Timber Limits, Mines,\nMills ami Buildings prepared in shape\nf. r submission to prospectiveinvestors\ni-i purchasers,\nSbe SailSetalb\n\u25a0 i woul    .  .  .  earnest!, a vIbq ihem for\n\u25a0: eli .-  .. to -   li   this pnpi i lo be punctually\nserved up, and .0 b<  upon it- .. pari ol\nth. :,-,i \u25a0.. ... tg..    .--.. ;.;*..n.\nSATURDAY, JUNE (i, 1111)7\nunder consideration a vast number of\nsubjects in which the gem nil welfare\not tho Canadian peoplo is involved,\nCommencing on  the  l'acili? Coast,\nthere is  tho preparati if  a new\nschedule nl freight (rum Vancouver,\neastward in n-sp use to complaints ol\nunfair discrimination of  wesi In.nnd\ntrallic  ueainst Canadian Cuast ci.ies.\nThere  is also the drafting of anew\nlorn, of bill nf lading to meet objections now  made l.y boards ol  trade,\nmanufacturers'associations nnd shippers genotally; deciding on n new set\no! operating rules ti r all tbe railways,\nto insure greater safety lo ilu-public\nd  to employees ul railroads; the\ncompel ing o( the railway companies\nto  improve  rolling  Block, road bed,\nani!  equipment so us to adequately\nhandle ttallic and relieve congestion,\nthe investigation ol the many accidents which  resulted in tlie past lew\nmonths (rom broken rails with a view\nto  placing  tho blame and guarding\nagainst further accidents,   All these\nproblems arise for solution when the\nordinary routine of business is excessively heavy.    Tbe commission have\nhave  now  received the report ol the\njoint committee  representing live ul\nthe  large  railways,   appointed sume\nweeks ago to draft a new  Bet of  uniform   rules.     Railway  ollieials have\nshown great willingness in connection\nwith improvement of rolling Btuck,\nroad bed and equipment,    The commission will insist upun railroad c -in-\npanics remedying the failures of  the\npast year and adequately provide for\nthe rapidly growing   trallic  ot the\ncountry.   It has been proved thai the\nchief fault of delayed trains and trallic congestions are the consequence ol\nthe lack ol power in hauling and the\ncommission   has  made the matter of\nkeeping  strictly  to time one of the\nmost impoitant parts ol the report.\nALL GOODS ARE QUOTED\nEXPRESS OR FREIGHT\nPREPAID\nI louses, business blocks\nHusiness &  Residential Lots\nSuburban Lnnds\nin Acreage Lois\nI'ine Farm and Fruit Lands\nin    Revelstoke,    Arrowhead\nGalena Bay, Okanagan Lakes\nOkanagan Valley and Salmon\nArm.\nWE HAY FRtlCHT In nnv railway sliilion\nin Weslern On.,uio, Manitoba, Saskalclic-\nIII | wan, Albcrin and liritish Columbia.\nWri c for our latest Prico list, i. is\nailed tree .... request.\n'I    We only handle tl.ejliesl goods money\ncan buy, only guods of besl ...ills, intiiiii-\nfacttirt'rs and packers shipped.\nWo make Prompt Shipments.\nWo absolutely guarantee satisfaction\nand Delivory.\nA'l Coods Cuariuitood cr Money Refunded.\nli is ti limy |o You, lo Vour Family and\ntti \\on.  l'.n-kt. Rook io iiiu-siiir in- tan-\n.- Jobl.e\nAlien .'.'\nE. A. HAGGEN,\nreal estate and insurance acent\nrf.velstoke, a. o.\nWe do uol belong lo ll.\nI l.eifiile.-.s* Guild or Assoc\nI .i-i.*..\nReferences:     Am  bank, l.'illwij or: smith n. cl...\n| Express Company in llie City, e\nlames of twenty ihi.iisf.inl sattsllcil\nI liuners ... tiie lour provinces.\nWrite for Our Price List To-day.\nCOPYRIGH1\nHouse Cleaning Time\nbrings lo the eye uf the careful\nhousekeeper the blemished of the\ncarpels under her supervision. When\nnecessary loninke renewals in carpets,\nrugs, mailings anil oilcloths, visit\nHOWSON'S nnd see llieir well selected stock before buying. You'll\nfind it n time und money saver. Our\nSpring display heals anything we\never uttered.\nHowson & Company\nTHE REVELSTOKE WINS& SPIRIT CO.\nLIMITED.\nImport direct from Country ot origin.\nWHOLESALE    DEALERS   ONLY.\nREVELSTOKE   B.\nO.\nNorthwestern   Supply   House\n239 ''im' -,()l Slftnloy Slreel\nWINNIPEG\ni'liains In pulllt nf I'oiiiiimiicriui'lil llllll CQllUltllftlg\nMO acres more \u00bbr Ichh.\nDated Muy Ifitli, IW17.\na. Commencing \u00bbt n pust plantod on tbe weal\nsuit! nf tlm north Turk ol Seymour Hivor about U>nr\nmill's nortb uf T. !*. fti-iT, ami markoil \"AnibOH\nKiUhii'h n. IS. eoruer post*-, ttmueo running Boutli\nBO chains, went no chains, north HO t-lialiiH, oust 80\nDlianiH tn point uf eounueneoiuoiitSanil conUiniug\n010 acros moro urleuit,\nDated May 10th, 1007.\n\u20221. UoiiiinonuiiiB at n pout planted on tire wost\nriiili* \u00bbf ilii'iinrtli fm-k uf Soymour rivor about6\nmllen nuiili of T.I*. ?\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'< mul marked \"Androw\nKitsun's S. ft I'liinri* |ii)*?l,\" Iliiiin* niiiiiiiit; imiili\nMl i-liji um, west 80 rh.iins, BOltlll HI cliiiiim, i>u\u00bbt Ml\n:*li;iin> lu point of couiiui iicenionl ami luii tain Ing\niim lien's more or less.\nDuted May lOLli, 1007.\nr>.  Uommenctng at a post planlcd nn tin* oanl\nslit.* of tlie iii'iiii turk nl Bej'ionur Itiver about two\nmile.-, umili of T, li. iisi and murnOil Androw\nKiisi.n'MS W. cm mr piMt,\" Liionco running norlh\nso chains, oaBt Hi clmiiis, south hi chuina, west mi\nrhalns to point uf coiniBeneoiuont and containing\nQtfJ acres more nt'h'ss.\nDated May imii, i\u00abi7.\nI   0. (Jotmnoimlug at a post plautod ono-half miln\n'north of lho forks nf tlie norlh fork uf Seymour\nI Itiver and mnrked \"Andrew Kitson's N. ft. cunmr\nI i>i<st,\" thonco running south WO chains,, west HO\nrlialns, uortli lu .\"Imins, nanl 40 chains, nortb SO\n1 haina, oast 4111 Imins tn point uf comuiouceiuent,\ni mul containing 11111 uorea moro ur lean.\nI    Dutfd Mny I,ill, IWff.\n7. Comtnouvilig iitiiiiust plnuled ntic nml min\nImlf inil.'s imrlli a tin* fiirksuf tlio nortli fork of\nSeyniuiir Itiver, met  narked   \"Ambviv   KltsOll'fl\n,\\. w.cnni--riuihi,' thonee running eaat 80 chains,\n,..   smitli h0 chains, wosl Hi chains, nnrtli hu chains to\ni|tl,' pninl of uouimi nceiuelil ami containing OIH acres\nmure or Wa,\nDaUdMay 17th, mu;.\n8, Coniumnolng ut a post planlt'd ono uml ono-\nImlf mib-A imrth ul tin* forksof tlm imrlli l.,rk nf\nBoynumr Kiver, mul ninrkod \"Andrew Kitson's\ns ft cornerpost,\" ilium 0 miming north-io chains,\nwoat 40 uhalns, norib su chains, west 4m imins,\naoutb ItH chains, cast mi clmins to point of coin-1\numii'i-ini'iit. and cuntaining Oil! acres mure ur leaB,\nDated Muy 17Lb, IH07.\n001            I     snlmytt               ANDREW K1T80N.\nMANITOBA( \t\nHalcyon Hot Spring j*     Notice to Creditors\n\u2022JCinitCiritiTTI 'N lllK ^Arn!R 0K THB Estate of Jaboi\nUntli*r tho ti\"w iiiHiinffHiniHit \u00bbf\nHahhv  McIntosm-     nffinun   Hou-e\nliu-sl.UKl,\nrpUE MKDIOAL WATEKSof iiil-\ncyun me tin* most eurntlve io the\nAi.i.kn Aonkw, Deceased.\nNOTICK is hereby given Ihal :ill creditors and others having claims against\nthe estate of llie sunt Jacob Allen Agnew,\nwho died on or about tlie 13th day oiAprit,\n19071 are required, on or betorfl the 151I1\nworld. A perfect, naliual remedy foi l day of June, KJ07, to send by pnst prepaid\nall Nervous and Muscular diseases or deliver to Messrs. Harvey, McCarter &\nUver, Kidney and Stomach ailments miikham, of the Imperial Hank Block,\nand Metallic Poisoning. A sure cure Kevelsloka, B. C, Solicitors lor Minnie\nfor  \"That Tired  FeeHng.\"    Special j Agnew, the Executrix of tbe last will ami\nNt.lii' is lirr-'liy jiivi'ii dial umnn uiuij n......\n[romdato I Intend to applv In tin* llonorahle\n(juiuf t'ommiaalonor uf hauls and Works fora\nsiu'i'ial license to cut aud carry away thulier from\ntlio followiuc described lands, aitnated in West\nKootenay District.\n1 CoinmouoInK at a post about\u00bb mile (rum\nlliu huftd uf Curilioo i.ske, mnrkod 'A. livtin>'\nnorth-west corner post,\" thoneo south hi\nuhalns, easl SOolinlna, nurth 80 cnains, west w)\ni'liains tnpnlir \u00bbl roniinonceinont.\n'i, ('.'inin neinn al 11 pusl nbout two miles\n(ruin   lhu   lii'inl  ni I'm limn ' uke, nil llie eiihl\nshore, mm ked \"\\. lvvniii\u00bb'north-west corner\npnsl,\" thonou soinii hi cbnins,east 80chains,\nnorth 80 ohains, west 80chafui tu the puint uf\netiniineiiroiiieut\nDated April i2ild, W07.\nA. EVANK.\n8. 1'iuiiiiii'iiriiii: at a post aliout two milea\nirum Un* lu'iul ut ruriliuii i.nki' nud nbuut una\nmile buck (nun snid lake, mm kod nW.Kd-\nwsrdtt' north-Mtiht oornur |aist,\" thonoo south\n80chains, cuatBrtoliftlns, north suehalns, west\nM1 cliniii-- lu -mini nl I'uiiiiiii'ii i-itu'Ui\nimieil April :.:ud. mu.\nVALTXK KDWAKDB.\n4. Couiraeuolng nt u post about ouo mile\nfrumthohcftd ui (Jarlhio inku andonorallo\nluck Iruniliikesbnro. innrkeil' A.Evaiis1 nurth*\nwest enrner posi,\" theme south *\" clutlia, easi\nsn eh .ius, nnrlh hu ehnins, west Ml 1 uiliis lu\npuim nf c'MiunoiiC'.'inont,\nHated April 22nd. Wo7,\nA.    VANS.\n5. I'uninicnelim at n pust abuul a i..lh> from\nlite Ill-mi ni imi!'... take and niiuii a mile\nIrum ihu lake *-hiire, mnrked W   Hil wards'\ninn,-east I'liruer post.\" ihencu wost Wl chains,\nnurth Hi elinlns, enst Hi nhulns, snulli mi ehalna\nto point of rninniuuecmeiii\nlimed April iMmUuVf.\nW  KDWAKD81\n(i, i-iniiietii'lii,- at a puaf plamud nl llie\niii'itli-eusienrnernf. iirili-u Uke. marked'-A\nEvans' tiorth'OOst cornor, uatJ' thenco wost mi\ni-hn.ns, south 80 ebains, oaat Hi ehnins, nurih\nM eimiiis tn point uf commencement,\nDated April'2>lll, W\"7\n1, Commoneliig nt a imst planted nlsHit 3\nmiles up a small ereek nmptyiuif nt tho bond ul\nl',i ri Iiuu Liil.ii, marl; ml \"A. Kvans' nurlli-wDsi\nnnior pusl,\" thonce smith Hi chains, oitstM)\nbains, nurth 80 ehains, wost Hi) chains tu puint\n,[ 1 um inmicomoiit.\nDatud April-Uh  Hull.\nA. KVANS.\n8, 1 (uniiionciiiK at n post plant nil ut. A. IiIvihih'\njorth'Woat oornor, aud about S milos up a \u25a0\u2022mall\ncrunk omPtylng Into bond of Cariboo Lako,\nmnrkod \"Walter Edwards' smilli-wnstcunior\nimst,\" thoneo north Michnins east80chains,\nsmilli .Hli chaius, west Hi chnius to puint of com-\nnieucomont\nUated April Wth, 1907,\nWALTER EDWARDS,\n0. Commencing nt n post pluutod about a\nmilo up a small creuk nmiityiuit inti) tho tmrlli\nnml nl Cariboo Lake and marked \"A. Evuns'\nBouth-east enrnor imst,\" tbonco wost80chaius,\nnnrth 8(1 eliuiiis, east Ml chains,-smith KO ohaius\nto point of rutiimnii'i'iii 'ill.\nDuted April 24tb, 1007.\nA. EVAN8.\n10, Commencing at a post plunted almul, v,x\nmiles up u creok ruuuiuK intu tlu: hoad of Cariboo Laku. on the oust side of suid lake, nnd\nmnrkod 'Walter Edwards' unrlh-wostcurnor\npust.\" tbonco smith 80{ehains, fn-tt80 clmins,\nnorth 80 chains, wist 80 chains to puiut of commencement.\nDated April 27th, 1907.\nsnt my 18 WALTER EDWARDS.\nNOTIGE.\nLocal Revelstoke\nSocialist Party of Canada\nMeuls l'i.*l fin.ri'liii-.l u..,!i.,.*,lfiy in ih.. tnntitli\nin s.-ltirk lhii. ii|.*t.i.-. f.i - p.m.   Mii')i-.-i lur\nlUKtwiim \"I. .- 1'iirt) riiii-'iii vs. ...m! 1\nlloimry SocWUl I'artj 1'IatI.mii.\"  All lutun-s\n:.t.  WttleOHIU\nCentral Hotel\nzr^a\u2014REVELSTOKE, B. C.\nABRAHAiHSON   BROS.,   PROPRIETORS.\nNewly  uill,    FirBt-claBf in every reppecl.   All modern con it niiinCK,\nLarge Sn(ii)iie Kijunis.\nRates SI.50 p. r Day. Sped I Weekly Rates.\nQueen's Hotel, Trout Lr.ke, under same managemem\nrules on nil bouts inul trauift, T\u00ab'.\nnlfiils ail'lve mul (li ait ev.-t-y .Inv\nTelegia li couimiin atlnn with .ill\ninnt-lf* ot* Ihi- world,\nTliii.Ms-$1*2 Iti $18 |.i-i- w....|i.   Pur\nfurther pitrliciil.ii-a applj' in\nHARKY McINTOSH\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nArrotii Lake, B. C\nJ. MclNTYRE & SON\nFull line, ol Groceries nnd Dairy\n1'riiduce, Men's Supplies, Etc.\nFresh stock always arriving at\nlowest prices.\nFIRST STREET,\nNEXT DOOR TO\nCITY RESTAURANT\nIcstnmenl of the said deceased, Iheir\nChristian ami surnames, addresses and\ndescriptions, the lull particulars oi' ihuir\nciniins, thc statement o\\' iheir accounts\nund lho nature of lhe securities, il any,\nliekl by ihem.\nAnd further tako notice that after such\nlasl mentioned date the said Executrix\nwill proceed lo distribute the assets of tho\ndeceased among llie parties entitled\nthereto, having regard only to the claims\nof which she shall llum have nolice, and\nlhat the said Kxeculrix will nol be Ihhle\nfor the said assets or any part tbereol lo\nany person or persons of whose claims\nnotice shall nol have been received by her\nal the time of such distribution.\nDaled lhe 15th day of May, 1907.\nHarvey, McCarter & Pinkiiam,\nSolicitors lor Minnie Agnew, Kxeculrix of\nthe will of said deceased.        s myiS^t\nNotice ia hereby ulvon tlmt Cl) days from date\nI in lend tu upply to ihe Honourable the CMcf\ni.uminihHioiier uf Lnnds und Works lor permission lu purchase tbe fulluwiuij described\nlnmls, Hituatcd hi tialena Bay, in west Kuuteiiay distriot:\nCommencing at a post marked \"W, 11, Hold's\nsouthmar-t corner pust,\" tin I plnuled 111 eliains\nmuhIi from th,1 north-wesl curlier of (J. Book's\nhot71M3, thouoe west 20 elinlns, thenco north\n\u25a0I: ohaius, thence east 211 chains, thence south\n40chaius to point of eeinniencemeut, und containing till acres more ur loss.\n1 inlfd Mav^ud, 1IW7,\nsal my ..1 , W, R. HKI I),\nNOTIGE\nNotice is boreby glvon that Hi) days after itate\nI Inlend to apply tu the Chief fumniissi.iiicr nf\nbauds and Works fora special llconse tocut\nand curry awny iim her frnm the following\ndescribed lands in West Kootonay district:\nCommencing at a post plan tod in chains soulh\nof a small oreek emptying; Into Mosquito ('r> uk\nnear tho north-west corner of K.&8, Hlock\nNo. S70, inarked \"A'> It. lteid's south*went corner post,\" Ihenco north (IU chaina, theiieo wesl,\nSO chains, tbence south 80 ohains, theuco cast K0\nchains lo puint of commencement.\nDiUed May 32nd, 1007.\nsatjunol W. It. HEID.\nORIENTAL HOTELS\nsuitably furnished with the choicest lhe\nmarket affords. Best Wines, Liquors and\nCigars.    Rat *\u25a0 $i .1 day.    Monthly rate.\nJ.   ALBERT     STONE     PROF.\nCIRCUS  DAY  AT   REVELSTOKE\nWednesday, June 19th\nPerformances at 2 and 8 p. m. Performances at 2 and 8 p. m.\nC. W. 0. w.\ni ,\nIHE V..M.C. A.\nA movement is on loot throughout\nthe city to raise lunils tor the couitruction ol lb, proposed additions lo\nthe V. M. C. A. building and also lo\nclear off the balance ol the present\ndebt. The matter has been public\nproperty lur several weeks and tliis\naction on the part oi ti:.- Y.M.C.A. .-\ndirector- has been brought nl- -fit only il ,V gfffl',*?.*\/,',? ]\nalter careful  consideration  and dis\ncussion  the result btiug that the\nMountain View Camp  No. 229.\nMecu .-\"i-i-ninl nnd l-'.-nrili W.-iIm-.!.!.- In\n,. i month, In s. link 11.11. VtailluK Wood- i\nmi ,. mm,.Ily Invited i.'.in. ml.\nIV, ii. Alt.MSTHON'0,Con.Com.\nII. IV. KUWAKDd, Clerk.\nREVELSTOKE. AERIE No. 432.\nF. O. E.\nThe m gol m moel i *-- ire held iti the Bolkirk\nHall every Ti lay evettinB nl * o i     *> nl\nW, K. SI.-I.U' III.IS S\nKoot'linv  I-ocIkb No. 15 A F.& AM.\n\u25a0 \u2022 .'     v     ftit'- nr.- ......I ... :..,\n'-.i' \\y--      Tl' Mfi.-.mi-\n'\u2022   X     jf       I      ..l.l K.-ll.i-..   .   .\n,       \\&-'     L 'l..-iliii-.l M\n.       -V*    i.fia   \" ii in..mli   ni   -\n-     ^       >.HB  ...  iTi.i.i....i.....ii..\n-\n.'It... I SIKH, BKttiKl IKV.\nSELKIRK LODC.E. NO  12. I. 0. O. F.\n'\u2022\u2022\u00bb'-'     *\u2022   ;--\"'- : -'     -      I\" ^t  \"l^fcB-       M..-1-.-M-rlllii..-.....f\n-     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-*' ajLXN53S \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0      \"\n.,--- and  -.-..-:-.  where  tin   Lr        \\J;\nally\ntend\nII . , Ml nlli.P.*. N.U.      J. MAT1IIK,\nCold Range lodgo, K. ol  P.,\nNo. ?i>, Revelstoke, B. C.\nI-.I-   l.\\ ..Ifi   Ulfl.'l -I.V\nim   f.i ri.lril '\u25a0\".:i.\u25a0 -i i   -.i\nM.M. i   nlli, ..i lhe Od.ll\nHull    \u00bbl     -    .M.k.      Vf.lli.iK\n.       '    , ... ,   ll...\n...     - ** -' The  r.'K.llar   inn\"\n\u2022cbeme has been pjact.cally launched       -*,,.. \u25a0-^   -v%_,,,.-- ,-. ... .\nor will be on Monday,    It  has been\nproved conclusively during ibe past\nyi ar thai th. b lilding ia d : - ill ci.  t-\nly large (ur its requiremi tits aud fui\ntlie accommodation ol the increased\nlii --ii:!-1-: ip     a- .... itistittit - h tbe\nY. M. C   '-. I.asd\nI\nI\nevening! can be spi nl in li net legit-\ninia.e  spo t an in :\nwhere tb. c ml .U lal ne can bo\nexperii t. ed. !;\u2022 - 1st , , ,--, \u2022...\nr...,id   men bav.\ntown ..:..; those wl\nol their own then\nhave I-,nnil (i.e   V. M.'   h    ,   .\nb -.-ii and such in im i tin\ndirect effect .- .oral* ol\nthe city ti. a high Itsndai: keeping\nmen and boys ..tt tbe streets and improving the physical and perhaps\nmental elements ol our citizens old\nan.l voting. Railroad men have\nshontd their appreciation ol ihis institution in many ways and were'\nperhaps the largest sul.scril.ers when\nthe building was erected   two  yenr.-  Premium System\nago.    The directors who have decided\non this step ol raising additional tun.is\nfor the building, hnve done  so  wilh\ntl.e indirect promises of general  cooperation from every oitUon and when   nrtI,\u00ab|   Cnin, Pa     I \u25a0***\u2022\/<\nIt is considered, that by this raising KOjdl  OUdP V.O.,  Lid.\n..I money, the piesent debt will he paid i Vancouver B. C.\nnil'ami the building materially Increased and that Iree Irom debt,  tlie\nQueens ftotel\nCOMAPLIX\nHost brands oi Wines, Liq ii rs .ir.*; Cigars.   Travellers to\nKish CreeK excellent accommodation at this\nHotel.\nCHIEF   YOUNG, - -        Proprietor\nHOTEL VICTORIA\nUnrli.r   New   Management.\nROBT    LAUGHTON,   Prop,    REVELSTOKE,\nB,   C.\nI- r-' \u25a0 ..-   .--. ...oni \"ii'i'iii  lor    r I'.-ii.-f-\n..- \u25a0   ii .nils   ol   SVioes,   Bpirits,   an I\nRATES   Sl   AND   $150   PER   DAY\nFREE   BUS   MEETS   ALL   TRAINS\nmr utuTinii-\nJ     \\.  l.lMl.lK. .    I\n.1   II   BRO h   K\nII   A\nil  11   .1 S\nBROWN U\nf K.\nNOTICE.\nNOTICK\nTHE MONEY SAVING\nWORK-SAVING SOAP\nThat's H .-. i   Crown kioii\u2014\n\u25a0 .!'\u25a0\u2022- h... 1\nwe lm In.apply tnUiiil h'.el ....\nUnds und \\\\ ....\n\u25a0 - ...\n\u2022rril..\"l        I  r. \u25a0   B I'M\n|        I   II.1I-M '     . -\nfl. - \"I      II.\nra ... .\n  ee mm\n\u25a0\nI ' . \u25a0\n.   ..... i,. .-\nmile, ir.in..... bank  - ...\n. ->\u25a0 I'.iii. marked - R - 11 i .     . jk m\npn.t,\" i.i.-ii-if fn-' .   chain\", \"-..\n.  ... ;. \u25a0   ll........ v-l lli'llill'.'.  I      .   \\*  I 1     V\/l'I'l\/.ll\nll    ,mm.ll -li \\lt\\   \\[)     \\[ ) |   J | y J'j\nAiiil lhe money saving ia the\nliookl.-t telll whnt n-i- give for\nlt.tv.tl Crown Wrappers. Hend\nfor it\u2014Freo\u2014-Also try the\nSoap,\nAdvertize in lln. iMaii.-IIi-.i:..i.ii antl\n' mh nelni. ni ii I--\u25a0' . - *-,: il\nf    H-l    lll.llk    Ml I'mMIIIM.  n\nmade in Vnncouver-Urgesl           ^^StiMi  '-.i, -\noap I'actory west ol Wlnni    ...   -,     .\u201e  ihaiicc nnril. U.o ohnlna lo | >\npeg.    House cleaning and   *\u25a0\"\u25a0 \"*'  *\n1 \", \u25a0 \u25a0.,.   ,  i    lid ioo*.\nwashing aro easy with ita help        m bmtok\u00bbBaw Uiu '\".. bixusn.\n,,i | mi..-. lohn    ion  - \u25a0\u25a0 il\n-\u25a0\u25a0 I Intend to i m\nI \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0....  ., \u25a0\u25a0 .1 I,,   i\nHOTICE\nNotltie is In-ri-l.; slvon ll.nl - '\u2022\u25a0\nI niii'ii'i |.|.i, tn flu-1 i.mI - oniinl  If.n   11\nI mul* in..I IVmli, lot .. -i-'-Mn  if.\n.nd\nl. - tn - ..I\nrry away limhor trom '..'- (..Ii'.w.m,\nubjects in view are indeed  worthy of, ^ct tlie best results.\n.....I'liunl-iii Hi- llovcljt.ikc I.iv.in..i nl\nVeil KmhI.-iiii) .li-ilrii-lf\nI'imiiif'tii'ilitt \"I ii I'.hI ..liiii''<l .it til\" N. I-.\n.ornoroi Bos,5a, ... 37, ll. w.-i nu, .tcrldlan,\niM.rk.-i. \"J, I', Kolly'aH. K eoruur poll,\"llionoi-\n...r.l. Ini'liiihu. ili.'ii.a *0\u00bbl I\" r.hnln   Ihonr.\nmrlli rn. Imiii*. Hi ni-if f.i-,.1 'in \"limn, il in\nmi in -ii i-il ui ti*. iiiiiii'-.- caat imi i'luini\"... poal\nil .\u25a0i.iiiiiii'iii-'-iiii-iii I...-I i-iiiiiiiiiiiiif.-.1 i.\"\niiiir.M.r I.'hm.\nlm.i\"l Mny Will,IM\nMlJS    .1 Ml-:   I'Bllliy KB'LY.\nKinel.ti.ko, ll (J.. Mlnof,\n-  ,. i .1 -     \u25a0 ...\n.1   ... . .... r ,.\n.1     \u25a0 \u25a0 Cl  \"-I '   fi.....\n\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0  ,...- oil ilmni , im.\n\u2022'ii - nor .-1 rirnbaf Mm.. ; la\n-   Iinln,  iii.-ii.\" eaal -'. oh i\n.-\".'I. \"i oli' -    haina lo poinl nl mi..\nms in\"..'   ' ml lining ail) flerai  . |i\nn i tl.   i-    |.\nI ma I, II   i|,.... iv\nNOTICE\nNotice |. hcruby glvon lhat (0 tin.   .(tir.li.\n'i.'\"i\"i  pi.ly to tha Ilnn, tin (thiol I.\ni i.wr ..ll,iim..i mil Work, (or permtalon in n r\n-I  i'i\" Inllniilm iloicrlbed I I.. .ItnaMnn\nimi...... liny w.-.n Kootenny dlnlrli-i :\n' nmnionefnii ft. n i\".-.. plantod .:.. chain h\n(imiii ih.- H w. Corner ... l\/.i .:..|... and kn.1\nllmi, i   Nimuiiiiii* 8. k Corner 1'n.l:\" Uion....\n\"\". h.f\".innii.. ihoneo ....*i fn i-ii,.ns  thonce\n Oi so Inm*   iii-ii'-i-  ..mi -in chain.; lhcnco\n Mi Well I .1 aat I...-Iini..,'in nine\n--. none -nl, containing idOaoroa ...nronr tea.\nII. T. NI.-AV.1I.N.\nliiilwl at ArMwIniud, Juno l,.i, mi.      mnUe\nPEOPLE\\\\\n150 HORSES\niVIUSEUM\nDouble Menagerie\nBeal Roman\nScores of Trained Wild\n1611] E\nTno Only Uuly in (hs Kninc World who lbrow\u00bb\nSOMBRSAUI-TS on llm Nekod Bucik of\nu Swiftly RunnitiH Horso\n2 Famous Equestrians\nDaring Aerialish\n23 Merry Clowns\n-    mc.\nLe Fleur f\u21222;\n10 Lovoly Ladies ol Faultleii Form In Classic\nPosei on a Greal Revolving Pedestal.\n11 Arabian Tumblers\nOeletorated\nffl (10) Fi\nIti'.etHliil Oyell.il isl Mils. Ililm\nReckless Rough Riders\nIOO SHETLAND PONY BALLET\nlarvelous pjjjjf jj\nAeriallata Supreme\n7 Russian\nCossacks\nSUPERB\nGARLAND\nThundering Roman Chariot Races\nWealed SEALS & SEA LIONS,\n'  ' A COMPLETE JAPANESE CIRCUS\n9 SENSATIONAL EQUILIBRISTS^\nOnly Lady Japanese Artists in America\n20 Astonishing Acrobats\nHIGHEST JUMPING HORSES'\nsHERDS'PBRFORMINQ ELEPHANTS\nCAMELS, LLAMAS AND BOS;ilCIKm<>\nCAKE WALKING HORSES>\nTRAINED IMPORTED ARABIAN STALLIONS V\\\\*\n>\"\u2022>, SUPPLEMENT\nThe Ghost Walks\u2014-A Theatrical Story\nWON'T Bland It!  So there!\nAmi the ginger In the *\u00b0\"'\nbrette's tone matched  the\ntint   of   hor   nnme-colored\nfCfflMRTiWB    hair*\n'   MiiiTOmSl^H \"It's an outrage!\" gloom\nily put In the low comedian, whose street face, If\nsuch an expression he permissible, would have done\ncredit to the melancholy\nDane.\n\"Unless my salary is\npaid tonight, 1 ehall refuse\nto go on,\" observed Bel-\nmont, the leading mnn,\nwho, by the wny. had fomented by every menus In\nhis power the discontent\nprevalent among the company.\n\"Way out In Lunevllle,\nover 1000 miles from the\nRinlto, and only driblets\nfor tho IflBt two weeks,\"\nproceeded the soubrette, who. like most of tho young\nwoman In thut line ot business, had a most flueni low\nfit language. \"And he must have money, loada uf It.\nhidden away somewhere. It's always the pom* actor who\nhas to euffer, while the manager lives on the fat of the\nland.  He's got to pony up, that's all\"\nThere waa a murmur of assent from the little group\ncollected together upon the stage of the Grand Opera\nHouse In Lunevllle\nThings had been going from bad to worse, nnd wore\nnow at their lowest ebb with the Hurley Star Company.\nwhich was touring the cities and towns of the Southwest.\nWhen he was at the head of a stock company In the\nthriving cily of Ford-mead, success had crowned thu\nefforts of Danle> Hurley, the genial manager, ns he wad\nalways referred to In the newspapers, but when he start-\nt>d \"troiiplng\" it, there was a very different tale lo lell.\nEverything hnd seemed to go against him, and the business had been anything but satisfactory. There were\nseveral reasons for this unpleasant state of affairs-bad\nbooking, tno many nne night stands, unseasonably warm\nweather, and a leading man whose bibulous habits made\nlilm anything but reliable.\nMatters had now come to a climax.\nSalaries werc considerably In arrears, and the members of (hc company were close upon open revolt.\nIt was for this reason that the meeting on the stage\nhart taken place. The manager had met the asscmbljge\nIn that smiling, friendly way of his. and for a time had\ndisarmed them by copious compliments and specious\npromises.\nBut almost Immediately upon bis departure, the storm\nbroke forth again, and with redoubled Intensity.\nAit were desperate, all were Indignant, but no one\ncould offer any definite plan of action by which their\nempty pockets could be repleted. To follow Belmont's\nsuggestion and refuse to go on would be simply to lake\nawny the chance of receiving a share of whatever the\nreceipts of the performance that night might be.\nNot even the shadow of a ghost would walk.\nMoreover, this wai tlie last night of lhe engagement\ntn Lunevllle. The next day they were to move on to\nHtlShton, a prosperous ai.d good theatrical city, where\nbetter results might confidently be anticipated.\nDut how would ihey get away without pujinp their\nboard bills*.'\nTiie discussion was waxing fast and furious, but\nnevertheless was Incoherent, when there appeared upon\nthe scone a personage who was at once appealed to as\none of authority.\nThis was .Mrs. Mxmtressor Carey, familiarly known\nthroughout the profession as \"'Mama Monty.\" MVs. Carey\nhad once been a star of no little magnitude, but Increasing avoirdupois, that shudder-compelling bugbear of ail\nnrtiesscs, had forced her into the position of \"first old\nwoman,1 ln which, however, she was Inimitable and a\ngreat  popular favorite.\nAccompanying her was a young man of graceful\nbearing and a dark, expressive face. Lance Wondert-on,\nn pupil and protege of Mama Monty's, hnd, through her\nInfluence, obtained a position ln the Hurley Company,\nanl, In the parts assigned to him, had displayed no small\nflegree of ability.\nHe   was a  manly,  unaffected   young  chap,  but  his\nawfully sorry for you.    I\u2014\"\n\"M-ni-m,\" Interrupted Belmont, with sarcastic imitation, \"If you're so sorry, why don't you lend us the money\nto pay our bills? If report speaks true, you could do\nso easily enough.\"\nMVs. Carey upreared her head haughtily, as she had\nbeen wont to do in tragic role.,, and her still fine eyes\n(lashed omhiotuly. In her whole attitude was the assurance of the \"has been\" und the pretension, not wholly\niulse In her case, of the \"is.\"\nStill, there wus no evidence of anger In her voice, as\n-.he replied coldly nnd distinctly: \"Because 1 know, Mr.\nBelmont, what actors like you are, and there are many\nof Ihem. Walt till I finish!\" as Belmont essayed to\nspeak, \"You've started me oft, and I'm going In have\nmy say.\" Sho paused Just an Instant, and then pro-\nceided. \"They borrow and they mean to pay. Oh, y*l,\nthey mean lo pay\u2014I'm not sarcastic. Bul when they\nget the money, Ihere Is a.convenient procrastination;\nthey need ho much with that ready money. They say\nto themselves, and in all sincerity: *1 owe that debt, ami\nI'll pay It some time.' Then in their eyes this acknowledgment half discharges the Indebtedness, and that some\ntime becomes never. Oh, yes, I know\u2014tht artistic tem-\nperarooril. some of you would say. Buh! Let them forget lhat artistic temperament, which le their proudest\nconst and their greatest weakness, Lei them come down\nto business! Oh, 1 know,\" with a nod ns if answering\nsome unspoken comment, \"I am an actress myself, have\nbeen one all.my life, and I love my profession. Am I\nthr mother, then, who is going back on her own flesh\nand blood? Perhaps. But the mother who sees tlie\ntaultn In her own children and would correct them\nDear mc!\" with a laugh and a change of manner so\nabrupt that, had It been before the public, it would have\nbrought forth a round of applause. \"Dear me! That Is\na pretty long speech for a first old woman to make, isn't\nll'.' But then vou see perhaps I haven't forgotten the\ntime when I was starring us tlie Southern Sylph\u2014heaven\nsave thc mark!\u2014and had the centre of the stage to\nmyself, calcium on me, and spouted speeches a yard\nlong.\"\nThe bubbling laughter accompanying these last words\nwus to Infectious that It removed from the Utile knot of\nlisteners any resentment her criticism might have caused.\nMoreover, they knew, most of Ihem from personal experience, that, with one of the mosl caustic of tongue*,\nMama Monty possessed one of the kindliest hearts In the\nprofession.\nThere was one, however, who was far from buing\nmollified. Belmont, the leading man, was conceit personified. Criticism In any form of his lordly self was a\ndeadly affront. Besides this, ho had a long standing\ngrudge against Mrs. Carey, who he knew saw through\nhlm, although he would not have put It In that way.\nHo, tt was with an ugly look In his bloodshot eyes\nlhat   lie said  with  sneering Insolence:\n\"t-hame upon you, madam, shame! You're a bird\nthat befouls Its own nest. Those others may stand for\nyour Insults If they like, but I for one am sick of your\nattempting to boss the whole show. What,\" lashing\nhimsell into fury, \"an old harridan like you\u2014\"\nHut before he could proceed furLhcr, young Wooderson had sprung In front of hlm, his face flushed with\nresentment and Indignation.\n\"That will do!\" he cried, warnlngly. \"Not another\nword of that sort!\"\nAmazed at this interruption, Belmont stood stock-\nstill, nnd then he demanded furiously:\n\"How dare you, you whlppersnupper? How will you\nstop mo  I'd like to know?\"\n\"If you utter another word derogatory to Mrs. Carey,\"\nwas the llrm, quiet response, \"I'll give you the soundest\nthrashing you ever received in your life.\"\nThose about gasped in astonishment, and for the\nmoment forgot their troubles in this new sensation. Belmont, from sheer self-assertion, had been a sort of\nmaster spirit among them, and this was the first time\nihey bod ever heard him delkd.\nKor nn Instant it seemed as If the leading man were\nabout to leap upon WoooWson. But there was soine-\nihing in the young raw'.. *tern, set face that told him\nhe was quite capable of carrying out his threat, and\nmade him conclude that discretion was the better part\nof valor.\nSo ho gave a thcatrlca ance of scorn at Mrs,\nCarey's champion, and turned away with what was\nIntended us a laugh of contempt, but which had a distinct\nring of pusillanimity in it.\nMpanwhlle, Mrs. Carey had laid a restraining hand\n'\"If you utter another word derogatory to Mrs. Carey,' was the firm, quiet response, Til give you\nthe soundest thrashing you evor received in your life,'\"\nsuccess had aroused  the Jealous  animosity of certain\nEiembera of the company who had been longer In tho\nrofesslon than hc. This was peculiarly so In the coat\nf Belmont, who suspected Mrs. Carey, and not without\nlome truth It must be confessed, of an Intention to place\nWooderson na leading man at some future dato.\nThere had been one or two passages at arms between\ntht two men In which Wooderson had come off the victor,\na fact which served to fan the tires of Belmont's vin-\nglcUvcncss.\nThe company crowded round Mn. Carey, all talking\ntogether, and each one trying to explain to ner the situation, with which she was already thoroughly familiar,\nAt last she raised her hand for silence with a sort of\nregal gesture, which was at once obeyed,\n\"M-m-m-m,\" she began, with that peculiar purring\nsound, habitual to htr, and which meant so much ot so\nlittle, Just ns she designed It ihould. \"And to you've\nhad a talk with Mr. Hurley, havo you?\"\n\"Yes, and much good It did us,\" snarled Belmont. To\nMrs, Carev's practiced ays It was apparent that lie hud\nbeen drinking, although he was nol, strictly speaking,\nintoxicated.    \"Lots of soft sawder, but no real stuff.'\n\"My landlady won't let me go wllliout my trunk,\"\ntearfully Interjected ont of the young women.\n\"Bah!\" exclaimed Belmont, scornfully. \"Do what 1\ndo.    Refuse to act.   That'll soon bring Hurley to terns\"\nMrs. Carey gave him one swift, contemptuous look\nbut snid nothing. She liiul no sympathy with the utW\nwho strikes flhe was too milch m an atilut in ,n-:ip.\npoint her audltnet, no matter bow small thnt audience\nmight be.\n\"Can't you advise us, Mamn Monty?\" pleaded the\n\u2022oiibrettt.\n'\u2022U-.m-nw.ra    U:iw.\u00bb hit word, it Is too bad. end I sin\non Wooderson's arm, nnd she Bsld calmly:\n\"Don't bother with him, Lance. In my day, leading\nmen were actors and gentlemen. Now, It seems that\ntome of them are neither.\"\nBelmont affected not to hear.\nThe soubretie, who, in spile of her taint of vulgarity,\nwas a good-hearted girl, pressed forward, and Insisted on\nshaking hands effusively with Wooderson.\n\"Now, ladles and gentlemen,\" said Mrs. Carey, \"Just\nk word more, If you will put the matter In my hands, I\nwl'] see what I can do with Mr, Hurley.\"\n\"Yes, yes!\" Vi\n\"Oo ahead!\"\n\"Hurrah for you. Mama Monty!\"\nThe acquiescence ln her proposal was universal, un-\nlall Belmont, who at all events made no spoken objection,\nbe excepted.\n\"Walt here, then, until I return. I would like lo\nhave yen go with me, Mr. Wooderson.\"\nWllh ihls MYs. Carey started for th* stage door, followed by Lance.\nBelmont, as he looked after them, snickered In ridicule nnd said In a stage aside:\n\"Look at him get under htr wing. Mother Carey's\nchicken, Indeed!\"\nThe young man heard, hut, paving no attention whatever, followed calmly In Mama Monty's wake.\n(line outalde, Mrs. Carey addrrased no word to her\ncompanion, but proceeded, as rapidly as her bulk would\nperm 11, round to thc tront of the house, through the ves-\n)ilbul' ni.d up lo thi box office.\nTher\" were no purchaseri of si-aia there, and Ihere-\nfore   Ihcie   was  no  delay  In obtaining  speech   with  the\ntlikel seller behind the window.\n\"1 Mint to see Mr.   I.Virley,\" demandfd  Mrs. Carey,\nTie ticket sell-1 who recognized ihe petrels, stammered and uii-d in form some excuse.\n\"No. that wont do.' declared Mrs. Carey, sharply.\nAnd then, she suddenly added, raising her voice as she\nsaw that u door leading Trom the box offlce to a private\nroom beyond wus ajar: \"1 know you're there, Daniel\nHurley, and 1 mean to nee vou. You know I generally\nget what 1 want, so you'd better let mo ln at once.\"\nYes, Hurley was there, and, ufter ft moment's reflection, he recognized the futility of resistance, although he\nwas in a measure In hiding, and hod resolved not to see\nanother member of hla company that day.\nAnathematising all \"old women\" in genera), and this\none in particular, ht admitted Mra. Carey and her\nprotege t'< the sanctum.\nThe lady swept ln, and\nwith an uir of determination\nund without being invited,\nlook U seat. Wooderson followed, feeling rather uncomfortable und out of place.\nThe manager's ruddy\ncountenance was less florid\nthan usual, and his customary broad smile revealing\nthe gleaming teeth, which\nhad won for him the epithet\nof \"genial,\" had vanished.\nAlthough she knew him\nand his methods well, MVs.\nCarey could not help feeling a bit sorry for him. It\nwas in a resolute manner,\nhowever, that she opened\nthe conversation.\n'Now, Daniel, I've come\nto have a plain talk with\nyou, and I'm going to begin\nat the beginning.\"\n\"Very well, Mrs. Carey,\"\nreplied Hurley, meekly, and\nwith an air of resignation,\nwhile there flushed through\nIda mind a remark of the\nlate Stuart Robson's lo the\neffect that he would willingly\npay on extra royally to any\nauthor who would write him\nn play not calling for the\nservices of an \"old woman\"\nur of supernumeraries.\n\"I know Just how fierce\nbusiness has been,\" proceed-\ned Mama Monty, relentlessly, \"but It's ail due to your\nown folly. I warned you\nagainst litis atrocious booking, aud that's tho reason I\nrefused to be your tlnancla:\npartner in thli; undertaking.\nYou remember that, don't\nyou?\"\nHurley was forced to\nconfess lhat he did.\n\"M ore over,\" continued\nMrs. Carey, \"if you'd had\nthe Angel Gabriel for a\nleading mnn Instead of\nthat incompetent drunkard\nBelmont, you could not\nhave expected lo do any\nbusiness over our route,\nAnd what under the sun\nyou took him back for after\nhe went on that spree In Fordmead and would have\nruined tis, if Cyril Raymond-bless hlm.-had not pulled\nue out of the hole. I don't know. Upon my word, Daniel\nHurley, with your experience as a manager, I cannot\nunderstand your asinlnity.\"\nWooderson, ns he listened, could not but think that\nshe was a little hard upon a man in mtslortune, but then\nhe was not behind the scenes.\n\"However, thut Is neither here nor thero,\" went on\nMVr. Carey, without giving Hurley an opportunity for\nretort or explanation. \"We have nothing to do with .he\npast. It's the present, and possibly the future, that concerns ns now.\"\n\"What can we do?\" asked the manager, weakly.\n\"What can you do?\" corrected Mrs. Carey, sharply.\n\"Let me see\u2014you owe the company about two weeks'\nsalary, don't you?\"\n\"About lhat.\"\n\"And how much have you got to pay them with?\"\nHurley hesitated.\n\"Tonights receipts\u2014\" he began.\n\"Bother tonight's receipts!\" interrupted Mrs. Carey,\nImpatiently, \"They will be only a drop in the bucket.\nWhat else?\"\nThe manager i  read out his hands deprecatlngly.\n\"Not a cent.\"\n.   Mama Monty's fine face flushed.    She was annoyed,\nand not a Utile disgusted as well.\n\"You can tell that to othcr people, Daniel Hurley,\" sho\nexclaimed, \"but not to me! J know belter. What's\nbecome of all the property you own In Fordmead? You\ncan raise money on that.\"\n\u25a0'Vou nre mistaken, 1 cannot.\"\n\"Why not?'\n\"I wrote to Abigail about it ten days ago.\" Abigail\nwas Mrs. Hurley. \"And she refuses. I The property is\nin her name.\"\nMrs. Carey wus silent for ft moment. She wns quite\ninclined to believe this statement to be true, for she knew\nAbl-Enfl, whom she had often mentally characterized as\n\"a miserly ent.\"\n\"If 1 could only get on to Uusliton,\" ventured Hurley,\n\u00abeelng thai Mama Monty's loquacity was temporarily\n\u25a0checked, \"I think all would gu well.\"\n\"Because the advance sale is fine. Look at this,\" and\nhe handed her u dispatch which corroborated lhe statement. .    ,   ,\nIt was from Flint, ihe sluge manager, who had gmio\nou in advance. , .    _   '     ...\n\"How much will lt lake to .mug us to Rushton.'\nasked Mrs, Carey, hn brows knitied reflectively.\n\"une hundred  and   twenty-live dollars.\"\n\"Ann how much do yuu owe the company?\"\nThe manager made a rapid calculation.\n\"About $000,\" he announced; \"but half of that would\nsatiety ihem fur the present.\"\n\"Three hundred uud seventy-live dollars In all, then'\n\"M-m-m-m,    l-I might help you out.\"\nHurli'V started, and his eyes gleamed with renewed\nhope.    He hud  not anticipated ihK although no was\nftWare that Mama M'only was possessed of u tidy Jl11 Lu\nfortune \t\n\"Oh, Mm. Carey!\" be started In, gratefully.    '1\u2014\nBut   the   \"ftrut   old   woman\"   checked   lilm   with   a\n* \"Malt a minute' We're old friends, Daniel Hurley,\nand you have your troubles. 1 have the honor of Abigail's' acquaintance, you see.\" lt was not in feminine\nnature to forego this little dig. \"And 1 am Inclined'to\ncome to your assistance-hut upon certain conditions.\"\n\"Nairn theml Name them!\" cried the excited manager, whose face was once more beginning to he wreathed\nln smiles. \"And I'll keep them, upon my word I will!\"\n'M-m-m-m. Yes, 1 think you will. Well, then, in\nthe tirst place, you must give me yuur note for the furl\namount, to be paid In a percentage of the receipts-say\n20 per cent , beginning next week In Rushton.\"\nIn answer to this demand, Hurley immediately sat\ndown at a table and wrote out the ndte.\nAfter examining ll, Mrs. Carey placed It In an old-\nfashioned reticule she carried. For u woman, and especially a woman uf thc Btage, sho possessed no little business acumen.\n\"And secondly,\" she proceeded emphatically, \"Belmont must go You must give him his two weeks'\nnotice tonight,\"\nThe manager's face fell, Belmont might not be the\nverv best ln the world, but It would be hard at that stags\nof the game and In their present territory to find any\none tc replace lilm.\n\"Bul\u2014\" Hurley hegan fn protest.\n\"But me no huts.\" interrupted Mbma Monty, Imperiously, \"I Insist upon it. He's sdwayB a mUjchief\nmaker, drunk or sober. Give yourself no uneasiness. I'll\nfind somebody who can discount him at every point.\"\nThis with a glance &l Wooderson, which caused that\nyoung man's heart to beat high at the prospect of gratified ambition.    \"Is it agreed, Daniel?\"\n\"Needs must when-Mrs. Carey drives,\" answered\nHurley, although a little ruefully, and with a doubtful\nlook at Wooderson, for he thoroughly understood to\nwhom Mrs. Carey alluded.\n\"Ihen, that's settled!\" exclaimed the \"angtl,\" rising.\n\"1 1) get n check cashed at thn hotel, and bring the\nmoney tonight I'll also make It all right with tht\npMoK-all except Belmont.   You must ste* him.\"\nNothing more of consequence was lo be discussed, and\nMinna Monty and Wooderson returned to tht stage, where\nthey found Lhe company still assembled und Impatiently\nawaiting their coming.\nIn a few words Mrs. Carey Informed ihem of the\n-\u25a0tsult of htr negollations, and that they could expect half\nof the money due them that night. She did not teli them\nof her own financial finger In tha pie, but 'there was\nprobably not one who did not suspect lhe truth.\nFrom gloom Instantly all becume sunshine. No class\nof people is more mercurial In temperament than actors.\nTrouble once gone, they are like children to believe that\nlt will tiever return, Hope certainly springs eternal In\nthe theatrical breast at least.\nMama Monty was showered with tliankH and congratulations, and had some difficulty in effecting u laugh-\n\"'Lance! Lance 1' she grasped, 'The money is gone.'\"\nIng ercape.\nDuring the afternoon, the money was obtained from\nthe proprietor of the hotel without any trouble; for he\nwas an old acquaintance, who had every confidence in\nMrr. Carey's pecuniary standing.\nIn Wooderson's presence, Mama M'only tied the bulky\nroll wilh a piece of yellow ribbon, which chanced to bo\nnt hand, and placed it in her ever-present reticule. It\nwas her intention to send for Hurley and give lt to him\nsome time during the evening, so that he could pay oft\nHie actors at the fall of the final curtain, und have euf-\nflclent left for the railway fares to Rushton on the\nmorrow.\nWhatever might be his share of the receipts for that\nnight's performance she had kindly allowed him to retain\nfor his own personal use.\nWooderson, as was his custom, nccompanlcd Mrs.\nCarey to the theatre, carrying the reticule, now even\nmore precious than usual, and relinquishing It to her at\nthe door of her dressing room, which happened lo be\nnext to his own.\nThe accommodations behind the scenes nt the theatre\nin Lunevllie were not very commodious, and Wooderson\nwai obliged to share a room with hla avowed enemy,\nBelmont. Theatrical life, as well as adversity, makes\nstrange companions.\nThe leading man was in a particularly vicious mood\nthat evening. He had received a letter from Hurley,\ntelling him that after a fortnight his services would no\nlonger bo required, and he was quite clever enough to\nrecognize .bo fuct thut Mrs. Carey had had a hond In\nhis discharge. This naturally increased his animosity\ntoward her protege.\nBelmont, moreover, wai a man who was constantly\nin debt, and never dlscharj nl his obligations If he could\npossibly avoid it. Mrs. Carey's diatribe on the stage that\nmorning hnd lilt the null on the head In his case.\nTiie money he was to receive that nighl would not\npny what he owed In Lunevllie, nnd, moreover, a letter\nhad reached him from Uusliton demanding payment for\nan old debt iu that city, and threatening suit and exposure if the demands were not immediately cump.led\nwith.\nlie was full of Blurring and satirical remarks, as he\nprepared for ilie play, but Wooderson paid little or no\nattention to lilm, being too much absorbed in thoughts of\nthe work befoie him to care what his dicsstng-ruom mate\nmight say,\nAbout a quarter of an hour before ihe time for the\nrising of llie curtain* Hurley came behind the scenes, and\nknocked at  Mis. Carey's door.\n\"Who's there?\"\n\"I-Hurley.\"\n\"ub, Is n yuu, Daniel? I'm awfully sorry I can't\nlet you In Just now, but I'm not half dressed. The\nmoney's nil right, though. 1 huve It here In my reticule.\nCan'l you coma tack later?\"\n\"Yes, but not till the end of the performance. 1 have.\nto counl up, you know, uud settle with thu house man-\nngement,\"\n\"All right, at the end \"f the performance, then.\"\nThe jiarllllons between the dressing looms were ihin,\nand every word uf ibis conversation was distinctly audible\nto both Belmont and W undersoil,\nThere was u strunge expression upon Belmont a fact\nn\u00bb he listened, uud suddenly it look of desperate resolve,\nmhgleil wllh relief, flashed Into his eyes. From then\non unlll the call for lhu tirst net   he wild nothing,\nThe im itihei lmd turned cooler, and thc audience wus\nquite u respectable one.\nThe llrsl three acts of thc piny, which was a four-act\nmelodrama, passed off umooihly enough, although Belmont acted more nervously than usual, and did not\nroach his own standard, which ut the besl wus not a\nhigh one,\nBut, in lhe Intermission, there came a aem-atlon not\ndown In the bills, and In which, for the nonce, only\nthree members of tho company shared,\nAs Wooderson wae leaving the dressing-room, where\nBelmont was packing his bug, as he explained wllh unwonted graclousness In contrast wllh his previous demeanor, In order to get home early, the young man wus\nhtaWed hy the appearance of Mrs. Carey, who came\nhurrying uut of her own room wllh chOCKS a-flume beneath her make-up, and every Indication of mental disorder.\n\"Lance! Lance!\" she gusped.    \"The money It gone!''\n\"Clone!\" echoed Wooderson, blankly. \"What do you\nmean?\"\n\"I mean what I say. The money Is gone, lost, stolen!\nI left It on my dresser before the last net, and now It la\nno longer there!\"\nAttracted by lhe agitated words, Belmont appeared ai\nlhe door of tho dressing-room,\n\"What bi the matter, MVs. Carey?\" he asked. In apparent surprise, \"I-'ld I hear you say yuu had lost\nsomething?\"\n\"Yos. A largo sum of money has bsen taken from\nmy room.\"\nBelmont looked slowly nnd meaningly ul Woodrmon,\na look which was not loSt upon Mrs. Cnrey, und the*\nsaid, smoothly;\n\"perhaps Mr. Wooderson can tel) us something\nabout  It,\"\nI unci flushed angrily.\n\"I!\" he exclaimed. \"Do you mran lo Insinuate-\u2014\"\n' \"1 Insinuate nothing whatever,\" disclaimed Belmont,\nin the snrfie bland manner. \"But perhapa you noticed\nthe money was theie when you were In Mrs Carey's\nroom a short lime ago,\"\n\"1 did lit notice. It Is true.'' hTTnre\"*-i(17*f T,'\"- i . -ey,\n\"that I wns In your room, when you were not ero,\nI needed a bit of crept linir, and 1 ventured to lake it\nfrom your make-Up box without your permission, '\nMis Carey was silent for a moment, her eyes wan>\niierlr.fi from one to the other with a look the Blgi ll cance\nof which neither of them could fathom.\n\"We must leave it for ihe present,\" she said, at last,\nand now speaking calmly. \"There is no time lo Investigate now, or there will be a wait. Meet me, bollt of\nyou, after tbe close of the play.\"\nAmi she turned and moved away in the direction of\nlhc stage.\nThe iwo men followed her. Wooderson's heart was\n<\u25a0 welling with indignation\nund wounded pride. Was It\npossible that Mama Monty\nluipected him cf being a\n'ilef?\nHut, as Mrs Carey hnd\n\u2022-aid, ther* was no time to\nthink of this now. In n\nminute or two all three of\nthem would be due be for*\ntne audience.\nThe play ihey were rep-\nreaentlng that evening was\na good, old-fashioned melodrama: stirring enough, but\nnot too complicated In plot.\nPapers und banknotes establishing the identification\nand representing the foriunt\nof the heroine bad been\nstolen by a rascally cousin.\nHer lover, acted by Wooderson, had determined tr recover them, and had engaged the services of a famous detective iBelmonl.' to\nuld him. Thc previous part\nof the play had been mainly\ntaken up by the thrilling adventures of tliis detective,\nand, toward the end of tha\nthird act, hc had notified the\nhero that he had important\ninformation. Thu two men\nwere to meet at the house\nof the heroine's nurs* a\nJolly old soul, who was\neverybody's iriend and ths\ndea ex rnnchlna of the whole\npiece\u2014a role inimitably portrayed by Mrs. Carey.\nNeither Mama Monty nor\nLance betrayed any sign of\ntheir inward agitation dur-\nIng the preliminary scene\nbetween them.\nFinally, Belmont, aa the\ndetective, entered. His first\nwords, as he strode to tho\ncentre of the stage, were:\n\"It's all right. I've ri-\ncovered everything1-\"\nAs he spoke, ho drew a\nbundle of pr.pers trom his\npocket; but with them something else-a roll of money\ntied with a yellow ribbon,\nwhich fell to thc stage.\nIn another moment, Belmont,    who    instantly   caw\nwhat he had done, stooped, picked up the roll, and thrust\nit back Into his pocket.\nRut  not   before  Mrs.  Carey',   keen eyes  had  caught*\nEight ot the roll and the delicate yellow tibbon.\nThe thief stood revealed.\nNever before had Mama Monty's brain worked more\nquickly than it did then. What was to be done?-that\nwas lhe question. It was impossible to denounce Belmont then and there, ]n his own person and in the flue\nof the audience. But lhe man undoubtedly suspected\nthat he was discovered, nnd would fly as soon ae nil\nscene whs over, while both Mrs. Carey and Wooderson\nwere obliged to remain on the stage for about fifteen\nminutes until the end of the performance.\nAs Wooderson took the property papers which Belmont, following the business of the play, extended to\nhim, the first old woman resolved upon a bold expedient.\nShe deliberately swept down the Btago between tho\ntwo men, nnd turning bei back upon Belmont, under tl.e\npretense of examining the documents, she munaged to\nwhimper a few words to Lance, who caught lhe dTift of\nthem, and was prepared lo act accordingly.\nMVima Monty's chance had comb, once more she had\nthe opportunity to dominate the scene, us ln her old dayi\nof glorious Btardom. Like a retired war horn* ot lho\nsound of the trumpet, the scent of battle waa ir, hei\nnostrils, and she longed for the fray.\nFacing Belmont again, she burst forth with rapid\nimprovisation, and ln those clear, ringing tones, which\nhad made her famous:\n\"Ah! You have betrayed yoursi If! You have given\nhlm the wrung papers! You. you alone, are the real\nvillain! Hand over the roll you have In your pocket!\nHand It over, 1 say!\"\nBelmont knew that the game was up, and hc turned\nwhite under his make-up. But, In desperation, he determined tu make a break for freedom, and get away with\nhis booty it possible.\nMama Monty read this determination In bis fact, and\ncrit-d out to Woodeison  a.** .: It wen* all In the play:\n\"Don t let him escape!    Take the roll from him!    It\nls for yuur love!     Foi   y. .r honor\nWooderson made u sup forward Belmont raised his\nland to strike, Ut Mn- Carey, who was Just be Id ml hlm,\ntaught ii before it could deii end\nThe two men gran ltd, ni.d then ensued a struggle\nwhich was realistic in the extreme, and which wai\nwatched with breathless Interest by the gaiety gods,\nwho, of course, were not In thi ae. rei\nLanes hud not forgotten the nno when he had played\nQuarterback on his college fool  team, nnd be tried *\ntackle for which he wus then noted, li succeeded now\nas it had lu the past, and Belmont fell heavily to ii.t\u00bb\nstage. ' \u2022\nMrs. Carey darted forward sank on her kneei and\nibnietiriH Her bund Into tbe thief\u00bb po'ket, extracted thl\nprecious roll uf bills.\nThun rising and drawing hersell . \u25a0 to ber full helghi\nhhi cried, wiih the full strength of nei superb volei\n\"Hal He   Bo li i Irtue vli i rl ui and \u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 i im   ki\nIt was \u00bb  trlts speech enough,  but  Its   gmlicent\ndelivery madf it \"go,\" u\u00bb peal oftei peal ol applause\nbetokened.\nwhen the long-continued entl islasm died away, she\nspoken few leu wordi ti Wooderson who, rather against\nhis win, obeyed and released hli erstwhile antagonist\nBelmont pcmmblt.; to t.i* feet, and with a snarl (\nruge and ba filed greed, dashed off thi stage at break-\nneck speed. It was ai, extremely effective exit fn a\nevery point of view\nFor an Instant. Mr\u00ab. Care) Hood Irresolute. Bhe\nrfall7'Ml that ihe rascal would escape and evade hil Jusl\npunishment if he wen not Immediately pursued, but\u2014\n'.here waa the audience to be thought of And this InttCf\nconsideration bad the most wiig.u with her.\nSne waia*d io the side entrance, and, in a natural\nmanner, called to the leading lady, who came on In a\nstate uf bewilderment nt what had oci irred\nThen camo another chance, which Mil Carey prompt*\nly took advantage of. Ob, it wus a great night for the\nfurmer Southern Sylph!\nln an effective speech she explained to the heroine\nthe recovery Of her fortune, nnd the discomfiture of tht\nvillain, while ih< hnd the presence of mind to express\ni.er own surprise Bt the unexpected denouemtnt.\nThen the hero took th** herolm to bis armi. while tht\nnurse, Joyfully waving tin bundle of money, Indulged in\na few triumphant, If somewhat ponderous, steps of a ;igj\nand-thu lurtaln came down.\nIt wue certainly not iht termination designed by ibe\nauthor, but the audience knew nc better and was i-ntla-\nfled.\nAt the fall of the curtain, the otbtr niters and uo-\niresset camt pourini upon the iluge, with eager and\nvoluble questioning, but only a vague explanation wai\nvouchsafed them\nSuddenly, however to every ones amasenient, Mama\nMonty placed her two hands upon Wooderson's shoulders,\nand   rending Mm down.  Imprinted a rousing kli-n upon\nM. i of his cheeks, whether ihis wa\u00ab in consideration\nOf bin ready Wil in grusilr.g the aiiuatlon and aiding In\nrecovering thc stolen money or ln remorse for nn unjust\nsimpleton, or a mixture of both, Lance never asked, nor\ndid Mama Monty ever teli him\nThe welcome gbosi walked lhat night; and the nelt\nmorning the memoers of the Hurley Star Company, wit a\nsmiling faces, their Mils paid and money in their pockets,\nboarded the uatr. for H Life NotAIIUgmcmw\nto tfye Nomads of\ntt)& Ocean.\nrOULD ym lm brave enough to\n'.ailure on a long ocean voyage,\nknowing thai beneath lhe deck\nof th' ship uiu concealed a volcano which at\nany lime, without a moment's warning, might\nbelch forth sudden death mid destruction?\nWilli a cargo of $00 tons of dynamite and\n200 loin nf nitroglycerin, a steamship recently sailed from the Atlantic coast lo the Pacific.\nA slo'in amid the ice field of Cape Horn\nwould have meant imminent danger, to say\nthe hist.\nWould ymi care lo ply Eastern xtalers in\ntt\/nWi ii was strongly suspected, floated deadly' mine which had been set during the Russo-\nJapanese War?\nSol long ago a Russian steamer struck a\nmine near Vladivostok and tSo persons were\ndrowned.\nOr would you prefer to journey through\nthe tropics on a ship carrying a car^o of animal bones, from which intolerable stenches\nand swarms of bugs and worms made life\nmiserable both day and nighll Then how\n'tihout sailing to apparently peaceful and sheltered harbors in which typhoons spring up\n\u25a0and in an hour destroy hundreds of Ikes?\n'During a lyfhoon in lhe harbor of Hong\n'Kong several months ago fifteen steamships\nand a hundred small vessels were wrecked.\nAttacked\nAuac\/fea oj\/yatives\non West African Coast.\n\\x\nWHAT I., a tramp vfusel?  you  ail..   Ymi liav*\nprobably come to tlio conclusion you wuuldn't\nJourney on one al any price.\nA tramp la a vessel which lias no regular\n\u25a0 .:*. which   take*   Its  work  wherever   It   Amis   U>\nnecessary, It visits tlie atualleat ami moat ot>-\nscure ports, taking cargoes from pine? to place and\ntriftng al! I.a.arda In tlie accomplishment of Us nila-\nal-jn.\n!\u2022 t., ...it uncommon for a tramp to leave it, heme\nport and no. return for a period of three to five years\nOnce a sailor, always a sailor, has been true for\ngeneration.. Home men are sivllora from necessity.\ncoera because of the fasi-lnattoti wh'eh the sea holda\nfor them. They accept hardships find liungnr aa mere\nIncidents of the life they have adopted\nWith the utmost nonchalance, they embark on ves-\n.-'., carrying cargoes of oil, powdei, dynamite, gaso-\nllne an-l Other diiig-rous substances, even though it\nI'. .0 the (r-.ji-n Heidi .->( Hi\" far North or to the Indian\nOcean, where typhoons rage\nWith red flags flying from all her masts, lhe .tram-\ns:ilp 3a.ua Maria last October lelt Philadelphia for\ntan Francisco with 5'') tons of dynamite and powder\nand C-io Ions <f nitroglycerin stor-'d In It. hold The\ncargo was one of the ino.,! dangerous ever carried by\na ,f -|.\nH-for\" having port. Captain l.ane s'linmoncd all\n,... men s\" ind lold ...\" they m-re aboard a ....oul-\n\u25a0;.-'; K-   1        .if. >\n\u25a0'Let m.. see one of you atn-.klng. l.e said, want-\nIr.gly.   or le. any one of you light a match\u2014overboard\nyou'll go-\nEven more dang-rous than tins trip was that of\nCaptnlr. ' j-' Couch, ..' tl.' tramp Adventure, nho\nt>-l< a cargo \"< ol'.. dynamite and '\"-\"Vder from New\nYork to Canadian po!'.--e stations at l-'ullerton and Port\n<Sunh by Floating\nMint tn tfit\n\u25a0Sea of Japan.\nA Battle Wttfi Pine\/) Bu$s from, tfjefiold\nChurchill, on the northeast shores of Labrador.\nI or thret' days the verael, which had been clad In\nan extru armor of one and one-half-inch steel plate to\nIniuro Us safety, made iw way through fields of loe.\nImagine1 th- thrill of apprehension thut must have\nswept from forecastle to cabin as tbe ship was caught\nlu that downward sweeping mass of ice, whioh piled\nabove the railing'' and crushed over the creaking\nshies uf tbe vessel, threatening at any moment to\nloosen the latent volcano within!\n\"Once we. were nearly driven on shore.\" said Cap-\nlain Couch, In relating his experience. \"This was at\nHobron A terrific wind wan ' lowing landward, and\nthe lot came pounding agnlnst the sides of the ship,\npiling higher than the railing, and threatening us\nwith destruction\n\"Despite Its extra civerlng of steel, th* ship\ngroaned and tlie beam* creaked under th- death-dealing embrace of the frozen masses A wild wind added\nto our troubles and our danger We were powerless\nto make headway, unable to steer from the downwari\nsweeping Ice. a collision with whj.-h meant annihilation. Wllh great difficulty w-j got close to shore and\nwaited until the win*.!, leortased\n\"This was off Cap- .Vjgford. I^brador No tramp\nhad ever gona so far Nortn, and few who were In >ur\nveiiel would willingly nmk\u00ab the *r:p n,KSln\n\"Wa reamed C|p\u00ab Chid ley three days later, and\ngot to Port Churchill and Kutlerton the latter part of\nAugust W, were It degrees North, and had made\nunuBiinl time, despite iur dlfflrnltv In getting through\nthe Ice Tha Canadian 'lo vern ment recently put pollre\nat these town* to ootleot revenue from whs ten\n\"A lonely port*   We'.:   I should lay so    The police\nare the only white men there. Our experience with\nthe Eskimos waa Interesting. Of course, there were\nno wharves along the coast, und we hul to do all the\nunloading by boat. There was no one to help us but\nthe  natives\n\"They are a strange people, but honest, and good\nworkers. Before they would work, however, we had\nto Invite their families aboard ship and give them\ndinner. Oh' yes, they ate what we cooked, but lots of\nbutter and fat. How did we pay them? With fat,\npowder and clothing At that place your money 1* no\ngood, and a pound of tailow is worth more than many\ndollar bills.\"\nPerhaps it is when two nations are at war that the\ntramp traders ar\" mont likely to meet difficulties. The\nnature of Its work taken the tramp to dangerous\nports, the captain playing a game with loaded dice. The\npossibilities are that the ship will be captured, the\nmen Imprisoned, or, what Is worse, that It will be destroyed by one of the diabolic mines which are placed\nalong the coasts\nDuring the Russo-Japanese war tramps piled regularly lu tue waters that weie thu scene of naval combat There was constant danger of being fired upun\nby one or the other of tlie combatant-*, or uf encountering float ing mines. Evon after tht* war the danger\nwas nut altogether removed.\nWhile paining Vladivostok last O.-iober the wooden\ncoasting steamer Warjagln struck a flout I rig mine and\nfoundered A cording to a dispatch received by Lloyd's\nagency, l*0 persons were drowned. Another dispatch\nreporter! |00 dead\nTo China. Japan and ports of the Indian rioean hundreds of tramps jo, with their miscellaneous cargoes,\nbraving the terrific typhoons which prevail on thepo\nwaters   Many small ve\u00abH\u00abls perish ea,*ii year.\nriven In the most sheltered harbors lurk dangers.\nImagine the sensations of tlie ptsln who bed retired\nthe night before In a calm barb*.***-* und Is suddenly\naroused to find hla ship high and dry on land! During\na recent typhoon at Kong Kong scores of vessels wore\npitched ashore or capsUed and several ocean liners\nwere beached.\nThe storm came up early In the morning of September IN, Many tramps were lying In tbe harbor,\nnnd Pearl river was crowded with boats. A number\nor Bteamahlps were unloading si the docks.\nSuddenly the sky darkened, a roaring, ruglng wind\narose, nnd the waters of the harbor began to boll and\nchurn. For lwo hours the typhoon raged, subsiding as\nsuddenly us It arose.\nFifteen steam.-hips Hank, hundreds of the smaller\nvessels were pitched high on Shore, und the docks and\nsea walls were strewn with wreckage. The American\nsailing ship S. P, Hitchcock wus thrown up Into the\nstreets of the city. More than u hundred Uvea were\nlost In ull.\nThen there an* othei woes for the trader less\nfraught with danger, but exceedingly unpleasant. Can\nyou Imagine living on a ship Infested with thousand.-.\nof pinching bugs? Think of being bitten wIUIh you\nwalk the deck, while you eat and while you sleep!\nWhen the British freight steamship .Struthulrly arrived at New York from Bombay some time since tlia\ncrew were nearly Insane from this experience. For\ntwo months the men had battled in vain against\nhordes of pinching bugs, \\\\ nen the sailors came\nashore in Now York, bugs were clinging to their\nclothes.\nThe bugs got Into the shin with a cargo taken at\nBombuy. Thoy began to multiply, and soon Infested\nevery part of the vessel. Powders nnd disinfectants of\nall kinds w-jre sprinkled about. Assistance was sought\nat Algiers, and more disinfectants were secured. But\nthe fight was In vain.   The bugs hud taken the ship.\nA tramp ship recently left the Argentine for New York\nloaded with animal bones and phosphates, While\ncrossing the tropics the heat brought multitudes of\nworms from the bones. They trot into every part of\nthe ship\u2014Into the beds, the cupboards, the food and\nflour. The odor from the fertilizer was stifling. The\nsailors all began to smoke tobacco to overcome the\nsmell, bul soon the tobacco gave out, There waa nothing to do but endure the evil until port was reached.\nA voyage 10 tropical Africa Is the bete noir of the sea\ntramp. Tbe climate la insufferable, the natives annoying\nand at limes troublesome, even dangerous.\n\"If there la one human being In creation who can fitly\ncompare wllh the 'heathen Chinee,' it u the west\nAfrican negro,\" wrote Captain F, ll. Shaw, an Krigllah\nmariner of wide experience, \"It Is an inborn essential\nto him that he should steal, no matter what, Just so It\nla dishonestly obtained.\"\nAt many of the African coast trading places then*\nare 110 docks. The ship brings up and anchors oft shore\nThere Is no sign of habitation, All Is silent, lonesome.\nYet. no sooner does the ship's siren scream, than a great\nfleet of surf boats spring magically Inlo being from a\nbidden port und dart over the waves wllh swarthy blacks\nbending at the oars.\nlt I*. hard work itul'iadli,-.; at such u place. The .-\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\nsei ti surrounded hy lighters and surf hunts >>f Hm native*, nnd into these the cargo la lowered.\nOften the local white trailer quarrels wllh the captain ol lhe tramp, and .is has happened\u2014Ihe negroes attack the crew und attempt to rob the ship. More than\nonce this has happened,\nLoneliness of life on u tramp falls heavily on the\ncaptain. Hay attar day In the same, lie usually arisen\nIn the morning at s o'clock, eats breakfast, promenades\nthe deck, chute with thc ohlef engineer alwut the saving\nIn the amount of coal as compared io tlie dny before,\nperfunctorily asks the mate ruimernliig llie work of the\nprevious day, ind n few minutes before noon mounts the\nbrtdge, Me must \"shoot\" the sun at l' o'clock to ascertain the latitude. During the Afternoon hu walks the\ndeck, none lonelier.\nThe members of the crew have their duilv occupations, but the captain finds utile to entertain him Fro-\nternltte with subordinates the rough etiquette oi the son\nwill not lei hlm do.\nAn Interesting story is told hy u retired sea captain,\nUOW u ship Chandler In an American port, who waa one\nof the crew of the Chlgnell, the first ship to curry tanks\nof naphiliH. The trip was from Newcastle, England, to\nBatoum, ltussia, und Flume, Austria, in imt.\n1 luring I'u- voyage the tanks began to leak, Uie explosive liquid even entering the coal bins. It was nec*s-\n\u25a0ary to use force to compel the terrified sailors to attend\nto  their duties.\n\"We coaled nt the Dardanelles,\" snid tbe narrator,\n\"und a few hours after we lelt port found that 'he tank\nof naphtha waa leaking. The coal hole became filled with\nvapor, und Ibe sailors were given orderi not to enter It\nwllh matches or llghtod pipes We searched for the leak,\nbut could not find It.\n\"Ai Batoum we got an engineer and mechanics\naboard, but u search failed to locate the lenk, One of\nthe foreigners In tbe crew heard them talking Of the\nteak mid the Imminent danger of explosion, nnd he told\nhis shipmates, They told Captain .'dusters they would\nleave tlie ship, und prepared to do so.\n\"That night, however, while they were below we shut\ntnem In, cast off the lines and steamed Inlo the sea.\nWhen they found that they were at sea their terror was\nextreme.\n\"One night, while wu were in the Black Sen, I waa\nawakened by a terrible scream. I heard the men running on the deck, and there was the utmost confusion.\nWhen I got on deck 1 found steam pouring from the engine room. The men were preparing to lower the boats,\nsaying the ship wns afire.\n\"In iheir fright several went beluw with lanterns, and\nthe density of tlm steam extinguished Ihe light. Several\nof the r'ngllsli sailors got Into the engine room, and we\nthen found that there was no fire at all, hut a steam pipe\nhad burst, wt discovered it Just In time, or many of lue\nfrightened crew would have lift lhe ship.\n\"During our voyage we took the greatest care In flr-\ntng the engines, and, fortunately, there was no explosion.\nWhen we arrived at Flume we found 1000 people al the\ndock waiting for us. We were compelled to put out all\nour fires before *we wero allowed to enter port. Wt\npumped tha naphtha from the tanks tn rubber bote.\nThese burst. With great difficulty we finally got steam\npipes from the ship and succeeded In pumping out the\nliquid.\"\nTHE  TERRORS  OF   LIFE   IN   A  LIGHTSHIP   AMID  WINTER'S  STORMS\nTn LIVE i'.r weeks on a ship tbat is pitching and rolling continually In \u00bb stormy\nies; \u2022 - sii before table, the body\nfastened bj straps while working; to bn\nhurled from the bunk at nighl and to pertorm the\nduties : the laj in ler almos. insuperable difflcul-\ntie*\u2014these aro lhe e mm .11 enperioncea of lho men\nwh :\u25a0 ih, I \u25a0;\u25a0-. Slates G irernmeul letails for\nI -rv f\"   :. ill . gl 111 i| \u2022\nF ir week, an : - nei -.-:.. ths 'iie men ar.i\ncompelled 1 - remain on duty, with no 1 mica\n.;,-. .-. \u2022;, land en pi thr igl the wlri.- -. tele\ncrap1! system, Ihe days dragging by in in       m  11\nr,; .rl, is pr   \u2022 \u2022\u25a0: \u2022, and bi pv. r; r 111 .ei ie  il\n1 -..- :-,.*\u2022\u25a0   -: \u25a0\u2022   (ten Irivi \u2022 the men nearlj\n*    li.trai\n\"1\n11,1V. in  -\u25a0       :\u2022 i* *. \u00bbhlp\"   1 have been li   il\n.,.-.   f 11    ,,     i: 1 have anr ed   m ths MU\nfee;    . \u25a0   , r-lpekft, \u00ab     \u25a0 <*   *\u25a0 I thOU|\nwns bi  iht most tin    me  snar\nvstti 1   exh*uii   [>       -    \u25a0-\u2022\u25a0*.- whli h I ever put In\nfor my country wai       i   g it the Ne **\u25a0 Ei glai I\ncoast\nspeaker 1 f wide experience, om\nwl      b\u00bb sent wn  for the ns\nPan       Cubs    *. I  *      '     ;,\u25a0-.,  \u2014-  hli moit I\nen; -Met   s was I .'\u25a0':,   -\u25a0 t   I\nA llf     ke Ihls grates on ll It ti   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 sal\nf..   \u25a0   i      and menial)] .    \u2022\n1 result! fi \u25a0\u25a0   , Is\nShortly after 1 wem       ' I Deci\nt*'     ial \\ *>. Ilgbl** lip    peratoi     a violent atom\nUl   ...\u00bb nighl   The vessel wai    Ing forty-three mllei   tt\nt     nearest point a m where we got a\nt .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0        -.*,.\".  .'\u25a0\u25a0\n\\ wenl t\"  beo        \u25a0   *-:*    i ared and h'.wled,\nlhe Mmi-ers of the    \u25a0 \u25a0-       * \u25a0 -.. \u25a0 I    *    r the      ilaun\nof the  waves    Tw  \u25a0\u25a0*.\u2022:   mli ite the : *  whisl \u25a0   i\nt-%**- --: I seeondi    makrni   n\nf ree \u25a0' \u00bb;  eai \u25a0\u25a0;  tilng t   koi\n',: 1 vessel rose and 1      I in e sick nnd gidd     \u25a0\nwe ill exhs -\u2022\"*\u25a0!    ir sirengll       ning to oui beds    Fl\nnail]  t eot up and laj on thi floor, an i the   Ighl passed\niini      horrlblj \u25a0.\u25a0-;\u25a0      sick and d 1st j\nIt was thei        vlng\n\"Uurli i,' thi   laj   \u25a0\u25a0 \u2022     \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 iteameri pe iii l   llm Liun\nfhnt ticket tifjoald li0 ',\nl\/dtlesa  tu Attempt c3\/ctp\nIn the distance None signaled us. Any flag would have\nbeen torn to shreds In that gale, During the day we received a few wireless messages.\n\"To sit at the operating table and prevent our being\nhurled to the floor, we looked our feet In straps whioh\nwere fastened to the lloor. That night, while working\nunder awful difficulties, the meuaages stopped\u2014Ihore was\na crash on deck, We rushed up nnd found that our main-\ntopmast had blown nwuy, bringing down wllh tt our wireless aerial.\n\"We looked helplessly at ihe confused, Intricate mats\nof wire rope, Insulators and rigging. With every violent\ngust of wind the sea swept ovej the deck fore uud aft\nWe were drenched to ihe skin, and the temperature was\nclose to aero. We tied the broken parts of the must to\nthe. rigging nnd turned In for the night.\n\"The next morning we succeeded lu Belling Up another aerial. You can believe me, this was no easy task.\nlhnn we endeavored to communicate with shore, Imagine\nuur temper when we found our apparatus wouldn't work\n\"Wh received RiASiagftS, wc could even hear ateumers\nequipped with Mnroonl apparatus communicating wllh\neach ollur, but we couldn't send unyihlng. After nearly\na day's work we got it fixed all right. All of the Operators were sick for a week,\n\"Tills service Is dreaded hy all operators. Those who\nserved before me hud been on the ship six weeks. We\nwere out about n week, when a reserve lightship was\nrent out in that the regular vessel could go to port for\nconl snd repairs.\n\"We changed ships and thought wn should bo relieved\nin n week or two, but the duys piissud, Ihen weeks passed\nand no relief cunie. During January there were storms\n,.'f two 'nnl three dnys' duration.\n'The ship which was to como out and relieve vm was\nlocked In llie ice and unable to move. Things wont on;\nwo were fretting and fuming, when an aooldent\u2014and a\nsorlous one enme to our deliverance, although for a time\nIt  seemed to threaten destruction.\n\"During a wild no tithe ast gul** our cluiln parted and\nwe wenl adrift. Only one boiler wan working. For two\ndavs we tried io find our location, and finally we drifted\ninto the mouth of n harbor und were safe. This lightship\nnank Inter, and lis crew nearly lost their lives,\"\nDespite the trying experiences of the men who do\nduty In lightships along lhe const the maritime world\ncould not do without ihem. Not only do they warn pnss \u00ab\nlug marltieis, but vessels not equipped with wireless tele 1\ngraph apparatus communicate with shore through ihu'\nlightships\nThis li done by Ihe International signal tode during\ntho dny, and tiie CoitOTI light system by night. CTKnoruni\/nrK\u00a3 J aug wr\u00bba, wno & j\/oun i\n:t\n.:,\nGuimpe    and   Jumper\nDesigns   for\nSpring   Sewers\nAmong tlie model* for spring wear may be\nmentioned one very pleasing survival of the\nfittest lu winter modi's, and that is the gulmpe\nor jumper design. Tlie princess lines, so trying to the average figure, so maddening In\ntheir exactions to tlie home dressmakers are\nsubtly suggested In the new jumper design!,\nand tills in itself is a recommendation, Another\nfact in favor of tlie Jumper or gulmpe is iis\nwide range of possibilities, Severely outlined\nby illtchlng. slrnlghl tines ami flat braid, It\ngives irlgness lo the tailored costume, elaborated with lace, Infinitesimal and Innumerable tucks, ii set*, off thc dressy frock, and\nwhen displaying the combination of tailored\nlinen gown wllh slieer or lacy gulmpe It becomes one of the most fascinating touches in\nthe wardrobe of die summer gown.\nProperly developed In soft, supple good*,\nthe jumper emphasises ileudernw, oue desirable point In llie spring itylei, Further, there\nIs no fabric to which it will nol lend Itself,\nfrnm softest of Indian silk to s'iiTest ami\nsmartest of linen, from light weight broadcloth to shimmering voile of cobweb weave.\nIn sftrctlttR tlie combination remember tlmt\nthere must he decided contrail In weight of\nfabric between guimpe and jumper waist. That\nIs, do not make your jumper of flowered or\nfigured silk and your guimpe of plain silk in\nharmonious coloring. Select lace, net or finely\ntucked chiffon or mousseline for your gulmpe,\nAlso, If you wish to make over a frock to se-\ncute the guimpe effect without actually em-\nploylng a separate yoke, cut out the silk or\ncloth around the throat, insert lace, net or\ntucked sheer material and hide the junction of\ntlie simulated guimpe ami the gown proper\nwith tiny ruchlnga of ribbon, In velvet or tafte-\nta*, line braid, lace medallions connected by\ntriple hands of narrow velvet ribbon or any\nsimilar device which will heighten the gulmpe\nerTcet.\nIll the illustration the material is loulslne\nsilk In a soft shade of green, while the trimming is of graduated rows of black velvet ribbon, The skirt it tucked in alternately long\nand short groups over the hips, and may h.*\ntrimmed as shown in the illustration, or according to the fancy of the person who is to\nwear the gown Applied folds and tucks, especial!)' iu the linen stuffs\u2014running around the\nbottom r>! tlie skirt are much in favor.\ni\\ pink linen frock, thc skirt to he laid in\nplaits, rl-srlng the ground about four inches,\nand trimmed in bands of the linen, would be\nsmart made after tliis design. The gulmpe\nshould be of handkerchief linen, sho-tlng tiny\nhand-run tucks and a lace collar; the sleeves of\nthe same sheer stuff showing \",i-;'-*.s, and a hand\nof lace sat lie ring iu the fullness, A smart hat\nto go with this costume would he In pink\nNeapolitan straw, with a wreath of foliage ami\npick-tipped roses for it* trimming.\nTo build thi* costume It will require, for the\nperson of medium sire, about 12 yards of Jl\nand 27-Inch stuff, or 7 yards of 44-lnch material.\nA silk or linen jumper will carry with it\nmany guimpe.*. With the silk voile or woolen\njumper you may wear the lingerie or silk\ngulmpe, while with the linen only sheer stuff*\nIn linen, hali*te, organdie or lace are permissible.\nAnother way of obtaining tlie guimpe effect\nIs with the girdle and brelelle type of cos-\ntmnea. These are semi-princess, extremely\nsimple, and may he made at home quite easily,\nbeing practically a princess skirt, wllh the bre-\ntelle* over the shoulder. Many of these come\nin the soft silks, witii loulslne, satin and tafte-\ntas leading.\nA smart model recently shown was of eel!\nblue loulslne, trimmed In graduated rows of\ndeeper toned velvet ribbon, The back of the\nakirt   showed   a   trimming   of   velvet   buttons,\nid the shoulder strap* w**re of Ihe velvet ribbon and wide folds of the silk, making lhe\ngraceful drooping shoulder effect.\nThe   gulmpe  effect  is  seen  iu  some  nf  the\nEton jacket*.   The jacket lo a beautiful gray\nbroadcloth  has deep  revcrs  or  a  Tuxedo\nlar of velvet, forming a guimpe In fronl, which\nis of all-over Cluny lace.\nAll Inexpensive jumper would he made of\nblack taffeta, with guimpe and sleeves of linen\nlingctie. The skirl sliould have black hand* of\nthe material, nr the black velvet ribbon as a\ntrimming. While much less costly 111 the beginning, on account of the fact that the taffeta\ndoes not require a skirl lining, a black voile,\nwhich does require a silk petticoat, will\nlust longer than three taffeta suits. Panama\ncloth, however, which Is also a liulu material.\ndoes not require lhe silk petticoat, and tti last\ninn properties have lung ago heen proven.\nA beautiful jumper recently exhibited was\nfashioned of rough silk nottveaute', showing a\ndesign iu delicate pah* green itrlpe, on a I\nground of while. The skirl had for its trimming live rows of narrow (Tuny lace Insertion\nrunning around Its full circle juit above a\ndeep hem. The guimpe wns nf Cluny lace n-id\nembroidery, A chic hat to be worn with this\ncostume would he of while chip with an under-\ntrimming of pink roses and a green ostrich\nfeather running from the left side of the hat\ntoward ami drooping off at lhe hack.\nA suggestion for development in dark blue\npanatua i*' The skirt and general style to he\non the line of lhc illustration, willi three bias\nhands of the material running around the\nskirt in place of the velvet; the guimpe aud\nsleeves to be In white hand tucked batiste,\nshowing fine trench embroidery inserting.\nThe hat to this costume would be in blue\nstraw, with white wings as trimming.\nUnless you intend your jumper suit to be a\nfancy reception gown, it should he made at\nleast four inches clear of the ground, so as to\nbe a comfortable walking length, lumpers are\nan easy ami charming mode of dressing the\nyoung girl. These umvns are often cut quite\nlow in front to reveal lhe lacy guimpe.\nAll guimpe* have a body lining, as well a*\nHie full sleeves, and plain or fancy cuff* may\nreplace the short length sleeve shown iu the\ndesign. A standing collar or a Puteh neck may\nhe used, ll Mill require, for the person of\nmedium sixe, 1H yards of material -I inches\nwide for the guimpe ami \\)i yards of stuff\n27 inches wide, or if the material is 44 inches\nonly one yard will he required.\nA recent debutante in metropolitan society\nwore a white cnuion cloth showing guimpe ef- j\nt'ect. The slightly trailing skirt\u2014bul (railing\nno more at (he back than at lhc sides and in |\nthe fr>nl had a wile hem aud a lace {riser\ntion let III about the bottom in a moiHfiei\nGreek key pattern, the modification consisting\niu the up and down har* of the lace running\nslantingly instead of straight, At the top the\nskirt was gathered ever so slightly at the\nsides and a hit more at tlie hack. The bodice\ntvas a hebe affair, shirred at Ihe bottom\ndrawn in under a white satin ribbon belt, and\nslurred also at the top, there being a guimpe of\nValenciennes lace insertion, and a stock to\nmatch. The top of the corsage proper was\nfinished with tiny puff* of white tulle. The\nsleeves were tiny puffs of the chiffon, finished\nwitii  tulle trimmings.\nAnother economical  feature of  thi* type of\ngown is that if it is made of a Soft silk ma- I\nterlal, daintily trimmed tn laces and ribbons, j\nthe   guimpe   ami   sleeves   may   be   omitted   at\ntimes,  thus converting the gown Into a smart\ndancing frock.\nSensible   Etiquette\nRules for\nThe Traveler\nmoney wl li h the pr iffera foi\nTillS\nIs  .h\nday\nof   ra\nltd    transit\nand\nof\nmuch\ntravelli\ng.\nThe\nperplex\nlog\nquel-\ntion   often\nirises\nft*  to\nwhat\ncour-\ntestes of the\nroad\nshould\nhe\noh-\nserved\nThere ire\nmany\ngood\nami\nJLuytf V,\nJLAspy\nProper  Care  of Eyebrows\nand Lashes\nA\nJ ' eyehrows   on   the\nappearance and\ncharacter of the\nface ii seldom appreciated except\nby an actor, who\nin representing a\npart addresses himself with all the\nskill he possesses\nto make the eyebrows do7 as-much as possible In his makeup to express what he is supposed to set\nforth.\nThc eyebrows are very easily trained to an\nattractive manner of growth. It ii, therefore,\namazing that women do not take advantage of\nthis fact and cultivate their brows.\nEyebrow brushes may be obtained In the\nshops, hut a small, fine toothbrush answers the\npurpose very well. With it the brows should\nbe brushed night and morning to promote their\ngloss and train them into the proper shape.\nHigh arched, delicate brows Indicate the aristocrat.\nIf they are thin a drop of olive or almond\noil, or a hit of pomatum or vaseline should be\nrubbed sen tly into them.\nThe eye needs the protection of dark lashes\nind brows, so this i* care which health dictate* as well as beauty.\nIll-shaped brOWS may be disciplined into the\nproper outline by running a mucilage brush\n>>vcr theni nt night. Ht sure tlie mucilage is\nfresh, or else make some of gum iragacanth or\nquince seeds dissolved in elder flower water,\nrosemary or rosewater. Let the gum dry on\nand wash off in the morning with warm water.\nA month or two of treatment will reduce quite\nunruly brows to subjection and coarse hair*\nwill drop out.\nAu alcoholic water, pure alcohol or perfumed\nglycerine rubbed into the eyebrows with a\nlinger tip, wil improve their lustre and promote llieir growth. A French ointment i*:\nKed vaseline, 10 grams; boric acid, 10 centigrams,\nIf your eyebrows have fallen nut from sicklier, n good restorative i*; Tincture of rosemary, 10 grams; tincture of canlharides, 2\ngrams) spirits of camphor, 100 grams; alio-\nliotat dc l'iornvanti (a French lollet water),\n100 grams, IliurRarian water of fine cologne\nmay be used as n substitute for the \"Flora-\nvanll.\" The hald spots only are to he lightly\nfriclloned with n hit of cotton or small brush\ndipped inlo the lotion. Of course anything\nused upon the eyebrows should be delicately pul\nproportions.   T I.\nnot to stimulate larne, hroad or heavy brows,\nbut to givi a velvety softness and close growth\na narrow, arched band. It is disfiguring\nand gives a sinUer cast to tbe countenance\nwhen the brows grow together. This uhould\nhe remedied by use of depilatories or electricity.\nAn approved eyebrow and eyelash tonic is:\nLavender vinegar, 2jJ ounces; glycerine, \\\\{\nounces; fluid extract of jaborandi, 2 il.ams.\nApply to the brows wild a brush, and to the\nlashes with a tiny camel's hair paint brush.\nThe brush must be freed from any drop and\npassed lightly along the lashes, exercising great\ncare that no minutest portion of the lotion\ntouches the eye Itself,\nA stimulative pomade Is: Red vaseline, 2\nounces; tincture of cantharides, 1 dram; oil of\nlavender,  15 drops; oil of rosemary, 15 drops.\nDo not blacken the brows with a pencil, as\nthis gives a stagey appearance.\nThe growth of the lashes is greatly facilitated by clipping them at regular intervals for\nfew months. As the task requires a firm,\nconfident touch, It i* better done by some one\nelse. Long curling lashes are desirable, and a\nbetter protection to the eyes. Rubbing the\nlashes three times a day wiih a solution of\nwhite wine and mint will stimulate their\ngrowth.\nA quinine ointment contains sulphate of quinine, 5 grains; sweet almond oil, 1 ounce; to\nhe applied to lashes with a fine sable pencil or\nliny brush.\nWhen liming the brow* and lashes, if i\nblonde  you  sliould  make  them  light  brown.\nOne of the most harmless of blnck dyes for\nihis purpose is one that comes to ns from\nFrance, composed of gum arable, 4 drams; India Ink,  7 drams;   rose waler, nne pint,\nPowder the ink and gum and mix thoroughly\nsmall quantities of the powder with rosewater\ntill a uniform black liquid results, absolutely\nfree, from granules, Then put the liquid in a\nbottle and pour over it the remainder of the\nrosewater.\nIt may bc applied ivltli a sable pencil or very\nliny brush, dipped first iu horated  water.\nIu dyeing the brows remember thai they\nmust be In harmony with the color of the hair.\nSlycs are occasioned hy the irritation of the\nhair follicle out of winch nu eyelash springs.\nThey should he opened ns soon as the pus is\nformed, for they will not get well as long as\nthe pus remains.\nKor Inflammation of the follicles and scali-\nness ndd to an ounce of vaseline fifteen grains\nof precipitated sulphur. Iti applying ihi* ointment it i* well lo warm it a little, as it will\nmu he so stlckv then.\nA pomade to be ruhhed on the lid and lashes\nto cure styes is: White vaseline, 8 grams;\nwhite precipitate, 10 centigrams; oil of birch,\n10 centigrams.\nJ. (,'.\u2014\u25a0 A blackhead lotion contains boracic\nicid, 1 dram; alcohol, 1 ounce; rosewater, 2\nounces. Steaming the face will help greatly to\nmake the face yield its hardened contents. This\nshould bc done once a week. Before applying\nthe lotion the following cleansing cream should\nbe used: Orange flower water, 4 ounces; oil of\nsweet almonds, 4 ounces; white wax, 2 ounces.\nK. E. J.\u2014I'or falling hair apply the following lotion every other night: Bay rum, 10\nounces; Keiorcin, 20 grains; Cantharides, .1\ndrams. After tlie application massage the scalp\nfor ten minutes.\nPrune Batter Pudding\nSoak a pint of prunes overnight, drain and\nremove the stones. In your wooden bowl chop\ntwo ounces of beef suet very fine, add four\nounces of sugar (half a cup), the same of\nflour, four eggs, a saltspoonful of ground cinnamon, half a saltspoonful of grated nutmeg\nand if you use liquor, a dash of best rum,\nabout two lablespoonsful. Min tins thoroughly\nwith a wooden spoon for five minutes, then\nbeat In four tablespoonsful of thick cream and\ntwo ounces of bread crumbs (two heaping\nlablcapoonsful), mix thoroughly and then add\nthe prune pulp lightly. Butter antl flour your\npudding hag or a stout cloth, and, drawing up\nthe four corner* of the latter, tie them tightly.\nDrop into a pot of boiling water twice snd a\nhalf the depth of the pudding, and boil two\nhours and a half. Then hang it up to drain\nabout ten minutes, suspending from a hook\nover a dish, Untie, turn out on a deep dish,\ndredge over  with  powdered sugar and serve\nGiving Children a Fair Start\nin Life\n\"I luppose I ought to be ashamed to say It\nof my own flesh and blood, but I certainly\nim glad Metvini and her children have gone\nhome,\" said motherly Mrs. Bates, ai she put\nover the teakettle to brew her caller a refreshing drink.\n\"Melvina tries her best to be pleasant and\nthe children are in nowise vicious, but they do\nhave the faculty of upsetting my whole family,\nand after they've been here a week or SO my\nhushand and children begin to think they hive\nevery ailment under the sun.\"\n\"Melvina is sort of delicate, Isn't shef\" Inquired the visitor.\n\"Now, you know that there isn't a woman\nIn all Taylorville more willing to sit up with\nthe sick than me, and Dr, 'Gordon says that\nonly my nursing day and night pulled my\nlohuny through the double pneumonia, hut I\ncan't feci any great sympathy with Melvina.\nTo my certain knowledge during the past year\n.he's written six times that she would soon\nhave to go under one kind of operation or another, She talks ahout having her stomach\npumped or turned over and other organs\nscraped and cut a* if it was something to be\nreal proud of, bit somehow I never heard how\none of those operations turned out. If I had a\nmind to let then, her letters would throw mc\ninto sisterly spasms of worry, she'*, that close\nto the grave or fatal illness.\n\"What I'd call a sore throat and treat with\nsalt pork or coal oil, Melvina calls grip and\nruns up a doctor's bill. When Sammy cut his\nfinger while they were here, she rushed him\noff to the doctor and came hack talking aboul\ndangers of blood poisoning because Sammy's\nsystem was so terribly run down. Poor liny,\n> looked sorl of ashamed and wanted to go\nout and play same n* usual, but site cooped\nhim up behind the kiichen stove and looked\nat In*, tongue and took his temperature.\n\"Then there was Bertie, eating all the while\nbetween meals and refi iii g everything offered\nto him at the table. Mostly lie ran away from\nthe table after looking things over and saying\nthey didn't look good. One day when he'd\ndone this Melvina was talking about how the\ndoctor told her never to force Bertie's appetite because he wa* so delicate, and just then\nwe heard a crash in the pantry and there was\nthe big cake I'd baked for the Ladles' Aid\nsupper on the floor, thanks to his dying to\nbreak off the Icing, and she didn't spank him,\n'cause the doctor says his nerves are so deli\ncate.\n\"Melvini was a* strong a girl as I ever\nthought nf being, hut since she married Sam\nTenbrook she seems to rind disease, death nnd\ndisaster ail around her. llie Tenli.onk* al\nway* werc great for detailing their symptoms\nand Melvlns'l caught Ihe habit, until honestly\nit was something pathetic lo see her children\nlistening ojien mouthed while she told nil out\ncallers about the terrible illnesses and sufferings of her family since aiie'd been here last.\nShe certainly ain't giving those children a fair\nstart iu life, for holh of them will be sitting\nbehind the kitchen stove grunling hy the lime\nthey're thirty and have wives to do the work\nand  cut  the  wood.\"\nIn her homely way, Mrs. Bales voiced thc\nsentiment of the hour. Wise ami tip-to-dnte\nparent* have learned the fairness of giving\nhoys' and girls a righl view of good health.\nll is no longer fashionable to he delicate.\nThe business world demands of men manly\nvigor and concentration of thought und energies. Thc mnn who beg* for work because\nhe ha* illness in his fninily or the man who\nwants something ensy became lie Is not over*\nstrong is oul of lhe running.\nThc girl wh.. glories in her dctlcalc health\nfalls behind In both the commercial nnd mnt\nrimonlal smites. Employers are not conducting\ncharity bureaus for semi-lnvnlhli nnd young\nmen are not burdening themselves nt the beginning nf ,i business career with wives of th.\nwith hard or foamy sauce, flavor*?!! with lemon,\nOr if tbe pudding is used fur a festive occasion, pour over it before serving a tablespoonful of fine brandy, set fire anu lake to table\nwith the blaze burning.\nsensible   rules   of\nIn ii Railway Train.\nA man acting as escort to a woman I* pre-\nreded hy ber Into the coach. He will also draw\nback  politely,  giving  the  right of way to any\noiiiau who attempt! to enter the train,\nA well bred man will be as courteous to a\nplainly dreied and evidently poor woman as\nlie will to one of evident wealth and refine\nment. This reminder ihould not seem necessary to a gentleman, hut many men have forgotten (lielr chivalrous upbringing especially\nin large cilies and often rush heedlessly on,\nregardless of the comfort and right! of others.\nDo not push or shove.\nIf you are late be considerate and accept\nthe best seat available upon ynur entrincc with\n\u25a0 good grace.\nDo tint allow your boxes and hags to pro\ntriide into tbe aisle, and put them In a* little\nspace as posi hie.\nShould the coach have empty, untaken seat*\nit I* permissible to place your baggage on such\n\u25a0eats.\nAt no time is il so important to observe\nitrictiy tiie \"etiquette of the road\" as when\nsharing accommoda'lons with others.\nIt Is very inconsiderate of a passenger to\nopen a window ou that side of the coach from\nwhich cinders and smoke fly inlo the car.\nSuch lack of consideration often causes a\nfellow passenger to contract grip or serious\ncolds. Vou should always, therefore, ask per\nmission before raising a window.\nA well bred person is seldom a restless pas\nlenger.\nDo not move up and down the aisle and\nfrom one car to another, slamming and bang\ning the doori.\nPerfect composure Is the outward sign of a\ngood traveler.\nIt Is a pour plan to discusi your private affairs in a railway train. It is not permissible\nlo take an undue interest in the affairs of your\nfellow passengers,\nA well tired person will speak in modulated\ntones, and will never laugh loudly.\nSelf-control should he maintained if possible\n--even Iu cases of a deep grief. It Is an unfailing sign of the bourgeois to display emotion in public places.\nMany person* erroneously think that the\nway to speak to lhe man at tiie ticket window,\nconductors, baggage men, etc., is' In a sharp,\nshort manner--peremptory, if not bullying.\nCourtesy is always a pa>iog investment, and a\ngood traveler is not only prompt to say \"thank\nyou,\" but will gladly perform small favors for\nfellow passengers.\nA gentleman in a coach should offer to raise\nan obdurate window  for a woman, be she\nstranger or a friend.\nIt is a man's privilege also to offer his seat\nto a woman or to an elderly man.\nIt is also his privilege to tell t fellow traveler where she may procure luncheon when the\ntrain has stopped for lurch.\nIf a woman seems in doubt as to where lo\nobtain a sandwich and tea, in passing, he may\nsay, \"I am going out to secure my luncheon,\nand If you wish I will send the porter for your\norders.\"    If bo buys a sandwich for her he\nshuuld acce-*'\npayment,\nihould the .     -ney he one of some Hays a id\nthe masculine pj-aenger serve, the woman or\nwomen who are traveling alone on several oc*\ncaslons, he may expeel lhat tbey will treat him\nith a pleasant friendliness, eventually give\nhim their cards aud ask for  hi* In return\n'Alien the journey is short, however, this Is\nnol  permissible.\nThe man who has done a slight service fot a\n\u2022man during a journey need not expect that\nshe will recoguhe dim h> even so much as a\nbow afterwards.\nhe reman who travels alone must, first of\nill, be i.lgnlfifd ind reserved.\nShe sh* \"M cordially thank a fellow nsiien-\nger for any service which he hat done for her.\nA woman traveling with a number of chll-\niren ihould be careful to keep idem in order.\nDo not let them : in ; a* 1 down the aide\nplaying game* ar-. annoying the Jthei paiien-\ngers. Keep them a* quiet as possible aid in\ntheir seats.\nA masculine escort buy* a lady's ticket ai\n'ii- sution, checks her baggage and cirrlei der\ngrip or bag into the car. Unless the journey Is\na short one, he should accept the money from\nher  for the ticket he purchases.\nHe may excuse himself t<> enjoy a smoke in\nthe imoking car. returning before their d-atl-\nnation i* reached iu order to ssslsl her In\nleaving  the car,\nHo not attempt to entertain the -j-erson with\nwhom you are traveling all the vvhi!e. Tlu* is\nmost auneying, .\nIn the dining car the lady pays for her\nmeals if tbe journey is a long one, Il<*r escort\nmay assume  this privilege on short trip*.\nIf a man friend who happens to be your fellow traveler has invited you into the dining\ncar, a woman *honM not offend him by offer\njug to pay for her dinner.\nEtiquette should be strictly observed by a\nwoman  who is alone at a hotel.\nI'nless she has friends with her, she should\ndine  before  t'i-  fashionable  hour.\nEtiqutltt on Board Skip.\nIntrodu ti * - v not necessary aboard\n.learner* i >i long voyages. \"(i..od morning\"\nand \"good evening\" serve as sufficient introduction   to  the  persons  sitting  at   your  table.\nA woman may Introduce her husband,\nbrother or sister lo an acquaintance shs has\nmade on board.\nDo not read aloud or gossip about your fellow passengers.\nIt is good form for ladies t\u00ab promenade\nwith young men on board, hut it is not per-\nmissihle to sit out on deck with them after 11\no'clock.\nOn   leaving   ship politeness dictates   an   adieu\nto  the  captain   and  off.ctis.\n\u2022\nTravtttrs' Drat.\nA man on a train or ship will wear a ucqttt\ncoat and trousers of gray or blue serge, dog\nskin gloves, white or colored linen.\nAt dinner on a steamer patronised by fashionable  people  evening  dress  is   worn.\nA woman on a train will wear a tailored\ngown or walking suit ot* some dark shade. At\nsea, for deck wear, i walking gown, with\nsmall hat or cap aud veil. A foulard silk or\ngown or shirtwaist suit at dinner, unless the\ncustom on board it to wear dinner gowns A\nwell bred woman will not weir jewels on shipboard.\nM. S.--A first and formal call should not\nexceed  one-half hour.\nC. I..\u2014An Invitation to a church wedding is\nanswered when it bean the letters R. S. V. P.\nVogue of Boleros and Berthas\n1\u00ab   ''^iw* \u2022 '\"* t^.W&KW^\nlm^W^&ifii&^\nAny style of short coat demands a cerlain\namount of trimming, but thi* season the bolero\nst-ems io acquire even more than jt* due In embroidery and fancy braiding of all descriptions Tbe bolero, which has long heen a\ndress Accessory of much beiiiily nud daintiness,\nbii's fair to go joyously nn, with the approval\nof the majority of tlie fashion gods uud its\nwearers. Boleros nml beilhas give to a costume a dressy appearance, and one nf these\nlittle accessories in lace or spangled net will ko\nwith almost any costume. Their usefulness,\nas well as effectiveness, does much to ptoloilg\nthe vogue of these smart little die** equipments.\nA new motif hai appeared in some boleros.\nA beautiful example of the Empire type is\nmade of wide pompadour ribbon or of alrlped\nbrocade, and is finished with Dlrectolre coils\nnnd collar and n peplutn, The cullni ami ciitTs\nui.-iv be \"f embroidered lace oi of chiffon velvet\nn ilelienlc tint, and embroidered  mlrli\nthe pattern of lhe brocade. The bolero ei Is\nand the peplum begins half way between (he\nbust line and the normal belt. Ihe peplum I*\nsimply n circular fold four Inches deep, joined\ntu the bolero beneath a rope of twisted bro-\ncade or velvet, These are seen tn fur and\nblack caracul and broadtail, ai well at In the\nlace and ribbon effect*.\nThe bolero shown in the illustration i* made\nnf Iilsh crochet lace, It will require of materia! 18 to 21 inches wide, 2 yards, or 1 yard\nof 44 inch stuff to make ihi* bolero, ll i* cut\n111 oue piece, the fronts being turned over to\nform   lhc   mere.\nTh.- all-over lace boleroi are always smart\nami dainty, but they may be fashioned for\nmme general weai of any soft materials, An\nattrarilvc one Is shown made of Inch wide\nh.ihy blue satin ribbon and Valenciennes lace,\nllonlion lace, whl h  n i \u25a0-.   ! p     -\n(Irrstand tin* art of making, ts extremely pretty\nIn cither a holcro or bertha.\nThree pretty berlbu ar- made after tbe fot*\nlowing manner: In ilie handkerchief style, fall-\n|i g |n  '!\u25a0*'*    p ilnU, the  fulness forming folds,\n:,  give  an   effect  of  plaits;   circular  fash-\ni     ii \u2022 el *\u25a0 gate 1 si the fi mt 11 form itotei\nthat .ve *\u25a0> mucd liked.    Puint* a!*o extend\ncr lite nhoulders,   'I iie (bird is a simple cir-\n- ilai bertha     rdese may he also fashioned of\nrlbboi   ind lace    Al times ihey are made of\nHie dress material, wild haby ribbon running\naround as a trimming,   One yard of IS inch\nStuff, and three-quirtcn of a yard 21 Inches\n;!>,   li   required   In   the   making   of   theie\nberthas.\nA* a general thing a deep girdle of soft silk\n[l   n || ,   vi'1*   a   bolero,   llllll *s   it   i<   one   of\nlingerie or  all    - *          * lib  a  linen\nsuit Oflei tii ea ll ii bard to discern what\n\u25a0:',- t ..'.I ol i bolero Is Ing to tlie lavish\nuse of tri inning\nM\\RV DI*:\\N.\nCV   -\n(?    <0>-\n^'lr^>':r:>    ^ DUJimv\n\u25bc \u25bc   A ^        - \u00ab\u25a0\u2022   ^\nT\nREJOLVED\nTHAT JOME FOLKS SAY THIS IS\"A\nCOLD WORLD.\" THEY COJ JN WRONG\nif You Jump intoThe Fire its a HOT\nworld. The World is \/ill rjghj,\nIF YpOURE MEAN EVERY ONE WJlfijE\nMEAN $ You. ir YOU ARE 5WttT AND\nKind others will tre at You just\nTHE SAME.^AS YOU DO UNTO OTHERS THEY\nWill Do unto You * the World is\nWHAT You MAKE IT \"\"THE KINGDOM\nOFdODiS WITH IN You''\n''SMILE AND PUSH*\nit Works\ngfe&b\n^*7T' Oufo\nH \/\u201e'-\u25a0   tPctf\n-'-'.   -      --\n\\ T\nTells of the Patience and Kindness Necessary in Training\nof Horses.\nIt litis lung been u disputed question\nus lo the umuunt ol intelligence\npossessed l.y \"man's Lest friend'*\u2014the\nhorse. Many nre the experts win.\nhave declared that the horse has no\nI.ruin at nil, that they are niltirally\nlazy, allowing no disposition to work j\nhave absolutely no reasoning power,\neto,\nFrank Miller, lan.oua as an cqtie.-\ntiii.ii director und premier trainer anil\nrider ot horses with all the largest circuses and hippodromes in all parts of\nthe world, has had us much, antl pro\nluihly more, experience than any other\nliving hormn.au. As a trainer he has\nIn. lulled every variety ot tlio four-\ntooled brute lhat has ever been product d, ..ml as a pio'cssional bare-back\nrider, hurricane hurdle and premier\njockey lider ol the world, Mr. Miller\nih acknowledged tu stand without a\npeer. There is never a time when\nseveral circus owera are not bidding\n(or the Hi'ivic-'s of Miller, so his opin-\ni.'ii ol the hnrw. shntild cniry sume\nweight.\nSaid Mr. Mill..., in a very interesting Interview:\n\"I have m...le an exhaustive study\nol  thediapisiti.iiisol  various horses\nI.it* almost a decade now, and l-elicve I\nah. as coinpele.it as any one to tell t.t\ntheir dulls ...ul virtues.    1 have handled all torts ..I thoroughbred racers,\nArabian   st.illio.is,   hesvy  stock and\nthe oddly  marked  pieb.ild or pinto\nhorse.   Ily expei'ienoe has been, and\nI   am  sure  that every  experienced\nhorseman will coincide with me, thai\nhoises  have as   many s.dcd dispositions as the human being.   Some do\nnot appreciate  llieir  power and will\ntj'iickly take advantage ot it, and (hen\ntheie io (he deuce to pny to s.-e wl o\nniuiiita'iiB the n.asleiy.   Of course I\nmust te the nias'er, (or lhe horse that\nmasters me would be ol Int'c accoun\nin the  Siena.    Oh, jes; hur.es h->ve\nintelligence an.l mighty acute intelligence al that.   Probably tbe plodding,\nhard working  Ire re shows but lii tie\nbut   it  is  only apparent, for even he\ncould  be  taught Ir.cks.  The circus\nterms, menage, high sch 'ol, principal,\njockey, hurdle,. le, are ha diy understood  by   ihe  public.    Menage and\nhigh school are about the same; that\nis, the hn.Bes are worked with riders\nii. the saddle;  the  horses place their\nIeet upon pedestals, he down, sit erect\nupon llieir limit.dies an.l forelegs, etc.\nA   principal act is worked without a\nsaddle, thc  rider standing erect upon\nthe bare-back of a  swiftly  running\nhorse, turning somersaults, etc.    A\njockey act is run with and without\nsaddle, but at twice the speed of  the\nother  ucts.    A  hurdle is, uf course,\nleaning high barriers, etc.\nIn preparing horses for these several\nacls 1 have encountered all sorts ol\ndisposition, Some are gentle an.l willing to help you all they can. All they\nask of you is just to show them what\nyou require and they are quick to\nobey. Then there is tbe horse who is\nsu quick tn understand and will do the\ntrick one dav and lor very willfulness\nrefuse to do it tl.e next time. He is\nonly \"stalling,\" lie knows what is required all right, and une has to keep\nalter him with light punishment;\nthen there is the horse that yuu have\nto \"jolly \" To whip hini would be\nfatal, for he would only sulk and tret-\nThe majority ol horses are as alive to\nappreciation as a human being. I've\nmade it a point tn show them my\nappreciation when right, and at the\nend ul adieu siicces\u00ablully performed,\nit-want theni with a hit ..f sugar, aud\nif I hey refuse tu du the trick I pretend\nto be angry will. Ihem and refuse\nllieir every advance towards iiiendship,\nfur thc horse is as big a jollier in his\nway as you nre. lie knuws when he\nii doing right ur wrung. I've taken\nheavy draft horses who had been pulling big cages and dens all winter,\ngiven them a guud rest and then started in un their educalinii. After 1\nawuke their ambition they were not at\nall hard lo train\n\"The greatest care must be given\n(he halfback riders' stock. They are\ncalled 'resin backs,' from the tact that\ntheir backs are rubbed thoroughly\nwith resin to harden them. These\nhorses are never allowed to do any\nutlicr wurk than carry the performers\nupun llieir ba -ks. They are shielded\ncarcliilly frum ami aril rain, given the\nbest loud and bedding. Although\nthey are uf a more nervous tempera\nment than the work horse, they soon\nlearn the routine an.l can be depended\n..pun to work steady and true unless\nsomething unforeseen comes before\nthem.\n\"The Arabian or spotted horses are\ntremendously strong and very hard to\ntrain. They rebel against mastery\nand will stand up on their hind lege\nand give yotiv a battle royal. They\nare never really subdued, and unless\nworked regularly every day, will\nquickly revert to their natural station.\n1 havo been training a horse Ior three\nyears. I bought him in California.\nHe is not very large, but is strong and\nrugged. When on the road I can tire\nhim out so will go through his act\nquietly, but once in quarters and liun\nuughly rested, he seems to apprecia t\nhis strength, and then we havo\nl...itle royal. He knows bis work but\nis just wilful.\n\"1 have just broken a tour-horse\ncarrying aot and it was very hard to\nselect lour horses ol almost equal dispositions and intelligence, They must\nwurk iu unison or the rider would get\na bad fall. It required unlimited\ngentleness ami patience and kindness,\nbut the work was worth it, lor they\nare all docile now aud seldom get\nmischievous.\n' Shetland ponies are easily broken.\nThey are very intelligent. The horses\nlor llie hippodrome and various kinds\nol races are broken fairly qui'kly and\nsoon learn what is required ol them.\nAll ot the stock at the winter quarters\nhavo regular hours fur school and\nplay, and wheh wo open hero, tlio public will sue lho Burt ol education I\nhave given my pets.\"\nNorris & Howe exhibit at Kcvolstoko\non Wednesday, Juuo lVth.\nPermanent\nShapeliness\nin\nOuting Suits\nThere is only one thing\nthat can make an Outing\nSuit hold its shape.\nThat's hand tailoring.\nSummer Tweeds and\nWorsteds, Flannels and\nSerges, must be moulded\nin shape by hand\u2014and\nheld in shape by hand\nstitching in order to\nstay in shape.\nFit-Reform Outing Suits\nkeep their style and their\nproportions, because\nthey are hand tailored,\n$15. up.\nN\nTK K IS IIKHKIIY UIVKN Mi... Iliim\n.     iif....*f.llrl' ll.ll-   1 ...I.-I..I   t(.  ll|.|.|J I...||i\nII.... . luff.. Commissioner ill Lands...... v. Ml M\nfor a special licenso lo cui anil carry away\ntimber In.in tlie follow.uk described lauds all\n.luted In thc (llstrlct of Norlh Kast Kootenai-\nII..*.:\n.1  ng... a post Planted.... il.,. wtst\nt Creek, about U.roe mllea up from\nIn llie l.i-.ri.-. nl Nortli Kits, Knut-\n\u25a0lilo ..[ .:,\nIll.sl. I.lv.l\nlfin.),  II ('., .\nw.'-i comer |.\nSnUtll  Stl  i-lifi\nnurlb Sl chain\nDated April\n.....I..\n.\".nn.\n-l.l.. nl ll..i\nRivor, in\nlie. nmi\n.impost,\"\n.Ihui-, .1.,\ntwins tot).\ni.i marked 'tl. w. Onl\n*i\" tlu-i.i'.. east80 t-liaii\nis, theuce \u00bb-.-\u00abt stl elinlns, .hence\n\". lh.. point of uoiumeni-omunt,\nIlti,. 1UU7.\n... w. a.f,TKs.\nfencing-at-apost plaated <>n the i-nst\nl I i.'.-K, almnt four tnil.'K ii]. from Hush\nlie Dislricl ol North-Bust K enav,\nimrki'.l \"... W. Hull's' north-west cor.\nIii-in',< east BO chains, thence sun I.s,\nnee wet su chsins, tlienee nortl. s-\n1 l'llIlllll..llCt..lll!llt,\nCITY OF REVELSTOKE\neiorm\n\u25a0  Revelstoke\nFurnace\nUNBREAKABLE FIRE-POT\nThe lower portion of a fire-pot is usually nearly\nor partly filled with dead ashes, leaving the live,\nred-hot coals in the upper part. The result is that\nthe upper portion expands much mi re than the\nlower.\nThis uneven expansion causes a strain\ntoo great for a one-piece fire-pot lo stand.\nL Sooner or later it will split, allowing precious\nheat   antl   sickening   gases   to\nescape.\nBut the fire-pot cf lhe Pnnshine\nis constructed to meet this . on-\ndition. lt is in two set lions. Ihe\nupper half expands, as much as\nnecessaiy, independently of the\nloner. When conl, it contracts *\nback to its original size, fitting\nto the lower half perfectly.\nAnd this strong, unbreakable,\ngas and heat-tight, two-piece\nfire-pot is just one of thc many\nsuperior featuresoftheSunshine.\nIf your local dealer does not handle the\n\"Sunshine,\" write direct to us for FREE\nBOOKLET.\nWQsiyi\nLondon, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B.'\nBOURNE BROS*, - Local Agents\nDnted April 80th, 1907.\nn. W. (lATI-X\nS, Commencing at n post pliMite I on tlie oait\nsii lo nf (loat Creek, about Hve i. Ilea up from HhbIi\nIlivor, in tin- District nf Nortb*Kni( K\nit. C., anil inarked \"tl. W. Gates' nortb-w\nnor jinst,\" thence eaut 80 nhalnu, tliouce BoutbSO\nchains tbence weat so clmins, tbence nortli Su\nI'liniitf, bo tlie pnint nf eniiniu'iui'iiit'iit,\nDated April fOtb, 1907.\nQ, W. OATK8.\n4. Commencing at a post planted on the easl\nside nf llniit. ri'tik, almnt six milos up from Musl*\nKiver, in the District of Nnrth-Ka.it Kootonay.\nIt. i'., nml marked \"G. W.Qates' north-west cor\nnet post.\" tlience east wi clialns, tbence south 80\ncbali's,tlience west- 80 clialus, thence uoitli hu\nchains to the imiut nf commencement.\nDated April uuth, nm\".\n(l.W.CIATKS,\n5. Commencing at n pnst. planted on the east\naide of Goal Oreek, about 8W miles up from Hu-.li\nRiver, lu the District of Nortli-Kasl Kootenay,\nli C ami marked \"U. w. iPii*-.-, north-wimtcorner posl,\" IbuilCO east Klilcluins, tlience  smitli in\nchains, tbeuce west W\" chains, tlienco nnrtli in\nihalns to tin* pnlnt nt coromonceinont,\nDated April Ut'lh, 1007.\nG. W (lATKH,\nfl, Coinineucing m a post planted unthoeast\nside nf Goat Creek about seven mill's up frmn\nHush Itiver, in Ihe District nl Nortli-Kast Kmit>\nnay. II. U., and marked \"G. W. Gates' northwest curlier post,\" thuin'i* cunt lflu chains, tbeucfl\nsmith in chains, thouce west 160 chains,thunce\nimrth -to chains to tlio point of Rounnenoemeut,\nDated V|iril Mli, \\\\t\\7.\n(1. W, GATES.\n7. Coinmeneing at a post plautod on lhe east\naide of (I out Creek, about 8 miles up frnm lluali\nItiver, iu the District uf Nurth-Kiisl  Kontoiiaj,\nII. c, and marked \"tf. \\v. (lutes' north-west eornor post.\" thence east c'u clialns, thonce snulli ho\nchains, tlienco west so cliains, thonco imrth so\nchains to the pnint nf comnioiiceiuont.\nDated April 20th, 1907.\nG. W. GATKS.\nK ('niiiiiii'iii'iim at a post planted on the\ncast side nf iiom iro.k, abuul nine mllei up\nfrom Hush itiver In the Itirurtot ol Nnrth*Kasi\nKooleuay, H. <J\u201e \u00abnd marked \"U. W. Gates'\nnorth-west oorner post,\" thenoe can mi ehnins,\nthenre soulh 80 nimius, Ihemie west mi chains,\nthence north 80 chaiua to the poim oi com.\nmenoement,\nUnlet! April \u25a0.KHh.lwn.\n(i.W. (IATKS\n!l. Commencing at h posl planted on the\nwestrldoof Goat Creek, about fli miles up from\nMush lil ver, in lhc District of North- Kast Kootenay, It. (J., and marked \"(>. W. \u25a0 ales' souih-\nwest comer posi,\" thence imrih um chains,\nthence cast -III Chains, tbence smith 100 chains,\nIhence west *lo chains to the poiutofcommencement\nDaled April 2uih, l'Jn7.\nG. \\Y, GATKS.\n10, Commencing at apost plained on the\nweatsldu of li'-at Croek, abuut 9U miles up\nfrom Itush lllver. in the District of North Kast\nKootenay, II. ('., and mnrked \"(i.W. Gates'\nsouth-east corner post,\" thenee west 40 chains.\nthenco north 160 chains, ihence east 40 cbnins.\ntbeuce auuth ico chains to the point ol Com\nmeneement.\nDated April 'Mi, 1907.\nG.W, GA1KS.\n11. Commend nu at a post planted on tha\nweBt bank of Goat Creek, ahout live miles up\nfrom Bush Kiver, in the Dlstrictof Norlh-Ea^t\nKootonay, Ii, ()., niul marked \"G. W. Gates'\nsouth-east corner post,\" Ihenee west BO chains.\ntheme north 8U chains tbeuce cast 80 chains,\ntbence south 80 chains to the poinl oleum-\nmeneement.\nDated April 20th, 1007,\ncat my 18 G. W.GATES.\nBy-law No. 99\nA By-law lo provide I'm- the\nstrut -ti.,,, of .....ii. un.l common ki\nIn tho Oity of Revelstoke .-initio\norisetho issue ..I* debentures foi-the\npurpose of raising ihe sum required\nthere!-...-.\neon\nuver\nmilli\n nl    D. berimes,\"    to    he   made,\nexecuted and i-s..e.l I... such .-inn ...\ns.iiiiK.is n.fty he i-.-.|..i.-...l fm- lhe purposes ftl'im-ui'...i .-.l not exceeding\nhowever th. ki.u. uf $1*0511 75, mcl< of\ndie sui.i .1 . i.ii..-e- b. ion '\u25a0' the denomination of (hn. Tin.ii.-..ml Dollars\nexeepl in tl... cts.. of ..in-..I such debentures i, I.i.-i. '....iy l.e for ftlessei\nsum if (lecini'd i-.-.piisi'o by the said\n.May...-, uiul ..li uf audi debentures\nshall hesen'ed witii thu -i-.l of the\nCurporatiuli nf lhc Oity of Uevelsloki*.\nmid aimed by lhe Mayor and Clerk\nthereof.\n. Iii.cndtoappli...,.,,. ii... f Commissioner  -\n. . |. and \".ok- (or us t.,-.a, ..,\u00ab..*,\u2022 ... .- .\nin i \u25a0- im . niher Irom the following detcrib. .\nlaudi - \"in.,... io .la-I'snU... |.i-..i,., |l ,;,.\nI '  ii   --I- lus .1 i |.\u00bb-i marked   \\. .1 ..... .\nlorth-.esl conier,\" planted on Canoe Hirer ,1\t\n.n mil-.. .....ii mouth ol I'larmfouiCreel, them-e\n-ii .-inini. PMt, (jienre -.- rhi.li., \u00abonth, tl .-<\u2022 -..\nI. . .-\u2022\u25a0 thence .*.. ehains ..--.:li lo poinl of\n-\u25a0i..i..i-1-.i. -......:\nDated March ttth,lJj07.\n2.\nWHEREAS iii llie opinion of the\n('....(..il uiul in the Intei'Bsl nf lhe Oily\nil is dosi.ul.lt. In construct a .system of\nsewers in U,,. Oity of Revelstoke according to thn pl-ms nnd specification\ntherein., prepared hyTl.os. H. Tracey\nEsq., City Engineer, mid approved of\nby the Council and that the funds to\nhe provided fur such Improvement\nshnll he repaid by special rate of frontage tax I., he levied on the lu.i.l or\nleal property in nr .... nr Fronting or\nnbultlng up.... 11... portions of the\nsieeeis uiul limes throughout the City\numl lininodliitely benefited literally,\nll. The said debentures shall be\nmade payable in twenty years from\nthe ilny hereinafter mentioned for this\ns By-Law tojtake effect, at the olliee of\nthe .Molsons Bunk al Revelstoke,\n11.    I'-,     aforesaid,     which      suid\nI'l. f  payment  shall  be  deslg-\nnaled by suitl debentures, and shall\nhave .tu.iel.e.l to them coupons for the\npayment of Interest, and the signature\nIuiiii! coupons muy lie eil bet- writ len,\nprinted, stumped or lithographed.\n7. The said debontnres shall bear\ninteiest ut the rule of Five per centum\nper annum from lhe date thereof,\nwhioh Interest shall he payable semiannually al lhe Offlce of the Molsons\nBunk at Ilevelstoke \".foresaid in\nlawful nu.ney ol t'.in.ulu.\nsueh walk i.s u local\nNOTIGE\nEvans & Woodrow\nMEAT MARKET\nDealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton,\nPoultry, Fish and Game in\nSeason. Orders promptly attended to,\nFirst St. Revelstoke\nE.W.B. PAGET\nExpress\nDraying\nStorage\nAll Kinds of tight and Heavy\nHauling Undertaken\nSAFES, PIANOS, ETC\nDealer iu Wood, Coal and Feed.\nPhone 71. House Phone 7\nLOOK! LOOK!! LOOK!!!\nJUST ON THE MARKET\nSEEDS! TREES!\nPIANTS!\nNo Seedless Plums; No I'itless\nApples; No Cobless Corn,\u2014just old\nreliable varieties at reasonable prices.\nFertilizers, Bee Supplies, Spray Pumps\nSpraying Material, Cut Flowers, etc.\nOldest established nuiBery un the\nmainland ot B.O.   Catalogue Iree.\nM. J. HENRY'S\nNURSERIES\nORItKHOVam AND SECDHOOStS VANCOUVER.B.C,\nI'.S\u2014 If your local merchants do\nnot handle n.y seeds, send direct.\nWe prepay filly packets, assurted\nvarieties ol gsrden reeds in 5c. papers\n(tested stock), to your nearcBt poBt\noffice lor $1.00, twenty packets lor fiOc,\ntrial collection.\nTake notico tlmt Alox. MrCrnt, ot Revelstoke,\nIt. C, Prospector, intends to n|.].ly lor .. special\number license over the following described liuula\nIltuate in the Lillooel liistrlrt:\n1. Commencing at a nost plnntt-,1 on .lie west\nhank of the north fo.k oi the Seymour itiver nnd\nihoiil two miles nortl. of T. L. 82-7. .mil marked\n\"Alex. McCrne's N. K. corner post,\" thence run.\nnine, south ISO chains, we-t 111 chains, north nm\nchains, east 10 chains to point of ci-uiiuciu-eiueiiL\nand containing bin acres ...ore or less.\nn..tc.l May 15th, nw,\n2. Commencing at apost planted on thfl east\nd.Ie of the norlh fork of Seymour Ilivor joining\nIhe north cud of T. I.. 8-is and marked -Alex.\nMoCiiu-.'s s. W. conier post.\" thence riiiudii\nnorth su cliains, east su ciniins, south so clmiiis,\nnest si. chains lo point of commencement ami\ncontaining CO acres ...ore or less.\n:;. Commencine at a post planled ou the wost\ni.i.- ..I tl.e north lo.k of Seymour lllver almul four\nmiles.....-th of I L. 8227. and .narked \"Alex. McCrue's S. K. comer post,\" .hence mulling north sn\n.-hains, .vest So chains, south su I'h.Ins, cast so\n-haius to point of ouiuiuoncemeut and containing\nfill! ncres nu.re or less.\nDated May loth, 1W7.\nI. Commencing id a post planted on llm Bast\nside of .1... nnrtli fork of Seymour itiver nbout two\niniles iiurili of T. I.. 8248, ami marked ' Ales. Me-\n('rue's .*.. W. cornel posl,\" llienee nunline,  sooth\nsii chains, east 8u chains, north so i haius ..est so\nAnd Whereas\nImprovement,\nAnd Wherens under and by virtue\nif the Municipal Clauses Act lhe\nCouncil duly passed a By-law known\nus the \"|,..|.,-i| I.n|.ii.ve...cut Sow.tge\nBy-law No. 08, 1007,\" being n, By-law\nlo provldo for the means of ascertaining und determining what lands or\nreal properly will ho benefited hy\nsuch Improvements and of ascertaining and determining the proportion in\nwhich the assessrtient is to be mnde on\nthe various portions nf land or real\nproperty so benefited.\nAnd Wherens in pursuance ..f the\nsaid By-law the Oity Engineer bus\nascertained and determined the Bald\nworks ..n.i Improvements and bus certified as corroit a plan or description\nthereof, and Ins oi.-nle an estlmute\nund report of the expense or cost\nthereof, uml bus ascertained and determined and shown on suid plan mid In\nsaid leiiiii-isivliut lund ur real property\nwill be iinine.li.ilely benefited by the\nproposed improvements,\nAmi Whereas in pursuance of the\nsnid By-law the City Olerk has ascertained and determined the propn.-tion\nin which the assessment is to l.e made\nnil (he various pot-lions of luod or real\nproperty lo be benefited and has duly\nmade his report thereon to the Council and which report has been approved\nof nnd adopted by tl... Council.\nlninsl.. |\n.int of ciui.ineiiccnie.it inul coiitaiiiii.L\nin. acres n\nire or less.\nUated M\nv l.illi, 1.1.17.\nr.   Co....\nMir.fr: at a post plantcil  in III-.',isl\n\u25a0Me of .1\nc nuiili fork ..I Seymour Iti.--.-..bout\nlot el..ill's\nnnrth of'f.i, H'. ond marked \"'Alex,\nllcOmo'at\nW, curuer post,'tlience running 1uui.l1\nSl .'haius,.\nist hi. chains, ...ulh SO chains, wests.\nhaina lo p\n.inl ..I commencement antl aonUinlng\nno ncres n\nire orless,\nPaled Ml\nv lllth, 11.17.\nOniim-m iiiK ;it 11 pnsl pluiitt-il lino and ono*\nhalf miles north of tlio forks of the north fork .if\nthe Sey iioiuHivi'i, mid nmrki'd '\"Alex Mci.rae'8\nx. K. cornerpost,\" tbence running south m chains,\n.vest tin cbiiiiiH, north -'i chains, enst go chains to\npoint of rominenceniont ami containing t;i' acres\nmure or less,\nDated May 17lh, 1007.\n7, Commoneliig at a pust- plunled ubout one\nimi iiiK'-li'i H niiles imrth nf the forks uf the mirth\nfork of Seymour Ulver.and marked \"Alex, Mc*\nCrae's s. \\v. comer posi,\" tlienco running north 80\n;lmins, east 80 chains, BOUth mi ehuins, west 8(i\n.Inin*. to point of commencement and <.-ontaliiiti)(\nUO acres more nrless.\nDated May 171b, 11)07,\nsat myM AI.KX. Mi-CKAK.\nNOTIGE.\nWAH CHUNG\nA 1.1. KINDS OF\nGreen Vegetables\nREADY FOR THE MARKET\nVancouver Manufacturer needs good\nmen lo rcpreut the very latest novelty,\nAgents coining money. Gel wise, start\nworking for yourself. E\\ -hotly buys on\nsight. Profits over one hundred per rent.\nDon'l waste lime asking foolish questions,\nIml send one dollar for finest samples in\nAmerica i\nTHE   PHOENIX   OOMPANY,\nSpin e 4, 4XS Granville St.,\nVancouver, B, &\nCEMENT BLOCKS\nM.iiiufiii'liiri'd for all clnssosltif building*\nCEMENT AND LIME FOR SALE\nAll kinds of btilldlnii ami plnstoriiiir\n\"    liken.\nFront Street, Revelstoke\nTELEPHONE 29.\nNotice is heroby give..).... un duys aftor .lui..\nI intend tti il|ilily to tin- Chiel Ciiuitnissluiicr of\nIju.ds und WorkB lor permission lo uurohas.\nlho followingdcsi-rih.-.l lends in Wesl Ki.i.li-niiv\ndistrict:\nSiliiiiti-d in (liileiiii Du)-. ciiniiiieuolllK illu\npost ..hulled on the easl shore of U'|.|.ur Arrow\nLuke close Ui tluli'.... point, nti.l marked \u25a0\u25a0!{.\nBln.pSO.rt soulh-east cornel- l.osl,\" llionce wesl\n111 chains, thonoo nortl. BO cliains, I heiiiie ensl\nlu chains ...ore or less to lake shore, thenco\n..long hike shorn lo point  I con.iiioiiceiuu.il.\nHaled April Uth, I'.\".'\nsat op 13 RALPH HIMI'HON\nAnd Wherens nolice signifying the\nCouncil's Intention to undertake such\niinpioveineiit.s uud of making the\nassessment Iheielorhus been published\nand given as required l.y suid lly-luw\nund the Municipal Clauses Act antl no\npetition bus beeu presented agaiust\nthe proposed improvements.\nAnd Whereas $99,611.75 Is the total\namount of the e.ist of the sai.l Improvements and is the amount nf the\nprincipal debt tu lie created by .this\nBylaw.\nAnd Wherens hy sub-section 17 of\nSection 250 of ll.e Municipal Clauses\nAct the Oouncll is empowered in the\ncase of by-laws pussed for works pay\nuiiii* by focal assessment, in' order It.\nfacilitate the negotiation of debentures\nthereunder, to declare that the debt\nor any portion thereof is further guaranteed by the Corporation at large,\nAnd Whereas the total amount required to be raised annually hy speciul\nrate per fool fnr pnying the salt, debt\nand interest thereon and for creating\na sinking fund for paying llie said\nprincipal debt within 20 years, which\nsuid debt is created on the security of\n(he special rale as settled by tills Bylaw, und on thai seeuriiyoniy, nnd\nfurther guaranteed hy iu.siilil Ctii-\npn.-ulioii ill large, is tor inteiesl\nlfi-1,976,68, and for sinking fund\n$8,703.88, making ii total of $8,07S.IW,\nAnd Whereas the total assessed\nvalue of lhe whole real property rale-\nable under this lly-luw according In\nlhc last revised assessment roll is\n$881,826.00.\n3. 11 shall he lawful for the s.ti\nMayor to negotiate and sell the suitl\ndebentures or any nl them al n rate\nbeluw par If he mav deem il necessary\nto do so, uml io unihoiize the Treasurer to pay out of the stuns ,su raised\nby the sale of the sai.l debentures ull\nexpenses connected with tho preparation and lithographing of the debentures und coupons, or uny discount or\nifiiiiin.issi.ni or ni her charges Incidental lo the sale of the suid debentures.\nII. Kor the purpose of forming a\nsit king I'nnil i'i... the payment of the\nsaid debt and the payment of the\nInterest thereon ill the rate aforesaid\nus llii! same becomes doe, there shnll\nl.e assessed and levied over aud above\null ulher rules and charges the annual\nstun of $8,078,90 in each and every yeur\nuntil the suid stun of| $99,511.75 and\ninterest Is fully by speeiul rate per\nfool frontage upon all Ihe lund or real\nproperty according to lhe respective\namounts hereinbefore recited as sei\nforth in the said report of the said City\nClerk, such yearly rute to bc assessed\nand levied in each year ill. the same\nlime and in the same manner as\nordinary taxes are assessed und levied.\nHI. The amount of the speeiul rate\nor frontage tax levied hereunder shall\nhe added to tbe taxes for the financial\nyeur in which such rate or frontage\ntux is assessed and levied, and such\nspecial rate or frontage lax may be\nenforced and recovered in the same\nmanner and in every respect as ordinary hintl or real property City Taxes,\nwhether by the sale of the land or real\nproperly upon which the same attaches, or l.y registration, as a charge\nupon such land or real property, or\notherwise as provided by the Municipal Clauses Act.\n11. If lhe owner of any portion of\nthe snid land ...- real property hereby\nassessed shall desire to commute the\nspecial assessment imposed by this\nBy-Law, he or she can do so by paying to tlie Treasurer nf the Corporation, on ur before the Fifth day uf\nDecember, 1907, the amount set opposite the real property, lots or portions\nof lots mentioned in the seventh\ncolumn of the said report of the suid\nCity Olerk.\n12. Any amounts paid in commutation shall or mny he invested a.cord-\ning to the provisions relating to the\nInvestment of the City .Sinking Fund.\n13. It shall he lawful for the said\nCorporation from time to time to\nrepurchase'any or all of the said debentures at such price or prices at or\nbelow par as shall he mutually agreed\nupun.\nII, The said debt us created by this\nBy-Law is hereby further guaranteed\nl.y ll.e Corporation nt large.\n15. This By-Law shall come into\nforce on the Second day of July, 1007,\nmay be cited as the \"Local Improvement Sewage Assessment Bv Luw No.\n99, 11107.\"\nII\nM.i]\ni oiumeneing ,. ap.at marked \u2022\u2022*-. J, oit'.'i\n.....fii.......to,-..- pbuiudon r. inifii... Cr-.- k\nii.m.u .ml,., up ir south, thenc. U chains\nlast, thence BO elialm north, theoce 80 clialna\nwest, thence en chain. ...uth i\u201e point ..f < .men.\n8. Commencing U a post marked \"W .1 int.,.\nsouth-nest corner,' planlwl on Itaniigau Creel,\nahout | miles Irom mouth, thenc. lo chain, ca-..\nthenco su chains south, Ihence s\u00bb chain, east\nthence \u00abi chains north, theoce SO chain, west,\nllienee L*lj chains  north, thence I. cliains west\nilo-nce 10 chains south to point of commenoement!\n1. Comn.ei.cing at s post msrked \u2022\u25a0\u00ab ..\notto's soulli west corner,\" |.lanle.l on I'lsrinl.\ngau orcekabouUmllc. from the moutb,ihence\nltu chain* can, tbence .0 chains north, .hence\nIti) .-'.sins wist, theuce 40 chains south lo\nl*int of commencement.\nHaled March-ffllh,l9u7.\nm Commenolng at a post marked \"IV. J.\nOtto's north-east comer, planted on < anoe\nItiver about Go miles from mouth, theoce loo\nchains tvest, thence .0 chains .out'-, tlienee 100\nchains ess., tl.en.c4uchain, north lo point of\n...unci..client.\nDated March :,l.t, 1D07.\n0. Commoncing nt n post markoil \".V.J.\nOtto, iior.hcu.-i corner.' planted on Canoo\nKivor about 61 milos from mou.h. il.ct.ee SI\nchains soulh, thenco to chains west, ihenco sn\nchains north, thonce DO chains cast to poim ol\nc.n.in.i tic.-..].,..!.\n7.   Col.....en.\nOtto's .....ili-.-f\nRivor about Oi\n10 chain.\n10 chain.\nof col.flue\nlog a: f. pool marked \"W. J.\n>l corner.' planled  ou Ciinoe\n.......file-fro... Hi- moulh. Ihenco\n'.rth. lhcl.ee.1' chain, wo-t. thenoe\niiith, Ihence so chain- ca-l lo poim\ncement.\n8. Commonclng at a |K.*t n.a.kod \"W.-J.\noi.o- i.oiilica-i corner\/  planleil on Canoo\nKiver about  JO mile*  fii.i.t ......uh. lhct.ee Sl.\ncha ns south, tnence 80 chains wost, thence sn\nchi....- north thenco HO chains oasl to point of\ncu.ii.ieijccniciit.\n0. Commencing at a posl marked \"W.J.\nIto*.outli cast conic.-, |,lai..e<l on ( anu.;\nover i.lsj.i. 7U ...lie* from IU mouth, Ihc.icc\nMc.a.us woat, thonco 10 chain, north, thonce\n100 ohains oast, thenoo 10 ohains south to poinl\nol coiit.iiciicenic.il.\nDated Maroh 30th, 1*7.\nsatJun 1\nW.J. OTTO.\nHOTICE\nNolice- hereby given thai 30 days alter dale\nInlend to appl) t\u00ab UioCl.lelCommlsslonor ol\nlands and Works for a special licence to cut\nand curry away timber from tin; following do-\nscribed lands in North-east Kootenay Ui-tricl:\nI. ,Co lOllolng at  a l.osl marked \"W.J.\n(III,.- norlh-ia*. corner.'* planted on lhc Col-\n11111I..11 111 yor, uboui ilo chni... uu jtrca.11 from\n......ia-kct Lake, 1 bonce west 1|>.chains lhcnco\nsouth 40 chains, thenco cast ion chains, thonco\nnorth 10 chains to poinl of emme.cement.\nDated April :th, iau7,\n\u2022-'. .Commencing a. a nosl marked \"W. J,\nOttos south-wesl corner,- plan.nl on Middle\n10\\cr, about SU chains fro... [he mouth, thence\nnorth iichin.,.., thenco east sn chain-, thence\n.-.inili Mi chains, tbence wesl SO chains to point\nOfCUllllllCI.CCIIlC.lt.\nDated April Olh, 11)07.\nsal Jun 1 \\v. J. OTTO.\nCertificate of Improvements.\nNOTICE\nKich.i.onii .Mineral Claim, situate in lho Kor\nelstoke Mining Division ol Wes. Kooicnay\nDistrict. '\nSouth\nWhere located:-.U Standaid Basin,\nrurk of l.ownie Crock.\nTake notice that I, 11. Smith, K..M C. No\nBf*. 12, acting as agent for w. ||. Willcov\nFroo .Miner.* CorllHoate No. Us\u00bb*.., Intend\nSixty days fro... (laic hereof, to npplv to the\nMuling Heconler for a CirtitlnUeol linp.ovc\nments, for the purpose of obtaining n Crow n\nO rant of the above claim,\nAnd fur. her lake notice lhat action, under\n.cction .... must he commenced before the\nissuance of such UrtiJcate uf Improvements.\nDated this 23rd day u. .May, A.D. WC7\nwe.l my 20\n11. SMITH.\nNOTICE.\nRevelstoke Und District.\nDistrict of West Kooleuay,\nTake notice that Ucorgc B. Campbell, ol\nArrowhead, occi.pi.tion limber Cruiser, intends to apply tor .1 special Umber licence over\nthe following described lands:-\nCoiiiiiiciicing nl a po*t plantod on thc south\nside of Lot e.2i!l about 15 chains west of Poplar\n(reck, thence west 2u chains, thence north 22\nchums, theuoe west nu chains, ihence ,-outh .-\u2022\nehains, thonco east IW chains, theuce north io\nchains tu point o( con....c.-clnent. and containing 610 acres, mure or less.\nOKQBOK BENJAMIN CAMPBELL,\nDa.c.l May llth. 1007. wed my a\nNOTIGE\n-round time the 2tst day of\nAnd Whe.\nof passing a\n.11..nli..n.ul.\n\"i.s the Council is deslrou.\nBy-law for the purpose.\nNOTICE\nuii'ltirh\nA. PRAD0LINI,\nREVELSTOKE\nTo Trappers\nRaw Furs Boughv\nUash Prices Paid\nF.   B.   WELLS,\nExporter of Purs.\nSTORAGE II\nFurniture, Pianos, or Meichnn-\ndice.stor.'.l in dry-well-liuili wnre-\nhoueo in convenient location.\nE. A.  HAOQEN,\nReal Ksl.it.'und Insurance Agent\nKevelstoke, B.C,\nT\u00bbkc nolice (list An.lrew Kits.......I Hovel\nMoke, H.C. Miner, I.......Is ... apply lor ..\nspecial timber license over the loll.i.vlug described lands m.un.- iniiic Itevotitoko Division 1. West Kooteuay District, B.O,\n1. Commencing at .. nosl planled .... Ihe\nnorlh naukol I'lsl Creek, about '.....le above\nlhe uorlh lork un.l marked \"Andrew Kit\nson'. H K, corner pusl,\" thenee running lu\n.iuiiii* nortli, llienee Uiu ehalus wesl, thence\nlu clialus suulh, tl.ei.ee 100 chains easl .11\npoint ol oommoncoffle.it ami csntolulOg Ml\nacres more or less\nHaled Mnv .'7lh. r.li7\n2. Cummencing at n noil planled al. ...'.,\nmile north ol Hot Creel, and nnout ', mile\nabove the north lurk .....I marked \"a u.lieiv\nKitson's B, IV, corner post,\" ll.cn.-e runniug SO\nchain, north, thunce mi chnlns east, tlience su\nchains soutb, tbenee so chsins we*, to pointol\ncommencemeni, aud containing uiu acres mure\nor less.\nHated May 2711., \u00bb7.\n8, 1'o.n.nenclng nt a pusl planted about W\nmile north (.I Flat Creek snd 1 mile ..huvo lhe\nnorlh lork and marked \"Andrew KIlsnii'sN.\nW, ...mer post,\" thence runniug He chains\nsuulh, tbenee su chains cssl, thenee HO chains\nnorlh, thence HU chnlns .vcsl to polul u[ co....\noiei.i-i-iiii-ni, nml 1 iiiiiiiii.-. liiu acres mure or\nless,\nDaled May 27th, 1U07.\n4 Ciun.nelK-Ing al a pnsl planted .... tl.o\nnorth Imnk oi Flat Crook shout l:l,u.iles hulu.v\nll.o north lork and .....tk.-.l \"An..rew Kits..it's\nS.W. comer pusl.\" thenoe running HO chains\nuortli, m chains easl, thenee40 chain, souih,\nIhence .0 chains es.l, Ihunco Hllchalns south,\nthence wes. 40 chains, thenee I'l chains north,\nthence lo chains west t-> point ui coinincncc.\nmen. nn.1 contslnlng.flu acres more or less.\nPaled May 27th, 1W7.\n5. Commencing al a post planted 011 lhu\nnorlh bankof HaU'rcck,nboul ,.'14 milesl.clnw\nIhe north lork ...d marked \"Ai.drew K.Mini's\nH.W, corner pust,\" .heliee running HU chains\nnorlh, thence .0 chain, cnsl. il.oiu.c2u chains\nsmith, ihenee 40 rhalns east, lhcnco H.1 chains\nsouth, thenee .0 ehalus .vest, thence 20 chains\nnortl.. ib.-..ce lu el.nlii* woit <<> point of commencement, .....I containing UIU acres mure or\nloss\nDated May 27lh, 1907.\nsstjum. H ANl.KI'.W KITUUN,\nrHEREPORE the Municipal Council of lhe Corporation of ihe citv of\nKevelstoke enacts as follows:\n1. That the sai.l hereinbefore recited\nestimates, plans and i-nports l.e\nadopted and thut Ibe proposed improvements in conslriicIiiiL' main and\ncommon Bowers und the works connected therewith throughout the City\nnl* Hevelsluke be ninde, ci.nsl 111.-ted\nantl carried out in accordance therewith,\n2. That the huul nr real property\nwhich Is immediately benelit...I l.y ihe\nsaid improvements shall be ibat which\nhas been ascertained in Uu. snid plans\nand reports nf the said City Englncor\nnnd the slinres nr proportions ill which\nthe suid iissesstn.-n! is lo be inude ....\nthe various lols or portions of lols\nbenefited together wiih the am..nnl.\nnecessary to form a sinking fund and\nInterest shall be us shewn by the repnrl\nof lho siilH Oily Olerk whicli lnnds or\nreal  property   and    ussessuu ills  nre\nshown III the snid report of lhu said\nCity Clerk and llie snid lands nr renl\nproperly and portions of land nr real\nproperty mentioned In said report of\nsaid Cily Clerk are hereby assessed\naccnrdlnuly wilh llie payment of tlie\n1.1.1..mil. ns therein sei ...it  oppoell\nach said portion nt land ur real property and the said lepn.-t is hereby\nadopted as tbe assessment roll tut- the\npurpoBOSof this By-Law.\n.'1. The amount of lhc special rate\nassessed US aforesaid ugninst each lut\nor part nf hit respectively shall l.e\nassessed, levied anil collected in eacli\nyear lor 20 years after the passing i.r\nthis By Law during which the debentures have in run.\n4. ll shall be lawful fur Ibe Mayor\nnf the Corporation nf the City uf\nUevelsloki! to borrow upon the\nBOClll'lty uf  lhe  speciul   rule  herehy\nImposed and upon the credit of the\ndebentures hereinafter menlInncd,\nfrnm any persuu nt- persons, or body\nor liodii'scnrporute who may he willing\nto advance tlie same, a so... n.i exceeding in the whole lhe sum of\n$1111,511.75 being the sum necessary for\nIhe wurk, and localise all such hiiiiis\nsn raised or received tn be pitiil into\nthe hands nf lhe Treasurer ul* (in. said\nCity Iur ll.e purposes herein recited,\nid u lirsl. lime   tbe 21st dnv ..I*\n10.17.\nIte.ul a\nMay, Illll*\nHead a third time, and passed, lhe\n21st day nf Mny, 1007, wilh lhe\nll.....llmnus cunsent of the Council.\nIt. considered and linally passed and\nadopied by the Uoun.-il (he\nday uf 11)07.\nMa von.\nCity Olbrk.\nTu ke nol ice Ihui llie above is a trite\ncopy of.-. By-Law which is Intended ...\nbe lllltllly passed und .id..pled by lhe\nCily Council for levying a frontage\nrale to pay Inr Ibe construction of Ibe\nliuprovniuonte therein mentioned and\ntlnit ihe Assessment U..II us contained\nIn tho report of the Oltv Clerk, mentioned in Ibe suid Ity-'Liiw, .-bowing\nlhe rale and lhe lunils ur real property\nliable to pay the tamo, together with\nibe names ot the owners thereof, ti\nnuw .... III., in i|... ..III. [ tl... i Uy\nClerk and is ..pen for Inipoctlon dining olliee boms.\nThe llrsl silling nf Ilu- t'i nil of\nltevisii.il to rovise lhe assesstnei.i will\nhe held nn Wednesday, June 12th, 1007\nat tho hour of 7.80 o'clock in the afternoon at the Oity Hull, Hevelslokc, B,\nC\u201e for the purpose of hearing cum-\nplaints ..gainst the assessment as proposed by suid By-Law, or the accuracy\nof the frontage measurement or any\noilier complaint whioh persons Interested may desire In make an.l which\nis by luw cognizable by tbe Cuurt.\nAll complaints against lhe said\nusseiisinelll, must be served upon the\nCity Clerk al least (H| eight duys prior\nIn tlie date nf llie Hist silling uf tbe\nCourt of Revision,\nDated Mav 22,1907.\nNotice is hereby given .hat 30 dav. alter dale\nI intend U) apply u, inccuicf commissioner of\nLands and Works lor a spceirl license to cal\nnut. carry away tfinber Irum the lollowlne\ni.csi-rinc.l lands situated on .McDonald Creek\nUppor Arrow Uke, West Kootenay districl:   '\nI;.,Co lenolng nt a po... marked \"W. It.\nHold.- southwest corner po-t.* situatod ..car a\nbc.iveiiiieiiilow.aWu. J miles from thu mouth\nof McDonald Creek, thenco nurth n. chain*\ntheoce cast so clialns, thence south si chain-'\ntlience west tn cha....* to point of commencement,\n2, Commencing al a post planlwl at thu\n-oull.-wcl corner of Nu. 1. marked \"W. It\nKolas north-wesl comer pus.,'.ii.-ncc suulh\nSO chains, Uience east 81 ohains, thenoe north so\nchains, Uience wesl so chains\nmeneement,\nto J'Uilll uf   coin-\n...   I ommcncillg al a posl  plnuled al  lhu\nnor.h cist  corner of No. 2 irked \"\\V, K.\nHeld s norlh west corner post,\" Ihence soulh HI\nchains, iiic.ee ohm. \u00bb chains, theuoe north so\nchains, lhcl.ee we-t MJ cliain, to point ol cone\ninciiccincnl.\nDaled .May 25th, 1KI7.\nwed my 28\nW, R. I1KID,\nNOTIGE\nII. FLOYD,\nCity Clerk.\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given .lnt radars ifie. .iat.- m\nIntenil Is apply lo the Honorable Chlol Coram!..\nsioner of Isimls and Works fnr permission te put\nelinse the following ileserllieil lands hi Wesl\nKooleuay dislricl;\nCommonolng at .. post planted on lbs 8. B.\ncumor of Thompson iiru-emiition >i.\"i, marked\n\"Kvuns it Ogilvie's N. w. corner js.-t,\" thenco\nI.) cbnins eust, .0 chuius .south. I'l chains wost,\nID chains north to .-.nil of ronimoiiectnoiit, containing l.vi notes moro or loss.\nDulod Mny DOtfa, 11101.\nsat my & EVANS *. OUILVIE,\nNotice is hereby given tha. 00 days after date 1\nintend... applj... tne ll,,... cl.iel Commissioner\nof Lands and I. oris lot permission t.. purchase\nU.l lollowing descrilied [finds in Wesl Kooteuav\nD strict: '\nCommencing fU a po-t planted on the eastern\nbank ..I ihe Columbia lliver ais.iit un,-(..iiril. ..I a\nmile l\u00ab.l,.\u00bb Priest Rapids and marked -I. II. WVs\nsi.iiiii..',,-i corner,\" Uience north In chains, thenco\nwest p. chains, tlu-nce s..u.h 40 chaius to the bonk\nid Uo-1 olumbia Knur, ihenc,.... a soulh-eistorly\ndirection lollowlng ll.e meandering, ol the Cob\nmnbia Kiver to poini of cuiuineiiceiiie.it, containing .-.Win Its. fines.\nDaleU Marcli Mli. A.D,, IU17.\n\u2022eilau iu F, B. WELLS,\nNOTICE\nRcvcMokcLand Di.trict.\nI..-.I-..I of W,..t Kootenay. II. ft\nTake noUoethal K.Sw.ucr.of Boavormoutb,\nB, U,, occupation I'rospoclor, lilteod. te apply\nfor a spocial timber licence over .he following\nI.-.ni...! lands: Situatod in nest Kootonay\nDistrict, B. C,\nCo 1 in ing al a post planlwl.... the .......tl.\nof Canoo River and marked \"ji, BwiUor's\nnorth onst cornor.' them-e wesi so chains,\n1 In n.i-.-1.nil, so chains, thenoo ca*. suehalns,\nthonco in.i-.li BO ohains te poinl of ooromonoo.\nine..:, and coliUiitiing010iur.--, more ur less.\nKDQAR SWTT\/.KH.\nDatu. May 2nd. 1007, wed my 20\nNOTIGE\n\u25a0run County Coubt ob\nKOOTBNAV    llt.I.I.UN   AT\nBTOKB.\nW'kst\nRbvkl-\n111 Ibe matter of UlO Estute nf Oscar\nE. Stevens, de.-eased, and ill the\nmatter of the \"Ollicial\nA.ln.inisttators Act,\"\nTAKK NOTICE thai by older nf\nllis Ilnn.a-.1. A. Km in, Judge, made\nlhe Mh day of May 11X17, I WHS appointed administrator of the estate of\nUser E. Slovens, deceased, and all\nparlies having cliiiins against lhe said\nstate are hereby required tu furnish\nin... properly verified lu me on or\nbefore the 16th day. it June, 11)07. And\nall parties Indebted to said estate are\n.lired to pay the amount nf their\nindebtedness tt. me I... 11.with.\nOHO, S. McCaiithh,\nOllicial Administrator,\nDated Ihis 1st. day uf June, 19U7, CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF REVELSTOKE\nReid & Young\nStores at Arrowhead and Revelstoke\nin ..I.I.. J\nAN'S\nI STOCK FOODS f\nI POULTRY FOODS %\nI CONDITION POWDERS   1\n41     Wc ..re Agents I'or lhe V\n*? famous     \" International ty\n\u25a0\u00a3 Stock Food.\" <&\nt?     Large >'.oek kepi here. *F\nv     Write   for circular or w\n# cull and see it. #\n*   *\nf Canada Dm? k Book Co, f\n..........................\n^r \/i gz.m\u00a3\u00a3\nslock\nIII' (j\nii in try the\nJUST A\ntrial will\n7fl\/\/f\u00a3\nIIIVIIIM\nVOU\ntbey are thu puresl nnd best\non  llie  ......-kid.   Try   our\nBREAD, CAKES AND PASTRY.\nj Hobson & Bell;\na (Incus, Bakers it Confectioners \u25a0\nIF YOU WANT\nTb\" Council\ncut neuter wnrl\nHall, according\nseen al the City\nd.siies   lenders   for\netc..  nl  No. II  Kite\nI.. -| eciltcatlons to he\nHall,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nSaturday, June S, Inr 21\nUnsettled, possible showers\nwith strong nnd squally\nwin.\"\nhours.\u2014\ncloudy\nw.st. .1.\nIs.   Temp., .mix. 62; min. 60,\nLocal and General.\nMrs. J. D. McLennan lelt ibis week\nfor uu extended visit to tbe Const.\nMessrs, A. Hornell i McPhail liavi\nopened the Savoy ten room! on Me\nKenzie Avenue,\nThe ladies el the Catholic church\nwill hold a strawberry testival on\nTuesday, June 18th.\nThe regular monthly meeting ol thi\nBoard of Trade fell through on Thun\nday night, a quorum not being obtained.\nI.W. Bain, Chief of Police, left lor\nNelson this meriting to In ing buck n\nJap charged with forgery, lor Bum\nniury trial\nR, H. Trueman will personally\nvisit the local studio on Saturday,\nJune loth, and will be in town for five\ndays lollowing,\nThe ladies ol tbe Methodist Church\nwill bold their annual strawberry and\nice cream festival un Monday, June 17\n\u2014alternoon and evening, on Mr, C.\nF, Liudmark's lawn.\nGold Range I. dge, No. 26, Kiiighte\n. I Pythias, will hold a decoration\nservice in their lodge room over tin\n;. -\u2022 :' ce I -.:. ri sv alternoon, All\nmember! are requested to assemble at\n1    M    I     p   111.\nThere will be a meeting ol the loot-\n, . club at the Y.M.C.A. tunight at\nS:30 lor lhe purpose ol electing two\nnew members to the executive committee. A lull attendance ol the mem\nben is desired.\nThe dredge is now et,gaged in cut-\n\u25a0 a . new channel on the west bank\nI t.. Col mbia al ve the dam, bo\n\u25a0\u25a0 it ihe curn nt n ay bco ir. way thi\n- .: I al that | int ai d - \u25a0 deflect u\nlarge volume ol water away Irom the\ndam.\nThe West K tt na) 1 i uu re In\n\u25a0titute ..r..- h lii. a - j-, - ui ntar)\nmeeting '.- -lay in ihe Court li is.\nI ne ... roing -\u25a0 --\u25a0 \u2022 - n.menced at\n1030 and Ihe all I -\u25a0 --\u25a0 u .- :\n-.::.:.. Evi ing session\n\u2022 ; 30 io : ... \u25a0 sn \u2022 *. II--.:..\n, ,\u2022 in All si . ivi ed lo all. nd ii -.\n... are c (dia I) \u25a0-\u25a0\u2022 <\u2022\u25a0 med.\nIJ, Nairn Inn been appointed dis\njtri.-t. inaiiager Ior theSivereign Lite\nAssurance Co. nl Canada, his Hold o:\noperatiuii being from Laggan to Sion-\nminis, tl.e Okanagan valley nud Hobson to the south. Abi.'ii:. $28,001\nstock of the company is held in Kevelstoke, while three uf the directors\nreside here.\nAn exciting lacrosse match wus\nplayed Inst night on the McKenzie\nAvenue recreation grounds, between\nthe business boys and students, resulting in n win for llie former, by 5 Iu 2.\nl'lie business buys played a spin .did\ncom bin ut ion gnme, whicli gained for\ntheni the victory, although tbe stud-\nc.ts [..it tip a strong fight.\nTbe cily authorities nnd cliief uf\npolice have issued notices in today's\nissue calling the attention of ..11 teamsters to the necessity ol weighting und\nlieing up their bones while standing\nin the streets to prevent runaways\nwhich have been very prevalent ol\nlute. A cily bylaw enfoices this\ntiring up of horses while standing in\npublic thoroughfares.\nKor lhe first time in the history of\nthe country, a train crew bus been\narrested without uny preliminary inquiry, by tlie directions of the County\nAttorney, This bus teen done in the\nesse of the (1. T. It. crew of the train\non whicli Fireman Kocl.un Hull was\nkilled near Parry Sound, Ont. Champ-\nness, tin- engineer ul the- train, i* Btiid\nto huve disappeared. The others are\nunder arrest.\nTo Buy a House.\nTo Kent it HoiiM\nT\ncl\nTo\nI-'.:,\nBuy Nice\niB6 ill.\nLols\nBuy Splendid Fruit\n.Is.'\nCOME ANU SHE\nKincaid & Anderson\nWE HAVE SOME BARGAINS IN COAST\nPROPERTIES\nMONEY  TO  LOAN\nReal Estate and Insurance Agts.\nT..nders to reach tl.e undersigned by\nJune 18th, IB07,\nII. FLOYD,\nOity Clerk,\n.lime Slh, 10(17.\nCORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF REVELSTOKE\nThe attention uf owners of lifwoi is\nonil..I to Section 23 ..I City Ily law\nNo 7, providi'.g that no horse, etc.,\n'hull hi. l.-fi .... nny street or public\npi., n ivi limit being si.lllciently lie.l\nOwing io ib\" frequency ol runaways\ni ci-mly, Ibe police have instructions\nIn cut nee rigidly the provisions nf suitl\nBy-law in this respect.\nII. A, BROWN,\n.Iuin* S, 1U07.        -It       Mayor,\nNOTICE TO TEAMSTERS\nSun bases\nand Trunks\nYou mav need a New Grip for\nvour Summer trip, and we are\nprepared to supply ycu, We have\ntliem in all styles, sizes and prices.\nLeather, Imitation Leather and\nMailing Covered Suit Cases, Canvas Telescopes, Club Hags, etc.\nTeninsli rs ...\u25a0.- hereby nolillcd ll.nt\nI heir teams must be propetly weighted\n...\u25a0tie:! while standing in tl.o streets,\nanil nfter Ibis dale ll.e I'mindkerper\nwill be instructed (.. take charge ol all\ntennis Improperly weighted or tied.\nT. \\Y, [IAIN,\n.liiiicSili.llii)?. Chief of Police,\nBusiness Locals\nHammocks nt Cansdi Drug Co.\nNothing better than Our \"Special\nDou'l futget lhe I, dies \"Al Home\"\n.it the V. M.C. A., Tuesday, June 18,\nCarpets,  linoleum!  mid   H \u2022\"*'  nil\ncloth at O. li. Hume & Co's.\nIndustry.     Smoke\nPatronize  Homo\nRovelstoko Cigars.\nSparklets and sparklet holies s.jl.l\nai the Canada Drug Si..re.\nWindow shades, wall paper, plain\nand decorative burlaps at ('. II. Hume\n& Co's.\nKur sore feet get a box ul our hot\ncase. Special make only 25c. ut the\nCauada Drug Slore.\nRovelstoke Cigars Union Made Our\nSpecial, Tho Union, and Marca Vueltu\naro ahead of all others.\nA choice selection of lace and tapestry . irtains, curtain p. \u25a0 -. r .1- anil\nfixtures at ('. B II ime -. Co's\nB n  i.e.   c -fn plasters. Jusl  lln\nlinng [or *. re -     - in l  --\u25a0\n10 cents  ;.   package.   C .da   Ui\n. .    kslore.\nAUGTIOH SALE!!\nAt MRS. HARRY BOURNE'S Resilience\nMackenzie Avenuo (Soutl.)\nThursday. June 20\nI rousers at\nSpecial Prices\nDuring this week we are offering a splendid line of Trailers,\u2014\nmade of the Best Wool goods, in\nilie Best Styles. See them in our\nwindow\n$3.50\nPER\nPAIR\nHot Weather\nUnderwear\nOur line of Summer Undeiwe.tr\nis very complete, comprising Balbriggan, in Black and White and\nNatural Wool in all weights and\nSilk mixtures.\nStraw and\nLinen Hats\nThe best assortment in town\nand sold at very low prices. Wc\nhave also a very large lot of Crush\nFelt Hats, in black, blue, brown\nand grey, that can be rolled up and\ncarried in pocket or grip. They\narc just what you need for travelling.\nLadies' Summer\nWearing Apparel\nWash Tics, Soft Collars, Belts,\nStocks, Light Weight Hosiery in\nCashmere, Lisle and Cotton, Canvas Shoes, Gauze Shirts, Negligee\nShirts of all kinds, in fact everything you may need to keep you\ncool and comfortable for the next\nthree months.\nat 1:30 p. m.\nUnder\nIlill'KNI'\n.-ii\nislinctioiis from  .MU'*. II.\nI will sell by Public Aue-\neiiliie furnishings of  her\nnsistiug In part of tho follow-\nhome, c\nlug, viz :\nThree snli.l (Ink Bedruoin Suites,\nBedroom Carpels, Bed Springs, Mntt-\nl.-esses, elc. I A 1 Roc ling Chairs,\nWriting Desk, 1 Sewing Machine,\nClocks, 2 Bicycles (lady's and gent's)\n2 Fine, Lounges, several Brass Lamps,\n(lynx Parlor Table, (Ink Hall Itaek,\nA I M.-Cluiy's Range with bol vvulei\nconned ion and boiler, Oak Music\nCabinet, Oak Dining Table and Chairs\ntti unit.-h, Fancy Bric-a-Brac, und all\n.liter furnishings iu this first-class\nhome.\nEverything must be sold ns putty is\nrnnving away.\nThis is your greatest opportunity to\nfurnish your home with the very best\nin luu ii nl your own p.-ice.\nThe goods will not be npen for in\nspe.-liun till .In...- inili. Sale take,\nplacp at above address \"ii June 20th.\nfit Ij30p.ni.\nliuni forget the date, JUNE 20th,\n.i! 1:30 [.in.\nTERMS cash.\nII. MANNING, Auctioneer,\nMCLENNAN'S\nZL\nThe Kb...Ies' scholarship competition bus been decided, Thorlief Lar-\nsen, whu received his earlii r education\nat .New Westminster and later graduated Irum the Tot.min University at a\nBachelor ol Arts at the heud ol Ilia\nclass, is the fortunate student, according to .... anno.ine.-.m-nt made by\nSupt. oi Education Robinson! .ll.Mc-\nKinnonwits the candidate frum Revelsloke und did nn excellent examination, although not successful.\nThe revival mission under the auspices ol the Baptist Church opens in\ntl.e mission t. nt, ipposite the clul  tomorrow in.....ing.   Cher, will bethrei CHURCHES\nservices  tomorrow;    Morning devo.\ntioual service and semi n    ' l'lie 1 .      ' i\u212201\"\numphsui Faith.\"   In tbeaftern      . \"   '\nn eeting for y iung pi  pie at 4 o'cloi\n,.n.l in tbe evening n m ise\nfollowing   the   si-.-i:.:..-   ...   -\nirehes     i.-     .1 id    Mrs,   E\nGel a Japinesi  irl\n\u25a0    i.da \"hairs \u25a0  . \u2014   il ..\n(.'. li. II mi.  i Co's\ner big . -   \u25a0\n.-1    ind drugs opened al\nDrug Sl\nand i. ivi -      - -\nUndoubtedly\nWEDDING   RINGS\nJ. GUY BARBER'S\nMarriage Licenses Issued\nJ.GUY BARBER\nC.P.R. WATCH INSPECTOR\nNEGLECTED EYES\nf QtnttttfTy\nJewelers and Opticians\nNext to Imperial Bank\nImproper!)' fitted glasses arc worse limn\nno glasses ami neglected eyes often means\nblindness.\nOur Optical Depart men I is in charge o\nMr. M. S. Hastings, Kef. IX, and positively guarantee satisfaction.\nIt has been proven thai 90 per cent, of\nheadaches are caused by defective eyes\nand ii does nol follow that because yvo\nhave good eyesight thai your eyes are nol\ndefective.\nHave your eyes attended to now and\nsave trouble and expense.\nHASTINGS, DOYLE AND ALLUM, LTD.\nTk Best\n\u25a0\nfi.imi- n Ma\n.   -\u25a0\u25a0 tisms; 2 30\nH   P'\"\n\u25a0-hanks i-i Nelson Baptist I\ncharg.      .   in .-ting-    Ri v. D. E.    St. I\nHal   M \\   B ipl    : Bu|: \u25a0  Miss    - - ...\nrill h.   i:- icut ii    \u25a0 -I n.i- time u dl-md 1 30  p.n\n.In. Shanks will sing at each I l'a I\nlervic.      W bile the mission is uiu l loupied\nthe lie Baptist i\nInsect\nPowder\n'I'i,.- I..-i known remedy l.\ni  . m     | iltoe* from yum hnus.\nIf properly   smudged,   in\nneed for con ern or loss ul -'..-\u2022 p\n60c. a Pound\nANTI-BUZZ  KEEPS (HT\nTIIK MOSQUITOES\n35 CENTS A  BOTTLE\n\u2014ISOLD  Aii\nil .i\nloter and a        irolu -  md -     \u2022   -\n\u25a0vil]   I..      Defined      111...\n!: i n.i el   ga are free I   -\ndid  i intern   will   ho med I\n\u25a0 j- jliig,   is.th   ii. mn     idi .and\nillustrated songs.\nlinuc all week,\nim     Hibl.\nW. BEWS.\nDruggist und\nMail Orders  prontji\nPhm. B-\ntationer,\nattended\nSocial and Personal\nMr Russell I the C.P.R. machinist.\nli fl : :,i- morning for v. innipeg\n.Mr.-. 8, I.. Jones, ni Calgary, i-\nvisiting Mr. .mil Mrs. ,1. M. Doyle in\ntown,\nliytf.n Willi.uu-, provincial game\nwarden, came... tu town .... Thursday\nnight,\nCapt, llacher went south to Burton\nCity for a lew days this week on\nl.i.-iiii-.-\nMrs, Geo, Edwards will not rn-\"niun Wednesday June 12th, .mr until\nSeptember,\nA. (lowing and A. (.. Eraser,ol\nTrout Lnke City, spent a low days iu\ntown this week.\nC. It Bayer, western travelling secretary ol the Y.M.C.A , Imn boon\nspending u week in town.\nHugh MePherson, ol Trout Lake\nCily, lelt fur the snutli this morning\nafter a lew days' visit iu town.\ntrated        r*r\u00ab\n\u25a0    -\ntnd\nKni    Phi\nMom-\neat It *\n-ni -!.-. .; -1 I'm\nAl.ei\n\u25a0\nSchool will prnl i   -   \u25a0\nthe\n\t\nN'o, 221), C. W. O   '     \u25a0.    il\nbody, ....-I the pimto.\nsubject\" tin- Creates! Coin\nr.f   Ul       Music sun ii f\" to the nccs\n,-imii     Invocation anthem, \"Our I-'.-\nther,\" Offertory  anthem,     I\nVm.r fiends d ye Gates,   and D\nsion anthem, \"Bow Down Thine 1. r\n(i   Lord.\"    The Young P.  |\nciety will meet lo. hall an hour al the\nHose ul the evening service whon a\nshort address will I o given on    Dr\nRobertson, j  Missionary State man\nchoir  practice  on  Thursday night\nAll are  welcomo nnd strangers ..n\nspecially invited,\nA uui-* unusual opportunity In have\n. .    i.f s.-wing Machine on\nthe win-Id's...... k.-i  in  your home  i.s\npossible in the extra valves embodied\ndern machines manufactured\nby ' hi Singei Sewing Machine Cn.\nof the year, sewing\ne purtii libit ly   saleable,\ninasmuch   \u25a0* homes are refurnished,\nm .ml I.iidil apartments\nup.\n- nm i recently\n\u25a0m - lun.-* thai re-\n-    .   '-.   i   pleasant and\nIs - ,-m irutite. d\n.aliti. in- [tig Reliable\ni.-fully Inspected and\n.i     terms,   Llheral\nf -Im...  linn-   uny-\n1)1.1 mil. Lin..- -\\- hanged,\n.i\" .Fl' SEWINC MACHINE CO.\nH, ii P I--, mnn, I.,., .i AgHiit.\nOffice : Davidson's Tailor Shop\n\",  ..1,11-\nWANTED \/^ BUYER  F0R\nllltl acres first-class FRUIT Land\non Arroiv Luke, \"2(1 acres cleared,\nto ncres now ready for crop \u2014\nFrame Duelling (live rooms,)\nchicken house ...id barn (holding\nlour teams) Plenty ul curd wood,\njust two miles trom town, An\nideal spot for poultry nnd u good\nmarket where tip prices are paid\nfor nil kinds nf v, getables, fruit,\neggs, elc\u2014l'l.IRK $4,01)0.\nI hnve alsu large and Rinaller\nacreage suitable fnr fruit clnse tu\nmarket. Kor full particulars\napply to \u2014\nW B. ROBERTSON.\nGOOD BUYS\nDwelling and Lot\nSecond Street      ....\n$2,Hi(l\nDwelling un.l Loi\nSecond Street   ....\n,     I.KIKI\nDwelling uud Lot\n, Third Street\t\n-1,200\nLuis un Second SI.\ncast of McKenzie Ave, eacli   ,\n.      2.)(l\nLuis on Third St.,\n\u25a0ast of McKenzie Ave., each   .    .\n.   20(1\nLols on Ko.u'il. St.\nensl of McKenzie Ave., each    .\n.      175\nLots on Fifth St., i\nast of McKenzie Ave., eacli    .\n.   150\n1\u20142 and 5-uci-c lil\nicks suitable for fruit.\nSIBBALD   AND   FIELD\nINSURANCE\nNOTARIES PUBLIC\nLOANS\n\u25a0\nH, W. EDWARDS\nTAXIDERMIST\ni .    i\ni io\ni . . .:\nE. A. SPRING\nHARNESS MAKER\nAND SADDLER\nII hums* neatly repaired,\nNew harness mndo tn order .... ll.e\n-luu-i.-*i notice.\nAl, kinds ..1 Whips and Stable requl-\n, sites k.-pi in Btock.\nUigglng  und    Team   Harness   a\n...Ml.lilV.\nPLACE YOUR ORDERS. WITH\nS. McMAHON, - FIRST STREET\nFur Agricultural lni|)loiiionts. Carriages, Wagons* | Etc., ili'liii\nli.'iTii Ploughs, Miilhio Wagons, Canada Carriage ('omimny'a\nHuggios, Pliinol jr., Gardon Sunders and Cultivators, Whool-\nwriglit and Blacksmith Work attended tu. Horso Shoeing a\nSpecialty,\nL% %%%%%% %%%%%% %%*%%%   %%%%*%%%%%%%<\nP.   BURNS   &   COMPANY,   LIMITED. i\nHKADOKK1CK:  OAWABV,  Ai.iikuta.\nWholesale and Retail Meat Merchants\nPort IVIdiiri iiiiii Duftbr in Livn Block. Murkuta In all tho prlnrlpal Cltluii anil\nTowns nf Allierta, liritish .,\u201e<iimI-1iiiimlllio Yukon, Piu'koia<*(the Culehrateil Hraml\n''Im i'i-  or\" Mains and Uncoil, ami Hliauirurk llraml, l^af l.nnl. j\nFIRST STREET\nipptwlu. ih.. i nt\nKKVKI.STIIKK\n..Ilolel\nII. ('.\nNOTICE\nAppllcatinns will be .-.-.:.-iv-.-.l up tn\nnoon nt .Intu: I2lli, lor tin- poBitioil   of\nSecretary-Manager ul the Fruit A-\nProduce Fixohango of II, ('.., Ltd, Only\nthose with lirst clnss references nnil\noummerolal rolcrcnccs need apply\nAddrea--., W, J. Brandritli, Ladnor, Il.C,\nProper Medicine\nfor the Blood\n\u25a0    \u25a0\n\u25a0 ' \u25a0   i |\n.'\u25a0!-,\u25a0.'.\nMill   :'!\n... ([rivei\ni | |i j, i ...i   ...;    in the\n. .,. \u25a0-,-:\nIn hi i m'li .i  brittle nt\nSPRING'S SARSAPARILtA.\nA full npply alwayi  hand\nRed Cross Drug Store\nHntl Order. B  l'f.in.|.i. Ittnnl\t\nWANTED\n.uill BALK  Sf,\n.'lu I...\nwill.\nI' f.-llii-, nnil ...ii.lei'ii plumbing.\n11 ill..-. ,M ti- of garden, g.\".d f.-u.-...-\n117(101)11, Im v i.nu*. For furlher\nparth ulii. - apply tn W, II. llohtuinin,\nW i\nIf I\n\\NTKIi   A    di g   '\nI..ml II.-i.-l,  N.iku-\nw\nWil'.li   Ai i....-.\u2022 a Dlnl.igrtin.n\ngirl,     Apply (lllll'.NTAI. II..TKI,.\n\\UANTI-:|i   Dining 11\"\nI l...v\nnil I...\nRUPERT\n\u2022 Uupcii property for i\nllHHllll'\ntluinci\nRRI1TCE1\n. secured Iho agency for Prince Rupert properly for n limiied li.nc\n35x120ft, Price $joo. Terms, II50cash, balance 4, Mind it\nhave also choice lots and residences iu Revelsloke, business\n1\nAlso liuil lunils iliise i...\nApply I\nT\\\/   OTAI^*^   RIAt HT*U*MD\n,    V.    O I MVjVJ,  CENtnAL BCOKEB\nI'.   II.   Hox,   lis,   lU-n-lM.ik.., II. u.\n*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nw\nI.Vlll   SAI.K      (I'riviilclvi   111    lhe\nI1      ..--l.l.-.i.i-   nl*    VV,    M,   Law -e,\nMiii'ki'iizii' Avenue, I dining table. I\nsideboard, I suit.-dining 11.0111 el...i.s,\n'(.'.n-k.-i-s, I .-.'nli'.. Iiibb1s, I .iuiiiiI.., 2\nll.ii.-.i I* fiiipel si |.If.res, I Nn. II K il -\n.ben r.inge.   Can be seen.il any hlllll'i\nmax Hotel.\nANTKD     Kvcvmie   having\nIiuu*..   lo  sell ...-   nml lo list it\nwllh in...   1 fi... Hooded with rutpitiioii\ni-.i hou '\u25a0 pi'iipcith--..   Phone, .-nil. or\n.Imp ....-1. .-..rd with full diwilpllon\nuui p.... l.llse |i|'ile. '..' lent I' ipiilell.\n15, A. Ki.ggOlli llenl Ksl.ile Olid Iii-iii-\nunci' Agent. Hevelslokc, II. ( .\nI.uill   SALK   CIIKAI'   Koiiillo. 111\nI'    Fiiriil\u00bbh.'d limine, Chicken houses\nlm..int.... w.....1*1..-.1 .....I garden, iu\ng I c.edition and ready for iiinm-d-\nIllll'   ol'l-lipillil.ll,    ..Is.)   ..    UU.libel'   of\nchickens forsnle.    Apply nni.reinlsi'B,\nIhre..  iniln.t.'s   walk fluin  depot  uu\n....sttrack.-Mis, Jewltt.\n><>W>Q<><><>0<><><><><>0<> OOO oooooo<\nLook Well! Feel Well!\nDn you enjoy I Iml, well diessed feeling? We all know what\nit feels like' lo bo but, lo be cold, or to be tired, uud It is\njusl ns trim lli.il we all know what, it feels like to lie well\ndiessed, ll feels good, and It's good to feel guud. Ynu can\nnever l.e well diessed it yuur clothes are not made by the\nlighl linker.\nGot toknow we handle tbo SEMI-READY GARMENTS\nmul ymi will llmi whul a pleasure and satisfaction it is tu he\nwell dressed.\nSuits and Overcoats  Sis, 118, and $20.\nBlue and Black Suits, the best made, (20, & $25\nRight Overcoats, up-to-date  Prices: $18 and $20\nSpecial Trousers IB and te.\nTailoring is our business, We make a .nan look well\nand he knows il.\n..Cressman  and Morrison..\n>O0O^OO0K>0OO00\n.-.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Revelstoke (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Mail_Herald_1907_06_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0310840","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"50.998889","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.195833","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Revelstoke, B.C. : The Interior Publishing Co. Ltd.","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"Series":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1907-06-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1907-06-08 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Mail Herald","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0310840"}