"fdef1d07-1e45-4574-8435-2548ef1b1ba3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1901-01-17"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranherald/items/1.0068530/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE CRANBROOK HERALD.\nVOLUME If.\nCHAN-BROOK, 15KITIS11 COLUMBIA} THURSDAY, .I.WTAIiY r,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 001.\nNUMB.EB I I\nHon. Gi o. A. Cox, President.\nTl Canadian Bank of Commerce.\nB. ti. Walkkr, Gen. Man-\nPAID-UP CAPITAL, $6,000,000.00.\nA General Banking Business Transacted.\nDeposits Received.\nLondon Agents\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Bank of Scotland.\nCRANBROOK BRANCH.\nHURT STEELE BRANCH. J, w, H. SMYTHE, Manager.\nBusy Stock Taking\nOdd lines will be sold regardless of\ncost. Great bargains in Dry Qoods\nBoots and Shoes, Etc. dtdtdtdtdtdt\nG. Bremner & Son\nFair Warning Last Call\nSaturday the 26th we will ring down the curtain on the last\nact of our great Underwear, Blouse and Mantle sale. And\nwhat a sale it has been! Nothing like it has ever before occurred in the city.\nWhat we U/p An When you read U**c cn\nadvertise \"T c u\" our advertisement1 * s s\"\nNow if you have not already taken advantage of the\ngreat sale it will be well for you if you do so now.\nReid & Co,\nTanuary Clean up of Gents'\nClothing and Dress Goods.\nWhat are you buying in these lines? We have\na most complete stock, too much in fact in our\nthree stores. We will exchange goods for\nmoney and offer big inducements. Call and try\nHill & Co.\nP. S.--We have bought the Leask & Rankin\nstock to sell and low prices are going to do it.\nt-*:>-4>^**e*\u00C2\u00AB>-\u00C2\u00AB^**>\u00C2\u00AB**#\u00C2\u00BB;m^***#>********#\u00C2\u00AB\n0\n| IT PAYS TO THINK\n^ *-^-^\u00E2\u0080\u0094-^r\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n|\n!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n9\n9\n9\n\*\n9\n9\n9\n*\n9\n9\n!\nV\nThink of quality\nThink of freshness\nThink of variety\nThink of prices\nThink of your money's worth\nThen you will think of the\n9\n9\n0\n0\n9\n9\n9\nI\n9\n9\n1\n9\n9\nt\n9\n9\nl\n| Port Steele Mercantile Co., Ltd. %\n9 9\nBargains for the Week\nLadles' Velveteen Shirt Waists,\nLadies' Silk Waists\nLadies' Black Cashmere Hose\nMen's Tweed Suits, good wearers,\nMen's Blue Serge, splendid value at\nwere $1.75 now $1.50\nwere 7.60 now 4.50\nwere 35 now 25\nwere 7.50 now 5.00\n16.00 now 11.50\nOne third olf on all dress and trimming silks. This means\nany dollar silk (or 66 cents.\nSave money\nand trade at\nGILPIN'S.\nFor anything you may require in the Hardware line call at the\nPioneer Hardware Store.\n********************************\nWe carry a complete stock. Plumbing and\ntinsmithing in connection. Satisfaction\nguaranteed.\nG. H. Miner.\nA BIG FIRE IN MOYIE\nThe Lake Shore Hotel Is Entirely\nDestroyed.\nSEVERAL PERSONS BADLY BURNED\nTwenty-Five People Drop From\nthe Third Story to Save\nTheir Lives.\nVERY LITTLE INSURANCE WAS HELD\n'I'he Moyie Leader of last Saturday\ngives the following account of the lire :\nFire broke out in tlie Lake Shore\nHotel this morning uhout six o'clock\nand in less than two hours nothing wis\nleft but the smouldering ruins of the\nhotel, the Union Restaurant, and Foiay's\nbarber shop. Lewis Thomson's office\nadjoining the barber shop was torn\ndown to preveut the spread ofthe fire.\nThe tire started from a lamp which\nexploded in the washroom ofthe hotel\nand in a few moments the house was in\nflames. There were no lives lost, but\nmany of the occupants of the house had\nnarrow escapes. Nearly sll those rooming ou the second and third floor were\ncompelled to jump from their room windows. Those who received injuries are:\nKd. Whitney and Jack Russell, musicians, slightly crippled about bodies;\nPat. MeNeil, pretty badly burned about\nface aud arms ; Fred Irving, ankle badly\nsprained from jumping; Bob Mills,\nankle sprained ; lieu lleniuiinger, Win\nGreen, Dan Drain, A. ll. Barrick and\nDau Mcintosh also received injuries\nmore or less severe. There was nothing\nsaved, und those who were in bed ouly\ngot out with the clothes which they had\non at the time. Mr. and Mrs. Frith,\nwho were running the hotel, lost not\nouly there chillies, but between $40*1 ami\n#500 111 money, The hi tel was owned\nby C.J. Clayton, of Nelson aud J. M.\nLindsay of this place. It was valued at\nabout $3,000, and was covered by (1,000\ninsurance,\nTllO Union Restauraut was the property of J. M. Chaltertou, It was vulued\nat $500 aud had uo insurance. Ii. Pope,\nwho had the building leased, got most of\nhis effects out und his loss was slight.\nThe building in which Mr. Foisy had\nhis barber shop was owned by F. \V,\nFrith, It was valued at about $300\nThe cabin of Joseph Frobus, near the\nUnion Restaurant, was also a total loss.\nSome of the buildings in the close\nvicinity ofthe fire were only saved by\nthe good work doue by those who turned\nout with buckets, shovels, etc. The Melnnis block across the street from the\nhotel whs scorched, but no great damage\ndone.\nMessrs, McNeil. Barrick, Drain aud\nHetuminger were taken to the hospital\ntoday. Drain has a broken ankle and a\nbadly sprained back.\nMINES tet5*tffr\n AND MINING\nCOAL COMPANY VS. C. P. R.\nSiime Is-Jdents.\nMr. and Mrs. Frith and their baby\nwere sleeping on the second floor. Mr.\nFrith heaid a a cry of \"fire\" hut thought\nit was some of the men joking down\nstairs, Finally he heard the tramping\nof feet, and by this time was wideawake.\nHe got up, looked out of lhe window,\nnn-l then unlocked the bedroom, aud\nsaw a sheet ol flame in the room opposite. Throwing a blanket around the\nbaby and pushing his wife ahead of hitn\nhe hurried forth, not stopping to get\nanything in the way of clothes and they\nstood around for nearly ten minites\nbarefooted with snow up 10 their knees.\nMiss Sarah McAllister, a sister of Mrs.\nFrith, was culled and started to dress.\nA man came along the hall kicked in the\ndoor, saying us he did so, \"ihere is no\nlime for dressing,\" aud carried her to\nsafety oulside.\n\"Hilly\" Hamilton, who has charge of\nthe bar, was Sleeping with Dan Drain.\nDrain woke hiin, and they started for\nroom 16, from where they could drop on\nto llie roof Ol the bar room. Drain got\nM-pumlcd from Hamilton and jumped\nfiom another window to the ground,\nbreaking bis ankle.\nDen Hetuminger, one of the men so\nbadly burned, could have easily escaped\nas he was on the first floor when tlie lire\nbroke oul. He look desperate chances\nto warn the others by rushing lo the\nthird slory, and was caught in the\n(lames,\nFred Frith had f(.t.<* in cash in his\npit tils, nud lhey were left In the bedroom. \"1 was thinking of my wife and\nbohy,\" said Fred.\nHilly Hamilton lost his bull dog.\nA miner, who hud worked for months,\nand by economy had saved up nearly\nf.soo which he had in his trunk. He lost\nnil of it and his clothes besides.\nThe latest word from the hospital is\nto the effect that all the victims of the\nfire are doing nicely. Two days ago it\nuas feared that complications might set\nin ou two or three of them, and tendered\ntheir conditiou extremely dangerous,\nbut fortunately that crisis has been safely\npassed. \t\nHugh John Out ol Politics.\nMontreal, Jan. 10\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Winnipeg dis-\npatch says Hugh John has dropped out\nof politics for good, aud will form a new\nlegal connection in Winnipeg, having\ndecided not to re-enter his old firm of\nMacDonald, Tupper, l'hippen & Tupper.\nHe hus beeu offered two seats in Ontario\nsince his defeat in Brandon, and has also\nheen pressed to remain In politics by Sit\nCharles Tupper, hut he positively refused to entertain the question.\nThe North Star.\nThe three bin producing mines of K ist\nKootenay\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Norlh Star, Sullivan and\nSt. Bu gene\u00E2\u0080\u0094-are reported to he iu excellent condition by Manager Robbins\nofthe North Star, who Is m llie city,\nsays the Spokesman-Review uf lusl\nFriday.\nMr. Robbins states thut the monthly\nrecord of 2 coo tons itom the North Star\nhas beeu steadily main tattled throughout\nthe year aud could have bein far ex-\needed had Die company nol thought it\nadvisable lo increase Hie ore reserves In\npreparation for llie lai-ge output that is\ncontemplated for the present and future\nyears. Accordingly a very large amount\nof development has been done during\nthe past year, und enough ore has been\nblocked out, according to Mr. Robbins,\nto sustain a large output fur u year or\ntwo at least.\nTbe Sullivan.\n\"The Sullivan, which is on the opposite range and also near Kimberley\nstation, is looking well, and, with llie\ncompletion of the uew spur from Kimberley station to the mine, it wiil he iu\na position to largely Increase Us output,\nThe property appears to be oue of very\nhigh value.\nThe year has not beeu a notable one\nin the development of prospects in Boat\nKootenay, and it is peculiar thai, wilh\nthree such mines as we have, there bas\nbeen so little activity iu the smaller\nproperties. The district is a rich one,\nand there seems little doubt that the\nthree big mines are by uo means the only-\npossible producers iu the district. There\nis, of course, the difficulty of transportation, but even that should uot hinder\nthe exploitation of the excellent prospects that are reported Itom many\npoints. I look, however, for a large increase iu the opperatlon of prospects iu\nthe near future, antl I believe tliat the\ndistrict will be found to hnve many such\nmines as the Norlh Slar, Sullivan and\nKugene are proving to be.\"\nCarbonate King tiroup.\nProspector.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Manager II. Olson, of\nthe Carbonate King group of claims, was\nIn town on Wednesday. The Carbonate\nKing Group is situated on I-Iardscrabble\ncreek, n tributary uf tbe Skookiim Chuck-\nMr, Olson says that a 100 feet of tunnel\nand drifts have been run, the mineral\nzone has been cross-cut for a distance of\n60 feet, tbe zone is heavily mineralized\nwith iron and urboiwtes of lead. At\nthe end of the cross cut considerable galena is coining in. Mr. Olson returned\nto the mine on Thursday. Work will be\ncoutiuued all winter.\nLooks as Though There Was a 1\nFight Un.\nMAY MEAN BITTER POLITICAL CONTEST\nGovernmental Concessions and Jim\nHill's Charter Are Also\nInvolved.\nMining Nuli-s.\nIt is the intention of the government\nto extend the wagon road now built to\nthe foot of St. Murvs lake, along the\nlake, and up to the forks. This is a\nproper move, i.s it will give transportation facilities to a large district lhat\npromises to be one of the richest in mineral in South Kast Kootenay.\nN. A. Wallinger, of Fort Steele, was\nin town yesterday enroute heme front\nKimberley, where he bas been negotiating options on several groups of claims\non the North Star bill for un Knglisli\nsyndicate. Mr. Wallinger says that if\nhts company secures control of these\nproperties they will begin active devvl-\nopmeut work early iu the spring.\nMORSELS FROM MOYIE\n[ Frunt lhc Leader)\nThe concentrator is running, but not\nvery steadily on account ofthe weather.\nMiss Tibbatts, who taugh the Moyie\nschool last winter, is now teaching iu\nin the Creston school.\nThe ore uow being sacked goes to\nHamburg, Germany. Already over 51m\ntons have been shipped there.\nVic. Desaulnier. is having an ice\nhouse built, and will soon begin the\nwork of putting up bis summer's supply.\nMr. Williams and family, late of\nFeruie, have opened the Bremmet house\nand are ready to meet the demand of\nthose needing hoard and rooms by the\nweek or month.\nC. J. Rose has returned to Moyie after\na six month's visit to his old home iu\nGrand Forks, North Dakolu. Charles\nwent east wilh the intention to remain\nhut found the country uml lhe people too\nslow so again drifted west,\nTbe Moyie Hotel had a narrow escape\nfrom fire last Wednesday evening. Andy\nJohnston was lighting one of the large\nlamps when the oil ignited and the blaze\nreached the ceiling setting the paper ou\nfire. Andy's presence ot mind und cool\nhead saved the building, though be is\ncarrying a pietty badly binned hand.\nConstable Drummond returned yesterday from Nelson having iu charge\nMichael Haggurty, who was arrested in\nPhoenix on a warrant sworn out by\nMoyie parties, charging him with\nobtaining money and goods under false\npretenses. He will he given a hearing\nbefore Chief Magistrate Armstrong,\nMonday. Haggurty is a miner nud was\nin Moyie about six weeks.\nPUBLIC WATCHIN0 WITH INTEREST\nOttawa, Jan. 10.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The World of today,\nwith the first authentic news of the\nmighty light between the C. P. R. nnd\ntbe Crow's Nest Coal Company and\nOthers was eagerly canvassed here tonight by politicians, aud tbe parti sinus\nof either side. There was it meeting of\nthe Cabinet today, and it is believed\nthat the quesliou came up. directly or\nindirectly, for consideration. At all\nevents Mr. Turte had a lengthy interview with Mr. Shaughnessy in the C. I'.\nR. offices Wednesday night, and the\nMinister of Public Wonts started for\nOttawa prepared to urge Mr. Shaiigh\nliessy'fl views upon his colleagues, llut\nhe is up against Mr. Illair, who is deud\nagainst the C. V, R,\nSir Richard Cartwright and Mr.\nSutherland, who cume here today, are\nwith the C. P. K. Mr. llluir is bucked\nby The Globe and Mr. Jaffruy, president\nofthe Crow's Nest Coal Co., by Senator\nCox, by Mackenzie & Mann, who are interested iu the North Star mine, by the\nGooderham-Blackstock syndicate and by\nthe niluiug companies generally. Mr.\nShaughnessy, fiom his side of it, has\ndeclared war to the knife, and his reprc\nsell tat Ives are hete today to answer the\ncharges of Mr. J off i'ay and his associates.\nNo one is able to say where Jim Hill is\nin the situation. The Crow's Nest Coal\npeople say Mr. Hill is with them, and\nMr. Shaughnessy admits it. If that is\n(he case, there will be a light iu purlin\nment this session to prevent the Great\nNorthern, Hill's roud, getting a charter\nIn build into the Crow's Nest,coat fields\nThe Crow's Nesters will support it, and\nthe government will find themselves in\na light corner.\nSome of their supporters think the\nCrow's Nest Company huve had enough\nof concessions. But Mr. Jaffray and Mr.\nCox are bard men lo beat. The C. P. R.\nrepresentatives here sny that Mr. Hill\nhas bought a large block of Crow's Nest\nstock, or at the very least has agreed to\nlake up all the new issue that is to be\nmade. Several hundred new coking\novens wiil be erected as fast as money\nand men can do it.\nOuly oue compromise is said to be\npossible, and that is that the C. P. R,\nhave their demands in reference to the\nIntercolonial grunted, and if they get\nthat tbey will make concessions to the\nminers and Crow's Nest Coal Company\nthat will be satisfactory all round. But\nthe answer to this is that Mr. Blair is\nbent ou a fight, and that he will nationalize the Houth road, putting the Intercolonial at Georgian Bay. put on a liue\nof boats at Porl Arthur und then encourage rapid construction of the Mann-\nMackenzie road across the continent.\nThe Grand Trunk, it is said, threaten\nto come into the fight if the government\nbuys the Booth roud, aud they will ruu a\nfust freight service between midland and\nMontreal or Portland. The big financial\nconcerns of Montreal ate said to be\nsiding with the C. P. R. as agaiuit the\ngovernment, and the Crow's Nest Company and its financial associates iu\nToronto.\nn:;MS FROM FERNIE,\n;yro*rfll'\u00C2\u00ABI*reerrw*i]\nC. J. Bulger Is a0^n8 B91 Special Provincial Constable at .Michel these days.\nDeputy-returning officers Hre begin\"\ning to wonder when they are going to\nreceive a cheque from the Dominion\nGovernment or Returning Officer McDonald.\nThe many friends in I'emie of Rev. D.\nI, Gordon will be pleased to learn that\nhe was married to Miss Anna Porter, of\nPic tou 1 Ont . on January 2nd. The\ntiter Press extends to Mr. Gordon and\nhis bride lhe hope lhat they may Hva lo\na ripe old agt- and enjoy all the blesslugs\nof health, happiness aud prosperity,\nSnow shoveling front roofs has been\nvery much in vogue in l-'einie this week.\nThere is nearly two ftet of snow on the\ns, This melts, runs to the eve and\nfreezes there, und iu doing so backs the\nwater up so that in many cases damage\nhas beeu done through leakage. Clearing the eve of ice in most cases has sufficed lo remedy lhe trouble,\nConstable Mcl.eod is to be congratulated. 'There hasn't been a single case\nin the Police Court this year. \"Archie\"\nirtalnly has the town well in hand, aud\napparently iulends to keep it so. A\nouple of undesirable characters came iu\nfrom Nelsou during the forepart of the\nweek, but were told lo \"git,\" aud accordingly took the next train out,\nF. A Wright, of Cardston, Alt., a well\nknown School teacher, was -.u-cideutly\nshot deud on Thursday evening last by\nII. D'Arc, druggist. D'Arc went to a\nback room for it revolver, which he was\ngoing to loan another mau, uud on coming iu the store wilh it, snapped the\nhammer und instantly killed Wright,\nThe deceased and his slayer where\nbosom companions.\nThere nre 11 lot of meat] teattisleis\naround Fernie. no matter who they\nmeet, be the BIlow or mild deep or other\nwise, ihey never think of turning out a\nIittle and giving lhe pedestrian hulf the\nroad. The oilier day we saw oue gee-\nhaw force a little girl into two feet of\nsnow, while a slight pull on oue liue\nwould have let the child pass without\ngetting Into SHOW up to her waist. The\nlaw entitles everyone to half the road\nnud some- of these senseless mute driver*,\nshould be mule to give Et,\nSTEAD SEVERELY SCORED.\nLarge Grata Warehouse.\nT, Lebel, of Pincher Creek, ha? been\niu town the past week arranging for\nestablishing a grain warehouse iu Cranbrook, Mr. I.ebel's firm is one of the\nlargest iu Pincher Creek, aud lust year\nthey purchased over 30,003 bushels of\noats and about Six) tons of timothy hay.\nThey expect to put up a large building\nand be prepared to handle grain 011 11\nlarge scale.\nRecord for tbe Year.\nProspector.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The reporting and issuing of public documents pertaining to a\ndistrict like South East Kootenay is always interesting reading, and to mining\nmen, everything relating to the mineral\nresources and the progress of the district\nin general it is of more than general\ninterest.\nTlie Government officials at Fort\nSteele have just completed the compiling\nof tlte years work.\nCertificates Recorded 703\nLocations 500\nCertificates of Improvements. 37\nConveyances 310\nPermits\t\nPartnership Agreements 12\nDocuments Filed yi\nAffidavits of Work 1048\nFree Miner's Licenses 6HS\n1*'. M. Licenses to Companies \t\n'I \" \" to Substitutes.\t\n\" \" \" Special , y\n\" \" \" Special to Companies.\nTotal Revenue from Free Miner'\nCertificates id,336 qs Total revenue\nfrom receipts ill general $5,036.75.\ni'lncer Claims in force\t\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" Partnership 4\nMiners Leases :.\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" in force 6\nRecords of Abandonments 3\nWater Grants and Permits 16\nKruger is Dying.\nWord comes from Europe that President Kruger is In u dying condition, and\nthut his German physician states that he\ncannot live a month,\nSold Out For SHI-MI.\nIt is reported that Peter Larson has\nsold his interest ou the Red Line prop\nerty al Windermere for f 10,500 to McsSl\nCol let te, Starbird and others.\nNOT ON THE PROGRAM\nA Concert Closes Wiih a Fire on the\nPlatform,\nLIGHTED LAMP FALLS TO THE FLOOR\nNarrow Escape of Many Young\nGirls in Light Cotton\nDresses.\nSir Alfred Milner Tells Hlm that tie Should\nbe Ashumeil uf lfim.,i'lf.\nSir Alfred Milner, the High Commissioner in South Africa, has rounded on\nStead in the following wholesome\nfashion :\nI have received your broad sheet pur\npurling; and 11*1 you have asked mv\nopinion, ynu shall have it. and I will\nIso forward it to the press. My opinion\nis that you ought to be ashamed of yourself for circulating so vile a slander\nagainst your fellow country men, Vou\nseem to have made it your mission iu\nlife lo vilify yonr country and to slander\nthe brave men who have suffered and\nhome so much for their country. It\nseems to uie a pity that you don't re\nmove yourself to France, and offer your\nservices to the gutter pres-t, where they\nundoubtedly would he appreciated. As\nto the letter of \"A British Officer\" I decline to believe lhat any British officer\ncould so demean himself as to spread so\ngross a calummy against his fellow-\nIdlers, without having the courage Uj\nput his name to tlte end of it. If,\nindeed, any British officer has stooped so\nlow. 1 can only say he is a conteiitpiibl\ncoward, and I should like lo have the\nopportunity oi telling him so to his face;\nbut in my opinion the British officer\niloes not live far front the office of Mr\nW, T. Stead. Personally I prefer to believe the testimony of Lord Roberts. Sk\nRedvers Buller and olher brave general\nas to lhe conduct of our soldiers in Soulh\nAfrica. I don't know if you bave taken\nthe trouble to read Lord Robert's touching farewell to his troops, wheu he\nspeaks of the gallantry-- the patient en\ndurance, the good conduct and humanity\nol our brave soldiers. If you have read\nit and it has not mnde you feel ashamed\nof yourself. I fear nothing will,\nWasa.\n[Prom The Ifcrold Correspondent!\nN. Hanson, the Mayor of Wusu, went\nto Fort Steele ou Tuesday.\nThe small force at present employed\nin the Bstella ure showing up the property iu good shupc,\nA number of mining properties in this\nVicinity ate being steadily developed,\nand several of them are expected to he\nput OH a shipping basis before spring.\nConstruction of the new bridge across\nthe Kootenay at this place, has heen\nCommenced. Eighteen men are at present employed in driving piles etc. The\nwork is in charge of P. Bile. The\nbridge will he completed before high\nwater in the Bprlng. This work is being\nundertaken by N. Hanson unaided by\nany appropriation of the government.\nWhen completed it will prove of great\nconvenience to lhe traveling public.\nMr. J. P. Wardner Is Dead.\nMrs. Wardner. wife of James ti. Wardner, the veteran western miner, is dead\nat Milwaukee. Her demise occurred a\nweek ago at tbe family home, 736 Franklin street, according to mail advices received in Seattle by fticnds of tlle\ndeceased and lhc bereaved husband.\nMrs, Wardner died of pneumonia.\nNews of her illness reached Mr. Wardner, who was en route to Seattle, in lime\nfor him tO return to his wile's bedside.\nMrs. Warduer leaVCI a husband mid\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0even children.\nSUDDEN CLOSE OF A FINE PROGRAM\nThe musical and literary entertainment that was given at the Met hod is I\nchurcli lust evening came near lermiuat*\ning in a wholesale conflagration, :*.. -i\nthe close of the ; rogiam the large oil\nlamp hanging over the platform began to\ngrow dim, due lo lack of oil, and Mr.\nGltlis took the church step ladder, a\ndangerous piece of furniture, and *r-\nmoved the lamp. .Mr. Reid to >k one of\nthe lamps in the main par; of tbe church\nand passed it up to Mr. Gillls, who\nmounted the step taddei to place ll In\nposition. Jusi as he reached the top\nstep the buck part of the ladder, nol bi\nng tied to the trout part, slipped, ami\nthe whole ihing flattened om. dropping\nMr. Olllls uud the large lamp 10 the\niloor. The lamp struck bant, throwing\nI up iu a sheet, which Iminedis el) in -\nmie ignited, and a coluiuu ol flame\narose to lhe ceiling as a result. Mr,\nGlIHs. although he h*d \u00C2\u00BB portion of\nhis clothing saturated with oil, gi 1 I\nthe lamp and righted :t, thos preventing an explosion Intense excitement\nensued, and for a moment it wai :...*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2. I\nthat eight or uiite of the young girls\nwho were penned in behind the flames\nin the choir reces*. would be victims\nof the tire. They all had on light\ngauze dresses, and the dinger was\ngreat. For innately the llarnes were\nsoon extinguished hy a number of men\nusing tbe rugs on the platform to\nsmother them, and no one was injured.\nThe church was crowded and it is to\nbe regretted that such an euj tyable\nentertainment was brought to so sudden a close. Those who did their work\ndid it well, and the audience showed\ntheir appreciation by enthusiastic applause at the close of every number.\nThe successful manner iu which the\nprogram was rendered demonstrated\nihe fact tha'. Cranbrook bas some excellent local talent.\nDANGER OF FIRE\nAad Craabrook Has Utile or No Protection\nAt Pre seat.\nIt is time for the business men of\nCranbrook to awaken to the realization\ntbat some \"action must \te taken to secuie\nlire protection. The recen*. nre at Moyie\nshould serve a*, a les-\u00C2\u00BBf.n. The town has\nsecured 500 feet of hose, hose wagon,\netc., but uo provision bas been made lo\ntake care of the apparatus. At tbe present time the hose lies in the ho*j\u00C2\u00AB*e\nfrczen, and would be unless in case of a\nnre. The officers of ibe fire brigade\nhave no means provided for drying the\nhose, and no money to bave tbe work.\ndone. There are no ladders foi use at a\nfire, and a debt of about $90 bai _ ovei\nthe department, for which those in\ncharge are asked each month lo settle.\nThe time for action is new. The fi'*:\nmay be tomorrow or next week, and\nthen it will be loo late. No man iti\nbusiness cau afford lo permit further delay, and no man in town wbo owns a foot\nof property, can afford to see the fire\ndepartment remain Inefficient fm w ml\nof means.\nWhal are you goin-4 to do about it .'\nTIIE ELECTRIC LIQHf COMPANY,\nIt Holds Its Annual .Meeting snd Elects a\nNew Board on Thursday Lasl.\nTbe first general meeting of the Craubrook Blectric Light company was held\nlast Thursday evening at lhe Cranhrook\nhotel, with Ur. J. H. King in the chair\nand W. W. I>uble as secretary. Tbe\nprovisional directors, Messrs. King,\nGurd,Ryan,Mt tan-ess and Bremner sub*\nmilled tbeir report to the stockholders,\nwhich was accepted.\nA new board was elected BI follows:\nDr. J EL King, James Ryan, B Slocks,\nM. Mclnness and V, ti, Simji*O0. The\nnew board met on Tuesday and elected\ntlte following officers:\nPresident, Ur. J. II. King,\nSecretary, F. H Simpson,\nTreasurer, W. W. Doble,\nManaging Director. James Kyan.\nThe Carnival.\nThe carnival held at the rink last\nThursday evening was a great success\nThere was a large crowd in attendance\naud everyone seemed to bave a good\ntime. Prizes were awarded as follows;\nMrs. F. M. Medhurst, as \"Good Luck,\"\nbest costumed lady, gold bracelet.\nCharles Stevens, best costumed gentlemen, the \"Label Man,\" shaving mirror .\nMiss Kitie Stewart, best costumed girl\n\"Scotch Lassie,\" glove aud handkerchief box.\nFred Small, best costunifd hoy, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'Good\nLuck,\" games.\nAlex McKinley, besl comic costume,\n\"Mrs. Jones,\" shaving outfit*\nFor Sale.\nPure bred (imported) pedigreed St.\nliemard dog pnp.\nSix mouths old. CRANBROOK BERALD\nEditor and Proprietor.\nThe Nelson Miner accuses the Herald\nof undue familiarity, because a mistake\nm made in the Ileruld columns in the\nnames of two of Nelson's prominent\n.-ill/.ens. In the same issue was news\nitems stolen bodily from the Herald and\nappropriated by the Miner. The Miner\nshould bs more cautious when it indulges in captous critic! m <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n. tha\nlop\nthe\nTEltMSOP SUBSOUUTIONi\nitne year\t\nSt\ IllOlltllS\t\nThe Herald Aetlres In give tlie news or tlie\ndutrl-at. ir vnu know any nbout:yonr l\"svl1\nyour mine or your ii-aoirte, wmi it t.\u00C2\u00BB this office,\nINDISPUTABLE FACTS.\nThe othcial records are a good thing\nby which to judge ofa mining district's\nprosperity. The cold facts are recorded,\nand uothing else. There is no false\nentries, no exaggeration, nochance for a\nb-*om. Nothing but the untarnished\ntruth is written on the official papers,\nand the story told by the records \u00C2\u00AB'\nSoulh Kast Kootenay for the year i'\nte one lhat demonstrates to the utmost\nsatisfaction of the most skeptical\nthere has been a vast amount of.leveU\nment work in this district during\npast season, and that -Ahe faith in it\nmineral resourses is greater than eve\nbefore.\nIt is no small thing by any means ti\nfind tbat there were 104S yearly assess\nment affidavits recotded, whieh show\nthut the work on properties thronghou\nthe district is being carefully kept up\nAnd since this means that *f 100 work ha\nbeen done on each claim, it is evident\nthat ihe showing 011 these properll\nmust be good, else tbe expense of asses\nment would not be incurred. There\nwere 500 new localitious made during tht\nyear, which is evidence uf itself of tlu\nmost convincing nature, that South l-.asl\nKootenay is a promising field for tilt\nprospector.\nThe Herald heartily endorses the senli\nment expressed by the Fort Steele Pros\npector, that this showing \"presents i\nmost satisfactory stale of affairs in relation to the mineral development of this\ndistrict.\" South Kast Kootenay today\nbas three of the best known mines in th\nprovince ; lhe Eugene, North Star am\nSullivan, and as has been repeatedly\nstated by Engineer Frank Robbins, of\nthe Norlh Star, there is every reason to\nbelieve that in this district there will yet\nbe found many North Stars, St. Eugenes\nand Sultivans,\nIt has been amply demonstrated that\nthe mineral is here, and furthermore\nthat the ore bodies are of sufficient extent lo prove attractive lo capital. The\ncoming season promises to be a lively\none iu the district, and the development\nduring the next twelve months will\nestablish the reputation of South East\nKootenay as one of the richest mineral\ndistricts in Canada.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nCranbrook is entitled to some recognition from tbe government. Not next\nfall, or next year, but now.\nThe idea of the government allowing\n$100 a year for school expenses in a town\nthe si/e of Crailbrook is ridiculous. And\nto expect a few citizens to pay the expense is an imposition. Cranhrook\nshould have fair treatment.\nThe people or Craubrook sincerely\nsymputhi/.e with Moyie and those of her\ncitizens who lost by lhe recent fire.\nThe Miners' Union of Moyie have\ntaken a determined stand against Chinese\nlabor in that town. (Jood luck to them!\nThe Chinese and Japanese are today the\ngreatest menace to universal prosperity\nin British Columbia.\nAlderman Towuley, ol Vancouver, was\nelected mayor, defeating Alderman McQueen, The result insures a wide-open\ntown for lhe coast metropolis.\nNelson settled their municipal tight iu\na sensible way. The people picked out\nJohn Fletcher for mayor, and five good\nmen for alderman, and then said, ''these\npeople go.\" That settled it. There was\nno election, no contest, nothing hut universal acipiiestnce.\nThe Trail hoard of trade is after the\ngovernment for some showing Tor tbe\nmoney paid in way of taxes, etc. Crnnbrook is in the same position. The\ngovernment revenues of this town are\nrapidly increasing, but the benefits are\nsmall. In fact, aside from the schools,\nlittle or no money has been expended hy\nllle government for the benefit of Cranhrook. \t\nThe Nelson Miner has changed muii-\n, ageincul, and Editor Beaton retires. Mr.\nBeaton was a persistent fighter, and he\nhad good timber in his ijuarrels with\nJohn Houston. The fact is, both papers\nfought a ruinous fight, as both lost\nmoney sieadil**. The Miner has got iu\nnew blood and new money, nnd will\nchange to the morning field again. John\nHouston has not said what he wilt do.\nAlter a toss of several hundred thousand dollars, the people of Calgary are\narguing about inefficient fire protection,\nCranbrook will be iu the same hoat if tbe\npeople don't do something.\nJanuary is always the quiet month of\nthe year in any town, either in an ngri\ncultural or mining country,\n\"AUNTIE DOCTOR.\"\nShe tiave I'm \"Prlncemi\" tu Ueeoui-u ft\nPlain \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tlm.\"\nIt wus recently n*p\u00C2\u00BBrt\u00C2\u00AB*d by eahW\nthat Prof. Dr. von Bsmnreh nud his\nwife luul celebrated iheir silver wv-d-\nding. Before she married t-ae doctor\nplain Mra. von Ksumreh wua Prlnoaas\nHenrietta von SehleHWlg*-l\u00C2\u00AB*4stelii-Son-\ntlei'bui'K-Auffiisteiihurg. The present\nempress ol Herman}' comes from the\nsame family as ta ber utece, Dr. Von,\nEsmou-h had for 43 yeara |\u00C2\u00ABwl Iweii\ndirector of the ramyloa] clinic of the\nKiel university, and hla 1\nrid i\n>d l,\\ning\nfuel ihat hi- is one of tlie mosl successful surgeons of llermnny to-dny.\nIn his i-liiiiieul deportment nloue lu* bus\nperformed more than BO.ooii operations,\nwhieh do noi Include hisbenefieenl labors im consulting surgeon uud chief\nof ihe military hospitals nl Ucvlln dur-\ntbe wars of Ifififl and I^Tu-TI. Ilia\npopularity tbroughoiil tier\nmanv is not only due lo his ability as\nu surgeon., hut to bis thoroughly <>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'-\n-g-RlllHlng the Society of tin* lied Ijoss\nAlthough :-l years old, In* is phj slenl-\nlv in porfeel liunUli. and his almost\nyouthful elasticity is quite rin*prising\nHe is a pn-ssionnte hunter, nnd for sev\noral weeks every Bummer goes iuto the\nhunting reserves of tlu* llnvartnn frontier hunting for chamois nud other\nmountain gamo.\nAs tin* wife of Prof, von Esmnroli\nPrim-ess Henrietta has understood\nmost admirably how tn maintain hor\nP'liii.ioiis to ilu*. highest, circles, ami 111\nilie tnme timu to nmlte for herself\nuu honored position among tin* friends\nnml niwoi'ililes of her husband ul Kiel.\nThe. empress of llermnny culls Iter af\nfectlonately '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Auntie Doctor.\"\nTHE SUSPENDER SIGN.\nOn* War ft Tell Inn Thut a Mun Ih\nUHtlng ohl.\n\"There are many signs indicating\nthat old nge la coming on a nuin,\" remarked an aged gentleman ii> 11 Washington Star reporter, \"bul one uf th.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ureal is wben he finds thnt liis bus-\npendera have a way of slipping olf the\nshoulders. At first be thi.d.s there i-\nsoiiiethiiig wrong witli thesuspendors,\nund tie tries lo remedy it by tigltl\ning them up. For awhile tliis eiirw\nthe trouble, but. in a little while there\nih more dipping and he gets 11 new pah\nof suspenders. Rven they slip olf and\nmake hint feel uncomfortable. After\nawhile be discovers the trouble i.s not\nwith tho suspenders hut with himself.\nAs 3 ears roll on a man he gets more\nand more round shouldered, and unless\nbe luia his suspenders braced up by\nconnecting 11w nt with a bund behind\ntbe shoulders fie cannot keep them up\nI remember, some years ago, hem in;\ntwo very prominent men speaking of\nthe fuet that lhey were gelling old.\nOne of them was aL the time vice president of the United States and the oiher\nwas a leading senator. \"What makes\nynu think you ure growing old?' one\nof thom aalted of the other. *I found\nit out,1 was the reply, 'a-s soon lis 1 (Hs\ncovered thai, my suspenders would not\nstay up.' 'That haa been my experience\nalso,' I-II.IU4' fnun the questioner. Neither of the gentlemen referred tn bud yet\nreadied bis seventieth year, but thev\nhad boMi discovered they were growing\no-Jd by Uie same luoldent in their lives.\nI have never known it to fail. Aftel\nn man reaches sixty bis shoulders grow\nround stew Illy, and by the time he is\nseventy-live his shoulders bnve lost ull\ntheir original si/e and formation.\"\nA number of the British Columbia\npapers published a two dollar and a hulf\nad for the Poulc Publishing company for\nwhich they will receive a seventy-five\ncent book by Parson Sheldon. The\ns niii' newspapers would have given a\nhome merchant the highball if he had\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0skid for lhe same favor.\nCURED BY EXPERIENCE.\nWbr lhe H11M Ar* Mot Got UK lu\nAltt-alta.\nA slory was told on the dock recently in Seattle of three young men who\nwere eured of lhe Alaskan fever in a\nvery practical manner, j-uys Ilu- Post-\nIntelligencer. Tbey had concluded\nthai they would go on the Al-Ki, and\nhud purchased three berths.\n\"Now, you hoys,\" sunt the aged adviser, \"want in remember that it's\npretty eold up there. It's pretty low\ntemperature here to-dny, but nothing lo\nwhat you'll find on the Yukon. Now,\nlet me advise you. Deforc going to\nthat country you would better have\nsome experience. You may not like ii\nand then yon will want io come hack.\nTo-night promises to be pretty oold.\nI have a tent ui my house that I used in\nAlaska. You hoys lake lln* lent out\non Queen Ann hill and sleep iu It tonight.\n\"It Is now ten o'clock. Dun't eat\nanything unlit about elghl o'clock this\nevening, Then build a tin* in your\ntent, cmik some beans and bacon, ti\\nup suuu* unsweetened black coffee and\nmake a mi'itl. Until bedtime all a rou nil\nthe firo smoking and chewing tobacco\nand playing ranis, nnd then fix up a\nrough bunk on tin* ground and sleep\nuntil morning. If you enjoy it, go to\nAlaska; if not. slay at linim*.\"\nTin* boya caught up with the Idea en-\nthiudnstiniHy, nnd promised to curry\nout tho programme. Whether ihey did\nor not is not known, but tbe other\nmorning three miserable-looking hoys\ncanceled three tickets on the Al-Ki, and\nas they humbly left the steamship office\none was heard to sny:\n\"Do ynu suppose it really gets that\ncold in Alaska?\"\nCraubrook has always stood on her\nmerits, ami bun always experienced a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0teudy growth.\nThe time bus come for one or more\nimellerb in South tit*A Kootenay.\nHOW FLIES WALK UPSIDE DOWN.\nAa EhioinoioKiHt Advane\u00C2\u00ABt n New\nTheory lo Kiplaln t In* 1'ht-iinniruiiu.\nlu our youth we were taught tlnn files\nndbered to the celling or to the window\npane because tbeir feet were provided\nwiitt suckers from which they had tin*\npower of exhausting thc nir, says the\nHartford Couriint, This was disproved\nby the fai-t lhat a Hy oould run up lhe\nside of nu exhausted glass receiver\nwlu-u a vacuum tinder his feel would do\nhlm no good, even if ht* had the power\nof orefttlng it. and by (be further fuel\nthat a microscopic examination showed\nthat his feel were not provided with\nmakers, bin with multitudes of hairs\nfrum which exuded a fluid In min til a\ndrops, it whs then suggested tlmt this\nfluid was viscous or gummy, so that tho\nfly adhered by a sort of mucilage. This,\ntoo, was disproved,as Itnvnsshown tlmt\nthe fluid possessed no adho-stve properties, l\y n scries of careful experiments\ndetailed In Our Animal Friends Dr.\nDrerhiild proves that capillary attraction, iho adhesion of water to n surface, i**. enough to support ;i fly even if\nhe were BO per cent, heavier than ho is.\nThe hairs give out an infinitesimal drop\nof water, and as there are a great number of them tin* fly Is enabled to hang\non the celling and to tickle any sensitive surface on which he alights in a\nhighly scientific manner. __ .-,\na 1. in.) Record, 1\nSome of the antiquities of ihis country which find their way into tbe inu-\n-,'inu.- are rivaled In ace by a living\ncreature at the Koo, li is an alligator\nterruplu, or Mississippi snapper, whose\n130 pounds of substance hnve been accumulated iu a lifetime of five centuries\nor mon*. Ai hast. Unit is whal the scientists calculate, and they sny that\nthere Is no reason to doubt tbut tt was\npuddling around nan little turtle In tbo\nMlssbudppl when De Soto flrst gazed\nupon the river. The glnnt terrapin\nmeasures aboul live feet Rrom snout to\nUp of tall, and drnrlng ita re side nee at\niii.* Zoo ii has grown nol n par-tide, It\nIs ioo lazy to move nbonl much, ami so\nnature lias endowed it with special\nfacilities for catching food. When\nhungry it lies in tin* water with Its\nmouth wide open, ami tlie bright little\nred tongue looks so much like a worm\nthat tl serves us n bait to attract flsh,\non which lhe terrapin feeds.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vbiladel-\npWaJteoorO, \u00C2\u00BB~ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Palouse, Wash., is short of wood,\nan unprecedented affliction, and ear\nloads of timber are being shipped in\nfrom neighboring places, What never\nbeforo bus been known there, coal isla*-\nIng fed to tho llres lu the city's pump-\nw. F. GURD,\nBarrister, Solicitor, Etc.\nDrills'-, Columbia\nJ. H. KINO\nPhy.iician and Surgeon.\nni'T'd'-sllKlM.orK '(LOCK,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2UANI1KOUK, : : : : : B. C,\nJ. R. COSTIGAN, Q.C.\nBarrister\nSolicitor, Hte.\nHJ1C0|\nHaiiKaf commerce Wilff. UltANMtouK\nAbout that House\nYou are to Build\nIt will pay to talk it over\nwith a Contractor. We are\nin the business ns our work\nfor last year will show. Call\non us for plans and ideas. It\nwill pay you.\nGreer & Co,\nTHE CONTRACTOR.S\nand\nG. Johnson....\n\J/ Assayer\n* Metalurgist\nCranbrook, B. C.\nCanadian\n...Pacific\nAnd SOO PACIFIC LINE\nWorld's\nScenic...\nRoute....\nLowest Rates Best Service\nTo nil jmiritw in Caniulu rtml the\nUnited Statea. The fufie.t\nequipped trull* crossing the rnti-\nliiii-iit. Hor further particiilnnt,\nim to little, lutes, etc, apjily to\nE. J. COVLE J. ATTWOOD\nA. 0. P. A. Agent,\nVancouver, B.C. Cranbrook\nBO YEARS'\nEXPERIENCE\nTradi Mark*\nDesigns\nCopyrights Ac.\nnil,,11 1, iir.ili'il.ly i'i,l,\u00E2\u0080\u009E)ti,l,l(>. I'uitimiinlrH.\nh..ii,,irii'i|yr..i,ilili,\u00E2\u0080\u009Ell\u00E2\u0080\u009El. I luiiilli.inknn l'.t\u00E2\u0080\u009Ent>\n-.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ii, ir,..,. 111,11,1 ni.i.niv lur....'iirlniiimtent,.\nI'm,.111, t,in,.\u00C2\u00BB 111 r,,, 1 l.' 11 Munn t, Co. r.cul.e\nll'fi l\u00E2\u0080\u009E! imllit, v'llli.niL Llmrun, In tha\nScientific American.\nA liiiiKl-miiioir ilin*-iritii-il it-i'cViv. I.nrun-it olf.\nnil'itiii'i nl nm* hi n-niil!.* innrm-l, 'liTinrl. f:la\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ii ; I--111 iinmlliMI. Hold tiy nil iiiiwhIi'iiIith.\nMUNN SCo.38,B\"\u00C2\u00AB\"\"'* Hew York\niiiiiui-ii niiii-ii. ina v st, Wrtf.ii mm-in, 0. u.\nr\u00C2\u00BBI*s-^Hs)-^-\u00C2\u00AE::\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-o>\n* <*>->fT$j$?l 1 v ta ........... . \u00C2\u00BBT$T*w\u00C2\u00BBMi>n*,!)\n'MimsmmM^w\u00C2\u00AE\nCRANBROOK, - British Columbia.\nC\D A NIRDHnk\" ,s the divisional point of the Crows\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Vrc/AI^DIK'-LNJIV ^st Pass Railroad.\nM Cl^nHfOok r'as a ,0=stall round house, large machine\nH ^* CUIUI -UUIV shops, expensive railroad buildings and ex-\nm tensive railroad yards.\n1*8* L ^*m\nfl Cranbrook 's the natural and commercial center of South Kast\nKootenay.\nCranbrook Is the headquarters for wholesale houses and corpora-\ni tions of South East Kootenay.\nW \u00E2\u0096\u00A0$ nt\nv^ Cranbrook Is the best starting point for all the mining districts in\nSouth East Kootenay.\nCranbrook Is building rapidly and her population is increasing week after\nweek.\nCranbrook offers the best field today for business men, builders, contractors,\nmanufacturers and investors.\nFor further information, maps and prices of lots, apply to\nL. A. HAMILTON,\nB. C. LAND INVESTMENT, AGENCY, C. P. R. Land Commissioner,\nWINNIPEG, MANITOBA.\nV. HYDE BAKER, Local Agent.\nVICTORIA AND VANCOUVER.\n-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-Sr-^\u00C2\u00AE^-4y^\u00C2\u00AE^-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-4>-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE^\nW>4-<\nJohn\nHutchison\n\u00C2\u00A3s*gL\nInsurance, Real Estate and\nMining Stock.\nCorrespondence Solicited.\nEstablished April 1898.\nI. O. 0. F. Block Cranbrook, B. C.\ny* Notice dt\nTo holders of Mining Stock In any British Columbia or Republic Co.'s\n1 am how in a position to give holders of mining stock the best brokerage service\never i n tr oil n ceil into Kast Kootenay. I have connections arranged In Spokane\nToronto, Montreal, Toledo Ohio, Boston aud New York. Besides being In\nclose touch with the West Kootenay brokers. My charges for either buying\nor selling will be as follows:\nStocks selling under 5c per share 'Sc per share\nStocks selling at 50 aud under 15c per share %e per slinre\nStocks selling at 15c and under 40c per share.. ^c per share\nStocks selling at 40c and under 50c per share % c per share\nStocks selling at 6nc and under (1 per share ic per share\nStocks selling at 1.00 and over 1 per cent on money\nNext week I will issue my first weekly list, so get your stocks listed with me\nas soon as possible.\nMeats and Poultry nnSSEoTI\n.Markets at.\nrOr tlie HOlldayS. |KimUrley,MoyieF.r-|\nJ nie and Fort Steele. J- m\n-l-tttCttttttlllf-ttttf*\nWe are betler prepared than ever to serve the\npeople of South Cast Kooteoay In our line.\nThe best of Heats, Turkeys, Chickens, Ducks, Fish\nand Oysters.\njtjtjt See the annual display.\n\u00C2\u00AEa-a a~aa-aa^a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA8 (baa.\nWhen in Kimberley\nStop at the\t\nKiriBERLEY Hotel\nJulius Hurel, Proprietor.\nNew Building, New Furniture, and Every,\nthing first-class. Our object is to please our\npatrons.\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2)\u00E2\u0099\u00A6-\u00C2\u00BB-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> \u00E2\u0099\u00A6-*-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2**-\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6-\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB<\u00C2\u00A7 (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\nfloyie's Hotel Kootenay\n1 j. \V The best of accomodations\nLeading 2\nHotel *\nfor the traveling public.\nMcriAHON BROS.,\nProprietors.\nThe Cranbrook\nLumber Co.\nSaw and Planing Mills\n:::AT\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\n-ALL KINt'S OF-\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI\n\*r na\nThere arc a few points to\nbe considered in building.\nGood work, Good Material\nand thc price.\nA. D. GRANT\nContractor\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Builder v*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Craiihriiok. II C\nGet Your Photo Taken\nand put on one ot our New\nChristmas mounts. There is\nno gitf that will give more\npleasure to the friends in the\neast.\nPrest, Photoghrapher\nHave yuu talked with anyone about bulldtni?\nCome and see me or let me see you. II may\ndo as both good.\n0. R. LEASK\nContractor.\nPATRICK NAVIN\nContractor and Builder\nFIRST CLASS WORK IIUARANTF.UII\nAt present am building the new St. I'ujtcne\nhospital and a number ol lwo slory and oilier\ndwellings.\t\nCranbrook, 11. C.\n| Rough and\n1 Dressed Lumber, I\n1 Dimension Lumber, \\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> '\n1 Shingles and \\n*. i\nI flouldings.\n| IN STOCK OK \"MAOH TO ORDER. *!\n**-******-************\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*********************************\nCentral Hotel North Star Hotel\n....PORT STEELE\n..KIMBERLEY\nHarry Drew, Prop.\nThe North Star hotel at Kimberley is one of the best\nequipped hotels in East Kootenay. It is plastered throughout\nand furnished in first-class shape. The Central hotel at Fort\nSteele has always been a popular house.\nRobinson & MeKenzie.\nSaw and Planing .Mills\nAll Kinds Of\nRough and Dressed Lumber THE HERALD.\nCKANBUOOK, B. 0.\nHEART TROU3LE.\nfood\nAn he wakes nn luja n-tliinl-.ni in ilu- m.*:i:.\nLooks ridiculous to ku hlin i In ti :u.|\nAn wben iioboily ain't I00M11 lotl In ro ol\nUut I rvchon Uml Hia Maker, when be ilui|\u00C2\u00BB I\nbe wm di.ii. when k* l\n11 wuGiit a dance t mot iier ilowti u< I'alv'mti\ncreek.\nShi's ,i bunch ol kiss)' iw-miicm uul.lur th\nliiilitnin Mi.nl.;\nIluill up 11 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2nii.iii titan ii ilrr-ipy, wilh ilu' mh\nBlily -'\t\nTh.it Is ii|.t In) ibi ii.iii H-tiii ibe rouu\n11,1 ,i url -I lorlm clltlfi I ihrd up In\nTin l'i I tin 111 ion I\" n (IiiUIi, itnrl ynu frelln\nAn Un* iiiiiii) -mil.' Uml ih. l,i red mm mi\nWai Ibi un t'.l l .1, \u00E2\u0080\u009E mi.ih hulfui-ii i\nWl'M\nIII- ll.:\nAn I teemed l.. Itonl nn no!Iiln\nBoliicboii t'.iiiL'hi -..iv i m tm < in\nKent 111:-1. ) uii.-n i ->.,,... .-,-.i i,\nThn\n...I t\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i( Imlli ul IM,\nAin'l Iii\nAn in\n1 Will ..\nFor ii\nllilnkin, i.f llial little\nigle, in a gorl ut mtikj\nrallle like I uted to on\nicb a-lldtikln K Hki-'\nrin in my heart an bava\ni to lln* crMjr huuJe.\nMontreal. Fr\u00C2\u00ABe Bus. Ain,\nP. 91.50 up, E.P.Sl.OOca.\nTimely (Irltltitsill.\nA'^'S Y'Mt *r \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\"II (Kn\n8trange. Kmmn. tlml\nIlu- house given id ub\nMr. Thomna Bnllnrd. Syracuse, N. Y.,\nwrites: \"lhave been afflicted for nearly a\nyear with tlml moat-to-be dn. mil d d-Btms-a\ndyspepsia, und at times Worn out with pain\nand wnnt ol sleep, and, alter trying nlmo.-t\neverything recommend-, c, I tried ono box of\nParmelee's Vegetable Pills. 1 am now nearly\nwell, imd believe they will euro me. 1 would\nnut bo without thorn for any money.\n.11 iti'Jit Do llim Good,\nQt?\n$r\nIV. -x .*-.\n\"l hnvo n wit viiln.ii.i.. work tm-\ntltli-,1 'Uow in ti.-i nidi.'\"\n\"Well wlii Jou'i you rend it J\"\n0. i* mill Ut.'a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*-- CO.\nllcnr Sirs \ r,-\u00C2\u00AB ilo-'H uro I n-iia\ntaken with n Ri'vpt-t' rum nnd contraction ol lho conls ol in) li* I\nhad i\" I il\"'\" linme I\" n rl\u00C2\u00AB l\ncould nol Blue r ntiln and wnn un\nable In |MI in. lo lhe Moor *,\nfriend lold n I your min llin \"\nLl NISI KM I' I on ' Iiiiiii* i\"\"\" llw\nlirfti niiiilienllon I waa nlilo lo wnlk\nand Uie imln i nllrelj .llmppenrnl\n*-. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2nu iim i\u00C2\u00BB imine ns lreol> ns\nvnn III \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I consider ii the lw.il\nreined.. I hnvo .-vet used\nI'lntlNTOl'lll ii iM.llllV\nlllKenall, \"n1\n.in,.,.,),.,I r.iini.\nCaller Vnu iim.i. I.iiili' hns heen **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nposi'd ni sunn ill '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 iium,1 his iH-iuisi'B\nI'ldlitri i- Imve? w ' ri, n i pill t isli n ll\nInni nf ,.-.,1.1 .1,. ill i Inn mnl, 7 Tlml\n, v.li.n mi nml Inn i nil u I\n,, I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ullll . \"\n1' lllllllll ll ,. ' III 11 I. I\nIn ii I* i Ill I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\nliflil llin Hi . ,1\nMl\nare Blmply kidney disorders. Thokldlieys\nfilter llio Iiliniil \"ol\" nil that shouldn't no\nthere. Theblood passes through tlie kidneys ovory three minutes. If the kldneya\ndo their work no impurity or cause of\ndisorder enn retnnin in tno einiulntion\nlonger llin\" lhat timo. Therefore if yuur\nblood is out of oidcr vour kidneys imvo\nfollod In llmir woik. They lire in need of\nstimulation, strengthening or doctoring.\nOne medicine will do all three, the lincst\nami most Imitated blood medicine thoro\nis\nDodd's\nKidney\nPills\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0A-*,*,*,*,*,*.*.e,,*..,*.4\niHisWaywardWayl\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n* tin Wail I.iinbl,, II,,, Ac,- nl *\n. the Girl lli> Loved, uuil It A\n- Troubled llluj.\n* \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n* *\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\nMiitllu-w Hallldnj Blghed. Stic- wns\nso wayward, so provoking, so lovable,\nno pretty!\nItul lm wus mueh ton ulil.\nMutitu'w cniiio from Quaker Btock In\nlhc City nf Brotherly Love, lie wns\ntouiticrnmcutnliy scilntc uml ut 38 felt\nhimself in be quite u Mcthuaelnh. lie-\nsides sim Imd, so iii spenk, growu up ut\nMatthow'a knee, he having Blood in Imr\nnml Inn- brolhci* Iii li pnicutla for\nBonictlilug like 12 .veil's evot* Bluco\nMntlhcw's besl beloved frieml, Uow-\nunt .Iny. took Ids Invalid wife awny fur\nu sen voyage, lenvlng bis lwo children\nin Hm good care of n innhluu uuul uml\nIiii lm-. ss nl'l'nlr.'i In llie safo llll mis\nnf Mnltbow llullldny, bnnkori over\nsluee Hie good ship Ai ;i Weill down\nin ii feuri'iil gnlo In the Wesi Indies.\nlllll HOW llm lllll, uf Mulllmw'n self\nImposed guardianship wus nun-. Howard Joy, .Ir.. Imd mado a s leaaful\nsiiirl In Hm world nnl wus qnlto ready\nin glvo dear old Mnl uny pointers In*\ni led nbonl lifo in general.\nAs inr Miss Kvclyn Itiisseii Joy, us\nidm Invnrlnbly uml unnbhrovlnlliigly\nsllbsei'llied llel'self, whom MnllllOW\nnulled \"Kve\" 01* oil. I* \"Miss Idle-\nwild\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, she, too, luul mnde n s\t\neessful siiirl Iii lifo after Ilu inner\nof ift-lrls. she wus 10 (\"Jusi Imlf my\nnge,\" Matthew often dismally reflect,\ncd). she imd charm with ull its powor\nof winning love, she wus coquette to\nthe linger tips, and slie wns imist fnir\nIn see. Besides nil this she wns n lllile\nlilt of uu heiress, nml uiuny swuius\nenme riding by.\nMatthew watched all this with n patient sort of despair. \"Pool!\" lie culled\nhimself, with very hourly self contempt.\nIt wns to t|iinsh n dnrllng pinn of his\npretty sister's thnt Howard stalked into Miuiliew's ollice one moruiug, his\nbrow wrinkled in u portentous frown.\n\"Mm,\" ho suld abruptly, \"ii seems to\nme Evelyn bus been spending money\nliko llie deuce lately, llnven'l you\nboou letting her draw lur interest\nahead of time?\"\n\"Sometimes slie bus nntk'tpiited a\nlittle.\" ho suld slowly, \"inu ii Is uo\ngreat Inaiter.\"\n\"But it Is very Imd for her,\" suid\nHoward, wiih n parental ulr. \"You\nknow yourself, Mat. slie bus no more\nidea of business Hiuu a luillerily. she\nou^lit to lenril lo live wilhin Inr lu\nconic. And she Is becoming quite reek\nless nbonl money muttera nnd\u00E2\u0080\u0094olliei\ntlllUtfS.\"\nMatthew pricked up his enrs. \"Whal\nother things?\"\n\"Why, it is chielly Hint pinywrlllng\nfellow, Duvnl. Hi* hns n coiuedy to be\nlll'iilllft-hl nut iu N'CW Veil, lln.vl wneli.\nand ubout 20 young people here pro\npose to make up a puny for tlio 'ilrsi\nnight.' Evolyu is- among tliem; They\nimve u rather good chnperou. us it imp\npens, but\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"She must nol go.\" sul.l Matthew.\n\"1 thought you'd see il il.nl wny.\"\nHoward replied, wilii ;i iniislietl ulr.\n\"Sn nil you huve tn do When she do-\nninn.ls money for lids expedition is in\nsny 'Nn.* Vnu can do ibis because she\nbus overdrawn her nccouut.\"\nTwo or three duys nftor this visit nf\nHownrd's Miss Idlowlld went down\ntown to see Matthew in liis olBee nl the\nhunk \"on business,\" ns she snid do\nmurely.\n\"Give Hie poor cripple a dime?\" she\nsnid in her absurd wny.\n\"Certainly,\" raild Matthew, with\ngrave pollleness, nud lm I ', n Url-jUt\nnew .lime nut of II little ri il if ,-,.;; i\nflesh from ihe mint and handed ii ;.i\nImr. So nhe looked n little disconcerted\nnnd obnndoucd tliis uievlmd or attack.\n\"Matthew, I nm bankrupt. Insolvent,\nforced tn make nn nsslgnmcnt.\" she\nsuid In n plaintive, spoiled child lone.\n\"I Wnnl snipe mnn,'.', ll Inl nf lUOUOy,\nIii fact- fm- ii vcrj Bpeclal purpose,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Mny I have It?\"\n\"A hu':\" repealed Matthew.\n\"Ves, that's ii: nt least u htindrcd.*'\nMnllhew looked grave. \"Wlmt Is\nIbe speeinl pmrnse.\" he luquired,\nfcrvoutly hoping she would tell hlm nil\nnl.em the inni...- sl theater pnrly.\nI s, ret,\" suid .Mis, Idle\ndreaming Hml long suffer!\"-; Matthew\nwould tnke her at her word.\n\"Very well.\" lm said, mul he wns u\nlittle paler as h- spoke. \"I will lake\nsteps to this end ni , ,-. Vnu will Iiml\nI hnve mil utilised my trust.\"\nlucenscd us slie was, Miss l.lk-wild's\nbend drooped wilh somctlllug like\nsluiuio ut these weeds. Never lu her\nlife hud Matthew spukeu to ber like\nthis. Never before Imd she felt abashed nnd frightened In his presence. A\nswift sense of his liiielity uud her owu\nlugrutlludc rushed \u00E2\u0080\u009Ever hor.\n\"Matthew!*1 she faltered, nud she\ntook u stop forward, but he turned\nnwny.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ami will pardon me If 1 leave yuu.\"\nhe said formally. \"I nm very busy Ihis\nlie held Ihe door open fnr her. nml\nwith burning cheeks she hurried nm.\nuul iu. wnrd wns B-pokeu by either us\nIbgy parted.\n1\" ' Mnllhew wus cut In the henrt.\nCertaluly she tried tn make ui ids\nti, him in u thousand wnys. Indeed.\nlu-r manner in hlm wus sn much gentler Hull hu begun In think 'In' Innl\nguessed hi- s'ecn-l Ihnl she pilled llllil.\nMnllhew lived only aboul Imlf n\nblock from the Joys, und Evelyn .vafl\nin llm hubil nf running I\" uml mil nf\nhis hoUSO ns If il were kor mvn Bho\nmis n very s| hll pel \"f Miss Ahhy.\nMatlliow'B innldcu sister, who kept\nI se Inr him.\nMnllhew went Into Ids sillily oue\novoulng aboul S o'clock nud closed lhe\ndoor, glvlug sirici orders that in- wus\nimi iu be disturbed. H wns about 15\nmiliums Inter, .lust us be hnd Bottled\ndown l'ur his evening's rending, when\nhe henrd lhe doorbell ring, limn quick\nfootsteps running down lhe hull, followed by u gulltlc Hip ut his door.\nllo did mil sny, \"Como lu.\" but got\nup, witli some Irrltutiou, nnd opened\nthe door.\nII wus Miss Idlewlld ill evening\ndress, with n frothy kinking piuk thing\nover her heud nnd shoulders, Inugliliig\nand out of brenth.\n\"Mny I come In?\" slie sold demurely.\n.Mnllhew looked ut her llllBiniiiugly,\nstill holding ou to lho door.\n\"Ahhy Is mil.\" he snid. \"She has\ngone Willi SOIlie billies ID n leelnie.\"\n\"How lively fur her!\" snid Miss Idle-\nwild rather quickly. Appureully she\nwus her old self this evening.\n\"Hid yull enme over here wilh llll\nwrap but tlmt llimsy thing?\" nsked\nMnllhew, Linking his very ei-nsse.-u.\n\"Ves, grandmother.\" This was what\nshe called Matthew when he lectured\nlier.\nHo hail hitherto borne such gibes lu\npatient silence, but tonight it lingered\nbim.\n\"1 object lo your nthlrcssliig mn hi\nHint innuncr,\" he snid Willi an ei'.ml.\n\"I beg your paid.in. Manlmw.\" sho\nsnlil. looltlug ii little rrlghtellcd. \"It\nwns only in fun.\"\nThen ho snid: \"You will tnke eold ruing buck. 1 will semi lur u slin.vl.\"\nAnd hurting ihe boll as he spoke-\n\"I'm going to take ymi liiiluo nnv,.\"\nhe suid. \"and I waul ynu lu wtlaf '.:::.i.\nLot mo pul It nrmiiid you.\"\n\"I won't huvo ll!\" -I s'-inimed excitedly, tears gathering iu her eyes.\n\"Now. Kvclyn.\" said Matthew gravely, \"lhat is childish. It h- n winter\nnlghl. Vim hnvo mi an indue.- dressi\nVnu must pin nn a wrap. .' u.i pm! .:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nlily Miss I'ally I Howard are llllt'ilsy\nabout ymi. Come, !..- reasonable.\"\n\"I will go home,\" said Miss Idle, lid\nin u trembling voice, \"slueo yuu are s ,\nanxious lo be rid of me. Itul I will llut\nneed eilhor you ur ihe shawl.\"\n\"Vnu will nevertheless have both nu\nthis occnslon,\" snid Matthew sternly.\n\"Ami 1 will ii,.i discuss the inuiii r\nwilh yuu any longer.\"\nSn snyillg, lie went up to her nud put\nthe shawl ure.unl her. whether she\nwould nr mu. lu trylug iu evnde him\nillnbl\nwil.I.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\n111\nlet\n!\"-l u ,.\. liu-.\" he snid cenily after a\npause, ii u.i as lm spoke lm carefully\navoided Imr oyo ami siare.i wm, rapt\nnb nrptlon at tho enrpet.\n\"lle.vai'ier,\" continued Miss Idle-\nwild, wiih a grand nir. \"I will mnn-\nup. my own money matters. Then I\nwill know Jusi how much 1 have nud\nspend li as 1 plenso without begglug\nI'm' it. I mn nf mm. I I will mu endure such treatment nny longer.\"\nAll this she suld lu linger, nevor\nnud nil. in his nn -.\nMatthew nlways snlil he completely\nlest his head nl t'-is moment. He forgo! himself- forgot cveryihlugbut Hun\nHie iiiil In- loved was in his urtns lit\nInst!\n\"Kve.\" he suld desperately, holding\nher eh.se nml all his pent up man's\nsoul breaking Its bonds, -yuu kuow\nthat I love ymi!\"\nThen ho released her quickly with an\nexpression uu his fnee ns i.f nne ex-\npeeling the heavens l\" fall, lint Instead uf falling llm heavens sei moil lu\nopen their golden piles to Matthew.\nIer Miss Idlewlld, till swathed us she\nwas like nu Mgyptian mummy, looked\nup ill hlm Willi wet. tnughlug eyes.\n\"It tuuk yuu it Inn;; time In iimke up\nyour llllnd. Mnllhew.\" sho suid plain-\nlively.- Buffalo News.\nl'i-,,,,,),.,: .ini.\n\"Hnvo you called on Penelope since\nshe p.t back':\"\n\"Ves, but I'll hnve to go ngnlii.\"\n\"Why:\"\n\"She got stnrtcd Ilrst In telling her\nsummer experiences, nnd 1 didn't get n\nword In edgewise- about whut I'd boon\nih.iug nil summer,\"\nTHE BREAD-WINNER'S\nCAPITAL ES GOOD HEALTH\nWhon Enei'g'3 is Lacking, Whon tin* Brain\nGets Tiriil iiml Un* Nerves Starved and\nExhausted, \i*u Vitality Conies With the\nI'se of iir. Chase's Nerve rood.\nII is wln-n lis- health begins I.) (nil, when lhe lirst symptoms ul ex-\nhallsfiou show thcuiBelvos, Hull tin* body is most quickly benefitted by\nlie- use of lit-. I'lms-'s Nine t-'ood, the groat blood builder und nervo\nrestorative, ll lilts fulling men uml women from lhe bonier hind ul ner-\nvous prostration, paralysis and locomotor uiu\in. nnd relits thein for\nhealthftt\nMis.\n,\.\n]'*!\noxhausl\nbody Ir\ndoctors,\niroublct\nbeing ei\nhud llr.\nsurpris,\nmoro. '\nagain.\niim.min\nufforli\ncould\nl<. h\n>6 yen\nig (no\nnut :\nml the\nui this\n111. Hr\n' huil\noy In\n11 lie\n. C'll\nlice\noil\npe 11\nI le\nrigl\npruvi\nIn t.\nlell\nsen., tlweu Sound, Out., writes:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"It is a pleus-\ni.'iits I havo derived from the use of Dr. Chnso's\nof nge, nnd for about llvo yenrs my life wus\nnervousness, weakness nnd extreme physical\n !p, nnd hut Hushes would puss Ihrough my\nI consulted mir family physician und two olher\nihat about my timo id life I was likely lo bo\ncontinually grew worse, und despaired of ever\nNerve Food eamfl to iny notion, and ns wo hnvo\nnok 1 hud conlldonco iu tiio doctor. I was so\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ccived (rum ihe lirst box thul I bought throo\nup. ami mado me (eel healthy nud young\nu greal blessing lo me, uud 1 hope this tes-\nniiii, weak, nervous woman suffering ns I did.'\nI)K. CHASE'S NERVE FOOD\nIh. I'lmsi'B Ncrvo food is |uv|>iin* 1 nnl India.,\nCanada consumes eleven mil lion\npound* ui cokir\u00C2\u00AB.d and dottured Ju-\npuu Oteen Teas Green tea of pure\nnatural srwn leaf arc bt'ing introdin.-\ned frum Ceylon mid India They aro\nnow on salt* Wilh all live nanus\nStutesinen see obstacles xo preferential trade within tin- empire. \ mi\nladion can sweep usidc all obstruction\nBring patriotic sentiment on your\nbreakfast table Your *-rm*i*r will\nl:i*' these i teas If ynu only Insist.\n'ih.* Saludn Ton compan> inn.- placed iIji-iu in hundreds nt' stores,\nM nr. other l.'.iilmu' linns have siup-\nini-nis coming. Only laggards await.\nMi-* JuropinH \"i' lj-jo ra' ii'itiiM*-!\nIlls clIOH l-\nWoarj Hill mh cheup restaurant I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'Sny, gimme a cupplo u\ eggs\nWaiter'\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"How 'I mui want 'em\ncooked?**\nWni.. 11.11 - What's Hi- -hll in ile\nwall '\nWuii. i - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \m i in. din.\"\nWeary Itiil- \"Den cooh em on er\ni hick Blleo uv ham\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bee!\"\n'i hi-re ulvit was, nnd never will lie. a\nuniversal panacea, in one i> m* dy, fur all ills\nto wit,uii il* fli ih llun'\u00E2\u0080\u0094tin- very milure ut\nmuny euriit vefl bv'nut such tlmt were tlie\nyeriiiu i>( oila-r and iliil-ri-titly Be&ted dis-\nnates rooted in the system of the putieni\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhut nuuld relieve nne ill in turn wuuld aggravate tie Di li r. W'e huve, however, in\n-Quinine Wine, when obtainable in QBOUnd,\nuimdulUriit- d state, u remedy fur ninny una\ngrievous Ills* Hy its -.'rudunl nnd Judfelous\nUse the (ruik-s* Byattms are led into convalescence and ?tretij;th I,;, tlie influence which\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Quinine exerts t n natnre'a own rentorativefl.\nH,ve!ii'vi*B the drooping spirits of those with\nwhom o chronic state of morbid de--iiond.\nenoyand lack of Intcre-tttn life imidiseuno,\nmui. by tranqulliElng the nerves, di.-i\u00C2\u00BBi.-i*- to\nsound and refreshing sleep\u00E2\u0080\u0094imparts vigor\nto the notion of tlie blood, which, being\nglimulutcd, courses throughout the veins,\nbtn ngtlu-mng ihe hen thy animal functions\nof the system, thereby making activity u\nneccssuvy result, strengthening the frume,\nimd givinp life to the digestive organs, which\nniiturnlly deinuud incr. used substuncc\u00E2\u0080\u0094re-\nbult, unproved appetite. Northruptfc Lyman,\nof Toronto have given to the public their\nsuperior Quinine Winent tlm usual rate,and,\ngauged by the opinion of scieitltats, this\nwine approaches nearest perfection of nny In\nthe market. All druggists sell il.\nFOlU'.li .\C\I\.\nIl,*__'*li inUi-s iwn i,i inaki'ii i|\nrei.\"\nsh.*\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Yes; mid it's necessary i\nboth should Imve more than u\ning of indifTorence inr each other\nDAI) IOUM.\n\"Look nl hulibs.\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'What te Ue doing?\"\n\"Riding in an automobile with\nhorseshoe pin on,\"\nA Illl'LO.MAT.\nSlie\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yes, it's nllw-tl enough to\nsay uow ynu think I'm pretty, Yesterday you said my nose l urned up\ndreadfully.\nHi\u00E2\u0080\u0094Weil, dem*. T was thinking ii\nshows mighty poor tusti* in backing\nuwuy from such a lovely mfallth,\nVery many persons die annually from\ncholera and kindred summer complaints,\nwho might huve been suved if proper remedies had been used. If attacked do notde-\nlay in getting a bottle of Dr. J.D. Kellogg's\nDjseiiteiy (Vr.lial. the medicine that never\nfalls to offeel a eure. ThottO who bnvo u-ed\nii suy it acta promptly, ami thoroughly subdues the pain and dlsenso.\nSAMSON'S FATE.\nTeachur\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whal happened to s,ini-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-,in after Delilah cut his hair?\n.lohnn.v\u00E2\u0080\u0094lie gol fired from tin* fool\nball team.\nMinard's Liniment Cures DijMtieria.\nll\ TIIK CONTRARY.\nVane tllory\u00E2\u0080\u00941 iiopo Swaitislmi saiil\nnothing aboul nm Um .itlim- liight,\nold rhai-7\nCecil Swarv.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Xol a word, ohl\nman In imt. wo had quite nn in-\n. oroBl ini, conversation.\nill' 1 NHOIillTl-'ll PEDIGltEE.\nTho profeasor's granddaughter was\nlokinift- nt a half-tone portrait nf\n'rim-.- Albeit, nl Flundors, ntul llm\niiichps-s Marie Gnbrlcllo, nl Bavaria.\n'Ulni are Illi'Sn people, granil-\nnlmr 1 \" nlm naketl.\n\"Thoso are llm Belgian heirs,'' ic-\niltcd tlm professor.:'\nMinard's Liniment Cnres ColJs, Etc.\nINTERESTINd TO 11EU.\n\"Miss Attleek seoius verv much In-\ntcresjtetl in thnt hoiim'.v rid niuslc-\nmn.''\nVes. She heard that he made\novertures quite frequently.\"\nIt takes u derrick to raise u laugh\nin tin* oil regions.\nProbablj It is because Uu* oarth\nis round thut so few people ftet on\nthe square.\nI'iii-h.-rs mul tumblers nmy be\nclassed as household acrobats.\nMinard's Liniment Cares Gamut in Com.\n[J It\nBANKERS AND\nBROKERS. . . .\n362 MAIN ST., WINNIPEG\nStuck, anil boetls bought, .old nnd j\ncarried on margin. Listed\nmining fitockB carried\n#****\u00C2\u00AB**\u00C2\u00AB*e##**\u00C2\u00AB-s*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABft*\nlOsler.Haimonfl&Mton\ni BROKERS, ETC., &\n! Dominion Bank Building, Winnipeg \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\nMoney lent at lowest rates.\n\u00C2\u00BB\nStocks and bonds bought and sold. JJ\ni? Hallway and olhor farm lands in w\nA) Mnnltoba and N. W. T. for sale. \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nt- Maps and folders sent on amilma- '-\u00E2\u0096\u00BA\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2It tlnn. *\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I (lalt coal from Lelhbridge, i*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I, l'rieea quoted to ull railway points.\n*********}*)*}***l**,*)*)*at**}\nBLOOD POISONING\nINSTUULTION u|* MM in\nt'otmuy\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sov, paw\nMl 1-itKS- W.-ll*\n ; Tomuiy\u00E2\u0080\u0094What Is lhc dilt.-n.nce I\"\nFOLLOWS A WOUND IN THF KNEE She\" kinds?\"\"\nMr. Figgs\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tin' praci leal polll i\nmj son, is of the Kind thut does\nilie * poor but highly respected\nTHE MAKCHES FEIUUF.>\nMrs F.oudleiyh Ves. My duugli\ntor pluys lhe ptuuo bv ear only,\nMrs Netdoughre\u00E2\u0080\u0094Indeed*' Some-\n-i:-.--i-l*\nTh.\nCAUSED BY A PHCHfOHK.\nFiT\u00C2\u00AB Doetoti In UousulUtlon Gnvu tho\nSiiQer-tr 1ml Little Hupu ol Hi-i-uvery\n-How Hin Ltffl Wuii Saved.\nBrockville Recorder.\nAmong the old families in the\ntownship oi' Augusta, in the neighboring county of Gronvtlle. thero is\nnone bolter Known or more influential, than those that bear the name\nOl\" His-* I The DlSSelll\nthe earliest settlers in\nand have ovor sinee tc\npari iu \u00C2\u00BB\l moves ta promote ns\nwelfare, ihe sui :l of Hns narrative Mr Sihis Disscll, is .ui,* of the\nyounger members of the family, who\n-..in.' eight years neo lefl Canada to\nsome yours ngo l.-fi Canada lo make\nIns in.uu- in ti,.- Mui,* ,,r Xobrflnka.\nIl* has passed through mi oxiwrienco\n(iim.isi unique, und considers tlmt he\n*s fortunate in being alive io lell ibo\nlllll*.\nTho story, as told in Mr. BlssoH'a\nown words, Is as follows\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"in tho\nautumn of 1808 I sustained a serious\ninjury through having tin* tine.*- of a I\npitchfork penetrate my left knee. Tin* ' Amn\"1\"K Letter* tieeelrcd ii\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-' blow Kruger 1ms re-\namong Icetvtd yet is th,* offering of his hat\nwiihIiId by a '-*01\"'\"\" periodical publisher for\na,.-iivu the greatest number nf new suhserib-\nFAGGKD OUT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094None but thoa' who\nhave become fugged out know whut a depressed, miserable f. ellug it is. Atl strength\nU gone, and despondency has tnken hold uf\nthe sufferers, '1 hey feel u-> tin ugh there .s\nnothing lo live for. 'Ihere, Iiow.vit. if u\neur.*---i n -feoni rul lack i.f \ Ital-\nIty, i can eure ynu, and only nsk jou\nPAY WHRN CURICD\nMy beautiful Illustrated 80-page lunik\nin senl FltEE ou apidication, und a\nmil- nil aboul mv w.inili'l'dil r.l.r.c-\nTIUC BELT ami how it cir.-s.\nSend fm- it today,\nDe. M. 15, McLaughlin\nlist) YONGE ST., TORONTO.\n+.\u00C2\u00BB+\u00C2\u00BB.+\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0+... f..,...+\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*+*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0+... f.\u00C2\u00BB, \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 -a,\ntMOI^EY^\u00E2\u0080\u0094. t\nly healed, hut I .inl\nnoi enjoy the boiuq health I Imd previous io the accident, and It was hut\na shoii time before 1 wns compelled\nLo toko lo my bod on account of i x-\nirutlatlng pains in my limbs nml\nKifiTuess in my Joints. A dorlor \*.as\nculled in, nnd he lanced the knoo\nthree times, nnd then tuid mc the\ntrouble wns hlood poisoning, lie\ntreated im* fm* some iim,- Inn I\nsteud'ly grew worse, nnd Iinally live\nphysicians wen* called in for consultation. My entire system seemed to\nbe alYeiied, nnd lhe doctors said the\ntrouble had roached one of mv lungs\nand tlmt they eould hold out hut tilth* hope of my recovery. After m-\nig ill bed for eleven weeks, I\ndeeidid ih.it. I would return to my\nohl home j-*, Cniinilu. I wus so unuh\nrun down, and so weak (hal II wns\n(pieslinn whether I would liu* to\nach there, bul I wns nevertheless\ndetermined io malt i effort to do\nAl'tei* u long 'Hey under I lies,*\nmosl trying circumstances, I reached\nI was su used up. and\npresented such nn enmcinted uppenr-\nih.v Unit mv friends hud no thought\nthui. I would recover I i d io\ndrag along in this condition ior soveral months, when one dny u eousln\nnsked uie why I did nol try Pr.\nWilliams' I'ink Pills. I wns willing\nto try nny medicine iimi wns likely\nlo run* m.*, nnd I s,-nt I'm* ll supply\nof lhe pills. After I Imd been using\nUie pills for aboul ihree weeks I felt\nun improvement in my eondll ion.\nFrom thai timu I gradually grew\nhei ier: new hi I seemed coursing\nihrough my voilifl, He* si illness iu my\nJoints disappeared, mid Hie agonizing pains which had so long tortured\nme, vanished. 1 look in nil ten or\ntwelve boxes of Hr. Williams' Pink\nPills, nml 1 lum* no hesitation in\nsnylng Umi I believe tbey saved my\nlife, for when I ralurned lo Canada.\n1 had no hope of recuvcry.\nMr. Bissell Ims since returned io\nhis old home nt Lincoln, Neb., but\nthe statements made nhovo inn In*\nvouched for l.y nny ol' his friends in\nthis section und h.v ull of tlie neigh\nbors in the vicinity of his old home\nhr. Williams' Pink Pills run- kucIi\napparently hnpoUss cases ns Mr\nllissill's. because thej muke new,\nrit'li, red hlood. uud thus reach tin-\nroot of tin* trouble. These pills ure\nthe only medicine offered Uie puhlii\nUnit call show u record nf such marvellous eures after doctors Imd failed\nU you nre ut ull unwell this uicdi-\ncino will restore you to health. hm\nbe sure you get ihe genuine with th*\nfull name \"Dr. Williams' Pink fill\nfor Pule People,\" on the Wl'llppei\naround encb box.\niiUhlmter rn' I\nPeii-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2imltMi\".\npei\nlm.*\nW11KN C1REEK MEETS CHEEK,\nFirst Uurglar\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Sh-h! There's n\ncop coming down tin.* street.\"\nSecond Uurglar\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Mou.se tbe glim,\nllun. We won't get. enough swag\nout of this joint, to stand a clivy\nwith bim.\"\neli,' V.\nMINT JULEP.\nMr. Bonder\u00E2\u0080\u0094More monoy,\nmust, think thesh er mint in me.\nMrs. Bonder\u00E2\u0080\u0094By your brenth i\nwould soy there were several in yuu\nDeafness Cannot Be Cured\n , of the ear. itn\nw\u00C2\u00BBy to mire iliafnes-\", mnl that is by ROiiltittl\ntiotifll ri'innlli'S iMUness Is ciin-n-il liy un It\nflamed condition i.f 'Iw inueoua lining ..f the\nEustachian tobe, When this tube gels ntl.im-\n\u00C2\u00ABd you Imvt* ii rumbling hhuikI or lmptirtect\nhoring, mnl when it Is entirely close \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \ntarrn, wblih In nuthhig but nn Inflamed eon-\ndltlon of ihe nine ob surfaces.\nWewilluivu tJiiu Hiindri-<1 nollnH for uny\nI'Utteof Ii, iiftuss (i-HiiHi-il i.v .'iitiirih) that can\nnot be Otirfld by lliih'*.rai.u*.h < ur.:. M-iitl t-T\nclri-ulur-, Iron.\nK.J. CHKNKY it W., Toletlo, 0.\nSold by riiugtitau.TSe.\nHella Kiuully Ttlla nre thu beat.\ntotters tn tin* pension nillce di\ninjuries nnd the ronsulis why tln-.v -Ie- ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nreeeivo n portion nf the houutj of 'il.-\ngoveriimcnt. Here un* sonic u( ihe es\ntr 'dlnary epistles ihat bnve been re\neeiveti hy the couimUsieuer of pctisiun**.\n\"I vurlly believe thai Orvlile Jnmesuu\nis fntlged from eitriiili hte leiivln hei-o>\nlie is inn fntt wnys 'JlHJ putmd nud Imv ii\nfamily to feud\u00E2\u0080\u0094thc unborn Ihluka iu\nhuve dropsy Imt 1 no he have uo drops;\nbecause Ue wuuld bust if I.e hnd tu lu\nsides him limn In* uuw hnv bcsldcf wid\nhe are without villous Imblts or refer\ncucos. 1 uo he Imv solid fut vlttels In\nIiiui uu im dropsy.\"\n\"The way I got mv win* lugcry v,n- ;:\nketcliln of a hog. The imi: wor u boh\nInu; nnd mu- captain wniited her fm- toi\ncge. We wus ehuslii the sow nml si.,\ncrawled threw a limil in n rule fence. I'\nwm- ti big hou I and I ihm 1 wnr aboul\nthe sis of u hog and tried to cinwl throw,\nhut 1 -stok nml uii,- t,. wlglc \"ut I\n(brode the rules off nml mir hi: me on\nmy lied I nocked uie Beiisless. 1 ,1.\nimt think the sow pig Imd uoihlng to dn\nwith my Hue of duty tm I did uot keeti\nthe hog.-Wtch sin- never wur cnught.\"\n\"New 1 Wlllll J.ui \u00C2\u00AB.!' Ihe i oiii.-enir of\npenseits to givo mo a phila in your otlitb\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ni hen 1 wont nsk fm- no monr nitc te\npctiscn jns-now.- i cnu ilurk o. k. l\".;t 1\ncum htber, or I end boss ihe oihor clurku\nniulk them stun n ami rase dewlit\nentile) peiisoiiK Ki-npe them from huh*\nluge whosporln iu ulil a ours in fuet aki as\njnueter or superviser seeing uii tiiiiiL--\ngone rile.\"\n\"1 fust got to he u total wreck from\nliver mid kidneys then 1 wits n totullj\nwrecked liy consumption whieh came one\nme.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Now I mu lutatly wrecked by .inn;.\ntroubles, Bprulnsnud hard marchiug.\"\n\"I gut blood poison by belnge hit with\nii liens eg whieh wns imt good when you\nsenl my pensen 1 wnnt the Deed mad\nsos my wife cnut ge- nnue off il\u00E2\u0080\u0094bin\nthrode the eg^*\t\nSKEPTICISM. \u00E2\u0080\u0094This is unhappily un\nago of skepticism, but there le one point\nupon whieh por-jons acquaint-* d witb the *>ub-\n]ect agree, nanie'f, thnt Dr. Thomas' Eclec-\ntric Oil Ib a medicine which can be relied\nupon to cure u cough, ic-move ]*n\n, heal\neorca of vuriuua kinds, und bonetit any inflamed portion of tlie body to whleh It te\napplied.\nA Public Character.\nT To Loan on Improved farmi ut cur- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2?\nt nnt rites. Writa io *\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*\n\"t NAItHS, ltlil.l*\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ()N A BLACK, f\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0f WXSKWKQ, UAS. i\nAND\nORDER\nNOW\nre oi'portune time to select\nXmas .Jewel I ery could hard-\navailed of ihnn the present.\nia ample time to pick, and\n!_ our mock is plentiful.\nWj, Leave your ordering\ni?^t ino late* nud th.*re's a\npossibility of some one\n. getting \"the last' of tlie\nselection you'%-o decided\non\nThe demand for onr\nNinas Jewellery threatens to eclipse all previous records, so our\nadvice la '..\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 do your\nCho ng or.I OKIM'.U\nNOW\nOur hnndsottu new\nIllustrated tiituiogue\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ns.-iti free <-m application\n'.**, - how easy nnd\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ctorily it can be\nB. & H. B. KENT,\nThe Le.idiat; Jewellers,\nI 44 YONGE STREET,\nTORONTO.\nHKIiiHT OP MIS AMBI1 I\nPat\u00E2\u0080\u0094'\"Ihey do sny that O'lJouM-\nlian is aflber getlin' to be a Kfeut\n,-1111111)1111 since ho got his mon\u00C2\u00BB;v 'von\nth' ould cotinthry.\"\nMiko--\"FaItIi, mi' Ol'm glad to\nheur tlu.i. li's been many a year\nthnt he's loon nfllier troyin' to gel\non ih' police fooreo-\"\n03CTT D 01ST O B. .\n{Inia Mar's KfKi't-prolNuver.-.WrSl.lMO i\nDr. S&nc**ie ierw# .; lake ins:Tumerus back\nnt half price tf I'arues 'i'lnv ihen*. ar* not t*on*\neflittd nfte; tu,: g l:r flvc w-rtki.\nV. Free, Whi i:-g. utj: I h\u00C2\u00BBve used ' Oivil-\n..nor'- for two -a*e*kl for Bruwddtll and C-a-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2..irrh of th* H- \u00C2\u00ABd, m-i I f*-*l ik-? x i:\u00C2\u00ABw man.\nMm, V. L. G-oV, Winiifi*-e. \u00C2\u00AB*yt: 1 had Buffered ur-to'.d ag ui-i [Run Br:*?!.: * DiHUe. ktiA\nu reliev-cd ui-: -A Paio. azd i. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- -k* i wu\n:ured.\n>;r- ff.G KIl*or:hr, *^\"::,r.;r--C' Rivj : I hsre\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0iuff-* f-d for**! T-san *>ri:L *rti'--ft. ar :h*Tiina'isini\nt.1* in hospii:*! for S \u00C2\u00BBeeks. and U5*d alnn-^t\nevery T*r.:-tiv, lr.clji.ng icej-j.-r;-?^, palv&D-\nisin. el-ctrtc i-el!-e*.c I h*tw aesA Oxjd.imr\nlOdavt mi 'ee-s.-rttv: r.or-i i-t:;e*fit tLtn frotn\n:.yib::ig tlsa.\nMrs. Oagntr, w\nni\ytg, \u00C2\u00BBys: I hare uaol ti\nbeo-afidally with my fau.ilj* *\u00C2\u00BB*l]-::,-?T.r sick.\n\u00C2\u00BBnd it haacure-i DH c*J\u00C2\u00BB**T-fri; ir.dig-ii-.i'jn and la\ngrin-*.\nsn*xiejler* \u00C2\u00B0 .i.t.-d :a every dtstrlet. Addrt-a\nwm T. GlbUait Grain Ei.:bar:i.--;, Winn^p-g.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ieii'lfo.-B.-Jk:eu :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'. gr~\-.t*l rtf-orts.\nBrass Band\nEVERYTOWN CAN HAVE A BAND.\nl\u00E2\u0080\u009E.w*.;: prie-s-s crer qout-tfl l*';ue ca'jlogue\nCO l loxtnUoni mailed tmt-. Wt.lt u-. for any-\nthlrff In UtutC or Mu-t* Hi InttnimetiU.\nWhaley Eoyce te Oo\u00E2\u0080\u009E ^l^'Si,.\n.-.r-*^.;-*.-**-^.\nMann..,- lur, .1 by THOS. 1.1 B, ITjuofpef.\nCatholic Prayer IXXi.'Z&T-\nolan, Kelisriou-tPhturf*! Ma:oirv,andCIiorch\nOrnatiientn, Kdii^i'lorial W'rk* .Matiordi-rirfr\ncel-re prompt attention. [|. & J. ^-;;:r & CO, Jsn-BiJ\nU\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABT-fKCANA \"RBLIANQR CIGAR\nI Ua-VAHA, FACTOKV,Montreal\nTHE ARIZONA KICKER.\nSomi- Live Newa Muni a Front n \>r*\u00C2\u00BB\nllree\u00C2\u00BBi> t:.\el.:-.tiiii*.\n[Copyright, lOOO, by C I). Uewia.1\nWhile Tiie Kicker is not exactly un\nIndependent puper. we nre not mixing\npolitics to any grent extent. The fnct\nte, we unut lo hold mir Job us just\nmaster nlong under tin* next ndiulnls*\ntrutlou, uml ive don'l propose to bounce\noiirself out by letting tie* euglo screntn\ntoo lollU. We used to be nil ciithtiM'..-'\ntie political partisan, hut we lived on\nroots ami herbs us u reward.\nWe regret lo learn thnt Cnptnlli\nJohnson shot himself i\" the foot ihe\nother day while pulling his gun on a\nman from Tombstone who doubted his\nveracity, but long, long ago we ad>\nvised Ua* captain to carry n squirt gnu\nInstead uf a pistol. Hi; intentions nre\ngood, but he never knows whleh end\nof a gun te loaded.\nVery few of our fashionable people\nare oul of town for the summer. In\nthe Ilrst place, they can't nfl'onl to go.\nami In the next they ure ul'rnhl ol\nrunning ncross old net] mil ntn titles wbo\nwill ask them whether they broke jail\nor were pardoned out.\nWe are the only postmaster In tin\nknown world who keeps his ollice open\nevery duy in llie year ami up to mid\nnight every night, nnd yet tliem an\nfolks lu thi.** town v ho wnnl to know\nwhy lu hlaswfl we dop'l hnve hoiuu nc\nloininndiilliui ubout us. We haven't\nshot anybody yet. but how much long\ner we can hold on te an unknown quantity. M. Quad.\n\ M-:i'I*;ss.\l!V PHELLMINAItY\n\"You are tin* queerest man thai l\nwus ever engaged to \"\n\"In what respccl7\"\n\"Vnu haven't snid a word yet\naboul being unworthy ol mj love.'\nWith our i *!do of filling\nmall orders, a man living In\ntho \"heart of the Rockies\"\ncan do business with us\nalmost as satisfactorily as If\nliving In tho city.\nIf it's a Diamond Ping, a\n25c. Collar Button or any\nartlclo In the Jowolry line,\nWRITE VS.\nAll goods marked In plain\n5 figures - strictly ono prlco.\nCarriago chsrijos paid by us\nand monc-y rot untied If you\ne'esiro It.\nOur hatKl&omoly Illustrated\ncatalogue sent freo.\nRYRIE BROS.,\nYotitcatiJAitUi.uSI..,\n,-m.*\u00E2\u0080\u009E,v,. \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u009E*.*.. TORONTO.\nt.ilat'lithid IbSI.\n@d^r\nfl iw.-'l 1,)* -:\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- *. A trained\n\"-.- \u00C2\u00ABtll -.t.-t.-- ... \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nr.-- 1100 l\" box,\n'..-'. I'.i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'-.- ... ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -. \u00C2\u00BB\ntOMM A*intn,iM-u\nA H*AV\l CO., lori-ou.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 trAVu.itr+t H\u00C2\u00BB\nof -alt j* *:l Ut-.ttlit.\nThe Only Printers' Supply\nHouse^in the Northwest *\nTORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY CO... Limited,\n17A Owen Street, Wlnnl|x-(-.\nYou feel better after\nrobbing against se.it, grease, paint,\netc,, when you have at hand a cake of\nThe Master Mechanics\nExtraordinary Soap\nThere te nolhin^' like it for removing heavy dirt honi Iuinds or fnee,\nAnd the ur, one of its principal In-\ngradient*, henla any sores or tuts.\nDealers in j^ood soap sell il.\nThS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2''t Toil'*- SoaP Co- *M/\"J-' Mtrittrtol,\nW. N. U. 209. It Pays to Deal\nWith Beattie\n1901 Diaries\nCall and see them.\nI\nR. E. BEATTIE, Druggist, i\nA Convincing\nArgument *&\nThere i.s a point you cannot\ntail to appreciate, and that i.i\nthe quality oi our goods. Jtjt\n\"Reliability\" is uur motto.\nQuality means satisfaction.\nSatistactlon to you means\nbusiness to us. Am showing\nthis week nice assortment ol\nevaporated Fruits. All new\nstock. Call and see us. Jtjt\n(let a sample ol our Tea and Coftee.\nG. T. ROGERS,\nJOB PRINTING.\nTlu- HeraliljH nnw equipped with\nthe finest joh plaut nml the largest\nslock of printing stationery in South\nBust Koaleuny. TheoQicelstn i\nceipt ofa number ofthe latest faces\niu job type and the besl writing\nstationery that can he purchased.\nTin ne, with modem machinery,\nperforator, numbering machine,\nund meu who have been educated\nns printers in leading job printing\nestablishments in the cities, to do\nthe woik, guarantee printing \"equal\ntu tbat done in any city, toe\nHerald is not a country job printing ollice. It is a fully equipped\ncity job nilice in a new town. If\nvon nunt job printing, and waut it\nright, eiill nnd see ns.\nOur work is onr solicitor.\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2(\u00C2\u00A7, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00A9\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*\u00C2\u00BB\nCranbrook\nHotel 3 3\nQuests Comfort a Specially\n(iood Stabling in Connection\nNearest to ruiliond and depot. Hns necoiniiiniln-\nttons for the public unequalled in Cranbrook.\nJAMES RYAN]\n Proprietor\n* HILL & JOLL\nGroceries\nand Crockery.\nm**9******e****************\nI LOCAL NOTES 2\n9*****9****9*9**9**9*******\nPicked Up About Ihe Cily by Asking\nQuestions of Many People.\nA. Leitch is in Nelson this week.\nG. II. Miner visited Moyie Wednesday\nTea tleliciousness, Rogers keeps ibe\nhest.\nI)r. King wns railed to Ferule Monday\nevening,\nCharles Theis came up from Spokane\nlast week.\nGeorge Dremuei\nlast week.\nr visited Lethbridge\nW. I). Hill is in Lethbridge this week\non business.\nPaul Rooks was taken to the hospital\nlast week, ill with fever.\nMr. end Mrs. John Fraser are confined\nto the bouse by illness.\nOntario fancy evaporated apples\ncents per lb., ut Rogers.\nMrs. Keay has been quite ill, but is\nreported as improving.\nThe Odd Fellows v.ill install Iheir\nofficers tomorrow night.\nAnother consignment of tresb dairy\nbutter aud eggs at Rogers.\nFor Rent\u00E2\u0080\u0094lwo warm, well furnished\nbed rooms. Apply at Heruld ollice,\nMrs. P. 1) Hope, of Movie, was visiting fiieinls in Cranbrook this week.\nWm. Small is the new engineer at the\nelectric light company's power house.\nFrank Dickerson bas opened a handsome barber shop in the Cosmopolitan\nHotel.\nThe change in the weather came jnst\nin lime to save the snow roads lor ihe\nlumber meu.\nRev. Hedly, of Fernie, officiated at\nChrist's Church last Sunday morning\nand evening,\nA series of meetings will beheld at\ntbe Methodist Church, commencing\nnext Monday.\nThere is a moral attached to llie lamp\naccident at the Methodist church: Use\nelectric lights.\nThe A. F. and A.M. lodge of Cranbrook will install there newly elected\nofficers this morning,\nMiss Dolly Watt left Tuesday for a\nmonth's visit with relatives at Regina\nand olher eastern points.\nFirst class rooms, well furnished and\nheated. To be bad with or without\nboard. Apply to Mis. Nelson.\nTbe quadrille club will hold their next\ndance Tuesday evening at the home of\nMr. and Mrs, F. ]\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;. Simpson.\nMiss Margaret Keay arrived yesterday\nafternoon from Silicon City, called home\nby the illness of her mother.\nBen Thiel, ibe Kimberley tentorial\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Hist, and one of the best in British\nColumbia, is visiting in town\nThose persons wbo have furnished or\nunfurnished rooms to rent will please\nleave names at The Herald ofiice.\nMr. Oleiicann Campbell and Mrs A\nBIgginga of Moyie, were united in marriage at Fort Steele ou Tuesday night.\nMisses Kittle Stewart and Gertie\nSmith bad a runaway last Saturday\nwhile sleigh riding. Neither ol the girls\nwere injured.\nMrs. John Hutchison has been visiting\nfriends and relatives in New York City\nand Boston the past two weeks, nnd will\nreturn to Prescott the latter part of the\nmouth.\nJohn Hutchison, probably one of the\nbest known real estate men and mining\nhrokers in lhe Kootenays, says that\neverything points to a lively lime iu the\ndistrict next season.\nThere was no quorum at tbe general\nmeeting of the ntheletlc ossoclatlon\nrailed for lhc 15th. Another meeting\nhss beeu called for Tuesday -13rd. .jp.m.,\nat the iDWtiuite office,\nW. A. fialMher, M. P., will stop at\nCranbrook when enroute lo bis new\nwork at Ottawa, as the guest of honor at\na banquet to be leudeted him by the\nmembers of his party in this district.\nMr, \V. F. Gurd and sister, and Mrs\nKrickson went over to Fort Steele hist\nFriday. Miss Gurd and Mrs. Krlckfoil\nwent from there to Fish Lake ranch and\nvisited with Mr. C. M. Edwards several\ndays.\nIndian Agent Galbraith is authorized\nto pay $500 encb for a pair of mountain\nsheep or goats, or $1000 for a pair of\neach Tbe animals must be delivered\nulive to tiie Indian agent. This is the\nlargest offer yet mnde for these animals.\nRev. Robert Reid preached a strong\nsermon at the Methodist church last\nSunday evening. Mr. Reid lias shown\nthat he's a thinker, an able speaker and\na man with depth of thought and tbe\ncourage ol bis convictions.\nIt is now quite probable that the\nmembers of lhe Strathcona Horse will\nreturn iu a very short time. There will\nbe a number ofthe hoys remain in South\nAfrica, having been promoted to various\npositions in the army, but neatly all of\nthe South Kast Kootenay contingent\nwill return.\nDr. Kennedy, of Lelhbridge, was in\nlhe city this week in consultntlou with\nDr. King on some serious railroad cases\nthat the latter has in charge. Dr. Kennedy and Dr. King have charge of the\nrailroad work on the Crows Nest branch\nand for the pasi three years have had\nmuch work together.\nspring. The Silver Ciown, Paradise*,\nShtimtock and Silver Belt group, all\ncarry tbe same lend. They nre situated\niu what is known as the Paradise Basin,\nhead waters of Spring Creek, a tributary\nof main Toby Creek.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Tlfl Easy lo Feel Uuod.\nCountless tbousnnds bave found a\nblessing to the body in Dr. King's Now\nl/lc* Fills, which positively cine Constipation, Sick Headache, Dizziness, Jaundice, Malaria, Fever and Ague, and all\nLiver and Stomach troubles. Purely\nvegetable! never gripe or weaker.\nOnly 25c at R, ti Beattie's Drug Slote,\n\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE--\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-\u00C2\u00AE-*sMa-\u00C2\u00AE \nHI Offices, [\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 16C. P... \u00E2\u0096\u00A0* 6\u00E2\u0080\u009415 95 1:5\n\u00C2\u00A3-5jj Hotels, Etc. J 116 ami upward So 1 10\np3 Private Houses 75c for t6 camlle power\n\u00C2\u00A7*H Private Houses 50c for 8 eanille power\n10 per cent, is allowed ou all accounts paid before tlle loth of\nthe month.\nApplicat'ons may be made to the electrician Mr. Kwart wbo will\nquote the cost of wiring, or to the undersigned.\nChaudei tiers, shades, etc. at Minet's hardware store.\nW. F. GURD, Secretary-Treasurer.\nm\n1\n1\nI\nI\nI\nHHHHHHBHBnBHBmfflK3D3\nHeated by hot air throughout.\nThe dining room is first class.\nEvery convenience for travelers.\n-a\nLAND NOTICE.\nThirty days alter ilatp I Intend to apply to\nthe elder commissioner of lumti and wnrlts for\n1 i-ruiis Inn in I'ut 11111 carry away Unmet* (rom\ntin* rollnwina described laml: Cominottclnjfat\na |n.sl on Kast liue or (', Mc A* lam's j>r>--*\"in j'l Um\nmi,st. Muryirlvnr,and running e.ist hi clinln,\nthence snuth ISO elinlns, thenoe west 80 chnins,\nthence north 1*20 i-hulus to -mint uf OQiiuitence-\nnii'nt.\nW. li. MeKiirliute,\nDated ni Crnnbrook, December i;, 10J0,\nLANO NOTICE.\nTliinj daya ar\ni hiet ('nnim.fisli\npermission local\nfoll-iwuiB descrtl\ndate [ jtitetet tn nji|>ly tu\nor of bands ami Works inr\nnl carry away timber from\nil land: Commencing at a\nliost mi tiie south bank ot st, Marys river about\ntwu mill's nbnve un nt li nt Terry creek, ami run-\nIn*- south ISO chains, thence east no dint in,\nihei north 120 chains, theuce w--st hi chains\ni.i point of commencement,\nChester McAdntn,\nDated Cranhrook December it, v.m.\nLAND NOTICE.\nNotice Is iieri-hy given tlmt -\"ji da) s niter date,\nI inten i lu npjily tu the chief Comnilsslstier \u00C2\u00ABt\nMinds nnd Works fur the norm i-8.ni io imr\nitiii-i*iiu>followliiKilawribeil landsi ah hlauil\ns tii'itetl on Moyie hike directly opposite Moyie\nCity ami containing mie nere moro or tins,\nCrnnbrook, U.O., Dec. 1st, num. O. II. MIN Kit\nSpokane Falls &\nNorthern R'y Co.\nNelson & Ft. Shephard R'y Co.,\nRed Mountain Railway Co.\nCosmopolitan\nHotel S &\nE. H. SMALL, Proprietor.\nThe best of liquors at the bar.\nAll the rooms neatly furnished.\nRates, $2.00 per day.\nFort Steele Beer\nIs the best. Patronize\nhome industry dt dt\n\wmwm\m&^mm\mw\u00C2\u00AE&\u00C2\u00AEQommo.\nThe...\nKefitte.i Throughout\nOne nf the Must Comfortable\nHotels iu ti.nsi Kootenny,\nNewly Furuished\nASSESSMENT INCREASE.\nCranbruok and the District Shew up in\nbund Shape.\nMagistrate Armstrong held n court <>f\nrevision ill Cranbrook. last Friday, to\nreceive complaints from projWrty owners,\nlie hnd little work to do here, as ihe\npeople seem lo be well satisfied witb Mr.\nNelson's work.\nSpeaking of the assessment iu Ihe\ndistrict, Mr. Nelson said thut it hml increased 6o per cent in the district, but\nthat in Craubrook there wns nn increa e\nof 8o per cent, (luring the past yenr\nThis is a magnificent showing for the\ndistrict as a whole nnd especially for\nCraubrook, awl gives a practical illus\ntralion thai this town is growing with\nthe district.\nAnother Kiel) Strike.\nPeterborough, Windermere District,\nJan, to\u00E2\u0080\u0094Authentic information wns received in town this morning regarding\nau extraordinary rich strike of over eight\nfeel of carbonates on the Paradise mine,\nSpring Creek, a tributary ofToby Creek,\nThis is the second rich strike on thin\nproperty within a month. The Paradise\nis one of lhe coming mines of Fast\nKootenay, The ore bodies now uncovered are something wonderful, Pour\nbone teams are hauling Paradise oie\nItltO Peterborough lor shipment Iu llie\nTbe mil) nil rail mule between all\npoints Fust, Wesi ami South to,.,.\nROSSLAND,\nNliLSON ,\u00E2\u0080\u009Ed %\nIntermediate Points.\nConnecting Ht\nSrOKANB with llie\nUreal Northern, Northern Pacific\nand U. I\". & N. Company.\nConnect, nt\nNelson with Steamer for Kaslo\nand All Kootenay Lake Points,\nConnects nt\nMyers Palls with Stage Dally for\nRepublic, and\nConnects daily\nAl Bosshurg Stage Daily for\nlir.-ind Porks nnd Qreenwood.\nII. A. JACKSON, lien. Pm. Ajl.\nFurnished or\nUnfurnished\n...ROOMS TO RENT\nInqn\nR. S.\nMcNIftllft\n1 lunik nvf.\nVanDecar & Son, Props.\nCraubrook, 11. C.\nRoyal\n..\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Hotel\nfiB0*!Sift3\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9\u00C2\u00A9Qg0.Q0\nA. T. Vroom,\nlllacksmithing,\nHorseshoeing,\nRepairing,\nWagon riaking,\nand Painting.\nCranbrook\nLivery 3\nAll kinds of work given prompt\nattention, and we will guarantee\nsatisfaction to our patrons in all\nwe do. Yours for trade.\nA. T. VROOM.\nI\nGEARY & DOYLE,\nProprietors jt jt jt\n', It. IIOHS. It. W. MRHCHMRII\nROSS & HERCHMER\nBarristers, Solicitors,\nNotaries Public,\nOonveyancers.\nriiANitnooK Cranhrook unicp\ntuu Fmt-r Stkxi.r. 15 nml til Hiiiihoii lllock\nAdrian Q. Hanauer\nMININO BROKER\ni|-S02 Rookery Bldf, Spokane, Wash.\nllei\u00E2\u0080\u009Et,|iiJiri,:i, for Sullivan llroini Hint\nNitrtli star. Wrlle oi wlte either liny-\nuift' or bell,Hi;,\nRegular Stage to Kimberley\nTeams anil ilrivers furnished for any\npoint in tlle district.\nHARRY FAIRFIELD\nManager Jt J, Jt\nBe sure\nyou are a\nSubrcriber\nto thc\nHerald\nFeed a Cold\nStarve a Fever\nTradition says thc remedy is a good one. 937 persons m\nCranbrook have a cold. To feed a cold one should be\ncareful what they eat. We have just received a fine line of\nFresh Fancy Biscuits\nFresh Eggs\nFresh Butter\nSee uur teas nnd cuffee\nOur prices are right un everything\nKING, The Grocer\nNight School 1S2-S\nDR, GRIMES has opened a night school in Cranbrook. and will hold\nregular sessions, Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings.\nSUBJECTS: Penmanship, Book keeping, Commercial arithmetic, Correspondence. Instruction will be individual,the needs of each pupil\nbeing taken into consideration. He is a graduate of Albert college.\nBel vie w, Arts and Commercial course; also Zanerian Art college,\nColumbus, Ohio, and has eight years experience teaching in business college, six of which he was principal.\n\*m*\\ni \u00C2\u00AE i \u00C2\u00AE i a\nBeale & Elwell,\nFire, Life and Accident Insurance\nAgents, Mining Brokers, Notaries,\nAgents for Assessment Work, Kimberley Townsite Agents.\nKimberley J Moyie J* Fort Steele.\n\u00C2\u00AEtb * Ji'\nIf -4 f\n\i:J\nti\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AE\\u00C2\u00AE<\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AE;\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AE\\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AEi\u00C2\u00AE<\u00C2\u00AE]\u00C2\u00AE\\u00C2\u00AE\\u00C2\u00AE!\u00C2\u00AE]\u00C2\u00AEti\u00C2\u00A3>\\u00C2\u00AE{\u00C2\u00AE,i.]\nCapital Wanted\nI ii develope the rich mineral resources of\n:::: South East Kootenay ::::\nPartially developed and undeveloped COPPER and SILVER-LEAD\nproperties are offered for sale on liberal WORKING BONOS. Por\nreports and information, address\nCHARLES ESTMERE, Kimberley, B. C.\nl.n.n.F. Key Cl y Iodic\n*fS JE3E\"^K **\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I-*. McoU emy t'rl-\n^*p5l-\u00C2\u00A78^ ''''\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"'tl'l il \"\"*'*' ''tl' \u00C2\u00B0\"\nlinker street. -joJOttrnlng\n[lllll Felline-eorill'illr Invited.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I. I*. llllli W. '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*.i<:nnl\nN.ii. See*!*.\nCranbruok Lodge, No, 34\nA. F. S A. M.\nmeetings nn Hie\nTlnnwlnv ol tlm\niPW,'***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> \"l\"\"\"*\n\ Islling brctltern weleoni d.\n\v. v. (luitii, aeo'y,\nTommy's\nCity Bakery.\nI KNEED VOUR BREAD . ...\n1 NEED YOUR PATRONAGE.\nYou have ^ot n tradesman; help to\nsupport hi tn anil get quality in return. Delivery to any part of city.\nT. J HAYHURST,\nCranbrook, B. C.\nJames Kerrigan & Co\nWholesale dealers In\nGeneral\nMerchandise\nHay\nGrain and\nProduce\nGiven .special attention.\nCar lots a Specialty.\nCranbrook, II. C.\nSuitable Gifts\nA choice selection in gold goods\nwatches, chains, bracelets, gem\nrings, brooches etc. Elegant\nsilverware, mantel clocks.\nWedgewood, Scotch and Canadian souvenir ware. The famous Crown fountain pens.\nW. F. TATE,\nJEWELER,\nCRANBROOK, . B. C.\nHill.Inl Wnkli Inipcctor for C. P. K.\nSURVEYS\nLand Purchases\nPre-emptions **\nMining; Claims\nlite. jt jt\nMade by Cottncl\nToys Must Go!\nIn order to make room for\na large shipment of art\nmaterials and musical instruments, I will sell my\nentire stock of toys at a\nsacrifice; come early and\nget first choice. We have\neverything you could wisli\nfor.\nA. ROOKES & SON.\nCranbrook Music Emporium.\nCHARLES P. CAMPBELL,\nUndertaking Al\"*\nEmbalming\nGnulunto of Chntnploti collego of r. s\nOffice nml storo, Aiken block,\nnear Cntiadlnti Hunk ol Colli*\nuiiTci*, Crntibrook. li C\nUfthulmcrlng and liencral rurn It ure Repairing\nWill iiltoml to miy work in the district\nA. W. M'VITTIE, D. L. S.\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nMining and Qeneral Agent.\nCrnnbrook, II. C.\nSubscribe for the\nHERALD\nEast Kootenay\nBottling Co.\nAerated Waters\nOf all kinds.\nSyrups, Champagnes, Ciders,\nGinger Ales, Etc.\nSoda water in siphons, The most\neconomical way to handle it."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Cranbrook"@en . "Cranbrook_Herald_1901-01-17"@en . "10.14288/1.0068530"@en . "English"@en . "49.5080556"@en . "-115.746944"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Cranbrook, B.C. : Herald Publishing Co."@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 . "Cranbrook Herald"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .