"467fe9f4-9c45-4a55-9649-e4d3c67c7759"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2016-06-27"@en . "1911-07-29"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranbrookpro/items/1.0305006/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Pl*\n^_ .. r., Ug. Antra. .'an 1 1 // V \"I/ty T=!v\nVOL. 17\n(JRANBROOK, B.C, SATURDAY MORNING, JL'LY 29th 19X1\nNo. ;lu\nMinstrel Troupe For\nCranbrook\nAN OLD TIME) MON8THR MIN-\nBTRBIL TROUl'K TO HIS PRO-\nDUOtOD HY ORANRROOK\nTALENT\nTO BE UNDER THE DIRECTION\nOP MR. CEO. D. INGRAM\nSomo time ago it will be remembered that a very successful performance of the Opera. \"The lielaha\" wan\nproduced here entirely by local\ntalent. The director of that organization has now undertaken to produce a local minatrel troupe, and\nJudging by tbe success attained hy\nuuu on former occasions, thc public\nof Cranbrook can look forward with\nkeen anticipation to a very enjoyable\nperformance.\nThere will be a chorus of 2f> men's\nvoices, a full band of twenty, and an\nOrchestra of 12 pieces, nnd the tlrst\nhalf of the programme will consist of\nfunny Hongs, dances, stump speeches,\njokes, and the regular half circle of\nminstrels, while the second half wilt\ntake the form of a screamingly funny\nfarce comedy and grand cake walk,\nThe opera house has already beeu\nengaged for the two (fall fair days,\nSeptember 19th and 20th, so the citizens want to keep the date in mind.\nThe management of the troupe say\nthat the end men will be chosen with\ngreat care, and it is definitely announced that Mr. George Stevenson\nhas consented to be interlocutor.\nPopular prices will prevail and a\ngenuine good long laugh is In store\n[or all those who contemplate seeing\nCranbrook's latest In tbe theatrical\nsphere.\nStMary's Church Lawn\nSocial\nOn Tuesday evening the ladies of\nSt. Mary's church gave a lawn social\nwhich was a pronounced success.\nThe grounds adjoining the church\nwete beautifully decorated with ever\ngreens, Chinese lanterns, electric\nlights and bunting.\nTbe lawn was crowded with meu\nand women, and presented n most\nattractive appearance, and the various booths were well patronized.\nThe flower booth conducted by Miss\nDrummond and.Mis* Wright did a]\ngreat business, and their many choice\nflowers and posies found many eager\nbuyers,\nIn charge of the candy and ice\ncream booth were Mrs. Henderson\nand Miss E. Drummond, and a very:\nthriving business was done.\nMiss Bouchard in a very pretty\nlittle booth dispensed lemonade and\nsodas to a seemingly thirsty crowd.\nMrs. tlenest and Mrs. Mackie conducted a well lilted tish pond, where\nevery fisherman or ftsherwoman were\nsure of catching something. There\nwere many patrons to tbe tish pond.\nMiss Anette Urault, as a fortune\nteller, had a neat little tent which attracted many of the young folks and;\nmany wtcrd and startling tales and\npredictions relating to matrimony,\nbest boys and girls, deaths, misfortunes, etc., were unfolded when a\nsmall portion of silver crossed the\npalm of the seeress.\nDuring the evening thc city band,\nunder the direction of Geo. Ingram,\ndiscoursed sweet music to an attentive audience.\nFreight Rates Lowered WILL GOTO THE Sewerage System\nBig Celebrations being held ' COUNTRY Splendid Beginning\nall along the line \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSpokane, July 24, 1'Jll.\nCommercial Clubs,\nInland Empire\nGentlemen:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSpokane and the Inland Umpire\n! have won tho twenty year Hght lor\nequitable freight rates!\n{ ilehiK able to announce this In ad\nvaaco today, it will not he necessary\nlor ue to wire you tomorrow.\nToday you no doubt received our\nletter ol Saturday regarding the\ncontemplated announcement ol tho\nfreight rate decision. Please rotor to\nthis letter and as tar as convenient\n. to you act on the suggestions made.\nThe Spokeaman-Rovlew in the morn\n! lng wlll publish the decision. Get It\nas soon as possible and then pull oil\nYOUR CELEBRATION.\nTho celebration here tomorrow will\nbe the greatest ever seen In Spokane.\nWhistles will blow, bands will play,\nstores and offices will close, factories!\nwill shut down \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ALL SPOKANE A change has been made In the ua-\nWILL CKLEURATF. THE FREIGHT tlonal anthem, In these days when\nRATE VICTORY! the main thought throughout tho\nGet Into the game, and let us tell civilized world is peace, one of tho\nxxxxxxxxxxxxx\nIt is stated on thc best of\nauthority that parliament will\nhe dissolved noxt week, probably Thursday or Friday, and\na general election will take\nplace sometime between Sep.\n20 and 25th. Reciprocity will\nbe practically the sole issue.\nThe govornment ls relying\nfor success at tbe polls on the\npopularity of reciprocity in the\nrural constituencies. It Is conceded that the cities are less\npromising.\nXXXXXXXXXXXXX\nChange in Our National\nAnthem\nthe world that you celebrated.\nYours for the Inland Empire.\nSpokane Chamber of Commerce.\nCranbrook, July 27th, 1911.\nSpokane Chahiber of Commerce.\nSpokane, Wash.\nold verses of the anthem is said to\ni have struck the King aB sounding a\n| somewhat discordant note. It runs:\n'U Lord our God arise,\nScatter his enemies,\nAnd make them fall;\nConfound their politics;\nFrustrate their knavish tricks;\nOn Him our hopes wo lix,\n0 save us all.'\nden tie men\nThe Cranbrook Board of Trade con-| _. .\n... a *, *. a t(J, T-i- a\ That verse has now been replaced\ngratulate Spokane and the Inland . .. ,nl*M\u00E2\u0080\u009Etn ,*. , \u00C2\u00BB,\nEmpire upon the victory for eqult- g',\"\" '0l0Wi\"(y wrlttM1 ,\"r ncft'!\nable freight rates and though the' \"\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00A3. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"' brcatl\"\"K \u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB'\"'\" .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nbenefits to this district will only be\nfelt Indirectly in certain lines of\nbusiness, we appreciate tbe fight that\nyou have made and can feel with you\nConstruction work on the sewer\nsystem commenced on Tuesdny morning with n force of 21 men. which was\nIncreased to 29 on Wednesday.\nMr. I). 0. McKay of Calgary is ia\ncharge, with N. S. Harrison as time\nkeeper.\nA representative of the Prospector\nvisited the scene of operation on Wednesday. At this time a trench tinn\nfeet long, witli an average depth of\nli feet had heen opened up. this depth\nwill gradually increase as the trench\nis extended toward town.\nA small force is engaged in laying\nout tho ground for the septic tnuks,\nwhich wlll he built on the bench Just\nabove the creek, and about H.UOO feet\nthe trench for the lng 18 Inch pipes\nwill hnve a depth of sume eight or\nten feet,\nTwo carloads of IK in. sewer pipes\nhave arrived, and W. K. Worden has\nthe contract lor delivering along the.\ntrench line. Pipe laying commenced |\non Thursday morning. As soon as\narrangements are completed the\nworking force wlll be increased.\nThe pipe line will extend up Crnnbrook street to within a short dis-'\ntance from Harold street, tlience\nsoutli about 100 feet to the lane that\nruns hack of tho public school, thence\nwest to Baker street. Klght and ton\nInch pipes will be laid in lanes\nthroughout town, and connection* arranged for at every lot, whether lt is\nbuilt upon or not.\nWhen completod the Craubrook sewer system will he one of the best and\nmost uptodate In the province.\nC. P. R. Employees Picnic\nat Marysville\nin your celebration of the great victory.\nYours truly,\nCranbrook Board of Trade;\nR. B. Benedict, Secretary.\nWedding Bells\nMcLeod-Rutledge\nOn Tuesday, July 26th, at 12\no'clock noon, at the residence of tbe\nbride's ulster, Baker street north,\nFlorence, the youngest daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. John McLeod of Kaslo\nand formerly of Vanloek Hill, Ont.\n'O Lord our God arise,\nScatter his enemies,\nMake wars to cease.\nKeep us from plague and dearth,\nTurn Thou our wocb to mirth,\nAnd over all the earth;\nLet there bo peace'\nThis alteration has been specially\naanctioned by the King, and Is therefore of national importance, seeing\nthat It Is aow likely to ne universally\nfollowed.\nHaley-Pautltng\nAt Christ, church, Craubrook,\nSaturday July 22nd, 1911.\nThomas Haley and Rose\nPautllng, bath of Cranhrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Haley will leave in a\nfew days on a visit to England, their\nold home.\nAnne\nBaseball Team's return\nSpecial Meeting of\nCity Council\nA special meeting ol the city council was held on Monday afternoon in\nwaa united in holy wedlock to'Dr. J! the council chambers, there woro pre-i \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB-\u00C2\u00BB. '\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB one game to\n* m\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB _ . L rilr TliA jnnrn nf ii_r.\nThe Cranbrook baseball team reach- ]\ned home on Wedneaday afternoon, nftor a soriOB of games played against\nNelson, Rossland and Marcus, In\nwhich they Iftst hut one game to the\nMaroons of Nelson.\nCranlirook took two games from!\nMurcus, at Marcus 6-3, and one game\nat Colville, with Marcus 4-2. Defeat-1\nod Rossland two games 8-6 and U-C.\nDefeated thc Maroons at Eolson 8-5,\nNelson\nWesley Rutledge, son of Mr. and Mrs.! sent Mayor Hunt\nJohn Rutledge, of Portage la Prairie Bowneas, Johnson,\nMan., the Rev. C. O. Main presbyter-' son, Taylor and McNabb.\nlan minister officiated. The matter of streets and boule-\nThe bride, who was attended by ber v\u00C2\u00BBrds was brought bet.ir.j the oouocll\nsister, Miss McLeod wore an import' and after some discussion Alderman\ngown of Ivory Duchess Satin with 'Pin0*1 '1 WW a-mou smb. uoa-pnr\nbodice of Irish rose point lace seeded' at the next meeting of tho Council\nwith pearU; also a diamond Sunburst introduce a bylaw for street improve-\na gilt from the bridegroom, and car- menta, including a boulevard.\nrled a bouquet of white roBes and There wore sjveral applications for\nsmilax. Miss McLeod was dressed in the position of clerk, in connection\na biscuit colored dross, and carried a w'th the construction of the sewer-\nand aldermen! ^ tl,e \u00C2\u00BBmn o( 6'B-\nCamphell, Jack-\nTo Contest Comox Atlin\nMr. T. E. Bate bas been unanimously chosen by the Cumberland;\nConserliative Association to contest;\ntho Comox-Atlin district in the'\nforthcoming Dominion elections.\nRod and Gun\nbouquet of mauve colored sweet peas.\nAt the close of tbe ceremony the\nwedding Party sat down to a splendid\nage system.\nOn motion of Aid. Campbell and\nMcNabb N. J. Harrison wns nppoint-\nluncheon the table having an arch of ed as time keeper.\n\"Following the Fur Trails\" a story\nol (lie far North of interest to every\nCanadian, opens the July number of\nlillies-of-the-valley and smilax also\nThe Rightto Appeal\nThe Liberal press Is trying to;\nshow that the Opposition is responsible for the impending dissolution of\nParliament nnd general election. Under the clrcumstniices the Opposition!\nmay well be proud if it is responsible for aa appeal to tlle people.\nPrimarily the reason of the appeal\nrents with the Dominion government,\nSir Wilfrid Laurier was returned to\npower three years ago on certain issues. It is a well known principle of\nconstitutional government that un\ngreat llacal or political change should\nbo made without the people having\nbeen consulted. Sir Wilfrid Laurier\nnegotiated reciprocity with the United States without any mandate from,\nthe people, and in the face of his own\ndeclared promise that missions toi\nWashington were forever at an end.\nTbe present government was returned\nto office partly on Its own declaration that no further effort to obtain;\nreciprocity with the United States\nbe undertaken by Canada.\nIn the face of all this, the govern-,\nment made a pact with its American\nfriends and then tried to force it\ndown tho throat of Parliament by the;\nbrute strength of Its majority. Mr.\nBorden replied: \"Give the poople a\nchance tn say whether they want this,\nor not. We do not holleve they want\nit, and we claim on behalf of the\npublic the right to lie heard before it\nis decided.\"\nThis plea Hir Wilfrid Laurier refused and on this Issue the light has\nao far beon made. Mr. Uorden and\nthe opposition stand t..\u00C2\u00BB*iiy for the\npublic, for the right of public appeal\nfor the torce of public opinion. The\nGovernment stands for the polley of\ncoercion.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Calgaey Herald.\nW. 13. Wordon tendered for the de- ROD AND GUN IN CANADA, pub-l\nInterspersed with white carnations llvwy of the sewerage pipes. His ten- Ushed by W. J. Taylor, Ltd., \u00C2\u00AB'\u00E2\u0080\u009E0d-j\nand roses, the centre and place of der was accepted, as was also the stock, Ont. In thiB story, Mr. 1. J.\nhonor being reserved for the large tender of the Washington Brick and Fraser, who is engaged on thc Hydro-1\nand beautiful wedding cake. Llme company for the supplying of graphic survey, relates interesting;\nOn a small table and buffet, ad- the same. The Canada Cement Co. incidents of the eight month's stay of\njoining there were numerous pleceB wa9 awarded the contract lor cement the party engaged In survey work in\nol cut glass and hand painted needed in Bowcrage construction. tbo neighborhood of Hudson Bay and\nHavlland china spread, which Tne Proposition of the townsite Co. tells of an attack upon thc Camp of j\nreceived somo worthy words of ad- tegardlng tho purchase of ten acreB Polar bears. He gives particulars of |\nmiration Krbm the guests- also a ,or sewerage tanks was accepted, live the fine trapping in which the party;\nsplendid gift was received 'from the ncr\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 *>'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ** Purchased at $100 per engaged and the excellent results of\nbride's sister of one of tho finest BCrc' the Company donating\ngrades of pianos of Mason & Risch acres.\nmttl\u00E2\u0080\u009E. Council adjourned.\nTlie party were driven to thc stat- ,\nion in Mr. Bureh's automobile, leaving Cranbrook on the Flyer at two\no'clock tor Spokanh, thence going to\nthe coast, and returning home to\ntake up their residence at Miss Me- \u00E2\u0080\u009E.,,,,.. ...\nLeod's on Baker street Tlie bride ducing a novelty In motion pictures British Columbia, showing the differ-\ntravelled ln a biscuit colored tailored \"1 the shape of a weekly animated \u00C2\u00ABnce In the conditions between those\nsuit and hat to match, with lace Gazette. You can now view the most prevailing In thut province and those\nveU ' important events of tlie world to existing In Central and Eastern Can-\nThe bride Is well known In the city better advantage than you could bad \u00C2\u00ABda. There Is much more ol Interest\nand has a host of friends. She was: yo\" heen on the ground. Some events to every_ sportsman - \" '\t\nfor some time ber sister's right hand: chronicled this week are. \"Lord Kit\nhelp in the millinery store. Miss \u00C2\u00ABn_ener Inspecting the Boy Scouts.'\nMcLeod will, without a doubt miss\nThe\nfive this portion of their work. The\nstrenuous outward journey from Fort,\nNelson to Winnipeg, supplies excellent i\nreading. There Ib much variety In the\nother stories, both fishermen and\nhunters receiving due attention and\nstories and experiences from the ifar\n'\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 East, as well as the far West arc in- i\nAuditorium theatre Is Intro- eluded. They hunt on horseback in |\nNew Novelty\nher sinter more than anyone else, hut\nBhe receives the small consolation,\nthat \"though she wont help her so Q\u00C2\u00B0*ttT Sports.\nmuch she will he with her.\"\nThe doctor has a veterinary practice that covers thc whole of the\nKootenay district, he is popular iu\nthe true sense of the word, taking a\nkeen interest in all manly sport* and\nhas time and again proved himself-\na man among men.\nThough the wedding to others than\ntheir closer friends wns somewhat of\na surprise, the many congratulations\nreceived were of the most sincere\nkind. \"The Prospector\" joins with\nthe many in tbeir wishes of long life\nand happiness.\nin this numher.\nIt should he found in every summer\ncamp, no plcasanter companion for\nVan Horse Parade,\" \"Bishop's whillng awny a pleasant hour is\nProcession in London\" \"Motor Races needed.\nand Plying at Brooklands.\" \"The '\t\nThe Latest Paris\nFashions,\" etc. The (ia/ette will be a\nregular weekly feature nn Friday and\nSaturday.\nOne of the most successful and\npleasant events ever participated in\nby Cranhrook folk took olace an\nSaturday, July 22nd, when, under the\nauspices of a committee representatives of every department of the (J.\nP. R. here, an excursion was run to\nMarysville for an all day Open basket picnic.\nThc morning of the 22nd broke very\ndull and threatening, and when rain\nbegan to fall soon after 7 o'clock, it\nlooked as if the one thing thnt the\ncommittee could not guarantee, was\ngoing to bfi tbe factor to spoil all the\nrest of their excellent arrangements.\nFortunately, however, nothing\nworse than a light shower fell, and\nit was a bright and warm sun that\nshone on the holiday crowd that had\nassembled on the depot for tbe llrst\nspecial train scheduled to leav* at\n8.30 a. m.\nIt was about 10 o'clock when the\ntirst contingent arrived at Marysville. Owing to the kindly thought\nof Marysville people, conveyances\nwere In attendance at the station to\ntake the ladies and children to thc\npicnic grounds which were very\npleasantly situated on high and level\nland commanding an excellent view\nof the surrounding couutry.\nHery soon after arrival the sports\ncommittee had the llrst event of their\nlong programme in full swing\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\nbaseball match between the Mechanical and Traffic departments of the\nC. P. R. A good fast game result-\niug in a win for the shop team.\nAt a quarter afc'tcr oue the second\naud larger party had arrived from\nCranbrook, and with these on the\ngrounds, the crowd must have totalled over 400 people, tbe larger proportion of whom immediately distributed themselves into lunch parties.\nIt must have been a very hasty\nlunch for many people though, for\nwith an unusually long and interesting programme to carry through, the\nSports Committee very wisely decided to commence immediately, and\ntbe list of events opened with four\nraces for juniors.\nFrom tben on the fun and excitement never flagged all through the\nlong afternoon, while several really\ncreditable athletic feats were achieved, sometimes in unexpected ijuarters\ntoo, so that from the onlookers point\nOi view, there was plenty of variety\nin every way.\nAll the usual fun ensued when the\nfour legged race came to be decided,\na team in which our two Y, M. 0.\nA. secretaries were partners came tn\nllrst in tine style, in the llrst beat,\nhut failed to repeat their performance\nin the final tie.\nIn the ladies' potato and spoon\nrace, Miss Millard arrived at the tape\ncool, easy and smiling iu the llrst\nheat with no competitor within dan-\nger distance of her, but in the second\ntry, Miss Ada Hlekenbotham camo\nhome n vcry close second, so close\nindeed, that her near proximity\nwould seem to Imve excited Miss Millard's self possession sufficiently to\ndrop the potato, though fortunately\non the judges side of the tnpe, thus\nretaining thc llrst place, Six worried\nlooking mon lined up Inter witb\ntn reads in tbeir hands ready to insert\nthem Into the eyes of as muny needles, that as many ladies as breathlessly thrust into their hands after a\nnil yard run. Only three of the ladles\nleft on the return journey with\nthreaded needles, the partners of the\nothcr three having '.ailed to pass tho\ncrucial test. There might hnvo been\na fourth, hut the man who shall he\nnameless, after having actually successfully negotiated tlie thread\nthrough the tiny hole, become so excited at his performance that he pul-j\nted it out again.\nAnother intcrestltlg event was the\nhop, step and jump competition in\nwhich several line distances were\nleapt, the record going to Sam, of\nMission, whose agility wns more than\na match for any white man present.\nIt was MS p. m. when Ilie Dual\nevent came on for decision, this being\na tug of wnr between lhe shops and\nollices, resulting in a win for the\nformer.\nThe full list of events and winners\nare as follows:\n1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Girl's race under 12\u00E2\u0080\u00941st Florence Uren.\n2.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hoy's race under 12\u00E2\u0080\u00941st F. McNeil.\n3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Girl's race, under Hi\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst. Florence Uren.\n4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hoy's race, under Ui\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tuft. u(\nMarysville.\n5.\u00E2\u0080\u0094100 yards, open\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst Donohue,\nKimberley, 2nd, C. Tyler.\n6.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Single Ladies' RO yards\u00E2\u0080\u0094-1st,\nMiss Burton, 2nd, Miss Lowery,\nT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Union .Men's Race\u00E2\u0080\u00941st, Ilathle.\n2nd K. Coanant.\n8.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fat Men's Race\u00E2\u0080\u00941st Griffith,\n2nd, Thompson.\nJi.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Married Ladies' race\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst Mrs.\nCross; 2nd, Mrs. R. R. Thompson.\n10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Four-legged race\u00E2\u0080\u00941st Bathie,\nElmer; Baldwin.\n11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Potato race\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst, Miss Millard;\n\u00C2\u00BBnd Miss A. Hlekenbotham,\n12\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hop, step and jump\u00E2\u0080\u00941st, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BBm,\nof Mission; 2nd, Donohue.\n18\u00E2\u0080\u0094Conductors race\u00E2\u0080\u00941st Dufour;\n2nd Patton.\n14\u00E2\u0080\u0094Kngineer's race\u00E2\u0080\u00941st,MacKenzte;\n2nd, Askey.\n15\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Standing broad jump\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst, 0.\nTyler; 2nd, Klmer.\nID\u00E2\u0080\u0094Putting llilb. shot - 1st, Mc-\nOreary; 2nd Crowley.\n17\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ladles' needle and thread - 1st\nMiss Griffith; 2nd Miss Burton.\n18\u00E2\u0080\u0094Trainmen's and Firemen'B race,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 1st, Sum Watson; 2nd Charbonueau.\n19\u00E2\u0080\u0094Old Man's race--lat Sam Griffith; 2nd 13. Bent.\n20\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wheel barrow ince\u00E2\u0080\u0094lst, Harrison and Watson; 2nd Hickenbotham\nand Clarke.\nA baseball match between the traf-\nlie department and shops resulted in\na victory (or the shop boys by the\nacore of s to tl.\nThe shops also won the tug of war\ndefeating the oltice ..tail The stakes\nwas a box of cigars.\nThe band hoys race was won by W.\nI.. Johnson, with V. Orenon second.\nHis worship Mayor Hunt and Sam\nGriffiths arranged a match race of\n7fi yards to decide which waa the better, The Mayor was defeated by a\nyard.\nAs mnny of the party had to be\nback In town for the evening's shop*\nping, it had been arranged to run the\nlirst train back at r> p, m., and thus\nwith the closing of the sports, there\nwns a general trek sta tion wards,\nHowever, everybody that went to\ntlie station did not entrain, anh soma\n-UD of tho pnrty remained for the\nevening, some to participate lu a\ndunce in the Falls' View botel, while\nothers rambled around the countryside, particularly in the vicinity of\ntlie falls, which are beautiful enough\nto deserve wider 'mme.\nThus, n pleasant evening concluded\na pleasant nlfiT enjoyable day, not\nthe less pleasant from the absence of\nany Intense bent or the ubtqitous\nmosquitoes.\nA generally tired and thoroughly\nsatisfied party left Marysville at\n21.80 arriving home nn hour later,\nmuny of whom had thus been a full\ntwelve hours out in tho open.\nThere seems to be a generally unanimous opinion, enthusiastically expressed, that the day's proceedings\nwere an unqualified success, and It Is\nhoped that this experience will encourage the C. P, R. boys to make\ntheir excursion an annual affair.\nWhile it seems almost unfair to\npick out individuals from a committee, that werc all enthusiastic workers for success, it would be quite as\nunfair to omit to mention the able\nchairmanship of Mr J. R. McNabb,\nand the untiring good humor of director of Sports 0. 0. Connolly,\nwhile considerable fun and vim were\nlent to the proceedings by our friend\nMr. McSwaln, whose stentorial voice\nthe organizing committee were wise\nin pressing Into their service on the\ngrounds\nThe 0. P H. boys also desire to express their cordial appreciation of\nthe co-operntion of the storekeepers\nin town in closing down their establishments and donating many substantial prizes.\nKing George to visit\nOur Dominion\nRasling-Campbell\nMr. Frank Rasllng ol Oranbrook,\nTlie Birmingham Ilnily I'ost announces Mint thoro is n possibility ul\nKin,- George visiting Canada during\nthe regime oi Oonnaiight ns govornor-\ngenernl It will be remembered that\ntlie t'nmidinn Associated press wns\nrecently authorized to deny rumors\not a visit o( the King to Canada nl- Onpt. nnd\ntor the Dnrbnr ceremonies In India,\nIt Is certain, however, that the\nMethodist Church\nPastor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev, W. Bison Dunham\nMorning service at 11 a. m.\nMorning subject\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Soul Hunger.\"\nAt tlie morning service tbc pastor\nwill also give a live minute object\nsermon to the children, subject\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Ooal and Wood.\"\nEvening service nt 7.30 p. m.\nICvaiing subject \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Men nnd He-1\nllglon.\"\nSalvation Army\nOfficers:\nLawrence I'\nTuylor\nBaptist Church\nllov. II. ('.. Speller\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pastor.\nResidence Norbury Ave.\nServices at ll a. in, and 7.'.In p. in.\nMorning subject - \"Freedom in\nthought ami action.\"\nlevelling subject\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"! am nol Inclined.\"\nSiilidny school Lesson John, elnip-\ntors li and 10.\nBaracca nud Philathea classes Ht\n:i p. in.\nStrangors nnd any with no church\nhome are nlwnys welcome\nChrist Church\nRector, llev. 10. I'. Iflewelliw.\nHoly Oommuuion nt n a. m,\nMorning prayer mid !l,,ly Communion nl 11 it. m.\nChildren's service lit '.I p. iii\nKvenlng service nt 7.30 p. in\nCatholic Church\ni'Hiiiih Priest Kntliei Plnmondon,\nand Miss Lulu Campbell ol Oladstone. Prince ol Wales and Prince Albert,\n111., were united In marriage on Wed- the second son, will come to Canada\nnesday by the Rev. W. K. Dunham at and will probably make It the Sret\nth* Methodist parsonage. , step ln a tour ol the Empire.\nHoliness meeting nt 11 a. m.\nFree nnd easy at :i p, m.\nSalvation meeting at H p. m.\nThursday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Salvation meeting\n8 p. m.\nAn excellent and instructive line ol\nlllms have been exhibited nt the odl-\nI son theatre. A new nnd special line\nI will be shown this evening.\nBundays\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Low Muss at H,3u a. in.\nHigh Mass. 10,80 n. m. Sunday\nschool Irom 2 to 2 p. m. Rosary nnd\nllcnodlctlon nt 7.:iu p. m.\nMondays nnd holy dnys ol obllga*\nturn\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mass at 8 a. in.\nWeek days\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mass at t a. in. at the\nhospital.\nKnox Presbyterian Church\nPastor\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev. 0. 0. Main\nMorning service at 11 n. m,\nEvening service at 7.3U p. m.\nSiiinlny School nml Bible class at\n8 p. in.\nEvening subject.\"Worshipping Cod\nin Dollars inui cents.\"\nVoting people's guild on Tuesday,\nni 8 p, in. Subject: Psalm 19,\nOholr prnctlco nl tho close ol the\nmorning service.\nLawn social on tho McCallum property on Friday, August 4th. Further ilclnilH next week.\nMrs. W. B lliiywnrd, Miss Lulu\nI lay wm tt and Miss Hvn Conley lelt\non Thursday mglit. on nn eastern\nvisit to Moose Jaw, Toronto and\nother points. THE PROSPECTOR. CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMPIA\nTHE PERFUME\nOf Wf\nLADY IN BUCK\nBy GASTON LEROUX.\nAalhtr .1 \"TK> M,.t.t> el UM Yallew\nRoom.\"\nCOPTRICHT 1909. Br BBINTANO J\n(Continued.)\nI'HAPTKU Wil\nThe Return ol Arthur Ranee.\nm\nHR weapon bPlflniiwI lo I'rluw\n(ialltcb. bui meiv wun uodoubl\ntn Hit* llllllll \"I llll) one ol U*\nilml it luul Ih-iii Molrli by Ul\nBob, nnd we toiibl uoi rurifirt luu\nWilli tilt lilM\"*1 I'l-'.illl Hellllef llllll uv\nCUSed l.:il-:ui Ol tlHllg ln> IIHMUMlIU\nNever bud Hu- liiiuiftf ol out Itob ami\nthul at Umiu tu'ii nu luextrti'uui)\ncoufouudwj in our rfxtiwu upirlti \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lino Itoiiletublllv bud (\"nml \"tbe old\nut dagger icuowi. i>- uie biinnin race'\ndripping \u00C2\u00BBiiii ibe bloud ot Keruier\n.Mnn.' Edltli bud ;ii mice muiietl ttiui\nhenceforth tbu rutt> oi um it-b my u\nUie bundl ot Itoi.lftiilniii'. Ami mere\nfore Mine Eli Ith, Who 111 h**t liuul al\nfectloo bad uol pwuwh! io believe tuui\ntin! mnn who lu) on i>is bed m im\nmiliar* lower \u00C2\u00ABih rvuiiy ber uncle\nluul begun lu HmiginM, (hanks lo ine\nbloody weapon, tbtll Un* Invisible Lur\nbim liud woven bu strong a web ot fir\ncuinstuntlal evidence nruttud (Md Uol\ntbut It could scarcely bv brnin\u00C2\u00BBu witb\ntbe design doubtless ol muking ttie ok\nuinn suffer ibe puulftbmeht lor ibe\nwretch's own primes tuul also tbt\ndangerous wetgbi or his personality.\nMme. Edith trembled for (Jul Hob anu\nfor berselt\nAnd the Incriminating fuel remained\ntbnt there bud been nothing miywhere\naround the corpse of Hern Inr but the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tone knife which Old Hob bud stolen!\nShe lead the certainty of mis conviction In Hie eyes nnd in tbe manner\nof Rouletabllle and of Uarr-ae tsui\nshe understood us soon us ttie young\nmun began speaking thnt be seemed\nto hnve no other end In view than to\nsure Old Hob from (tic suspicions ot\ntbe authorities.\nRouletabllle In giving hi? evidence\nproved with a logical accuracy mat\noverwhelmed tbe examining magistrate und plunged (tie deiegato into\ndespulr tbnt Ibe deed could only tune\nbeen committed by the dead iiuid\nhimself. The four persons at the\npostern gale nml the two persons in\nOld Hob's room hnd each been looting at the others and tind uot lost\nBight of each oilier while some one\nwus killing Bernier a few steps away.\nbo It was Impossible io believe thut\ntbe killing could have been done by\nany other Hutu tbe victim.\nTo this the esn filing magistrate,\ngreatly interested, replied by Inquiring whether any of us bud renson to\nsuspect nny motive for suicide oil the\npart of Herider, to which Rouletublllf\nanswered that tbe supposition of suicide might easily be laid aside and\nthat of accident substituted for It.\nThe stone, which might have attracted his attention by its strange form,\nmight have been picked up by t'ere\nHerider. and If be bad happened lo\nslip und full while holding It In his\nhand everything would be explained,\nand very simply. Here Hernler undoubtedly must, have thus unfortunately fallen upon this triangular tlmt,\nwhich had pierced Ids heart.\nOue of (he physicians summoned tr\ncare for Old Hob wus railed, and In\ndecided that Hernlur's fatal wound\nwas caused by lbe Hint.\nAs to Mine. Edith and myself, nfter\nHome futile and useless questions, asked while the doctors were ut the bed-\nwide of Old Hub, we were allowed to\nleuve (he room, and we went to sit In\nthe little parlor just outside lhe bedroom and were there when the magistrates were ready to depart.\nKdlth suddenly seized me by the\nhand and cried out:\n\"Oo Dot leuve me! I beg of you\ndon't leave me! I have only you left.\nI do not know where Prince Oalltch\nis\u00E2\u0080\u0094I do not know anything ubout my\nhusband. That Is what makes this so\nhorrible. Arthur sent me u message\nuuylng tbut be was going iu search of\nTulllo. lie does not know even yet\nthut Bernier bus been murdered, iius\nbe found tbe 'hangman of the sen?'\nIs It from this mau\u00E2\u0080\u0094from Tulllo now\nthat I expect tbe truth! And not a\nword has come! it is horrible!\"\nAs slit* took my bund so cnnlldiugly\nand beld It for a moment In her own\nI felt that I wus for Mme. Kdlth witb\null my heart and soul, ami i assured\nber that she Dllgbl rely upon my devotion.\nHouletabllle never failed to cast a\nglume In our direct loo every time be\nbad tlie opportunity.\n\"Ah. he is watching us!\" exclaimed\nMine. Edith.\n\"You ought tn be grateful tn Rouletabllle,\" i ventured to remind tier,\n\"fur Ills Intervention and his silence\nrelative to the 'oldest knife known to\ntbe human race.' if tin- officers bad\nlearned thai this stone dagger belonged to your uncle Hob. what could\nhuve hindered them from placing him\nunder arrest?\"\n\"Oh!\" she cried bitterly \"Tour\nfriend bas ns muny good reasons to\nkeep silence as I have, uml I dread\nonly one thing, M. Suluelnir\u00E2\u0080\u0094I dread\nouly one thing.\"\n\"And whut Is Ibat.*\"\n\"I feat lest lie lias unved my uncle\nfrom the authorities only to ruin lilm\nmore completely At nil erptits It Im\nnecessary lu !\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ready fur iiuytklfifi\nnnd I kuow how to defend lilm so ion;\nus I draw hrcaili.\" And she showed\nme u Ilny revolver which was hidden\nIn her gown.\n\"Is it art uul (ru Hi Hint you ure\nready lo defend ine?\" she deinuitded,\nturning her beautiful eyes run upon\nmy own.\n\"I am ready.\"\n\"AgllltiSt your friend even?\"\n\"If it should be necessary,\" I un\nswered, with a sigh, passing my hnnd\nacross my forehead.\n\"Very well; I believe you,\" she answered. \"In (hat case I will leuve\nyuu here for a few minutes. Vou wlll\nguard ibis door for me.\"\nBLISTERS AND SUNBURN?\nTRY ZAM-BUK\nBlisters Irom canoeing, ball-playing, or any cause, painful sunburn\npatches, stings of insects, and chufed\nplace-, all un sod instantly by\nX.im-Unk Don't have yout vacation.\n-polled by pain from any sore, whloh\nZam-Buk could cure in quick time,\nThis wonderful balm is made from\nherbal juices und bj hujhly antiseptic. Poison frum insect sting,\nbarbed wire scratch, or thorn prick.\nis Immediately rendered harmless us\nsoon us Zam-Buk touches it. Stops\ntlie stinging, smarting pain. Zam-\nBuk is so pure, too, that the most\ndelicate skin is able to absorb it. and\nis benefitted by it Mothers with\nyoung bullies should use it ior chafing sores, etc Also cures piles, ulcers and festering sores. All druggists ami store sell al We box. Pse\nalso Zam-Buk Soapl 95c tablet.\nAlld sue pointed to the door betiind\nwblcb old Hob was resting Iben sbe\nlllll nili ut tlle rOOIII, W Here Wit* Sllti\ngoing? She confessed to tue later.\n:*tbe wus going io .<>ok fur I'rluce Ou\nItch, i 'li, wuinun, wuutuul\nsue laid scuiveiy disappeared undei\nlie ar.h Wben Ho'ileiuUillu and M\nminute entered the ruuUl. Nwj had\nHeard nil that had passed Runlet a bllli\nuKuui-ed to uij stile and iuio me\npiielly IIi.it be Mas aware thul 1 had\nnei rayed bim,\n\"You are using u large word, Roule\nrubille!' 1 exclaimed. \"Vou knew tout\nI um not in the hubii ot betraying an>\none. .Mine. Kdlth is really very uiucb\nto be pilled, und you do uot pity Lei\nenough, my friend.\"\n\"Ab, well, you pity ber too much.\"\n1 started lo muke some reply, but\nItouletabille cut short my words wilt\na dry gesture.\n\"I ask you only one thing-only one,\nyon uuderstuud It is tuut. no mallei\nwbat may happen\u00E2\u0080\u0094no matter wbut\nmuy happen\u00E2\u0080\u0094yon shall not address out\nwind to eitber M. Darsac or to myself.\"\n\"That will be a very easy thing tc\npromise,\" i replied, foolishly Irritated,\nund I turned my buck upon tdm.\nHut ut the same moment the officers\ncumiiig uut of ihe castle called tc\nus. i lie iuqtiPHl was at sn *ud. 1 hert\nwas no Quubt. in tbeir eyes, after iQt\ndeciararlou ol the doctors, tnat the affair had been an accident, und that\nwus it)., verdict which I'lej telt obliged\nto render. Dunne and Rouletabllle\naccompanied them tu itie outer gate.\nAS 1 Stood leaning on my tfibuws al\nibe window I suddenly heuru a souud\nwblcb fell upon ibe evening air like\nthe blow ot an Immense gong, and I\nknew that it was itutiiPiabllle who bad\nordered Ihe Iron gates in be closed.\nNot a single minute passed aftei\n[hat when I saw .Mme. Kdlth rush lute\nHie room and bum to me as tbougb J\nwere ber only retngw.\nTben I saw Ihirzac appear, th-n ltou\nletabille. and leaning on nls arm wa*\nthe Ludy iti H:ui*k ll could now very\neasily be seen Uml sbe was making a\npowerful effort io hide u,e norror\nwblcb In spite ol a.I. pierced through\nher troubled glance and to bide Irum\nus tbe emotion which inadp ber cilug\nfeverishly to the urm ot tier young\ncompanion, Dannie, tno. bun (he somber und resolute mleli oi a Judge. Hut\nthat which mos( ol at added lo our\nsurprise and ud right was the entrance\not I'ere Jucqlies, water and Muttonl\nluto (he si [ita re lower. All turee were\nannul with MiUSIMS and placed tuem-\nselves In silence h\u00C2\u00BB-tbed in entering\ntiie rooms which bid beeu occupied\nby M und Mme inmate to see upou\nM barzae's desk ibe drawlog board,\nthe wash drawing upon which our\nfriend had worked at the side of Uld\nBob in the In tier's workshop In tbe\nCourt of the Hold and ulso tbe little\ndlsti full nf led imiiii am) (he Uny\nbrush drenched with He- paint. And,\nlastly, In tbe middle nl the desk there\nwas placed, appearing rery much ut\nits ease, upon It* I ly Jaws, \"the\nold phi skull nf humanity.\"\nRouletabllle locked aud holtml (ho\ndoor ami said to us. himself greatly\naffected, while we listened with stupefaction:\n\"Sir down, If you please, ladles and\nj-eutleiueii.\n\"You will acknowledge,\" begun Rou<\nletabille. \"lhat there is here around\nthis table me chair ion many and In\ni onse,(uem e one person t<\u00C2\u00AB> tew\u00E2\u0080\u0094li)\nimrtlcuhirhte, M Arthur Itance, foi\nir ho an we cnuuni wan much longer.\"\n\"Pel hups ai this very moment n\*\niUHtuiIld possesses Ilie pcoofS uf Oil]\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*. in mice nee.\" observed sia *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nEdllh. whom nil these preparation!\nbad disturbed mure thau all) olio else,\n\"1 cut real Mine. Durxuc to join me lu\nImploring these gentlemen to do nutii\niug uuiii Arthur's return.\"'\nThe Ludy in Hluck had no opportunity to intervene, for before Mme.\nKdlth finished speattlug we heard a\nloud uolse outside tbc door uf the corridor. A knock lame nt tbe door, and\nwe heard lhe voice of Arthur Uance\nbegging us lu open immediately, lie\ncried:\n\"I buve brough I (he pin wllh thu\nruby head!\"\nHoulMtnhllle opened the door,\n\"Arthur Itance, yuu are come then\nai lust;\" be exclaimed\nKdlth'* iiu-iniii.t -ecmed plunged lb\nthe deepen ineluuclioly.\n\"Wn.ii buve you in t\"ii me? Wbut\nhas happened? Home new misfortune?\n\ii, i feu red *o feared tbut i had armed too late when l saw the Iron\n(tlte closed and lieatd lhe prayed fur\ntbu dead cbunted in the tower U-s. 1\nKnew thai yuu had HXevi-OHl Uld Hob.\"\nRouletubllle! wbo luul closed und\nboiled ihc iImoi b*-blu<| Art mil Uance,\nIUrued In the American ami Mild:\ndid Rub Is a.ne, and rere Hernler\nIs dead He seatttl, mum-iour.\"\nUance stared ui tin- speaker in\numazement, th-u hmktHi i nsfrna-\niii'ii at tlie drawing board uie Q1R0 of\npaint and tne iu<\"ilv Skull and demanded.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Who killed him?\"\nI ii-n. condescending to notice that\nIn* wife was i lure (je pressed her\nHand, but lus eyes Were fixed upou\ntlie l.ady in UlUl U\n\"before nis neath Hemier accused\nFrederic Larsan,' answered M. Dar\u00E2\u0096\u00A0|Vo you mean to say by that tbat\ntie ac.u-.ed Did H\u00C2\u00BBbr\" interrupted\nKuoce ludlRimiitiy. \"i wl:i not sutler\nthat I. tod. had sortie doubts in regard to the ppp-oiiHtltv nl oui beloved\npnrle. bnt 1 tell you tbat i have the\nruby ueai'*--i \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n(To be oontluued i\nTHACKERAY'S ART.\nBINDERS at COCKSHUTT'S\nFROST A WOOD Machine* Lead All. Set Catalogue from tho Cookohutt Dealer\nBEAU BRUMMEL\nTht Dandy Who Vied With Qeorgi\nIV. for First Honorg.\nRruinmel never pi\nanything but a dandy\nsaying* prove thai I\nready to burlesque h\nexquisite fastidiousue<\nThus be sai.l Ilmt b.\ncold because \"ott tiie\nthe other day. that\n(his valet) put in ill\na damp stranger.\" Th\nmerit in bis poem\n.tended to be\nHis recorded\ne wus ttlwuyu\n[| DWn pose . I\ni mid fragility\nhad caught a\nBrighton road\ninil.l\"! Weston\nto a room with\nere i- also some\n\"The Butterfly\nYou\nCan'\na Doilg.\nMicro\nh*.\nTl\n... Hull, nl\nmill\nniUc\nrol.M\nH\ntlmt\nnu |\nperson\nrun\nt'vn\n1.' Ill\n''III\nA \u00C2\u00AB\n..\u00E2\u0080\u00A2lik.\nened\n. oonsl\nnun,\nin IS\nllllll.\ni-t Mir,' 1\nii In'\ntlieii\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 prey\nl'i\n.Villltli, ll\nUK\"\nImt\ntlu'\nMinn\n'l'i'-'-\nIII gc\nllll\nire w\n.-II ei\nl.illl!\nh in\n11.n\n1 \. II V\n. I'll'\n1 til\n1' lllll\nII wl\nin I\nakrs\ncart'\n..1 1\n.ii Ki\n'llrll\nll III\nullli\ni.i I\nlater\nllllll\n, lho ,\nHI.' Vi\nIto 1\nilluwi\nIn. ,\n'nils\nhm-\nlion\nI.. I.i'.\n'..III..\nlllll\ndown\n. evei\n1 llll\nlllj-ll\nHi.'\nlatter\ni* i'i|i\n\"IT\nPil \"I\nHi nn\nimi\nIVI.I-\nTi)\nStai,\nFuneral,\" particularly In tills ver&e:\nThe Dormouse attended, but cold nml\nlorlorn,\nAnd tbe i;nnt ilowly winded hia ihr tt\nlittle horn,\nAnd the Moth, who was grieved lot\nthe tosi ot h \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\nPent ovi the bodl aud -iYntlv Iti*-*\ned her\nBrummel seem* to havo done no\nharm to anyone n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\u00C2\u00ABt hli crpiliton\nnnd U) have had \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nt kin.In. v- .(,\nwell an ihrewdni In his nature\nPerhaps he waab I nothing except\nother people's tu n * loi lie may\nhave bemi born i d in Is as Mosarl\nwas born s mush an H no, the fuel\nrem ai ui Iha' it It nol well to lie born\na dandy, unless j m can conti Ivs to\ndie young, Bruuimol lived to be\nilxty-two, and in nl hli la'-t twenty\nlour yen- in txilf* In Kranca, with no\nobjeel in life exci pt to dresij a> well\nas be could in ipits ot a poverty\nwhich ftradually heeame ilestltutlon\nMiss Clare JerftKt, in hei book on\n\"The Beaux and the Dandles,\" tenths story oi In- ttiiaerable end, ami\nmakes ti- se\u00C2\u00AB> that at last be attained\nla a real dignttj through suffering\nHe grew tattered and filthy, and one\nlady in Caen wai the only person\nwho wuuld receive bim She was\nasked \"How can \-o\i admit such a\ndriveller?\" and she answered, \"He 'i\nnever In onr way, ami though it is\ntr ii t he is not no w ihe amusing character he once was, I 'ike to see him\ntake bis seat before my tire.\"\nAt last his mind went, and be was\nadmitted to a convent where the insane were kindly treat eil. There he\ndied, more happily, perhaps, thnn\nh:s rival Qeorge IV., who never forgave bim for being the liner dandy,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Times.\nmil di ud.iiii* cup ^^^^^^^^\nMiiuiid'-, Liniment Corot Colds, Etc.\n.\" drawled the Yankee. \"I\nio a mail, sir. wim fell off a\n-.ill mi a iliii twenty stories\nonce kn\n\\ ni.Iiiw\nlimb, and ti\na few l>inisi\n\"Noitaetm\nman\n\"True!\" i\nI here be n\nm.i in i.H right i\n\"Boah!\" said\n\"How could tiiat I\n\"Waal, air,\" .In\n\"you sim', he ju-l I\nfall Inside!\"\ni hml himself, I\nDxclal I tb.- Im\ncle\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Up\nEnglishman\nThe folluwiug took place iu nn ele*|\nineutiiry lohool on the oooasion ol the\ndiocesan Inspection:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nInnpector\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Which U the Fifth\nCommandments\" Hoy repeat*, it and\nHoes Up one.\nInspector \"Very good:\nai school whom must vou obeyP\"\nHuy \"Teacher, sir.\"\nInspector \"Very good; und when\nat play in the BtroeiH\"\nHuy \"Tlie policeman, sir\"\nInspector \"Quito iiiiiii Who puis\nihe policeman to look alter youP\"\nSmall Huy (ilistutttly) \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"Satan,\n*>ii \"\nPhrnsi\nKngliali,\n\"Tllell\n\"This\ncar, Iha\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0It. iw\n.-.I. falsi\nI th\nvied lie\nU li,\nti HpIIiiwm -\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nt ti ut mill\nll.-sh\nit Iniii Hi,.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ut wiihuul\nVanl\t\nuckily tu\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 >.i>iiii*<,i\nroots uml\nIllllll v to\ns out of a translation called\nof Ouy do Maupassant' tales\nlip* met Inllltlv.\"\nhiily dellglitod the eye, Ihe\nplllllle.\"\niM-ii ber smile her teeth show\n. i.ui hentittful \"\nuiglit it another barrier between my love.\"\n\"At n iluiti mi Ihc lloor above, gent\nly with two fingers, she tapped, opened it. moved back, niul. us he entered, silently behind bim closed it.\"\nHer Sacred Word\n\"Nol going to Alloe*i luncheon?\nHut you gave your laored word!\"\n\"So I did, and I'd go in a minute\nif my dress bail cume borne.\"\nI when Wlsa mpthen who knew the virtuea of\nMother Univi'rt\" Wiirm Kttpnuiliatur \u00C2\u00AB1\nimivh have it ut luiiiil, li.ruum- It prowl\nits \iiiin-\nSome wise men sny that religious\nfaith is ignorance. Kven if this were\nso, it would be equally true that non-\nbelief is a matter of Ignorance, Ami\nit'.- belter lo have an ignorant faith\nthan an ignorant doubt.\nSome people seein to get round\nshouldured from carrying the responsibility of things that dn not concern\nthem in the least,\nI'Vnr is lb\nwhereby it i-\nQod and His\n' awc-hnnd of the aotil.\nkept from starling from\nways. Siblies.\nI.itlle Jennie wa- ill and bad tu lie\ns ui t.i a liospitnl In tbe same loom\nwllh lui was a hub' hoy who was ex-\nceedillgly fond of liis 'lather. The\nlather had just left tbe hospital\nin t tlie little fellow licgnn tu\n.ry \"Try mitl no io ileop, .lul lo\"\n-aid .lennie. \"I eaift,\" aaid Johnnie,\n\"1 |ust can't du without my papa.\"\n\"0, yes, you can, .lubiuiie, ' said\n.lennie, wisely, \"You can do without\nany llimg but yuur own aelf.\"\nI'uderwear is being advertised ho\nextensively in tln< mngaalnes that the\nmen lln ally may be induced not tu\nwear anything else during the bot\nseason.\nOne thing I have learnt, nml I\nthink it is worth remembering, (but\nheaven may be reached and touched\neverywhere, that one enn help or\nhinder happiness bv a tiny word.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAmy l.e l-Viivre.\nwhi\nHousekeeper at\n did vmi\nButler- \"The 'ole\nhas been fought uu\nTiitiuis, and i.s dlr\nand I\nPunch,\nI..ud X'a\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"And\nvole, Mr. Hiidd?\"\nof tliis election\nolarso 'atred, Mrs.\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ted ngalnst bus.\nlid my duly accordinM\"\nBABY'S OWN TABLETS\nCURE SUMMER COMPLAINT\nPr of essor Saintibury Ditcutm thi\nGreat Novsltsts.\nProfessor George Baintsbury hm\nwritten au article for tbe aprcia)\nThackeray centenary number ot the\nLondon Bookman, in which he compare!) some of the great English nove'.-\nUts,\n\"The Brt of novel writing is not\nold,\" ho says j \"it is bandy at the\nbeginning of its third century, strictly speaking, and already there hai\nfallen between Thackeray and that\none of his predecessors who was\nmost 'ike him in kind HiH degree i.f\ngreatness, Fielding, one of those curb\nous veils which time drops now ;.nd\n; then, but at quite uncertain Interval)-,\ni and thro igh which we can only *e-\ndarkly. hui hy a certain effai't and\n' calculation.\n\"Of the great English dealem with\nlife through fiction who are thia side\nof that veil. Bcott, though he is still\non the right side of it to all but very\npoor and unhappy optics, seeim to\nhave been partly entangled in its\nj fold* to some, and undoubtedly,\ni pioneer as he wns. and dealing as he\ni did mainly with romance itself and\n| with pa.-t times, gives only partial\nj play to the actual intimate knowledge\nj of pure lifp that he [Kissesnod.\nI \"Miss Austen, almost as absolutely\n; life-like a- Thackeray, has, we are\nj told, her life-likeness obscured hy a\n' partly obsolete style, and she cer-\nt tainly limited and 'miniatured' her\n! presentments,\n| \"Bulwer, nur pink friends' 'great-\n1 est living novelist,' did know life.\nj but he chose to adulterate his knowl.\ni edge to an intolerable degree with all\n; sorts of conventions, tricks, fashions.\nDickens knew it better\u00E2\u0080\u0094in flashes,\n! indeed, perfectly, but he atrain chose\nI to subordinate his knowledge, Itself\nvery partial, to a perpetual glamor of\nJ comic or tragic fantasy, not real at\nall, as well ag to worse things, Mich\nas political and social prejudice and\ncrotchet, teasing mannerisms of style,\nhampering disqualifications of liter.\nary and otber ienoraiice.\n\"Charles Reade, a genius certainly,\nnever could uei tbat genius into any\norganic condition. Charlotte Bronte,\na geniuB likewise, had too short and\ncrumped an existence, too narrow an\nexperience, too little critical faculty,\nand perhaps a temper none too genial.\n\"George Eliot bound hersell to the\nschool* and the systems till *he became Httl\u00C2\u00AB more than a mere eyeless grinder at the mill with scientific slaves.\n\"And the late Geonze Meredith,\nhimself a novelist, be It remembered, of the 'fifties, handed over In no\ndissimilar way his subtle and eccentric but real life knowledge as a\nfamihar spirit to Jargofl and play to\ncolerie galleries, and subtle cobweb j\nspinning tu catch the flie-j of foolish j\ncleverness. |\n\"Hut none of them ever quite mas- |\ntered the problem, the quest of the\nnovel ii. I proper, which ia the presentation and criticism, without wandering from it or adding to it, of\nhumor, life and character by tbe way\nof fiction,\nThackeray did. Tbat he saw life\nwli.de is not true. Who has, except\nGod? He was human. Hut the al-\nmost superhuman thing about him ii\nthat in nothing that be does touch U\nhe ever unllfoTlkP, as, from different\n: mason a and in different manners, a!l\n, the gn-at rivals and contemporaries\nmentioned above are, sometimes.\n\"No other writer with whom 1 am\nacquainted, bnve Shakespeare himself, and no other novelist at all, has\n. tbia infallible and u'must divine\ni power of Infusing life intu every hu-\n' man figure that he creates, or that lie\neven touches tor \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 momentary pur*\npota.\"\nA HAPPV ACCIDENT,\n, H. G. Wells Owes His Literary Start\nto a Broken Blood Vtsset.\nIn view of the criticism* aimed nt\nI him because of bis recent books.\n\"Ann Veronica\" and \"Tbe New Mac\nhiuvelli,\" H. G. Wells has written\nwhat might be called a defence, but\nwhich is in fact more of an attack\nI on his critics and on life. He tells\n, in his own way of bis emergence from\nthe teaching profession into litera.\nsure:\n\"Then I tolled for years to Income\nj eitber u biological investigator or a\ni teacher. I set my face sternly npainst\n', tbe sort of work T do now, and which\nI even tben attracted me most, because\nj I thought it a mure unprofitable indulgence of the mind. I hammered\nj at tbe doors of bchco] and laboratory\ni for a chance\u00E2\u0080\u0094for half a chance\u00E2\u0080\u0094for\ni ju-d a little bit of a chance to give\nj my life to these things, t did not\nI understand thai both these worlds\nare ruled by academic cliques; that\nI should have entered either only to\nlive n life of embittered obscurity. I\nshould have spent my days in hampered, suppressed, or unrecognized\nresearches, and in attempts to ventilate highly specialized grievances,\nJived, indeed, like a mnn swearing\nwith his head in a hag. But my good\nluck in its usual disguise of misfortune intervened, and one day as 1\nran down Villiers street with a hag\nof rock specimens I had been show\ning to a class of candidates for the\nLondon Bachelor of Science degree, I\ncoughed and broke a blood-vessel.\nThereby I was stretched out, it seemed, a broken and ruined and almost\npenniless young man, and as 1 could\ndo nothing else I wrote, and in a\nyear found myself free to live any\nwhere and write ai I liked, twice as\nprosperous as I had ever been in my\nlife before.\"\nAnd after all, say what you will,\nwho does not rejoice when he finds\nhimself, by hia own honest efforts,\ntwice as prosperous as he .was before?\nThe Tafl.Hattad Highlander.\nField Marshal Sir Evelyn Wood,\nV.C., wbo bus recently formally us-\nsumed his new position as Constable\nof the Tower ol London, surely holds\nthe record fur versatility among distinguished army officers, having served und fought in the navy, Light lira-\ngoons, Lancers, Irregular Horse, and\nHighlander-, in addition tu which he\njoined tbu Middle Temple and was\nculled to the Bur in 1874, and is tbe\nauthor ol wurks renowned for their\nhigh literary distinction. A good story\nmuy ba told of bin attachment tu a\nregiment of Highlanders, when the\nlatter were stationed at Portsmouth.\nSir Evelyn, then a captain, one day\nreturned from London, and with great\nhurry proceeded to array himself for\nparude. When he last emerged, he\nobserved that his men were evidently\nat great pains tu conceal their laughter, and he quietly questioned his\nsubaltern as tu the probable reason.\n\"Well, sir,\" replied the latter, \"you\nare dressed correctly as to kilt, sporran, and all tbe rest of it; but you\nhave forgotten tu remove your tall\nhat I\"\nInsuring Jewels.\nBorne large Insurances were offered\nto the companies and members of\nLloyd's on jewels to be worn hy Indian princes attending the coronation.\nOne insurance for $4'2&,U00 was underwritten, and in another case the\nvalue nf the property was between\n$1,000,000 and $1,600,000. In some\nInstances the ri*, until a\nman be wed, he is a being of no account. If a father has not selected\nwives for his suns ere they reach the\nage of twenty he is considered worthless and neglectful.\nToronto Typo Foundry Co., Ltd.\nCALCARY\nWINNIPEG\nREGINA\n**e\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094mm*m\nThe Largest Printers' Supply House in Canada\nWe Carry in Stock Cylinder Presses, Job Presses,\nPaper Cutters, Type and Material. Can Fill\nOrders for Complete Equipment from our Stock.\nWe are the Largest Beady Print Publishers in\nthe West. We Publish Seady Prints from our\nWinnipeg, Calgary and Begina Houses.\nOrder From Nearest Branch\nW\n$3,600 in Cash Prizes for Farmers\ni* HEN you enter the Canada Content Prlie\nCon telt, your dealer wlll unlit yuu.\nConsult him In reference to condition*!\nof tha contest. Hefer ull quu*tloni of doubt to\nhim to decide. Confer with him when hli experience and advice and hln knowledge of our\nid .in would hci-iii helpful.\nfnin'i hesitate uliout riolnjr thla. We bavt\nrequested him to astdit to the heat uf Ilia ability\nany farmer In tils locality competluir In thia contest\u00E2\u0080\u0094whether u'tt >i m.tlii r Involving the application of OQincslti or how to go ubout winning une\nuf ttie prlaea offared In this conteit. Do you\nrealist a thut yon huve un j-,ood *t chance ai. the\nnext m.ili 11) j\"In one of these prlxci? There are\nfour for each Province, ai follow*:\nPKIZK \"A\"\u00E2\u0080\u00941100,00 to l>-> glftn u, the firmer In \u00C2\u00ABich\nI'rofi'lC* win, will ukf dunlin tilll. lilt *j:*>atp*,i nuiubtr uf\nl>..ip. of \"CANADA*' Cu-urnl. 1MUZE \"ll\" -$M0.0Q |(l he\nMfPti to tlii' f.iriniT in v*n\t I'ruv noe whu in 1VI1 uire\nCAN \I'\ ' Cement '\u00C2\u00BB\"ii (ur tbo greatera number\n-* -irpotn. I'UI/.K \"C\" #iuii on to bo |.*.-n tu iii*\nfaiiui'r\niit\"iiai'h Vtevlooe whu luru.ileii *% will\nCanada Cement Company. Limited, Montreal\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0hawing the beet of anr particular kind ef work done ob hti\nfarm during lttll with \"CANADA\" Cement. PRIZE \"O\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094llllll.0O te ba glffD to the farmer Ii aaub Prefleea wke\neubtuit* the heat and mo*l eoranlala description uf hew ant\nparticular piece vf work ebuwn by acuempaiiylBi photograph,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 aa dona.\nContest will cIoa* on November 15th, llll, and\nns Noon un iiusalble thereafter, prUei will be\nawarded.\nBe aure and get a copy of our Conteit Circular,\ntnllliiK ull about the contest. A.ik your dealer for\none or liue the utUchud coupon, If you And It\nmore convenient.\nIn writing ua, m-nt'im whflhpr yuu hava rereivad yout\nropy uf \"What tin Faimrr Can Du With Concrete,\" a\npi'ufunelr illuitnteil 11' f\u00C2\u00ABi* book, wkich fli* yuu\nhu* tu build with coionle, >u that yuu cau de\nmuch ut the wurk yourself. It*\u00C2\u00BB a ru'.j*lity handy\nanil uauful book, aud iluuld ****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 y\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 maiiy a\ndollar. Fdrmera who hart recevud it. **j j Pl\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\nit ia a ikudid Write to-night and t will X ' ,\"\ngn back lu yu.i wiih ?rUe tWoil M \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I'-'r*\nPuldar. by return mall, J _ cul-r an*l\nBr**.\nName..\nAddraoa... THE PROSPECTOR. CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n**************************\nHis Night I\nOff |\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 And What It Accomplished \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nFor Him j\nBy CLARISSA MACKIE J\nCopyright by American Prsss Alio- -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nclitlon. 1,11. f\nM>-t*t4''$\u00C2\u00ABi4*\u00C2\u00AB4'3'*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB^3\u00C2\u00BB\nDunbar stepped out of the tall Park\nrow building witb u pleusuut sense nt\nfrwiluui Uo bnd turned lu bin lust\npugo of copy for tbe Sunday edition,\nsuit be hud twenty bours of rest nnd\nreluiiiiinn uheud of bim. To Bum hnu\nbur, tbe tnoHt Indefatigable worker on\ntbe liully Universe, reluiutlun ineniit\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0eeklnjt bin pleasure auionu. Iiuuuim Hint\nmust fmnlsb copy. In bin youthful\neutbUHluHui Iiii life bad Uiuh fur cou\nalHied uf work, sleep and work.\nOu tbu Saturday nlgbt Hum win In\nr-plred lo Keek tlie gurlsb llgbta of ttie\nUowery lu tome restaurant Ibere lie\nnilgbt Und lbe type of young mau be\nwaa looklug for\u00E2\u0080\u0094lbe weuker brotber\nwbo bad lout bopeand aelf res|ieit uud\nwbo waa burdened with a multitude\nof flies, yel In whom there nilgbt be\naotue alumberlng apark tbat could be\nfaoued to a dame of renewed lutereui\nIn life, ambition and, In tbe end, rep\nutable citizenship. If be cuuld prove\ntbat thla might be done witb some of\nthe degenerate aoua of tbe city, per\nhups a measure of tbe gold Ibat was\nateadlly poured toward tbe enlighten\nment of tbe heathen ot otber lands\nmight be diverted to tbat greatest ol\nall charities ut home.\nNow be atrolled along tbe Bowery,\nmingling with the crowds tbat thrums\ned tbe sidewalks, looking bere and\nIbere for a cheap eating bouse wherein\nhe might Uud whut be was looklug for\nSam Dunbar wus hanging up his bul\nIn a chop house preparatory to ink\nIng a seut at oue of the polished cherry tables wheu tbe vacant eyed youth\nwhom be bad picked out for his prey\n\"Ol Till \u00E2\u0096\u00A0!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 IWATl\" BHi CBIID\nsuddenly arose from bla aeat and ap\npreached tbe oashler'a desk. Sum looked around at tbe otber patrons of tbe\nplace. Two Uusbily dressed men sat\nIn \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 distant coruer. Bere and there\na man wun eatlug a solitary meal, and\ndirectly opposite bim a girl wus bent\nover the greasy bill of fare.\nThere was something In tbe droop of\nber shoulders that appealed to bim\nTbey looked like shoulders that ver,\naccustomed to carrying themselves\nproudly, but now tbey bunched together, and the enormous beaver bat\nwas ao flopped down about the girl's\n(ace tbat be could see nothing save a\nround white cbln and a pair of red\nlips that undoubtedly trembled.\nRegardless of the wirtsvr'a disdainful\nglance and tbe Insulting laugh uf a\nman In a striped suit of clothes. Sum\nreclaimed bla nat and moved across to\ntbe table occupied by the glrL Sbe did\nnol lift her bead at bis approach. She\nmerely bowed It lower over the framed\ncardboard until tbe broken featber on\nber bat nearly swept the table.\nTbe broken feather deilded the mat\nter for Hum IMiuhur. If there was no\ndegenerate young man to be reclaimed\nthat nlgbt. here wus material to bis\nhand, or, aa be told himself, for bla\npaper.\nThe waiter shoved a card under\nRatu'a nose and thumped a glass of\nwater on the table.\n\"A porterhouse steak and coffee.\"\nwu hia decision.\n\"And yours?\" Tbe waiter enapped\nIbe question at the girl.\n\"A aandwlcb and a cup of tea.\"\nearns from under tba beaver bat In a\nvery small voice.\nTbe waiter departed and returned\nalmost Immediately with tbs leu and\naandwlcb.\nThs girl slowly lifted her bead and\nmads a pretense at eating Ihe fond\nBam, apparently absorbed In a news\npaper, noted tbal ahe ate daintily and\nthat ber hands were pretty and well\nkept Her face waa charmingly sweet\nand refined.\nWhere had she come from? What\nwaa abe doing here on tbe Bowery?\nBam asked himself these questions at\nbe dlacnased bis meal. He w'shed\nthere was something that he could do\nHe felt thnt ahe needed protection\nHera waa Ibe timidity of Innocence.\nThere wan no guile in the frightened\nblue ey e that evaded his.\nAn opportunity came. The door\nawnnt open, nnd a mnn entered, a\ne~.ri.\u00E2\u0080\u009Eri\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei. half drunken individual,\nwbo made slow progress up ine room,\nsupporting himself by a dirty band\nlaid on Ibe tables. Wben be reached\ntbe table where tbs young reporter\naud the girl sat the man puused uud\natared foolishly al tbe girl,\n\"Say, Mabel,\" hs began, wllh a\nthreatening glance toward Sum, \"If\nyouss wants me lo throw bim out I\nwill. Whal sny?\"\nThs girl uttered a little cry nnd\nflashed an appealing glance toward\n8am. \"Uh, take bim away!\" ahe cried\nnervously.\nJust the\u00C2\u00BB the waiter blustered up\nand with little ceremony ejected iha\nnewcomer from lbs place.\ni ne girt was rising from her sent\nand fumbling In a small bag lhat\nbung from her wulat Sum pushed\naside bis own unfinished meal.\n\"If you're nfruld of that fellow. Ml\u00C2\u00AB*\nMabel,\" he waa beginning wbeu the\nI i-lt-l put out a protesting band.\n1 \"(Hi. you are mistaken,\" she said,\nivlih a broken little laugh. \"My name\nI isn't Mabel, and I never saw nlm oe-\nfore lu my life. Be was tierely offensive, that's all.\"\nBuddenly be arose and reached for\nhis but. \"Tbis Is a pretty tough section.\" be snld quietly. \"I wonder If\nyou'd let uie put you on a car for\nUonieV\"\nThe girl hesitated and looked at Mm.\nTheir eyes met In a long, earnest, absorbing glance. At last tbe girl uttered\na little sigh of relief.\n\"If you wlll be so vcry kind.\" sbs\nsnld gen lly.\nThe waller grinned sardonically sn\nthey paid their rhecka and passed out\nof the restnuraut together.\n\"Which wuy?\" Inquired Sam as ihey\npaused tm Ihe sidewalk,\n\"Way uptown-Ninety-second street,\"\nreturned the girl. \"If you will put ms\nou u car\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"I'll see lo Hint.\" said Sam. \"There's\nan elevated station two blocks down.\nI will he glud to see you nil lbe way\nhome If you will permit me,\" he suggested.\n\"You are very kind, but perhaps I\nam luting you out of your wuy,\" said\nthe girl.\n\"Not ot all Tbla Is my nlghl off\"\nThey walked slowly down the hr'l- |\nlluntly lighted thoroughfare, the girl's\nface quite hidden by tbe enormous\nheaver hat. Sum Dunbar walked very\nstraight, bis broad aboulders thrown\nback as If braced to meet some ei- \\npeeled trouble, his handsome brows\nknitted In perplexity.\nNot a word was spoken until they\nwere In the train rumbling northward.\n\"I would like to usk you what you're\ndoing ao far from borne.\" hesitated\nSam at Insl. \"That's a pretty tough\nport of lhe city, you know.\"\n\"I do know It,\" abe said quickly.\n\"Thut Is why I went there.\"\n\"Because It is touguV\" be repented\nIncredulously.\nSbe nodded her head, and tbe broken\nfeulber wagged iu unison. \"I don'1 believe you would like lo hear why 1\nI went there.\"\nHe looked uncomfortable. \"Well. I\nI would like to beur.\" be said bluntly.\ni \"You're too young to be wuuderlog\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 around lhe city like this.\"\n! \"I'm not as young aa I look.\" sbs\nprotested. \"I bope you wlll understand me I suppose you live down\nthere yourself, but 1 bad a mission\ndowu ibere.\" She blurted It out as If\n< relieved of u burden of secrecy.\n' \"A mission! Tbeo you are a settle-\nI inenl worker?\"\n! \"No You see, 1 am a woman re-\nj porter for Ibe Dally Sphere. I bare\ncome la contact with some of the un\nI fortunate girls of Ibe dry. and I\n(bought that lu my spare moments I\nmight get down among them aud per\n1 baps be tbe meuas of leading a few of\n! them back Into a better life.\" Sbs\nI blusbed rosily uuder tbe disreputable\ni hat\nI He sighed with relief at ber confes-\n[ slou. \"But Ibat waa a mighty duuger-\nI ous thing for you to do,\" be advised\n| her. \"You might get luto serious trouble yourself. Tonight waa your tlrst\nattempt?\"\n\"Yes, and I was so frightened I\npicked out thai cbophouse, aud I felt\nso perfectly awful with thla wicked\nfeatber in uiy but\" Sbe reached up\nand plucked out tbe offending feather,\n\"1 suppose I've made a failure uf (hs\nwhole tblug Just when I thought I wae\ngoing to accomplish such s nobis\nwork. Tbere Is a man ou tbe Universe\nwho reaches young men in this way.\naud his ezumple Inspired me to du\nlikewise. His name is Dunbar\"\n\"Perhaps we can work together,\"\nsaid Sum quietly, tlsblug a curd fco.n\nhis pocket and bunding It to ber.\nShu uttered a little cry of delight\n\"How very strange\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ahe was begin-\nulng, wbeu a sudden thought brought\ntbe roses to ber cheek ouce mors. \"You\nthought\u00E2\u0080\u0094you thought you were goiug\nto save me?\" ahe asked quickly.\nll was Sum's turn to blush. \"I might\nbuve known you were different\" hs\nsaid apologetically\nShe waved the feather thoughtfully.\n\"Not while I wore that air Dunbar,\nI believe we are coming to my station\"\nSum uceompuuled ber to ber borne\nIn a most Irreproachable neighborhood.\nIn tbe mouths that followed It was bla\ngood fortune tu Instruct her lu otnot\nmutters outside uf the sphere uf philanthropy\nIn the end tbey formed a matrimonial partnership und worked together\nfor lhe reclamation uf unfortunates.\nOuce a week (hey entered the res-\ninuranl where tbey bad llrst met snd\ndined under Ihe coutempluoua glaucs\nof the waiter.\n\"1 don't know If I ever told yon.\nHam, but I believed yon to bs s repro\nhale when you sat down by ms tbr.l\nflrst night snd I was ao afraid W\nyon\"\n\"You've got over tt bravely eno'jgb.\"\nreplied her husband, trying to look\nhenpecked and dismally falllag la am\nattempt \t\nEmpty Competitioni.\nA remarkable angling competition\nhas jusl been held on tiie River Wit-\nham, Kngland, where for two hours\nMly-six Lincoln anglers llshed in\nvain. They were on tlie bunk o( tho\nriver between Wushiiigborough and\nLincoln, but not a single tisii was\nnaught. About ten yeurs ago a similar tiling happened, but on that occasion tli.Tc were only thirty competitors taking purt. In another compoti-\ntion rctntly open to twelve clubs iu\nDerby, tilt mutch lor thc twenty-live\nguinea challenge cup took place in\nthu Derby Angling Association's private water in the canal at Wellington.\nAfter halting for an hour and a half,\nonly fourteen competitors out of sixty-\nfour had taken any tish, and the challenge cup was won by Mr. J. Dawney\nwitli a gross weight ot only 21-4\nounces, four shot. The 'owest weights\nto lake a prise were 1-4 ounces, six\nshot uud three shot.\nHUNTING YANKS.\nAdventures on \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Canadian Flshsriee\nPatrol Boat.\n.'.ny man who ever carried a pun\nin (he wood* or \"wet a line\" in pur*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nit of any member ol the tribe of\nIin*] and scales, will tind delightful\nrending in a volume ol hunting aud\ntuning stories by Staphen Chalmers\nwhich has juat been iuued, the Oana.\nJim edition being published by the\nMuason Buok Company ol Toronto.\nThe volume is ealled \"The Trail ol\nt .Yhdcrfoot.\" It ea.n be read through\neasily ut one -titling. All the stories\nare full of lite and color, and they\nar>* related aa any jolly Sportsman\nwould tell a story to a group ol con*\ngenial companions.\nThe Ust chapter of the book is especially interesting to Canadians It's\ntitle is \"Out With a Kish Patrol,\"\nnnd it throWH Home new light on one\nphase of a big question\u00E2\u0080\u0094 the enforce.\nmi-nt of fisheries regulation-! along lhe\nCanadian* American boundary line\nMr. Chalmers wan at Campohello Island on tho Canadian tide \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>( Passa*\nmaquoddy Hay when The Hague Tribunal held that Great Britain had\nthe .-sovereign right \"to make tisherie.-\nregulation* without tha concurrence ot\nthe Untied Stutes.\" 60 he made\nfriend, with a Canadian patrol rap-\n1*11111 with lhe Idea of seeing how the\n\"sovereign power\" worked thereabouts. He got up one morning at\nth t-e o'clock, in the midst of a Kuudy\nlog, und went out with Captain Silas\nMitchell, of Dominion Fisheries Patrol No. 2. He saw how things are\ndone. AUo, he heard some good\nstories.\nPatrol No. 8 is a laat little boat,\n\"derisively called The Pup' by those\nwho feur it.\" It tlgurea in many adventures. This one was told to Mr.\nChalmers by Charles Cline of the\nBROWN SWISS BREED\nOF DAIRY CATTLE\nIt la sometimes claimed thut th*\ndairy quality of the Brown Swiss\nbreed bus been Improved aud the breed\n\"retiued\" by the Americun breeders\nwho have cultivated this breed for thi\niusc thirty years. Writes E M. Barton\nId Hoard's Uuiryuun. The method ol\n\"refining\" tins consisted iu feedlug th<\nCttlvea less liberally while they un\ngrowing uud In breeding ttie heifer*\nabout a year earlier thun Is the Swis.-\npractice, thus making then) llghtei\nund leaner thun tbey would be if thej\nhad had Ihe usual cure that Is Rlvei.\nto young cuttle lu Switzerland. B>\nfollowing this practice for two or threi\ngenerations the normal weight of the\ncows is reduced two or three hundred\npouudl, uud thla la done without spoil\nlug the cows for milking |iur|w*\u00C2\u00BBeH.\nWhether this practice lakes off some\nthing from Ihe milk uud butler qua I in\nand whether tt takes otr something\nfrom (he useful life of (he eow Is haril\nto prove une way or the other, Imt I\nhutd to the theory (hat, (he breed belnj.\nuf the highcHt dairy quality und ut tin\nsume time of considerable weight, n*\nIt htiH been bred for hundreds of gen\nerullons lu Switzerland, the chaiicei*\nure tbut tbe \"running\" process, ao\nculled, which boa gone ou In thia cou 11\ntry U lu reullty a stunting proi ess aud\nthut by liberal feeding of the calves\nus Ih pructlced lu Switzerland, und\ncoiupurulively late breeding of (he\nheifers we shall keep to the true Swiss\ntype und huve better milk uud buttei\ncrew concerning the handling of ! fteW\" nnd longer life.\nsome Yankees, who were uot only on i There were at the uationol dnlrj\nthe wrong side of the line, but were ahow in Chicago last full two cows\nbreaking the laws of both countries: , lowu Lassie und Merule, thut rep re\n\"We nad a ticklish encounter not \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 sent tive generations of American\nlong ago. There were half a dose 11 ' breeding. Tho former was selected h\\ndynamiters from the Maine shore | tho Judge us the champion cow of the\nthut hud been awful annoying to 8:1a\n-fellows who skipped over the line\njust as he came up. Silas hates to\nuae a gun, but one day he got mad\nclear through. He heard the explosion and saw them take tho fish. He\ncrammed on ail .-.peed and seemed ag\nif he'd get U) them before they got\nto the line. But presently it looked\nlike another getaway. Silas couldn't\nstand fur it. He whipped out one ol\nhia Sniders and sent a young cannon-\nball right over their heads, then another oue between tiieir boats. Still\nthey didn't stop. Silar didn't fir\"-\nagain, because there might be a war\nif you hit an Amerioau who was one-\neighth of an inch over his own side.\n\"But the funny tiling -as that they\nstopped right over the line and began .wearing something awful. Silas\ncame up, mud clear through. But\nwhat d'y suppose? A couple of them\ngot up with dynamite in their hand:\nand lifted their arms in a way thut\nmade a man's scalp creep.\n\"'You blunkcty blank blank!' they\ncussed. 'You'll shoot at us, will you?\nNow you put down that gun quick\nor\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\n\"Silas didn't put it down. He put\nit up to his shoulder.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' 'Lbok her*',' says Stlu, 'the minute that leaves your hand, the man\nI'm covering's a dead one!'\n\" 'if you pull thut trigger,' says one\nof them, 'the rest of ua will send you\nskyhigh'tc glory.'\n-So there wus a deadlock. They\nheld up uie dynamite ready to throw,\nand Silas never took his finger off\nthe trigger or his eye off the mnn he\nwus covering. But The Pup wua drifting off, and when she was at a bit ;\nsafer distance, he says:\n\"Now, listen to me. If yuu throw\nthat dynamite, you'll miss our hull,\nor the c- ncussion won't be hard 1\nenough at this distance to set it off. J\nIf auy of you attempt to light a stick [\nwe'll riddle you. Charlie,' he sang\nout to me, 'are you ready with that l\nother Snider?'\n\"I Bure was, and so was Polkenhorn !\nwitli the big Colt. They talked a lot,\nbut finally rowed away. You see, the\nline was between us and them and j\nwe couldn't even resent their language !** \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Real \"Buffalo.\"\nMost towns are like other towns\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00ABs\na rule. Wainwright, Alberta, breaks\nthe rule. Wainwright is just aa much\nunlike any town in America as could\nbe. She has a park. So bas New\nYork, Central Park; Toronto, High\nPark. But because Wainwright bus a\npark she is different.\nWaiiiwright's park is tbe whole\ntown. That explains partly why she\nis different. Who would think of naming Toronto or New Ycrk Paradisos?\nWaiuwright is Puradisos. Wainwright, tlie park, ia different from\nCentral Park or High Park. It's bigger. Wainwright is 11,000 acres sur-\nrounded by a wire fence 25 miles\nlong, which cost $1,000 a mile to put\nup.\nAnd Wainwright has over a thousand of the rarest animals ou the\nglobe\u00E2\u0080\u0094over a thousand buffalo.\nReally tbat is why Wainwright,\nAlberta, in different\u00E2\u0080\u0094the buffalo. The\nAlbcrtan never mouths Wainwright,\nhe speaks of \"Buffalo Park.\"\n\"Poor Polly.\"\n'lalkmg of aspiring dramatists who\npester him witli plays, Mr. Charles\ntiuwtrey, who has made another \"hit\"\nin '*Inconstant George,\" at the Prince\nof Wales' Theatre, London, mentions\na letter he once received:\n\"Dear Sir (it ran),\u00E2\u0080\u0094If you are in\nwant of an oppeuitig one-act drama\nat your houae I have such a domestic\ndrama to offer, it it not a representation of the iper classes, but rather off\nthe lower. It is called \"Poor Polly\nNewly Married and Done.\" It is certainly orriginal, and will delight your\nmiddle and lower class audiences.\"\n\"The same man,\" says Mr. Haw-\ntrey, \"inaile me an offer of another\nplay a little while later, entitled 'Saved by the Skin of Your Teeth'\u00E2\u0080\u0094a piece\nwhich he declared contained 'a thrill\ning love-- ry, with enthralling closing\nprecedents'.'\nbreed, nnd the latter had mude a line\nrecord for amount und economy or\nproduction at the Wisconsin expert\nment station. These cows have finer\nhone, the hind legs are leas straight.\ntbeir weight under 1,21.10 pounds, uml\nln the view of muny experts showed\ntbe highest dairy quality. They arc\ngood milkers aud good cows, but to my\nmind they are uot us typical repro\nscututivea of tbe breed us the bin\nheaded, strung legged, square buttock\ned 1,200 pound caws thut ure imported\nand occasionally rubied In thla couutry\naud sucb as you find represented in\nlarge numbers In the stables of their\nown country.\nTbe uorinul weight of lown Lassie\nthe champion cow, la 1,130 pounds\nWith ber second calf she gave within\nThe Brown Swiss Is one of the\nstandard breeds from Switzerland.\nlt has become generally distributed\nthroughout Europe und was tlrst\nImported Into the United Stales In\n1RC9. Brown Swiss cattle are well\nadapted to conditions when a combination of dairy and beef production Is sought. The size Is medium. Cows weigh 1,200 to 1.500\npounds. The quantity of milk Is\nmoderately large and the fat content good. According to the American standard, the color Is dark ti>\nlight brown or some seasons of tha\nyear gray. The cow bere shown\nwas bred ln New York and made a\nrecord ot 4,403 pounds of milk la 120\ndays.\nFUNNY LAWS.\nEngland Has Had Some Qu\u00C2\u00BBr Act, sl\nParliament.\n\"An Act ul Parliament, sir, ia a 8-T-\niuu- thing,\" Sjn'iiUer lirand once, s.iid\ntu i frivolous member, in a \uixe ul\ngrave rebuts, \"and should tin pro-\nleci.-il irum undct'Oily humor.\" And\nwrtalnly tfn- itatute-buuk ll usually\na.* little calculated tu provoke a smile\nai auy -iry-ai-dun volume iu arohaeo.\nlus)-. Hut it ha= its ainusiiia corners,\nnevertheless, if une is uily diligent\nenough tu 1.- k lur tU-;ro\nli: fact, suin,'times they leap to the\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0v<- as in lhat clause in the Irish\nBank Act ol IMS which provide, thai\n\"the urolita shall be eiiually divided,\nand the residue so to the Governor\";\naul in an uld-time act onoe quoted\nhy Lord I'alnierston, which provided\niur the possibility uf Guod Friday tailing on a Sunday-a \"happy thuUKht'\nil which even the late Major ll'Unr-\nman might well have been proud.\nThe must enthusiastic believer in\nvaccinal night woll lake alarm al\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iile section ill an Act ol -li and -i\nVict., which nnide vaccinatum coin-\npulsury In Scotland. Hy a lection \"I\nthis act the registrar was ordered \"to\nmuke out a list nl the names and ud\nilregges ol such persons as Imve fail.-.I\nio transmit ur lodga a certificate ol\nviiivinati'ili .anil upon receipt of th-\nli:-t or order ol a vaccinator ap|iointeil\n... to vaccinate the persons mini\n-il in the list, he, In pursuance \u00C2\u00BBi\nsuch order, shall vaccinate the per\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ions named therein.\"\nAa it was the duty ol parents to *'.r\nWard tin- eertilieate, it wus thus deal\nthai if they (ailed, from oversight oi\nany other reason, to do so, they\nnuuld huve to submit tiieir own arm-\nti the needle and lymph, a penalty\nwhich, it is not necessary to suy\nwus as little contemplated by the lav\nus t would be relished by the parents\nKquullv aiurining was the Act pasn\ned in 52 George III. lor the registra\ntion of births in Kngland. lly tin\n141 . Section of this Act, \"if any per\nsun falsifies or defaces registers ol\nissues a lalse copy ol an entry, lu\nshall, un conviction, be deemed aim\nadjudged to be guilty of felony, uml\nshall be transported lor a term ol\nfourteen years.\"\nSo far. so goiid! Thc jienalty niiclii\nhe unduly heavy, but al least it fell\non the culprit. But read u litlh- further. By Section 18, \"one-half of tin\nle s or penalties to be levied in pur\nsuance of tllis act shall go to the per\nson who shall inform or sue for th\nsame.\" Thus the promised induce\nment to anyone whose seal led him\nti report a breach of tliis law was tha'\nthe Informer should himself go ti\n\"Botany Bay\" lor seven yeurs (half\nthe penalty) to ruminate on tlle lolly\nol coming to the assistance ol jus\ntioe!\nA statute for the rebuilding ol\nChelmsford Jail provided that prison\ners should be conllned in the uld juil\nuntil the new one was built. A ver)\nproper precaution, one would think\nBut as a subsequent clause ordered\nthat the new jirison should be con\natructed out ol the materials il the old\none, the difficulty of providing accommodation for the prisoners during the\npulling down and rebuilding was so\nobvious that a new Bill had tu be\ndrafted,\nAMAZ3NS of the mill\nluull,\nScotch Students.\nMany a mun who never had any\n'schooling\" gets an education, and\n.iften a surprisingly good one.\nA traveler in Scotland once met a\ni farmer whose ground rent was aboul\n$20 a year and who wrote poetry ill\nGaelic that was of high order.\nThis same traveler met a youth 111\nScotland who rode Irom home on\nhorseback to the seaport and then\nacross Scotland to Aberdeen, where he\nsold his horse to enter the university.\nit is related of auotlier Scotchman\nthat lie was overheard repealing a line\nof Tennyson, whereupon some one\nasked him what poet be liked best.\n\"Homer,\" he replied.\n\"Whose translation do you read?\"\n\"1 rarely reud a translation,\" he\nsaid, wiping the fish scales Irom his\napron. \"I like best to read Homer\niu the original Greek.\"\na year 10,000 pounds of milk testing\n443 pounds of butter fat and dropped\nber third calf about thirteen months\nafter her second, constituting a dairy\nrecord of which oue need not be\nashamed. Sbe Is uow making a record\nwitb her third calf which will probably surpaaa tbe former one.\nNuegell. that waa exhibited at the\nsame show, bas a normal weight of\n1.06O pounds. After dropping her second calf sbe gave within twelve\nmouths 12.0111 pounds of milk testing\n523 pounds of butter fat.\nHow the Lancashire Lassies Take Cars\nof Themselves.\nIt ll said ut Lancashire cotton ]\nWorker! ttiat the) ure little aud they\nara lithe. This i. uiaiuly true, but\nthere are exceptions, and id contrast\nlo the nimbi* lass uf live feet two or\nso, a woman of truly splendid proportions may occasionally be seen at\nthe luum ur spindle.\nUne such worked at a mill where\nthe writer was employed some tinir\nagu. She was tive feet nun- in height, '\nand weighed over thirteen .-tone, fc.de\nby side with her worked la-r im.-banl,\na puny man, tive inches les.- than ins\nwife in stature, and three stutie le-.- ,\n.11 avoirduiiois.\nThe won.an became noted fur her .\nfeats of strength, lt was .-aid thut -he\nhud knocked u man out in the street\nwith one blow ol her list when lie I\ninsulted her \"ii a dark night, in lhe\nshed she was held En awe and respect |\nhy the overlookers.\nHut one day a new clothlooker came :\nto work at the mill, uud begun lo talk\nto the woman in what she consid 1\na les.- respectful manner than wa- hei\ndue. She sharply drew hnn up with\nthe word-. \"Don t va know win. iha it\nlaiknig tor\"\nNo, he didn't; neither did he cure\nAnd. moreover, he wus going t\nher sixpence threepence iur a\nand threepence for her \"lip.\"\nBul ii\" sooner were the words out !\nof his iiiuutli iliun the woman selied I\nhim Isdil), uud, without any apparent 1'ffuit. she hurhsi hnn over the\nUble on to a pile ol elutll beyond.\nll meant, ol curse, tlie sack fur\n'he Woman; hul ll was lung before the\nI'lolhinaker heard the lasl ol the in-\ni-ldunt.\nAnother such damsel wus a re\nlass of twenly-twu. whu hud charge -.1\nlour liKims. One duy she surprised\nthe luom-tuckler by volunteering '.'\nhelp him tu lill a warp weighting\ntwo hundredweight to ils place in the\nloom.\nThis was the lir-l time that she had\nshown that she jsiasessed more than I\nordinary strength. Indeed, she was ;\none ol the swoitcst anil musl modest j\nlasses in lhe shed, ready with a smile I\nlor everyone; and one day un over- ;\nlooker took advantage of her frec-und\neasy manner t\" \u00C2\u00BBay something she\ndid not like.\nUiiinrtumil-ly tor him, he had a |\nbeard, and the hiss, sewing hold nf\nibis willi une hnnd, dragged him round\nand round, while he shrieked l\"r\nmercy. Then she threw him down,\nand, with a contemptuous look, left\nhim. Later, the manager gut lu know\nof the incident, and tlie ovei looker\nwas dismissed.'\nOne day, when the engine happened to be stopped, owing to a breakdown, the lassos were twining one ol\ntheir companions about her strength.\nThe result was thut she offered to pit\nherself against any three uf tbem ill\na tug-o'-wur.\nA rope wus procured, and the lasses,\npulling tiieir hardest, tailed to make\nher budge; then, taking them unawares, she dragged them across tho\nline.\nThe room overlooker happened to\nbe standing near while this was gniu-\non, and. having u reputation for being witty, lie tried to be funny at\nthe umuzon's expense. He was u\ndajiper little I.-llow, not more than\nnine stone or so; she waslhot and excited, us a result of her exertions,\nand in a twinkling sbe Btood him on\nhis bead.\nAnother striking, Instance ol a mill\namiizon refers to a lass who worked in\nIbe spinning- or oardroom. She was\na comely lass, and one day, near\nChristinas, us she stood at the factory\ngate, a hall-tipsy man coming along\nput his arm round her nook, kissed\nher, and whispered some insulting\nwords iu her ear.\nShe broke away, her lace Hushed\nscarlet, and then her tisls began to\nply about bis face in such a manner\nthat lie shrieked for help. Finally,\nwith u blow lhat would have done\ncredit to a Uill I.ang, she knocked\nhim clean off his feet into tbe slrisst.\nAnswers.\nWoman'sWorld\nMillinery Professor Says \"Make\nYour Hats and Let Ballot Go.\"\nTrtalmsnt For Scratches,\nThe first thing to do Id a case of\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0cratches ls to see that tbe horse\nstands lu a clean stall, where no mud,\ndung or urine cnn come ln contact\nwith his heels, writes David Buffum In\nFarm and Plreaide. Failure to attend\nto this Is often tbe cause of scratches,\nthough they also appear without any\neiternal cause, owing to some condition of the nyatt'iii.\nScratches are sometimes very obstinate ubout healing. Tbe beat external\nremedy that I kuow of ls white lead.\nHave tbe sore places perfectly clean\nand dry and ilii-n aee that they are\ncompletely covered with white lead.\nBind It on with a bandage If It wlll\nnot stick without oue and renew thc\napplication twice a day. Meanwhile\nfeed the animal geiieroualy, keep Bait\nIn hia manger and give bim enough\nbran every day to keep his bowels\nopen. This treatment, If faithfully followed up. ahould make an Improvement lu him very soon, though If the\nra\u00C2\u00ABe la a bud one it Is lmpoHsthle to say\nhow long It may take to effect a cure.\nQuicksands.\nQuicksands have, a horrihlp fascination for writers and readers nf fiction,\nj and the reality is every bit us bad as\nI fancy paints it. One of the most re-\n[ workable quicksand accidents occur*\n[ red years ago in New Zealand. Two\n| prospectors were wading across the\n. mouth of a small stream running\nI into the sea in the north island of\n: New Zealand. Both stepped into thrt\nI quicksand. One who merely touched\n1 tlie edge of it got loose. The other\nsank rapidly und, in spite of his companion's efforts, was sucked under.\nWhen an attempt was made to recover\nthe body it was found that the sand\nwas enormously rich in gold. From a\nsingle ton of it f 1,500 worth ol guht\nwas washed.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pearson s\nQueen's Accomplishments,\nQueen Miiry U no public speaker,\nthough a widely read woman, with\nout being in uny sense a hlueatook\ning, and is proficient in Italian, (ler\nman and French, playing the harp\nand piano well nnd being a great\nknitter and the most expert needle*\nwoman iu thc royal family.\nHerring Fiihsrtae.\nThe earlleii ment ton ut the herring\nflsbery dales from iu\u00C2\u00AB year 7utt\nPrsseott. the -Historian.\nWllllaiu llleklmg I'rewolt, one of\nAmerica's most eminent hlsi-manx.\nwaa afflicted with Imperfect vision al\ntbe age oi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 em.v Ills \"Ferdinand\nand Isabella.\" \"('onqui*at of WWtl o\nuud \"Coiniiieal of ivtu were writteD\nuuder moat trying cireiiiiiiiames, ow\nIng to his partial bllndueas.\nHow \"Abide With Me\" Was Written.\nAt the age nf fifty-four l*yte found\nhimself doomed to die of consumption, and in sorrow at having tu leave\nhis task unfinished he prayed tlmt\nat the least it might he granted to\nhim to write something which would\nlive tu the glory of (iod when he was\ndead. Then on the last evening lit*\nevir spent at Hrixhani, after preach*\ning his farewell M-riuon, he look pen\nand as tlie sun was setting over the\nHhips that lay in the harbor \"Abide\nWith Me\" was written. Next morning\nbe started for the Kiviers und then.\ndied a mouth later,\u00E2\u0080\u0094London Telegraph.\nEngland's First Cricket Club.\nTbe firai cricket club founded hi\nKngland wiih tbe Mamhledou dlamp\nshlrei club, wblcb bvguu in 175u ami\ntasted till I7UI.\nWant Women's Residence.\nA movement li on foot to raise fund*\nI tor the construction of ft women's\n', reildenee at Queen's University ** a\nDr. Johnson's Cudgel.\nThe reign of George II. was a great\nfighting time. Kvery man who went\nabroad knew that he might have to\nfight to defend himself against footpad or bully. Most men carried a\nstout stick. When Dr. Johnson heard\nthut a man had threatened to horsewhip him he ordered a thick cudgel\nand was easy in his mind. There\nwere no police, and therefore a man\nhad to tight. It cannot he doubted\nthat the martial spirit of the country,\nwhich was extraordinary, was greatlf\nsustained by the practice :if fighting,\nwhich prevailed alike in all ranks.\nThe English Regular.\nI/ird Roberts has given out the impression that the English soldier it\nnot as good us he ought to be. Perhaps that i- tiue. But he Is in instances quite the equal of the German. At Aldershot this fall he gave\nexhibition of his prowess which as*\ntonibhed visiting Canadians who declared the work was simply unsurpassable.\nThe Second Infantry Brigade Is one\nof the commands which hns attained\nthe highest proficiency. They marched out of Blackdown early one morning and made a 40-mile tramp to Aldershot. pitched their tents and in one\nhour after arriving had settled down\nfor rest. Mind you the men were\nfutipued after the hard march, hut\nn huge tented city every way provided for rise up In very brief time. This\nfeat can be better understood when it\ni\u00C2\u00BB known that it would huve taken\ndayu|pr fresh troops to do what the\nregulars accomplished in 00 minute-.\nOn the following morning the soldiers were up at -l o'clock, breakfasted, tilled the wagons with tiieir tents\nan.) vanished - off for unother 40\nmilo. This departure was accomplished in ib minutes from the time\nthe men were aroused fr.rui thell\nslumbers.\nTwo Wonderful Walkers.\nWi!li;un Gentleman, a^-d 71, of\nMontreal, has rfiullunged fcklward Pay-\neon WeaUm, aged 7*1, the fatuous walker in tne United States, to a walking\nmatch. \"I would like to walk Weston anytime trom an hour to twenty*\nlour,\" say Gentleman, \"but 1 don't\nwant to walk on a road, I want in\nwaik on a track where people cau see\nwhat WC ar.- doing,\"\nThese two men met, a third ol a\ncentury ago, at thc Agricultural Hall,\nIslington, hnglniMl. Gentleman in that\nevent won the championship of Kngland hy covering wil miles in all\ndays. There were twenty-sil men iu\nthe race. Weston finished nowhere.\n(ientlcn\u00C2\u00A3iu is only about live [eel in\nheight. He UOC8I11 use street cars,\nand he keeps iu condition hy walking\nabout, seventy miles u week. He is a\nrubber and athletic attendant ut Mc-\nGill University, aud he does his work\nbetter than many a younger man.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCourier.\nMarriages sf St. George's,\nHardly any church in Christendom\ncan sh> w a record so remarkable fof\ni marriages of aristocratic or remark-\n] utile peoplo as St, George's, Hanover\nSail nro.\nThis is explained by the tact thnl\nfor more than a century St. George's\ni enjoyed a practical monopoly, because\nthe rectors refused to ri*>k loss of\nfees hy allowing their huge parish -\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 which included the best part of the\n, West Kiid to be sub-dlvlded It was\nnot until IMI that Bishop Blomfleld,\ni who had acquired the patronage, was\n| enabled to enforce the formation of\ni several daughter parishes. Two of\nI these-Ht. Paul's, Knlghtshrldge, and\nSt. Peter's, Eaton Square having\nI more ornate ceremonial nnd other at.\n(ructions, have eclipsed the mother\nchurch in the ruce for fashionable\nI functions - London Cbrouidu\nmemorial to the late Mrs. Gordon,\nwl'i ol the principal. All lady graduates will bs asked lor financial assist*\nince. Already a bif sum has bssn\nrsaiiisd.\nKing George Stamps.\nIt is stated at th'- Postotllca Department that the King George stamps will\nuot be on sale for a couple ol months\nyet. The dies have sU yet been cast,\nthough the design is approved. The\nmutter is engaging the attention of\nthu Department, hut there are considerable details to be arranged belora\nIba iaaus Is made,\nWild Boar of India.\nTerrible ne Is Ibe tlgei in India, the\nwtld tioni Is even mure MHVHgf uml\nlaugernua iu attack, Mi* iu-kh fre\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Itjciitl) grow in miie ur ten i\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 lien In\n: length Mini nre m Nliurp tm a raxui\n! I'litem tut vi* n Npfchii dread of tiltu\nj und in iln-u eneiitiutvfs wim-ii some\n(linen tiappeti, be nearly always cuiue*\n. mil \u00C2\u00BBi. iur\nPboto by American 1'rem Aniioclatlcak\nUltH. EVIU.YN TOllKY.\n\"I would advise women to make\ntheir own huts nml let the liullot go.\"\nfills was the pertinent answer given\nrecently by the professor of millinery\nat the Teachers' college, New York\ncity, when naked for her views on tbe\n\"votes for women\" question.\nA professor of tin* art of bonnet\nmuklng is u comparatively new chair\nlu the college world, hut that It ls a\npopular course and a profitable one\nfrom the pupils' standpoint one has\nouly to drop luto the pleasant room\nwhere the students work from 0 to 12\nthree mornings lu u week to be convinced of the fact that the highbrows\nare looklug to their millinery laurels\nss well ua to purely mental achievements.\nThe millinery course at this Institution Is Immensely popular for two reasons\u00E2\u0080\u0094tlrst, because it is prai tleal uud\nmeets everyday requirements nnd, second, on account of the charming personality of the instructor, Mrs. Evelyn\nTobey, who Is a Barnard graduate.\nThe course, by the way. counts for as\nmuch as any of the elective studies lu\nthe college curriculum,\nlu the workroom there Is nn air of\nsuppressed enthusiasm, tin atmospheric feeling of everybody trying to do\nher best, anil the ideal held up by Mrs.\nTobey Is .1 high one.\n\"We never,\" she snld. \"let go our efforts on eveu the most hopeless looking hut We alter the shape und rearrange the trimming Until thc most\ncritical member of the class pronounces a satisfactory verdict on the\ncreation.\" And lhe weekly class criticisms are dreaded by tho pupil whose\nhandiwork is the target for the alma\nof her sister worfeers.\nTaking u special course under tbe\nexpert guidance of Mrs. Tobey ar\u00C2\u00ABj\ncollege girls, society matrons, staid\nhousewives and pupils from fashionable finishing schools. The work starts\nIn wtth the making of n real hat; de*\nsigns ure tlrst made m paper und then\ncarried out In fabrics. The tlrst bat\nmude Is the simple street model, and\nnext comes the dressy confection.\n\"Rather u good looking hut, Is it\nnot?\" snld the professor with purdon-\nBble pride, holding up for Inspection a\nstunning picture hut. the recent work\nof an advanced pupil.\nIt was n study In Gainsborough line*?\nconstructed from royal blue sutlu covered with bluck maltnes nnd trimmed\nsimply with plaited rutlles of creum\ncolored luce bunded with narrow lines\nof snble fur nnd n pale pink satin\nI rase tucked lovingly ot one side of ths\nwide brim.\nBut Mrs. Tubey considered the facing of the lint und the artistic manner\ni of its manipulation the muster touch\n. of the creation. And not the least\nInteresting of the many wonderful\nthings done lu the school is tbe making\nof frames from a willow fabric that\nIs da in i'ed nnd pulled and much better ell inn lu. mote lerille laud\nj snd Is much larger thnn nil three of\nthess countries put tUgelllur\nHot Wstsr Heating\nUse <>t but water tm tieutlug pur\nposes dutes frum I .'la. T1TF. PROSPECTOR, CRANRROOK. BR ITI', ,2 0OL5jMBIA\nScene fro\nNOWESoreatlondonSNOWS\nat cranbrook\nFriday, July 11th\nFull of Honors and Wonderful Triumphs of its Long, Con?\nquering Tours of the Continent, and presented cn a Scale,\nof Colossal Magnitude and Lavish Expenditure\nnever known before in this country.\nTHE TRAVELING\nAMUSEMENT\nSENSATION\nOP THB\nBRIMMING OVER\nWITH\nMIRTH\nAND OF\nJOY.\n.',- i Sset t\nernment wai\n.-*.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -.: \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 bat\n[Then \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 set \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 th( ftne steel\n.'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Canada\ncame \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 neai ca] tui ag '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 industry. N*ow tbat they think that reci\nproeity ts practicall} iss ired, tlie\npromoters wh were in tavor of looting in Canada, are thanking their\nsl ira bat thi y did \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Thi j a I\nthat a new iteel plant in Canada \"is\nnot under those pending circumstances\na necessity, and may never be a necessity.\"\nPresident Taft has staked his political life nii the outcome uf the re-\nciproclty pact, for if those whu feel\nthemselves injured vote Democratic\nnext year, in order to abolish duties\non what they buy, since they are abolished on what they have to sell,\nhis re-election will be Impossible, nc\nmatter how hard they all try to ac\ncomplfsh it. The measure brings hot\nthe slightest possibility of attracting\nany Democratic vuter to tho Republican ranks.\nterminated. The Penu\nn invasion\ntook place ttie same yei\ni, it was a\nn because it was i\nlumpily met\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 epelled. Had it .1\nit been. it\nwould doubtless have ht\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A011 seized up-\non :i-^ an opportunltj\nfur carrying\nout the United States\nlesire to 08-\ntablish us ascendency\nhere. Our\n11\n20\nCLOWNS\nSO I .PAPERS\n100 ACROBATS\nKENTUCKY HORSES'\n250\nHORSES.\n400 PEOPLE.\nThe Dublin Grays.\nThe Black Huaaars.\n-The Marvelous Eddys-\nMONAUCHS SUPKimi! IN THB AIYIUJEMENT REALM.\nThe RoyalYeddo Japanese Troupe\nAnd 200 Other Great Acts.\nDOUBLE MENAGERIE\nContaining Wild Animals Irom Every Country.\nTHREE BANDS OF MUSIC.\n..ROYAL R.OMAN HIPPODROME..\nMany time-, the Biggest and Mo.st Bewildering Production\never in America Most Stupendously Stirring Spectacle\nthat Human Eyes Ever Witnessed.\nAFTHniVOON Ja*T B - - NIGHT -A.T ft\nORANb FREE STREET PARADE AT 10 A. M.\n^\u00E2\u0099\u00A61\" 3y-V00P*C*Ct0*C\u00C2\u00AB -1'1\" h remedy for labor troubles, and\nESTABLISHED Utt,\nTHE PROSPECTOR PUB CU\nF. M. Christian, Manager\nIn many cases 11 ha actually pre\nvented the partial KOttlnR to\naether to consldei term\u00C2\u00BB3 of settle\nment.\nAm a [nditicfti measure, in ''minda\nh well as the Dnlti I Btates the re\nI'nijlihh.td Kn:iy -aninlujj^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nSubscription Rate \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 $2.00perj ar ciprocity pact *jll result in defeat\nAdvertiflinu Rates upon application in\u00C2\u00AB khe Liberal party in Canada In\n 1911, and tin; ricputilican party in\n~\" thf? United States In 191'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tggHHBa\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Htiirtlna' rijirhtinr: \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,,fhii: 11 .\n\"[regards tho taking of the census In\nTlie reciprocity Qght promises to Canada wan brought to the attention\nbe a. hot one, ending with tho do/eat 0| the House ol Commons fl is ro\nof tbo Laurier goverotnonl ported that thousands have been\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . omitted, and that entire districts In\nvarious parts of the counti y have\nThe elections aro In sight, an . ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E overlookD(1 liy ,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\nBtructlon work un the punt offlco will\nbe commenced, thin ih hill a Hmall t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nportion nf the governmenl war i*t The Ottawa FYoo Press, (Liberal)\npennfiH. announcoa tlmt a Canadian mombei\n* * * * uf parllamont, who has |usl returned\nThe great political fight in now on, frum [England, has broiighl from a\nReciprocity iH tbe Inane that will do- group of tariff reformers mi Invito\nfeat Laurier and liin parly. tion to tlie Canadian opponents of\nft la understood that tho war client reciprocity to draw upon thorn (or\nOl the government Ih we,l lined toi $500,000 for the campaign\u00E2\u0080\u0094WOUld'ntI\ntha coining campaign. thm Jar you\u00E2\u0080\u0094thle probably is In-'\nA sturni uf the \"Tempest in a teapot\" variety, uver remarks attribut-\nd to Commander von Verboni de\nSposetti, of thc German cruiser Bremen, now in the port of Montreal,\nanont the fighting powers of the Canadian warship, Niobe, has subsided.\nThe officer was quoted as saying that\nthe Niobe would not be much good in\nactual warfare, but that, she was an\nxcellent training ship,\nI The denial of the sub-commander\nwas duly reported to Ottawa, Von\nVerboni de Sposetti stating that he\ndeclared that the Niobe was a good\ntraining ship, but wuuld not admit\nthat he questioned bei utility in\ntimes uf war, The matter Is now\nconsidered closed.\n, The commander must have beeu a\nman of good sense. He cannot bave\ndesired to expose his country to tbe\nrisk of war with a naval power such\nas Canada lias become under Laurier\nrule.\nI The Canadian Reciprocity Bill has\nassed the United States Senate\nwithout amendment, by a vote of 53\nfor and 27 against.\nThirty-two uf those voting for the\nreciprocity agreement were Democrats\n\"free traders\" whu. if absolute free\ntrade hud been the issue wuuld have\nvoted iu tin- affirmative. President\nTaft tried hard to net the Republicans lined up witli him, but failed\nBtrlklngly. It thus became perfectly\napparent tiiat President Taft Mini the\nDemocratic party passed the bill,\nIt is the iloBire of Preeldenl Taft to\nbring all Canada as a preserve to the\nUnited states. Ho wants tliis country o( ours, with its untitled room\nfor scores of millions ol Inhabitants,\nwith Its Immenso Btore nnd diversity\nof raw material as a hinterland to be\nexploited by citizens of the great republic\nThe reciprocity pad is the small\npart ol the entering wedge for absolute free trade between the two\ncountries Tho Liberals of Canada\nwin, were elected on a platform of\nfree trade as it was In England, whu\nhowever, have never dared to Introduce any resolution to this otloct in\nthe House uf Commons, all bull the\nreciprocity pad ns tho entering\nwedge, and ti,.- elogan at tlio coming\nelection, on tho purt of Liberals, v ill\nbe lree trade, while In 191 i! in tho\nUnited Htntoi nlocLlon the battle cry\nwill 1,1- \"Canadian free trade and\nannexation \"\nit w 11 ISGli that Canada, to use\na phrase thai Presldonl Tafl has\nmade familial was al tho parting of\nthe wnyH, when the Elgin Roclprocl\ntv treaty of 1853 hnd pud terinin.it.\ned. the motive being to bring pies\nsure upon tho people of Canada in\nfavor of continental union.\nThe great Canadians whu brought\nahuut the confederation of tho North-\nAmerican provinces, brought their\nlabors ta n successful conclusion the\nyear in which thc reciprocity treaty\nneighbors are now making another\nattempt to bring Canada within their\nsphere of influence, and Sir Wilfrid\nLaurior's government is falling in\nwith their plans. The premier cannot ,be expected to have auy great\nsympathy with the men who repulsed\nan advance movement of the annexationists on the eve it Confederation.\nMuch ado is heing made about an\narrangement, to enable, us they put\nit. the two countries to increase their\ncommerce with each other. They\nkeep saying that the reciprocity pact\nwill enable Canada to sell more to\n, the United States. But these economists need to be told that there are\nsome things Canada does not want\nto sell, For example, it does not\nwant, or desire to bargain away its\nfiscal independence. Also it will refuse to put a price on its national\nhonor. Its British connection, too, it\nprizes above money or anything our\nneighbors can give in the way of\n(market advantage. Strange as it\nmay seem to tbe exponents of Laurier political economy. Canadians\ndo not include these things among\narticles of exchange. They will not\nbarter their country or their place in\nithe Empire. They will not sell even\ntheir home market or their domestic\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0industries for anything the United\n'states has to offer.\nThe Prince of Wales\nnearing his mafority\nThe Prince of Wales has now entered into the first month of tbe last\nyear of his majority.\nBorn at White Lodge, Richmond\nPark, in 181)4, bis royal highness was\nbaptized there sonic three weeks\nlater, as Edward Albert Christian\n(Jeorge Andrew Patrick David, thus\ncombining the names of his father,\ngrandfather, and his great-grandfather with those of the patron saints of\nEngland. Scotland, Ireland and\nWales, on April, 1907, be passed tbe\nqualifying examination for tbe royal\nnavy, and on .May in tiiat year he\nentered Osborne college He completed his course of instruction there in\nApril 1909, and in tbe following\nmonth entered Hart mouth college.\nOn the accessiun of bis father, King\n(Jeorge to tho throne on May fi last\nyear, tho young prince succeeded to\nthe Dukedom of Cornwall and to the\nScottish title of Duke of Rothesay,\nEarl of Oarrlck, Huron of Renfrew,\nLord of the Isles, and Great Steward\nof Scotland, uu Juno 'i'i he was crc-\n1 a ted Prince of Wales and Earl of\nChester. On tho 'following day, he\nand his brother, Prince Albert, were\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 confirmed in the private chapel of\nj Windsor Castle, hy tbe Archbishop of\nCanterbury, among tin* assistant clergy being Rev, II. D. Wright, by\nwhom the young princes bud been\nprepared for tho ceremony. The investiture of tlie Prince as a Knight\nuf the (.artcr will he fresh in public\nrecollection, and only recently > bis\nroyal highness has been rated a midshipman in ins majesty's service,\nwith seniority (rum the dny of the\ncoronation, wl , In tho ancient abbey ur New Wcstmlnntor, ho led tho\nline of lllustflous men nml benrern of\nhonored names and ancient titles who\ndid homage to a newly crowned sovereign, anil where he SWOro to be lllH\nfather's \"liege mnn of life and limb,\nand of earthly worship.\"\nThese ate the leading events lip to\nthe presonl time in a life which bas\nso fm neei'Hsnrily been one of prepar-\notion for the greal career which lies\nbefore the Prince of Wales as heir to\nthe tli^iic. (ir his home life it, need\nonly be said that, under the care of\na devoted mother, he has grown up\na splendid example of the best type\nof English hoy\u00E2\u0080\u0094earnest and .Tubus- j 9\ntastic in the performance ol all the\nduties devolving upon him.\nPre-emptors Maps\nnearly ready\nIn accordance with a promise given\nthe public of Ilritish Columbia by\nllou. William R. Rush upon his us-1\nsumption of the responsibilities attaching to (be administration of the\ndepartment ot lands, there are uow.\nalmost ready for Issue It) that department tlie lirsl (uur 01 a aeries\nol pre emj)tors' maps of available\nlamls, surveyed, which await colonization and development ot new agrl\ncultural settlers, The maps in question are based very largely upon the\nresult oi the ftottvlttes ol the corps\nof surveyors which, during tbe past\nlew years, has been employed iu\nopening North Dritish Oolumbla,\nwhore tin* Held (oices have largely\nbeen concentrated ol late yeaiH In\ni-uusmiuenre ol the assurance of early\nfacilities ol communication for then**\nareas through Grand Trunk Pucltte,\nund Canadian Northern Qoustructlou.\nThat mopping the districts bad uecew\nsarily to await the completion uf\nsurveys, explains tho nou-appenrauoo\npartial ol these eagerly awaited dueti-\nmints lit thfl maps uow In band,\nsheet l deals with the localities contiguous to the Shunt river, and in\nNecacho township, sheet '1 covering\nand delineating the locality ol the\nMack water. Ruth ol these are now\nui the hands of tbe printers, and\nshortly to be issued. Sheet 3, of the\nFort Qeorge locality, is at present\nalmost complete, and Sheet 3\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nStuart lake section- is well under\nway.\nNecessity for reorganization of the\nsystem o( land surveys and classifications has long beeu recognized by the\ngovernment. The obviously desirable\nchanges require time for their con\nsummation necessarily, but a beginning has been made in tbe revision of\ntbe instructions this season issued to\nthe surveyors taking tbe field, and in\nthe appointment of an inspector of\nsurveys, in thc person of W. S. Drew-\nry, at present engaged on a first official tour through the Kootenays.\nHereafter surveyors employed under\ngovernment auspices will be required\nin so far as possible, to supplement\ntheir field notes with a report on\nforms prescribed by the department\nof agriculture as to temperatures,\nrainfall, soil characteristics, timber,\netc., which information will be tabulated and compiled in ready reference form for the convenience of land\nseekers. The force of surveyors at\npresent engaged in field work (for the\nprovincial department of lands numbers some 32 parties, these being\nwidely distributed throughout the\nawaking northern areas, and on the\noutlying islands.\nPHONE 340\nP. O. Box 904\nRare occurance in Chinatown\nA Chink, filled with Sam Sule aud\n\"hop\" started a rough house in\nChinatown on Saturday night last.\nHe procured a large knife and proceeded to run things, he tried to\nbutcher a number ol celestials, but\nwas finally locked in a room, where\nho proceeded to amputate a linger of\nhis left hand. Chief Dow wns called\nand placed him in jail. Dr. J. M.\nDel I dressed nis wuunds and pronounced him'insane. He will be taken\nto New Westminster.\nCranbrook\nPlumbing, Tinsmithing\nand Heating Co.\n\V. P. JOHNSON, Prop.\n25 yeai s' Practical Experience,\n5 years Inspector of Nuisances,\nPlumbing and Sewerage Expert\nfor Swinton, 30,000 population.\n1 ....\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-.\nREPAIRS A SPECIALITY\nEverything in Tin and Iron made to\norder. Blower System, Mine Ventilation\nExpert.\nHot air furnace, hot water and\nsteam boilers\nl.stimes (iiven\nCRANBROOK\nHANSON AVE.\nWATER NOTICK\nTbe Jewell Lumber Co. Limited, ul\nJalfray B, 0, give notice that on tbe\n28th day of August, 1911. at 2.3U\no'clock, in the alternoon they Intend\nto apply to the Water Commlsaloner\nat bis office in Cranbrook, for a'license to take and use one and one ball\n(li) cubic feet of water per second\nIrom a Creek rising on lot 2966 north\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ of B. C. S. Railway, in the Oran-\nNOTICB is hereby given that all brook Water District,\npublic -highways in unorganized dis-. The water is to be taken from a\ntricts, and all Main Trunk Roads point near the highway crossing of\norganized Districts, are slxty-sii (said creek for irrigation purposes.\nPUBLIC HIGHWAYS\nProvince ol British Columbia.\nfeet wide, and have a width of thirty-three feet ou each side ot the mean\nstraight centre\nroad.\nTHOMAS TAYLOR,\nMinister ut Public Works.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria. B. 0., July 7, 1911.\n28-17t\nTHE JEWELL LUMBER CO,\n__^_^^^___ Limited\nline-of the travelled jo. a. JEWELL, Agent.\nHanbury, B. C. July 19th, 1911.\n29-St\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistrict of South EaBt Kootenay.\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistiict of South East Kootenay\nTake notice that\nrell, of Vancouver,\nWillard B\nB. 0., occupation\nNotice is hereby given thnt 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the\nMinister ot Lands for a license to\nprospect for coal and petroleum over\nthe following lands situate in the\nDistrict of Southeaat Kootenay, British Columbia, in Lot 4593.\nCommencing at a post planted\n\u00C2\u00BBj,er.' at or near tbe 21 mile post on the\nic. P. R. survey line, which is the\nManager, Intend to apply tor a licen- j Western Boundary ol Lot 4593, and\nse to prospect lor coal and petroleum j **ln* *bt Northwest corner post of\non thc following described lands. Charles W. Mason's claim, thence\nCommencing at a post planted I a\u00C2\u00B0uth el\u00C2\u00BBntv cm,ins; thence EaBt\ni the South bank ol St. Mary's >'Khty c\u00C2\u00BBains; thence North eighty\nRiver, at 0. G. Yeaman's North West Ichains; tb\"nce West \u00C2\u00AB'Khty '*****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 t0\ncorner, thence 80 chatns WeBt; thence j',olnt ol commencement, making 640\n80 chains South; thence 80 chains \**r*\u00C2\u00BB- n'ore or less.\nEast; thence 80 chains North, to tlie! Located thia 17th day of June,\nplace ot commencement, making in\natl 640 acres.\nWILLARD BURNES8 TERRELL.\nJ. W. WOOD, Agent.\nDated July 29, 1911.\n30-5t\n1911.\nLAND NOTIOE.\nDistrict of South East Kootenay.\nTake notice that 1, Samuel Thorpe,\noi Nelson, B. C, occupation, mill\nCHARLES W. MASON, Locator.\nEATHEN W. UUTTS, Agent.\nHarry Turney, Witness. 30-6t\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistrict of South East Kootenay.\nTake notice that I, J. W, Wood, ol\nNelsun, B. C, occupation sawyer,\nsuperintendent,, intend to apply \u00C2\u00ABoi' j 'nteml to apply for a license to pros-\na license to prospect tor coal anil | l,ect ,or coal aml iwtrolouiii, un the\npetroleum on the tollowing described lollowing described landH.\nIan,la Commencing at a post planted\nCommencing at a post planted j0\" \">\u00C2\u00BB Sout\" ***** \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 st- Mar,'\u00C2\u00BB\non the Soutb bank of St. Mary's Rivcr' \"ear tne Northwest corner ol\nRiver, at J. W. Wood's North EaBt' Whitney's pre-emption, thence 80\ncorner, thence 80 chains South; thence chal\"\u00C2\u00BB WeBti thencc 80 chainii So,lth^\n80 chains Kast; tlience 80 chains jtllellce 80 cllal\"s E\"-St' tnence 8\"\nNorth; thonce 80 chains West, to tbe;cllaln\" North, to place ot commence-\nplace ol commencement, making in I ment' m^lnn In a'l M\" ac\u00E2\u0084\u00A2s.\nWATER NOTICK\nThe Jewell Co., Limited, of Jetfray\nB.C., give notice that on the 28th\nday of August 1911, at 2.30 o'clock\nin the afternoon they intend to apply\nto the Water Commissioner at hia\noflice ln Cranbrook for a license\nto take and uae one and one halt\n(li) cubic feet of water\nper second from a creek rising on\nLot 2966 south ot the B. C. S. railway in the Cranhrook Water Districi.\nThe water is to be taken from the\ncreek at the Jewell Lumber Co's mill\npond on the south eaBt corner of lot\n6206, (or irrigation purposes.\nTHE JEWELL LUMBtM! CO.\nLimited,\nO. Q. JEWELL, Agent.\nHanbury, B. C, July 19th. 191).\niMSt\nnil 640 acres. ^^^^^^^^^^\nSAMUEL THORPE.\nJ. W. WOOD, Agent.\nDnted July 29, 1911.\nLAND NOTICE.\nDiatrict of South East Kootenay.\nJOHN WALTON WOOD.\nDated July 29, 1911.\n30-5t\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistrict uf South East Kootenay.\nTnkc notice that I, John K. Woods,\nol Nelson, 1). 0., occupation student,\nintond to upply for a license to proa- . . , ,,..,..\n, , . . i .. !\"c tu prospect for coal nud petroleum\npect Inr conl and petruleum, uu the J .... ,,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E , ,,..... ........\nTako notice thnt I, Otho G. Yeainau\nuf Vancuuver, U. C, occupation\nsalesman, intond tu apply 'fur a llren-\nfollowing described Innils.\nCommonclng nt a post planted\nou the South hunk ul St. Mary's\nRiver, at S. Thorpe's Nnrth East\ncornor, thence Hnittli 80 chains; thonco\nEnst 80 chnlns; thonce North 80\nchains; thenee West 80 chnins, to the\nplnce uf commencement, mnking In\nall 640 ncres.\nJOHN RRNEST WOOD,\nJ. W. WOOD, Agent.\nDated July 29, 1911.\nM-tt\nnn the following described lnnds\nCommencing at. u post plunted\non the South bank nf St. Mary's\nRlvor, nt J. W. Wood's nnrth west\nenrner, thence 80 chains West; tlience\n80 chnins South; thenee 80 chnlns\nEnst; thence 80 chnlns Nortli, to\nplace of commencement, making in\nall 6411 acres.\nOTHO GIOTTO YEAMAN,\nJ. W. WOOD, Agont.\nDated July 29, 1911.\n30-51\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistrict of South East Kootenay.\nNotice is hereby givon that 60 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to tht\nMinister of Lands for a license to\nproapect for coal and petroleum over\nthe following lands situate In tht\nDiatrict ot Southeast Kootenay, British Columbia, in Lot 4593.\nCommencing at a post planted\nat or near eight miles due Eaat\nnt the twenty-nine mile pnst on\nC. P. R. survey line, which It the\nWestern Boundary ol Lot 4693, and\nbeing the Southeast corner post\nol Eathen W. Butts' claim, thenct\nNorth eighty chains; tbence Weat\neighty chains; thence Houth eighty\nchains; thence East eighty chaini; to\npoint of commencement, making 640\nacres, more or less.\nLocated this 9th day ol June,\n1911.\nEATHBN W. BUTTS, Locator.\nHarry Turney, Witness 30-5t\nLAND NOTICE.\nDistrict of South East Kootenay.\nNotice is hereby given that 60 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to the\nMinister ol Lands for a license to\nprospoct for coal and petroleum over\nthe following lands situate In ths\nDistrict ol Southeast Kootenay, Brit*\nIsh Columbia, in Lot 4693.\nCommencing at a post planted\nat or near the 26 mile post on the\nC. P. R. survey line, which Is the\nWestern Boundary of Lot 4593, and\nbolng thc Southwest corner post of\nClara A. Mason's claim, thence\nNorth eighty chains'; thence Bast\neighty chains; tbence Soutb eigbty\nchains; thence West eighty chaina, to\npuint of commencement, making 640\nacres, more or less.\nLocated this 17th day ot June,\n1911.\nCLARA A. MASON, Locator.\nEATHBN W. BUTTS, Agent.\nHarry Turney Witness. M-tt ^\nTHE PKOSVtSUivi*. t'RANBROOK. BRITISn COLUMBIA\nmmw************************************************** I\nWe offer Close-in Business and Residental Lots in the Original Township of j\nNOKOMI\n*#\nThe Junction City\n\u00C2\u00BB*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'_' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -iy./i:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:;, > \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0(*\u00C2\u00A3*\n%\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:*. :.':\u00E2\u0096\u00A0: . :-;-.V:; ?\nGrand Tiuuk Pacific Station and Grain Elevators at Nokomis\nAbundant Water\nSupply\ncue of the greatest essentials to a\ntown'.'! development Is uu adequate\nwut.'i' supply,\nNokomis Is uute.l im- Its pine wafer\nwhich in itupplied hy numerous arte\nSinn wells. Good water in invariably\nobtained hy going down Irom one\nhundred to one hundred und twenty\nIhe feet, the water rising to wilhiu\nlUtcen or twenty leet of tbe surfntse,\nnml il is tilts abundant supply of\ngood water that ia more than likely\nto cause both the Canadian Pacific\nand the Canadian Northern railways\nto establish Nokomis ns a divisional\npoint.\nwr\ntjjjgffl&Z\nCanadian Pacific Station aud Grain Elevators at Nokomis\nNokomis Likely to be a Divisional Point on Two Railways\nIt Is claimed that the Canadian Pacific has expended over s-ui.ouu nt\nsouth or Nokomis, in endeavoring to secure an adequate supply of water to\na divisional point. It ls understood tbat sufficient water has not yet been\nit Is being rumored tbat tbe 0 anadian Pacific will consider making Nokomii\nPheasant Kills line.\nStrassburg; thirty-two miles\nenable it to make Strassburg\nobtained at Strassburg, and\n1 a divisional point on its\nThe extension of the Canadian Northern through Nokomis will assure tbe future oi Hum rapidly\ngrowing new town as one of the important distributing points of Western Canada. It is uot only pos\nslide, but very probable that Nokomis will also be a divisional point on the Canadian Northern. The\nCanadian Northern must have a divisional point at or near Nokomis and as an abundant supply ol pure\nwater at a divisional point le essential, it is believed that Nokomis advantages in this respect will not\nbe overlooked\nModern Educational\nFacilities\nNokomis points with\npride to its public school\nbuilding erected last year\nat a cost of $12,-\n000, and conceded to he\none of tne finest iu the\nprovince. It Is built of\nbrick, with stone trimmings on an ideal site,\ncommanding a good view\nof the town and surrounding country. There are\nfour large, airy class\nrooms, gymnasium and\nrecitation rooniB, principal's room and library.\nThe equipment is complete\nand. in keeping with the\nbuilding. Recently a well\nselected library waB purchased for the use of the\npupils: The playgrounds\nare large and well laid\noff, and it is the Intention\nof tbe school board this\ncoming summer to plant\nsuitable trees and shrubs\nthereon.\nWhere and what Nokomis fs\nSocial Life, Nokomis\nNokomis oilers every inducement to tbe farmer\nand business man, owing\nto its attractive surroundings and social advantages. A large rink is\nmaintained iu which hockey and curling matches\nare held, Baseball, football and tennis are among\nthe favorite summer\nsportB.\nNokomis has four [internal societies, ibe Kor-\nesters, Odd Follows, Templars aud Orangemen. A\nliterary society bas been\nrecently organized under\nthe auspices of the\nChurch of Kngland.\nThere are five church\ncongregations iu Nokomis\nthe Methodist, German\nBaptist, Presbyterian,\nI toman Catholic nud Anglican.\nLast Mountain Lake is\nbut Vi miles soutb of Nokomis. During tbe summer season this is a favorite plensure resort, their\nbeing an abundance of\nwhltefish, pickerel and\npike in ihc lake. This\nla lut is navigable for\nabout sixty miles and a\nmodern steamboat is run\nregularly between Water-\ntown and Lumsden,\ntouching at several other\npoints.\nNokomis is situated midway between Winnipeg and Edmonton, In thc center of the Province of\nSaskatchewan. Nokomis iB in the heart of Saskatchewan's renowned wheat district \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the Last Mountain valley.\nThe future of Nokomis as an important railway centre Is assured by two Transcontinental railways\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Grand Trunk Paciflc and the Canadian Paciflc. Another Transcontinental, the Canadian Northern railway is to extend Its line through Nokomis. Five large implement warehouses, a Hour mill,\nand the Imperial Oil Co. now use Nokomis as a distributing point. The lend taken by these institutions\nis about to be followed by others of similar importance, aud in a short time it is expected that the\nrailway yards will he hedged in by warehouses and mercantile establishments, and will be active, not\nonly with a huge national forwarding and traffic business, hut witb the hum of the local manufacturing\naud wholesale enterprises. As a distributing point Nokomis affords advantages which manufacturers and\njobbers will not overlook. It will command a large part of the jobbing trade lor a considerable distance up and down the main line of tbe Grand Trunk Pacific railway, and the two important branch\nlines which will centre there. Its shipping facilities make it an especially advantageous location for\nmanufacturers. It has been demonstrated that aii abundance of watcr for factory use is obtainable.\nBacked by a rich agricultural district, an important railway centre, a distributing centre, und destined to become a manufacturing centre. Nokomis cannot help continuing to grow rapidly, nnd continued\ngrowth menus continued increase in real estate values and big profits for those who invest in real estate there at present prices, When population doubles, real estate values quadruple. Today Is the time to\nbuy lots in Nokomis.\nINFORMATION COUPON\nGrand Pacific Lund Co., Limited,\n248 BomerBQt Block, Winnipeg, Mun.\nPlease send ins l>y return until full particulars regarding tho sale of loi* in NokomU. It is undoi'Stood that iu\nn tviug ibis information I am under no obligation to\nInvest,\nName\t\nAddress\nOne of Nokomis' three Hotels\nEasy Monthly Payments Without Interest\nMain Street, Nokouiin\nWe offer these lots upon the payment of one-tenth the purchase price with your application, and the\nremainder ln nine equal monthly payments, without Interest. Or a discount of six per cent, wlll be allowed for full cash payment wl h your application,\nWe have lots ranging In price from $50 to |50fl; they can he bought hy paying from Iii to $fifl per\nGRAND PACIFIC I AND CO.\n237-243 SOMERSET BUILDING WINNIPEG. MANITOBA.\nExclusive Sales-Solicitors For Cranbrook and District :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLIMITED\nCRANBROOK AGENCY CO.\nREAL ESTATE and INVESTMENT BROKERS\nBAKER STREET.\nCRANBROOK, BC.\nmonth. Call, write, phone or telegraph us, at our expense, for confirmation on the lots desired nud let\nyour remittance follow by next mail.\nIf you wait to write for certain lots, you may he too iate, as we do not anticipate that the opportunity to purchase these close in lots at the present low prices will hn open longer than thirty days.\nforget No\nA serious question, of National\nimportance- A question that\ninvolves vital interests\nto Greater Canada\nThe Herald has received the follow-\nlug article from an American citizen\nnow resident in the Province of Alberta, who is deeply interested in tbe\nsubject uf reciprocity. This article\nbo ablj discusses muny Ji the salient\nfeatures al that policy that the Her*\naid luu decided to publtab it In its\neditorial columns\n\"American reciprocity Involves a\nmeat deal more than merely more\nfriendly trade relations with ine\ngreat republic just across the International line It means a business\npartnership with a nation ten-told\nBtronger than Canada, In which tbe\nbalance ot powei will be Irrevocably\nhanded ovei to the dominant part-\niii'i. Tin . wo Id Involve dangers\n. uougli i\" a nation with all its future before it, bul the partneeahlp\nitrll \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 li oppi than that even. a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i'.'u I'.f! ship w ith America\nreruns im Canada, the wide opeu\ndooi to tho 'American spirit.'\n\"The lino which separates the\nVn .\".'in rep iblic from Canada, is\ntbc mosi part neither a range of\ngreat mountains nor n great river;\n. il no mountain ram e nm great\n: i\ or ever (separated two peoples ot\na common tongue more widely apart\nin their traditions, principles and\nideals, than are the two great Eng-\nllsh.speaking nations of thn American continent. And the hope of Can-\nit du today is .something to which\nAmerica has not yet come and which\nCanada is In dangor, 'Lest We Forget.' lt is tho foundation of sound,\nsubstantial 111111 enduring morality\nwhich lie.-, beneath every institution\nin this great Dominion\n\"Cent ui it-* ol the deepest experience with the fundamental of human\nconduct have brought forth the British [Umpire ot today. The onward\nmarch from the Magna Charta to the\nCanadian federation has been hut the\ngradual adoption of those principles\nthat have proven their right to supremacy hy the law of 'The survival\n01 tho fittest,' and tbe traditions of\nthe Empire, which underlie tbc Canadian nation are hut the net results\nof ten centuries of nation building.\n\"It may he said tbat Canada reBts\nupon a three-fold foundation, the supremacy t.tf tbe law, the sanctity ol\nthe Sabbath, and sound business me\nthodri. And at the heart of these Is\nthu shrlno which lies at tbe heart of\nthe Hritish Empire, It is told in one\nword, made glorious by tbe manly\nmen of every generation and made\ndivinely beautiful hy the love and\nconsecration of wlveB and mothers:\nthe shrine of home. The Canadian\nnation is not living for today. The\ncall of tbe coming generation, the\nlan i'h of childhood aud the promise\nof youth bave hung out yonder on\nthe frontiers of endeavor an Insignia\nof durity and ideals which no true\nCanadian would sacrifice for all the\nwealth of Araby.\n\"Wbo would exchange the universal\nrespect for law which abides\nthroughout the Dritish empire today\nfor corporation control at the national capital and liquor control in the\ngreat cities? Who would exchange\nthe beautiful spirit ot Sabbath observance, which means more to the\nboys and young men of Canada today\nthan nny but its mothers know, for\nthe Parisian society of Chicago, or\nNew York? Who would exchange the\nsubstantial business methods of Canada, which are so well expressed la\nits great banking institutions, its\nDominion land laws, and the whole\ncommercial organization of the Dominion, for 'shoe-string' methods ol\nspeculation and the fantastic dreams\ni/f J. Rufus Walllngtord? And, flaal-\nly, who would exchange tbe sacred\natmosphere of tbe Canadian horn*,\nfor the spirit which so lightly regards the marriage vow and makes\nthe divorce court its final confessional.\n\"It is much easier to tear down\nthan to build up. And a single decade of 'commercializing' Canada\nwould destroy what it has taken a\nthousand years to make. The araeri-\ncan nation im the product of hut a\nsingle century. It is the most heterogeneous aggregation of humanity on\nearth. The democracy of Thomas\nJefferson has become the individualism of today, which tlnds its expression all the way up or down, from\nthe ward heeler to the trust magnate; tbe principles and methods are\nthe name all along the line. Every\nthoughtful American knows that th\u00C2\u00AB\nUnitod States is 'sowing tbe wind to\nnap the whirlwind.' Aud Canada\nouch nu obligation to its meter nation across the hue, and lt is an obligation which tbe American nation\nneeds a thousand times more than It\nneeds added commercial npportuni-\nlifn. ll in the obligation of good\nexample\n\"As lot Canada, let her not sell\nher birthright for gold. Canada has\ngreater needs than an American market for her products. And Canada\nhad better pay duty on manufactured goods for ever, than pay the price\nof the safety of her Hons and daughters.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Calgary Herald. THE PROSPECTOR. CRANHROOK. BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTHE PEOPLE'S PULPIT\nBermon by\nCHARLES T. RUSSRLl*.\nPastor Brooklyn Taberoacle\nFATE OF THE RICH MAN AND\nLAZARUS\nStumbling Stone Removed\u00E2\u0080\u0094Words of\nthe Saviour Explained and\nMade Clear\nWinnipeg, July 9th. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Pastor Russel.\ndelivered two addresses here to*dsy\nwhich will never be forgotten, even by\nth-jse who did nut commit themselves\nfully us endorsing Ins every utterance. We report one of his discourses\nIr .in the text, \"And in lull In- lifted\nup ins eyes, b.-iug i\" torments, and\nbeeih Abraham afar off and Lazarus in\nhis tm.-wm\" (Luke xvi, 'id) Addressing the public urid.'r the OUSplCea u(\nthe International Bib.e Student.-, association, Hi.- speaker aa:d :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nI nm not choosing my tupic for this\noceushin accord.ng to my own prefer*\nencea, n- r di I wish tv . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 so. Kealiz*\ninfi that a great cloud o! superstition\nand erroneou-s Interpretation ol Cod's\nWord acta a- an earth-born cloud to\nhide tlu* heavenly Puttier trom oui\neyea of faith, I am continually addressing mysell to the rem val ut this\nbarrier, to the intent tiiat the light\nol the knowledge of the glory of Owl\na- il shines in the lace uf ji --us Christ\nour Lord nmy shine into the hearts ut\nall uf Cud's dear people more efful-\ngt-ntly than heretofore; tu lhe intent\nthat, with the clouds removed, our\neyes may behold the King in 11 -\nbeauty, and uur hearts be drawn tu\nHun as to a Father, as to a Qod ol\nlove, as to an Almighty Saviour.\nTiun.- and ugam a.- I have delivered\nan address setting forth the Divine\nPlan uf the Ages from the Bible\nbland puint, 1 have been approached\nafterward by Christian brethren who\nsaid, \"What you say. Pa. .r Russell,\ni*s cheering, is God-like, is ju>t what\nour hearts are hungering Sw and crying fur, bul\u00E2\u0080\u0094but I cannot accept it\nbecause of the Lord's Word respecting the 'Rich Man and Lazarus,1 and\nHis description of their ta'-'S.\"\nWhat 1 say to these privately never\nreaches the ear.- oi others who have\ntlie same query and the l \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 obatac u\nto ine.'t, hence 1 take this as my topic\non this occasion, not only for the ben \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nfit of thia uudience, but fur the benefit\nof the larger audiences to whom I\nspeak weekly through the columns ol\nIlie press uf this land and Great Britain and Australia \u00E2\u0080\u0094 numbering millions, All need to have this -tumbling\nstone removed from their pathway,\nand by God's grace we will remove it-\nHe will remove it, using our stammering lips for the purpose.\nIt is nut sufficient that I declare that\nin tbe Scripture under consideration\nthe great Teacher was giving a parable, It is not sufficient ttiat 1 quote,\n''Without a parable spake Hi- not unto\nthe people.\" Some dear, earnest children of God would object, saying, \"It\nreads, there was a certain Rich Man,\netc.\" 1 must, therefore, prove that it !\n!.*> a parable and not a literal stal -meut\nby showing that, considering it as a\nliteral statement, it would be untrue\naud absurd. Alter thus proving it to\nbe a parable 1 will discuss it as such\nII il be a statement of literal tacts\nthen all the facta must be taken literally. This would mean that because\na certain man was rich and fared\nbountifully every day and was clothed\nin purple and line linen lie would gn tu\nan eternity of torment, without a single charge being mude against him\nalong tho lines ol murder, ur injustice\nor blasphemy, (or in the ac -uni nothing of the kind appears. Furthermore,\nnothing i.s said of the poor man as being a godly man, a saint, but merely\nthat he was pour, full of .sores, which\nthe dogs licked; and lhat he ate the\noffal from \"The Rich Man's\" table. :\nIf those be the grounds and cimdi- j\ntions .Upon which any ol us have had i\nhope Inr eternal bliss, surely a comparatively small numher could claim\nit. Uni we ever have such experiences?\n11 nut, what ground have we, according lo this leaching, lor a hope ul\nre-chins Abraham's bosom? And, additionally, it the statement is a literal\none, Abraham and his bosom must be\nconsidered literal also, and if only two\nor three who were beggars like Lazarus were before us, what hope would\nwe have for room in Abraham's boa-\now? But enough of this! We see\nclearly that the statement is parabolic\naud we must look lor such an interpretation as will tit ail conditions. And\nhere it is!\nViewing the matter as a parable,\nour difficulties all disappear as soon aa\nwe get ihe key. The great Teacher in\nthia parable was criticising the leaders\nof the Jewish nation and foretelling\ntheir late. He Himself was an outcast, so were His disciples aud so\nhave all been since who have become\nHis followers, As He wai so are we\nin this world.\"\n\"The Rich Man\" ol the parable represented the Jewish nation. Tbe tine\nlinen he wore represented the typical\njustification granted to thai nation under the Law Covenant mad'- with Israel at Mt. Sinai. \"The Hich Man's\"\npurple raiment pictured the royalty\nwhich belonged to Israel as God's\ntypical kingdom in the world Thus\nwe read, \"'Solomon sat upon the\nthrons of the kingdom of lhe bord, in\ntlte room (or stead) ol his fathei\nDavid.\" Jesus recognized tin's kingdom dignity as still ^dunging to that\nnation when He said. \"The Kingdom\nahull be taken from you ai. 1 shall be\ngiven to a nation bringing forth the\nfruits thereof\" (Matthew xxi, 4;J>.\nThe Rich Man's bountiful table\nrepresented the glorious promises ol\nGod which were theirs primarily, and\ngranted to no other people until after\nthey had rejected Jesus and erueili.il\nHim, St, Paul refer- to tins table in\nthia way ami quotes David lln- Prophet saying, \"Let their table become\na trap aud a snare and a recompense\nso Ihem.\" This was because they did\nnot riglit!y appreciate tiieir glorious\npromises and live up to the condition*]\nwhich they required. The death ol\nThe Bich Man represented the cut-\nting ,fl of national Israel trom all\nfchoae special privileges and advan\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0...\u00E2\u0080\u009E.:* every way which had been\ntheirs for centuries. \"The Rich Man'\n( ,ie Jewish rial on) began to sicken\ntrom the ti*no of the i r .<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nxion from\nthe time that Je*u*i\nin left unto you d\nye shall see Me ri\naid, 'Your house\n.date; henceforth\nmore until tint\nlie !\nday when ye shall any, Moan\nthat cometh in the nan I th\nThe saintly few were gnthci\nnf Judaism into rt? t AtlOliah if\nChrist ut Pun I st, and \"Th\nMan,\" the nation, continued tn bi\nand finally died In the yeni VI\n, when Titus, the Ku 111 nil general.\nlured Jerusalem, the entire la\nPalestine being laid waste.\nThe Jowis.1 uation b*!=; been a dead\nnation sine\" lhe year A. I). 7i). ll is in\nhades, in the tomb. Hut this implies\nita resurrection In due time, lor the\nfigure oi the tomb, hudes, doea not re\npresent a perpetual condition, nut \u00C2\u00BB\nd\ne Lord '\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I I uul\nwith\nKlch\ne tick\n70.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2up\nid of\n............. one, trom will' i Jleaoiah\nwill grant a release, a . hades in\nevery N'use ot the Word, will be de\nt Lived,\nBut the parable declares that Dives\nMa.- in torment! How could this be\nseeing that the word hade- signifies\nthe death state, the un ouscious von-\ndition? We answer that the Jewish\npei.pl1-1 have a double a?pect, In the\nparable and out of it. Nationally,\nthey arc dead cr asleep, but a? a people :h\"y are very much alive\u00E2\u0080\u0094no other people more so. It is as a people\nthat they haw been suffering the tor\ntures of persecution during the past\ne.ghteen centuries, while as a nation\nthey huve been dead, burie in hades,\nand are awaiting a resurrection, ot\nwhich the present Zionism is an ad\nvance tok.*n. Soon Israel's persecutions will end. when M-^iah's glorious Kingdom shall take its power;\nan. then will com.- their uut.unul re\nsurrectiou, iur they are lo le actively\nand specially identified with the Messianic Kingdom shortly, as its uarthlj\nand visible representatives.\nAs the two tribes of Judah and Ben\njaimn were represented :n \"The Rich\nMan' in a verj special sense, th'\nother ten tribes, watt r -I amongst tm\nsurrounding nations, would, at .\u00C2\u00BB lik-\n!'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *ti ui, i pn eut his ..ve br t run\nCud- dealings v\itu tm- Jews will b.\nthe same wherever they are no pret\nerence will be *h wu ' \"They 1 a\\nMoses and the Prophi ts, let ' i ni I i u\nthem \" This could u< t be i| p tcab\nto any excej t these two tl bi - and lh\nother ten tribes of Urael, i i : i .\nalone had Moses and lhe Pi\nAll scholurs will concede thut th-\nCreed word hades and the Hebrew\nword sbeo., rendered he . .. .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tn\nmon version, re il j sig \u00E2\u0096\u00A0. ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nstate, the- tomb Vari ..- S i ture-\ntell us uf the silence of shoi in\u00C2\u00AB\nhad\".- and that ther \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 is nei thei \u00C2\u00BB isdom\nnor knowledge n r di vice tin\nihr dead know not anything Serial\nars, therefore, bave beeu : \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - \\ngreatly at the statement ,1 this imt\nable that The Rich Mai iM I ip 1 -\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2yes in ha J.-, being .:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0... \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\nThe difficult) d ss dvi - us - on \u00E2\u0096\u00A0,-\nwe have the propei inn rpretati\nthe parable and see that thi - -\npeop.i- died as a nation an i n r\nburied as a nation, but lid not a\nindividually. Uie oe< I i-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,\noutcast from th ii m '-. I u . g .\nthe nation.-, uf earth, ai\nalivi - ii dly and personally ha\ \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nsuffered for a;, these ceni ai -\nOnly very recently we havi had u\nexhibition of how ,.:i:.- Rich M in 1-\nrael), dead as a na:.. n, I .: il .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0- i\npeople, has appealed t Fat er u-.t\nham to hav.- Lazarus coi : ;..- i ngu\nw...i a drop of water, uf course, I >\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nthought would not be tha; a spirit\nlinger would lake a drop of liti ra\nwater to c \"1 a lit ral t i gue A dr. ;\nof water on the Un oi a finger wou I\nnut afford much relief anyway\nThe interpretation must be looked\nfor along the linea of the parable. T.v\nfulfillment came when the Jews ol\nthis country in a general petit.i n re\nquested the President oi the Unit*.\nStates* to co-operate with other \"Christian nations\" and intercede on behall\nof their people in Russia that the.\\nmight have more liberty and less per\nbecutiuu, that their torments might b<\ncooled.\nIf we have found Thc Rich Mai.\nlet us now seek fnr -.mor Lazarus He\nrepresented a God-fenring and God-\nseeking claa3 outside the pale of of\nficiaJ Judaism -not all the Gentile.*,\nbut certnin one.- concerning whom\nJesus said. \"I have not found sw\ngreat faith, no, not in Israel!\"\nThe Jews were in the habit f\nBpenking ,(f the Gentiles as \"dogs.\"\nThe grent Teacher Himsplf used this\nexpression (Mark vii. 25-; 10), Lay.n\nrua had no fine linen garment gran*.*\ned to bim because lie was outside tin*\npal-1 of Israel, for whom alone the\ntypical sacrifices were offered. Lazarus had no purple robe for the same\nreason\u00E2\u0080\u0094because tlui kingdom of\nblessing, for the time, belonged exclusively to the seed of Abraham\nTtie dogs (other Gentiles) licked hn\nsores, in tin- sense of considering the\nLazarus class upright and godly an I\niu some sense showing sympathy for\nthem. His euting of the crumbs that\nfell from the children's table signifies that Jesili did, on a few occasions, allow some special blessings of\nhealing, which were for thc Jews, to\ngo to tliis worthy class of Gentiles.\nKor instance, the daughter of .lair-\nus, raised from death, was a crumb\nfrom the children's table to on-!\nnoble-minded Gentile who feared God\nand who had built a synagogue for\nthe Jews. The healing of the centurion'.- servant was another crumb\nfrom \"The Rich Man's\" table to one\nof the Lazarus class. Healing the\ndaughter of the Syro-Pbcnician woman was another crumb from \"Tin1\nBich Mau's\" table to a member of\ntne Lflzftrin e;oa*. in answer to npr\nrpque?t Jesus ftli'wered. \"It iJ not\nproper to tak- the children's bread\nand give it tn dogs\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gentiles. Accepting the suggestion the woman\nreplied, \"Yea, Lord, yet the dogs eat\nof the crumb- which fall trom the\nchildren's table, ' Her faith In God\nmarked her as one of th \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Luzaris\nclasi, nut-id* \"The Rich Man's\"\nrn u-i-b.,1 ( She w;)- q companion nf\ndogs (Oi nt !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0->. and for the tini*\ncould merely have a crumb from\n\"The Rich Mnn - lah - \"\nU the death \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I \"The l: rti Man\"\nre] i'---n'-t ii e! unge In hit iiffair-,\n-o ihe death ol the LaziiriH class In\nlicat*d a change in lhe affairs ol the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 uti asl cl i - But, instead \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I belntf\nburied tl wi re carrii -1 bj the\nin-.'\"1- to \hr:di;.m'- b Mini -nol to\nheaven, nol to purgatory, not t'\n*ome intprmpdiate \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 it< A - \hrn-\nham in th- pnrnhle repr nt\" Ood\nthe receiving of Ihe falth'ul of th-\nLaznru* i-'-i-- into the ho\u00C2\u00ABom -t by renson of their unbelief nnd how their\nunbelief ntlennted them frum lhe lh\nvtiu- favnr of this Gosp snail * ed\nwith lo-t.t.it. ui [ n\ ih ges and \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ppor*\ntuutties and rtitn au I am ul\nir. -i tlu- ruys ol the Sun ot K\nness, uhieh then through the ippi nt\ned lanuels will be fioodiug ad the\nearth. I UUs will tiie ul ig l I \ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\nhave it.- amplified tulfilment; lirst, iu\ni.: \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Chi..-!, ilu spii itual 1-: lei, se\ncondlj. undi v the New Cu\ i iianl \u00C2\u00ABith\nUrai. ifti r thi Hi di. and through\nthese bless all tiie I ami lies uf the\nearth si that all the willing and obedient may gradually attain to the\nstandards ul ttie etuldren ul Uud aud\nbe possessed ul the \"liberties of tin-\nsous of God' freedom from siu, sor\nr. W, p.on mid death. As the Old Law\n(J vi riant * as \u00C2\u00BBith Lsi\ntm N \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.. 1 aw i- -\ enanl wi * a ith\nIsrae i nl). Othei nations \\ .11 share it\nby becoming Lsraelit >. Pr. - lyti - I\nl-.i\nSOLDIER BY INSTINCT I\nCOL. M'LEAN HAS SPENT MONEY\nAND TIME IN SERVICE.\nCommanding Offict-r of the Canadian\nContingent at the Coronation Hat I\nOnly Missed One Annual Drill In,\nForty-Five Years\u00E2\u0080\u0094Raited a Corps\nol Quldei For the Boer War at Hil\nOwn Expenie\u00E2\u0080\u0094Holds M oiy Offices, j\nThe pomp and sounds and color of |\nthe King's festivities were a lyric de\nlight to thc men in the ranks of the\nCanadian Coronation Contingent; Col. j\nHugh H McLean. K.C, Ml',, cum\nniandiug, has found ihe nay Imperial\nlatic London quite w his liking Im ,\nperi aii am Is the oolonel's hubby, Ha\nhas been fostering d down in New\nBrunswick now for half a century ut\nthereabouts- in a rather big way lor\nan avocation. In I irtydtve reg.mentul\nyears he has onlj inissed one annual\ndrill; which minute attention to de-\nim. is rather a sign.tlcunt record for\na man, who i- a tawyi i. piloting corporations aud a busj Pariiainentarian :\nCol McLean in a t instructive lure\nm Cauadiau militarj eli\nIdeas, also monej \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'i\"l a big bump ol\ninitiative tu -et thi two in cumbina\ntion The War i die. knows lum. In\nl-jTsi, h. row with Russia threatening\nBUTTERFLY NOTES.\nA RAILROAD EXPERT.\nManufacturers' Transpctetton Man\nr at Had a Wide Experience.\nj James lv Walsh, manager ol trans-\nI portatiun for the Canadian Mauufac-\n| turers' Association, is a mild-mannered\n! man, and unobtrusive. His voice is\nnot of the magaphone variety, and his\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 eyes beam benignly behind his spectacles. No stranger would pick mm\n1 ou. as a railway censor, but, then,\n, appearances are deceptive.\nAs a matter ot hard tact, Mr. Walsh\nI is steeped in railroading. By way ol\nemphasis, it may be added that the\nsaturating process has been in progress for twenty-live years. That his\npractical knowledge has helped him\niu his present position can be verified\nhy a reference to the records ol the\nDominion Kail way Com mission. The\ntypewritten pages are plentifully\nsprinkled with his naino and his opinions, He is not a lawyer, but he holds\nhis own with railway counsel.\nMr Walsh is a native ol Onustown.\n0. icb v. He was educated at the Protestant Separate School ot Huntingdon\nCounty, and at Jollottfl and Varenucs\nColleges, lhe classics were taught at\n.Iulieltc, and husiness axioms were\nfurnished al Vtirennes, After clerk-\nlug for a short lime at Onustown, he\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2l8 lul*' became a timekeeper on construction\nwork fur the Canada Atlantic. He\nrenin in otl with lhat road for twenty\nyears, and though hit work was largely executive, he learned much that\nwn\" useful about railroading.\nFrom construction work ho was\ntransferred to the track and ballast*\niug department. Then he went to the\naudit branch, and had charge ol\nfreight and ear mileage accounts. After a glimpse nf the mechanical de*\npartuient, Mr Walsh was made chlel\nclerk of the freight and passenger department. When the Canadian Atlantic was extended ami reorganized, he\nwas given charge o| the passenger,\nticket and baggage departments, and\nretained that position until the road\nwas sold. He was with the Richelieu\nA Ontario Navigaton Co. for a time,\nas assistant to the general manager,\nand on leaving the It. A O., was engaged by the Federal Government on\nthe Georgian Hay survey, where he\nmade a study of trultic possibilities\naul compiled trade statistics. His report has been considered interesting\nNORTHERN ONTARIO.\nYVingi of Ribbon end Lace Give an\nAiry Effect to Millinery.\nCrapes tlpure conspicuously among\nthe new cottons.\nTurnback curTs are a favorite finish\nfor elbow sleeves.\nButterflies fairly riot over tbe gowns\nand bats of the season. In the primed\nmuslins K'e see butterfly designs, while\nhats, big and little show butiertlles of\nall sizes made of feathers, ribbons and\nVelvet and ia some cases of tbe same\nCOL. HTUU 0 M l.K.VS.\nthev shook hands with him for his of' .\nfer'of sixty un-n aud himself for tha' re??in^K.Ja\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00C2\u00B0i* ^P,1*!;\nfront; and in IHUI) they bowed their\nacknowledgements, for he was ready\nfor Uie veldt with \"'ie hundred guides\nMr. \"Walsh came to the CM.A. In\nLi;07, succeeding J. lt. Marlowe.\nMr. Walsh has been a busy man a\ntrappers-he's practical, mind you | long time. He can brake a train run\n-raised at his own expense. ' \u00C2\u00AB locomotive, and do other thrilling\nDur.i g the major portion of his iniii-: things, but he doesn t p.ay golf, and\ntary career, Col. McLean has been wh'.l; he takes a literary interest in\nidentified with two regiments, the ! baseball reports, etc.. he has uot been\n&ind St. John Fusiliers, and the Uth an athlete.\nInfantry Brigade, both of which hs I '\)aUh Is a glutton for work; that s\nhas commanded. Since March last, he ***[. 1\u00C2\u00BBJ\u00C2\u00BB IrlenU a view,\nhas been chief of tlie 23th New Bruns- ' Mr. Walsh will admit one weakness,\nwick Dragoons, which consists oi four j though he denies It i a weakness. He\nsquadrons uf dashing cavaliers, organ- \ \u00C2\u00AB * great angler,\nized bv himself. In the humdrum' When Mr Walsh was with the Can-\nbarrack life and parade ground ma- j ada Atlantic, he acted as guide, phllo*\nnoeuvres, he has taken huge interest. Bopher, friend, to theatrical compan*\nFor one thing he has done a lot of I ie*. circus people, hard-headed men of\nshooting and encouraged it; he was science, and othe\u00C2\u00AB. Ontario and Que*\ncommander of the Bisley team in 1899. bee boast some large bass and trout.\npresident of the Provincial Rifle As* Mr Walsh captured many whoppers,\nBociatlon in 1910, and still holds down ! Including a tiye-pound brook trout, on\nthat job. He wants the young idea to > these personally conducted tours, and\nsquint down the sights; six years ago | I\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0****\u00C2\u00BB hoHdaya\u00E2\u0080\u0094when he took a vacs*\nhe took hold of a lot of raw boys, or-1 tion. I Mr Wa sh were a talkative\nganlsed them into the St. Andrew's! man, what fish stories he might tell.\nBoys' Brigade, and outfitted them with i But he is a silent man, except on\naccoutrements similar to those of the | transportation matters.\ncelebrated Black Watch. One of his\nown sons he gave to tlie Imperial\narmy, a young man who saw exciting\nservice in South Africa.\nSome <*c tinent Facts About ths Nsw\nPromised Land.\nArea, 140,000 square miles.\nSouthern boundary is practically the\nCanadian Pacific Railway direct line\nfrom Montreal to Winnipeg, which\nruns across Ontario for a distance of\n1.2& miles.\nNorthern boundary, the Arctic\nregions.\nEastern houndary, the Province of\nQuebec.\nWestern boundary, the Province of\nManitoba ami tho Territory of Kee*\nwatiu.\nThe country is divided into six\ngreat divisions, known as Nipissing,\nSudbury, Algoma, Thunder Bay, Rainy\nUiver and Kennra.\nMinerals are found extensively, and\nin splendid paying quantities, especially gold, silver, nickel, copper and\niron.\nThe most important mining centres\nare Sudbury, Michipicoten, Temiskam-\ning, Cobalt, Porcupine and Gowgauda.\nThe mineral output now exceeds $27,-\n000,000 annually, and is increasing.\nGame Is plentiful, including moose,\noaribou, rea deer, bear, beaver, otter,\nwild duck, partridge and ruffed grouse.\nThere are immense quantities ot\nwaterpower scattered over nearly all\nof Northern Ontario, and very little of\nit has been developed as yet.\nThere are now a number of villages\nsnd towns scattered over the country\nwhose population runs from fifty up\nto several thousands.\nTelegraph and telephone connections are spreading with amazing\nrapidity all over the land.\nThe narks and forest reserves are\nlarge\u00E2\u0080\u0094Algonquin Park covers an area\nof 1,210,000 acres; Temagami Forest\nReserve covers 4.670.0H0 acres; the\nnlissisauga Reserve covers 1,920.000\nacreB, with several smaller reserves.\nMODERNIZING QUEBEC\nGEORGE A. VANORY IS A PILLAR\nOF THE NEW \"OLD CAPITAL.\"\nProminent Merchant ef Quebec City Is\nPresident-Elect of the Federated\nBoard* of Trade of His Provinco\nand Was Chosen by Acclamation\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nHe le a Fox-Hunter, a Harbor Commissioner and Club-man.\nGeorge Alfred Vandry is presidentelect of the Federated Boards of Trade\nuf the Province of Quebec, which ia\nthe most important commercial body\niu French Canada. The convention\nthis year came off in Quebec City.\nThere was a nat.niial sentiment in it;\nthe members made it understood by\ntheir resolutions that they wanted inter-provincial trade as free as is compatible with provincial autonomy. For\niiutaucu, Uun. Mr. Uesjardiu* uf\nAn Old Enemy In Arms.\n\"1 come to Kngland happy in the\nknowledge that I represent a united\nSouth Africa.\" The wordB were spoken\nby Gen. Botha when he landed at\nSouthampton in May to attend the\nImperial Conference and the coronation festivities; and that happy result\nis largely due to the indefatigable efforts of the man who fought so well\nThs New Bishop.\nThe consecration of the new Bishop\nof Niagara brings into the forefront\nof church life lu Ontario a man who\nhas hitherto been unknown outside\nhis own diocese. During the discussion which preceded the election. It\nsurprised outsiders to hear tbe name\nof Archdeacon Clark mentioned io repeatedly, but It was evident that he\nhad many friends. It appeared to be\ngenerally recognised that the diocese\nneeded an administrator, and Archdeacon Clark had been so intimately\nconnected with this aspect of the work\nand so successfully against us during \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . . .- .,\nthe South African War. Gen. Botha for many years that he was the nat\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2IBL'S EUBROID1RBD DRESS.\nstraw as the bat. Again, tbe butterfly\nIs of Irish lace and dangles from tbo\nJabot\nKate Greeuaway and poke bonnets\nare among tbe millinery for tbe small\ngirl, and both of these are picturesque\nshapes to frame tbe pretty face of s\nlittle lady of four or five.\nTbe waist line for tbe young girl not\n' yet ln ber teens muy be empire,\nFrench or Just regulation, any of tbeso\nbeing seen on tbe smart little frocks\nturned out by fashionable dressmakers.\nHere Is a pleasing dress for a little\ngirl wblcb la effected by tbe skillful\nadjustment of sertloua of embroidered\nflouncing, although any bordered material mlgbl Just as well bave been\nused. It has a square neck, elbow cut\npeasant sleeves and In combined witb\ntucked muslin. JUDIC CHOfXBT.\nTbis May Manton pattern Is cut tn sties\nfor clrls of eight, ten and twelve yenrs of\nage Send 10 cents to thla oflice, glvlnff\nnumber, 701%, und It will be promptly fur*\nWarded to you by mall. If In haste send\nin additional two cent stamp for letter\npostage, which tahures mure prompt 4o>\nlivery.\nnow holds the honored position of the\nfirst Premier of United South Africa,\nbut prior to the Boer War his name\nwaa known to few save his own im*\nmediate circle. When the campaign\nstarted he was only a Field Cornet,\nbut promotion came quickly, and he\noommanded the Boer^oroes at Colenso\nand was Commander-in-Chief during\nthis rest of the war. \"Let's fight like\nmen,\" he said to some who counselled\ntactics ol a particularly savage character, \"but do nothing revengeful or\nm.'au,\" and there we have the Keynote\nof the character of the man who\nfought, lost, and is now doing everything he can to heal up the old\nwounds and restore the prosperity of\ntho South African Colony.\nTwo Brusque Notes.\nWhen Andrew Millar, the publisher\nof Dr. Johnson's dictionary, received\nthe last proof sheet from Dr. John-\nsun, he wrote him this brusque note:\n\"Andrew Millar sends his compliments\nto Mr. Samuel Johnson, with the\nmoney for the last sheet of the copy of\nthe dictionary and thanks God he\nhas done with him.\" To this the d <*--\ntor replied, \"Samuel Johnson returns\nhis complimonts to Mr. Andrew Mil-\nural choice. He is not known ss sn\norator, a personality or a controversialist, but he Inspires confidence si a\nman experienced in the business o! his\nchurch.\nAlthough Bishop Clark is not widely\nknown, he has been connected with\nmany dioceses ln the course of hli\nlife, He was burn ln Russell County,\nP. Q.; he received part of hli educa-\ntlno at Bishop College, Lennoxvlllej\nhe also attended Trinity College, Toronto- he wai ordained ln Ottawa\nCathedral, and Niagara diocese bs*\ncame his permanent field of work.\nCompiling Censui Returns.\nReports from all parti of the country are flowing into the Genius Department aud preparations are being\nmade for the big job of compiling ths\ncenaus from tht enumerators' returns.\nThe work requires machinery as\nwell us men and women, and up to\nthe present time the machinery hoi\nuot made its appearance. It Is ei*\npect ed, however, that 2(t tabulators\nand 70 card-punching machines, ordered by the Government and now In\ncourse of construction at Toronto, will\nbe ln Ottawa In a few days.\nA number of girls have been given\ntemporary position, and will assl-t\nlar and is very glad to find, as he \u00C2\u00BB P'\u00E2\u0084\u00A2fH '\"Awhile the censu\ndoes by this note, that Andrew Millar [^ft ^flig oSmpilVd\u00C2\u00B0 '\nImi tim arum- to thank Gotl Iur any\nthing.\"\nNeeded a Chang*.\nA lady told Lord Puhncrstnn that\nher maid, who had been with ner to\nthe Ifile ol Wight, objected to go there\naguin heeau.se tiie climate wa\u00C2\u00BB not\nembracing enough.\n\"What am 1 to do with auch a\nwoman?\" she asked.\n\"You hud better take her to the\nTbIc of Man next time,\" Aaid Lord\nPalillerston.\n\"Ti\nA Modal (ien.-.l.\nIdler\" lu llultl,\" hiiIiI nn en\nglnecr who tins just returned from\nI'hii nn Prince, \"lire HH|i|inHeil to re\ncelve IL* cent!, ll week, lult llley Hcldnm\ngel their iillowiiuee nud depend ulnioet\nwholly upon foraging for exMence.\nOrgnnlanthui aeenm to imve dhwppenr\neil. I hiiw n general driiilm: six men\nwith a sword When I offered lilm ti\nfloltur for Ihe sword he sold ll eagerly\nfrnl eiimli d Ids drilling, substituting\nu niece of suiiur rune for the sword,\"\nBox Making.\nThe manufacture of paper hn^es ii\nwidely distributed throughout Kngland. The boxes are made in all the\nlarge towns aud give employment, it\nIs estiiiinir.l. to more than '22.1**1 persons, of whom I7.IKH) are women.\nI\nR.ugh and Ready Wo.lng.\nThe Australian aborigine when wen\nry of a single life looks ahuut fur a\ntmrlner nnd. Undine, one to hln llfclnu,\nsiniks her nud. wntfhlog bin opportunity. Hluns Iier n-llli n heavy bluw ami\nrnrrles .ier uff tu ber new home.\n. where. Ii In to he hoped, on ber relurn\n: to connciounnenn hia nfter tenderness\nj ninkes sume atonement for bis some-\nj what ruugb and ready way of woolug.\nMormons In Britain.\nIn the United Kingdom there wert\nlast yeur, according to dflicial returns,\nlB^Sitf Mormons.\nA iiiiiii cnn itlwnys nitiki' blunders,\nbut il Inlo-s a wpnuiti to convince liiui\nI of tin-in. ('otislan.'i' Kvnli Jones.\n(hit- hapiiinera in Ihis world do-\n' jieluls on tim nffeetions we ure nble to\nI inspire. Iiiu-lioss de Pruslin.\n' When people nre doing kind actions\nI Ihey nre nlwnys hnjipy. It jh the one\n' true pleasure on this enrth.\u00E2\u0080\u0094M.\nIlirthu Synge.\nA Busy Woman.\nMrs. Adam Shortt, ol Ottawa, the\nwell-known worker in women's circles,\nwas formerly Miss Elizabeth Smith, ol\nHamilton, and had wou distinction as\na Cunudiull woman belore she uiurrieJ\nDr. Adam Shortt, who was for many\nyeurs Prolessor ot Political Economy\nat Queen's University, Kingston, and\nis now oommlssioner of the Civil Service at Ottawa. Mrs. Shortt it was\nwho first wrote to Queen's University\nto ask tor separate classes lor women\nand wai the first regularly matriculated woman student to enter the University. In 1884 she graduated In\nmedicine, one of the first three women\nto do so, and besides her degree from\nQueen's she holds a diploma from\nthe Ontario College of Physicians and\nSurgeons, so that she was able to practice medicine, which she did tor two\nyears in Hamil>n. Since her marriage Mrs. Shortt haa taken a very\ndeep interest in all forms of philanthropy, especially that pertaining to\nthe public health. She is at present\nconvener of the Public Health Committee ol the National Council of Women, and is on a similar committee,\nof which Lady Aberdeen is convener,\nin the International Council. She is\nalso keenly interested in the Anti-\nTuberculosis Crusade. She is an active member of the Y.W.C.A., having\nheld the offlce ol president in the\nKingston branch lor several years,\nduring her residence in that city. In\nOttawa, Mrs. Shortt holds the offlce\nof vice-president ol the Women's Canadian Club, vice-president ol the\nCouncil of Women, and belongs\nas well to the Women's Historical Society and to the Mouheri'\nUnion, which gives much assistance\nto the Day Nursery recently opened\nin connection with the Settlement\nHouse.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Canadian Courier.\nTha Qrtat Clay Bait,\nNorthwest ot this section of Temls-\nkaming, and beyond the Height of\nLand (a scarcely perceptible ridge,\nlorty miles from New Liskeardl, Is\nwhat is called the \"Clay Belt,\" a\ntract ol sixteen million acres of rich\nagricultural land, extending about\n400 miles trom east to west, and lying\nmainly south of the 50th parallel.\nThe Ontario Government, having sat. rines bands,\nisfled Itself by running base and\nmeridian lines of survey through this\nregion that it was even better In\nquality than the reports of tho explorers ol the year 1900 led It to expect, haa surveyed ISO townships,\ncontaining 2,625,000 acres. In addition to subdividing the townships, It\nhaa by survey blocked out in nine-\nmile townships one and one-half mil.\nlions of acrea more. The surveys were\nmade that the .country might be\nopened (or Immediate settlement, or\nas soon aa circumstances made It\nJudlcloua.\nIIKOKOK AI.FK.IU> VASDHV.\nMontreal was emphatic in asserting\nthat warrants issued and judgments\nrendered should be liable to execution In any province. Mr. Vandry\nior president was a unanimous choice.\nHe is one of the broad buiuuess men\nof Quebec City. As chief executive ol\nthe Paquet Manufacturing Co., Mr.\nVandry has exercised a potent influence on commercial policy in Quebec.\nHis interest in the affairs ol \"New\"\nQuebec\u00E2\u0080\u0094where tram cars rattle over\nthe atones down by the Plains, and\nthick smoke curls over the Citadel-\nhas made him head of the Quebec\nCity Board ol Trade aa well as tha\nprovincial boards; also president ot\nthe Canadian Club, and member ol\nthe Quebec Harbor Commission. Away\nIrom his desk, Mr. Vandry it a fox\nhunter, a prominent member of the\nQuebec Hunt Club \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Master ol the\nHunt this year.\nMilitary Musical Famlllea.\nThe honor of a dinner paid recently\nto Mr. Dan Godfrey, conductor ol the\nBournemouth Municipal Orchestra, by\nBritish musical composers, is a re*\nmiuder ol the Godfreys' remarkable\nassociation with the Guards' bands.\nFrom 1825 until 1880 the Coldstreams'\nband was continuously controlled by a\nGodfrey; tlrst by Charles, the founder\nol the family, and then by his sun\nFred; and lur some years all three\nFoot GuardB* bands were conducted\nby the three brothers\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fred, Charles,\nand Dan.\nThe second of these then went to the\nRoyal Horse Guards, and Dan became\nfamous as the bandmaster of the Grenadiers, to which position he waa appointed, ou tne recommendation ot tue\nPrince Cuusort, at the age of twenty-\nfive I He was the first British bandmaster to be commissioned, and some\nsome idea ot his world-wide celebrity\nmay be gained from the luct that the\nKing ol the Sandwich Islands conferred on him a \"Royal Order,\" whilst\nthe Sultan ol Zaniibar presented him\nwith two massive gold bracelets.\nBesides the Bournemouth conductor\nhonored, there is Mr. Herbert Godfrey, conductor ol the Crystal Palace\nband. Only the Winterbottom family\ncan rival this record, four brothers,\nand a nephew ol the same, having at\nvarious periods conducted Royal Ma-\nTuppar, ths \"War Horse.\"\nSir Charlea Tupper Justly earned the\ntitle of the War Horse ol Cumberland.\nIt was In hil native county that, as a\nyouth, he measured swords with the\nindomitable Huwe and beat lilm, Hav-\nlilt' an extensive medical practice\nabout Amherst, N.8., Bir Charles did\nconsiderable driving, using hil doctor'! gig, and it wai ln this vehicle\nthat he campaigned In 1864, or fifty\nLaid Out.\nEdinburgh and Glasgow have lor\nlong been notoriously jealous of each\nother's Institutions and attractions.\nThe story goes that a Glasgow mau\nmet an Edinburgh man on the neutral\nground ol Loudon They got aloiuj\nvery well together until the Glasgow\nman happened to mention that his native town was \"a very line city.\"\nThen angry passions arose.\n\"Yes,\" was the reply, \"I dare say it\nis, but it's not so well laid out as\nEdinburgh.\"\n\"I'll admit that,\" answered the\nGlasgow man, soiuawhat to the other's surprise. Theu he added, \"Glas-\ngow is uot so well laid out as Edinburgh, but it will be when it is aa\ndead a. Edinburgh.\" Pearson's. '\nA Houis of Shells.\nA retired sea captain living near\nEdinburgh, Scotland, concluded that\none ol tue rooms iu his house waa too\ndark, uud. not wanting tu whitewash\nor to paint the wull opposite the win-\nCensue Figure! Den't Tell All.\nWhile the results nf the census wlll\nshow a large Increase In the population ol Canadian cities, the first figure! wlll, by no means, Indicate the\nreal growth since the last census wa!\ntaken. When the censui districts were\nmade up thousands ot resldenti In [\nseveral ol the newly-annexed districts\nol the big cities were not included\nIn the population ol the big cities |\nSi . the result will be that there wlll |\nbe considerable heart-burning when\nthe figures come out.\nTo Inquire Into Fish Sterile.\nAn Inspector hns been despatched\nlo the north country by the Ontario\nProvincial Fisheries Department to In.\nrestlgate fish stories published In Thl\nCobalt Dally Nugget, wherein It was\nitated that far more fish were caught\nthan, the fisheries regulations allowed.\nEverybody ln the north country li\nwrltlrj letteri to The Cobalt Nugget\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Ulmluf the biggest oatch ol the ***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n . _ - - . . ui WW vains \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB nun vtigrv^.**. tees iraiar\nliven yean ago. The r g la itlll In | dov( \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E lo renMt tne light into the\nthe belt ol condition, and wai used at\nthe burlesque Horse Show given by\nthe Pilgrims ol Amherst recently.\nThe noble steed in the shafts wai\nanother old war horse. It li some\ntwenty yean of age and wai t champion In weight-hauling contest! several yean ago.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Courier,\nDuke Em':ratee to Canada,\nThe Duke ot Sutherland, who owni\nover a million and a quarter acrei\nIn the United Kingdom, is leaving\nEngland soon to reside at his new\neatate at Brooks, near Calgary, Alberta. He li establishing there a (arm\ncolony, which will be peopled with\nScottish larmera.\nManitoba Salt Bid.\nThe largest bed of salt ln the world\nll eaid to have been discovered at\nFort McMurray, Manitoba. It ia 200\n(eet deep and extendi (or 300 milea.\nThe felllllli' ileleetive should be 11\ngood looker.\nA woman pays no attention lo lint-\nlery- if she is ilcinf,\n\"llnvin' ii good tiun- ain't a mutter\nV age,\" said .loshuu. \"It's a matter\nI1 lieiu' willin' to huve a good time.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Anne Warner.\nStiek to your friends but don't\nstick them.\nLead Ihe Dominion.\nOillirr Iod (very city In Canada In\nbuilding permlti during May, thi vol-\nno ol permit! taken out totalling |l,.\n100,000.\nroom, he covered the wall with cement and in it placed a layer of white\nshell, says bt. .Venules, lhe result\nwas so pleasing aud he had so many\nseashells which he had collected trom\nvarious parts ol the world that he con.\nturned the work until his collage and\ngarden became the wonder ol the re-\nij.'on.\nSuperstitious Musicians.\nMusicians are uften singularly superstitious. Paderewski ouce ordered\nau expensive apartment in London,\nbut refused to enter, when he found\nit was No. 13 uf a certain street, although he had paid for it. Massenet\nhas written twenty-one operas and\nmany other compositions, but on all\nof hie manuscripts page 121-2 la\nwritten iu place oi 13.\nA Ruby Wedding.\nThat rare event, a ruby wedding,\nwas celebrated in Hallour village,\nSliujiaiisey. Orkney Islands, recently\nby Mr. and Mrs. John Orever. They\nwere married in 1841, and their respective ages are ninety-oof tod\nninetj-lour yean.\n\"The poot sitlgH of lining knnn-dnnp\nill .limn. rhen poets nre always\nhysterical. The mini ain't thnt bud.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Louisville, t'ouriir-.louiiiiil.\nFew women nm deep thinkers- -hut\nthey nm all clothes observers,\nKicker \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Our snennd baseman\nwould make an excellent swimmer.\"\nSnicker- \"Why so?\"\nKicker\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Ho strikns out so boldly.\"\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0linimy! What on nurth ure you\ncrying ahout now?\"\nTommy Jones dreamt lust night\nthat hn hml a whole pie to eut nnd I\ndidn't.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Toledo liliule.\nFind Monkey\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"It seems lo he a\ntoss-up whether miiii is descended\nMost people put ofli till tomorrow Inuu us.\" \"Yes, it's heads they win;\ntuils, we win.\"\nthe fnvurs they could do us today.\nNever judge ii mnn by his clothes-\nunless he is a tailor.\nA girl is noxious tn make a name\nlur hersell by marriage.\n\"Thu clinging type of girl is\ndisappearing. \"Yes, Modern wu-\nmun, with her numerous hatpins, is\nmure like ti cactus than a vine,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWashington Herald.\n\"Yes, wn nre going to the seaside\nngain, All but (nthcr. Father says\nhe must have n rest.\" \"Going a-flsh-\ning, oil?\" \"No. He's going to stay at\nhunie.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cleveland Plain Dealer. THE PROSPECTOR. CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nA MAKTYR TO HEADACHES?\nMA^Dggcol headacheI^FERS\n__ .25c, a Box at your druggist's. \" m\nwill make life comfortable (or you again.\nTh-y relieve the worst headache in 30 minutes or less.\ntiatiamal Dru> ud Chaauc*} Camt****a*i **\u00C2\u00BB Cmrli. Limtt.d. . . .\nFOX & ROSS\nEstablished 1837.\nSTOCK BROKERS\nMembers Standard Stock Exchange\nMINING STOCKS BOUGHT & SOLD\nCorrespondence Invited\n*3 SCOTT STREET, TORONTO\n\"PUMPED\" PARHELL\nThe Mystic Seven\nA certain (ond father sent his son to'\ntiie University of Pennsylvania hist\nfull. As ji farewell piece of udvtce he\ntold the young mnn thut \"hia succesB\nwns almost assured, since both the\nword success.and ymir name contain\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0even letters.\" Tin* midyear exam in*\nations, however, proved to be his\ndoom, nml he wns compelled to return\nhome. i\n\"Well,\" said his father, \"didn't:\nyuu keep in mind what 1 told you\nubout the seven lettersP\"\n\"I did that, father,\" answered the\nhoy, \"but you must remember that:\nthere are also seven letters in fail-)\nure.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Philadelphia Times. [\nGeorge\u00E2\u0080\u0094She sings nicely, doesn't\nshe?\nTom\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oh, yes; when she sings they!\nhnve to close the windows.\nGeorge\u00E2\u0080\u0094My goodnossl What fur?1\nTom\u00E2\u0080\u0094Why, her voice is so sweet it J\ndraws the Hies.\nMiss Smart (addressing long-haired '\nstranger near her at the musicale)\u00E2\u0080\u0094I\n\"You ure fond of Gounod, of course?\"\nStrunger (who happened to be a'\nwaiter)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Mel I never et none.\"\nJudging by Sound '\nVisitor\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Ah, you huve n fountain'\nin the next room. 1 cun hear it\nsplashing.\"\nHost\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"No; my wife is giving un\nnftermm tea, and father's drinking a\ncup.\"\nThe Foe of Indigestion.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Indigestion ia\na common ailment anil few are tree from\nit. It is a most distressim* com plaint\nam) often the miA'cring attending it is\nmost severe. The very best remedy in\nCar me liv s Vegetable I'ills taken accord*\niug to directions. They rectify the Irregular action of the stomach and restore\nhealth) y actum. For many yenrs they\nhave been a standard remedy for dyspepsia and indigent ion and are highly\nesteemed for their qualities.\n\"(live me you candid opinion of\nthese lines,\" said the young man with\nliterary aspirations. \"Do they convey any Idea of poetry to yuu at till-\"\n\"Yes, there is something in every line\nthat conveys the idea,\" answered the\nfriendly critic, after looking Ihem\nover. \"Kvery line begins with a capital letter.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chicago Daily News.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\nLo-d RlbbUsdale Actually I Marvin*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2d ths Irishman.\nLord Ribbieidale, the well-known\nKngUsh peer, is noted for having accomplished an extremely difficult\nfeat. He once interviewed Paruell.\nThey happened to travel by chance\nin the same com^urtment trom Loudon\nto Holyhead, aud the lirst efforts of\nthe peer to draw the Irish leader luto conversation were met by very brief\n.-epliei.\nIn time, however, Parnell thawed\nand talked at some length upon the\nIrish Tenants' Arrears Bill, which waa\nthen the great subject of political Interest, and many other mutters betide.\nThe interview duty appeared over hit\nlordship's signature in a Loudon magazine, and Parnell never questioned\nits accuracy, merely saying, with a\ntwinkle in his eye, that it was got by\nfalse pretences.\nLorn Hibblesdale once held office as\nMuster of the Buckhounda, and, inspired by his vocation, wrote a book\nentitled, \"lhe Queen's Hounds and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Stag Hunting Recollections.\" Ha\ndresses well und pay* the mont careful\nattention tu his toilet. He is known to\nhis intimates as \"Tommy,\" and the\nlute King Edward bestowed on him\nthe name of \"The Ancestor,\" because\nhe gives thu Impression of having stepped out of some ancient fumily portrait.\nA curious story Is told concerning\nthe decoration of his lordship's family\nplace \u00E2\u0080\u0094Glsburne Park, near Clitherue.\nIn the early part of tbe eighteenth\ncentury, a party of French plasterers\ncame from Paris is Glsburne Park,\nwhere they worked for a yeur or so at\nthe adornment of the house. And tbey\nleft permanent evidence ol their visit\niu some singular figures on the wall\nof the principal staircase.\nThese figures are In half relief, life*\nsize, and tney nre represented us feuding, writing, training flowers, uud to\nother such occupation!. The greut hall\nis hung with pictures. Among these\nis one of Cromwell, by Sir Peter Lely,\non the canvus of which is puinted th*\nwiirii, \"Now,\" possibly in allusion tu\nthe immediate execution ol the ill-fated King.\nJudge\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"You are charged with non-]\nsupport of your wife. Whut huve you\nto sny for yourself?\"\nRasturs\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Well, judge, I done got\nher three more washings a week than\nany other cullud lady in the block,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nToledo Blade.\nState of Ohio, City of Toledo, \fB\nLucas County. /\nFrank .1. Cheney mal-ea oath thnt he tn\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0enk-r partner of the firm of V, J. Cheney\nft C'\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u009E doing business In the City of To\nledo- County and State aforesaid, and\nthat said firm will pay the sum of ONE\nHUNDRED DOLLARS tor each and every\ncase of Catarrh that cannot he cured by\nthe use of Hull's Catarrh Cure.\nPRANK J. CHENEY.\nSworn to before me and subscribed In\nmy presence, this 6th day of December,\nA. D.. 1686.\nA. W. OLEASON.\n(Seal.) Notary Public.\nHall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally j\nand acts directly upon the blood aud\nmucous surfaces of the system. Send for\ntestimonials, free.\nP. J. CHENEY 1 Co., Toledo. 0\nHold hy all Druggists, 75c.\nTake Hall's Family Pills for constipation.\n\"An' one other thing I want you to\nremember when you build tlie house\nia to put one of the finest elastic\nsteps on to is that money can build.\"\n\"An elastic step, sir?\" \"Yes, I was\nreading how Dick Johnson had a fine\nelastic step, an' I want one just like\nit or better.\"\nThe city editor was looking over the\nnew reporter's manuscript.\n\"I notice,\" he said, \"you use the\nphrase 'puzzled to death.' I should\nlike to have you tell me how u man\ncnn he puzzled to deuth.\"\n\"Well, he might be 'riddled with\nbullets,' \" answered the reporter.\nThat nearly cost him his job, but\nhis youth\u00E2\u0080\u0094und his good record, up to\nthat, time\u00E2\u0080\u0094saved him,---Chicago Tribune.\nIf There is\na Weak Spot\nIn Your System or a Faltering Organ\nIt Will Be Worse at This\nTime of Year\nBoth Saw It.\nThe Duke of Devonshire, who has\nentertained the King und Queen al\nDevonshire House, is probu b.y the\nonly duke wbo Ihis had personal ex*\nperlunce of life in u city uccouutuut's\noflice. At the age ol twenty-tlirue h*\nbegan his Purliuuientury career- and\nwas ut tiie time tne youugest member\nof the Lower House, 'ihe owner ol\nmany thousands oi ueres, his grace is\nkeenly interested in agricultural oi*\nlairs. The duchess hut beeu on terms\nof friendship with Queen Mury tor\nseveral years.\nTlie Cavendishes have always been\nnoted for their taciturnity, us un old\nanecdote testifies, Two members of\nthe family, generations ago, when traveling to their home in the north,\nwere shown, at an inn where they\nstayed lor tin* night, into a ruum iu\nwhich were three beds.\nBefore getting into bed each in turn\ndrew aside tlie curtains ot the wld\nbed, peeped in, and retired without\ncomment. The uext day, when they\nhad ridden fur from the inn, the une\nasked, \"Did you see what was iu that\nbed last night!\"\" to which the other\nreplied laconically, -\"Yes.\" They had\nboth seen u corpse in tne third ojdl\nThe Deserted Village.\nScotland has been considerably dis*\nturbed by returns showing decreased\npopulations in certain districts; but\nthere is one place in England much\nmore striking than anything Scutlund\ncun show.\nThis is Brendoti, on the easternmost\nedge of Brcndon Hills in .Somerset. Ai\none tiun', when the mines on the tup\nof the hills werc being worked, Uren-\ndon wus prosperous, with 000 inhubi*\ntant; a church, two chapels, u railway station, a cricket club, aud a\nbrass band! But it was discovered\nthat the same ore could be imported\ncheaper from Spain, and the mines\nwere closed. And thereupon the village was abandoned, leaving streets of\nuntenanted cottages and shops.\nThere is a little bit of Brcndon left\nnow, but most of the buildings wer<9\npulled down long since, aud the bricks\nand stones sold; while the railway wus\ncosed to all traffic about thirteen\nyears ago.\nWhen Fish Was Scarce.\nThe scarcity ol fbh in old tunes in\nEngland made it iti in cult lor tue poor\nto keep Lent. Pepys remarks, \"in\ntalk of the towne now is whether\nLent shall be kept with the striuliibSM\not tne king's proclamation, which *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nthought cannot be, because ol til.\npoor wim cannot buy Hull.\" lie aU\nsays, \"Notwithstanding my rusutuUuh,\nyet tor want of othcr vidua lis, 1 een received by the Lydia E. Pinkham\nVIedicine Company, Lynn, Mass.\nYoung Girls, Heed This Advice.\nGirls who are troubled with painful\n>r Irregular periods, backache, head-\niche, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion, should take\nimmediate action and be restored to\nhealth by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Thousands have been\nestored to health by its use.\nA'rite to Mrs. IMnkhuiu, Lynn,\nlass, for advice, free.\nNot On Duty\nMr. Smith (beholding clerical ac-\nquaintiince in seat ut theatre)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Why,\ndoctor, how i.s this? I thought you\nstrongly disapproved of theatre-going?\nClergyman\u00E2\u0080\u0094Well, you see, I'm\u00E2\u0080\u0094ah\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094on my vacation.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nEN6LISH RUGBY FOOTBALL\nOld Country Style of Game Is Mak.\ning Rupld Strides In tht Dominion.\nIn the pust year an effort has beeu\nmade to revive tha English game of\nrugby football in the province of Quebec, and three strong teams have been\nformed in Montreal playing the game\nunder the British Rugby Union rules.\nThe three clubs are McGill University, Montreal English Rug y Football\nClub, and the Canadian Pacific Railway, E.R.F.C. In Ottawa the Royal\nNaval College also hopes to take up\nthe game. English rugby football ii\nfurther played to a gict exleut iu\nWinnipeg, eitreme Eastern Canada.\nBritish Columbia and Calilornia,\nwhere it has in recent yeurs taken\nthe place of the American game.\nWhile it Is not the wish of KngUsh\nrugby clubs iu Canada to try and\nmake converts to the British game,\nyet they feel that it is time that Canada, especially on account of her eloss\nsituation to Great Britain, be able to\nput a fifteen iu the held under British rugby rules and capable uf holding its own against representative\nteams of Greut Britain, lt auy of her\noverseas dominions.\nThis would make one game of rugby\nthroughout the Empire and induce\nBritish, us well us tlie teams of South\nAfrica, Australia, and New Zealand\nto visit Cunudu.\nAlmost 500 first class clubs are members of tlie British Rugby Football\nUnion, and these clubs ure spread all\nover the world, the head office of the\nrugby buard being in Loudon, Eng-\nfund.\nThe rules governing the British\ngame have chuugi'd considerably since\nthe game was lust played iu these\nparts of Cunudu, now many year*) ugn,\nand the g.tne us played to-ouy is, uo\ndoubt, tlie lastcst, exciting and most\nspectacular guine of football in exist\nence.\nThere are lots of men In this country who know uud huve played the\ngrand uld game, aud muny will probably come forward uow aud help the\ngume along in tlie Dominion,\nAn English International team will\nprobably visit Canada in ttie spring\nof next yenr.\nBiSHOPS AND REPORTERS.\ncmtw\nThe wife of a clergyman warned\nhim uh he went off to officiate at a\nfuneral one rainy day. \"Now, John,\ndon't stand with your bare head on\nthe damp ground; you'll catch cold.\"\nA Sure Corrective of Flatulency.\u00E2\u0080\u0094When\nthe luidiKfM't'd food lien in the Htutuat-h\n! it throws off kancs calming paina and op.\n1 preanlon In the stomachic* region. The\nbelching or eructation of tht nf ono time, hut she landed this fellow just as we were beginning t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 give up hope,\nLawyer\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"You said thfl prisoner had\nrefused for some lime to SpOltk to\nyou. (hi tlie day in question did he\ncut you with malice prepense?\"\nWitness\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"No, sah; wif u ruwih,\nsah.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Baltimore American.\nHow Clouds Got Tholr Frlngti,\nProf. Tyndall used to explain to\npopular audiences, with the aid of a\nbrilliant experiment, that the blue\ncolor of the sky is owing to floating\nparticles of invisible dust that break\nup and scatter the short waves, which\nare the blue wuves, of light. Thia\noccurs principally at a great elevation, where tne utmuspheric dust is\nextremely fine, while in the luwer\nregions of the hir, where the dust U\ncoarser, the scattering affects all the\nrays, or colors, alike. The brilliant\nfringes of couds, seen nearly iu the\ndirection of the sun, ure largely due\ntu dust, which especially accumulates\nin the neighborhood of clouds aud refracts the sunlight uround their edges.\nQueen Consort's Flag.\nFor thc first time in the history of\nEngland the flag of a Queen Consort\nwas flown over Buckingham Palace\nrecently. The new Hug is a beautiful\ncreation, the colors being woven and\npuinted with marvellous dexterity.\nOne hide of it does not Miff r (nun the\nRoyul Standard; the other, composed\nof eight square imrtions, consists of\nthe Roy ul Standard with new quur*\ntarings, illustrating Queen Mary's\ndescent from the Houses of Cambridge und Teck.\nCould Turn Engineer.\nThe Duke of Sutherland is h skilled\nlocomotive engineer, and could earn\na living ut tlie work did he so desire.\nNo folding bed was ever so constituted us to form a very correct imitation of anything else.\nWhen the \"maybe\" man muffs it\nhe always claims ihui tlie miiii got into\nhis eyes.\nI am afraid teachers are taking up\nthe attitude that no one can teach;\nthem anything.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. Shuwcross.\nCanada's Butter Trade\nj Canada's export trade in butter is!\n1 not so greut ut the present time that\nher fanners cun afford to imperil\ntheir duiry industry by a tariff\nscheme thut would, in all probability, make the country's imports in\ntills article greater than her exports.\nIn fhe year ending 1010 Cunada shipped only 4,615,380 pounds of butter,!\nworth $1,010,274. Canada's iiqportfl\nof butter on the other hand, amount-'\ned to ti*\".4M pounds, worth $104,301.\nApartment Life\n\"My grandfather used to sleep In\n: a fourposter.\" I\n\"People used to live in those days.\nThere were no flats theu. Now I sleep\non an ironing board rigged up in thei\ndiningroom on two chairs.\nPerhaps ynu overestimate tho fun\nto be had in acquiring a case of delirium tremens,\nWe all flatter ourselves that wo\nhave great powers of resistonoo till we\nstack up against temptation,\nDon't let 'em anchor you iu the\nante-room,\nTeacher\u00E2\u0080\u0094\".Johnny, what do wo call\nthat awful region where there is so\nmuch fin* and smokeP\"\nJohnny\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Pittsburgh.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094J tidgo,\nWc have got Into the habit of spilling our best und biggest adjectives\nover tho most trifling circumstances.--\nII. lv Austin.\n\"DODD'S 'v-\nKIDNEY*\n'/.PILLS 4\nMontreal If Changing.\nThf aspect of fhe City ol Montreal\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094In fact, the Island of Montreal\u00E2\u0080\u0094Is\nehunelng rapidly, dny by day. TiV\nspread of the resldental areas westward, and northwari, Is simply phen\nomenal. The downtown section,\nwhich at the present time, is extending as far as Ontario itreet, Is bolntf\nrapidly given over to the ever-ln\ncreasing demands of business. Numbers of old churches have already\ndisappeared, within the In -t few\nyears, and moro will disappear In the\nnear future. Old lundmarks are dis\nappearing and new ones are taking\ntheir pluco.\nFor year\u00C2\u00AB\"1o come thern will continue a succession nf pull ine down\nand bulldlna up. each fnuh ln\u00C2\u00ABtancp\nshowing that the founders of Montreal never realized tho proportions\nto which It would nttaln. A few\nfigures will show succinctly what\nthe growth of Montreal has heen, ond\nwhnt mny be expected In the future\nThe nomilstlnn In IfiOO wan fi.ODOt\nIPia, 10 000; 1825, 32.000; 1952.. 67.700:\n1000. 262.200; in lOOfl, th\"re was nn\ne-tlmated population nf 201,002; In\nt!HW after fhe annexation of 8t\nHenry, Rt. Cunogondo nnd VHWny.\nIt was 337.400 nnd fn lfKW, 352.BM\nThe present population of Montreal\nand Its suburbs ts probably ubout\nhalf a million.\nThe rapid orowth of tho City >t\nMontreal. Is shown hv the fHCf thi!\nIn IB83 fU area was 4.(i24 acres; wblo'i\nhad grown to 5.072 ncros in I0.'K'\nTon yenrs later with various nnnexa\ntlons, It had reached tl xt\"nt <\u00C2\u00BB'\n28.747 acre?, or over 40 ?< % re miles\nSince 18BS fhe taxable real ostliti\nof the city hnd lncron*ed In vnlif\nten times over, from $39,174,120 t -\n$319,341,616 in 1010. In the ?nm\"\nperiod the value of exempt nronertv\nhad Increased from $6,017,800 U\n$109,102,499.\nChurch Union Experiments.\nWhile church union Is being discuss*\ned throughout Canada, the experiment\nwill be tried in Kingston us a vaca-\ntlon expedient during the next two;\nmonths.\nRev, I. A. Montgomery of Knox\nPresbyterian Church takes his vacation this month, and during his ab\nsenoe his flock unites with the Methodists of Dominion square Methodist\nChurch under Rev. E. I. Hart.\nIn August it wtll be the turn of\ntho Methodist divine to take a holiday and his congregation during that\nmonth will go under the spiritual\nguadianship of Rev. Mr. Montgomery.\nTho union of Presbyterian and.\nMethodist Churches at the Village of\nPortsmouth is also likely owing to the j\nfact that the membership of both con*\ngregatlons is very small und it is ditfl-\ncult to keep up expenses, A commit-\ntee from each church has been ap-\npointed to discass the matter.\nOno Hundred Years Old.\nAmbroise Guay, the oldest cititen la\nQuebec City, recently celebrated the!\n100th anniversary of his birth, and the\nevent was a memorable oue. Over 300\nrelatives and friends assembled at his\nresidence to do him honor, and after a\nmass at Bt. Jean Daotiste Church,\nthere was a banquet, Mr. Quay is still\nIn good health and spirits, but ho\nwai spirited away by his friends while\nthe celebration wus at its height, in\norder that he should not be too much\nfatigued by the event.\nBass For Chalk Lake,\nAs a result of the Interview which\nCharles Colder, M.P.P, for South Ontario, had with Hon. Dr. Roaume recently, u more generous policy will\nbe pursued ln stocking the inland\nlakes of the east and the north with\ngame fish. Chalk Lake is the particular place In which Mr. Colder ls Interested, and when the matter Is taken up a moro liberal policy with re-\nard to the stocking of the lakes with\nass will be inaugurated.\nA Youthful Invsntor.\nSamuel Colt was only fifteen years\n, cf age when ho Invented hli famous\n1 wv olver.\nArchbishop O'Connor Could Not Boar\nto See a Note Book.\nThe announcement t!.at Archbishop\nO'Connor hud confirmed three hundred children m St, Michael's Cathedral will remind people of the mutability of human iii-. says a writer\nin Toronto Star Weekly. Her- [3 the\nman who retired frum the rse because\n0! weight of years und iu order to\nprepare for deaih taking ip the work\nwhich tiif apparently vigorous young\nman was cut off by death from performing. The return of Ur. O'Connor,\neven temporarily, into public life re-\nminds tlie writer uf an iuteresting\nepisode connected with this saintly\nund humble-minded man. 'Ine writer\nwus told off to report Archbishop\nO'Connor's sermon at th; blessing oi\nthe bells of Bt. Mary's Church, Both-\nurst street, Torouto. Seated in me\nfro..t pew immediately under tiie pui-\np.t, 1 was writing away, oblivious Ol\neverything but getting down the ser*\nmon, when sudden iy there wus a\nbreuk in the discourse, and as I looked up to see what was the mutter, the\nArchbishop leaned over the pulpit\nand said: \"My friend, would you\nkindly put away your notebook, lt\ndisturbs me.\" ut course, 1 put away\nthe notebook nud reported the rest of\ntnc sermon from memory.\nThis reminds me of two other archbishops wait whom 1 had rattier interesting experiences. Tlie iir.it wus\nArchbistiop toons of tit. Boniface, in\nManitoba, Ou one occasion ufter 1\nhud interviewed lum In the puluee\nlibiui'}, tie said: \"You must excuse\nmy not going to the door with you,\nbecause 1 am sick ui my legs.\" 'Jhen\nUe added Wltn u smile, \"Some people\nthink I um sick in my head, but 1\nassure you tlie old man's head is\nsound yet.\" Considering the hard\nwork he wus tlieti doing, und did afterwards perform, many people were\nreudy to agree that Archbishop Tochfl\nwus uot sick in his head.\nThe other Instance was in connection with hia successor, Archbishop\nLangevin. The Manitoba school question controversy wus then at its\nhe.ght, und tnc newspaper 1 was\nworking on was strongly opposed to\nSeparate schools, which Archbishop\nLangevin was us strenuously supporting. When I called to see him he\nsuid jocularly; \"l just received an account for your papet, this attemoon.\n1 don't know w nether 1 shall continue to take it or uot. ft ia bud\nenough to be ubu-ed without having\nto pay for il.\" All of which goes to\nshow thut these prelates, weighted\nwith thc burdens of gieut oflices and\nresponsibilities, uie still moved like\nother men uml cupable of seeing the\nlighter side ol life,\nLand of Promise.\nJ. L. Cote, who represent Athabasca\niii the Alberta Legislature, seems to\nbe the right mun iur that riding, the\nurea of which is, roughly speaking,\n75,000 squure miles. He is suid to be\ninuu ugaiy acquutiited with his huge\nconstituency, and thut statement uppeurs more eus.ly belhnuble when\none remember? luat lie is a civil engineer.\nMr. Cote is enthusiastic concerning\nthe possibilities of Athabasca, und in\nu apeecu 111 tue Legislature, wlueh\nincluded quotations from the opinions\nof other civil engineers und from geological reports, na gave reasons lor\nlitis faith in tin* h.g riding's future.\nlu thc conclusion of his speech he\nbecame prophetic.\n\"Quite Hue,\" he said, \"we cun slur\nthe north country hy saying that there\nare muskegs. Mut swump loud is land\nthat needs drainage. In thc south of\nUie province the CP.lt. advertize today millions of acres of irrigated laud\niur sole. These lands were once considered us useless. 1 cluim thut the\nonly difference between these two\nclasses of lands is that iu one case you\ntuke the water from the rivers and\npour it on thc land, and in the other\nyou take the wuter from the land and\npour it into the rivers. Therefore, a\nshore of the public money thut is expended for irrigation in thu south\nshould be expended (or drainage in the\nnorth, and 111 u few years we will be\nable to advertise millions of acres of\nthe best laud lor occupation.\"\nDIXIE tobacco\nWrite to us today for our choice\nlist of Agents' Supplied. No outlay\nnecessary. Thev are money makers.\nApply B. C. I. Co., Ltd , 22s Albert\nSt., Ottawa, Oct\nREST AID HEALTH TO MOTHEt AKD CHILI.\nUn- WlMLO* 1 SOOTHINO SVKCr lilt I bMB\ninert for over SIXTY YEARS bv MILLIONS ol\nMOTUBKS for ih*-ir '::*lH,6kI-N WH'Ui\nTHKTH1NG, with PBRFTl SOCCRSfl \u00C2\u00BB\nSOUTHKS the Ctlll.U. sUF'tfaMJ thc GtaSS\nSU.AYSitll 1'AIN CORBS WIND COLIC. IH\nli the but rmiedv tr,i UIAKKHOHA. It U \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2olutely harmless. Be mrt and a*.k for \"Mffc\nWiB\u00C2\u00BBlo'w\u00C2\u00BB Soothiug Syrup,\" and take uo 0Ak*M\n\u00C2\u00ABmd. Twesty-bve ceotta bgttte\nORBINL\nwid iwu. .1 inllimtS, iwallia Jtlalt,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0rtiiiM, Sth luncbtn. Cun Stilt, Nf\nUU ar ior ttabialib-* ion juickln\npltManl tout-,; dual nut blUtol\n-11..inr bamlnga or rsinoTt Iba hall,\ni.'i you coo w.rk \hm faun*. II pal\nbonis at -1. . -n of d\u00C2\u00ABllvet\u00C2\u00AB&\nHorse Book 7 p fret.\nAUSOHUINL, Jk , f.\nfor mauklaS,\nll-'- ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i .it ... KedBoaiVarleoaa\nWon. Varicuctl-i, Bydroeala,\n 0'iltra, \"A'Miii. Strathi, Bralia*\n-_ itoin Pain and lotUmmailua\n. YOUNG. P. D. F., 137 Temoli St.. Sprin-rftild, Mm\nLVR1.SH, I.i*., Itilrnl, \u00C2\u00BB..\u00C2\u00BBrtlii *(>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*.\nfi.ruUt.il b> HlHTI*< Hill fc a WlNMi IU., WlM.MI\ntill \*iiimi. oui i. a illKUKiL to., WlaalM*f\n-JV| i Md UIIUKIUHM MUM. Uk, U4, VtaaMtar,\nHere's \u00C2\u00BB Home Dye\nThat\nANYONE\nOan Use.\nHOME DVEINChaa\nalways been mora or\nUn of a difficult uuder*\ntaking- Nol >\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 whan\nyou um\nDYOLA\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'leg\"\"1\"'!'\"\"\nJUST THINK OP ITI\nWith DY-OLA you can color eithar Waal,\nCotton, >l!k or Mixed Goodi Perfectly with\ntlii SAME Dre. No chance of uainf tht\nWWOWC Dye far the GooJa you have to color.\nSand I..i Saar.\u00C2\u00BBle\nCa>\u00C2\u00AB and Star?\nBook lat \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTha JOHNSON.\nmiCHARhSON\nCO., Limited,\nMontiaal, Can,\n'e\nHelping thi Frontiersman.\nOne uf tlu* big problems before the\nCanadian people to-duy is tin- eduoa*\ntiun uf the men whu ate doing the\nrough work un the frontier. They\nlabor all day in lumber \m*.<1-;, in\nmines and ill railway construction\ngangs. When night comes thi'y have\nno place to gu except tu tht' crude\ncamp fur foud and rest, Without\nproper faoillttes iur comfort and\nhealth, their lioUTB of idleness are\noften their undoing. Just BS in cities\nthe supreme social problem is to provide fur tiie haunt in tlie lives of\nyoung men between work and sleep,\nno it is in big frontier camps\nFur ten years the Reading Camp\nAssociation has been working to save\nthe frontier luboicra for lives of usefulness as Canadian citizen*). The as*\nsocial ion bus enlisted the interest ami\nco-operation of many of our leading\ncitiiens in Uus great work and has\nreceived tin* personal assistance of a\nscore or more uf university men who\nteach classes aud cuiiduct reading\ncircles among tne men in the cainjji.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Toronto Globe.\nHIGHER WAGES HERE\nAgricultural Labor is Not Su Well\nPaid in the United States\nIn adopting Reciprocity with the\n(init.-il Slates, Canada would entei\ninto nn unequal nnd unfair competition in farm labor, Senator Stone of\nMissouri, spoke at Washington the\nother dny on this phase of ilu- agreement, nnd showed tbnt farm labor\nwas cheaper in the States than in\nCanada. The Rrooklyn Times] commenting on thi*. speech \u00C2\u00BBs follows,\nshows how foolish it would be for\nthe Canuck to fry to compete with\ncheap Yankee labor:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"It hns been generally assumed that\nfarm wages paid on the Americun\naMe of the Hue were higher than\nthose paid in Canada, and that therefore tlie ndvnntugci of tree entry for\nCnnndinn farm products conceded hy\nthe proposed reciprocal agreement\niiiennt n decided advantage to the\nCnnndinn fanner at tin- expense of\nhis American competitor. But, according to Senator Stone of Missouri,\nwho in his -pei'eh quoted liberally\nfrom American official figures, the\nboot is on the other leg. The Missouri Senator demons)rated that the\nCanadian farmers really pay more\nfor their form labor than we pay on\nthe United States side of the line,\nfind that if anybody has cause to\nfear disaster from reciprocity it is\ntln.> Canadian and not the American,\nIt is the Canuck who has cause to\ndread the competition <>f cheap Yankee labor, and not the bloated plutocrat of Americun fnriiis.\"\nMy little girl, who is three years\nold, was \i-itnii! her grandparents in\nthe country. Some one handed her a\njelly gluss with a rim around the edge\nwhen she naked for a drink of water.\nShe looked at the glass rather disgustedly, and said. \"Mother. 1 can't drink\nout of a glass with a ruffle uround it.''\nHOW SKIN-TROUBLES\nHAVE BEEN CURED\nA Remarkable Record of Itching,\nBurning, Disfiguring; Eruption*\nSuccessfully Treated.\nW. N. U., No. 166.\n\"He used to he a straight enough;\nyoung chap. What made him get\ncrookedr\"\n\"Trying to make both ends meet, I '\nbelieve,\" Toledo llladc.\n\"I don't believe bachelors have uuy\nhearts,\" she suid, \"Why, ws'ro just,\nthe men who do huve them,\" he re-,\nplied. \"Why is tlmt?\" she nsked.\n\"Bccnusc wo haven't lost them.\"\nThe Marketer- \"Aren't you wasting\na good deal of that steak in trimming\nit?\"\nThe Hutcher\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"No, ma'am. I\nweighed it first.\"-Toledo Blade, I\nA Youngster of 101.\nA wonderful mun ia Peter Campbell, of Kurd's Mills, N.B. He completed the first year ul his second\ncentury about a mouth ago, but he\nis still working, uud planning more\nwork.\nMr. Campbell wus burn ut Grand\nUiver, P.K.I,, and run a ferry bout\nthere when fifteen yearn old. Shortly\nafterwards he moved lo Buss River,\nN.B., where he attacked the dense\nforest and made one of the best farms\nof that section. H<- lived at BuSI\nRiver till thirteen yeurs ago.\nHe has made shingle by hnnd during the pant few year-., and in the\nlust thirteen years hu has Hindu uud\nnold live canoes, He has unlerad fish\niug netting, which be will make into\nfour nets, und ha expects to be busy\nut lishing iu the coining season.\nMr. Campbell's eyesight pari ml ly\nfailed him thirty years ugn, but foi tlie\nlust ten yeurs tie ban been ublu to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ue perfectly without glosses.\n\"Yl light |0 see Ihe chll rtlliflg\nbungalow the Johnsons have got over\nin Hyde I'ark.\" Mrs. l.ansling suid\n\"It's only one story high, but the\nthc rooms are just as conceilicntly ar-\nranged us tbey can be, and there's\nthe neatest, tastiest little virage running uround three sides of it yuu ever\nThat thou* who have surTerctl lonf uift\nhijjn-li-v.lv hum ecietOB and Other torturing,\ndUh|*urlnf* eru|>tloni of the ekln atul icalp\nami who tmv<* lust fuilli In all manner ot\ntreatment, may learn thai there U one way to\nund iiinij'Mui.'..' relief, tlie foHuwlnt* remarkable\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tin--, uf condensed tenttmonlaU U published,!\nW. II White, 312 E. Cabot St. Philadelphia: Km--' tu ankle a mat* of eruptlun.\nMitiiTiinc limply Indescribable 'or six loue\nVesrs. Had to scratch till hluud ran and\nhealth wus undermined hum luck ot sleep,\nimil uitt Remedies cured tt without a mark.\nMrs. M. 0 Maltltnd, Jasper. Onl.: Itchy\nra\u00C2\u00BBh on her IjuIjvi head when but three\nmonths old. It .spread over entire body. Put\nmittens on hlin lo prevent oaring skin,\nHeduced tu a skeleton, one bath uiih Cuticura .sua)) and application <>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Cuticura unit-\nment soothed ban to sleep. A single \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2%\nlined him. Thinks I'hlbl vsuuld bave died\nbui iur Cuticura Remedies.\nMrs, Win. Hunt, WH Falrmoiint Ave.,\nNewark, N. J.: whole body * muss ot raw,\ntorturiiit; \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-< />-inn Ai;uii> wu beyond words,\nHull ull Ml out and etri M-eim-il reudy to\ndioii ort I Uothing v>unld .stick lo bleeding\nBosh, flu|'--d deatli would .-voon end It-arhil\nhiifTi'iiiih' Cuticura Remedies cooled the lteh\u00C2\u00AB\nHi,', bleeding Hah ut once und won iuted her,\nMme J. [I Itenaild, 277, Mentaua Sl.,\nMontour Treated by doctors 26 yean tor\nUd enema nn leg It peeled hum km-e\ndown lout lik<- i,ia tlesli. 1\u00C2\u00ABm|\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei \u00C2\u00AB.i ,[..-,!\ncutting if1- of) Dectaed to try Cuticura\nIti'iii'-ilit\". first lu two months' line ui Cuticura Remedies the \u00C2\u00BBu- cured.\nMrs Soiu Emmott '.'ll. Lena (ianlemt,\nhiuok Oieen, I.\" in Two lutie girls bad\niheudlul M-alp in.nble tlmt d.n luin , ulM\niiiii-miiiiii Cried witli Interne it. nint*. Hos-\npii.ii treatment give incntiui pum but did\nuo kihmI. M.iTi'ini three feata, cured i.y\nthree sets oi i hiihhu *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2..-[. and Ointment,\n11 A Kiut-kntT. ,'iTH WubDsb Ave.,\n(Iiiin-*..' It. nun'. imp iiuu spread hum bunds\nto IhxTv I it.-i.ilh lute hi' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ku. ml In idoedi.\nI>u< lurs niul remedies did no good (iiii. ui\u00C2\u00BB\nt-.l,,lp. Illl.lllU'l.l llllll I'ills !n|.|\u00E2\u0080\u009E,| illtllllg\nnuniiy uud cured disease in three week*,\nI- ruuk Orkney, 82(1 B, 48rd si . New Vorki\nIII IWellt) lOUl li'illls lu- l,..-n.r |i,* |i,ui\nIll-mi lu luul Willi u ilKiidlill 11111111111- Illli,\nBuffered agouleM uud could ma lie down or\ni HoupuMl l iitl'iirai'ii.tiui-ril\nid In\nflu,\nday\n\"flood intentions ought to count for\nsomething,\" remarked the generous\nperson. \"But they don't,\" replied\nMis\u00C2\u00AB Cayenne, \"The mosl Impolite\nacquaintance I have in one lets you\ngee what nu effort she is mnking to he\npolite,\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Washington Star.\nMis Kale brougham, 900 Dewey St.,\nlien illusion, Vl . lu-h cn en her buby\nami lomi turned h> wateiy, umtMi ecaema\novei lure, tuud ulid bu.lv Ue wus u feHi|ul\nhiciii uml all i I tem pin ut i ure were iiunir- -.\nVastly Improved In u week by ute of emu uie,\nRemedies and raunskln was cleat ami healthy.\nO, J. Hume, 27. New ftoud nrenlford,\nI'.iu/lniiil loilured lur tive viae wild l>\u00C2\u00BBd\nsktii dbease. Aii.-cd.d ii'>'pli\u00C2\u00BB] hv.* months\nwithout success, Covered with eruption, No\nfllerp nui rest. Kelt Hke leailnf* li iiim-K to\npieces witb terrible Itching, With lirsl nppli.\nration of I'utfiiira Ointment was relieved and\nirot L'oud nlfcht's sir, j, ,;i -4 rorlnlr-ht ( uih\n('lira Ointment -*\u00C2\u00AB\nLOCAL NEWS.\nw-s**ww^4-ww4> 4- aHt\"* \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB>*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0$\u00C2\u00BB\nRev. J, P, Westman spent several\ndays in town this week.\ngary were Oranbrook visitors Wed- E\nnesday.\nH. Jones and H. Y-. Macktd of Cal-.\ngary were at tbe Cranbrook on Wed-'\niieaday.\nMra. H. L. Sawyer of Marysville, I\nwas shopping in Cranbrook on \V\u00C2\u00ABd-j\nnesday.\ni A. L. Couzamt of Marysville waa\nQ, H. Thompson went to Proctor j transacting buaineaa in Cranbrook ou\nThursday. He will return Monday\nThursday,\nrf. (.;. Bradley\ntown Friday.\nif Nelson was\nEQ, i<\ Walkman ol hi Paul, Minn,\nwas a guest at thc Cranhrook on\nThursday,\nF. Lawc ot Pern\nFriday.\nYou can get a large carton for 50c\nF. Parks & Co.\nHardware. Stove-,\nHouse Furnishing Goods\niw hi th,' elty\nMr, and Mr\nWycllffe. were Ore\nMrs. 11. Epstein ol Vancouver, was Thursday,\na Oraabrook visitor Friday.\nI. J. McOrolian\nJ. Reed nl New York was m town sou & Rlacll pla\nTuesday. city Friday.\nCheater Btaple*,, ol\ninbrook visitors on\n..I Nelson, the Maim,i was in the\nSimps In tlimu\nA Manning's.\nsets at Campbell W B. Merkle) I Winnipeg, was in\ntbe olty and \u00C2\u00BB ni, .i at tbe Until\nbrook Tuesday\ni F. 0. Adams ol Dulutb wan In town\nWednesday Walker's grape lulce the Invigora\nting drink lor ii itiinmci mouths.\nM R Hill ol Taber, was n town Campbell A Manning\non Tuesday\nC. a Howard I Vancouver was\nWANTED, MEN who can registered al the Cosmopolitan on\nSING, PLAY or DANCE, Wednesday\ncither witli or without pro- gpeol\u00E2\u0080\u009E, caj!b pl ,,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,, Iot\nfeSSional experience, for CRAN- Saturday Finest Creamery butter 3\nBROOK BIG FALL. FAIR ** \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"' \"' >':'>sl Kootenay Produce\nMINSTREL TROUPE. [f and Provision ho e\nyou have any liking tor this p i.u\u00E2\u0080\u009E,i \u00E2\u0080\u009E, Wardner was transact-\nkintl ol work, get in touch .11 Ing business In Crnnbrook on Thura\nonce, by dropping a Postal to Uv\nGeo D, Ingram, V 0 Box 224 , , WilllllH' \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E, N woods, of\nCt anbrook. Fernie were registered at tho Oran-\n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 brook on Wednesdai\nJ H Buchanan ol Moyle was In\t\nthi citj Wednesday Mr and Mrs. a Callender o( Van\ncouver were registered at the Cran-\na F Caldwell ol ICaslo was tn thei brook Thursday\n..'.) Wednesday,\n Dr F. 0. Hudsiiiilli. and Fred llall-\n0. Bradwin ol Ferine was ln the drew- ol Spokane ivere guests at the\ncity Monday. Cranbrook Friday\nDon't Forget--=\nThe Social and Dance\nTo be given under the Auspices of the\nLadies' Orange Benvolent Association\n1\nIn the Carmen's Hall on\nWednesday, Aug. 2nd\nPostponed from Tuesday, .Inly 85tli\nThis poalponatuenl wus intida nut of courtesy to tun Sl. Mary's Ohuroh, who, after\nihe arrangements hud boen made it was found wore holding a social the same evening,\nRefreshments served\nHome-made Ice Cream\nDancing commences at 9 pm\u00E2\u0080\u0094A good time assured\nWe have a lew copies a the' nj!Hre!Eri3faiSle^MSliMraiab\u00C2\u00A5ariSre!lS)alf Mraffira/aHaBraraiaiauUBias/SiBiaeiias\nsouvenir Issue ol the ProBpeotor on S\nhand. It la not too late to send theu, j\nto your friends. I\nAUDITORIUM THEATRE\nMra, J. Stannart, Mrs. 1). Baldwin\nand Miss Florrie Baldwin will visit\nfriends at Ourson Sunday lor a\nweek's holiday.\nRandolph Itruce of Windermere waa \u00C2\u00A3\nat the Cranlirook Wednesday. Mr. | (r\nllruec went east on the local Thurs- B\nOne Night Onlv\nMONDAY, JULY 31\nCRANBROOK\nHritish Columbia\nK, Campbell ol Moyie\nWednesday.\nC. F. Fish,\ntown on Monday.\n,.it Chicago, was in\nMr. and Mrs. J Little of Wycllfle,\nwere guests at the Cosmopolitan on\nWednesday.\nT. Soutb and T. Horton Campbell\nleft on Thursday morning for Klngs-\n;n the: Bate on a fishing trip.\nWe are convinced you buy your Hardware at\nJ. D. McBRIDE'S\nIf for no other reason,\nBecause We Carry The\nSTOCK\nOur Lines are becoming more updo-date every dale\nantl we take the greatest earn in selecting In order to meal\nyour Immediate wants and guarantee satisfaction.\nBring Vs Your Next Order\nJ. D. McBride\nWholesale Hardware Retail\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094^r.^rr^toKS\nTHE HAHNISSS STANDARD\nIh pretty Iiinii In this shop. It has\nto Iir to maintain the reputution we\nhave earned [ur harness that can be\nrelied upon. We particularly invite a\ncall from those who have experimented with cheap mail-order harness.\nWB1 ARK READY TO PROVE\nto them that not alone is our harness infinitely superior, but also that\ncounting express, freight or other\ncharges, they have really paid more\nfur the poor than we cDirge for the\ngood.\nThe Cranbrook Trading Co., Ltd.\nCkAMikOOk\nE. Butterlll ol Creston wa\ncity on Tuesday.\n Preserving currants, gooseberries\nC. G. Griffin of Hamilton, was tn (ana raspberries on the market now.\ni the city Monday. Campbell & Manning.\nIt C. Buchanan, of Vancouver, was' Ml. anj Mra A cummings of Per \\n; in town Monday. ni(, were cranbrook visitors on Fri-\n1 day.\nA. C. O'Neil. of Ymir. was In tlie \t\ncity Sunday last. Constable Barnes of Marysville wa\n\"\" ' in the city Friday on official busi-i\nH. L. Clark, of Wycliffe was In the ne88\ncity Monday. .\n ' W. J. Allen, of Vancouver, was re-!\nA. C. Bowness was at Jaflray Wed-j glst(!reu at the Cranbrook Sundayl\nday on business. ja9t\nBob Huggart of Marysville wae In ,,Wec Wullie Molnnls\" is slated toj\ntown on Friday. ; |,ec01nc the leader of the Liberal par-!\n~ . . ' ty in this province.\nS. C. Baker of Wardner was in the, \t\ncity Thursday. j Mr ana MrB. j. s. ataples ofl\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 j Wycllfle were Cranbrook visitors on\nE. D. Becker of Winnipeg was in j Monday.\nthe city Friday. ' \t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Born\u00E2\u0080\u0094at Cranbrook Sunday, July\nJ. Irvine of Calgary waa ut th \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 03 to Mr aml MrB H c Higgins a\nCranbrook Thursday. ! brighter.\nOtis Staples, of Wyclifle, was In the; j. Collins, and T. Hardy of Ward\ncity Thursday. ner were at thc Cosmopolitan Sun \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n day last.\nJ. H. Roberts of Winnipeg, was at. \t\nthe Cranlirook Thursday. J. W. Robertson and son, of Fernie j\n ; were guests nt the Cosmopolitan on j\nPreserving raspberries, fresh every; Monday.\nday at the Fink Mercantile Co. \t\n Miss Irene Kirwin has accepted th |\nN. A. Disney of Garfield, Washing I)l)aition of stenographer at the gov\nton was in town Thursday. ernment offices.\nday morning. |\nAl. MuU of Fernie, president ot the,\nFernie-Fort Steele Brewing Co. was!\nin the city Thursday on company\nhusiness, j\nMr. and Mrs. W. Mayhew of Hunts-\nville, Ont. were guests at the reel-.\ndence of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Hayes j\nou Sunday laat. j\nH K. PitM'ce und Co.\npreseut Kdward Millou\nTHK\nKoyle'n\nj Squaw Man\nUnquestionably the Most Pasoinatlug American\nEj ~~j Pluv nf :i Decade\nMrs. E. Ismay left on Wedneaday , @\nfor Fernie to Join her husband, who '\u00C2\u00A7.\nie the manager of the Davis Bro\u00C2\u00AB.\nElectric Co.\nrhe Sensation of the Century\nExactly us\nW. S. Neville of Vancouver, S. H. |\nSmith of Toronto, and Chas Wat-, H\nkins of Calgary wete registered at the Ej\nCranbrook Friday.\nJ. Haddin, representing the Jahn il\nGait Co. of* Toronto is in town. Mr. I 6\nHaddib will have charge of the Bewer g\npresented two years\nTheatre, New York\nu Wallace's\nPRICES' Children, 25c, General Admission, 50c,\ni niww. Reserved Seats, 75c, and $1.00\nAl Una Uealtii' Muqdiy Drug (.'o.'s Store\nconstruction in thia city.\nJ. H. Malcolm, who passed his civil service at Nelson last week, has\nbeen appointed a clerk on the government stall at Cranbrook.\n' e![Siaii3li2iai?ja?!;:''.1Jjai3;a!-P:l?,S-!=ii\"!3! M\:-0*>M?IE]iift MaV-iaaiaie/SfS\nW. Cramm, of Yorkton, Sask. was\nat the Cranbrook Friday.\nWANTED, MEN who can\nSING, PLAY or DANCE,\nJ. L. Day of Tacoma was at the! either with or without pro-\ncranbrook on Tuesday. fessional experience, for CRAN-\nHeinz Mince Ment put up in atone BROOK BIG FALL FAIR\njars. Campbell & Mnnning. ! MINSTREL TROUPE. If\n,- . , ,u T,\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 'you have your liking for this\n\. A. I,iiiidboin of Wardner wns ltl|' J .\nthe city Wednesday. >\u00C2\u00BB'nd of work. Set ln touch at\n once, by dropping a Postal to\nSpecial cash price on butter for,Geo D lngram p. O. Box 224,\nSntnrdny. Finest crcumery butter 3'\nlbs. far '.io. East Kootenay Protlue\nanil Provision house.\nCranbrook.\nF.\nH. S. Elliott aud C. G. Lawrence\nA. Patrick of Vancouver was nt|\u00C2\u00B0' Vancouver were registered at the\n1 Ihc Working man's!\nBarber Sli up\nilie Cranbrook Wednesday.\nH. E, Crosswell, of Nelson, was at\ni i the Crnnlirouk Wednesday.\nJ. McCallum, of Grand Forks was\nin the city Sunday laat.\n5 McDonald's!\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 S'exl in I mperial Bank \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n\ ForagoodHotBath|Liorv7,to1LaT\nCranbrook Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. K. Porter, of\nPittsburg, Pa., were guests nt the\nCranbrook Monday.\nH. B. Dixon and J. M. l.ewla of\nSpokane were registered at the Cran-i\nN^-xt tu [mperial Bank *i H. S. HuimU, of Montreal, was at ,,rook \u00C2\u00B0\" Sundayjast,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> tbe Crnnbrook Sunday last. ; \u00E2\u0080\u009E , ,, . , \u00E2\u0080\u009E , . . ;\n- Born\u00E2\u0080\u0094at. Crauhrook Sunday July!\naneouver ,va\u00C2\u00BB a -:| '\" Mr' nml M,'s' J' Saunderson\nhursday. I twi\" '1\u00C2\u00AB1'B\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB''\u00C2\u00B0-\nTake a Hint \u00E2\u0099\u00A6,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 l.. A... ....A. ml nan In \u00C2\u00BBnt.. *\ntram the few words we say in thii\nadvertisement. Soft drinks will\nnuench the thirst as well as anything\nyou can drink. The many different\nthings that we bottle are all made ol\npure materials and tbey are good for [\nthe health us well as lor ipienehing ;\ntbe tblrat.\nOur bottled goods not only taste\nbetter but are better to use than or\ndlnary water.\nPHONE 73.\nP O. BOX 801.\nEAST KOOTKNAY\nBOTTLINO CO.\nor u \"mul hair cut <\nHurry E, Pettitt, of Medicine Hat,;\nwas at the Cranbrook Monday.\nFor ;i K\u00C2\u00ABjud shave!\n ise:\nj. e. McDonald\nBox 332\nF. II. Hcnilron, ot Montreal, was in\nthe city and registered at the Cran-\n. brook Sunday last.\nJ Greaves, of Medicine Hat, was ~\nai the Cosmopolitan on Mondny. \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Meredith, of Creston and H. J\n, ' Howlnud of Wnrdner were registered\nIt O, Nelson, of Poison was u: at the Cosmopolitan Mondny.\n| guest at the Cranbrook Sunday last. \t\n F. W. Adalph, Mrs. F. W. Ailnlph\nT II McDonald of Lethbridge wn and Mrs. F. Adolpb of Paynes werc\n! a JHOBl al lbe Cranbrook Thursday Crnnbrook visitors Wednesday.\nMi ami Mrs\nN It,, were (\nday,\nB. Gale of SI., John\nranbrooh visitors Frl\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094At Crnnbrook, on Wednesday\n.Inly 20, to Mr. and Mrs. Charlen\nPnrner, of Cherry Crook, a daughter,\nIII H lloiinell. ol Fernie was re- TI|C ''rnnbrook nine will play n\nglstorod nt tlie Crnnbrook ou Tnes- Kallspel\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 team n series of guinea on\nThe Fink Mercantile Company are ,|\u00E2\u0080\u009E, ; .Inly 80 nnd 81, nnd August. 1 nnd\nBbowing Honietbing very dainty in | 2nd.\ndinner ware\u00E2\u0080\u0094white body with green, F. Dickinson of .lalfray was truns-l ' *\nbnnd andhnlr line cdf-1actin|! ,,ll\"lno\u00C2\u00BB1' in tjic city on Tnee- W\u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00BB Cline president of the Cran-\nElectric Restorer lor Men\ni\u00C2\u00BBhoiphonoii;*i?i?,r:;aln\u00C2\u00B0:'i'.'..b\u00C2\u00B0.'lS.\nelm ui vitality, fammn *m\iSS^S^Sa\ ' \" I dnv\nSfel'-to^JMBftS ing-muetb. seen to be appreelat-1\ney gol\nbrook lishing club wns at Bpokane\nWedncndny nttcndlng the big celebra-\nMr. and Mrs. C. M. Lang ot Cal-1 tlons.\nThe new Indian Tree design in\nRoyal Grafton china now on dis-|\nplay In Fink's inimitable Chinn de-,\npartment.\nThe new isolation hospital wlll\nsoon be under construction, and will\nbave eight rooms, and will coat in\nthe neighborhood of (3,500.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Mallandalue ofl\nCreston, were in town TueBday. They,\nleft on Wednesday for a week'B out-'\ning In the Windermere district.\nW. J. Allen lelt on Thursday lor\nCalgary on\u00E2\u0080\u009Ebusiness. Before returning to Cranbrook he will visit Vancouver and other coast cities.\nSpecial cash price on butter lor\nSaturday. Finest Creamery butter 3\nlbs. far 90. East Kootenay Produce\nand ProviBion hotiBe.\nMrs. A. G. Lambert who has been\nvisiting at the residence of Mr. and\nMrs. B. A. Haynes for thc past week\nreturned home to Nelson on Mondny\nlast.\nA lot of rubbish on lire in tbe back\nof A. Cameron's residence on Burwell\navenue brought out tbe Fire Department on Monday. No damage waB\ndone to thc property.\nConstable A. C. Adney of Wardner\nbrought In to thc hospital Thursday\nnn insane mat, named Giovannc Fab-\nbio. Ho will be sent to New WeBt.\nminster.\nA sad accident occurred at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. F. Oassldy\non Sunday, when their little boy\nfell from a high chair and broke bia\nleft arm.\nBill Smith, tire warden at Jaflray,\nhad the mlslortune to have a rib\nrib broken on Tuesday last. He\ncame to Cranbrook Wednesdny to\nreceive medical attention.\nA man named Dan Flynn who waa\nemployed at the Hanson block, was\nstruck by a (ailing brick on Thursday, his injury ia nothing serious,\nonly a acnlp wound.\nTondera wore called this week for\nthe construction of an addition to\ntbe St. Eugene hospital. Tbe new\nwing wlll bo 30x04 feet, four stories\nhigh, comprising 32 rooms.\nMr. and Mrs. Geo. Mead ot Croa-\nton, nnd Mr. and Mrs. .lames Mates\nwho have been outing at, St. Mary's\ntake for the past week returned to\nCrnnbrook Friday.\nThe Methodist Sunday school picnic was held on Thursday afternoon\nat the grove on Bt. Joseph creek,\nnear the brick yard. There wgs a\nlarge attendance and all enjoyed the\nouting.\nR. E. Beattie and E. Small lelt\non Wedneaday morning (or the Windermere country, in Mr. Beattie'a\nnew Ford auto. They will visit Golden helore returning to Cranbrook.\nMrs. William Doran was tbe most\nsurprised woman in Cranbrook on\nWednesday evening when a number o(i\nfriends assembled at ber residence toi\ncelebrate her birthday. Tbe party\nspent an enjoyable evening.\nThe United States Senate having\nadopted the reciprocity agreement,\nCanada will have the unusual experience of keeping her neighboss\nguessing as to what to do in a matter nf international nature.\nTbo Woman's Institute will hold a\nmeeting on Thursday August thc 3rd\nat tbe residence of Mrs. English, on\nArmstrong avenue. Mrs. Win. Doran\nwlll demonstrate how to make salads\nA cordial welcome is extended to all.\nR. K. Beattie and E. Small, wbo\nouting in tbe Windermere country returned on Thursday accompanied by\nMr. Seigel, manager of the Imperial\nBank at Lethbridge, and Mr. It. E.\nBeattie, senior, of Portage la Prnir-\nie, Man.\nTbe Fink Mercantile Compnny report the most satisfactory sale of\nfruit this season that tbey hnve ever\nexperienced \u00E2\u0080\u0094 tbey attribute the\nheavy demand to their system of\nselling out each dny, thereby giving . their patrons fresh fruit tbe\nday it is picked.\nDetective G. Thompson, ot Spokane\nwbo has been ln Oraabrook (or two\nweeks awaiting extradition papers to\ntake H, Wilson across the line, led\non Monday with his prisoner. Wilson\nls wanted in Spokane [or burglary\nand assault, and ls considered a bad\nman.\nHOLY NAMES ACADEMY AND\nNORMAL SCHOOL\nSpokane, Wash.\nCatalogue and Rates on Application\nAddress Sister Superior.\nGrand Drawing\nFor an up-to-date\nStuvesant\nPianole\nPiano\nWoth $860.00\nOn display in Show window of CCS\nA Second prize of a new baby\ncarriage\nTicket $i.oo\nComing to the Auditorium\nWinnipeg, July 24, Ull,\nAuditorium Amusement Co.,\nCranbrook, B. C.\nDear Sir:-\n\"Thu Flower ol the ltane.li\" closed\ntheir engagement here on Saturday\nto very good business. Tbe show Is\na gnnd clean musical comedy. Tho\nmusic Is bright and catchy, singing\ngood, costumes and scenic, equivalent\npretty. 1 have no hesitation In snying that It Is one ol the best musl-\ncal shows thnt bave toured the west,\nthis season, nnd feel sate It will wnr-\nrnllt the support ol your patrons,\nYours vcry truly,\n0. P. WALKER.\nFOR SALE.\nA house (or Bale in central position\nI the city. Apply the Proapector.\nROOMS TO LET\nTwo well appointed rooms to let\nor gentlemen, iu a very central\nosltion. Apply the Prospector.\nScobell's Liquor, Tobacco\nand Drujf Cure SaWSSit;\nI Ah -iliul, Tobacco ami l>ruf-ti- It counteract) the\n1 tltvclu almost Instantly--'uiiiovch all cmviiige.\n| Aliei tulci-iK tho tiuatiiieni tliciu will uever be iby\nneed tifttirliik IntoxkmiU or uie drugi again. Can\nhe Riven Hccrctly. We hnve yet tu liea. ot one\ntuiluit-. Mulled under uetmrute cover to uuy id-\nPrice irj.lij iiu*. or U hoxet lor 11010. Tht\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oob-m Urug Co., lit. Vathftrla\u00C2\u00ABi, Out,\nUUK HHIl'MKNTH.\nthe tjIi.-'iiumtH from milieu in the\nOranbrook Diatrict for the pant week\nnml yenr tn dutu were uh follows:\nSullivan 387 8,712\nSt. ffltigene 02 3.726\nTotal\n449\n12,437 THE PROSPECio**, CRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nA. G. Bowness\nWholesale\nWine and Spirit Merchant\nMitniifarturtir of all kinds\nof Agrlated waters\nAgent for\nAnheuser Busch Budweiser and\nFernie Beers.\nMelcher's Red Cross Gin and\nP. Dawson Scotch Whisky.\nImporter of ull kinds of Foreign and Domestic\nWines antl .Spirits\nlinker St.\nigl\u00C2\u00ABWl.l\u00C2\u00ABl.l\u00C2\u00ABl\u00C2\u00ABiBliBIMil\u00C2\u00ABlal-*lllM}rf\nANCIENT ORDER \u00C2\u00A3 FORESTER\nMeets id Carmen's Hull Una und 4tb\nThursday of each month at a p.m.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2harp.\nA. McCuWuD, Chief Hunger\n0. A. Abbott, Secretary.\nVliltlni Brethren made welcome.\nOODRT ORANBROOK, I94t\nKnights ut Pythias\nCranlirook, B.C.\nCrescent Lodge, No.\n.U\nMeets every Tueaday\nat 8 p.m. at\nFraternity Hall\nT. G. Jones, 0. C.\nJ. M. Boyce,\nK. of R. & ti.\nVisiting brethren cordially invited to attend .\nJ. W, RUTLEDGE,\nGraduate uf Ontario Veterinary\ncollege, Toronto ln lain. Gradate and medalist of McKUUp\nVeterinary college, Oblcago, 111.\nin 1900. Registered member of\nBritish Columbia association.\n.LL CALLS N1UHT . OAV PttOMPTLV AIUNUkOTO\nOFFICE AT :mcKIN8TRY'I UVCRV BARN\nORANBROOK, B. C.\nT. LAIDLAW,\nMilling Engineer and\nB.C. [..ami Surveyor,\nP.O Um 230. I'huna 223.\nORANBROOK,\nB. C,\nThanks to Mr. Busch\nLas Angeles, Cal., July 11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nAmerican Medical asaociation, recent-\nly in session here, has sent by cable\ntwo messages to Adolpbus Busch, at\nhis German villa, in recognition of\nbis liberality In promoting the alma\nand interests of the association. The\ntlrst one reads:\n\"Adolphus Busch, Langenschwalbach\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094The president, Dr. Mattiuon, the\nlocal committee and 34,000 members\nof the American Medicine Association send hearty greetings nnd best\nwishes and a rising vote d( thanks\nfor your generoaity to the American\nMedical Association, your donations\nto the scientific advancement and\nyour contribution to Its personal\ncomfort.\n(Signed)\nJOHN B. MURPHY,\n\"President..\"\nThe second one is as follows:\n\"Adolphus Busch, LangcnHcliwalhach\n1 \u00E2\u0080\u0094Cordial greetings, grateful appreciations and best wishes from , i morl-\ncan Medical astociatlon.\"\n(Signed)\nMurphy, Gorgas, Jacob!, Welsh,\nMattHon.\nAdditional Locals\nMaurice quain of tbe Empire Electric Ca., returned on Friday from a\nhusiness trip to Medicine Hat.\nJudge Joseph Rynn loft on Tuesday\non a buslnesa trip to points in West\nKootenay.\nMr. and Mrs. W. XI. Holland of\nDouglas Arizona, nro visiting at the\nroBldonco of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ohns.\nMagee, this week.\nMrs, J. F. Bridges and MrB. J. H.\nJordan nnd child will leave today\nfor Sheffield, Bunluiry Country, M. I).\nfor a holiday; (luring tholr utay tlioy\nanticipate looking up boi X tholr\nold frlendn nnd uci|unlntencos, uIbo\nmnking a visit to Lakcvllln corner.\nMiss Barton, nurse who linn boon\nfor a long time staying at tho homo\nof Mrs. T. Cnsaldy, Is lenving today\nfor hor homo in Cumberland, Quoen'H\nCounty, N. fl. MIhb Barton hns\nmade n large elrclo of frlonds during\nher otny In Crnnbrook, from which\nslio wlll be badly minuet], besides\nbeing a faithful and regular member\nof the Baptist church choir.\nK. P. PRESENTATION\nDRS. KING & GREEN\nPhysicians and Surgeons\nOflice at Residence, Armstrong Ave.\nOFFICE HOURS\nForenoous - - - - a,00 to 10.00\nAfternoana - - - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a.00 to 4.00\nBvsnlngs - - - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 7.10 to 1.10\nSundays 1.10 to 4.10\nIRANBROOK : B. 0.\nr******+*a\*Afir***\u00C2\u00BB*AV*l/********\\nCentury Restaurant\nK. Y. Uyematsii, Prop.\nTHU BEST PLAOH IN\nTHK CITY FOR A\nGOOD MUAL.\nBOARD AND ROOMS\nOpposite C. I'. II. Depot.\nPhone 119 P. II. llox 104\nAt the last regular meeting of the\nK, of P'b. T. S. Jones, Chancellor\nCommander, hail a vory pleasant\nduty to perform, this was to present\nto the several members wbo made\ntlie most regulnr attendants on the\nregular mooting nights. For the railway boys Hro. 8. Grlfllth and Bro.\nJ. Clnrk drew the aame marks, si\nanother splendid modal faced with\nthe Lodge emblem, n duplicate of the\noriginal prize, Is to bu obtained and\npresented to them; llro. J. lloy\u00E2\u0080\u009EH') ', ^T OLiINE\nwoh Hocunil, receiving a lodge pin.\nFor the city boys llro. B, A. Hill\nwon a beautiful locket lor first and\nllro. P. Kummer a lodge button for\ntlle hit,,nil\n^^^ry*VWTVWWWWWy\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094At ('rnnbrook, nn Tliuraday,\nJuly 27th to Mr, and Mra. Geo. Ladd\na daughter.\nol Hit old MAliltolin II.ii,.i\nsimii okii non I,* fm md in nit\nMANITOBA HOTEL\nFirst Olali Work In\nall branches of tim\n; Tonsorlal Art- >\nMINERAL ACT.\n(Form F.)\nCertificate of Improvement!.\nNOTICE.\nGibraiter Fraction Mineral Claim,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ltuate ia the Fort Steele Mining\nDivision of Soutb East Kootenay\nDistrict,, located at the Skookum-\nchuck River.\nTAKE NOTICE tnat we, Jacob\nNelson, F. M, C. 37,206 B., Nils John-\nsun, F. M. C. 61TQ B., Robert McNair\nF, M. C. 6170 ii., intend, sixty days\nfrom date hereof, tu apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate ot\nImprovements, fur the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice tbat action\nunder section 37, must be commenced\nbefore the issuance oi such Certificate\nof improvements.\nDated tbis 29th day of May, A. D.\n1911.\nNILS JOHNSON. Agent.\n11-91 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMINERAL ACT,\n(Furm F.J\nCeiiltica.i\nof Improvement*.\nNOTICE.\nOo.deu Key Mineral Claim,\nsituate in the Fort Steele Mining\nDivision of South East Kootenay\nDistrict,, located at tbe Skookum'\nchuck River.\nTAKE NOTICE that we, Jacob\nNelson, F. M. C. 37,206 B., Nils John-\nson, F. M- 0. 6170 B., Robert McNair\nF, M. C, 617U B., Intend, sixty daya\ntrom date hereof, to apply to tbe\nMining Recorder lor a Certificate qf\nImprovements, fur the purpose of obtaining a Ciuwn ***************************\nPHONE\n56\nTHEQUAUTYgOR^\nGold Standard !\nTeas and Coffee\nOur whole time is devoted to your wants in the\nGrocery line thereiore we absolutely guarantee every\narticle that leaves uur store.\nWe will thank our customers to advise us if at any !\ntime goods are received that are not No. i quality.\nCAMPBELL & MANNING I\nStaple and Fancy Grocers\n**************************************<*****\n* \"ffttfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff\n' \u00E2\u0096\u00BA\nNORTH STAR HOTEL\nKIMBERLEY. B.C.\nD.J.JOHNSON\nCARPENTER AND\nBUILDER\nCONTRACTS SOLICITED.\nHOUSES\nFor Salt er Rent \u00C2\u00BBt Reasonable\nPrion.\nLumsden and Lewis St.\nPhone No. SSI.\nf\nW, DJABW, Proprietor.\nw A Moaclilm ol St. Mary's Lnkc\nwm, in t.'iwn on Friday\nli Crichton, ol Kolowna; .1 Ino\nunit., ii custom oulcor Irom Bhang'\nlinii, accompanied l\u00C2\u00BBy A. n. I'Vnwlrk,\niln,vi* ovor Irom Fori tltoelo Priday.\n.i ii Fink, ol Wlndormoro, wun al\ntin' Cosmopolitan Friday.\nConstable \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' Walsh of fori Btoolo\nwnu In town on Frldny\nT. T McVlttle nf Foil Btoolo wim\nIn town nn business Friday.\nU. A. Moflott ol Hossland, wun\nat tbt Crnnbrook Friday.\nand we cannot jo on with them. But\nreciprocity in holoro the House to be\ndealt with. Tho Liberal leadorn do\nnot want reciprocity to wait. Wc\nwant It to pass either In the House\nor before the country.\"\nOpposition londor, ii. L. Borden\nreplied that nn Canada hnd wnltcd\nforty yenrs (or reciprocity, It could\naltoi'd to wait six months longer and\nnllow redistribution to Rive the weut\nltn proper roprosontntlon.\nThe situation i'i Uini. Conservatives\nwant redistribution lirsl with a lair\nrepresentation for tho went, then nn\nniipenl to tl iiiilry on the reel-\npioi'ity agroement,\nThe Llborals wanl reciprocity pan-\nned, mid ihey imu,id delay nn election\nfor u yenr or two, mil then give redistribution.\nWith nn incroanod representation to\nHie went thoy nre afraid ol tho ro-\nsult, especially lu the west, and pro-\nlor to make tho reciprocity fight\nwithout (I'hlillonnl representation.\nHence they are trying tu throw the\nI rtsponnlblhty ou ths opposition.\n********************************************\nYour Husband Would Enjoy\na Delicious\nBeefsteak\nfor Dinner\nTJ K has luul a hard duy,\nhut his tireil body uud\ntugged brain will hn\noheered by Mm sight und lastn\nof ll nice cut of liHUfslettlf,\ndone lo u turn and served up\nwith .loino of those Crush\nonions. Wm know tho cut\nwhich will suit him nxuclly\nshall wu send il V\nP. BURNS & CO.\nPhont 11\nP. O. Boi I\nScene from \"The Squaw Man\" wlll ba at Tha\nAuditorium, Monday, July 31it\nW. R. BEATTY\nUndertaker,\nErab&lmer,\nfuneral Director,\nCKANBROOK, B.C.\nFrank Dezall\nGENERAL BLACKSMITH\nand\nWOODWORKER\nRubber Tiros Applied\nTo Buggy Wheels\n1CBNTS POR CANADIAN OTOLI\nAND MOTOR GO'S BICYCLES\nRepairing a Specialty.\nPhono 10 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 P, O. Boi 111.\nWe Deal in Everything From\na Needle to a Locomotive\nJoseph H. McLean\nDBA LER IN\nAll kinds of .Second Hand Goods\nFurniture a SPECIALTY\nBUYER OF FURS\nSaga's Old Stand. Hansen Ar*\nPhono 111.\nR. WALSH\nFort Steele\nPACK HORSES\nSADDLE HORSES\nReturned Home\nThe Cranhrook hall team returned\nhomo on Wednesday from a tour oi\nWest Kootonny and n portion of\nWashington. In 1910 ths boys played\nin names, winning all. In 1911 at\ntholr recent trip thoy played nlns\ngames, winning eight.\nThc hoys will leave today for Kal-\nIspel, where they will play a series of\nlive games, on tholr return tlroy wm\nPlay on tho home grounds games\nwith Nelson, Roasland, Marcus, Kit;\nUMl, and pouitfly Xftjby."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Prospector_1911-07-29"@en . "10.14288/1.0305006"@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 .