{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","Series":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"b41ed794-361a-4c9c-a802-1520c68fe65e","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2016-05-17","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1915-04-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/mherald\/items\/1.0311445\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" REVELSTOKE\nChief lumbering, railway, mln-\ns-   g,  agricultural    and nnvlga-\ne)      centre   between  Calgary\na   \"V >e Pacific ocean.\nV\nThe Mail-Hepald\nTHE MAIL-HERALD\nPublished twice \u00abMkly\u2014Rea<1\nby everyone\u2014The recognized\nadvertising medium tor the\ncity and district.\nVol.\nNc 32\nREVELSTOKE.  B.C. W1DN1-SDAY  APBIL 21, 1915\n$2.50 Per Year\nTRAMWAY, FOWER PLANT,\nAND MILL FOR LANARK MINE\nCompany Organized by W. B. Dornberg\u2014Tramway Will\nCost Over Ten Thousand Dollars\u2014Control Remains\nin Hands of Mr. Dornberg\nA  KNOTTY PROBLEM\nThe Lanark Mining company, organized this month by William 14.\nDornberg and Leo M. Dornberg ol\nSpokane, will begin In two weeks the\nerection ol a   7000-foot tramway    at\nof the richest silver lead values ol\nBritish Columbia, some of the ore\nrunning as high as M and tin cents a\npound in silver. Three tunnels have\nbeen  run into the  ore bodies.  A  one\n600\nSix\nsamples picked up by E.A. Ely ol\nSpokane assayed $44.00 per ton, it is\n\u00abtated, and samples taken from the\ndump were found to carry 135 ounces\nof silver.\nDornbergs Control it.\nUltimately  it is the    plan   of   Mr.\nDornberg  to utilize  the. water   power\nee*reeCtlOIl     Ul   IL OJVVlwv.\nthe Lanark mine in British ColiunLVa, 'fot vein has heen opened up lor\nSB miles east of Revelstoke, it     was   feet, running ut fluM) to the ton.\nannounced recently     by     William U.\nDornberg,  manager    of the property,\nsays the Spokane Chronicle.\nThc new equipment will cost   from\n11(1,000 to $I2,00& and w>Jll bring   tho\nore from the mouth of the mine     to\nthc  railroad,  351>U  feet below.   Sufficient ore is available to maintain shipments this summer of 1(10 tons daily, 'available below the mine, a large um\nafter the completion cf the tramway, ' ount of old Hume construction and a\nit is declared, making thc Lanark ono   partially completed dum being ready j\not      tbe  important   British  Columbia   for hydro-electric  development.     Thc I\ncroducers. installation of a power plant will   lie\nClot it For $t;0,ii00 | accompanied  with  the  erection of   u\nFor the last two years Mr. Dorn- ! mill,\nberg has been conducting develop- The control of the mine is retained\nment work on this property, making in the hands of thn Dornberg family\nregular shipments last season by the nnd up to tho present the property\nuse ot a pack train down the moun- has not been incorporated. Thc Lan-\ntain until the smelter refused to ark Mining company was incorporat-\nhandle ore because ol low prices. The ed by W.B. Leo M. and Mrs. Ella M.\nLanark  was purchased  by  Mr.  Dorn-   Dornberg, having nn authorized capi-\nherg in 1911 for $iiO,0(K! after it had\nbeen idle for 17 years. It was originally opened liy the Horn-Payne syndicate along with the numerous other\nproperties in  the Revelstoke district.\ntalization  of  $200,000.   Capital  Btock\n|to the extent of $90,IX>0 is   to be issued, it is stated.\n\"During the last lour years I   have\nleen able to acquire     two properties\nMANUFACTURE\nOF SHELLS\nGeneral Manager of Western\nLints Will Investigate Possibilities for htvelstoke\n8ir Robert Roiden has to finish Limner's work\niroperties in  me nctiovw \u201e.\u2014\n\u25a0\"he Lanark produced about $500,000 which have been demonstrated mines\nduring  the early years ot   its  opera- states Mr. Dornberg. \"I believe   that i\ntion  it ia estimated.  The report     ot eny man acquainted with thc mining\nJ.M. Turnbull of the Trail smelter in business can leave   Spokane   in   any\n\u2666.ho  hands of    Mr.     Dornberg  states direction  of the  compass  and be sue-\nthat $12.\\00<l worth     of   ore was re\nceived during 1897 from the mine.\nThe mine is declared to carry some mine\nccssful    in finding a genuine prospect ' junior classes in vocal music combin\nwhich   will     ultimately     become     a   fcd in an entertainmeut\nplayed for the closing number \"Land\nof Hope and Glory\" in which thc solo\npart was well    Bung by Miss Parker,\nwith full chorus by her pupils.\nThe Morris dancers, who performed\n\u2014 j most gracefully, were Misses Marjorie\nand    thG   Seven  Flcet,lam.    Nancy     Fleetham,     Mar-\n' garet Morgan,    Alma Corson, Berbn-\nDwarfs Proves Delightful    i dine Bunnell and Loretta Dupont.\nMiss Parker wore a handsome and\nhighly becoming gown of old gold\nsatin with overdress of net with\nsequins. As Snow-White, Miss Annie\nMcLean wore a beautiful wedding\nin the opera   gown of white satin with    veil     and\nOPERETTA\nBY CHILDREN\nSnow   White\narf ^^^^^^\nEntertainment\nMiss Trypbosa  Parker's senior  and\nGrant Hall, general manager ol\nwestern lines ol the Canadian Pacl&Q\nrailway, accompanied by J.M. Cameron, assistant superintendent ot tbu\nUritish Columbia division, F. E.\nTrautman, chief publicity agent, and\nJ. Sullivan, chief engineer, arrived in\nthe city in his special cur on Monday\nafternoon and left on Tuesday morning for the coast.\nWhile in the city Mr. Hall received\na deputation from the board of tradu\nconsisting of T, Kilpatrick, president;\n0. R. Murdonald, secretary; Vi. M.\nLawrence, A. te. Kincaid, A. ,McHae,\n1 R. Howson, W.H. Wallace and Mayor\nVi. A. Foote, J.M. McKay, Canadian\nPacitic railway superintendent being\nalso present, and thc possibility ol\nmanufacturing shells at the Cunadiaa\nPacitic railwuy shops at Revelstoka\nwas discussed.\n| Mr. H.ill suid that the only shops\nat present manufacturing shells wero\nin Montreal and the only place turning out the raw mater.al was the\nHamilton Iron Works. He wus unable to say whether thc equipment ol\nthe Revelstoke shops was suitnble for\nthe manufacture of shells, although\nlie had doubt on the nuhject, hut if\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ they could be used he would be will-\n  ing to permit tbi' machinery    to    be\nFast Getting Habit\u2014First Day's ,ipvoto(i t\u00b0 the purpose 0t sbeu manufacture. Mr. Hull said that he would\ngo into the question thoroughly and\nwould notify the board ol trade as\nto tbe result.\nMr. Hull was optimistic about tho\ntrude conditions in western Canada\nand said that crop conditions at this\ntime of the year never appeared more\nWAR STAMPS\nWORK WELL\nOUTFITS FOR\nBELGIAN BABIES\n' culinary table was in charge of   MrB.\nWallace assisted   by Mrs.  Horobin an.l\nI Miss\nbouse on Monday evening. Tbe o^i~\nttta \"Snow-White and the Seven\nDwarfs\" formed tlie program, ann the\nresulting  preformance     was a highly\nP.O.  Hardie und proved a great   '\"11115 ,   lU .    ..\n1 **        creditable one both to the pupils and\nsuccess everything being sold out in\ni; short time to the disappointment\nof late    arrivals.     A special feature\norange blossoms\nOn hohult of the class and\nParker a few words of thanks\ngiven bv Ralph Lawrence before\nclosing number.\nHarvest for Dead Letter\nOffice\nPeople are now getting into the\nhabit ol placing war stamps on tbeir\nletters and the new regulation is\nworking smoothly,      says  F.  Young\nMiss\nwere\nthe\nsent\n... i  iii   -i,   rt,.n..,c In    waB the     \"genuine     Belgian almond\nExhibition of Work WIWW\" bread.. whi($ 80,dlike the proverbiai\nhot cakes. Mrs.  Laing at the     candy\nterested Spectators-Musical Program Well Chosen\ni,\nj stall did a rushing    trade    with     her\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^    ''able assistants     tbe     Misses   Eileen\n  Lawrence,   Estelle  Shuttlewood     and\nAmong the many   successful atfairs  ,ater Mig8 winpiow\nto tbeir teacher, and, at thc same\ntime very pleasing to the audience.\nSome twenty children took part aud\nalthough both solos and choruses\nwere numerous, all the vocaliBts appeared as fresh at the end as at tbe\nbeginning, proving tbe correctness of\ntheir voice-production.\nA  pleasant feature     of tho    whole!\nconcert wus t.he entire     absence     of\nOfficers Elected by\nSt. Peters Auxiliary\noperution M letters bad to be\nto the dead letter office.\nMr. Young has received instructions that postage stamps on which\nthe words war tux bave been printed\nmay be accepted for prepayment of\npostage. Under no circumstances are\ninland revenue war stamps to he\naccepted for postage or war tax On\nletters. This new ruling makes it so\nThe annual meeting of the Women's that a person who buys a sheet of\nAuxiliary of  St.  Peter's church   was   l ostage stumps wur marked or other-\nt    the funds ot var- A   well chosen      musical     nroeram                                                           ^_ held at the Hcctory on Tuesday, alter- wl*c can use them lor postage or wur\ngiven to augment   thc tunus oi vai A   well cUoBen     musical     program that shriUncBS    alld     horah struin.ng '                   \/ tax pasraent.\n.mm enmrnence- ereutlv added  to   the    eniovment    ot     ...          ,                  ,.                       v,   , noon. Belore tbe business part ol thc i\u00bb\u00bbj\u00bb\"<-\nious charities   since     tne commence t.reauy auneu ro   ine    enjoyment,    oi after volume usually so noticeable in v Thc  inland revenue stamps    are   a\nment ol the war the    tea and exhibi- those    present,     and     Mrs.  Robbins children.s chofllSP8.  Each pupil,  with meeting light refreshments were serv- yd,owi8h color   an(, arc douMe     the\ntiunofwork     held at     Mrs.   W.  M. rendering of    tbe     Belgian  National that imitative faculty BO Btr0ngly de- ed by Mrs.  Procunier.     The following width 0f the postage stamps,\non Saturday  last in   aid Anthem called forth hearty applause. vcloped in youth|  appeared   to have officers were elected    for the ensuing !\u201er\u201e rwl  fnr the twos nnd  en\nunder the aus- Others   who contributed to the musi- cuught from thcir teachcr| Bomcthing year.\nlccg             - - --\u2014-\u00bb'- leaeue. cal success were     Mesdames McVity, nf the vocai easc anQ raodulat.i0n of |   Hon. Pres.-Mrs.  0.  A.  Procunier\ntakes  u  prominent\nwol'King   smoouuy,      bujb   r.    iuuu6, ...            ,                      ..   .\n.     ,     \"                .. promising, and  that a larger amount\npostmaster. Ou tbe tirst duy in which '                                        ^.*,\" v   \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,.\n1 e\\1    armeii'P    nieiilp    trip    rtiitlnnk    AnPOAr\nthe  war stamp  regirtution  cume    into\nof acreage  made  the outlook  appear\nto him to be a good one.\nMr. Trautman said that the pictures of the Revelstoke park were being displayed daily at the Canadian\nPacitic ru.lway building at the San\nFrancisco fair and were attracting\nmuch attention. Tbe ski jumping pictures had not proved particularly\nclear but tbe pictures of tbe park\nwere excellent.\nwhich\ngreen     for\nLeave to Join\nAlberta light Horse\nMrs. C. T. Marshall and Mr. und\nMrs. B.O, Hadow left last night for\nCalgary. H.W.H. Marshall will leuvo\nto-nicht. Mr. >;urshall and Mr.\nHudow have been attaihed for the\niast six months to tho 23th Battalion\nVancouver, hut obtained their release\n r \u2014 \u2014.  and huve joined     th?     15th Alherta\nire lively to draw less frequently   and   Light Horse, which, is at present be-\nin larger amounts, and  will pay tbeir   ine recruited at Calgary,\nhills in cash Instead of by cheque. Mrs. \"Marshall und Mrs. Hadow will\nname Vl..- u -.-  ,      a1    \"\"\"ui uurus nun u\u00bbcu ui\u00bb.,c     ol I    At thc drug stores, war stamps are   inn,in  In Calgary     until the troops\nbeautiful princess, charming everyone  one of the abandoned mines and mill   ,,ow heine placed     on   all perfumery   leave inr the front.\nwith ber singing, giving promise of a ' properties of Sheep creek    and     will'.,,,,)  patent or proprietary  medicines. J\nvoice which when fully developed will  start improvements toward placing 11   a  \u201eno ccnt stamp is required on   all\nI.O.F. at St. Francis hall on Tuesday   i,e very lovely.    Miss Marjorie Fleet    among the nctlvc mines of the    dis- Ug ccnt.  puckneos or   'less,  two cents\nevening. Twelve tables commenced at   ham     was a handsome and dignitlcd   trict. Mr.  Curtis    is   on   the ground   <m   packages to     *i0    cults  in  value\nnine o'clock  under the direction     ol .flueen. Her voice, though not   strong,   ntA will complete    the arrangement*  three cents up to    tbe    value of     75\nForesters Give Whist\nDrive and Concert\nA successful     whist drive and concent  was held by     Court Mt.  Begbie\nPresident\u2014Mrs.   J.  E. Dickson.\nVicc.-Pres.\u2014Mrs. G.  R.  Lawrence.\nSecy.\u2014Mrs. H. H. Goddard.\nTrcusurcr,\u2014Mrs.  J.A, Middleton.\nArrangements   were     made for the '\nity in Miss Parker's singing\nThe operetta,  though     simple     in\ndramatic action,    afforded  opportunity for several prettily sung solos by ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nvarious members of ths chorus    and   May Day sale to be held at thc For-\nalso    contained four     good     leading   est Mills residence.\nparts. Miss Annie    McLean     in   the  r\u2014\nname part of \"Snow-White, mado    a'    Smith Curtis ha* taken charge\nLawrence's\nol the Ue'gl\"\u00b0 . \"al ^auty league,   cal success were     Mesdames McVity,   o{ \u00a3he vocai eaBC and modulation of\n\u00b0' \u201ef     nlnce    and   the   Wood, L. Howson     and    Miss Urqu-   tone whjch (orm8 B0 pieuBing a qual-\n....j   a   prominent.      i>\"\" - ^^bb\n^endid financial result. pM\u00bb M*I  hart\nrealised, gives further proof     of   the |\ngenerous response accorded     by    OM\ncitizens ot Revelstoke to eacb    fresh\ncall upon their sympathies.\nMrs Lawrence's handsome room*\n.,\u201e tastefully decorated with flags\nand .lowers and were wcil adapted\n,or entertain.ng the large number Ol\npeople who kept coming in a continues stream during the afternoon.\nMrs.  Lawrence   had    with     her as\nhostesses    Mesdames     RobWn-     an*\nSturdy, while Mrs. Moth took cbarg\nof  the collection     plate    and    U\u00abl,   ^^^^^^^^^^^^  ^     ^^^^^^^^^^^\nhlcne Robbins and Helen Briggs ,   ^ ^ following were declared the   |u'uiience\"b'oth\" for the naturalness    of   vestments made  from 20  to 30\ntended the door. | winncrB   The ladieB nrBt prize a   b u      ,vnd f()I. her flnC alto BOi08. 'ago   in the Sheep creek country\nThe  drawing room was <ki>1\"  l,i        .\u25a0\nh   * hi ition olbaby garments, nnd   handsome china tea service was   won   Miss Agnes Mct.ivm was all a Prince\nW   from     tiny    bootees     to   by Mrs. Wilson after a tie with   Miss \\ charming Bhould he and     sang well.\neveryt ,n* ^ tfap con,piete   out-   Parker. The gent's first prize, a   fine j Every    performer   was letter   perfect\nnet     uibvwas shown, doing great'thina tobacco jar was won     by     S.   and the whole perlorinance proceeded\nMt *t 'the industry of the   sewing   Needham Jr. The ladies booby   prize  to the end with a  smoothness achlev\ncredit to ^ diends.     These   was won    by    Miss Pickard and the   cd only by diligent preparation.\nC\"i.   l Twere arranged on Hag draped   gent's by W. Whitby. After the whist |   The younger   members of tho audi-\n* 11 eainst a pretty background t drive    Miss  Tryphosa iParker     sang   ence  were    especially  delighted    with\nti        Ihat of Belgium being given Splendidly    \"W? Wandered Down The   the antics ol the seven dwarls.    each\n\u00b0f     |K9'nce   while  tlie large bowls  ol   Mountain Side\"     and     \"Two Little  dressed in proper     goblin     costume.\nPromt      ^^     through     the room  Irish    Songs\";     H.  V. Morgan sang   green hats,  coats, spades and\n\\ I'll \u00ab most artistic effect. Mes-   \"Sweet Vale Of Avoca\"     and    \"The   lanterns complete,\ncomplete., a        Law8on and K.   Gor-   Brave Patrol\" scoring a distinct sue- :    Two entire     acts.     Morris dances,\ndanies _._n\u201ei_- ' _\u201e__ -.ill, *%,\u201e ,\u201e\u00bb\u00bb.r   \\tiaa  porker act\narc red  lor  the twos  and\nthe ones.\nI   The effect of the new stamp regulations on banking     circles     is rather\nbard to foretell. Payrolls will pro-\n, bably change Irom thc weekly cheqiucs\n'to payments in cash.     People     who\nkeep their money in savings accounts\nvery sweet.     Miss    Isa Dunlop as   at once for    reopening the  property,   cents and four rents     < n\nH.V. Morgau and alter un interesting   '\"  vll\u00bb  D\"':c,\"     \",\"\"'    *\u2014 ' \u2014 _.\n,   ,                   Curl won much admiration from   the ln> \"\"11\ngame th \u25a0 fnllowini: were declared the        ,          ,.,,.,                , ^^^^\naudience both for the  naturalness\nHngllsb investors\n^         packages\nis one of several  large     in- j worth between 75 cents and tl.W. The\nyears  ptnm|is are to he ttta<cbe\u00bbd at  or    lie\nb|   |.,re  time of retail  s.ile and are to be\ni uirelled at   the time  ,idlxcd.\nSUTdlsnlaTed the work With untiring   cess with the latter. Miss Parker act- , \"Rigs-O-Malow'\nand \"Bean Setting,\"\nMETAL PRICES STIMULUS\nTO MINING INDUSTRY\nFew men have their linfrer   on   tho  utile arrangement waa obtained.     De-\ndark   pulse oi tbe mining industry ln these  velopment work  was    continued     in\n1 parts more accurately  than   Andrew  somc ca\u00bbC9 80 thut tlic>  ure now P\"\"\npnrtMl  to considerably  increaso   their\nworking  forces and ship  on  a normal\nG.  Larson,    mining     engineer.     Mr.\nLarson . passed     through     Rossland\nless ..( the duration of tbe war.\nThe newer conditions, Mr. Larson\n1 o.nted out were such that mining\nwas benefited In all its brandies. Not\n..illy Was a ileinami created lor pro-\npertlM Hi t have reached the ship-\npine stavre. hut alio f\"i prospects\nrnd .iii'li'Veli.pcil mines. The Stability\nol the mining industi , and the pnv\nBl Iue to high metal prices w\u00abe encouraging the tnuiket lor claims and\ni rospeets. Contepanice Bnd englneera\nwere paying increased attention to\nthe new claims and partitUy developed non-producers as well as to developed properties .\u25a0 nd small ebippera\n',iTiimrements \u00aber: 'wing made lor\nthe expert examination of the different mining districts wiib a view ta\ntuture development so the Impetus\nwas certain to have a lasting effect\n\u25a0 n the mining industry.\nHeferrintr to the mines of the Sin-\ntan Mr. Larson stated that, in spitu\nnt the high <ost of tnetale and toe\ngood opportunit) lor substantial profits now offering under tho present\nadvanced prices tlie operators    were\ncd as  accompanist ond gave a piano jwere performed for the tirst time    in  ^TBm ' PaB8en     lnrouKn     \"\u00b0B8,an\" \\hUlM. Among these mines be mention-\nenergy to all com n. ^  leading ' 8elcction. this city. Six girls in village    house-   twice this weok going   to tho Sloan.  ,,! tbe Slocan Star, with    which     he\nBelgian  M'0U*V        B      and     th0 j    Th0 dcrving  ol dainty  refreshments   wives costumes of the long, long ago   from  Hpoknno.     Mr.  Larson    states   i* connected, the Cork and others,\nnolo In the ,,\"\"uju \"''.,;    ,mJulp,,mo   |,y the comnanions ol the court con-   with mutches,   kerchiefs, kirtles, and   mln|ng is improving all     over     the]    Thc rn\u00ab't wil! \u2022\u00bb mort be.iclical on\npolished tain crowned   eluded an     excellent    evenings enter-  bells went     throtieh     the    fantastic        . the whole district and country, In Mr.\ncentre pice of i ed .mil  ii.uk l ^ K*Pna \u00bbnd  .mntomlme of these oriein-i y' Larson's  opinion.      The    substantial      \t\nbl \u00bb\" ' .bOW' J* \"gj- 1*^^ ,)f thp ,imeg we\u201e donflt.  JSSJ SjfS hi \\\\Z*  \"on |   0t the Slocan countsy    Mr. Larson   ,,\u201e\u201e,_ J  ,,\u201e  ^ \u201e, M    m\u201e   ,.._,  \u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e,.   \u201e dlspMlng  ot thei,\nofltoadVantfcgethe\u00abainiyun        ,,y',,, ,,v \u201eon   Thomas Taylor, minister i village greens    centuries ago.     Both   8P\u00abko in most encouraging terms. Tlie   , ]lvinK a m08t stimulating efleet     on  Une output. While     line    was    well\nuhlnltiK silver.   Ica \"\u00bb\u25a0\/__    ku*     t ..\u201eU1I. \u201e\u201e\u201ew\u201e   \u201eh\u201e   h\u201e\u201e     k\u201e\u201e     \u00bb:dances   were     much     enjoyed by the  new basis of settlement nrrangi.i by   mining throughout    British Columbia   above the  point where it can be pro-\nBUdienCO, the Trail  Reduction works    for     the   and the Couet D'Alenes    and     WOUld   tit.il.ly  produced,   the companies  wero\nOpening the program,     the    senior  treatment of silver-lend  ores,    doing J mean  a   great deal  toother     minim;   inline it almost  Impossible to     dis-\nsinging clnss gaveachorus, followed  away with the ipeclal charge Imposed districts as well   The impetus would pose of theii Tl    reaaon.be\nby Mis= Parker wlio sane \"Pipes   ot  (<dll<>wing   the   stringent    condltlone be more than t<emporary, he thought,  too gbi ners In   the\nPan.\"   .   lolo Which shows to advani     brought by the   wnr, has resulted   in   for with the tremendous\nMesdames Briggs and H.M. Bmythe\n(or the first hour after wbieh th.y\nwero relieved by Mesdames Robblns,\nMcLean and Coursier. They wore\nefficiently assist'\"1 in diepfcutag    the\n, i ol i bv tie    Mleaee Drquhart,\nHyatt, Raton, fJurrle, Winslow and\nllurdio\n\"f leiihlic. works, who has been a\nneiii'ier nf this court for over in\nyears.\nThe following lulies were the refreshment committal Companions\n\\ : tin,  Cormier and  McKinnon.\nNew   lie nvcr  Is not   unite  niir' whet\nin  tho Stud)   -ie tlm culinary tab-   her sprinc hns come to stay  ,,r\nIrs  bothehOWlng the colours     ot  tho i\nTho  bluebirds  and      crossbeams havi\nI. IgUI\npurple, green and white.   The not arrived ns vet.\nWaste     In l'nited   .-'\u2022   ' \u25a0      ..rking to  tlieir\nseveral   properties starting up  on     a   inetiils, the dlvertine of    metals     to hlehest in  tan.ing out   '\/-'nc\n\u25a0hipping hi'sis thai  haVf been    Closed, war  munitions inst'nd  of Into Indus- from thetrown  ores und    were     not\ndown  for some  time.    Several   mines   trial and     manufacturing     channels going to taki ine ores ua\nwen   that  were  operating  'icfore   the war   would  m   ite  a verv     heavy  demand lone as they  could command thc top\nInoun excellent  manner,     and     also  stopped shipping until a  more favor-   for tbo product, ol the wine,  regard- rotch prices with their own metal.\nnee the Hut 'like tones of ber voice\nIn response to an encore she gavi\n\"My Ships.\" Mrs Fleetham accom\npanied Miss Parka    in    her    well t  \\(!R TWO.\nTHE   MAIL-HERALD,   REVELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1W6.\ntbe n&aiMfoeralb\nfUBLISHKIi   WEDNESDAY   ANU\nSATUKHAY   AT\nREVEL8T0KE.  11. 0\nADVERTISING  RATES\nLocal Heading Notices and Business  jsh Columbia.\nwho enjoys the confidence of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, and who iB endeavoring\nto save his party from evil\ninfluences which ho believes have\nbrought it to ruin and which\nprevent it from becoming a powerful\nInfluence  in the public affairs of Brit-\nLocals 10 cents per line ouch insertion. Minimum local ad charge '25c.\nDisplay advertisements 25 cents per\ninch each Insortioii,  single column.\nLegal advertising ot nny form, also\nGovernment and Municipal Notices 12\ncents per line first insertion and 8\ncents per line subsequent insertions,\nallowing 10 lines to tbc inch.\nApplications for Liquor LicenseB 85.\nApplications (or Transfer of Liquor\nLicenses $7.f>0.\nOil  prospecting  notices  $7.50.\nLand Purchase Notices, ?7.0d.\nHon. Joseph Martin, whoso views\nthe Journal presents, Ib urging the\nnecessity of convening a provincial\nLiberal convention as the only hope\nol extricating the party from the\nmorass in which it is now struggling.\nHe believes that the effect of the convention would be \"to wipe off tbe\nmap the bogus 'Mackoy platform,\"\n\"to elect a permanent leader of the\nparty so tbat the public may know\nwho will be the Liberal premier when\nwe attain power\" nnd also to tuke\na  stand  regarding    the    proposed as-\nworth while to become  interested, nor'months, or oven a year or two.     We\nwhy the company,  when in need     ol   believe that without overtaxing    the\nfunds, placed $15,000- in   a newspaper   >e80llrces     of     Kamloops,    provided\nI . . .   ...   ,    , _.    |enough  capable  mechanics ure to  be\nventure in which  It lost money.   The .     .  ' \"\"        . \"\nfound, that a contract for 4,000     or\ncompany was looking for favors from   -\u201e<,\u201e, shpllB  for (,elivery  witMn     Bix\nthe government. Mr. Oliver    was     a   months could    be    undertaken here,\nmember of that government.   The ex-   Certainly on a smaller    scale     some\nminister of the interior must   have,a  operations could be   commenced     us\npeculiar Idea of the  fitness of things ,B00n aB materlal iB available,\nif he contends thut  hia acceptance of\n$15,000 from a railway company with\nLARDO NOTES\nNOTICE!\nVOTERS OBJECTED TO BY LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\nWater  Application  Notices,      up to\n10H words,  $7.50,  over   100  words    in  histance to the Pacitic & Great Bast\nwhich ho was dealing on behalf of tho Lurd0i April SO.\u2014O.B,    Wilson  has\ncountry is ti matter of .no public   in- leturned  from  the  caBt, and Kelt   for\nterest. Marblehoad.\nIn  h s  explanation      of  the Fahrni Mrs.   James  Alexander,   of    Cooper\ndeal,     in     which Mr.  Anderson,  Mr. Gardens,  was a visitor   here between\n. trains.\nOliver's son-in-law,  became  possessed\nMrs.  E.  Chandler and family urriv-\nof u valuable tract of Hand und after- ^  ^  pfoctor    ]ngt    TueBdliy      to\nwards transferred     It   to Mr. Oliver, H])em, tW(J WCPka hcre aB    guests     of\nMr.  Oliver   Ignores    the   fact     that Mre. J.R. Brandon.\nAnderson  is his relative and that thc The Chinamen who   started   placer-\ntitle to the land was cancelled   and mining on  Cooper creek must     have\nafterwards reinstated,    contrary     to \u00ab*** \u00ab '\u00bb*>\"\"  in  Jb\u00bb* \u00ab\"\u00ab!\u00ab*.     \u00bb8\nThe Court of Revision for the Provincial Voters' List will be\nheld in the Court House on May 17th, at 10 o'clock.\nThe Liberal Association has filed objections to the below List of\nnames and the Conservative Association would request any of the\nparties to call at the Conservative Committee Rooms, or write\na letter to the Secretary of the Association and forms will be\nprovided them to have their names retained on the list. Electors\nwhose names have been objected to can appear personally before\nthe Court of Revision and see that their franchise is protected.\nproportion.\nSntertor Qnbliabtng Company\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1915.\ncm railway, on which at present he\nintimates that the Liberal party is\ndivided.\nRegarding the necessity for \"wiping\noil the map the bogus Mackay platform,\" which, by the way, is the\nplatform  which  Dr.  Sutherland's    or-\n_   \u201e    ns.rur,.   .. a  **a\u25a0 l \u25a0   glitl proclaims to be the true   Liberal\nE.  G.  ROOKE,  Manager and Editor.  *\ndoctrine, Mr. Martin speaks plainly.\nHe declares that \"the present condition of thc party in view of tbe action of the Vancouver convention is\nlamentable and' requires to be\nHe points out\nthat the \"bogus\" platlorm, nullities\ntho party's regularly adopted platlorm and contains \"a great deal ol\nbogus Liberalism.\" \"It sets aside,\"\nhe says, \"some ol the most valuable\nplanks in the real Liberal platform\nnnd substitutes platitudes, which\nhave, to our mind no meaning and\narc clearly intended to delude thc\nelectors.\"    A convention.  Mr. Martin\nthey stated thut all  they     got     was\n40 cents worth of the yellow metal.\nTlu1 people in the Lardo valley are\nthe regulations,  so that     the     deal\nmight lie put through.\nIn his explanation of his action in t.ntlrely oppoB(.d to tho proposed Can\ncollecting mining royalties, the pro- Bdian Pncitlc ruilwuy schedule, as it\nperty of the Crown, and putting tbc means the worst kind of inconvenience\nmoney into his own pocket Mr. Oliver for travelers from this section. A petl-\nis still less convincing. He pleads\nignorance of the fact that thc Crown\nowned the  mineral  rights.  But     Mr.\ntion has heen signed by every   person\nin the valley opposing the change.\nAndrew  Gnrvey,  Carl Fobs und   T.\nHanson have a deal  on for their pro-\nA DEATH-BLOW TO GRAFT\nIf Sir Wilfrid Laurier, when pre- straightened out\ninier of Canada, hud assumed an attitude toward graft in the Liberal\nparty similar to that which Sir\nRobert Borden has assumed toward\ngraft in the Conservative party it is\nunlikely that we should today he\nbearing of irregularities in the purchase of army supplies.\nOne of the strongest  incentives   to\ngraft is the idea  that tbe  grnfter   is       ..\nbelieves,   \"would repudiate this bogus\ntntitled  to  the protection  ot  his own     ,  .,       ,,     . ...\npluUorm  and would give the purty un\nOliver was thc minister in charge , erty at Poplar creek, and had two\ndealing daily with scores of patents mining engineers from Spokane look-\nsimilar to his own.  If anyone should ing over thc claims.\nknown     the   facts it was Mr. \u25a0  \u2014 ;\nhave\nFIRE ALARMS\nparty   \t\nTo that idea Sir Robert Borden has\ndeult a blow from which it will not\nrecover so long as a Conservative ad-\nministrntlon remains in power in\nCanada.\nOn the pages of Hansard for the\npast decade or so are the records of\nlong struggles over charges ol BCund\nals in administration.\nLiberals burked enquirj and defended those charged with  craft.\nSir Robert Borden hus inaugurated\nb new system.\nHe courts the fullest Investigation\ninto    irregularities    and     does not\nh<esitate to  condemn   those   within Ins\n<jwit   party who     are    Involved\nwrong doing.\nEvery politician is ready to throw\nfctones at those among lus  opponents\non whom is the breath ol scandal\nauthentic policy.\nThe Liberal party at present is\nlacking in leadership as well as policy\nand Mr. Martin believes that a convention would not only provide the\nparty with a sound platform but\n\u25a0night also disclose a leader. At present the 'question ol leadership, \"is\nalso in an unfortunate position,\" and\nhe admits that Mr. H.C. Brewster, the\ntitular leader at the present time, is\na weak man who does n t possess the\nqualities necessary to actual leadership. He explains the situation as\nfollows\n\"Mr.  iirewster was elected     leader\nat Revelstoke with a distinct under-\nin   ttanding  that   be  was  merely  to   act\nin that capacity during the campaign\nund that    it    would     be open to the\nLiberal     members    to chose\nr  they   miirht  desire,  and  that\nMr. Brewster should have no   special\nOliver.  Thc regulation  reserving   the j\nmineral rights was marked in red ink I\non his application  for homestead en- Fire alarm signals, are given thus,\ntry  and  was the  regulation  applying Two strokes, interval    five seconds.\n,\u201e..    ,    ,    .       j four Btrokes. Box  24,  No of box will\nto ull entries since 1S&0. And, in ad-\n'                                                           . also be shown  on indicator    at   lire\ndition,     his   memory on the subject ha)1\nwas joKged by the chief clerk j   of the practice signal.\u2014Six  (6) strokes of\npatents branch in February 1907'. | tell slowly.\nAnd even yet Mr.  Oliver has failed Testing   slgnal.-Three (3)    strokes\nf bell slowly.\nto make restitution. Flre Qut Bignal _Two (2)   fltroke6\nA \"Solid Six\" from Vancouver will >f bell slowly\nDefect signal.\u2014One    tl)    stroke   of\ngive the McBride government a   good ^ glowly\nstart when the returns from the con- FIRE brtcaDE NO. TWO\nstituencies are counted.   Hon.   Joseph Box No . 14\u2014Corner    First   street\nMartin says: \"As things ure it looks McKenzie avenue, C. B. Hume & Co.\nto us as if it will be entirely hopeless\nFirst   street\nto expect to elect any ol the six Liberals now in the field through the\nirlorts of the Liberal party.\"\nPOLITICAL NOTES\nIt requires courage     and     a   high   rights tothe This\nsense of honor to condemn one's ow '\u25a0       \u25a0 '      - felt that\nthe ' '\nthe\nrades when they di paj I from\n\u2022 and narrow  path.\nSir  Robert  Bord tn    b is that   i\n. _\u2022\u2022\u25a0 and sense of honor,\nample has done moi i  foi    thi\nol pul I\nplisb I in\nNO POLICY: NO LEADER\n. i\nals   wit I\n\u25a0\n'\n'   \u25a0        .  \u25a0\t\nIn\n\u2022   '\ni y Dr,      \u2022\nol the  Libel m   drawn  tp  ,,t\n\u2022\non      Tl'    cr.l\nwhich these   irtldles contain ar.-   ad\nditioi \u2022\u25a0-,..\n\u25a0   ,'  biassed    Con\nBervattvi        it ol    i     Ll fi  i\ns which \u00ab - tie bim   to\n.  leader   of   the\ned  the\nLike u.'isr\na Mr.  Bre   it tried   to\ni   \u2022\n\u2022 -\nBox No    15.\u2014Corner\nind Rokeby avenue,\nBox No.  16.\u2014Corner  Second street\nnd  Government   Road    and    Opera\nHouse.\nBox No.   17.\u2014Corner    Third   street\nand Campbell avenue,  Globe Lumber\n        company.\n' !   Box No. 18.\u2014C. P. R. station.     \"\nSince the contention  held on Mon- '    Box  No.  2L\u2014Corner   Pifth    6treet\nday the executive of the Golden Con-  and     McKenzie     avenue,     Catholic\nservative association  have been busy , church.\norganizing their campaign  and     the      Box  No.  23.\u2014Corner  Sixth    street\nprospects of the election  of Dr. Tay-   and Orton avenue, W. A. Foote.\nlor are looking brighter every day.\u2014     Box No. 2ti.\u2014Corner Fourth   street\nHolden Star. Rnd McArthur avenue.\n  I   Box No. 27.\u2014Corner Fourth   street\nThe number  of  names on tbe   new  and Townley avenue.\nvoters'  list for Kaslo riding will   be '   Box No. 28.\u2014Corner Second   street\napproximately  1,200,  according to A.  and Robson avenue, Mrs. Baker.\nMcQueen   collector of votes, who now j   Box No. 31.\u2014Fire ball No. 2.\nBox  No.  86.\u2014Hospital.\ni Box Noi 36.\u2014Central Scbool.\nBox No.  37\u2014Selkirk Schcol.\nFIRE  BRIGADE NO. ONE\nBoi No.  44.\u2014Fire Hall No. One.\nBox  N'o.    25.\u2014Front   street    west,\nrear C.P.R. bridge.\nThe date for    the    holding   ol   the j    Box  No.   16.\u2014Corner     King     and\nouglas streets. Palace Meat Market.\nBot   So.   17.\u2014Corner  Second street\nstreet,    back of Court\nhas about all the names rounded in\nand in order. Some names, which\nlave been objected to, will likely be\nstruck off the old elist. The former\nKaslo list rontained about seven hundred names.\ntive     convention     to\n.i   \u2022 .present   that\nbi  the     fi rtbeorning    election,   and     WaUs\non, the par-  house,\nlers evidently deciding to \"bide '   B\u00ab>*  No.   4s.\u2014Corner   Third     and\noi not  there   Charles streets,  Cowan  block.\n\u25a0   \u25a0   .,.';    All    of\n,.,,.  .i trict     a socfatlons,\n\u25a0,vlth      tbl '   Kaslo.  have\n(oi  the'ci nvon-\neiatl\nRossland Roman Catholics will\nbuild a new 850,000 church this yeur.\nThe Nelson Red Cross branch will\nput in one lied In the Duchess of\nConnaught hospital at Cliveden.\nBarker, Donald W.; Policeman, Revelstoke.\nBarker,  John;  Schodl Teacher, Revelstoke.\nRaines, Henry;  Car Repairer,    Revelstoke. \u2014\nBarraclough,   Earl;  Laimdryman,  Revelstoke.\nBatchilor,    William 15.;     Restaurant\nProprietor, Revelstoke\nBlair, William,  Butcher,  Rcvclstoko\nBraganola,    Augusto,     Boilermaker's\nhelper, RevelstoKe,\nBrand,  David Winton, Machinist, Revelstoke.\nBrophy,  Martin  J.;  Bridgcman,    Revelstoke.\nBryant, Sam L.; Agent, Revelstoke\nBuchanan,   John;  Miner,  Rovelstoko\nBuck, Walter Muuspeld; Clerk, Revelstoke.\nCameron, William 8.; Painter, Revelstoke.\nCamphc.'l,   Walter E.;     Rancher,  Revelstoke.\nCampbell,    Walter  E.;    Farmer,    21\nMile Board.\nCash,  Wntlter G.; Brakeman,     Rcvel-\nI   stoke.\nCristiano, Giuseppe;     C.P.R. Helper,\nRevelstoke\ndimming, W.; Brakeman, Revelstoke\nDa,vies,  William;   Bridgeman,,   RevelBtoke.\nDavis, James; Fireman, Glacier.\nEskridge,  Grover;    Brakeman,  Revel-\ni   stoke.\nEvans,  (leorgeu;      Bartender,    Revefl-\nstoke.\nEvans, Tom  Edward; Waiter,  Glacier\nFuirlield, Joseph J.; Filer, Revelstoke\nFairfield,   Victor; Filer,  Comaplix.\nFoogood, Charles, Butcher, Glacier.\nKorde,  John  P.;  Olvll  Engineer,  Revelstoke.\nEraser, Duncan R.; Sawyer, Comaplix\nFraser, James, Woodman, Beaton.\nFruscr, William; Baker Glacier.\nFritz,  Frank H.; Painter,  Revelstoke.\nQansinl, Richard; Laborer, ReveJlstoke\nGarvan,  Adam, Trapper,  Revelstoke.\nClifford,  Percy;  Waiter,  Glacier.\nGilford, Percy P.;    Physical Director,\nRevelstoke.\nGilchrist,   William;    Butcher,    Arrow-\n!    head.\nGillis,  Alexander J.; Bridgemnn,   Re-\n|    velstoke.\nGiguere,  Joseph  A.; Operator,  Revel-\n'    stoke.\nGoodfellow,   Stewart;    Clerk,    Revel-\n1   stoke.\nGorofnlo, Santo. Helper, Revelstoke.\nGrunt, George;  Machinist,  Glacier.\nGreen,  William;    Lumberman,    Revelstoke.\nHarris, Reg.  Vi. D.;  Engineer, Revelstoke,.\n! Harvey,   Charles;   Carpenter,     Revel-\n\u25a0    Btoke.\nHammond,   Lrnson  H.;    Luml crmnn,\nll Mile Camp.\nHilman,    Charles,     Teamster, Revel-\n,    stoke.\nJardine, John F.; Carpenter, Glacier\nJohns'-n, Joseph K.; Publisher, Revelstoke.\nJohnston Robert E., Laborer, Beaton\nJones, W. J.; Brakeman, Revelstoke.\nKerrigan, Martin; Bartender, Revelstoke.\nKirkpatrick, Robert A.; Engineer, Re*\nvelstoke.\nKohne, Joseph C; Trapper, Camborne\nloader, Thomas Henry; Draughtman,\nGlacier.\nI oeiin, Chipman, Ladiorer, Revelstoke\nLnugheud,  George  B.;  Plumber,    Ro-\nvolBtokc.\nLee,  Arthur; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nMaclsaac, Archie; Trainman,     Revelstoke.\nMacDonald,  John;  Bridgemnn, Kevelstoke.\nMacDonald,  John  Malcolm;     Bridge-\nman, Revelstoke. \t\nM acl )en r i.lid,    Garfield;      Bridgeman,\nRevelstoke.\nMauown, John;  Machinist, Glacier.\nMillar, George; Trapper, Camborne\nMiller, Henry, Teamster Revelstoke.\nMorriscy,    Joseph   W.;      IJridgsman,\nRevelstoke.\nMonteleone,   James;    Laborer,  Revelstoke.\nMcBeth,  Malcolm; Teamster,    Arrowhead.\nMcDonald, Alexander H.; Purser, Arrowhead.\nMcDonuld,  John;  Watchman, Glacier.\nMcDonald,   John C;   Bridgeman,    He>-\n1    velstoke.\nMcEuchcrn, Wm.  Joseph;  Bridgeman.\nRevelBtoke.\nMcGillivray,  Hugh    J.;     Bridgeman.\nRevelstoke\nMcintosh, Walter J.; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nMclBaac, Michael, Trainman,     Revelstoke.\nNicholls, Frank Albert: Clerk, Beaton\nNorth,  William;    Boilermaker,  Revel-\n1   stoke.\nOgilvie, William,     Ruilroadman,    R*-\nvelstoke.\nPaterson, James; Bridgeman,    RevelBtoke.\nPatterson,  Keltb;  Bookkeeper, Revelstoke.\nPatterson,  R.A.;  School teacher,  Revelstoke.\nPearson, Alfred J.; Photographer, Revelstoke.\nPlover,  George;     Bridgeman,   RevelBtoke.\nPooly, Thomas; Teamster, Revelstoke\nSanservino,  John;    Laborer,     Revelstoke.\nSaviuno, Emllinno,     Laborer, Revelstoke.\nScrutoen, Ralph G.; Journalist, Revelstoke.\nScruton, Jess;  Journalist, Revelstoke\nSmith. Robert T.: Machinist,    Revelstoke.\nSmythe  Duncomblc  R.,    Soda-waterman, Revelstoke.\nSneddon,  James;  Boilermaker, RevelBtoke.\nSteed, Hugh, Laborer, Revelstoke.\nTurnbull, Thomas;    Timekeeper,  Glacier.\nTurner, Francis B.; Bookkeeper, Comaplix.\nWebb, Albert; Engineer, Glacier.\nWestby, Nils N.J     Planerman, Revelstoke.\nWillis,  Edward V.;    Mail Clerk,    Arrowhead.\nYoung, William C; Caretaker, Revelstoke.\nVI\n\u2022\nI'ttOM THE  SANCTUMS\n-\n\u25a0,\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nTHE PASSING OF MR  OLIVER\n\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0   ol   Hon      Frank   I\nthe       ous   charges   brought\nagainst him Is pitiful, and the coun\ntry will  watch  with sorrow the down\nfall  'if a man      who,      whatever      his\nfaults,   had  up to  the   present      main\ntamed,   amid     difficult   eireuinstances,\n|a reputation for personal rectitude,\nMi.   Oliver  dlSmlSROS      the  question\nol  Mi\"  purchase  l,v the Grand    Trunk\nPacific   of   116,000   of   stock    In   his\nnewspapei,   the      HM mon ton   Bulletin,\nas a  matter of  private  business.      He\ndoes   not  explain   why  his  newspaper\n______ was  the only one  in  Canada in  which\nDECLINE SUBSTITUTES   the  railway    Company      thought      lt\nli'iW XV M.i.   OF   Kit VN1\ngram       \\   lorry\nHon,\nCrank - die  ch imp\n\u2022   corn\n\u25a0\nbis posi\n\u2022   ol  the :\u25a0 -\n\u25a0\nil     the\ni\nstill remained by bim    tnd it  Is   snfe\npublic 'Pt' , \u2022-\nned I.     the\nvast mi -\"\u25a0\u25a0 of     this\n.\u25a0I-e .','\u25a0'\u25a0  md of We id\nWANT.-:    ,'IIKU.   MAM  |-' \\( Tl  RK\nKamloops Inland Sentinel When o\nI. w hundred thousand dollars have\nbeen    pent  In    thoroughly deve'oping\nbnd   proving   the   leaving   natures      of\nthe mines In tins ares   viewed as   n\ncommercial  proposition  on an assur\ned   Imsis   foi   some   years    It   will       be\ntime to discuss the erection ol treatment   plants    Meanwhile  sueh   proSalO\nbusiness ns shell   manufacturing    is\nwithin our reach, and Would lie cap\nnhle of ensuring employment for\nQuite a number Ol men working at\nfull  pressure     for      possibly    several\nmSmu^.        \u25a0 \\     '^mmm\\nmkmm\u00bb\nCUPYHISHT UM1IRWOOD 4   LNUtK*OvP,  H.\nBELGIAN AND BRITISH CAVALRY IN THE TRENCHES WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 111*,\nTHE   MAIL-HERALD.REVELBTOKE\n.AUU THRU-\n-  in \u25a0 -1 i r\nSEE the Goods!\nHowson's\nThe   Furnishers\nDon't furnish your home by guesswork\u2014it is unsatisfactory and costs\nyou more. SEE the goods hefore yon\nbuy. A well harmonised home need\nnot be nt all expensive-if you buy\nat Howson's. Our immense stock\nami nml.y suggestions are at your\nservice whether you decide to buy or\nnot.\nGo After the Chicken Business!\nSPECIALS FOR YOUNG CHICKS.\nDr. Rush's Chick Food. Cracked Corn.\nWheat, Bran, and Shorts for sale at\nL.  G. MASSON'S   STORES\nWAR DECLARED!\nWar is declared\nTea and Coffee,\nfor specials.\non our stock of\nsee our  window\n$1 Buys 3 lbs.\nWhile thiB lot lasts, and as another advance is predicted in the\nnear future we would adv'ise putting by a few pounds.\nPhone 41\nHOBSON'S\nBox 734\nShamrock Hams\nand Bacon\n(CURED IN CALGARY)\nMade from selected hogs\u2014in the most modern plant in the\nWest- -Government inspected\u2014approved by careful housewives everywheie. SHAMROCK IS THE SEAL OF SUPERIORITY, and this applies equally to Lard, Butter, Eggs,\nSausage\u2014wherever it appears-\nP. BURNS & COMPANY, Limited\nImperial Bank of Canada\nCapital Paid in\nReserve Fund\n$7,000,000.00\ni 7,000,000.00\nPELEG HOWLAND. ESQ., KLIAS ROGERS, ESY.\nPresident Vice-President\nKDWARD HAY, General Manager.\nWILLIAM MOFFAT, Assistant General Manager.\nSavings Bank Department\nDeposits of $1 received and interest allowed from date of deposit\nArrowhead Branch Pc elstoke Branch\nA.U. McOLHNEGHAX. Manager.\nKING EDWARD HOTEL\nH.J.  MCSORLEY. PROP.\nREVELSTOKE, B. C.\nStrictly First-Class\nRooms\u2014Single, en Suite, and with Bath\nRevelstoke Wine and Spirit Co., Ltd.\nImporters and Wholesale Dealers.\nManufacturers of Aerated Waters\nWINES\nLIQUORS\nCIGARS\nAgents for Calgary Beer\nJack Laughton, Proprietor First Street, Revelstoke, B. C.\nWINDSOR HOTEL\nEUROPEAN  PLAN\n(IUOD ACCOMMODATION REASONABLE RATES\nCAKE IN CONNECTION\nf\\ 0 I C KI T A I      Suitably furnished with the\nv_-\/ 111 L_ I \\l    I ML   choicest the market affords.\nHOTEL\nJ. Albert Stone, Propretor\nBest Wines, Liquors and\nCigars. Rates $1 a day.\nMonthly rates.\nBREAD\nWhy are we selling more bread?\nThere muBt be a reason.\nLet Us Tell You Why\nJust compare a loaf of ours with\nany other amd we are absolutely\nsure you will use the best, then\nyou will know why.\nRBST BY TEST\nTELLS OF EXPERIENCES\nAT WILLOWS CAMP\nThe following letter written liy\nJohn Ferguson at the Willows Camp\nhas been received in the city.\nDear Dick,\u2014I have heen here almost six weeks now, and I am going\nto try and give you some idea   as to\nUreases his battalion, of over 1,1)00,\nthen on tlie sound of the bugle each\ncompuny commander gives orders to\nhis junior officers and the work commences. At this stage ol the game,\nwe     feel    ourselves     advancing  very\nhow the  Willows camp    is   laid out, rapidly   gott flu;;  the   extended    order\nand  how we are   being  prepared      for drill, company     and    battalion, etc.\nthe front. The Willows camp is situa- Route    marches     are     beginning, so\nted about three miles from town. The everybody thinks they ought     to   lie\nlirst thing     you    see     when comiug marching to Germany, but we realise\nthrough the gate is the sentry,    Whan the tusk which is set before us,     and\nyou have   passed      the   guard   house, have quite a bit of hard work ytt. We\nwhere  the  c.uarter-guard  is  Bituatcd, are dismissed Ior lunch, at 12     noon,\nwhich     is    composed of     six men,    a and at 12.SO, we again enter the mesB\nsergeant, corporal and bugler.     You room lor our meal.     At two o'clock\ninter a new  world,  yon 'leave behind tlie same ceremony    is gome through,\nyou the remembrance of hard   times, each company      parading  and  falling\nin, in battalion! formation, tlie afternoon is much tlie same us the forenoon, with a few variations, so au\nmil to make it tiresome for the men.\nAt 4,30 tlie various companies are\ndismissed for the day, und at\nwe  get our last,  meal   lor    the\np.m.\nday.\nand\nund\nand worries, and (ind yourself lu B\nlittle world ol bustling restless activity, no one here is idle, everywhere\nare men in their serviceable khaki\nshirts and rough trousers of the\nsame business like colour, very different men, from the swuggcr brass but-\nioned sojdierB, you can eee parading The meals are very substantial\nthe streets after duty. Those are sol- very good, everything the best\ndiers in their work-a-garb, it is not a plenty of it, so one has no kick corn-\nsmart dress, but it is serviceable and ing. At night, after payday the men\nsuited for the variety of jobs which enjoy a few hours down town. The\nfall to the 'lot of a soldier in the jitneys ure very handy, ai'l kinds of\ncourse of each 24 hours. Bach man uutos outside thc gate, in which you\nyou pass walks smartly as though can get to town for 5c. then take in\nbent on some important mission, a show, and unless you hnve lt pass\nSmartly dressed officers may be seen you must be in bed at 10.15. Lights\nhere and there just as keen on the out iB sounded, and every flight has\ndrill as the men. The men when not to be out, by 10.3O, and the sentry\non parade ure busy playing football halts every main at the gate after\nor improving their mind and limbs that hour, calling out with a loud\nIor the great object which every- voice, and at the same time bringing\nbody hus his mind on (crushing tier- his rille to thc loading position, and\nmany). Belore you get uear the par- goes through the customs of u scn-\nade grounds the sleeping quarters for try.\nthe men are     visablc on     your left.     This is our war song when on   the\nThere are five  very    large buildings, march.\nHurrah, Hurrah, Ior Berlin   on thc\nspree;\nHurrah, Hurrah,     we    will    have\nsausages Ior tea,\nWe're out, to catch the  KaiBer,  and\nbring him to his knees,\nAs we go marching to Germany.\nThis is sung to the tunc of  marching to fJeorgia.\nI am going to toe.school of instruc-\ntuin, for the N.C.O. 1 do not know\nhow 1 will  make out,  nut I  will     do\nthe interior is a sight which makes\none think of home and all its comforts, no ceremony of where you can\nlind a nice cosy corner. The buildings\nare laid out in lines, each platoon in\none line, then the beds are composej\nof a mattress filled with straw, a\nwaterproof sheet, and two blankets,\neach man has a shelf, three nails to\nkeep his kit. During the day the\nbeds, and kits are kept in the true\narmy style everything aB neat and\nclean as possible lt is surprising how my best to keep up the good name,\nclean each building looks, when you of the R.M.R, I am pleased to say,\nthink ol the fact that sevcrul hitnd- that the R.M.R. has turned out the\nred men, sleep in each building. When best men, Ior all the contingents, und\nyou leave the sleeping quarters or get a very good name here. There are\nbarrack rooms, and their wouderful a number of men here who huve had\nsystem of sleeping accommodation, years of experience in the army, and\nyou enter the race-track, now the 1 will have to go some to hold my\nparade grounds, the fifty acres ol stripes. I am going to meet B.M. Jim\ngreen, are dotted with groups of Quintan today. He is coming here\nsoldiers, there must be over 1,00a with B0 men, I think I have given yon\nmen at drill, all one can hear is tho all the news, 'live Mr. Grant. uud\ncontinuous shouts ol commanders Brock a read of this, and 1 hope to\ngiving orders to their respective plu- heat from you loon.\ntoons. This is where, tlie going to lm l remain yours truly,\nfamous ISth battalion are being ; JOHN FERGUSON\ntrained.     There are four    companys, ' ~\t\neach company trying to do better\nthan the other, the result being a\nvery high efficiency is gained, through\nout the whole battalion. I am connected with No. :2i Company, which is\npretty close for first place. The six\nA'eeks have made good soldiers out of\nu hunch of men, who never drilled in\ntheir lives belore. The defaulters are\nseverely dealt with, so by this means\ndiscipline is gained, which is tbe root\nof success. As time goes on  the drill\nThe ice 'is about gone oR Howser\nLake.\nJ. M. Harris, of .Sandon, is taking\nin the sights at the Sun Francisco\nfair.\nFree   Press:        Sherman   was  nght\nNow boooze has been  put on e cash\nhaBis in Fernie.\nJ. T. Kelly uud .1. Vi. M. Tinling,\nof  Silverton, hnve been    giv?n  powei\ngets severer, and the     men     improve lo try eases as a small debts court,\njust as rapidly. The reveille is sound- ]   Lo||ta th,.caM   \u201e,\u201e.,. \u201e m(,,, \u201e, ,,,\ncd at 6 a.m. and very shortly    every yeur\u201e M hoa\u201e ()f ^  Kumlm,1)() tr\u201e,e\nman is outlined, washed and dress- ,.\u201e  M,llM,liy>  April  ,,       WHB ,,\u201e,\u201e\u201e,\u201e,,\ncd, his blankets !olded, bed rolled up, ,     ,,,\u201e fat|,pr nf \u201e\u201e, ,,,,\u201e (il(, (|[\nund his little corner    neat und swept ,ik.lltv.H(.vl,M      H(, \u201e\u201e,,  , \u201e \u201e,\u201e\u201e,\nup. than at 6.30 every man is out, d- fr\u201em  ,m  aUli(.k  Q.     m.n||, ,\u201e.,\u201e\u201e.,,.,\u201e\u201e\ning  physical  drill,  which  is   running (lir \u201e,,\u201e,\u201e fl\ni ound the rucc-track  and ull kiudB of\nexercises, which gives you a very ,;o,d with thc  fcdUni\nBppetite for  breakfast,  then the rook\nour oi  live days. J.ouis whs\nrecognized ^fl one ol the ablest chiefs\nm the Interior.  He was    a     uuiti    ol\nkeen inteftlganm, very diplomatic   in\nuii business connected witb Um lata\ncKtH  of his   people  and he      will      be\nniich missed by them.\nCreston Review:\nhouse call goes at S p.m. tbc men\nfall in, ami are marched over to the\ncook house, where are the orderlies,\nwho arc detailed to serve the ineul\nhy their section commanders. Here a\ngreat system ie undertaken,  in    'n:t\nthe greatest of all. Thc drawing ofl OtWjton ttovlewl Rev. W.C. Blake\nrations for the men. This building i* *ml family left on Wednoeduy for\nquite a curiosity to many ,'isitors, Nakusp, B. (.'., where he will |u.\nevery visitor being curious to know stationed for at leaet the aummer\na* to how so many men arc fed. But. months. Mr. Blake haa bean in char go\nagain the British army has to thank \u00b0' the Creston l'rcebyterian church\nthe many men of brains who havc Bince 13i2 \"n<l The Review ie understudied thia thing out. After break- stating the sltuution in pointing out\nfast thc men havc a little time to thut he hus been thc most successful\nprepare for thc next drill, then every pastor thc town hus known. Either\nman looks to his kit, gets his boots in the work ol the, ministry or in the\ncleaned, his shell looking neat, his discharge ol his duties ue a eltlitn.\ntitle, belt, etc. cleaned up, shaved Mr Blakc was in all truth thl right\nand ready to be inspected by hi* man \"' the right place. He had to an\ncommander. Then at 0 a.m. every exceptional degree thc happy faculty\nman is out again with his :rifle and >n a\" his public utternucesto say all\nfide arms, after the inspection nil thc that the mutter merited briefly and\ncompanies parade together on the to sny it right. He was active in the\njarade ground. The sight Is very Knights of Pythias and the Masonic\npretty to look on, the whole 4\u00abth order, und in every move lor the\nbattalion standing steady as n rock, making of Creston a better place to\nwhile various regulations arc gone live In.,He was in nil respect a good\nthrough, the reporting of eoction \"C01|t both for thr Master and as the\ncommanders, who have charge ol a world interprets that appellation,\nsection of IJ men, right through to The people \"I Creston without et-\nthr commanding officer, each N.C.O. <*Ptlon will wish he, Mrs. llbike,\nand officer according to rank banding .Bandy and the little Blake a full\nhis roll call, etc., to his lupcrior. measure of health, bapplnreB md\nThle being done the commander   ad- proip\u00bbrltjr.\nWATER ACT, 11)14.\nBefore the  Board  of Investigation.\nIn   thc   Matter   of   Streams   How ing\nfrom  the  West  and    draining    into\nUpper Arrow  Lake and  the Columbia  River    between     a    point live\nmiles south-west  of Arrowhead  and\na  point  three miles southwest     of\nBurton;\nAnd in the   Matter   of   Streams Mowing from the Hast and draining into Upper Arrow Lake and the   Columbia River between the Southern\nlino of Lot1 2110 Galena Bay and   a\npoint five mileB south of Burton;\nA  meeting of the Board of Investigation  will  be  held      at    the  Courthouse at Nakusp on 'the .'(let  day   of\nMay,   I'.ll.\",, at one o'clock in thc   afternoon.\nln the Mattel of Streams flowing\ninto Kootenay Lake 'from thc North\nand West, north of a point three\nmiles north of Queen's Buy and of\nall Streams flowing into Kootenay\nLake from the East, north ol Pilot\nBay including streams in the Lardeau and Trout Lake Mining Divisions:\nA meeting of the said Board will be\nheld at Kaslo on the 14th day ol\nJune, at nine o'clock in the forenoon.\nAt these meetings all statements ol\nclaim to water privileges under Acts\npassed before thc l'2th day of Murch,\n1909, on tbc respective streams, ull\nobjections thereto, and the plans\nprepared for thc use of the Board\nwill then he open Ior inspection.\nAll persons interested are entitled\nto examine these, aud to lilc objections thereto iu writing if they deem\nfit.\nAt these meetings claimants who\nhave not previously done Bo ihall\nprove their title to the lands to\nwhich their water records ure appurtenant. This may bc done hy producing, in case ol Crown granted\nlands, the title deeds or a certificate\nol cucumbrnnce or other evidence ol\ntitle; or in case ol lands not held\nunder Crowu grant, by producing the\npre-emption record, the agreement of\nsale, thc mining record, or other\nwritten evidence of title.\nObjections will be heard forthwith\nif the purty objected to hus received\nsufficient  notice of the objection.\nThe Board at the said meetings will\ndetermine the quantity ol watc-\nwhich may bc used under each record, the further works which ure\nneceesary for such use, and will set\ndates for the tiling of planB of such\nworks and for the commencement nnd\ncompletion ol Buch works.\nAnd whereas there may he persons\nwho,  before the  llth day   ol   March,\nmi\".i,   were  entitled  to   water   rights\nii tho suid streams and yet lnuve not\nBleed .statements of their,claims with\nthe Board of Investigation, euch persons arc required to file on or hefore\nthe 20th duy of May. 1916, a statement as required by eection 294 ol\nthe \"Water Act, 1*14,\" Forms (No.\n.V for irrigation, and No. .\">l Ior\nother purposes) muy be obtained\nIrom any Government Agent in the\nProvince.\nDated at Victoria II. ('., the 14th\ndny ol April, 1915.\nFor the  Hoard  ol  Investigation,\nJ. F. ARMSTRONG\n\u2022r't-My.-19 Chairmnn.\nnuy District, by reason of a notice\npublished in the B. C. Guzette on the\n27th of December, 1907, 'is cancelled,\nund that the said Lot will he open\nto entry by pre-emption on Tuesday,\nthe loth day of June, at the hour ot\nnine o'clock in the forenoon. All applications must he made at the office\nof the Government Agent, at Revel-\nstake, B, c.\nR.  A.  RBNWICK\nDeputy Minister of Lands.\nLands Department,   Victoria, B.C.\n13th  April,  1915. J15\nSYNOPSIS   OF COAL MINING\nREGULATIONS.\nCoal mining rights or the Dominion\nln Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al-\nterta, the Yukon Territory, the\nNorth-west Territories and In a portion of, the Province of British Columbia, may be issued for a term ol\ntwenty-one years at an annual rent-\nal of $1 an acre. Not more than\n2,500 acres will be leased to one applicant.\nApplication for lease must be made\nhy the applicant in person to the\nAgent or Sub-Agent of the dietrict\nin which the rights applied for are\nsituated.\nThe lease will include the coal mining rights only, but the lessee may\nbe permitted to purchase whatever\navailable surface rights may be considered necessary for the working of\nthe mine at the rate of 110.00 an\nacre.\nIn surveyed territory the land must\nte described by sectione, or legal\nsub-divieions of sections, and ln unsurveyed territory the tract applied\nfor shall be Btaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied by a fee of $5 which will be refunded if the rights applied for are\nnot available, but not otberwiee. A\nroyalty Bhall be paid on the merchantable output of the mine at the\n| late of rive cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nI lurniah the Agent with sworn returne\nj accounting for the full quantity ol\n; merchantable coal mined and pay tbe\n! loyalty thereon If the coal mining\nj righte are not being operated, euch\nI leturns should be furnished at least\nonce a year.\nFor   full    information    application\n| should be made to the   Secretary o!\ni the Department  of the   Interior, Ot-\nj tawa, or to the Agent or Sub-Agent\nof Dominion  Lande.\nW. W. OORY.\nKevelstoke Uxlge\nNo. 1085\nLOYAL ORDER\nOF MOOSE\nMeets every second\nunci Fourth Tuesday\nin   lhe Selkirk Hall.\nVisiting Brethren are cordially invited.      Ur. McLRAN, Die.\nII. I.. HAUG,Sea\nH.\nW.\nEDWARDS\nTaxidermist.\nBear Rugi\nMounted. Pure cleaned\nand\nDressed.\n85\nSecond\nSt.\n, Revelstoke,\nB.\nC.\n'hinders will be received by the unci signed up till nnd  including Thursday,  the  NU  Mnyne^t,  lor thc pur\nbase  of   the following   mincr.il chums\nwhich mete [orf<stted to the crown ut\nthe tn>   sale  held at     Uevlstuke      on\nthe   Ird   November,   1913,  namely:\n\"Corbin and Kenned) No. 2,\" Mineral Claim, Lot 20\", Kootenay Dis\ntrict\n\"Crystal\" Mineral Claim, Lot 103,\nKootenay District.\n\"Happy Find\" Mineral Claim, Lot\n20C,  Kootonuy District.\nAny tender Ior u less amount than\n$\u26665.00 for any one claim will not bc\nconsidered.\nTenders mull it scaled, and plainly indorsed on the outside.  \"Tenders\nfor Reverted Mineral Claims.\"\nROBT.  GORDON,\nAssistant Commissioner of Lands\nCourt    House,     Revelstoke,    B.   ('.,\nApril  l.ritb, 1915. My-lo.*\nCOLD RANGE LODGE, No. t%\nKNIGHTS   OF  PYTHIAS\nMeets  every    Wednesday evening\nat    8 o'clock,    lo Selkirk Hall.\nVisiting    brothers    cordially  invited.\nR. GORDON, 0. O.\nSELKIRK LODGE No. U\nI. O. O. F.\nMeets every Thursday evening ln\nSelkirk  Hall  at  8 o'clock. Visiting bretheru cordially Invited.\nR. MILLER, N. Q.\nJAMES MATHIE. Secretary.\nKOOTENAY  LODGE, No.  lb.\nA. F. and A. M.\nRegular Meetings are held ln\nNew Masonic Hall on tbe Fourth\nMonday lo each month at 8 p.m.\nVisiting brethren are cordially\nweleome.\nJOHN  LEE,   W.  M\nROBT.  GORDON, Secretary\niiiiiiiieigiiiii\nNOTICK  OV  CANCELLATION  OF\nRESERVE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that    thc\nreiene existing on Lot 7326, Koote-\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\nP\n-\n\u25a0\nAll cbangea of advertise\nments must positive';- be\nhanded into tbie office by\nMonday evening ln order that\nthe change shall appear ln\nWedneeday's Issue, and any\nchangee Intended (or Saturday's Issue must be banded ln\nnot later than Thursday\nevening of each week.\n1\nH\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nIS11S1!1!1I1|||| PAGB FOUR\nTHE MAIL-HERALD   REVELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1915.\nGOOD POLICY\nIt's good policy I o think ofthe future\nIt's still better policy to provide agalnsl\nthe misfortunes il may have in si ore\nfor you. The surest way of protecting\nyourself and family is a\nLIFE INSURANCE POLICY\nwith  a   reliable  company.    The   high\nlinancial Btanding and long business\ncareer of lhe Kootenay Agenoief\nmakes   ii    absolutely   trustworthy,\nYour time mav !\u00bb' near III hand\nDon't delay.   Take oul n policy now.\nKOOTENAY AGENCIES, Ltd.\nA. E, Kincaid. Mauarer.\nI [ome-made Marmalade,\nPer jar 25c\nWo specially recommend\nthis line\n(Hutu Olives,\nper boule 15c\nHulk Pearline, same;\nquality, and ve give 3\nlbs. for 25c\nLet us have your order for\nGarden  and   Lawn  Seeds\nMclntyrc's Grocery\nLuml)\nermen\nIt will pay you to make\na call at\nF. B. WELLS\nFur Buyer and Exporter\nOl.n Town        ReVKLBTOKK, B.O.\nb<siore buying your outfit\nof working clothes for the\nhush. I make a specially\nof \"Logging Shoes, Pants,\nSiix, Shii t~. Blankets, nnd\neverything 11 quired in yonr\nbusiness,\nH. V. rJ7V10RGAN\nACCOUNTANT and AUDITOR\nlLaii' wiih the Kevelstoke\nGeneral Agencies,\nBookkeeping. Typewriting and\nall kinds ief Clerical Woi I*\nA   . .ni - Collected\nPrompt Returns\nKin-, Life and   Vccident insurance placed with sound and\nireliable companies\nOffice :   McKenzie Avenui\nNV\\i to Com. Telegraph \u00abIfflt e)\nPhone203      P. 0. Box :i!7\nE. G. Burridge & Son\nPlumbers and Tinsmiths\n\\\\ \u2022 -p. 1 lalize in\nMetalhcCellinge, Corrugated Rcot-\nIng, Furnace Work and up-\nto-date Plumbing\nWork\nWmk Bbi i'   < onnaugbl\nREVELSTOKE      \u2022 Id\nCITY TRANSFER CO.\nBaggage 11 ansfei red\nDistributing Agents and Htomge\nGENERAL DRAYING\nFurniture snd  Piano-moving a\nBpeclalll y\nPhone 16\u2014276,   Night Phone 84e\n-U ITZER HI 08,\n'.  il. 01 KTIS\nIt is not a mark of breeding\nto write visiting cards ....\nLet the c^Vlail-Herald\nput you right. The\nprice will not wreck\nyour exchequer. We\nprint in the best style\nWOMEN  OF  NIGERIA.\nTheir Lips Are Plugged With Wooden\nDisks So They Can't Eat Dog.\nTlio women of northern Nigeria are\nnot prepossessing unci in their scanty\nattire, with tails of grass hanging from\nttieir girdles, are sometimes really grotesque.\nTo udd further to their beauty both\nthe upper nnd lower lips of these women nre pierced in order to admit a flat;\nround disk of wood called the lichiak,\nwhich Is usually about the size of a\nhulf dollar. The lips of the little girls\nare pierced when they are seven or\neight years of uge, and a piece of\nwood inserted and worn for a time until a larger one takes its place, Uie\nopening thus being gradually enlarged\nuntil u full sized tlehiak can be carried\nwithout discomfort The object of this\nsingularly discomforting adornment ls\nto prevent the women from eating\ndogs, which nre considered the greatest\ndelicacy by tho men of the tribes.\nBoth sexes decorate their bodies with\nregular designs. The chests and backs\nof the little girls aro scarified at a\nvery early nge. When they arrive at\nmarriageable uge the girls undergo a\nfurther ordeal, for two sets of parallel\nlines aro cut both on tbe chest and the\nback, and as soon as possible after\nmarriage the head Hues are made.\nThese consist of a number of short cuts\nacross the forehead, extending from ear\nto ear, nnd thirteen long, slanting lines\nare cut on each cheek from ear to chin.\nAT THE UK NT.\nCOACHES AND AUTOCARS.\nHow the Twentieth Century Is Linked\nWith the Eighteenth.\nThe nineteenth century bas seen the\npassing of the democracy of travel\nWith the twentieth has come a return\nto thc aristocratic methods of the\neighteenth century, when a gentleman,\nlf be wished to tour tlie continent, did\nso in tils own much. Friends in the\ncountry inviting a lady of quality to\nvisit them wroto asking where horses\nshould meet her. She naturally came\nIn her own carriage. When Miss Edge-\nworth's heroine Helen wished to pay\nher debts her principal asset was her\ntraveling chaise.\nln tho youth of our own grandfathers tlie truly great, enshrined ln au\naristocratic vehicle, refused to descend\nfrom lt even when on shipboard. The\nopera singer Grlsl crossed the channel\nln her own conch, while ber dutiful\nhusband stood on deck at the coach\nwindow holding the harmless necessary basin. The individual vehicle was\na hall mark of distinction.\nThere has been un intewal when people were content to herd together In\nrailway trains, but lt has already passed away. We have returned to the\nprivate, the special, the personal; ln a\nword, we have gone back to the eight>\n\u25a0tenth century. Now, as then, a genUe-\nman travels In his own conveyance.\u2014\nAtlantic Monthly.\nCowboys.\nA cowboy, to our modern minds,\nmeans a man who herds cattle. Vet\nthe original \"cowboys,\" instead of\nherding cattle, stole them. The name\nseems first to have been applied to a\nband of horsemen, part soldiers and\npart bandits, who fought on tie British side during the Revolution. Westchester county, N. Y., was the scene of\ntheir operations, and the most of them\nwere Tories. Because they drove away\nmany cuttle on ethelr raids they were\ncalled cowboys. Opposed to the cowboys In tbeir raids througb the section\nof New Vork which lay between the\nBritish and American  lines  were  the\nBritain Has a Host of Notables Serving With the Colors.\nMore than 100 members of the\nBritish House of ('ominous have gone\nto the front cr have volunteered.\nMany relatives of members of the\nGovernment have also joined the\ncolors. The children of some of the\nMinisters are too young for service;\nother Ministers are not married oi\nhave few relatives.\nThe Prime Minister has a nephew\non a battleship, Lord Crowe a son-in-\nlaw, Mr. Lloyd George's second son il\nin the Territorials, Mr. Churchill's\nbrother has joined. Major Guest, one\nof the Whips, has joined his regiment; Mr, Masterman's brother, Captain Musterman, who was in the\nSouth African war, was wounded ln\nthe Balkan war, and has trained enthusiastic hands of Boy Scouts, lint\nvolunteered for the front. Mr, Mas-\nteriuan has a nephew in the service;\nSir Kdward Grey has also a nephew,\nand Mr. McKinnon Wood a son undei\nthe Hag. A son of Dr. Macnamara,\nFinancial Secretary to the Admiralty\n\u2014himself a soldier's son\u2014has applied to be enrolled.\nThese mimes do not hy any means\nexhaust the list of relatives of the\nmembers of the Government who\nhave joined Ihe forces or volunteered.\nColonel Seely, a former Ministei\nof War, lias joined the Expeditionary Force, and the only son of another ex-Minister (Lord Heading)\nthe Hon. Gerald Isaacs, is with the\nInns of Court Officers' Training\nCorps. Lord Heading's brother, Mr,\nGodfrey Isaacs, has two sons; the\nyounger, who is 18, Is with the Honorable Artillery Company, and haE\nvolunteered for the front. He is an\nexpert swordsman, and had a successful encounter with a German\nstudent    last    year.\nA Temperance Admiral.\nThere is no stronger advocate of\ntemperance than Admiral Sir George\nOallaghan, second in command of the\nBritish fleet. He has stated that it\nhas been proved that shooting carried\nout before grog had been issued was\nSO per cent, better than that done\nafter. \"Therefore,\" he added, \"captains always found some excuse for\ntaking their ships to sea a full day\nbefore carrying out one of the annual\ntests, while Ihey also took rare to\nhold on to the grog issue until the\nevening.\"\nTo the public the name of Admiral\nOallaghan is not very familiar, but\nin the service be is known as one of\nthe lini st seamen we have possessed\nsince the days of Nelson.\nHe entered the navy at the age of\nthirteen, became a lieutenant when\nhe was twenty-three, and a commander at hirty-five. He greatly distinguished himself as commander of the\nNaval Brigade of the Allied Forces\nduring the Boxer Rising of 1900,\nand succeeded to the chief command\nof the fleet on the retirement of Sir\nFrance Bridgeman not long ago. He\nhas now retired In favor of Admiral\nSir John Jellicoe.\nGoose and Naval Victories.\nThe goose has associations witb\none of the most Important of British\nnaval victories, for Queen Elizabeth\nis said to have been eating her\nMichaelmas goose when she heard of\nthe defeat of the Spanish Armada.\nLong before Elizabeth's time this\nbird was the recognized Michaelmas\nilirh. In the lease of a Herefordshire\nfarm granted in 1471 the tenant un-\ndertakes to furnish \"one goose fit\nfor the dinner of the Lord of the\nManor on the feast of St. Michael.\"\nEven when living in Venice Byron\nused to hunker after goose at\nImas. Countess Guiccioli relates that one year he bought a\nIn August so as to be well pre-\npared for the feast. \"He fed it every\ndaj   fur a month previously, and tie\nskinners, a somewhat similar band of\nmarauders,   who  espouse!   the  contl-    *\u00bb\u00bb \"* ' '^^t;!\"1\"^1,\nr ly attached that when September 29\nnental cause\u2014American Boy.\nParental Severity.\nThe children of two centuries ago\nfell on stern times, lf one may believe\nthat the spirit of family life was ac-\n\u25a0curately express^ by an excellent\n(toother of that day who said, without\nhumorous intent tbat hw children\n\"loved her as sinners 'iread death.\"\nThere ls little doubt that parental \"control at that date was ss rigorous ss\nthis anecdote Indicates. It Is said that\nwhen little Andrew Elliot, afterward\nlieutenant governor of New York, objected to b'.ileil mntton bis father, Sir\nOUbtrt Elliot, frowned.\n\"Let Mr Andrew hnve boiled mut-\n'jon   tot   breakfast,\"   commanded   tbe\narrived    he   could    not   kill   lt. He\nbought    another,   and   had    the pet\n<wung   in   a   cage   tinder his\ncarriage when he  traveled.\"\nTaken For a Woman.\nWill Crooks, the British Labor\nMl', lauehed heartily recently when\ntold bow Mr Eugene Wason. one of\n\u25a0 members < f the Uritish\nHouse of Commons,, when traveling\nfrom Austria, where he was on holiday when war was declared, was\nBtopped by Germans and suspected\nof liMng a woman spy In disguise.\nThai \u25a0 in- funniest thing I've heard\nfor a long time,\" he said. \"Wason\n\u2022 r, .-' have been knitting again.\"\nthe referem a being to the favorite Indoor   putlixn   of   the   tnembei   f',r\nitem parent, \"cold mutton for dinner   Clackmannan, who has actual!)\nknown   to   bring   wool   and   kniuing\ntnd cold mutton for snpper till be h\u00ab\u00ab\nlearned to like It\"\nHit Company.\nMark Twain, meeting Charles Onth-\nrle, a prominent British lawyer, ln\nVienna asked him lf he smoked.\n\"Sometimes when I am In bnd company,\" wns the reply.\nAfter a pause cmne a second question. \"You're a lawyer, aren't you.\nMr. Guthrier\n\"I am. Mr. Clemens.\"\n\"Ah, then, Mr. fJuthrie, yon must be\na very heavy smokerf\nneedle i <\u25a0 to while away\nthe time  when  he got bored with a\ndebate.\nFishbone In tha Throat\nTo remove a flshlx>ne from the\n.throat swallow a raw egg and follow,\nIf possible, by entlng plenty nt rnnsh-\ned potatoes. The e^g \u25a0<\u25a0 111 carry the\nbone Into the stomach, and the pota-\ntcxes will prevent lt from doing any Injury there.\nSkeptical.\nT have dyspepirfa, bat you never\nheard me growl about It\"\n\"Never growl about It? Well, then,\nyon haven't got It\"\u2014Phrndelphla Bulletin. \t\nPilling tht Autoorat\nWhy  should  wives complain  when\nbuflbnnds rend the more lng paper at\ntbe breakfast table since reading mak-\n\u2666th a full man,)-Uttle Rock Qu*U%\nA   Remarkable Hervlce.\nA   rtmakable  Bervlce  was  held   in\nHereford Cathedral recently in ceie-\n',railnn   of   the   eightieth   blrthd.iy   Of\nthe   Itlsl op  of   Hereford.\nTre\" \u2022\u25a0\u2022 rvlci  was led by 'h\" H-      I\nIninrombe   aged eighty five,  tl\n\u25a0..     i ead   by   Canon   ' open\naged Bight] \u25a0: ree   I hr- \u00bberon'i\n\u25a0 -iCd   eighty fo\nthe Kpis'le by Prsbendary Lambert,\naged eighty-two;  and ihe Qoipel  \u2022,.\/\nPrebendary   Wanbury,   aged   eighiy-\nflve     Their combined  hick  to\n11 'i years\nAmon;' the congregation we.\nRather, uge,i  nln''-. two    Mrs   'ell.\naged     \u2022 et     Mr-   Littledale\nSmith ilx;   and   Mn\nHanl.'iry. ri^<-'l SlghtyfOUf\nFREE TRIPS TO\nPANAMA\nScottish  Reetlcence,\nA story Illustrating tha cetloen \u25a0 of\nthe Scotch regarding their private .<r-\nfairs waa once told hv inn Maclari n\nA train was ;it ,a railroad station,\nwhen a porter put his head Into a\ncar and called out: \"Anyone In this\ncar Tor Doun? Change for Doun?\nAnyone for lioun?\" No one moved,\nand In n few minutes the train was\nspeeding along, not to stop again for\nnearly nn hour. Then an old Sroleh\nwoman turned lo a lady sitting near\nher and said: \"I'm for Doun, but I'd\nbo it.li '.Ut ma \u00bb\u00bb.\"\nHow to Get a Free Trip\nAny lady over 16 years (married or single)\nwho secures 100 yearly subscriptions for\nThe Mail-Herald will be given a return\nticket to San Francisco, absolutely free\nby The Mail-Herald.\nSome Superior Points of This Offer\n1. This is NOT a competition.\n2. There are no votes, so that you cannot be crowded out the last few days by some contestant who has\nbeen holding back votes- You know every day where\nyou stand.\n3. No undue publicity, as we do not publish the\nnames of those entering.\n4. If for any unforseen reason you are unable to\ntake the trip The Mail-Herald will pay you $50.00 in\ncash for 100 subscriptions or $25.00 for 50 subscriptions.\nYou cannot lose.\n5. The number of persons that may go is unlimited.\nEvery person getting the required number of subscriptions will be given a ticket.\n6. You may go any time during the Exposition that\nyou desire.   We will arrange the dates to suit you.\n7. We do not confine you to any special district'\nSubscriptions secured in either city or country count.\nPayment on subscriptions already owing will count\nthe same as new subscriptions.\nHow to Enrol for\nSUBSCRIPTION\n=RATES=\nFree Trip\n12 Months   .   .   $2.50\n6 Months   .   .   $1.25\n( .ill or send your name to the Mail-\nHerald office and  we will supply you\nAll Subscriptions Count\nIt ia not necessary to secure\nnil  yearly subscriptions; six\nmonths, twelve month*, and\nwith receipt books nnd full instructions.\nI in ii today,    The earlier you start the\nsooner you can ;><) to the Exposition.\ntwo years will ootintaa below i\n2 e.menth subscriptions; valus\n1 yaarly subscription\n1 12 month subscription; value\n1 yaarly subscription\n1 1-yaar subscription; value\n2 yaarly subscriptions\nFor Further Particulars Address\nCirculation Manager, Mail-Herald, Revelstoke,B.C. WEDNESDAY,  APRIL 21, 1915.\nTHE   MAIL-HERALD, REVELSTOKE\nncnnr*\nBOOKINGS SHOW\nGOOD PROSPECT\nTide of Travel Started Coast-\nward\u2014Many Tourists Win\nVisit Kevelstoke\nour i t y and its surroundings through\nom ' ic lurge centres ol population in\neastern Canada und the United States\n\u25a0Some work along this line has already been commenced by our industrial commissioner and the board of\ntrade, but it is hoped that the wort\nwill be further extondeed, for the reason that this is an opportunity that\nwill not rresent itself again for som;.\nyears to come.\nAN INGENIOUS COOLIE.\nAlthough the regular tourist sua-\n--son.has not yet commenced in earnest, the tide of tratiic wuku ih expected to assume large proportions\nthis summer has alreudy set towards\nthe coast. The outlook in the opinion\n\u2022of H. W. Brodie, general passenger\nagent for the Canadian Pacilic ruil-\nway, lookB most promising. The\n\u25a0traffic otticiul gives some interesting\nparticulars ol the business already\nbooked in the following statement\nprepared for publication;\n\"Pet a period extending over a\nyear ull the forces of the company\nliave been busily engaged in wonting\nup traffic to and from the Pi.numa-\nPacific exposition, with the object oi\nbringing, as many passengers aB possible through the coast cities ot Canada, aud inducing as many people as\npossible to step at the vurious resorts along the line of the railway.\nThe traffic is a'.ready moving and for\nthe past three v;ee...s we have noticed\n\u2022 a steadily increasing movement of\nJjusin ss via our steamships and\ntrains to and through Vancouver. The\nmovement is also fceingi felt at our\nvarious hotels.\n\"Without going into\"any detailed\nparticulars, I might mention that up\n\u2022 to the present time we have contracted for no lewer than eighteen\nspecial trains from Vancouver east,\nand nine special trains west. In addition arrangements have been made\nlor some 30 odd special parties, occupying one, two or three     cars     in\n\u2022 each direction. These people will be\nmoving on regular trains, and the\nbutinesa indications point to a further large increase of special trains\nand special car parties.\n\"Among the special car parties may\nbe noted: Thc governor of New Jersey\nand party of friends; the American\nLibrary association; the Colonial\nFamily Parties from New Englafld; a\nr.umber of Gillespie and Kings, ort\ntours from the KuBtern States; the\nNational Association of Stationers\n-and Manufacturers, and the National\nTuberculosis association.\n\"Among tlie special trains which\nwill move over the road may be recorded: The Retail Grocers' association of Ohio; the National Klectric\nLight association; the American Medical association; a, number ot Shriners' trains to and from Seattle; The\nKnights of Columbus; the National\nEducational association;! the National\nfrontal association, and the National\nLife Underwriters. One special train\ntrom Hamilton will bc operated by\n\"the Frost Wire Pence Company for\ntheir employees. There is allso the\nAmerican Bankers' special from New\nYork with 150 persons nnd Chas. M.\nSchwab, the steel magnate, who is\ntravelling to the coast In a special\ntrain.\n\"In addition to all the special business there will be a large and ever\nincreasing travel by individuals, and\narrangements are being made for the\nallottment of special space in our\nsleeping cars to our San Franeisco\noffice, and later on in the season we\nwill allocate special sleeping cars\nwhere the entire space will he reserved for use in our San Francisco office\nto take care of the travelers.\n\"The outlook for the summer is encouraging. It is to be hoped that\nsuitable provision will be made her\"\nto supply full information to these\ntourists passing through our city, so\ntbat Vancouver and the surrounding\ncountry may receive the full benefit of\nhaving so many strangers visit this\nsection of the country who have not\nbeen here before, and who will be in a\nposition to spread  information  about\nTrout Lake Mining\nDistrict Looks Promising\nCapt. J.C. Gore, superintendent of\nthe Canadian Pacific lake and rive.'\nsteamer service, has returned to Nelson Irom an extended official trip into Trout lake and Ferguson district.\nThe mining properties there look\nmore promising than e\\er and some\nnew properties are talked ol. Larger\nshipments are hoped tor from the\nmines now working in that district.\nIt ib anticipated thnt the Canadian\nPacific will inaugurate a new service\non Trout, lake this summer should\nconditions justify.\nCapt. Gore visited Comaplix, the\nscene of the recent disastrous fire.\nScarcely a building remains and the\nfew sctt'.ers lc.'t are livinT in Improvised iiuarters.\nWoman Soldier Twice Shot.\nEsther Manuel, a Jewess and mother of two children, decided to find\nher husband, who was in the Prus-\nslan army fighting France. Under\nthe name of Louis Grafamus she\njoined the Second Koenlgsberg uh.\nlans. Twice wounded, she rose to the\nrank of a sergeant-major and was\nrewarded by the German field marshal with the iron cross.\nIt was only discovered that the\nbrave sergeant-major was of the fe\u00bb-\nmale sex when she found her husband under the walls of Paris, just\nkilled by French bullets.\nAn Armed Cr*b.\n\"This crab,\" said the keeper of the\naquarium, \"goes armed in his native\nstate. In his claws, which are too\nweak to fight with, he always carries sea anemones.\n\"The crab ls of the genus Mella.\nHe lives among beds of coral in\ntropical seas. The anemones he carries\u2014one in each claw, like a noses-\ngay\u2014are stinging, poisonous ones.\n\"They are his defence against\nenemies, and when I see a soldier\ncarrying a gun I think to myself that\nthere Ib a little pink crab in the sea\nthat is quite as wise as any soldier.\"\nJust as a Compliment.\nCount Baldlssare Castlgllone WTote\nof manners In sixteenth century\nItaly: \"Discourse of love Is used by\nevery gentleman, * * * not only\nwhen impelled by ardor, but also\nmerely to do honor to the lady with\nwhom he speaks. The pretense of\nloving her is, at .ny rate, a testimony to her worthiness to be loved.\nShe. on her part, will for a time seem 1\nlo fail to understand and anon will\ntake it all as a merry jest.\"\nHis Mean Trick.\nWhite\u2014What's the trouble be- 't\ntween you and Green?\nBrown\u2014(ib. there's no trouble,\nonly li\" refuses to speak to me.\nClaims I did hi:-i a mean trick about\na year ego.\nWhite- How's that?\nBrown\u2014We were both courting\nlhe Barae girl, and i withdrew from\nthe race an 1 let  him marry bor.\nHew He Helped the Doctor* During a\nCholera Epidemio.\nIn a life and death battle with a\ncholera epidemic ln Hunan province,\nChina, ln which an American medical\nmissionary was tbe leading figure, on*\nof the most serious dlfllculUeea was met\nsuccessfully by one of the menial hospital coolies.\nSince every patient had to have from\none pint to several quarts of distilM\nwater with salt tn It, the water could\nnot be distilled fast enough. For two\ndays the staff struggled along with\nmakeshifts while thinking up a plan to\nbuild a still for little money without\nthe loss of time. This coolie solved\nthe problem. In one day and at a cost\nof less than $2 be built a still which\nlater produced twenty gallons of die-\ntilled water every twenty-four hours.\nThe still was simplicity itself. For\ncooking food the Chinese use large,\nflat saucer-like pans made of Iron.\nWith one of these above and another\nbelow the coolie mode a drum of galvanized Iron with a bole In tlie side for\na trough. Into the lower pan bot water for boiling was poured. Underneath, a hot fire sent up a constant\nsteam vapor. Tbe upper kettle waa\nkept cool by frequent chunkings of coll\nwater. The vapor from the lower kettle, condensed on tbe lower surface of\nthe cool upper kettle, dripped off into\nthe trough, and filled bottle after bottle with distilled water.\u2014World's Work.\nTHE WHITE FARM.\nIt Deservid Ite Name, and It Cheaply\nAdvertised Itself.\nDuring a vacation spent in the north\nwe were driven through a most pro* j\nperous  country,  lined   with   beautiful\nfarmhouses.\nAmong others we passed a whit*\nfarm. The bouse was white, the burns I\nwere white, the fences were white, i\nMilk white cowb were grazing lu th*\nfields, and snow white chickens were\nrunning upon the lawn. A huge whit*\ndog lay upon the grass, and a whit*\nhorse, with a white harn<ess and whit*\ncarriage, was hitched to a white post\nby a white strap. The white graveled\ndrive was bordered with white rock's.\nA white fountain threw up a white\nspray, while white duckn floated upon\nthe water beneath.\nJust aa we drove by a lady dressed\nln pure white, witb white shoes, stepped out of the door and seated herself\nln a white hammock.\nThe whole effect was most striking\nand was an excellent example of advertisement without expense. Tbe cost\nwould bave been the same lf no attention had been paid to one .color. Tbere\nwas no need of giving a name to that\nfarm. It Is known as tbe White farm\nfor miles around and ls one of th*\nshow places of the disetrict\nThe same Idea, of course, could b*\ncarried ont with other shades.\u2014Progressive Farmer.\nA Cimpromise.\nHe (bitterly)\u2014-Talking about extravagance just give a woman rope\nenough \u2014 |\nShe (blithely)\u2014Well, if you're going to eivo ine one let it lie a rope\nof pearls and call it quits.\nHear, Heart\n\"Hear, bear!\" is the house of commons cheer, tbe member of parliament\nbeing forbidden the use of any other\nform of applause. But \"Hear, licari\"\nln the bouse of commons may be mad*\nto express a number of conflicting\nemotions. Some of tbe varieties of\nparliamentary cheering have heen\nnoted by the late William White in\nhis \"Inner Life of the House of Com-\nmons.\" \"There la,\" he writes, \"th*\ndefiant cheer, more like a yell than a\ncheer. This ls most commonly heard\nfrom the conservative side of the\nhouse. \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Then there ls th* !\ncheer derisive, which ls very express '\nsive, and, again, the cheer confirmatory. \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 There ls also the obstructive cheer, \u2022 * \u2022 and, lastly, there\nls tbe genuine English, manly, approving cheer.\" And \"Hear, hear!\" denote*\ntbem alt i\nRed Trousers Excite Dogs.\nFigaro says sonic: of the German\nspy clogs captured by the French are\nhighly educated and have been taught\nto rear at the sight of the red trousers of French soldiers.\nKeeping Their Word.\n\"I have your new book on the\ncounter.\"\n\"My Iriends sal', thej would all\ngo buy It.\"\n\"Wei'., they all go by lt.\"\nA Short Lived Club.\nOne of the most shoit lived clnbs\never formed was the Club des Laid.\neases\u2014club for ugly women\u2014organized\nby tbe Princess Pauline Metterulcb,\nwho was an elegant woman, but so\nugly tbat she used to call herself \"a\nwhite monkey.\" Perhaps she felt lonesome. Anyhow, she tried to guttler\nsome of the other women she knew\nwho were not blessed with good looks)\nInto a club. But tbe club proved unpopular and died a natural death Th*\nprincess got back at her women ee*\nqualntanrt\"! bv remnrklns that if there\nwere nny candm in tt.eiu her club\nwould tin in       i\n.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\n;\u25a0\/, ^iVrf'.\/.\n'\u20ackp\\t?*$&.' r-f'-.-r'::i ,'imii   '\u25a0\nPit* '.\">' I\" - - '\u25a0    '\u25a0'\"  t      '.-\n' '^..-   '\u25a0^--T^^\n. ...t*\n\u2022jO^MttMT   UN0CMWOO0  *   UMDflS\nGF:RM\\N Ma      llNK GUN IIKTACHMENT CREfcPING :NTO ACTION\nC. B. HUME & CO., LTD.\nRevelstoke's Departmental Store\nFAMILY SHOE\nOUTFITTERS\nWe Mm te Clve Maximum\nwear at \u2022  Minimum Price\nDRY GOODS DEPARTMENT\n100 yards Silk TAFFETA RIBBON, 41 inches wide,\nany color.   On sale Thursday only,\ni   \\\nttL \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 . . .\n15c\n300 Fine SPRING BLOUSES in this week's\nSale. It will be easy for you to purchase 3 or 4 and over- Blouse is this\nSpring's make and style $1.35, J.90,2.90\nLadies' and Misses' Spring Needle-knit\nVESTS and DRAWERS. Nice, cool,\nSpring goods; pure white, all sizes and\ndifferent styles at, each 15c\nLadies' VESTS and DRAWERS, all sizes,\nup to the largest. Some short sleeve,\nsome no sleeve at   25c\nSILK PETTICOATS reduced. All go at\none price now. Satins, Messalines,\nSilks. Some pleats, some plain and a\ngood variety of the opening colors at\n   $3.90\nA boy used to be treated as a\"clothes waif\"\njust to wear any old thing but is\neasy to see that someone was thinking\nof nice clothes for small boys when\nthese fine WASH SUITS were made.\nWe have them at  $1.35, 1.90, 2.90\nLadies' VESTS, DRAWERS and COMBINATIONS.   Nice, new goods, pure white, several\nstyles of knit, short and no sleeve styles.   3 for $1 or each, 35c\nMen's Furnishing and Shoe Dep't\n4\nGiant Suit Sale\nAU our Suits must be cleared out.     One hundred\nand seventy-five first-class Suits at prices which\nmust attract you.   Note these:\n53 first-class Suits in Tweeds and Worsteds.   Not one of them\nbat is wjrth three times th; maney.    Sale price, per Suit\n$6.00\nLOT NO.2 -75 Suits\nComprising Suits from $18.00\nto $25.00  Tweeds and Worsteds.     First-class  goods at\nthe lowest prices.   Per Suit\nLOT NO. 3-50 Suits\nThe best we have in the store.\nNewest   models and   cloths.\nSale price, per Suit\n$ 12.00\n$17.50\nGrocery and Crockery Department\nFresh Stock of Pickles Just Arrived\nCROSSE & BLACKWELLS Chow-chow,\nMixed, Gherkins, White Onions and Walnut in pint bottles; Chow-chow, Mixed and\nWalnuts in quart bottles.\nCrosse & Blackwell Chutney, quart\nbattles. 05:: pint battles, 35c; A-pint bottles, 25c.\nHEIN\/\/ Sweet Mixed, Sweet Gherkins,\nChow-chow, Mixed, sour, and Gherkins,\nsour, in pint bottles. Heinz' Sweet Gherkins in bulk sold in the pint or quart.\nSTEVENS' Pickles, pt. and qt bottles,\nsoar. HAMBLtN & BRERETON Sweet\nGherkins, pint bottles. Pin Money, Mellon Min?i and S\u00bbvaet Mixed Pickles.\nPickled Beets.\nDOM, SEN & Co. Mangol Sweet Sliced\nChutney; quart bottles, 75c; pint bottles,\n40c.\nWATCH OUR WINDOW  FOR BRtAKFAST FOODS\nSpecials for Friday and Saturday\n3 lbs. Ceylon Tea $1.00 3 lbs. Fresh-ground Coffee _  $1.00\nLiurentia Cream and Milk, a tin      10c Schilling's Baking Powder, 12-oz. tins 25c\nNabob Baking Powder, 12-oz. tins 15c TAOM BIX.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD   R*\"ELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1915..\nBRIEF LOCAL NEWS\nF. McCarty haB returned\nvisit to the coast.\nIrom     a\nat the\nat\nRe-\nW. A. Anstie is\ntrip at the coast.\nmaking a business\nin\nwith\nmother\nVancouver,\nother south\nA   V. Yoder ol Nakusp was\nKing Edward hotel on Sunday.\nW.  J. Brady of Toronto    was\nthe Hotel Revelstoke on Sunday..\nA. G. Pearson of Glacier paid\nvelstoke allying visit on Sunday.\nGeorge Robertson of Arrowhead was\nat the Hotel Revelstoke on Sunday.\nThere will be a lacrosse meeting\nthis evening at 7.80' at the Y.M.C.A.\nF. 1). Nicholson ol'Salmon, Arm, waa\na. guest at the Hotel Revelstoke on\nSunday.\nAmong the guests at the Hotel Revelstoke on Sunday was A.M. Calder\nof Montreal.\nAmong thc guests at the King Fd-\nvrard hotel on Monday was B.R.\nIlslcy of Armstrong.\nThe Ladies Auxiliary of O.R.C. will\nhold an \"At Home\" in the Masonic\nHall on  Monday, May  24.\nThe ladies of St. Francis church are-\nholding ,i whist drive in St. Francis\nhall on Wednesday, April 28.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry    Kurrasch left\non  Sunday night for their home\n8t.  Paul after spending a week\nMr. and Mrs. P.G. Lcosch.\nMrs.  ('.   J. Treat and children    .ic\n\u2022Sompanied     by     Mr. Treat's\nleave    today on a trip to\nVictoria,   Seattle     and\nwestern points.\nMrs. G. W. Hastings, Mrs. A. H.\nMonroe Master Hastings Monroe, of\nToronto and MisB Hicks, of Mitchell.\nOntario, are guests of Dr. Ernest H.\nS.  and  Mrs. McLean.\nBishop Doull, who was compelled to\nreturn to Victoria early in March,\neuflering from an abcess in his right\n\u25a0ear, is able to be on duty ngain, having restarted his tour ol the Kootenay diocese.\nSlocaiO Record: It is said that a\ndaily train service will be put on\ntween Nakusp and Kaslo this\nmer. This is the belief ol a number ol\nKaslo's -business men. The diistriets\nconcerned are entitled to a daily service.\nAll members of the Overseas (.'lub\nand als j citizens interested in this\nmovement are requested to attend a\nm<eetlng to be held in the city hall\nthis evening, at S p.m. to consider\nthe formation of a local branch of\nthe Overseas club.\nThe Boy Scouts meeting on Friday\nwas largely attended and addresses\nwere given by J. Gordon, w.H. Wallace. A. McRae and J.M. Paterson. A\nlarge number of the scouts haw\nI.as3ed tests in scouts signs, salutes,\nknots and the composition ol the\nUnion Jack,\nMiss Florence B   Johnson. a '\ner Creston teacher and   later teacher\nThe police havc collected $440     in\ndog taxes in eight days.\nMr. Markstrum of Talt was a visitor in Revelstoke this week.\nSunday     at\nC. R. Skeeno came up from the\nSouth on Sunday to spend a few days\nwith his family.\nMrs. George Moth spent a couple of\n  days at the Halcyon Hot SpringB   at\nMrs. Ed. Corning leaves today for a   the beginning  of the week.\nFred McMahon' spent\nArrowhead.\nMrs. Stacey's house on Fifth street\nhas heen demolished.\nW. G. Fallen of Gait registered\nthe Hotel Revelstoke on Monday.\nat\nbe-\nsum-\nF. C. Werley of Calgary registered\nat thc Hotel Revelstoke ou Sunday.\nThe young people of the Methodist\nchurch are holding a concert tomorrow night.\nThe Tango club will hold its linal\ndance of thc season in the Masonic\nhall, this evening.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Morgan of Edmonton were among the guests at the\nKing Edward hotel on Monday.\nVi. J. Gerbecht of Nelson, auditor\nfor the Canadian Pacific railway was\nat the Hotel Revelstoke on Monday.\nMrs. F. C. Cormier will give a tea\nin aid of the Red Cross society at thc\nhome of Mrs. Hughes, Fourth street\ntomorrow, from 3' to li o'clock.\nThe Canadian Pacific railway intends to improve its right-of-way\nalong Victoria road after which the\ncity will also improve the street.\nThe annual meeting of the Women's\nCanadian club will be held on Monday\nevening, May 10, in the High school,\nofficers for the year will be elected\nat this meeting.\nEddy Murphy returned from the\nRevelstoke hospital on Friday night\nand is making satisfactory progress,\nthough he is still very weak from the\noperation.\u2014Salmon Arm Observer.\nThcre will be a meeting of the Revelstoke Poultry and Pet Stock association in Smythe's hall on Friday,'\nApril 23. S. Gale will give a lecture\non \"How to take care of the setting\nben.\"\nT. Moore, ol the stall of the local\nDank of Commerce, left on Saturday\nevening for Nakusp where he is spending his vacation. He will be away for\nabout three weeks.\u2014Salmon Arm (lb-\nserver.\nPeter Mel.. Forin is seriously iPl at\nDelleville, Out., and his brother,\nJudge  Forin,  has  left for that   place.\nshort trip to Vancouver.\nMrs. A. Babctwill not receive on\nFriday 23rd nor again until May.\nMrs. W. Robertson and family will\nleave tonight enroute to England.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Ralph Lawrence\nspent Sunday on the Arrow Lakes.\nW. Shepherd of Rothwell, Man was\nat the King Edward hotel on Sunday.\nNearly every householder has now\ncleaned his lot and the city is looking\nunusually tidy.\nR. P. Laughead and D. McKiney o!\nNelson registered at the King Edward\nhotesH on Sunday.\nA meeting of the Boy Scouts lscal\nassociation wi'll be held in the city\nhall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock.\nHon. C. W. Cross of Edmonton, attorney-general for Alberta, registered\nut the Hotel Revdistoke on Sunday.\nMr. Allan, ticket    agent     at the\nCanadian Pacific station   here, has\nrented Mrs. Marshall's home on McKenzie, avenue.\nMrs. Henderson of Beaton came up\non Monday for a short vacation. Mrs.\nHenderson was one of the sufferers\nIrom ths Comaplix fire.\nProvincial Constable Howieson of\nArrowhead has been moved to Golden\nand Constable Gallagher ot Golden\nhas been translerred to Arrowhead.\nCapt. Robinson, of the S.S. Kootc\nnay, and daughter, came up from\nArrowhead on Sunday, and were the\nguests of James Gordon for a couple\nof days.\nMrs. Bellamy and young daughter\nEdith, returned from Halcyon on\nMonday afternoon and are the guests\nof Mrs. George Moth.\nN. V. Rothwell has resigned his j.osi-\ntion in the provincial police force and\nwill join the Mounted Rifles in Calgary for service at the tront.\nMnscn end tame\n.Winners of Torement\nIn thc rag-time doubles competition,\nwhich closed on Thursday evening,\nJohnson and Newsome tho two local\npin smashers carried oil first honors\nin the A class. The winning score\nwas    made     on March 2'.), when they\nwas brought to    the    local hospital and conventions to be held  in     any?\nfrom West Demars on Tuesday. part of the Kootenay and Boundary\/\nBorn, to Mr. and Mrs. M. Yingling must be prepaid, or guaranteed     ati\na son, April 12, the following rates: Reading notices,,\nA burglary was committed at Wag- ten cents per count line    each inser-\nstaff & Vestrup's store.\nBishop May Decide to\nLive in Jkanapn\ntion; display   advertising, 50c.\ninch. Tbe Mail Herald.\npec\nThe Bishop of Kootenay paid a\n6hort visit to Kelowna on Friday\nlast arriving by car from Vernon in\ncompany with Mr. and Mrs. Price\nEllison and daughter, says the\nKeloW'iia Record. There were present\nto meet nim, the Rector, the Rev. P.\nStocks, and Messrs. E.M. Carruthers,\nLloyd-Joni's. Dr. Boycc and Messrs.\nG.A. FiBbrr, P. DuMoulin and D.\nF. A. Taylor and G. Benson, were unavoidably absent.\nAfter lunch at the Palace Hotel,\nthe Bishop with the Rector and\nrolled up UliO pins, with an average Messrs. Carruthers nnd DuMoulin, in-\nof 193 pins per game. From that date spected Gadder House, the property\nuntil the competition closed, many 'of T. W. Stirling, Esq. with a view\nattempts were made to put this score to making it his temporary residence\nin  second  place,\nGALT UOAL burns all night.     Revelstoke General Agencies,  Limited.\nShingles arc down,  down, down at\nthe Globe.\nBANKHEAD BRIQUETTES BERK'\nBEST.\nWANT  ADVTS.\nWANTED.\u2014Sewing and dressmaking\nby the day. Miss R. McMahon 19*\nFirst street west, Revelstoke.\nWANTED.\u2014Would like four respect-,\nable parties to room and board.\nPrice Jfi.OO a week. Apply to J*\nFirst street, east, next to Y.M.\n0. A.\nsecond place, but without succl'ss.\nlhe nearest approach was made by\nH. Burridge and J. Bezley, when they\nrolled  10111  pins for the 3 games.\nIn the B. class B. Robertson and\nF. Young, still lead with I0.r>4 pins\nfor 3 games.\nSwimming Classes to\ni be Given at YlC.fi.\nStarting next Monday thc Y.M.C.\na, will conduct a swimming campal<gn\nfor nonawlramers, whether rneniDera ol\nthe association or not, and will provide an opportunity for the  boys and\nto\nmen of thc city  who cannot swim\nSir Thomas Shaughnessy, president   1(,anl hcfor0 tho  gummcr eomea.\nof the Canadian Pacific railway     is      pupllg in lhp BWimmi\u201eg c'uissjs will\nexpected to pass through the city  on   ])C     taught   thc best    strokes in thc\neasiest way by experienced swimmers,\nexpert attention is given to each\npupil individually, so it is no trouble\nSunday or Monday on his way east\nalter a visit to the San Francisco exhibition.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Hammar, A.\nE. Wels, Mrs. George Skarison, Dora\nWels and Mr. and Mrs. G.W. Zull-\nboefer all of Velva, N.D., were tourists registered at the Kilng Edward\nhotel on Tuesday.\nE. Trimble, road superintendent,\ncompanied by I). Bales, who was\ncharge of the construction\nof\nac-\nin\nthc\nP.  McL.  Forin, before returning     to   bridge over the Kicking Horse\nleft on Friday morning for the\ncountry.\u2014Golden Star.\nBelleville some years ago, was a law-\nyei it Rossland and In Nelson and for\na time was also acting county court\njudge.\nThe Kootenay Lake hotel at Balfour, is scheduled to open for the\nsummer tourist season ou June I, and\nwith the exception of the hotel at\nBanff and the Lam' Louise chateau, is\nthe earliest opened hotel of the company's  mountain system,   the\nriver,\nupper\nopening un June 15.\nC.  North,  r;ty electru ,.\u00bbn, has     re-\nceived news from  England that     his\n\u25a0Ji rgt.  W.H. North     of     the\n^^^    Royal Scots Fusiliers    h.-.s been sen\nin the Movie public scbool. is .till at  oull, WouQded m Ue face Md 1B ,\nCranbrook not having     yet rei lanchester hospital. He was     one\nfrom the serious     attack  of rheumatism which caused her resigniitie.n  In\nJanuary  last.  She is a sister ol    I K\nJohnson formerly  o ike.\nChief Young, whi se hoti    st i\npill  was burned in    tue  recent      tire'\nsays that the main building destroyed\ncost 82500   ind tbe an nei fl\"     , I\ntal of ui this h\" bad Insura\no! II .'\u25a0    Tbe furnishings and    stock\nwere worth 15222.30 ami earned      in\neurance     o'.     8M6Q   Oo two c,.ttages\nwhich ro-i 1560 each  there   ree\ntal insurar.f <\nAccording to record sskiT\nCanael.an   Padfii      rallwi\ndepartment.  Um ttowlall   la  ibr ''an-,\nadian  Selkirks   luring the winter    of  \"'\"'\n1914-1915,  has  I ren the lowest   rSf\nered at Glacier, where     the     highest.\nprei  pltatton   generally   takes     place.\ntin'- 1 \u2022     1900   Tl.e fall this year wan\n10 feet '\u2022  ln<thss, un   compared     wit!,\nnear:     ' feet last season.     A ree-e.r.l\nwas established     lor   1913-lfl S'-ason,\nwhen  more than  4\" ten was register\ned.\nEMPRESS THEATRE PROGRAM\nTODAY.\u2014Hounded. In 2 parts,\nwith Ben Wilson For I have\nTolled. Thc Dear Hunter, comedy. Fickle Elsie, (ornedy.\nTHURSDAY.\u2014Final Episode,\nTrey O Hearts, 3 parts. The\nLast Trump.\nFRIDAY.-$2^,000,000    Mystery,\nPrisoner  In The Pilot House.\nThe Ghost of Smiling   Joe,   2\nparte with Ford.\nSATTmDAY.-Cnptain Of Villainy, last of O Rourke series.\nTUESDAY.\u2014Whats His Name,\n5 parts with Max Figmnn.\nt Ol his regi\nment  who survived  a    recent  engagement\nNotle      -   .-    en in  the     British  Columbia  Gaaotte  that     commissioner*\n\u2022 en named as follows   Glty   of\nFemle     License,     Aid.  H.B.  Barnes\nand  J.P    Lowe;   poi.re.  Aid.  3.  Gr.i\nMoflatt.  (ity ot Cran-\nUd.  A. J. Balmrtn\nsnd   i \u25a0( \u25a0. police, Aid. T. H.\nUtridge,\nnted at the\nlast  Kn\nf work  at. the\nit     \u25a0', SO   v  rlny.\nil \u2022 Mi     Men lUgsll\n\\ Hi Dl    R J    Ballard and W.\n11     A   llaCe, Aid    Smytl I\nI \" lOSSd the appoint-\nmen! e.f Mr   McDougall, Md   Bell se\nconded  by   Ud,   Mackenrot    proposed\nas an  amendment the appointment of\nMr    Ballard       On a vot.'  being taken\nthe   intendment  was lort.       Aid.  He\nMcSorley  .'lie. advocated the appoint\nment  of  Mi     flaii'.rk    voted  against\nthe amendn ei I   and  thus the    t\nfor  the  appointment   of Mr.   McDougall r-irrled\na post card i.i\" \u25a0 \u2022\u2022 \" \"'i at. the\nv. \\t ' \\ bulldln \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 iti r i, morning\nfrom an association member .lark\nMotley, vii', bai b en H il loned al\nOttawa for the past few months ?itb\ntba Engineer 'oris, nr states th<sy\nwere leaving (orHallfai on Ajirli 15,\nand thence I'oini- direct to the Old\nCountry. This la of Interest to the\nrnnnv Revelltoke people Who have hnd\nfriendu attached to this COTpi nt'll\ntnwn. Word hns hern icccived from\nFranc' from members W. Cowling and\nEd. Clinton Stating that, the Revel\nitokr l.oys arc faring well In trench\nlife. Former physical director W A\nAlldrltt Is at the llrlng line nnd srii'ls\na card to say he Is wen.\nfor a beginner to soon master the\nprinciples of the nrt. The water at\nall times is kept at the right temperature so that a jieison may stay in a\nlong time without feeling any ill effects.\nThis swimming campaign is for non-\nswimmers only, the object being to i\nteach as many boys and men as pos- j\nsible to swim. Ftur lessons will bc\ngiven to each pupil, after which the\nmost backward should be able to\nswim the length of the tank without\nany trouble. Those wishing to, make\nuse of thc opportunity mny get\ntickets at the Y.M.C.A. any time,\nand will he gladly received into the\nclasses. Lessons will be given only\non certain days and at certain hours\nin the following order. School boys\non Thnrsdny from 4 to 5 p.m. and\nSaturdays from 10 to 11 a.m. Employed boys, Tuesdays and Thursdays\nfrom 7.30 to 8 p.m. nnd men on\nTuesdays and Thursdays Irom 8 to\n9 P.m.  Each time b lesson    is   given\nthat nn j\nof the '\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The use of     clean\ntowels mav bc   had at   the Y.M.C.A. i\nWhite     superintendent    ol   for  - r(,nti,    It  ,\u201e horC(1 thnt ft ,\u201erco I\nemissions of tbe Methodist church will   number of boyi    nnd men wl\u201e mt,\\,(,\nbe in    Revelstoke     ton.ght, and wil |nM (lf thls nfle.r of the y.M.e.A.     as\nthe hot weather will soon bc here and\n; for a year or so. His choice is between Kelowna and Vernon, and he\nwill  give his decision  in  a couple   of\nWeeks. His Lordship was highly pleased with the house and grounds. On\nhis return, he .inspected the church and\nwas very much pleased with thc new\naltar cross and Reredos, which the\nrector dedicated on Easter Sunday.\nThe Dishop then returned to Vernon,\nintending to leave onithe following\nday to attend a meeting of the House\nof Bishops to he held this week at\nFort William, Ontario.\nThe Kettle Falls correspondent to\nthe Oolville ' St\".atesman-l|ndex sayB\nThe excitement in thc gold diggings\nnlong thc Columbia river continues\nto increase.\\ Over forty men were\nwashing for gold last week. This includes six men from Okanagan. British Columbia and three from Spokane. Twenty years ago tbe panning\nresulted in many thousand i liars\nOne of our prominent merchants who\nhns had some experience in |mining,\nclaims that the bed of thc rivi is\ncovered with gold, hut it is too rugged to bc dredged.\"\nWANTED.\u2014To rent a good saddla\nhorse for two months. Apply stating terms to Box. A. Mail-Herald\n\u00bb  \u25a0\nTO  RENT.\u2014Furnished     Ave    roomed\nI    house on Third street at ?15.0O. H.\nN. Coursier. tf.\nBARGAIN SALE\u2014 Neat, comfortable,\nconvenient, modern six room\ndwelling wit i bath, hot and cold\nv.. ' T. electric lighted and 1} acre\nVilla Lot, neutly arranged flower\nand vegetable garden, adjoining the\ncity, close to Selkirk school. Low^\ntaxation. Hore is a n'ice home.\nTerms.     H. N. COURSIER.\nFOR SALE\u2014Efegs for Hatching,\nSilver Campines, 1 netting 13, $2.00 \u25a0\nWhite Rocks and Leghorns, crossed.\n31.Ofl a setting; Indian Runner\nDucks and White Pckin Ducks, S1.50\na setting, also setting Hens for\nfor sale. Day old chicks, 25 ccnta\neach; White Rocks and Leghorns-\n$20,00 per 100; Silver Campines,\n50 cents each; Anconas, 50 oents\neach. New Grove Poultry Farm.\nPhone No. 212, Mrs. R. A. Upper.\nMy-l-np\nJack Murray, tbe son of George\nMurray, and grandson oi E. Corning,\nwas struck in the eye on Monday\nevening by a stone thrown by m\ncompanion. The eye was severely injured but it is hoped that thc sight\nwill  he >suved.\nTbe Red Cross tea to be given tomorrow afternoon by Mrs. Cormier,\nil t.i i.e held at the home of Mrs.\nHughes, 50 Fourth street. Many good\nthings will be sold from the culinery\ntable, and t!..re will be all kinds Of the ticket will be punched so\nhome mude candies at thc candy .observation maybe kept\ntooth. pupils' progress.\nP.ev.  Iir. White     superintendent    ot\non his trij. tothe Yukon, illustrated  with lanten.  views.  It.  will   be\n\u2022  tdty for yonng and old to\nM,., \u2022\n\u2022      '\u25a0 thodlst church\nA'r.c:   recoran \u2022 i\norders for   large quantities of BheliB,\nwith foundries ..nd machine sh'\n'. Ictotia, New   West\nminster. Col David ' ai'i'-gir and his\nassociates -ial  shell\nn,     ari  returning \u2022\nhave arranged to   stop enrouti     at\nCalgary.     Edn 01 '\u25a0 n       RS<gil \u2022     snd\ndon\nLardo  petople and  I\nthe north  <-idnf the  'listrirt,     -\nir.  favor  of   I rnanur     in\n'  the  K.iHlo-N'elson  ;\n'\nnd S*nlgbt eeteici at that Tbe\n\u2022[--.   \u2022  |   ..   .\nthe OOCi   who  eatarteil      the aejfltation\ngo t., \/n  -h'- '\nmade to the       ireet   \u2022   nr! ...:\u25a0::.        ,mfl\nKnsloltee*. also seeing advnntagM   In\nit for  ^e*m  inder      the then  p. Ist.lng\nconditions, hncke.i up Ki.sio Kootsns\nian.\nNotice is ''ils  week's  issue\nr.f  the Firit.i.ih  Co\nthe council of public instruction |mH\nappointed tbe following es a board\nof \"xaminers to art     with the\nIntendent or educational ihn etnmin-\nntlon of nubile <\u00bbrhor\/l teachers fe.r the\nvear  1OT\u00ab       W   K    Beeib.      Thos.   A\nBroflffh,   H    f'liodnt    John  T.      Dun\nnine, rvrrv It    Elliott,  John  S. Oor\ndon,  .TnmcR    Henderson,  Joseph      K\nHenry,   H.P,   Hope.   David  Q     Little\nStnnley  W   Mtithnwp. D.L. McLnurln.\nF^lwnrd n.  1'nul,    Lemuel  Robertson.\nOeorge E. Robinson, Ernest H. Rus\npell,     Alhe<rf    Bull!van, Rnmuel     3,\nWillie, and David Wilson.\nswimming will he just the thing.\nQuance Mill at Nakusp\nResumes Operations\nAUCTION SALE\nHaving been favored with instructions from Trustees of tbe late Mrs.\nKennedy, I will si .1 hy Public Auction\nabsolutely without reserve, on Thursday, April '!9th, promptly at 1(1\na.m. until lunch then at 2 o'clock in\nthe ufternoon, these splendid hoUBe-\nhufld furnishings at the residence of\nthe lato Mrs. Kennedy on Second\nstreet, west.\nGoods comprise as follows: Fine\nmounted stags bead, early English\ndining room suite, valued $liH); solid\nblack walnut bookcuse; desk, lounge,\nupholstered oak rockers, parlor tables\nlovely Wilson carpets, 16 x 12; table\nlinen, curtains, bliiids, iioti and braSB\nbeds, bed linen, Irc-ser and stands,\nlinoleums, stair carpet, McClary\nrange o holed cost $S5,0O; K.uhcn\ntallies, chairs, garden toris and a\nhost of other useful hoiu?ehold necessities too numerous to mention.\nTerms of Auction Sale   cash or approved note at ..  .no tin.\nW. PARRY.\nCONCERT\nand   Whist   Drive\nIndependent Order of Foresters\nHall\nApril 20th at St. Francis\n,H:.'\u00ab> p.m.\nSplendid I'.izes      Excellent Music\nand Refreshments\nTickets       -       -       .50\nTo be obtained from any\nof the  H.M il\u00bb. i\nNakusp, B.C.   Apr.'. 20.\u2014The annual\nmeeting e,f the Nakusp board of trade\nid Tuesday. H. I..  Rothwell is\npresident.  The  resolution  of  the Win\nnipeg board \"t trade urging eiinform-\nity  of  laws     regarding debts,  dels,\nnts  '.f  sale and  othi r      lcgul\npapers was endorsed, The matter of\na  local  po'md  law was held  in abcy-\n| e Jag  i,c.ink.  Umt us     long\nas  owiieis  Of   cattll  and   othii       live\nstock  exen is\"i   reasonable  eflorts to\nherd thl a I avoid   ml iusioh ii,\nto other  people's premises,  the board\ntake  nu action to apply      the\nlew in Nakusp   n \u2022\u25a0 '  dee\u25a0idi-ii i'i bold\nHi'-   annual       \"dsen-Up\"   dny, today,\nths msrehants Ix li t asked to alios\nn hall solids        The h> bool children\n'.ill be asked to do then pnit. The\nelection of olfl<ceri resulted President,\nI,,.i. Bdwards; vice president.    D, T,\nllulger, secretary, 'ill    liohnrt;  tree\nRurcr,  Walter  ,-<cott.\nThis   week   has seen  a levlVSl   in   li,\ncal industries. The Unance Lumber\ncompany h.es disposed ot about 36\n\u2022 -r'o a \u2022 bite pint loi the Chicago\nmarket, which   is now being (hipped\nThe min stilted ui., rr.ing employ\nment to about in me'   The Un<dtl>t]\nfiros, company   bas also   stalled   a\n(SW men to work     in     the j.ols yard.\nRoad work by the provini ml govern\nment  is In full swim-\nMr. and  Mr     Burl! nl  Summit have\nreturned to  Nakusp\nMrs. Carstens of Mncdonnld     creek I\nBUSINESS LOCALS\nThe ladies of St. Kiancis church are\nholding a whist drive in St. Francis\nHall on Wednesday, April 38. Music\nwill be jirovided. Good prizt'B will be\ngHvcn. Tickets 50c. will be uold by\nthc ladies.\nGet nn estimate at thc fllobe on\nyour Lumber Bill. tt.\nAll notices of   political     meetings\nBicycle Repairing\non Short Notice\nAll Work Guaranteed\n\\\nAgents for\n\" Indian^JViotorcycles\nELECTRIC WIRING\nand REPAIRING\nWe carry a\nComplete Electrical Stock\nStar Electric &Bkycle Shop\nlit'arold Stc   Tn.'litre\nTHE LADIES  AUXILIARY to O.R.C.\nDance \u00b0n May 24th\nWill be held in\nMASONIC HALL\nInstead of Opera House\nChildren's Shoes-\nThere ll i right and a wronK \"hoe for children to\nwear. Tbe wrong shoe orowds the child's foot\niiiiil mat mi the child for life. The right shoe\nallows the foot to rest on lhe insole naturally am.\ne   i oomforl to the wesarer.   Otir children's shoe.'\nare made OO loot-form lasts. We have the largest\nslink of Children's shoes lo lliis Oity and our prices\nare the lowest.\nMCRAE SHOE STORE Boweon Hlock\nFor Sandal*. Canvas and Tennis Shoes\nPHONE 217","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Revelstoke (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Mail_Herald_1915-04-21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0311445","@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":"1915-04-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1915-04-21 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\/1.0311445"}