"9f6f49d9-42fa-452b-8a46-726e9289966a"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2016-06-27"@en . "1914-08-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranbrookpro/items/1.0083258/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " If You Require\nGlasses\nGet Them NOW1\nThis is the Place\nWilson - Optician\nfk\nnt.ov.ncin! ' r (Irintlve AwemM'\n&\u00C2\u00A7pt&0t\n_f *\"* '\"''\"'.\n<.\u00C2\u00A3\\nThe Leading Newspaper\ni*\"\u00C2\u00ABb '*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0', Koowoays\nIhe -^\n\"Prospector\"\n$2.00 Per Year\nVOLUME 20.\nCRANBROOK, B. C. SATURDAY MORNING AUGUST 1, 1914,\nNo. 31.\nEuropean Nations in Conflict\nStrength of Nations\nmost likely to be\nconcerned\nBelow ls shown the armed strength\nof those countries which are most\nlikely to figure in the Austro-Servtan\nImbroglio. TheBe nations are grouped according to their probable alignment:\nAustria\u00E2\u0080\u0094Army, war Btrength, 2,-\n000,000. Navy, two dreadnoughts,\nsii battleships, two armored cruisers\nlive cruisers, fifty-one torpedo boats\nand destroyers, Bix sub-marines.\nGermany\u00E2\u0080\u0094Army, war Btrength, 5,-\n200,000. Navy, thirteen dreadnoughts\ntwenty battleships, four battleshi i\ncruisers, nine armored cruisers, forty\ncruisers, 130 torpedo boats and destroyers, twenty-four submarine*.\nServla\u00E2\u0080\u0094Army, war strength, 240,\n000. Navy, one steam craft.\nRussia\u00E2\u0080\u0094Army, war strength, 5,500,-\n000. Navy, eight battleships, six\narmored cruisers, nine cru'sers, 107\ntorpedo boats and destroyers, thirty\nBitbmar nes.\nPrance\u00E2\u0080\u0094Army, war strength, 4,000,-\n000. Navy, two dreadnoughts, eighteen battleships, twenty armored\ncruisers, ten cruisers, 220 torpedo\nboats and destroyers, seventy-five\nsubmarines.\nTremendous Armies\nServia, one of the little nations ol\nthe world, has not much ol an army.\nLatest figures, prepared this year,\nshows that her army ln time ot peace\nnumbers 32,000 men. Her war\nBtrength is 240,000, and in addition\nto this (orce Bhe haa an unorganized body of men who, in case ot dire\nnecessity, could be called on tor service, number 60,000 more. This body\not men would be but a speck compared with the tremendous armies\nwhich would be called upon to shoulder arms H Russia, France and\nGreat Britain, composing the triple\nentente, took up the cause ot Servia,\nRussia leads all the big countries\nmentioned both in peace Btrength and\nwar footing, although her war looting is but 300,000 in excess ot that\not Germany, She has 1,290,000 men\nln times ol peace and 5,000,000 as\nwar looting.\nFrance has 720,000 lor a peace\nguard, and 4,000,000 aa a war tooting. Great Britain haa a peace looting of 254,000 and a war tooting ot\n730,000. The total armies of the\ntriple entente number 2,264,500 in\ntimes ot peace and the gigantic number ot 10,230,000 in times of war.\nThe same three countries have a combined force of 8,200,000 unorganized\nmen ot military age who could be\ndrawn on in case ol emergency. This\nwould make the stupendous number\nol men available tor actual service in\nthe triple entente, exclusive ot those\nOr Servia nearly 20,000,000.\nThe total ot the three countries\ncomposing the triple allianc\", Austria, Germany and Italy, are almost\nas staggering. The total war looting ot the combination is 8,400,003.\nThe peace strength, 1,510,000. The\nsnme countries have an unorganized\nlorce ol men of military age which\nnumbers 5,200,000, or about 14,000,000\nmen who could in a pinch be called\non lor service..\nThree ot the Balkan states which\nmight possibly become Involved ln\ntho Imbroglio are Roumania, Bulgaria and Greece. The combined peace\nfooting of thltsc countries ls 180,500.\nThe war tooting la 1,020,000. In war\nfooting Roumania leads the three\nwith 500,000. Bulgaria comes next\nand Greece last.\nIn naval strength the triple entente would be nearly twice as strong\nin number of ships and men as the\ntriple alliance. In the triple entente\nGreat Britain leads with 669 ships ot\nall kinds, battleships, cruisers, torpedoes, destroyers, monitors and sub-\nnut rines. To man these she has 137,-\n000 men.\nNew York Correspondent: \"Germany has declared War on Russia\"\nThis is not confirmed by Press Dispatches up to the time of going to press.\nGermany, Russia, France and England are all\nprepared for any emergency\nBaltic Shipping Stopped\nHamburg, Germany, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Besides suspending the sailing from\nHamburg of the Imperator, it was\nreported today, that the Hamburg-\nAmerican line bad also ordered the\nVaterland to stay at New York and\nawait the development ol the International situation. The other Ham- Drlna. Both Austrian and Servians\nburg-Amorlcan liners, howsver, will have sustained h avy losses. Tho Alls-\ncontinue the service. Shipping to trlan divisions, alter fighting fiercely\nBaltic ports has hern entirely aus- all day, tailed to force the defile\npended. leading to Plevlie and' Priepolle.\nAir Craftin War\nFor the flrst time in any conflict ol\ngreat proportions the aerial war\ncraft would be brought into use and\nso swift bas bom the progress in the\naerial development tbat the aeroplane, dirigibles and other air craft\nwould without doubt receive a genuine test.\nAirships were used in Tripoli, but\nit was never known just what codld\nbe done on a large scale, with navigators and operators of highly developed skill.\nLatest figures show that France\neasily leads all other nations in her\nair fighting force. She has 750 air\nand a.-aplanes with 300 first-class and\n250 second-clasB pilots. Next to her\ncomes Russia with 380 aeroplanes and\nseaplanes and many excellent pilots,\naccording to Hazel's classification.\nGreat Britain has 130 aeroplanes and\nseaplanes with sixty first-class and\n170 second-class pilots.\nOt the countries allied in the triple\nalliance Germany haa 350 aeroplanes\nand seaplanes', Austria haa 150 machines of both kinds, and Italy has\n200. The organization and transport\not Austria and Italy are classed a,i\n'lairly good.\"\nFLEETS IN READINESS.\nAeroplane fleets of powers in readiness for conflict:\nAustria\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number of craft, 150; pilots, not known, 120; organization\nlairly good.\nItaly\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number of craft, 200; pilots,\n120; organization good,\nGermany\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number ol craft, 350;\npilots, 200; organization excellent.\nTotal craft, 700; pilots 350.\nGreat Britain\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number of craft 130;\npilots, 170; organiiation limited.\nFrance\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number of craft, 750; pilots, 250; organization excellent.\nRussia\u00E2\u0080\u0094Number of craft, 380; pilots ; partially organized.\nTotal number of craft, 1,280; total\npilots, 420.\nEngland Prepared\nLondon, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Precautionary\nmeasures are being taken by the\nBritish naval authorities.\nThere was great activity at Portsmouth, chiefly in getting the ships of\nthe second fleet ready to answer a\nquick call.\nCrews are being filled up. Leave has\nbeen stopped. Strong infantry detachments are guarding all magazines.\nThere was considerable naval activity on the Humber. The eighth\ndestroyer flotilla arrived and coaled,\nand submarines and cruisers took up\nstations at thc mouth of the Humber\non the Yorkshire coast.\nThe tanks of the admiralty oil fuel\ndoput at Kllllnghiiline have been\nspotted with green, black antl red\npnlnt to render them unobservable\nIrom the sea.\nThe flotilla ol submarines and three\nsea planes arrived at Dover naval\nharbor.\nThirty-four Million is the tremendous\nnumber of men that can be placed on\na War footing\nBULLETINS.\nBerlin, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Official confirmation of tbe reported blowing up by\nRussian troops of the railroad bridge\nbetween Oranica, Russian Poland,\nand Szezakova and Galicia, on the\nrailroad from Warsaw to Vien.ia, was\nreceived here this evening.\nLondon, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094An Exchange\nTelegraph company's dispatch from\nNiBh, Servia, via Salonlki, siys that\nup till last night the Austrinn invaders at Semendria had not succeeded\nin forcing the pass held by the Servian tro.ipa, possession of which\nwould give them access to the Mora-\nva river valley and thus open up a\ndirect road to NiBh.\nVienna, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Austrian frontier\nthat something might happen to\navert thc necessity of doing bo.\nRESUME \"CONVERSATIONS\"\nLondon, July Bit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Official announcement of thc resumption of the \"conversations\" at St. Petersburg and\nVienna came today at a moment\nwhen pessimism had ta^on possession\nof all Europe.\nThe hope that it might lead to\na peaceable solution was grasped\nwith desperation, but the news was\noffset later by the proclamation of\nmartial law In Germrny, which was\nregarded as a preliminary to the\nmobilization of the German forces for\nwar.\nEverybody then seemed to settle\ndown to await tbe news that the\ngreat European powers had decided\nguards today repelled a strong attack ,\nv a . i _ wi ii i, .. ' to engage in a struggle for suprema-\nby Servians near Klotievatz, on tbe \u00E2\u0080\u009E, _.\" . , _.\nBosnian frontier, without Buffering\nloss. The Servians lost one officer\nand 22 men.\nWar Declaration\nNot Confirmed\nWinnipeg, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A private wire\nto Chas. K. Lewis & Co., trom their\nNew York correspondent, states Germany has declared war on Russia.\nThis is not conllrmetl by Associated\nPress dispatches,\nLondon, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094An Exchange\nTelegraph company's dispatch trom\nNiah, Servla, via Salonlki, says that\nup till last night the Austrian Invaders at Semendria hid not succeeded In forcing the paas held by\nthe Servian tri:o;>a, possession ot\nwhich would give them access to the\nARMIES MOBILIZING\nLondon, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The momentous\nannouncement was made by Premier\nABquith in the house of commens today that Russia had proclaimed the\ngeneral mobilisation of her unity nnl\nfleet, and In consequence martial'law\nhad been proclaimed in Germany and\na general mobilization ln Germany\nwould follow.\nPROCLAIM STATE OF WAR.\nBerlin, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A decree proclaiming martial law end tbe prohibition\nof publication of news ol the movements of German troops and war\nmaterial was Issued today.\nThe proclamation announces military measures on the frontiers, the\narmed protection of the railroads and\nthe restriction of telegraph and postal services except tor military purposes.\nMOBILIZE OREAT FORCES.\nIt had been generallv expected tlvt\nan order for the mobilization ot the\nGerman army and navy would be Issued some time last night. The government's postponement ot this drastic action gave rise today to Inpes\ncy. There was nothing to give the\npublic hope that a gen Tal war might ]\nbe averted.\nThe stock exchange in London and\nthe big provincial cities, as well aa\nthose on the continent, were closed.\nThe prevailing public opinion here\nis determined tbat England must observe her unwritten obligation to bb-\nPRINCE HEADS TROOPS.\nBerlin, July 31. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Crown Prince\nFrederick William ol Germany todHy\nwus appointed to tbe coinmund of tbo\nFirst division ol the Imperial guards\narmy corpB.\nThe general feeling throughout\nGermany is that only a miracle can\nprevent war.\nThe German government is putting\ntorth the greatest exertions to prevent the spread of alarming rumors\nand false news. It ordered the con\nAscation of four newspapers.\nOfficial quarters found in the Russian ukase calling out the army re\nserves a factor which greatly aggra\nvated the situation and amounted in\n. their opinion to a direct challenge to\nAustria-Hungary and Germany.\nThe financial markets reflected the\ngeneral pessimism. Trading has been\nalmost suspended, except tor ta\nbusiness, and even this iB listless.\nMoney is almost Impossible to obtain and It is known that at least 12\nbrokerage and hanging firms are in\ndifficulties.\nCZAR CALLS COUNCILLORS.\nSt. Pitersburg, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tbe czar\nsist France in hcr difficulties with \u00C2\u00B0' RUBB'a today gave an audience to\nGermany, but a small body ot radicals continue to utter objections to\nEngland's involving herself in the\nqtiarr?ls ot the continental powers.\nDispatches from Nlsh, in Servia,\nand from Vienna told of encounters\nbetween Austrian and Servian troops\non the frontiers, hut authentic details were lacking.\nAmericans visiting Europe received\na shock today when it was at.nounc-\ned that the sating ol the Imperator\nfrom Hamburg lor New York had\nb>en canceled owing to the unsettled\nsituation. There was a rush to steamship offlceB to endeavor to book pns-\nBages, but few or none were to be\nhad as all the ships were tilled to\ncapacity until the middle of September. Business men to whom it was\nimperatively necessary to get back to\nAmerica offered premiums for berths\nbut even then could not get the lucky possessors to give them up.\nthe German ambassador and subsequently presided over a full council\not ministers, attended by the chief of\nthe army general stall.\nThe mail train tor Germany will\nnot leave St. Petersburg tonight and\nthe line of boats running to Stockholm, Sweden, has been stopped,\nPATROL FRENCH FRONTIER.\nPariB, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Military movements on tbe German side of the\nfrontier Mite active today and French\ntroopB sent out outposts.\nA German patrol at one point actually crossed the frontier, pro ably\nowing to a mistake.\nIn no case has any considerable\nforce of French troops advanced closer to the frontier than six miles.\nThe French foreign ofllce officials\nwere considerably more pessimistic\ntoday because, as they explained, the\ngravity of the situation wbb lnsreas-\nj ing with the lapse ol each day. At\nAugust 7th is Strike Date\nPresident Wilson appeals to General Managers\nand Union Officials\u00E2\u0080\u0094summoned\nto Washington\nthe same time it must not lie assumed that all hope of a peaceful solu\ntion had vanished.\nBRITISH Fl.HKT SAILS.\nBelting, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The British fleet\ntoday deserted Wel Hei-W.'i nnd sail\ned at. midday with sealed orders, thus\nfill dl ling its long-standing orders\nThe British considered the place not\nworth defending.\nMost active preparations are going\non nt Hongkong in view uf eventual!\nties. The Canadian Pacific att-a ne;\nEmpress uf Asia Ins heen chartered\nhy the government aud guns are he\n%._ mounted on toard. At the dockyards work is proceed'ng night nne\nclay and double guilds have heen\nplaced on duty. All the troops have\nheen confined to barracks and leave\nbas been stopped.\nThe British battleship Triumph today took on her war stores and Is\nprepared for action.\nTRACKS UNDER GUARD.\nKoenlgsburg, Germany, July 31. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe German military authorities\nhave posted notices that tlic railroad\nstations and tracks here have b.en\nplaced under military guard. Nobody\nIs allowed to approach nearer than\n100 yards of the tracks and culverts\nand an order says that civilians disobeying the sentries' challenges will\nexpose themselves to the danger o.\nbeing shot.\nDUTCH UP IN ARMS.\nThe Hague, July 30,-Queen Wilhel-\nni.iin uf Holland this ai ternoon issued an urgent decree, ordering the\ngeneral mobilization of tbe Dutch\narmy.\nSWISS ARE READY.\nBerne, Switzerland, July 81, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nfederal council today ordered the mobilization of all men between 30 und\nii years of a>e capable of bearing\narms.\nSTOP ALL TRAINS,\nBrussels, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The German imperial railway administration to-day\ninformed the management of the Belgian State Railways officially that\nall international trains into Germany\nhad been suspended,\nIMPERATOR SAILING POSTPONED\nLondon, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094'Ihe Hamburg\nAmerican comiany Bent notices to\nthe SOO first-class passengers waitin\nhere for the Imperator, that the com\npany had been compelled to poBtpune\nthe sailing of, the vessel owing to tbe\nclouded political situation.\nEstablishes Patrols\n...Cardiff, Wales, July 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Military\npatrols were established today by the\ngovernment authorities at the docks\nalong the Bristol Channel and the\nelectric light company of the Glamorgan territorial engineer corps,\nwhich belongs to the special service\nsection of the reserves, was ordered\nto Pembroke to relieve the regulars\nthere on Bervlce at the searchlight\nstation on tbe coast,\nPrepares Defences\nLondon, July 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thr HritiBh war\notllro t,:iluy declared there wns no\ntruth in the report published In the\nUnited Stntes that Hritisb territorial troops had been ordered to mobilize,\nSeveral sections ol the Hritisb special defence force were culled to duty\ntoday on the east and south coasts\nto relieve the regulars ln guard n\nbridges and railroads sidings \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\nni.'inning the coast defences.' Specie\narmy reservists were called to the\ncolors today comprising electricians,\nmilitary engineers and mine layers.\nChicago, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Btrtk.- ot 55,-\n000 firemen and engineers on 9s railroads operating west ot Chicago bus\nBecause the railroads seem determined to force the employees to abati- [\ndon the mileage busts ol pay with-\nAPPEAL TO WILSON.\nAlter the federal mediators had llo\nCanada is warned to\nmake ready\nOttawa, July 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dispatches' from\nGreat Britain to thc Canadian Government have been received urging\nthat steps be ta''onw\u00C2\u00AB end positions of duty, and\nmonts thereto nnd accepted rulings w,llle **\"\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00BBtr\" nwnsgers to be wl'h\narbitrary attitude. drawn without prejudice.\"\nloads will accept the plan proposed\nby tbe federal boat .1 nf mediation, in\ntime to prevent the strike, no strike\nwill occur.M\nf, William li, Chimin's and Judge\nn Martin A. Knnim <-f the federal\n, board of mediation, left hero lait\n- night for Washington lo prepare fnr\nithe hearings there by informing the\npresident nf all thnl has tateon place\nin the ten days nf effort here. <\nBanquet to W.J.Renix\nlhe District Mechanic Department\nre presenting Mr. W. .1. Henix with\nbanquet on Saturday evening in\nthe Cosmopolitan hotel In view ol\nbio enrly departure from their midst.\nMr. Ilonli during tho time ho hns\nheen associated with the stall Ins\nmade liimsolt a general (avorlte and\nholds the esteem of all I hose with\nshorn ho came into contact. i!n-\nhinhti dly the banquet will be a stir\nAlready the wnr fever lias reached'hsh. There aro several from outside\nI'ltnadn, tbe militia department being\ndeluged with oilers ol services lor the\nempire's defenen Irom militiamen In\nnil parts oi Canada, Until it ls certain that Britain will bo embroiled\nno slops wlll be taken In lb a regard.\nKveu then Canadian troops would\nHHe|v see little s'rvice, aa tbey woild\nhe used to garrison llrltlsb defenses\nand relieve tho regular nrmy tor act]\nive service.\npoints who bave come Into the city\ntor tbe purpose of attending, amongst\nwhom are Car Foreman Ayres of\nKlngFgate, Car Foreman Twohey ol\nSnilnrin Car Foreman llow'nnd ol\nCrow's Nest, Locomotive Foreman\nMltdiloek of- ('row's Nest, Price ol\nHwlft Current, nntl ,1. Teller, road\ninaHtor Irom Fernlo, the latter bfJlng\ncommonly known as \".lack or the\nCoop.\" THE PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK, B. C.\n\u00C2\u00A9he proepeetor, \u00C2\u00A9ranbrook, \u00C2\u00A7. Gu\nESTABLISHED 1895\nPublished Every- Saturday Morning at Cranbrook, B.C.\nF. M. Christian, general manager\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES $2.00 PER VEAR\nPostage to American, European (British Isles excepted) and other foreign countries, 50 cents a year extra.\nADVERTISEMENTS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Advertising rates furnished on application. No\nadvertisements but those of a reputable character will be accepted for\npublication.\nADVERTISERS AND SUBSCRIBERS.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Unless notice to the contrary\nis given to local manager advertisements and subscriptions will be kept\nrunning and charged up against their account.\n20th YEAR\nCRANBROOK, B.C August 1\nNo. ;u\nDuring the week there have been\nB?veral bush fires in the district\nwhich have their origin through\ndropped matches or cigarettes. The\nfact is very significant that during | Follow Karmers\nthe past few weeks lishing in our\nvicinity has been exceptionally good\nand parties are leaving almost every\nday for the lishing grounds. Large\ncatches are being made and a great\ndenl of enthusiasm is being displayed\nin the sport. However, the consequences of any act of carelessness on\nthe part of \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the campers are very apt.\nto be resultant of tremendous loss if\nthe camp fir?s are not properly put\nout or any material of an Inflammatory nature is left lying about for\nthe winds to carry in all directions.\nThe tires now in the neighborhood\nhave all in the main been caused\nthrough campors and the work it involves on the forestry staff is very\nBtrenuous and is causing them much\nanxiety. It is hoped that everyone\nwill take the matter to b art and du\ntheir best eo avoid unnecessary de-\nstrdction.\nhave their eye on and would lull ub\nwltb purring* of anti-paternalism\nwhile tbey make the haul,\n\"It took the world centuries and\ngenerations to assimilate the idea of\nbrotherhood, it has taken the world\ncenturies and generations to fathom\nthe possibilities of government fatherhood. Possibly the slowest nation\nto awake to tha advancing trend of\ntbe time is Great Britain, but she\ntoo Is awaking and ere long will participate in the benefits of government fatherhood a\u00C2\u00BB well as national\nbrotherhood. Canada must keep\npace. She will.\n\"What is paternalism good lor?\nEvidently in the mind id Mr. Bury it\nis only good for corporations and\ncapitalists, but in the mind of A.E.\nThe article reads as follows: Watts and others wbo have written\n'We reproduce this week an article extensively on the subject it ia good\n. . . .- .I,m. nfkns l.i,l,.-t-,.1,,.-, n..,l ......... .ana.\npartment to combat.\nAt the time ol writing practically\nall the fires are under control in the\nOranbrook district although new ones\nare being reported daily.\nThe lishiug is excellent In various\nstreams adjacent to Cranbrook and\ncauses a large amount of travel. AU\nflshermen and campers are urged to\nuse every care in the exting lishin;\nof cam}) tires and to he careful not\nto drop burning matches or cigarettes. In this connection It Is significant that all the flres oeourlng back\nfrom the usual lines of travel are at\nthe present time on good Ilshlng\nstructiou,\nfrom tbe pen ol \. E. WattB, ot|f\u00C2\u00B0r other Industr\nWattsburg. on the Bubject 'Industries| clally is it good f.\nIs Paternalism Ad\nIn another column of tbis issue will\nbe found an advertisement that calls\nattention to the fact that the B. 0.\nCommissioners will be in Oranbrook\non Tuesday the Hth August for the\npurpose of arriving at a decision of\ntbe boundary lines to be drawn in\nconnection with the Re-distribution\nBill recently passed in the local legislature. It is to be hoped that a\nlarge representation of the interested parties of both political opinion\nwill be present to present their views\non the matter. In Cranbrook with a\npopulation ot 4,500 we should undoubtedly have a representative, as\nalso should Fernle; then another to\nrepresent the district. The latter representation will have a very scattered field to cover, but the population is very scarce in places and It\nwould not he fair to the larger populated places if the smaller places\nwith, say 4,10 or 500 population,\ncould command a representative for\ntheir own right. The purpose of the\ncommission is to gather data to recommend to the government on tlu\nvoting areas of the Province. Thc\nmeeting will he nn interesting one\nfrom all points of view.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a\nWe arc taking tbe liberty of reproducing nn article that appeared in\nthe \"Creston Review\" of date July\n17th. We wish to draw particularly\nthe attention of our rentiers to the\nlatter part of the article, In this\nthe writer given voice to some very\nBtrong truths and facts that will undoubtedly have to be faced hy the\nruling government of any country in\nthe future. One sentence tbnt strikes\nhome nnd which will give to all\nthinking men a wonderful amount cd\nmaterial to ponder over if\u00C2\u00BB \"Whereas\nSocialism today would he a failure\nas an executive force, it is furnishing to the thinker some of the greatest (reform suggestions that any flirty has ever advocated and it would\nbe gnod fatherhood on the pari of\nour government to take this latest\npolitical claimant to sonship into\nthe paternal confidence and counsel.\"\nvisable?\n\"This article is of exceptional value at this time, when the name of\nthe writer has been suggested ua a\npossible candidate for the federal\nhouse,in the constituency established\nin East Kootenay under the new distribution act,\n\"While Mr. Watts rdeals with no\nnew subject and advances no new argument he comments ably aud pointedly on the remarks of no less a per-\nson than the Vice-President ol the 0.\nP. R., the greatest corporation in\nCanada. Mr. Bury says one ot the\ntroubles that he believes is confronting us is that we expect too much\npaternalism. The truth is that we\nhave seen the C.P.R. and other corporations do so well under the limited paternalism that seen to have\nbeen reserved for such institutions,\nto the exclusion of all others, tba:\nwe have even dared to hope thnt\nperhaps a measure, a very limited\nmeasure, of the dose, might work la\nthe case of others industries, say,\nagriculture. This from Mr. Bun-\nanil imve espe\nthe agriculturist. The Review ol July 3rd contained an article signed by \"A 1'ios\npector.\" In it the writer made a\nBtrong plea for paternal aid to the\nindustry <>f prospecting, to which the\nworld and this province owes so\nmuch.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Now tor the point ol the argument. Mr. Bury is afraid t!c family, lf he fails to\ndo this voluntarily the day will\ncome when his sous will get together and force bim to do what his\ncommon sense should have suggested\n: bin before. It is a foolish gov-\n' Every move thnt is made or every\nproposition that is gut carries with, eminent which fails to see in the\nit the idea that the Government ,.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;. ution anything of good, and it\nmust father it. Why not stop this I is a wise government which absorbs\npaternalism idea and try something what is best in its opponents .wbeth-\nfor ourselves.' Alas, that a man of er ^ib._>ral or Socialist. Whereas So-\nthe ability and experience which have cialism today would be a failure as\nraised Mr. Bury to the proud position he occupies, should fail so utterly to read the signs of the times.\nan executive force, it is furnishing to\nthe tbir.*:er some of the gn-atest re-\nform suggestions that any party has\nStop paternalism! Might as well try j cver advocated and it would be good\nto stop the roll or the mighty ocean. I fatherhood on the part of our gov-\nHhh Ui\" t:a:a,: '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" t-i\" r JSI ernmsnt to .take this latest political\nclaimant to sonship into the paternal confidence and co nsel. If not\nsnme day this big growing boy will\ndemand recognition and when the old\nman is enfeebled with internal complications, obtain by force more, a\ngreal deal more, than he has the\ncourage to ask or hope for in this\nday of bis youth.\n\"Paternalism equitably administered solves the enigmas of time, answers the riddles of the past, knoc'ts\nthe crutches from under the pessimist and furnishes the reformer with\nabundant food for thought. It has\nmany names and a past history\nwhich is not very flattering, but tbe\ngovernment which adopts this child\nand gives him fair treatment, will\nmake for itself a name which will\nnot souu be fnrgott>n.\"\navailed for naught? Knows he not i\nthat the idea of paternnlism, Governmental fatherhood, is the infant\nof the political conceptions of agv\"\n\"Perhaps be means to Btop paternalism as it ims been carried out in\nthe past, where corporations and\nrailroads whoBO 'every move and proposition carried with it the idea that\nthe Government must father it.\" lf\nhe means to stop that form of pa\nternaHsm he is right, it will be\nstopped. The people are awaking to\nthe fact that in many instances their\nvery best lands, their forests, their\nprairies, their Alpine beauty spots,\ntheir minerals aud in fact the cream\nof their inheritance has heen given\naway to the corporations and rich\ncapitalists and in return they are offered a mess of pottage. The change\nhas not come uh the result of political agitation or opposition, but on\nthe other hand it haH como because\nof the actual emancipation of the\nvoters who in the past have been\nblindly led by so called politicians\nwho were nothing more than scamps\nand political bootleggers.\nUnder that system paternalism by\nthe Government would have furnish-\ned but additional power to tbe ex- j\nploiters and left us in worse condi- j\ntlon\nPrevent Bush Fires\nTho town ol Hearst in Ontario waa\ni recently destroyed liy a lorest lire.\nSeveral villages in New llnnnwlrk\n; have been swept away by (orest lires\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Hub summer. During the paBt tour\nsummers at least two down villages\nhave Buffered through forest IIi'ob ln\nEaBtkrn Canada, The prime ralise of\nthese lires is neglect in protecting\n' young timber Irom lire. Since the\n. burning of the .'row's Nest Valla; In\n: 1908, with ihe loss of lives and mil\nllona or dollars worth ol properly,\nI special cure has been paid through\nout the Province ol iintish Oolumbla\nto the prevention ami control ol lor\nest Brea in young Umber as well as\nmature timber.\nIt has been found by experience\nthat a large proportion ol the lires\nwhich start in slush or young timber will, if allowed t\u00E2\u0080\u009E run, spread to\nvaluable timber or property, ami\nwhen beyond control destroy the\nhomes of settlers In the small villages now being built up throughout\nthe Province and cause loss ol life.\nThe protection ol the \u00C2\u00BBjttlers, as\nwell as of the timber, is uot assured\nunless all bush fires aro kept under\ncontrol during the dry season.\nYoung timber growing on non-agricultural lands is an asBet worth protecting from Are. Nearly every settler knows how rapidly young timber\ngrows to pole and tie size. In moBt\ndistricts in British Columbia timber\nreaches commercial size in sixty or\neighty years. It requires no planting, grows without care or expense\nand produces a valuable crop which\nnow beautifies the hills, protects the\nwatersheds and will in another generation support industries. These facte\nnre bo well understood in BritlBh Columbia that thr Forest Branch is everywhere securing th? co-operation ol\nthe residents in preventing destructive fires in the young as well as the\nold timber.\nBush Fire Perry Creek\nDuring the hot weather we are now\nexperiencing the tire wardens and\nrangers of this district are having a\nstrenuous time of it. The hot and\nwindy weather has caused many\nbush tires to spring up and consequently has rendered their control\nif possible, than we are today. | extremely difficult. There are at\nWho in C'anaia has gained so much\nfrom paternalism .as has the 0. P.\nR.? And now forsooth, Mr. Bury dis\ncourages paternalism there must be\npresent several crews of men out\nfighting the fires in different directions, the worst fire being one now\nraging on Perry Creek which is call-\nsomething left that the capitalists ing forth all the resources of the de-\nFiremen should be the\nInspectors\nFIRKMEE SHOULD BE Inspectors.\nFire Chlel Tremblay, ot Montreal,\nls asking lor 68 new firemen, one-\nhall of whom will be required to carry out the special system of fire Inspection which it is desired to put\ninto eflect without delay. An eitra\nman is to be attached to each station (or tbe work ol inspecting the\nbuildings of each district. The work\nwould be kept up constantly, the\nmen taking the inspection duties ln\nturn. This Ib decidedly a step ln\nthe right direction.\nA considerable part of the firemen's\ntime seemB to be consumed by fatiguing games, such as dominoes and\ncheckers, or ths armchair exercises\npracticed ln Iront of fire balls. Too\ngreat attention to theas pastimes\ntends towards mental inertia and\nphysical avoirdupois.\nLet part of the fire-fighting force\nteach the methods of prevention. Prevention will save property for the\nhouseholder and work tor the firemen. Moreover, It may save both\ntheir lives.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Industrial Canada.\nLargest Failure ever in\nthe United States\nTho great dry goods firm ol H. B.\nI'latlUt Co., with headquarters in\nNew York and a chain of thirty other storcB in different cities in the\nUnited States, went into liquidation\non Thursdny ol last week. It is reported that the liabilities of the concern amount to thirty millions ol\ndollars and over a thousand banks\nare caught In the collapse of the\nfirm. The head of the firm claims\nthat it has assetts aggregating forty-four millions of dollars, but thoy\nare unable to realize cash to satisfy\nthe banks. This Is the fifth time in\nthe history of this concern that it\nhns been In financial trouble, in the\nBoventy years of its existence, and\nIrlends hnd either to come to the\nicbciio or It hnd to Biibmit to reor-\ngnnizntlon. It still went on notwithstanding Its difficulties, adding new\nCranbrook Civilian Rifle\nAssociation\nThe Cranbrook Civilian Itiflo Association held a very Bi.cceBHl.il sh ot\non Wednesday afternoon, this being\nthe final competition lor the Baker\nCup. ThiB eup was preBontod to tho\nABsocintlon by V. Hyde linker, Ban,,,\nto encourage shooting among the\nyounger members of the association,\nthe conditions being that no men\nher should at tho time of entry havo\nmade a score ol 70 or ovor out Of a\npossible 10.r, to be Bhot lor at 500\nand 1100 yards oi.ee a month lor three\nconsecutive months, the highest aggregate score to tako the nip. Lister\nwas the winner and the eup will bo\npresented to lilm at a general meeting to i,e bold in the Government\nBuilding on Tuesday evening at 20\no'clock.\nThe highest scores were as loliows:\nMAY BHOOT,\n500 1,00\nLister BO 23\n0, lllll 17 14\nHarvey 'i'i 'il\n,11'NK BHOOT\nLister ill 28\n0, .'.ill BO 32\nHarvey 24 26\nJULY SHOOT\nLlstor 24 31\n('. fiill 30 28\nHarvey 25 20\nTOTALS.\nLister 157\nC. Hill 151\nHsrvey 145\nIn the practice shoot the following\nwere the best scores:\n200 500 600 Ttl.\nW. J. Atchison 33 33 31\u00E2\u0080\u0094 97\nA. 0. Bowness 30 28 24- 92\nJ. Milne 32 27 20- 79\nSpecial Meeting\nA special meeting of the Cranbrook\nCivilian Ride Association Is called\nfor Tuesday evening, August 4th; at\n8 o'clock, in the haement of the\nGovernment Building for the purpose\nof considering ways and means to\nprocure a government range for\nCranbrook. This is a most important matter and one which should interest every members as well aB the\ngeneral public and it ia hoped that\nall members as well as any person\ninterested will make it a point to attend.\nASK FOR\nFIHEROSKill\nThe World's Best\nSend/or Five Roses\nCOUPON\nWrit. Hum end Add\u00E2\u0084\u00A2* lUuly.\nDbni (\u00C2\u00AB|M ta mlm T\u00C2\u00ABn Oeem\nin Hamjn\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"' I IBM\nCook Book-\nBEING A MANUAL OP COOD RECIPES carefully\nchoMn Iron. th\u00C2\u00AB contribution! of over two thouaand\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uccntful Men of Five Rbtes Flour throughout Canada.\nAIM Ueeful Note* on th* variom cImw* of good thing*\nto eet, ill of which have been carefully checked end\nre-checked by competent authority.\n___w m*m huu wnt wm mm_ijwn___mg_t\nCranbrook Jobbers. Ltd.\nDISTRIBUTORS, ORANBROOK\nBabies coming back to farm\nTo Keep gutter Cool\nWhen ice Ib not available, put\nenough butter for a meal ln a small\ndish, and set it in a larger one containing a little water. Turn a porous clay flower-pot over It and this\nwill cause evaporation of the water\nIn a way that will keep the air inside ' the pot very cool. II the pot\nls wrapped in wet cloth, the corners\nof which are left touching water in\nouter dish, the arrangement ls almost as good as an ice-chest. Stand\ndish where there is a Iree circulation\nof air.\nThis is as helpful In connection\nwith milk, meat and other foodstuffs, and the similar trick of tilling\ncan or bottle with water, closing\nlt tightly, wrapping ln wet flannel,\nand standing in a current of air, will\ncool the water as effectually as putting ice in it. If tbe wrapped can\nis stood in a plate containing water,\ntbe flannel will keep wet without attention.\nJust a Sprig of the\nMountain Heather\nAn unusual Oovernment publication\nhas recently been Issued by the Dominion Parks Branch of the Department of the Interior. It consists ol\na small souvenir booklet artistically\nbound ln duplex leather wild grass\npaper and tied with an olive green\nsilk cord. The lettering is embossed\nin gold and a very unique design has\nbeen chosen for tho cover. The latter is cut out so aB to form a sort\nof frame and in this is inset.a spray\nol Canadian Heather trom the Rocky\nMountains Park, the purplish flowers\nol tbe heather against the wood-\nbrowti background making a very\nattractive colour combination.\nIt will no doubt he a matter ol\nsurprise to many to learn that Canada possesses a heather ot her own.\nThis plant ls not, as It has sometimes been called, a \"poor relation\"\not the Scotch heather, hut has a Um-\nUy connection and slandtng ol Its\nown well recognized hy botanists,\nand ls nearly allied to the Heath of\nthe British Isles. The booklet gives\nan interesting account of tbo locality\nfrom whlsh the souvenir was gathered, Simpson pass, abo.it thirty inllos\nPalls ol I'criy Creek, showing Plume nf the Perry Croek Hydraulic Mining Co\nThe country around this district is now being broughi again into prominence because nf the\ndevelopment that la taking place in rasped to tne gold mining revival in Perry Creek and tho\ndistrict adjacent to Cranbrook.\nstores mul Increasing Its Held of op\n.. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ... , ...,,,,., . ,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,..,\u00E2\u0080\u009E south ol Uanff, and ol some of tho\norations. It Is now roported that1 tits _ '___., . t ,__\nbanks aftactod by tho failure will m-l lcB''\"'lfl\neuro a reorganisation of tho concern\nand It wlll eventually go on unH'r\nlho same iniinngoment. I\n al Parks ol tho Dominion, not only\nTramp Would you glvo a poor to tho attractions thoy offer to those\nanil stories connected with\nthe heather ln othor lands. Its main\npurpose, however, Is to rail tho attention ol Canadians to tho Nation\nBABIES \t\nThe agricultural fairs of the nation\nwhich have so much to do witb\nstandardizing stock, grain and farm\nproducts in general, bave taken up a\nnew line of work. They are improving a farm product which had been\nsadly neglected\u00E2\u0080\u0094the farm baby. The\nSpokane Fair last year was given tbe\ncredit of holding the largest Better |\nKabiea Contest staged in the country, and this year it Is going to lend\na helping hand to both the farm and\ncitv baby again in the second annual\ntests of the health of the babi's.\nAGE LIMITS, ONE TO FIVE\nYEARS.\nThc age limits in the Better Babies Contest have heen chen^ed thiB\nyear, no baby under one year being\nallowed to enter, and the maximum\nlimit has been increased from four to\nfive years. As a result any haby in\nthe Inland Empire between the ages\nol twelve months and five years is\neligible lor entry. All entries must\nhe made hefore the opening of the\nFair on Sept. 12 and on tbe official\nblank furnished free of charge by Dr.\nWilliam L. Hall, Old National Bank\nbuilding, Spokane, superintendent ol\nthe department. No entrance fee ls\nrequired. The examinations will be\nstarted Saturday, Sept. 12, and wlll\nbe continued Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and up to Friday\nnoon of the next week. The prizes\nwill be awarded in fron of the grand\nstand on Saturday, Sept. 19.\nFew among thi 1,300 mo hers that\nbrought babies for examination last\nyear were moved by the idea of winning prizes. The big majority were\nInterested rather in finding whether\nthoir children were hialtby and bow\ntheir strength could be Increased.\nThe Spokane Fair, however,Is giving\nover $300 in prizes tor the hest babies this year, and the Woman's\nHome Companion, which initiated a\nmajority of the Better Babies Contests last year, wlll give a series of\nPhoto . by Oeorge Libby.\nmedals to the prize winners and diplomas and certificates of examination to the othars. The boy and girl\nshowing the most improvement over\nthe 1913 tests will each he glvin cash\nprizes of $10 by the Fair management.\nstnrvln' manisomothlng to ont, nitun\nl.ady ot Ilio HoilM-I might, hut\nyou are nnl starving. .\nTramp I know dat, lady, but an\nounce ol prevention Is worth a\npound of euro, yon know.\nwho mre able to visit them, hut also\nto tholr valuo in tho national llle.\nTholr commercial potentialities are\nsomewhat startling. It Is pointed\nout that owing to the Increasing\nmodern taste for travel, striking\nscenery has become one of the most\nvaluable sources ot revenue a nation\ncun possess. The tourist revenue of\nSwitzerland per yenr is placed at 150\nmillion dollurs. It would appear,\ntherefore, that the creation of national parks, which aro one of the\nbest moans of attracting and providing for tourist travel, may well be\nconsidered ln thc United States, as a\n\"Bolld business proposition.\"\nIt Is on othir grounds thin tbe\ncommercial, however, that the parks\nlay claim to recognition. Chief of\nthese Is an aid to producing efficient\ncitizens. These great natural reserves are reservoirs of vitality for the\nrace. As an antidote to the Ills of\nover-civlllzation and the complex life\nof modern cities, they offer the opportunity lor life in the wilderneas\nand the best sort of recreation where\nfresh air, sunshine and heaut'ful natural scenery are combined. The problem of thc preservation of the vitality of thc race Is admitted by all conservationists today, to be the first of\nall conservation problems and ths\nvaluo ol parks, playgrounds and recreation in thiB respect is each year\nbeing given a largi'r place.\nThe I'lliiriitional and patriotic Influent!' of the Parke Ib nlao touched\nupon as well as the work which tbe\nDominion Parks Branch la doing in\ntbo preservation of native wild llfo\nlu connection with the buffalo, elk,\nnntclope, etc., ns well as bird life.\n'Ihero Ib also pointed out thi) need\nlor tho creation of historic parka aa\na means ol preservation for our historic sites, many of which we are al\nlowing to disappear.\nA new line of development which is\nworthy of consideration, Is suggested, viz: the provision ol nationnl\nparks near out congested centres ot\npopulation. All modern town planning makes provision tor parks and\nPlaygrounds within the city Itself,\nbut while these are useful and necessary they provide a means of recreation for a few hours at most. The\nnational parks would reserve large\nareaa whet*-; people would he free to\ngo for as long as they desired. Such\nparks would be, ln reality, 'people's\nestates' and would afford to the ordinary citizen many of tho advantages which the man of wealth possesses in his country eBtatc. In the\nwords of tbe booklet tbey would ho\n\"places where the poor could get a\nsummer cottage or camp site for a\nnominal rental, where boys and men\ncould camp and Ilsh und study nature, where the sick and delicate\ncould And new stores of health ln the\ngreat out-of-doors, by right of citizenship, without leavo or hindrance\nol anyone.\"\nThere is still within easy reach of\nmany of our large cities, land available for such a purpoae which Is either public doma'n or procurable at\nlow cost. It would seem worth whllo\nconsidering the advice given hy Ambassador Uryco In Ottawa, before his\nreturn to England, namely, that tho\ntime to set asldo public domain for\ntho future needs of tho peoplo is now\nnot when the encroachments of civilization have rendered tills almost\nj Impossible. THE PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK, B. C\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICH\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the MiniBter of Lands for\na Licence to prospect for, coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bltuate in the Fernle District ot South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nJennlei Swain's 8. W. corner, and\nrunning south 80 chains, thence east\n80 chains, thonce north 80 chains,\nthence wost 80 chains to the point of\ncommencement.\nJOHN KENNEDY, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated Ilrst day ot duly, 1914. -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter dato horeol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ol LandB for\na Llcenco to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bituate ln the Fernie District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe S. W. corner of J. Dewar's location thence South 80 chains, thence\nEast 80 chains, thence North 80\nrhains, thonco West 80 chains to\npoint ol commencement,\nE. SUTTABY, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914 -2\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICB la hereby given that, Bixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the MiniBter of LandB lor\na Licence to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bituate ln the Fernie District ot South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe N. E. corner of F. W. Swain's\nlocation, thence East 80 chains,\nthence South 80 chainB, thence West\n80 chains, thence North 80 chains to\nplace ot commencement.\nJENNIE SWAIN, Locator\nJ\ F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated Ilrst day of July, 1914. -29\n -\u00C2\u00BB\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to thc Minister ol Lands lor\na Licence to proBpect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bltuate In the Fernle District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a pos^ planted at\nthe N. E. corner of Jennie Swain's\nlocation, thence North 80 cha'nB,\nthonce East 80 chains, thence South\n80 chains, thence WeBt 80 chains to\npoint of commencement.\nW. McKENZIE, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated first day of July, 1914. -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na Licence to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe N. W. corner of W. McKenzle'a\nlocation to run thence North 80\nchains, thence East 80 chains, thence\nSouth 80 chains, thence West 80\nchains to point of commencement.\nM. McKENZIE, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated first day of July, 1914. -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, sixty days alter date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands lor\na Llcenco to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a poat planted at\nthc S. W. corner of H. M. Colllngs'\nlocation to run . South 80 chains,\nthence East 81 chains, thence North\n80 chains, thence West 80 chains to\npoint of commencement.\nJ. TOSH, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914 -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter dato hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands for\na Licenoe to proapect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthc North-east corner of T. B.\nO'Connell running East 80 chains,\nthence South 80 chains, thence West\n80 chains, thence North 80 chains to\nthe point of commencement,\nFRED W. SWAIN, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated flrat day ol July, 1914. -29\nof commencement.\nMAURICE QUAIN, Locator,\nJOHN EWIN, Agin:\nLocated second day oi July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty dayB after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na License to prospect for coai aud\npetroleum over the lollowlng described landB, situate in thc Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe 8. W. corner ol M. tjuain and\nrunning South 80 chains, thence EaBt\n80 chains, North 80 chains and thenco\nWeBt 80 ohains to the point ol commencement.\nWILLIAM MATTHEWS, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nSouth West corner ol William Mac- Commencing at a poBt planted at\nKonzie to run North 80 chains, thenoe |Frank Rutley's S. W. corner to ru,;\nWest 80 chains, thence South 80\nchains, thence East 30 chains, to\npoint of commencement.\nMURDOCH MacKENZIE, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, six\nty days after date hereof, I i\"ti d\nto apply to the Minister of Lands tor\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie Dis-\nrict ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nWebster Burton's N. W. Cor. thence\nEast 80 chains, thence North 80\nchains, thence West 80 chains and\nthence thence South 80 chains to\npoint of commencement.\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Locator\nLocated tirst day of July, 1914. -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereol, i Intend\nto apply to the Minister ot Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the lollowlng described lands, situate in the Fernle District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a poat planted at\nJ. F. Huchcrolt's N. W. Cor. thence\nEast 10 chains, thence North 90\nchains, thence West 80 chains, and\nthence South 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\n8. E. HUCHCROFT, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands tor\na Licence to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate ln the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe N. E. corner of Jennie Swaln'a\nlocation to run thence South 80\nchains, tbence EaBt 90 chains, thence\nNorth 80 chains, thence W\"st 80\nchains to point of commencement.\nJ. DEWAR, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agont\nLocated llrat day ol July, 1914. -29\nCOAL AND PBTROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, sixty days alter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands lor\n_ Licence to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate ln the Fornle District of South Eaat Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe S. W, corner of E. Suttaby's location to run South 80 chains,\nthence East 80 chains, thence North\n80 chn.ns, thence West 80 chainB to\npoint of commencement.\nH. M. COLI.INQS, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914 -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, siity dayB alter dato hereof, I intond\nto apply to thc Minister ol Landa lor\na Licence to proapect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate ln the Fernle District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted nt\nFrank Rutley's North WeBt corner,\nthence East 80 chains, North 80\nchains, West 80 chains, South 80\nchains to place ol commencement.\nJ. E. WALLER, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914 -29\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands (or\na License to prospect tor coal and\npetroleum over the following described landB, situate in the Fernie District of South Eaat Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nA. B. Grace's N. E. corner to run\nNorth 80 chains, thence East 80\nchains, thence South 80 chains,\nthence West 80 chains to point ol\ncommencement.\nL. THOMPSON, Locator,\nJOHN EWIN, A ten;\nLocated third day of July, 1914,\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of LandB for\na License to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described landB, situate in the Fertile District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nT. H. Banfleld's S. W. corner, to\nrun North 80 chaina, thence Weat 80\nchaina, thence South 80 chains,\nthence East 80 chains to place ol\ncommencement.\nROSS CARR, Locator,\nJOHN EWIN, Agort\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nN. E. corner ol Hetting M. Colllngs,\nto run North 80 chains, thence West\n80 chains, thence South 80 chains,\nthence East 80 chaina to point o!\ncommencement.\nJANET C. M. DEWAR, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands (or\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the tollowing described lands, situate in the Fernle District ol South EaBt Kootenay.\nCommencing at a poat planted at\nN. W. corner ol Emily Alice Suttaby\nto run South 80 chains, thence West\n80 chains, thonce North 80 chains,\ntbence EaBt 80 chains, to point of\neommen cement.\nHETTIE M. COLLINOB, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nNorth 80 chains, thence West 80\nchains, thence South 80 chains,\nthtnee East 80 chains to point ol\ncommencement.\nWM. McKENZIE, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agen:\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands lor\na License to proapect lor coal and\npetroleum over the lollowlng described landB, situate in the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthc 8. E. Corner ol W. R. John and\nto run South 80 cbainB, West 80\nchains, North 80 chaina and Eaat 80\nchains to place of commencement.\nM. A. BEALE, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Ancnt\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICB\nNOTICB Is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the following described landB, Bituate in the Fernle District ol South Bast Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nRoss Carr's N. W. corner to run\nNorth 80 chains, thence Bant SO\nchains, thence South 80, and thenco\nWest 80 chains to plnce of commence\nment.\nOBOROB LEASK, Lo.'iltor\nJOHN BWIN, Agent\nLocated third day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, sixty daya aftor date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands (or\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bltuate ln the Fernle District ol South Bast Kootenay.\nCommencing at a poat planted at\nS. W. corner of Fred Kummer, to\nrun North 80 chains, West 80 chains,\nSouth 80 chains and thence Eaat 80\nchains to place of commencement.\nT. H. BANFIEI.I), Locator,\nJOHN EWIN, \ .en;\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PBTROLBUM NOTICB\nNOTICB is hereby given tbat, sixty days after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the MiniBter of Lands for\nLicense to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over thc following described lands, situato in tho Fornle District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post plnnted at\n1 mile West of the S. W. Cor. of L.\n7339 in Block 4.193 and running\nNorth 80 ehalni, thonce Enst 30\nchains, thence South\nthence Weat SO chains to the point I\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na License to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bituate in the Fertile District o( South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nN. W. corner' ol Johanna Tosh to\nrun North 80 chains, thence East 80\nchains, thence South 80 chains,\nWest 80 chains, to point ol commencement.\nWILLIAM MacKENZIE, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICB\nNOTICE is horeby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands tor\nLicense to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the lollowing described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South Bast Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nN. W. corner of M. A. Beale, to run\nNorth 80 chains, West 80 chains,\nSouth 80 chaina, and East 80 chains\nto place of commencement.\nFRED KUMMER, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated third day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICB\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to thc Minister of Lands lor\na License to proapect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nMurdoch McKenzle'a N. W. Cur.,\nthence Bast 80 chains, thence North\n80 chains, .hence West 80 chains and\nthence Soutb 80 chains to point ol\ncommencement.\nWEBSTER BURTON, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the tollowing described lands, situate in tbe Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted ct\nthe S. W. corner of A. C. Bowness\nto run North 80 chains, thence West\n80 chains, South 80 chains and East\n80 chains to place ol commonu'ment.\nW. R. JOHN, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Ageut\nLocated second day ol July, 1914,\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hercol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands tor\na License to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the lollowing described lands, situate in the Fernie District ol South EaBt Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\n1 mile west of the N. W. cornor of C.\nL. 1920 to run South 80 chains,\nthence Bast 80 chains, thence North\n80 chains and West 80 chains to\npoint ol commencement.\nEMILY ALICE SUTTABY, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agent\nLocated third day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty dnyB after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the MiniBter ol Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bltuate ln the Fernie District of South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe 8. E. corner ol A. C. Bowness to\nrun South 80 chains, thence West 80\nchains, thence North 80 chains and\nEast 80 chains to the place ol commencement.\nLEA SIMS, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, Bixty\" days alter date bereol, I intend\nto apply to the MiniBter ol Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the lollowlng described lands, situate in the Fernie District ol South Bast Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe 8. W. corner of M. qualn and\nrunning North 80 chainB, thence WeBt\n80 chains, thence Soutb 80 chains,\nthence East 80 chains to the point of\ncommencement.\nA. C. BOWNESS, Locator\nJOHN BWIN, Agent\nLocated second day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICB\nNOTICE Is horeby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of LandB (or\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum ovor the following described lands, situate In the Fernle District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted ut\nS. E. cornor of J. 0. M. Dewar to\nrun North 80 chains, thence East 80\nchains, thenco South R) chains,\ntlience West 80 chaina to point of j\ncommencement.\nJOHANNA TOSH, Locator\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT, Agonl\nLocated third day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PBTROLBUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty days niter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ot Lands for\nLicense to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over tho following descrlb-\ned lnnds, situate in the Fernle His\nchaina and I trict ol South Eaat Kootenay.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICB\nNOTICE Is hereby given tbat, sixty days after date hereof, I Intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands for\na License to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described landa, altuate in tho Fertile District ol South Bast Kootenay.\nCommencing at a Post planted at\n(leorge Leask's N. W. corner to run\ntlience Nortli 80 chnins, thonce East\n80 chains, thenco South 80 chains,\nand West 80 chains to plnce of commencement.\nFRANK RUTLBY, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agont\nLocated third day of July, r.iit.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Mlnlater ol Lands for\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following descrlb\ned lands, situate in the Fernie District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthc 8. W. corner ol W. F. Doran,\ntbence 80 chainB South, thence East\n80 chainB, thence North 80 chains,\nthence West 80 chains to point ol\ncommencement.\nLESTER CLAPP, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agotr-\nLocated tirst day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Ib hereby given that, sixty dnys alter date hereof, 1 intend\nto apply to the MiniBter ol Lands lor\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described landB, situate In the Fernie District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe S. E. corner ol Gertrude M. Tan-\nner, running EaBt 80 chains, thence\nNorth 80 cbalna, thence West 80\nchaina, thonce South 80 cbalna to\npoint of commencement.\nR. H. MUENCK, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated first day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby givon that, Bixty days atter date hereof, 1 Intend\nto apply to the MiniBter of Lands (or\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernie District of South Eist Kootonay.\nCommencing at a post plantod at\nthe N. E. corner ol George B. Powell running South 80 chains, thence\nEaat 80 chains, thenc North 80\nchains, thence West 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement.\nT. B. O'CONNELL, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated flrst day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, sixty days alter date bereol, I Intend\nto npply to tli\" Minister ol Lands lor\na License to prospect Ior coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, Bltuate III the Fernle Ills-\nCommencing at a post planted at . trict. ol South East Kootenay\nI\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the following described landa, situate ln the Fernlo District ol South Bast Kooten.' i.\nCommencing at a post planted al\nthe South West corner of George B.\nPowell's, thence South 80 chains,\nthence Bast 80 chains, thence North\n80 chains, thence West 80 chains to\nthe place of commencement.\nW. F. DORAN, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated flrst day of July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICB Is hereby given tbat, sixty days alter date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands (or\na License to prospect (or coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate In the Fernie Dls-\ntrh*. ol South East Kootenav.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe South East corner ol C. L. 1848,\ntbence South 80 cbalns, tbence Bast\n80 chains, thence North 80 chains,\nand West 80 chains to the point ol\ncommencement.\nOEO. B. POWELL, Locator.\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated flrst day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, siity days after date hereof, I intend\nto apply to the MiniBter of Lands for\na License to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the lollowlng described lands, situate in the Fernie Dis-\nt-ict ol South East Kooten y\nCommencing at a post plantod at\nthe South Bast corner ol C. L. 1848,\nthence North 30 chains, EaBt 80\nchains, South 80 chains and West\n80 chains to the point of commencement.\nGERTRUDE M. TANNER, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Ageut\nLocated Ilrst day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, sixty days alter date hereol, I intend\nto apply to the Minister of Lands lor\na License to prospect lor coal and\npetroleum over the following described lands, situate in the Fernle District of South East Kootenav\nCommencing at a post planted at\nA. McKenzie's S. W. corner to run\nNorth 80 chainB, West 80 chains,\nSouth 80 chains, thence East 80\nchaiUB to place of commencement.\nA. B. GRACE, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated third day ol July, 1914.\nCOAL ANO PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given tbat, sixty days alter date hereof, I intjnd\nto apply to the Minister ol Landa for\na License to proBpect for coal and\npetroleum over the lollowing described lands, situate in the Fernie District ol South East Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nA. B. Grace's N. E. corner to run\nNorth 80 chainB, tbence West SO\nchains, thence South 80 chains,\nthence East 3(1 chains to point ol\ncommencement.\nJOHN EWIN, Locator\n.orated third day ol July, 1914.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS.\nNOTICE,IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nall persons having any claim against\nthe estate ol the Into David Griffith,\nwho died on or about tlio IHth day\nof July, 1914, at Fort Steele. In the\nProvince ol British Columbia, are required on or before the 31st day ol\nAugust, A. D. 1914, to Bend by post\nprepaid to the undersigned solicitors\nlor George M. Judd and Henry Ker-\nBhaw, the executors ol the said estate, their names and addresses and\nfull particulars ol their claims iu\nwriting and a statement ol the accounts and the nature ol the securities, if any, held by thom, and such\nstatement shall be verified by statu-\nLIQUOR LICENSE ACT.\n(.Section 18.),\nNotice is hereby given that on the\nfirst day ol August, 1314, application will b; made to the Superintendent of Provincial Police for a\nlicence to sell liquor by a wholesale\nand wholesale shop license, on the\npremises yet to be selected as to\nlot and block number on the main\nstreet in the town ol Fort Steele.\nSuch lot and block number will be\nentered on ,the application.\nR. A. FRASER,\nManager Ior the Kurt Steele\nLiquor Co.\nDated tbis 1st day ol July, 1914.\n27-4t\nSYNOPSIS OF COAI, MINING\n'REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nin Manitoba, Saskatchewan aud Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the North\nViest Territories and in a portion ol\nthe Province of British Colombia,\nmay be leased (or a turm ol twentymo years at an annual rental of .1\nan acre. Not more than 2,560 acres\nwill be leaaed to one applicant.\nApplication lor a lease must be\nmade by the applicant in person to\ntin Agent or Sub-Agent ol the district in which tbe rightB applied for\nare situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must\nhe described by sections, or legal subdivisions ol sections, and in unaiir-\nveyed territory the tract applied (or\nshall be sta'icd out by the applicant\nhimself,\nEach application must be accompanied by a lee ol $5 which wlll be\nrefuniS.'d if tbe rights applied lor are\nnot availaDle, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shall be paid on tbe merchantable output ol tbe mine at tho\nrate ol live cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nlurniBh the Agent wltb sworn returns\ntory declaration.\nAND TAKE NOTICE that after the'accountin\u00C2\u00AB ,or thc 'ull quantity of\n31st day of August, A. D. 1914, merchantable coal mined and pay the\nGeorge M. Judd and Henry Kershaw roJ\"\"t5' \"\"eon. If tho coal mining\n\"''' ... ... BUC|1\nleast\nwill proceed to dlBtrlbute tbe assets rlBhts arc not belnK \u00C2\u00B0P<\u00E2\u0084\u00A2ted\nol the said deceased bavlng regard\nonly to the claims ol which they\nshall then have had notice, and will\nnot be liable to any perBOn ol whoflc\nclaim they Bhall not then have had\nnotice.\nHARVEY, McCARTER, MACDONALD Ik NESBIT\nSolicitors Ior said Executors. 29-4t\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNotice is hereby given that within\nsixty dayB from date hereof, 1 intend\nto apply to the Minister ol LandB\nfor a license to prosp.'Ct lor coal\nand petroleum over the following described lands Bltuate ln Block 4593,\nFernie District ol S. B. Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post plnnted\nabout 20 chains south of the Southeast corner of Lot 7117 and about\ntwo miles north ol the International\nboundary line, being the Southwest\ncorner, thence Nortli 80 chains, east\nreturns should be furnished at\nonce a year.\nThe lease will include 'the coal mining rights only, but the lessee may\nbe permitted to purchase whatever\navailable surface rights may be considered necesBary (or the working of\nthe mine at the rate ol 510.00 an\nacre.\nFor full Information application\nshould be made to the Secretary ol\nthe Department ol th'.' Interior, Ottawa, or to any Agent or Sub-Agent of\nDominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister ol the Interior\nN. B.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Unauthorized publication of\nthis advertisement will not b? paid\nlor.\u00E2\u0080\u009430090. Jan. 3rd-tf.\nCOAI. AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, sixty dayB alter date hereof, 1 intend\nto apply to the Minister ol Lands lor\n80 chains. South 80 chains, and Wcot'g Licence to proBpect lor coal and\n80 chains to point ol commencement petroleum over the lollowing describ-\nand containing 640 acros more or ,,_ ia\u00E2\u0080\u009Ed\u00C2\u00BB, situate in tbe Fernle Dis-\nlOBS.\nLorntcd tills 28th day\nI.\ntrict ol South\nif June, 1914.'Block 4593.\nEast Kootenay, In\nFRB1) LOOMIS,\nCommencing at a Post planted at\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nLocator Lester Clapp's South-Kast corner,\nJAMES FISHER, | south 80 chains, WeBt 80 chains,\nAgent North m chains, East 30 chainB, to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nLocated thiB Oth day of Juno, 1914.\nW. F. DORAN.\nLocator\nJOHN EWIN,\n25 Agent\nNotice is hereby given tbat within !\nsixty days Irom date hereol, 1 intend\nto apply to tbe Minister ol Lands\n(or a license to prosp.'Ct lor coal\nand petroleum over the following deecrlbed lands situate in Block 4593,\nFernie District of 8. E. Kootenay.\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe Southeast corner of Lot 7109 and\nbeing the Southwest co n.r, tbence\ncast 80 chains, North 30 chains, WeBt\nabout 40 cbalns and South about 60\nchains, West about 40 chains and\nSouth about 20 chains to point o,'\ncommencement and containing 640\nacres more or less.\nLocated this 28tb day ol June, 1914.\nFRED LOOMIS,\nLocator\nJAMES FISHER,\nAgent\nCOAL AND PBTROLEUM NOTICK\nNOTICB Ib hereby given tbat, Bixty days alter date hereol, 1 intend\nto apply to tho Minister ol Lands lor\na Llcenae to proapect lor conl and\npetroleum over the lollowlng described lands, situato in the Fornle Ills\ntmt of South iSaat Kooten IV\nCommencing at a post planted at\nGeorge Leask's S. W. cormir to run\n80 chains North, an plains West, 80\nchains South and nil chnins Kast to\ntbe point ol commencement.\nF. M. CHRISTIAN, Locator\nJOHN EWIN, Agent\nLocated third day nl July, 1914.\nScobtll's Liquor, Tobacco\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd Drujc Cure pPBTKdHS\nAlcohol, Tobacco sad Druii. Ii coufltortcie ihe\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Skis almost NMIuflf -removes til ereiinie.\nAim tekloi thc ltutn.nl ili.it \u00C2\u00ABlll mil bc est\nneed tcSUruk latoskonli ut un .Inift tittn. Ceo\nbo tlxK.Mcrally, Wc !.\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB yel to hen ol oni\nlillurc. Milled under sai.ir.ti cn\u00C2\u00BBer lo mt id\n.\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2l .Ksl\u00E2\u0080\u00A2**S.\"''\">\"\u00C2\u00BB'\u00C2\u00BB'**.!*> \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nSMkoll Drag \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,#\u00C2\u00AB. t\u00C2\u00BBn.\u00C2\u00BB.i\u00C2\u00BB.e, Oak\nCOAL AND PETROLEUM NOTICE\nNotice is hereby given that within\nflixty days Irom dato hereol, I intend\nto apply to thc Minister ol Lands\nlor a license to prosp.'Ct Ior coal\nand petroleum over tbo lollowing described lands situate in Block 4593,\nFernle District ol S. E. Kootenay.\nCommencing nt a post plnnted\nabout 20 chains south ol the Southeast corner ol Lot 7117 and about\ntwo miles north ol tbe International\nboundary line, being the Northwest\ncomer tlience south HO cbainB\n80 chains, mirth HO chains, and weat\n80 chains to point of cniitincuc'incut\nnnd containing t>4U acres more or\nless.\nLocated tills 28th day ol June, 1914.\nFlll'.ll LOOMIS,\nCANCELLATION OF RESERVE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\na reserve, notice of which appeared\nIn the B. C. Gazette on the 27th ol\nDecember, 1907, is cancelled In so lar\naa it relates to Lot 11804, Group 1,\nKootenay District, for tbe purpose of\nthe sale of same to the Canadian Pacific Railway.\nR. A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Minister ot Lands\nLands Department,\nVictoria, B. C,\n4th June, 1914. 24.3m\nMINERAL ACT\nIFORM F.)\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENT\nNOTICE.\nSTRATHCONA MINERAL CLAIM,\nSITUATE IN THK FT. STICKLE\nMINING DIVISION OF EAST KOO-\neast TENAY DISTRICT.\nTAKK NOTICK that I, Goo. M.\nJudd, agonl lor S. B, Steele, Free\nMiner's Certillcnte No, f.7372 b, Intend, sixty days from date horeol,\nto npply to the Mining Recorder lor\na Certificate of Improvement for lho\nLocator Purpose ol obtaining a Crown Grnnt\nJAMES EISHKIl, ,\"' 'be above claim.\nAgent AS\" '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\"IITIIElt TAKK NOTICK\n- mm*\" *'\"'* action under Section 37 must bo\nElMtrlC KOttOrer for net* commenced before the Issuance \"l\nPhOSDhoitol natana ..\u00C2\u00AB, actio io the boi.\nrm_____n__^u j|B ||----J iuiImi raatimJ\nio J .11.lur Preaiolt\nliio \t\nneiktieil curled tl once,\ntneke vou c flew mea. Price J| e\nU Melled to on* oddroee. *\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nD.\u00E2\u0080\u009E St. tl.,hme Ince. Oat.\n\u00E2\u0084\u00A2lup\"pei'teat\"\u00E2\u0084\u00A2i; reetorij SUM Certificate of Improvement.\n'\"\"\"\" Dated this llth dny ol Juno, A.\n1914.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2IMt QUO. M JUDD.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Ilelllr. Crenetnro dtcei and ell mui1 |\nrtMCBhoaot HID\nbot. Of t*o Iol\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oabill l>m|\n1). THE PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n+ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB~rt'l-H+-H--H+l'-l-+\u00C2\u00AB-l--H+\u00C2\u00BB'-+\u00C2\u00AB WH-H-I\n?\nProfessional (\u00C2\u00A3arbs\n-anb \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00C2\u00A3ob^e Hotices\nr4-t-l-M-W-W-MM\"rM.^ ,\nANCIENT ORDER OF FORESTERS\nCourt Cranhrook No. 8943.\nMeet in Maple Hall, on 2nd and\n4th Thursday ol each month.\nJ. McLACHLUN, CR.\nLouis Pearson, Soc, P.O. Box oil.\nVisiting Brothers Cordially Welcomed\nOVERSEAS CLUB\n(Craubrook Branch)\nMeets in Maple Hall on the 2nd\nand 4th Tuesdays in every month, at\n8 p.m. Membership open to British\nCitizens.\nE. Y. Bralte, Pres.\nW. J. LOwer, Sec-Treas.\nBoi 247.\nVisiting members cordially welcome\nCRANBROOK LODGE No\nA. F. _ A. M.\nRegular meetings on the\nthird Thureday ol every\nmonth.\nVisiting brethren welcome.\nH. Hirttenbotham, W.M.\nJ. Lee Cranston, Sec\n34\nROCKY MOUNTAIN CHAPTER\nNo. 125, R. A. M.\nRegular meetings:\u00E2\u0080\u00942nd Tuesday in\neacb month at eight o'clock.\nSojourning Companions are cordially Invited.\nBi. Comp.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. C. Shankland, E\nCranbrook, B.C.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nCranbrook, B.O.\nCrescent Lodge, No. 31\nMeets every Tuesday at 8 p.m.\nat Fraternity Hall.\nA. Hurry, C. C.\nE. Halsall, K. ol R. & 3.\nB. A. Hill, M. F.\nVleltlng brethren cordially Invited\nto attend.\nV\nI.O.O.F., KEY CITY LODGE\nUo. 41\nMeets every Monday night\nat Eew Fraternity Hall.\nSojourning Oddfellows cor\nillully Invited.\nBroughton, W. M. HarrlB,\nN. Q. Sec'y\nPRIDE OF CRANBROOK\nCircle No. 153\nCompanions ol the Foreet\nMeets In Maple Hall , First and\nThird WedneBdny ot each moath at\n8 00 p.m., Bharp.\nMrs. A. M. lAlirio, C. 0\nMrs. A. E. Shaw, Sec\nVisiting Companions sardlally wel-\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\nCRANBROOK LODGE\nNo. 1049\nMeets every Wednesday at 8 p.m.,\nin Roynl Black\nKnights' Hall on\nlinker Street.\nMatthhws, dictator.\nCarlson, Box 756. Secretary.\n\"T^\nINDEPENDENT ORDER OF\nFORESTERS\nMeets In Royal Black Knlghte Hall\nBaker Street\nMeets every 2nd ond tth Thureday\nof each month at \u00C2\u00BB p.m. eharp.\nMrs. I.. HaywaiM, ree sec.\nIV ll. MacFarlane, chief ranger\nVisiting brethren made welcome.\nThe Cranbrook Poultry and Pet\nStock Association\nPresident-A. B. Smith.\nMeets regularly on tho First Friday\nevening of each month.\nInformation on Poultry matters\nsupplied.\nAddress the Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094W, Vi McGregor, Craahrook.\nLoyal Orange\nLodge No. 1871\nMeets 1st. and\n3rd Thursday In\nIt oynl lllnck\nKiiuihts ol Ire-\n8 p.m. sharp. Visitors\nland .mil ut\nRtelrorne.\nIi. h. Oarrott, w. M,\nft. Diiiintan, Roc Soc.\nCranbrook Farmers' Institute\nPres.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. B. Smith\nSec\u00E2\u0080\u0094A,b. H. Webb\nMeetings are held on the Third\nThursday in the month at 8 p.m. iu\nthe Old Gymnasium All Welcome.\nWomen's Institute\nMeets in tbe Carmens1 Hall 1st\nTuesday afternoon In every mouth\nat i p.m. Tbe fancy work classes\nmeets on 3rd Friday evening iu the\nsame place at 8 p. m.\nMrs. E. H. Leaman, President\nMrs. j. shnw. Sec-Treas.\n1'. o Boi 4-12.\nAll ladies cordially lnt Ited.\nT. T. M cV I T T I E\nP.L.S. * CH.\nCRANBROOK. ... B.O.\nHARVEY, McCARTER, MACDONALD\nand NISBET\nBarristers, Solicitors and Notarise\nMoney to Load\nImperial Bank Building\nCRANBROOK, - Britleb Columbls\nLAIDLAW _ DE WOLF\nCivil and Mining E\u00C2\u00ABt-ineers-Britieh\nColumbia l4ind Surveyors\nP.O. Boi 236\nCRANBROOK,\ni'bono 221\n... B.O.\nDrs. KING & GREEN\nPhysicians and Surgeons\nOffice at Residence, Armstrong Ave\nOlflco Hours:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nForenoons - - 1 00 to 10.00\nAfternoons - - 2.00 to 4.00\nEvenings - - - 7.30 to S.30\nSundays - - - S.30 to 4.30\nOranbrook, B.O.\nF. M. MacPherson\nUNDERTAKER\nNorbury Aveuue Neit to City Hell\nOpen Da, end Night Plume lii\nW. R. BEATTY\nUndertaker,\nKnilialmer,\nFuneral Dlraotor,\nCRANHROOK, B.C.\nP.O. BOX 585\nI'HONK 348\nCranbrook\nCottage Hospital\nGARDEN AVE.\nMatron: Mrs. A. Salmon\nTerms on Application\nPhone 259 V. O Box 845\nNOTIOH OF CANCELLATION OF\nRESERVE\n2l:i07,\n22f,r,l,\n2CJ2C,\n2MH2,\n:U184,\n81185,\n:I2II22,\n83711,\n84231,\n:ii27;t,\n87M8,\n87994,\nNotice is hereby given that a reserve, notice of which appeared In\ntbe B.C. Gazette, on October 10th,\n1912, is cancelled in su lar as It relates to the following expired timber\nlicences:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n11347,\n2C7.'i7,\n,111X0,\n31411,\n33460,\n3731(1,\nand 431 ;r,\nR. A. RBNWIOK,\nDeputy Minister ,,f Lands.\nLands Department.\nVictorin, B.C. March .'list, 11114.\nIf. 3m.\nDr. de Van's Female Pills\nA relleblc French TeRuUt' : nt ver falls. These\npill, ere exceedingly pomrfol I\" '-,: il.tlng Ilia\nI'l'n.r.i'iv. portion of tin' fornole lyslein, Rsfofl\nnil rlicni) linllell.ini llr. .1.- Von'e Hte sold el\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fie Inn, or three f\"i tin, Mnil<-,| to itnv atHrei*\nIke SixlMll llroj CO., KI. I ethsrliioe, Out\n4481,\n2311C,\n28183,\n31201.\n33411,\nMil),\n4I341.\nMS2,\n2-1432,\n30368,\n31380,\n33459,\n36503,\n41420\nThe Romance of the\nGold Quest\nJason'a guest of thu golden tloscis ih\nh1 ill 'in progress, but tbe Jattona\nnumber many thousands In mnny\nhinds. Tbeir methods are its various\nas tbe lands.\nIn addition tu tbe genuine latter-\nday Jason, wbo pegs down a Bueep-\nskiu in tbe gold-laden rivters ol Bur-\nope, and tho Pioneer who spreads un\nox-bide in the waters of Brazil, there\nare amalgamated Jnsons, who, with\nbutteries of stamps and crushers and\ndue equipment of mercury and cyan\nide, tear the uttermost auriferous\ngrain from tbe mountain and tbe\nreef. All told, these many Jasons,\nfrom primitive washings and organized scientific discovery, deliver now to\nthe markets of the world close upon\nUOU,000,000 worth of puro gold Pet-\nyear. The energy by which tho \"no-\nble\" metal is won from its matrix\nis largely that of tho black, tin-\nbrown and the yellow man. But the\nwhite man is lord of all. His is tbe\ndirecting mind, bis the capital, lus,\nas a rule, tbe Invincible courage and\ngenius which track the gold home to\nits mysterious abiding place. For It\nis mysterious, not only in Its sub\nBtanca, but also, even mote so. in its\noccurrence.\nThe wisest metallurgist cannol say\nwith \"certainty how gold was formed,\nnor can tin1 wisest geologist predict\nwhet-' it will be found, or. rather,\nwhere it will .not be round. There is\ngold in clrcutnpolar regions; there is\ngold in equatorial lands; there is\ngold, abundant gold, in Hungary;\nthere is gold in Canada; there is\ngold in China; there is gold in the\nKloi tyke; there is probably more\nId :n India than has ever yet come\n'.;: ol that old mint of the world.\nthere is gold en,nit:h in k-reat Britain to run the Bank of Kn^'lund. if\nwe could but discover a method sufficiently economical to make recovery pay.\nay strain it from the waters\nOi r.ver* winding wearily to sea; you\nmay dig it from the muddy beds of\nstreams run dry in Summer. You\nmay scratch it from dry soil where\nrivers ran million? of year ago. you\nmay burrow after it into the earthy\nsides of hills which have been left,\nsole sentinels of a past where what\nare now hills f .rmed part of great\nvalleys. You may stumble upon it in\nnuggets weighing two thousand or\nmore ounces, or blast it from thin\nveine of quarts in which it lies, run\nning hither and thither, as on the\nj Rand, where it dips at an angle of\nthirty degrees, then goes sheer down,\nlike strata of coal. We do not know\nbow it was formed; Bcientiiic guessing has resolved itself into a series\nuf well-defined schools to show how\nit came there. Three defined theories\nhold the field, though none of them\nare satisfactory as to th? origin of\ntbe metal. As to the greatest mines\nin the world\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Witwatersrand, in\nthe Transvaal\u00E2\u0080\u0094there can be no doubt\nthnt where the great reef now lies, a\nvast sea once washed. It deposited\ngravel and pebbles which we now\nknow as banket. Tbis banket, a\nDutch word, with the accent on tlic\nsecond syllable, means a sort of confection, a rock in which pebbles take\ntho place of almonds. The ban'tot\nwas deposited by the sea.\nThe rocks were worn down in an\nage-old past to pretty much their\npresent elevation; erosion and weathering having done tbe rest. Tbe\nsmooth ellipses in which the nuggets, when released from their bed,\nare found, represent the rounded\nft mis of gold, rolled and tumbled hy\nthe tide, as are the Bmooth nnd\nrounded pebbles found on the shore.\nSo far s0 easy. But how came the\ngold there in the first instance? Was\nit brought in by the sea and preci\npitated as minute gra!ns or as a\nchlorine.1 Or, after volcanic upheavals of the land had given the rocks\ntheir present fissured formation, did\ngold, contained in molten lava, pour\ncut from below to steal into crevices and openings to become solid in\nthe quartz in which it is now discovered? Was gold formed in the sea\nand brought thenee to the land tn\nenter by process of infiltration? Or\nwas th; gold of which the sea con\ntains vast quantities, infinitely diffused, conducted to the sea aH other\nterrestrial properties, which will\nsome dny form new continents, were\nconveyed, after frost and storm and\nrain 'and wind had done their part in\ndisintegrating the masses from which\nthey were wrested?\nWhatever the true answer may be,\nthere is the gold -in rock and banket, in pockets, in veritable mines\nrunning from four thousand to live\nthousand feel Bheor intn the bowels\nof tin- earth; and the problem is to\nreduce it to hard cosh,\nThe process of wlimiiif Ibe crud I\nmetal from tbo rock Ih noi vastly different from those employed in riving\nfrom tholr primordial beds the com\nmon products of which we mnk,- our\nfires and build our OfllCCS. Von bnve\ntin- rod: dull of the npwcfll pnttorn,\nthe flynamltc charge, tlm panting\nblack toiling, In plntonlc gloom, |u\ntiHoat of ibe brightest ot metals. Me\n\nTHE PROSPECTOR, CRANBROOK, B. C.\nAn Institute of which Cranbrook citizens may be proud -CRANBROOK PUBLIC SCHOOL\nBattleship vs. Submarine\nAn article appropriate to the disturbing\nconditions in Europe\nThe lollowlng articles will fornv interesting reading to our many subscribers ln view oi the disturbing elements in southern Europe and the\npossible breaking out ol a European\nwar. Urave will be the consequences\nif such a calamity occurs and the resulting influences will probably mean\nthe changing oi the whole of thi\nEuropean map.\nThe article lollowlng ls by a service contributor to tbe Edinburgh\nScotsman and he replys in the lollowing terms to tbe criticism ol Sir\nPercy Scott's recent letter claiming\nthat the day oi the Dreadnought ls\nover.\nSir Percy Scott's recent letter in\nthe Press, In which he has pronounced bimselt to the effect that the day\nol the battleship is over, and that\nnaval warfare in future will be carried on almost entirely by the Instrumentality ol the submarine and\nthc seaplane, has naturally aroused\ncontroversy, and it has been bailed\nwith unlimited satisfaction by the\nLittle Navyltes. The gallant Admiral's name undoubtedly carries considerable weight in, view ol bis pre-\nciouB contributions as an Inventor to\nthe efficiency ol the sea service. With\nthe assistance ot his skilled engineer\npersonnel he, moreover, contrived to\nproduce long-range held guns at a\ncritical time, just when, they were\nbadly wanted in Natal, and by doing\nso contributed appreciably towards\nthe saving oi Ladysmith.' Since those\ndayB hts ingenuity has devised methods by which tbe effectiveness ot naval gunnery has been greatly advanced. Bnt a technicalist and inventor\nis not necessarily a master oi the\nart ol war, and is indeed, in the nature of things, sometimes inclined to\nappraise merely mechanical contrivances at too high a value.\nEnormous progress haa been made\not late years, and ls Btill being mad;\nln developing the submarine. The\nucwest types ol these vessels are\nquite large ships, with a radius ol\naction extending hundreds ot mileB.\nSuch cralt are no longer tied to\nbases on the coast, and they are capable oi proceeding long distances\nwithout replenishing their motive\npower. But they labor under the\nsame disability that the original\ncraft labor under in that, wben submerged, they have to depend upon\nCome on\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aetego\n5EPT.I2L0 20-1914-\n1 MONG the Amusement Features will be Irwin's\nCheyenne Frontier Dnys\u00E2\u0080\u0094150 Cowboys with\na trainload of .stock presenting every thrilling\nWild West Contest known. (JLPolo Games\nwill be held daily between Canadian and American teams, competing for the Northwestern\nInternational Championship\nThe Rncinjs Program will include Motorcycle Races, Relay\nRaces, Indian Races, Cowboy Races, and the usual Running\nRaces. \ndispone .\nthm h\u00C2\u00ABvti\npayment\nthis\nl.ii\nIn many CISC'* tho speedometers show tlwt tho mr.1* have\nbeen run Inu irom SiOOo to\n10,000 mill's, wlillo th*-ir life\nIh from 100,000 io 160,000\nmiles. After thoroughly overhauling thc only thin\u00C2\u00AB worn\ndown is thi! prlftO,\nItarely moro than half is ul-\nlowed by im when teJcIng a\ncar on u tnidi' di-al of this\nkind. V,f nro soiling th*\nwill close Wednesday afternoons during July and August.\nPer Order BARBERS I'SIOX,\nR. S, Nelson, Secretary\nFor Sale Rents & Wants\nKOR SALB\u00E2\u0080\u00943000 potato Backs, sec-\nmd hand, in goud condition. Write\nA.B.C., Box 320, Cily. *81-2t\n$150 FOR SIXTY DAYS TO ANY\nthoughtful man or woman for helping uh circulate Bible literature.\nUible House, Desk 6, Brantford.\nFOR RENT\u00E2\u0080\u0094Excellent store on Armstrong 'avenue, lately occupied by\nNlblock & Barker, Apply W. W.\nKilby.\n$15 WEEK AND EXPENSES TO\ntravel appointing local representatives. Whitfield Liuscott, Dept. 7,\nBrantford,\nROOMERS WANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094Meals served,\nbreakfast u specialty. Cor. Lumsden avenue and Kdward street.\nPhone Ml. Mrs, J. tf, Mennie. ;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A229-lt\nAGENTS\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wreck of Empress of Ireland fltilt selling by thousands.\nProspectus free on promise to can-\nvuss. Big commission, Bralley-tJar-\nretson, * Brantford,\nWith the adjustments that make the\nright and left hand movements and nlso\nplain screwdriver. This handy inexpensive tool is needed in every home. Comes\ncomplete with three bits of different\nwidths.\nThe Disston Handy Hand Saw\nYes, it is Always sharp, will hold it5\nedge three times as lonn' as the ' just as\ngood \" kind. Another point to consider \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nIT'S FULLY WARRANTED. When\nyo'J buy a Disston you are getting the\nvery best saw that the very best mechanics know how to build.\nOne Disston Will Outwear Ser-\neral of the Common Kind\nIf It's Quality Tools\nFirst\nCome Here\nOut-of-town orders given prompt\nattention\nF. Parks fi? Co.\nHARDWARE and HOUSE\nFURNISHINGS\nCRANBROOK, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 British Columbia\n.\nLocal News\nBpeaklng of picture framing, Kilby\nFrame* Pictures. 'Nugh said.\nT. T. McVittie of Port Bteele wan\nIn the city last Sunday.\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094To Mr. nn.l Mrs. ('. Tyler,\non Sunday, July 26th, b daughter,\nNurse Oarson left on Thursday for\nHull River to attend tt patient, who\nIs very sick.\nGordon Palmer of Oanal kimh wuh\nregistered nt the Oranbrook Hotel\nTuesday,\nMr. and Mm, J, P, Kink and (ami\nJy nre visiting MiIh weok al, fJre-n\nimy, M-.vie Lake,\nMinn Pye left for Spokane yester\nday, and anticipates resuming her\nteaching the last woek in August.\nR. E. Beattie returned this week\nfrom spending a trip up in the Windermere district.\nKILBY FRAMES PICTTRES\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Wednesday, July 29th, to\nMr. nnd Mrn. J, T. McFadden, a\nson.\nBorn-On Saturday, July 18th, to\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Matson, a daughter.\nff. RatclifTe nnd P. Butterfleld of\nlnvermere were in the city on business Monday. They report business\nftrt being very quiet up thp valley.\nMrs. Frank Martin and son,\nI.awrancp, of Winnipeg, are visit int\nat the home of Mr. nnd Mrs. Maurice quain.\nMiss H. M. Collins, of the dry\ngoodti department nf the F;nk Mercantile Co., is visiting several of the\nprairie cities, among whirl, are Cal\ngary, I.arombe and Penh old. '\nR. J. Lung uf Creston was union k\nthe visitors registered at the Cranbrook on Tuesday. Mr. Long is well\nknown here and nlwnys receives a\nhearty welcome from his friends,\nMr. and Mrs, J. L. Cranston and\ntheir little daughter left Monday for\nWinnipeg where they are expecting to\nA MISTAKEN IDEA\nThere ore Mme people wlio itl 11 retort\nto drugged pills or nlcoholfi nyrupi to\novercome colds, nervousness or general\ndebility, nntl who know thai lhe pure,\nunadulterated nourishment In Scott's\nQmulilon Is eminently better, but refrain\nfrom Inking it because thej fenr it mny\nlead to excessive tal or oh Ity.\nThis Iin mistaken Ides, Ikm sh ic Scott's\nKriiul.ii.ii firs! strength ri ilu-body before\nmaking flesh* It* mood forming proper*\nti\u00C2\u00ABs niil nntiir.* to throw off sicltneu by\nbuilding\" health froth It verj Ronrce, ana\nflefdi is formed onlj by its i onlinued use,\nA void alcoholic aubatllul i foi SCOTT'S.\nspend several weeks of their vacation.\nKILBY FRAMES PICTURES\nMrs. M. B, Oolllns and children are\nleaving in a few days for Regina to\nvisit some of their friends until Mr.\nOolllns is established in his new position at Lethbridge.\nFrank Johnson and Frank Carlson\nreturned from a lishing trip lu the\nMoyie Lake on Thursday night with\nns tine a catch of tish us one could\nwish to hook on a line.\nRev. O. E. Kendall and daughter\nUuth have returned from a vacation\ntrip to Vancouver where tho annual\nmeetings of the British Oolumbla\nBaptist Convention were held early\nin the month.\nThe Parker boys, accompanied by\ntheir father and a friend, went ilsh\ning on Oold Creek Tuesday and drew\niu HOO tish Tor the party to divide.\nThey were much elated with their\n\u00C2\u00BBueeess.\nThe regular monthly meeting o. the\nLadles \id Society of the Methodist\nChurch will be held at the homo of\nMrs. ti. U. Powell, Garden a\cnue,\non Wednesday afternoon. August Sth,\nat :\ p, m.\nKILBY FRAMES PIOTURBS\nllev. Dr. Spencer of Vancouver, a\npreacher ol wide reputation in the\nBaptist denomination, will be the\nspeaker at tbe public Hemes in the\nBaptist Church on Sunday. Dr, Span\ncer la an expert worker among tin*\nchildren and will nlso address tho\nschool.\nThe maximum and minimum temperatures for the mouths of June ami\nJuly are June 15th 86 degrees an!\nthe ~\i\ 87 degrees, with a rainfall of\ntwo and one-tenth inches; for July\nthe 3thh ;>7 decrees and the mth 34\ndegrees with a rainfall ol one inch.\nThe children of Marysville and\nKimberley enjoyed a splendid outing\nat the former place on Wednesday.\nSeveral miners and parents also accompanied the party and an excellent\ntime was enjoyed with the usual\nround of races and sports that at\ntact, themselves to such picnics.\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. John E. Stannett fffshtes to\nvery sincerely thank all her friends\nwbo by their many actB of kindness\nand sympathy and gifts of beautiful\nllowers, did so much to help and\ncomfort her during her reomt bereavement.\nKILBY FRAMES PICTURES\nFor thirty days only Beale and Elwell are offering the biggest snap in\nreal estate in the history of Cranbrook, a live-roomed cottage \u00E2\u0080\u00A2five\nminutes walk from the Post Office),\nnewly decorated throughout, water\nand electric light. Price (for 30 days\nonly) $900. Terms $25.00 cash and\n$2.*>.00 per month, 8 per cent, interest. Apply Beale & Elwell.\nThe pipe organ of the Methodist\nchurch has been undergoing a complete overhauling this week by Mr.\nC, W. Howard of Vancouver. The\nrepairs and improvements will include nn electric blower and ventilat-\nThe instrument will be used at th\ning system, the strengthening of the\ninstrument throughout and tuning,\nservices Sunday though work, it is\nexpected, will not be completed until\nnext week.\nWe are interested to learn that Mr.\nArchd. Fairbairn, of this city, has\nbeen engaged by the Industrial school\nLl the local R. C. Mission (St. Eugene) as music teacher to that institution. He is now getting the mission string orchestra and brass band\ninto shape and under his capable tuition the talent at his disposal\namongst the Indian hoys and girls at\nthe Mission Bhould bring additional\nkudos to both teacher and pupils,\nKILBY FRAMES PICTURES\nMr. Arthur G. Shatford's most intimate friend* are extremely sorry to\nhear that hia recent hunting expedition in the Wattsburg Alps proved\nsuch an entire failure but his efforts\nwere rewarded in having shot three\ngophers, He left on Tuesday afternoon for the Prairie Provinces to call\non the leading lumbermen there to\nmake exhaustive enquiries into the\nlumbering business and also to ascertain the renson or the present inactivity of the oil market.\na case was brought to hand this\nweek of tha probability of the gifts\nmade to subscribers by the Agricultural association ln tho shape of a\nscy ring safety attachment, The\nbunch of keyH had been lost nbout\ntwo weeks whin thoy were found by\nR, P. Moflatt who traced the number given to Dr. Rutledge, the own\nor of the lost property. Mr. Moflatt\nsnd pnrty were having a little vaeu\nlion on the St. Mary's Ln'e und\nwnn in ihe neighborhood of Mossing\nCrook when be saw the keys lying on\nthe ground.\na oarlonh of contractor's material\narrived In thfl rlty this weed for the\nconstruction of the new waterworks\nnnd work wilt be pushed mi fust, as\npossible na soon nn the pipe nrrivoR,\nwhleh Ih expected to bfl some time\nBboUt the middle of next week.\nMessrs. Leader, Hotson and Goode\noi Lethbridge have the contract in\nhand, and as thoy come highly recommended tbey can he trusted to\nsee that the terms of thfl contract,\nlu so far as the employment of local\nlabor is concerned as well as making\nefficient progress, are fully carried\nout.\n-_ ^ m\nKILBY FRAMEB PICTURES\nI\nOn Wednesday the children of the\nMethodist Church left the schoolroom\nfor the Picnic grounds in good style,\nthey being driven thoro by friends\nwho provided automobiles; with flags\nHying and Ringing the children pass\ned through the streets.\nOn arriving at the grounds, about\ntwo miles out of the city in one ol\nthe most beautiful spots imaginable,\nthe children set to and enjoyed thom\nselves in roynl fashion. Ah the nf\nternoon wai too hot for any great\nexertion the sports wero held over\nuntil nfter supper and then thoy wore\nthoroughly enjoyed by young and\nold.\nIt was a pleasurable sight for the\ncommittee in charge to note tho\n'urge attendance ol the children's\nparents. This was very enoournglng,\nas it portrayed a greater interest Lit\nthe doing of the children and the i\"\ntorest the teachers were paying to\nward their welfare.\nTho August number of Rod nnl\nGun issued by W. J. Taylor, Limited,\nPublisher. Woodstock, Ont., has appeared and is up to the usual standard ol excellence maintained by this\nrepresentative Canadian magazine of\noutdoor life. The cover cut is an attractive one and illustrates a big\ncatch of tuna in Nova Scotia where\ntbe sport of catching this big tish\nwith rod and Has is growing in favor. Tbo contents include many interesting stories and articles, among\nthem another canoe story \"To Moose\nFactory by Canoe\" wh'ch in so far\nas the territory covered is concerned\nforms a continuation of the account\ngiven in last month's issue of a Trip\nfromiLatte TemiscamWg to Lake A.bi-\ntlbi, Bonnycastle Dale gives a graphic description of \"Wild Fowling\nwith the Kwakiutls\" and the issue\nincludes stories of interest to the\ngeneral reader as well as articles and\ndepartments containing special information for sportsman.\nW. W. KILBY\nPRACTICAL PICTURE FRAMER\nARMSTRONG AVENUE\nP. O. Box 802 Oranbrook, B.C.\nKeep the Correct Time\nand you wiil always be prompt in\nyour business or social appointments. Our Watches are noted for\ntheir excellent timekeeping qualities. They are beautiful works of\nthe jeweler's art, too, and very\nelegant in appearance. Chains and\nFobs of all kinds, in varied designs\nand the best 14k*. gold. Gentlemen\nin need of first-class Jewelry will\nfind this a good place to buy.\nRAWORTH\nBROS.\nJewelers fr Opticians\nCranbrook, - - B. C.\nThe\n'Rexall Store'\nThe Store with a Reputation\nKOOTENAY'S\nGREATEST\nDRUG\n6?\nBOOK\nSTORE\nThe\nBeattie - Murphy\nCo., Ltd.\n\"Where ll I ,iy\u00C2\u00AB lo Deal\"\nCranbrook\nB.C\nPlease Take Notice!\nCranbrook Trading Co. from the\n15th August will give Monthly\nCredit on Cash Basis\nCredit and Cash 30 Days\nCommencing on the lath uf August we are starting on a strictly Credit-Cash\n30 day baala. WW HEMWVW THAT THOSE WHO PAY THEIR ACCOUNT AT THE\nEND OF THIRTY DAYS ARE ENTITLED TO CASH PRIOK8.\nWe will make all charges from our Inst Orocery Price List, and, as well as on\notber linen of goods, they will ho found to be very much below regular charge prices.\nWo shall havo\ncount wlmlevor.\nprice for everybody and it will not be subject to any dlH-\nOur accounts will be rendered from the 15th of each month to the 15th\" of the\nnext; it seems to us that the lath is the gcneial payday and we think this date\nwill satisfy everyone. Five days of grace will be given in which to pay these monthly accounts, but if the account is not paid by_tha 20th of any month, no further credit will ho allowed until the account is paid.\nWe anticipate thnt this 30-Day Credit-Cash System will be something that will\nappeal strongly to all consumers who want to KEEP DOWN THE COST OP LIVING\nIrcausc thoy are thus enabled to get tbe lowest cash prices and at tbe same time\nonly hnve to pay their account onco a month. This will be at a time when most\npeople are receiving their pny.\nWe would a^ain call attention to the rule that all of these 30 Day Accounts\nmust ho paid hy tho 20th na it is only by this that we will be able to give the low\nprices we intend to make the fenture of this system.\nWe would particularly like all our present customers to take advantage of this\nnew system and we assure you of a considerable saving over the old method. If.\nhowever, you have an overdue account on our books we would ask you to let us have\nas much as possible on it at the same time that you are paying your monthly account, or at any otter time; but of course we must have the monthly account paid\nas outlined above.\nWe shall he glad to answer any enquiry about this new system of ours and invite everybody to ask our prices.\nCourtesy to our customers and prompt attention to all orders will be found\nto bo the prevailing feature of all our dealings.\nRespectfully yours,\nThe Cranbrook Trading Co.\nNOTICE OF\nRedistribution Commission\nNOTICE is hereby given that a meeting\nwill be held on Tuesday next, 4th August, 1914,\nat 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Government\nOffice, Cranbrook, B. C, by the Honourable the\nCommissioners appointed by the British Columbia\nGovernment for the purpose of hearing and taking\nevidence in re the redefinition of Electoral Districts.\nN. A. WALLINGER,\n* Government Agent.\n30th July, 1914.\nLawnjennis\nThe lollowing Ib a list ol matches\nplayed during the past week in the\nCranhrook Lawn Tennis club's annual tournament:\nL. 8. Mackersy -30 beat 3. W. Wilson, scratch, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00941, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00944.\n0. R. Newton, -15J, beat 8. 8.\nPhillips, scratch, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00941, 6-0.\nM. A. Beale, -30, bent H.H.Bourno,\n-IS, 6-3, 3\u00E2\u0080\u00946, 6-0.\nMiss Erlcksjn, -30, hent Miss Hewitt, -IS, 6-0, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00941.\nMecredy and Pair) aim, -40, bent\nOreen and Beale, -15J, 6-3, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00942.\nH. Mclllwaino, -40, beat Cl. McCreery, -1S1, 6-2, 3-6, 6-0.\nJ. McBwen beat A. 11. Shnt-\nlord. W. O.\nMcEwen and Newton bent Hic'is\nnnd A. N. Other. W. O.\nMiss Mecredy, -30, heat Mrs, Mill\ner, scratch, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00940, 6\u00E2\u0080\u00940.\nFairbairn & MIsb Hewitt, -If., hot\nRumsey and MIks Banwoll, scratch,\n6-0, 6-4.\nBand Concert\nThe Cranhrook ('Ity Hand will Klve\ntheir regular weekly open air concert\nSunday evening, August 2nd, commencing at 8.46 p. m.\nPROOHAMMI3\nMnrch\u00E2\u0080\u0094On thc Hike ... Hroc' "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Prospector_1914-08-01"@en . "10.14288/1.0083258"@en . "English"@en . "49.5080556"@en . "-115.746944"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Cranbrook, B.C. : A.B. Grace"@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Prospector"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .