"1a4efb3a-ccc3-427e-a181-0c809ce456b1"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1920-04-15"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranherald/items/1.0069167/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " . .1 M V*1\n . f'\t\nTHK NATIONAL ABVKBTISEH f\nKNOWS THE BEST MEDIUM- 1\nHE FATKONIZF.S THE HEKALD\nHE CRANBROOK HERALD\n\u00C2\u00AB Ptl-ltt FOR THE IIOMI-\nTHt IXTEHESTS III' IRAN.\nBKOUK I'UKKMIlMl IU.II)\nVO L U M E 2 2\nORANBROOK, H. I'.. THURSDAY, AI'RII, IB, Hlin\nSIX PAGES TODAY\nN I \u00C2\u00AB RE It 8\nU.S ARE DRIVING\nEXTENSIVE TRAVELLER\nWRITES INTERESTINGLY\nHilt HERALD READERS\nATTIIiriH 01\nII ETA II US ll\nI,AIIOII\n5VELOPMENT\nfiles Uni) ii I'ch Instances n(\nAdvantages Oiiuiidn litis to\nIHYcr llmncscckcrs\nAEENT-I\nIDE'S SMAHT\nilSIE\nmultiply Iiis crops or his live slock\nnor will he stick to n farm tiiat ceases to be profitable to him.\nMany appeals have been, made tn\nthe public to go slow in consumption j\nind acquire habits of thrift. All such\nappeals arp idle. 90% of the population spend nil they earn. They warn\nthe (good things of life while theyj\nhavo the money lo buy tliom.\nTho two percent save nml put their1\nsavings \"way for a rainy day but Am-!\n(Tii'tins are geiioroiiH spenders, hence\nihe tremendous Increase in conaump-!\u00C2\u00BBK>lHKltS INCI.IM.H TO DO\ntion mid bustnetfs, in 1020 Americans\n-I AWAY WITH nn; IU.\nwill upend n billion more for sugar\nthai) they spent in 1918. This Bounds\nabsolutely Incredible yet It is but too\ntbey would cat 1,000,0(10 tons more\niiiuii seven years ago.\ntu like manner limy nro spending\n$8,000,000,000 a year more for the cot- \t\nton fnhrli-i tbey uso than they did In I\n1018. They consume iii-ooo.ooo.nom. | Present Government\niioisi: |\ l,t>M>0\\nWIM. ABOLISH IM KI.H\nllll,IHIS COMMISSION\nilly P. A. OTarrolt, written for the\nHorald)\nCALGARY, Mbertn, April 13, 1030..\nAlberta is propnrlng for a porio- of\nuuexuiii'pled development and pros-\npertty. Every hamlet town nnd cit>\nhas nu incipient building boom. The\nfanners ure building feverishly expect Inn bumper crops thi* coming\nsenson. Tin Immense snowfall Is tlie\nharbinger of proline urops and Bottlers from the United States are already trooping in nnd buying up lands\nin nil parts of Alborta.\nTho States of the corn belt have\nlind one of the most frenzied hind\nbooms in history. Farmers grow so\nrich owing to wnr .prices und world\nscarcity that speculators begau buying\nfarms everywhere In the corn belt.\nTiie boom gathered force as H swept\nover the country nnd hundreds of\nthousands of farmers sold tlieir lands\nund homes ttt prices ranging from\n$.100 to iilOU per ncre. Probably u\nhundred thousand farmers .villi their\nfamilies have abandoned agriculture\nund retired io the towns and cities.\nToo much prosperity has separated\nthem from life-long occupation. In\nthe Middle West n vicious system has\ngrown up hi recent yenrs. :io'.. or\n409S of the fnrun- nre not cultivated\nby their owners but by tenant farmers, whose sole aim is io get nil they\ncan nut of the land uud then move\non wtth money enough io buy farms\nof their own further West. The\n\"Hoom\" hns sent u hundred thousand;\nor it may be two hundred thousand\nor these tenant far mer a iu Bearch of\nnew hmds further West or in Canada\nand Willi their savings ihey nm buy\nfarms larger than they left behind\nfor 10'- of the prices being (laid In\nlown or Illinois. One farmer who\nsold :i 160-acro farm In Iowa for $1*-.-\n000 lust Pall, hns Just boug-bt a farm\nof 1.00(1 acres 100 miles North of Col-\ngary for $30,000. He suys he will,\ngrow 500 acres of Wheat this year und*\nthnt, he ought to harvest 'JO.OOO bushels, nml sueh u crop nt presont prices\nwill pay for the farm, Ho believes\nAlborta land will raise mors grain\nnnd feed, more live stock -icre for\nncre, tbiin the best land In Iowa, and\nIn five yenrs lie believes bis fnrm in\n.Mbertn win he worth mon per acre\nthan the hind he left in Iowa.\nHe got over $Ti00 nn acre for his\nfarm In lown und the 1.000 acres he\nhns Jusi bought i.n $80,000 he thinks\nwill he worth $800.0000 m live years\ntrom now. Tens of thousands of the\nfarmers who sold out during Uu boom\nare migrating to Oregon nnd Wash*\ningtnu and Idaho mul British Columbia, Lands iu California are no long*\nor cheap, neither nro thoro any cheap\nlands in Ih,. Red Apple Valleys of Oregon and the Columbln Valley, Tlmt\nIt. why sn many faritu rs Irom the Corn\nDoll are Migrating 10 Sii.-kiilcbe\u00C2\u00ABun\nund Alberta\nll is snld thai full.-, a million peo\npie win imve changed during 1920\nfrom ihelr old honiesleadv iu the Com! It\nKelt in oilier home- \"nd lands. Fully u billion dollars \u00C2\u00BBr hanking capital has heen tied up financing the\n\"Frontied laud Doom,\" mid u bus led\nor is leading io the grontotl migration\nnt l'uriuer-< the world hns ever known.\nThe boom iu land values and this Immense trek <>i fnrm population is one\nof the unexpected cousi t|nonces of\nthe wnr.\nThOSO who huve been exporting u\n.lump In laud values and In the prices\nof farm prod tic te hnd better watch\nthis mlgrnlloti of farmers carefully.\nTttcro will he fewer acres of land tilled In 1080 than In 1018. A hundred\nthousand furmers have retired lo the\ncities, tens of thousands of farm laborers have found some congenial\nwork In the steel mills, in motor factories and In coal mid metal mines.\nIn tlie lumber und mining cnm,ps,\nshiftless and inetttclent labor lis getting |5.00 mid $r..r.O for s hours work\nOnly very inferior labor can ho obtained on the farm for $100,00 a montii\nand board. Intelligent agricultural\nlabor is dully growing scarcer and\nthe speculators who bought farms in\nthe Corn Belt for $500 an ncre will\nhave a hard time to make them pay.\nThe tennut-ul-will, oven\nworth of hog products more than in I\n1014, und they export another billion\nof hog products.\nIt Is Idle to appeal to them tn lessen tlieir sugar and meat end egg\nconsumption, while they have tho\nmoney to pay. The fanner, the carrier, tho manufacturer, the banker anil\ntho middleman arc all getting a slice\nof the increased profits, they are all\nsharing in the general prosperity save\nand except the great multitudes wlio\nare engaged In .professional or clerical work or In casual unorganized\nlabor. The wages of this vast multitude, the largest part of the population, are not yet adjusted to the\nnow scale of prices of farm products\nor to the wages paid In essential Industries to organized labor..\nIt is useless) to hide the fact that\norganized labor te arousing intense\nanimosity among nine-tenths of the\ncommunity hy Its everlasting resort\nto strikes and slacking to enforce Its\ndemands. When a ten million dollar\nplant Is closed down for monthly by a\nstrike or lock out the public pays In j\nhighor prices for the commodity made\niu that .plant. When Uie workman Is\nonly TiO'/'l efficient in a coal mine or\non a farm tbe public and not the proprietor is cheated for the costs of loafing always fulls upon the consumer.\nNo snne mnn objects to tho work-\nman's efforts to better his condition,\nbut in our complicated civilization\nneither employers nor employed should\nbe permitted to wrong the 90^r of the\nnation dependent upon their industry.\nGovernor Allen of Kansas has led in\nthe llgth to end ull strikes and lockouts by referring labor disputes to\nthe courts.\nAnother economic change which the\nimmense growth ln consumption and\nbusiness will bring about ls the electrification of all the railroads of Canada und the Imited State*. The great\ntnuik linos can no longer do tlie business being offered them and business\nis growing mid will grow faster than\never. The American railroads need\nseven billions for extensions, betterments and equipment, and the Canadian railroads need at least $500,000,-\n000.\nLots of people said that the Canadian Pacific was ten or even twenty\nyears aimed of the business of the\nDominion, yi today the Sanadlan Pacific traffic lias outgrown its fneil-\nitfos. On the main line from Calgary to the Coast the traffic has\nreached its limit. Only by routing\nfreight over the Southern line through\nthe Kootenayg can it lake care of the\nexpanding business.\nAlready Its great lonrlst botels\nfrom the i'hntcau Fmnteiiae nt Quebec to the Ehnpross at victoria, ar*\nmaking unprecedented reservations for\nth summer. How the Canadian Pacific l< going to take care nf this\nimmense coming traffic from tbe\nStutt s Is n mystery. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA treat deal of the tourist travel\nwill be done in motor cars, for Canada\nwin bo America's playground during\nthe Bummer of 1920. The Canadian\nPacific is doing all tiiat is possible\nto build and buy new equipment, and\nuntiling lis yards and side\nracks, but business kei oh growing\nasler than construction,\nFor years to come lhe great economic problem of the North American\nContinent will be u wholly liinderpinte\nlabor monopoly. $\",000,000,000 must\nbe expended on tho Amorloan rail\nroads to tit them for the work they\nhave to do, $R,0O0,0lN),uOO more must\nbe spout immediately for new homes\nanil stoics und buildings nnd factories,\nbarns nnd warehouses. The need is\nthere, the harvest Is grent and thc\nlaborors aro few. Vet American Ingenuity mny overcome this labor\nshortage.\nThe electrification of the railways\n(Continued on Page Five)\nI of the present Liberal administration\n'failure to look aim- iis friends lias\nI not, so far. been ot-e of them.\n! Tin* projected expenditure for the\ncoming year threw Into bold relief the\n(fact that half a million is to be xprni\nupon new administrative branches,\nsonic ol them useful and some of them\n..such as. in view of.thc existing financial position of tqb province, might\nwell In done without. The amount of\n$82,770 for a [tui'cu of Information,\nwould appear to littles te q policy nf\npreparedness iu view of the forthcoming general elections. Humor has it\n.ihat Mr. W. W. Haer, efslwliile Mel ho-\ndist parson, political editorial writer\n'Hilti. until recently, private BOCretai'J\nfor ihe premier, is slated for ihe position of head of the bureau at a \u00E2\u0080\u00A2---alary of $2,400. Mr Haer has in the\npnsl done peoman sbrvlco for the Lib\noral ucaso, Hut lately lie was ousted\nI from his position fOs secretary ami\nj something else is to lie found for him.\nAnother party stftlwgrl provided for is\n' Mr. Walter Hepburn, movie ci nsor\n' whose chief claim to fame would ap\npear to lie iu his dash loot year will\nthu returned soldiers who sought to\nsecure opportunities io train ns moving picture operators in conjunction\nwith tin oporators' union. Mr. flop-\n' burn is alleged to Imve termed the returned men \"pin heads\" because thoy\nI ditl nol approve of his autocratic moth\nods. Thon, 100, It will be remember\ned, Hepburn wus ou hand to exercise\n: his power of ecu.soi'.-:Mp in connection\n( with moving picture- of the rush for\n- liquor nt tiie Vancouver government\nstore lasl yenr. He banned tiio pic\n! tures. ids excuse being thut he did\nj not consider it proper llrnt people who\n' participated lu ihe atnmpodo for booze\nshould be screened. Another ex pic -\n. nation offered is thai those films would\nj Imve demonstrated what eevryone with\n1 ordinary intelligence was aware of,\nthat so far ns enforcement ot the Pro\nhibltlon Act wns concerned, it had\nbecome n farce nnd the governmeni\n[store wus doing a veritable land office\n: husim.'-'s fn filling prescriptions Which,\nu,ppnront!y, wer being issued without\n'stint. Hut suppression of the pie\ntures would prevent undue advertlz-\n: Ing of the Inxlty or thc Attornoy-gen \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\neral's administration nnd ns the mov-\nI ing picture censor Is also under the\n* jurisdiction of that department, il was\n; natural thai the power to suppress\n'tlie films should be exercised.\n] Other party stalwarts well provided\nIKES PLEA\nEl\nfinance upon\nfor political\nthai what the\nwns attention\nfuture needs.\nIre lattor's propensity\nost-mortems, averting\nicople today demanded\nlo their present and\nThe government could\nI\nNot I'll it-\ning to Look Alter Its\nPolitical Friends\n(By Our Special Correspondent In the\nLegislative Press Gallery)\nVICTORIA, B.C., April U\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Public Utilities Commission, that unneces-\nseary bit of machinery which tiie present government insisted upon creating Inst year for tlie uvowod purpose\nof providing for the proper supervising of the B. 0. Electric und H. C. Telephone companies and, opposition critics were then unkind enomgh to suggest, to provide a nice fat job i'or .Mayor Gale, of Vancouver. 11 strong parly\nfriend of the Attorney-General, will. In\null ikellhood be scrapped, This economy would undoubtedly not be considered by the government were it not\nfor the strong protest from opposition\nand government members ut tlie action\nof the government In making provision\nIn the budget for the coming year for\ncontinuing tho commission, since the\nabove two companies have withdraws]]\nthemselves from lho jurisdiction ot liie\ncommission und come under that of\nthe Railway Commission of Canada tho\n.provincial body finds It-Self, so to\nspeak, all dressed up unci no whoro\nto go. Major Retallack, commission-\nIs enjoying a salary eijiial to that\npaid to the premier of the province\nand it is proposed to increase the salaries of the secretary and chief clerk\nof the commission, both party stnl-\nWt!*,.8' , , , ,ifor r\"'\u00C2\u00B0 Colonel Sclater. prohibition\nWhen the commission wag appointed]\nlast year members of the House con hi\nsee little advantage iu it. Tlie o.ppo\nsltlon strongly objected to it In view\nof the necessary financial outlays\nwwhich had to be met for other and\nInfinitely more Important purposes.\nBut n Public Utilities Commission was!\none of the Attorney-Genereat's babies\nand ho Insisted upon ltd creation.\nMayor Gale got the appointment, ns'.\nwas arranged, but no sooner was thai\nappointment announced than the re-j\nSpecial Correspondent in tho\nLegislative Press Gallery.)\nVICTORIA. EC, April li. Tho outstanding feature of tin proceedings\nIn the Legislature was undoubtedly\niho speech of Mr. W. .1. Bowser, K.C.,\nConservative leader, hi tlie budget de-\nbale, out which uiude a deep im.pres- j\nion upon the llouirp as was evidenced\niu ilie Buhsoqueul outspoken criticisms j\nby Liberal members concerning the ( Minim:\naruival nf expenditures proposed for|\nthe coining fiscal year, criticisms whicli j\nmade It clear Hint, as Hi urge Belli\nLiberal member for Victoria, doolflred\ntlie government in Its domain'-- upon 1\nthe people of the province for more\nand still inort taxation is reaching\nIbe point where further imposts i-ttli-\nbo borne \"The 1 pie of till\nprovince are dlspalrlng of over\niind end to llifs continued ami Inert as-; y-r nm.]HTOj| u*as\nIng taxation.\" declared the Victoria| convention from tli\nmember, who urged the government lo\nommlsBloner with his $3,700 per year;\nMajor Retallack public utilities commission. $7,600: Major Martyn, liidns-\n', trial commissioner. $3,120. A. Turnbull,\na friend of tlie minister of lands, who\nj entered ehtsorvlco two years ago tlG\nclerk at $150 per month, and Is now\n; Lumber Trade Commissioner at $3,000;\nJ. I). McNiven, deputy minister of labor, a one-time defeated Liberal candidate. $:t.71i0: W. McKenzie. American\ncitizen, named grazing commissioner\nby the minister of lands, at $11,000. und\nColonel Bruce Poyloy, bend of the government labor bureaus, $2,700. The\nelan of Mclnnes at Vancouver has also been well looked after, Civil Service Commissioner Mclnnes, who has\nsucceeded in setting tho whole civil\nservice by the enrs, is to have a salary\nincrease from $4,000 to $4,120. Another Mclnnes, lawyer of Vancouver,\nsecured a plum in the- shape of $2,fi$r>\nj as counsel fees in connection with\ndrafting the legislation under which\n[ tlie settlement between the former P.\nG. 13. Interests and tlie government,\nI wns effected. Tlie 'Wade's, Mclnnes\nand Brown's\", that aggregation of\nparty favorites and stalwarts, concern\nIng whom Mr, Bowser was wont to dl\nlaie. would appear to have been well\nlooked after hy the present Liberal\nadministration.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC BEGINS\nSURVEY AT INVERMERE FOR\nTHE MONSTER TENTED CITY\nSHOWS intiiais win:it 1\nGREAT SAVINGS 001 hl>\n111: effectkii\n>ih. mnvsi.it m:i.i\Kits\nHUM,I MM ADOKKS8\nWus IViii|m rnh in Tone umi In-\nmarked hy A n> tlilnir in Nit-\nhire \"i\" Political Kiuicor\nilly\nnot excuse its lack of administrative\nefficiency hy continually damning tiie\nlate government or criticizing tlie\npreseni day opposition because it was\nnot continually aiding the government by constructive criticism and\nsuggestions, The oposltton, he said.\nI would ever bf found ready to a -sist\n1 iu promulgating policies for the bene-\n'tit ot the people bul the fact was the\nelectors saw fit tu put the Liberals\n, in power, to entrust tliem with tin\naffairs of the province and it was to\nthe present administration they were\nlooking for result* The preseni administration must accounl for it\nwork and upon fr^ record alone could\n. laitu lo continuance lu\n] it bas\n; office.\n; The\nlength\nposition leader went at\n11 the claim of the raluiatc*\nof finance mat ibe present government's financial policies had restored\nthe credit of tiie province pointing to\nSFOItTS ('OMMITl'KKK ARE\nBUSY WITH PROGItAM\nOK BIG EVENTS\nK.moiS BOXKH \"II,I\nIti (INK OK FEATURES\nHorse Iln ring unit other Spurts\nwill Go Towards Jinking One Grand Hn>\nthe fact tlu.t Just before the hi\nmiln 1strnltou had left offlct i\n(Continued ou Page Two\nA- | Tlu '1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2went) fourth of Ma;\n1 Cole-\nad tiraiiou <\n'omuilttee. having to\ndo Willi\ntlie big\ntecoud anneal celebn\nit Ion to\nbe held\niu Cranbrook on Mi-\ny LMth.\nEast Kootenay\nOres Attract\nMen nl IniernniliMial (iinten.\ntion li Seattle Take fir eat\nInterest Id IM-plat\n\u00E2\u0080\u009EJ,\ncity,\nF. Huchcroft,\nProspectors'\nwho was at\neco\u00C2\u00BB-|delegat\nM\u00C2\u00BBe Trado.\n now enjoying\na salary of $8,000. He was recently\nhack in Hi'., ostensibly on sick leave.\nthough his erstwhile ffriomls deolaro. t)]a, ,iM h6nCeforth( to cure for the\nthey never snw him looking iu better t|10U>andfi o( 1(mrists Rd|\u00E2\u0080\u009EB into thnt\nhealth. The opposition members took, \u00E2\u0080\u009E,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,. wvUm ln tha Unnro.\nconsiderable Interest in Mr. Wade's HosidpB n ,argfl .\u00E2\u0080\u009Enhlgroom wWch\nmovements. To the question whether CQn bo Uf(C(j \u00E2\u0080\u009Es 0 dance hall, a uum-\nMr. Wade was in the Province the Pre- bflr of nnR\u00E2\u0080\u009E cotta\u00E2\u0080\u009EM wm bfl prprtP(J\nmlor replied he did not know whoro t0 ,m Ut tn th0M desl-hm to stop\n[over or make a lengthy stay al thai\nAu engineer representing tht Canadian Pacific Railway Company Is nt\nInvermere witli a force of assistants\nlaying OUI tbe monster te :ted city\nwhich will hn a permanent thing at\nSENIOR FOOTBALL CM'B\nOlti;AM/EH: NAME OEEICEKS\nAt n meeting held in the \"Y\" on\nMonday evening, a Senior Football\nClub wns organized. Tho officers ere\nnn follows:\nPresident\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev. Harrison.\nSecretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oeorge Page.\nTreasurer\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. B. Davidson.\nCaptain of the Team\u00E2\u0080\u00948. Malcolm.\nVarious names wore suggested as\nIf a good j members of the team or teams. Any\nfarmer, will exhaust the land undj wishing to Join will hand their names\nwill only cultivate to mako tho most to any nf the officers, or the general\nmoney for himself and he will not'secretary.\nhn wus, ilinug!i ul Hint time Mr. Wade\nwns holding dully a sort of lovco hi'\nthc corridor or tlie Legislative chamber. Asked if Mr. Wade, while here\nwas on full salary, the Pram lor re-\nwhctherplled \"presumably so, nnd asked whether Wade, while hack here,\nwas .privately negotiating in connection with certain private matters, the\npremier gave the reply, \"no information.\" In fact there appeared considerable mystery In connection with the\nAgent-general's vlatft hut, judging from\nthe attitude taken by some of Hie government supporters anont the London\nagency, It would appear there ls u\ngrowing belief thnt Mr. Wade's work\nIn the Km.plre's metropolis is not\nwoth the money being spent thereon,\nMr. Wade hns developed a business\nsystem, apparently, for it dove lopes\nthat In order to beat the adverse exchange rate ho has secured advances\non account of his salary to meet personal liabilities on this side, one such\nadvance amounting to some $ftoo odd.\nWhatever may lie the shoricomlugH\npoint,\nAll modern conveniences win be Incorporated ill Hie work, such an u\nwnter system, sewerage system und\nlu fact everything to make the .surroundings .plensnnt nnd perfectly sanitary.\nPonies for the use of tbe tourists\no 10 he kept there and guides will\ncompany Hie visitors to points of\nInterest, accomodations for nutos also, being in tin program.\nKOOTENAY-IHH M.ARY SCHOOL\nTEACHERS ELECT OFFICERS\nThe lirst annual meeting of Kootenay und Boundary School Teachers'\nAssociation, held here hisl week,\nelected the following offieers for the\nensuing yenr:\nPresident -B. D. Daniels, Fernie.\nVice-President -it. S. Shields. Cranbrook.\nKec-ordini-. Secretary\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thomas Pros'\ncolt, Coal Creek.\nwipe inn non-esseutlnls and by\nomy uud thrift, virtues always\npreuclied by the premier, to ou\nburden Upon tlie taxpayer.\nMr. Dowser's efTorl wos one of the\nbest he lias ever made in the House,\nlt was temperate in torn; and unmarked by anything in the nature of pollti-\nul rancour, tho while clearly emphasized tlie opposition vlev.*-point that\ntlie present Increasing overhead cost\nof administration must bo reduced, that\nincreases in a staff already greatly\nover-manned must cease aud thai\nwhile adequate provision must In-\nmade for essentials Hint the frills\nmust he eliminated. Tlie present civil service stax. hr claimed, could be\nreduced by twenty-live per cent, without any loss In eclency and to the\ngreat benefit of the people wlio, iu the\nfact of the increasing tost of living.\nshould not be regarded as a perVonial I\nsource of money without stint or lim-;\nit, ll was ull very well for (he minister of finance to bring what ho (Mr. j\nDowser) declared to he \"camouflaged\nsurpluses\", to seek to prove that rhe\ngovernment Is living within current 1\nrevenues, but the fact was tlie net re-\nBUlt in tlie financial operations of tlie\ngovernment wns nn annueal deficit Increasing in amount as thc years went 1\nby. The book-keeping expedient of\ncharging to capital account large;\nsums in an efl'ori to show that current\noutlays were being kept within current revenues wns no relief to thel\nover-burdened lax-paper who footed!\ntbe bill In nny event. As a piece of\nfinancial tegermalu ft might serve to!\ndistract tbe attention of the public for\nthe time being but the final outcome\nwas always the same-tiie people ]\npaid.\n\"We don't know wliere we're going,\nbat we're on the wny,\" npptnred to\nthe opposition leader to aptly sum up I\nthc government's financial policy.\nTe said Hint hud tlte l*:te governmeni\nseen fit to charge up annually sev-\n1 ral millions to capital accounl it, too,\ncould have shown pnpor surpluses\nbut, Innteadi it hnd preferred to Invest Its revenue in permanent public\nworks to the advantaco of tht peoplo\nAim were putting up the money, Tlie\nresult had been thai when the present\ngovernment took office tin-re were cap-J,n overyon\n'1*1 assets over capital liabilities of\nover 116)000.000, He criticized tin\nidmlnlstratton of the Dapnrtiuenl of\nPublic Work-, point Ing to lhe present\nbad condition of tlu roads of the prov-\nnnd astertlng thai assets, left by\nthe former government had bn nl-\nlowd to deteriorate to tin* point where\nit will require miliums to restore\nthom. He rewarded the announcement by the minister or publio works\nthut $6,006\u00C2\u00BBOO0 would be borrowd to\nimprove Hie main trunk roads and\nthat amount together wltll $1,600,000\nto he advanced by Hie Dominion for\n.cretary of the\nDelation of tin:\"\ne International\nlli j Mining Convention held in Sc-ulle tit-t\n'rg j week, arrived home Tuesdny e-fenlOK-\nhe delegate to U\u00C2\u00BB\nlocal ProBpei ut--'\nAssociation, \. A. Walllnger being a\nrepresenting the Board ot\nmet Monday evening in tiie City ball\nto compare notes and arrive at some\ndefinite program\nA representative number of ihose\nl*\u00E2\u0080\u009E;vim: the arrangements in cliargo\nm.i- \"a bund, Chairman Porcj Adams\na general discussion was entered\nIuto, -md die boxing conuuHlee made\na report, showing it bad made most\nexcellent progress nnd would have\nlOme Of tht be-i talent iu the name\nier- to put on a match.\nTbe committee reported that tin*\nlightweight champion of Canada, McCarthy, .md Jainc- Clark, tiie army\nchamp, would In sll probability bt\nthe top nottbers. with other lesser\nllclit-- in the prel mlnaiies\nThi- p.n: oi the program will be\nstaged ia the skating rink and the\nseating eapaclt) when arranged final-\nUeorgl Carr and William Van Ars-\ndeu, were also in attendance\n.Mr. Huchcroft suid the convention\nwas very largely attended and that t:.-r\nEast Kootenay and West Ko tenay di.--\nplays, arranged side by side, madt Uie\nmost attractive exhibit on tlie ground.\nHe spoke in the highest terns of the\ntreatment the delegates received and\nanticipates u great number of mining\nmen interested in prospects will be'\nin this section as soon a-\" the restber\nwill twrniit of examination. Tlie requests for blanks for Information re-\ngeardlng certain properties were numerous, he said, and aside from this\ntlit delegates have been told personally of the intentions ot engineers and\nothers toVnme in here as soon a* ex-\naminatious can be made,\nBn route home Mr. Huchcroft -.topped in Spokane In entiwwtlon with the\ncoming from that olty of parties in-!\nterested in proepects hereabouts.\nThe next meeting of the convention\nwill lie held at Portland. Ore., the delegates from the Kootenays voting as\na unit for that city. The date Is to.\nbo announced later.\nMr. Walllnger ha\u00C2\u00BB not yet returned\nremaining in Seattle in charge of the\nexhibit, tlie executive of tiie mining\nconvention requesting that tise Kast\nKootenay exhibit be left at tlte Wellington State University until the Portland convention is held, agreeing to\nmake a permanent exhibit of the display at the university.\nit is estimated by t;inf,c in * posit-!\nIon to know that thero were fully 1000\ndelegated ut the gathering\nN. a. Walllnger, of thi- 1 n> was\ngiven a place on tbe permanent committee of the convention as a representative of the (\"ranbrook Hoard of\nTrade.\nI> \u00C2\u00BB.ll ;:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\nAr*-a*i\u00C2\u00A3. 1\nmod a\nent*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ove\nUVi :\n2000.\n>,. been made\nuf the fastest\nRiling horses\n-ill be spoils\nt*i bring in three cars\ntrotting, pacing .md 1\nto i-e had. and there\nand amusements for all.\nAn effort i- being made to stage a\nb;t-ei\u00C2\u00BB.. 11 ^.niit- between teams representative of Cranbrook District and\nWatdi and Baynes l^ike. ami sonic\nlively pjport can be looked forward to\nby lovers ef baseball.\nThe committees are working hard\nto make the celebration e success and '\nwill iii^et again tomorrow evening ln\norder to perfect arrangements for\n^fime cf C.e events.\nAt the Uiet-tiiir tomorrow night the\nsports program for children will also\nbe discussed.\nSpecial train- are being arranged\nto brini- In tbe visitors from points\nboth Bail and Wesl aod the largest attendance iu the history of celebrations here is anticipated.\nMemorial to Be\nErected Here\nMeeting Held in < ia) Hull lin-daj\nEvening Deeldes le Go Ahead\nI i.inmitlt-f th N;mieit\nIMI'OKTA>T MEETING OF\nfRAXtlROOK HOAIlli OK THlliI\nTO HE HELD FRIDAY EVENING\nAt :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. fairly rej-re-ieutMUe meeting\n..eld !n !h\u00C2\u00AB be unncrmkeii\nThe important special meeting of by the Board of Trade and C P It In\nthe Cranbrook Board of Trade, railed beautifying Baker street ai the depot\nfor tomorrow evening, commencing and v.*it>i the plan ru outlined ihli\nat S OC'tOck, 111 the City hull is open point would If one uf the bOIUty IpOU\na public meeting of tbe dtj ami located ai a polni\nBusiness of vital Importance to all, when ll) passengers golnc through\nI resident within the district t*. to be Uie city by rail or toiilta c Inn In\nionslderod and nil nre urged to nt- b> auto, could see it\n1 tend. Fundi are to be realsed b) popular\n1 Among the matters to fie discussed! rubscrlptlon to carry on the work.\nwill he conservation of the iiinl\u00C2\u00BBer. 11 waa also decided that the com-\nalong the main trunk roads; provls* mlttea named can add to its number\nlona fur tourists coming ihis way and\nmaking game rowrves out of tlu St.\nMarys and Premier Lake sections\nWISCONSIN AMI MICHIGAN\nMMHEIt MAGNATES COMING\nphbltc works purpot\namount it. Is expert,\nitles will contribute\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2s and tin equal! Ml\n(1 tbe municipal-1 aci\nunder the now\nThi syndicate of\n[gan lumbermen,\nHighway bill, would bo spent on road\nwork, as a mere sop to the electors\non the ive of uu oloction. The minister, Mr. Bowser opined, hud painted a glowing picture of road construction imt he was content to let tho\npublic judge. In the light of past experience. Just bow much of thnt\npromised programme tin y might\nproporly expect to roo Inaugurated\nand completed.\nMr. Bowser twitted tbe minister of\nWisconsin and\nwhich recently\nacquired ihe ift.fton acre tract of timber West of Cranbrook, and which\nsyndicate Intends establishing a big\nPlant 10\narrive 1\ntrom those outside tho city to make it\nmore representative of the whole district.\nmtX CRANBROOK GET ONE\nOF AIR ROUTE STATIONS!\nHAS AM. REtlREMENTO\nWill Cranbrook get. one of ihe air\nroute station.-, iu tbe -heme to eMnb-\nr Wattiburg, are expected to Mth an air-route across Canada now\nro Saturday and go Into the being Investigated?\npreliminaries in connection with get- It Is believed hy many, in view of\ntini; the mill nnd other works under1 ihe tart that the city hoe everything\nway at the earliest possible date to offer the undertaking, that ''ran\nTliis will add to the district another I brook la to be considered in the plan,\nindustry worth while Parties Investigating thi route for\nThe purchase of tin tn-ct and lhe the airplane scheme are now en route\npinnt< of the company were outlined I to the Weal from Bastem headquar-\nfully and exclusively In the Herald tern and lt will not bn surprhdng If\nat the time the deal took place. I the question will he brought up soon. V A tl K T W 0\nTIIK lit A N It It (Hi K IIKHAI, I)\nThursday, April 15, I tlill\nYour Next\nPhonograph\nWill be a\nBrunswicK\nFind out WHY\nCall To-DAY\nRaworth Bros.\nJeweler* A Opticians\nNext to Hie Postofflce.\nTHE VALUE OF MONEY\nMoney\u00E2\u0080\u0094ready money is an essential in every\nline of business\u00E2\u0080\u0094mercantile or farming. Wise\nfarmers build up Savings Accounts, whieh\nenable them to purchase for cash.\nA Savings Bank Account with this Bank\nassures ready money when needed. Interest\npaid at current rate. .1.\nIMPERIAL BANK\nChe Cranbrook Gerald\n\"ii Every Thursday bj\nwill a. 1:1.1.KTSOS \t\nWILL A ELLETSON. JR..\n Ed I to 1\n,ahsi. Mgr\nCranbrook Branch,\nOF CANADA\nB, E. Howard, Manager.\nSuh-Alency at Kiiulieiley.\nucrt\nslngn\n1st oi* living, 10 lucre\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Willi 11 .MOtnluni Wllbuui 11 Slusale\"\nPi-lilted l.\u00C2\u00BB Union Labor\nSubscription Trice, $2.00 a Year\nSubscription Price, |'.s.. $2.;\u00C2\u00BB(l a Year\nAdvortlslng Rates on AdpIU\nIuiiik's tor Advertising MUSI\nill la ofllce U'L'Uiii-.\"i.iiiy noon the ct\n,\,-.-\i to secure attention.\nNo letters to tho edit\nept\nUlri.si-\ni of no\n>t llu. write:\nexceptli\n11 be Insert-\nproper fll\u00C2\u00ABnutun\nCltANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTHURSDAY. APRIL 16, 1920\nOPPOSITION\nContinued from Page One)\ntl\nTiii' opposition leader roundly\nji'ii tin- government for its failure to\nlive nml adequate assistance tn the\niiunictpniiil.'s doolarhig the proposal\no hand over Hie unpopular poll lax\nmd one-halt of the amusement tax,\nWhich Inner il WM pnipiiM'il to\nlouhk- so llmi Hie government would\n--till retain lis present returns the\nwould bo called upon to pay Hie shot,\nivhtle the peopu of the municipalities\nwus a plain caso of the mountain laboring nnd bringing forth the mouse\nit was n vorltable municipal gold-\nbrick, he asserted, Truly, ho thought,\nthe minister musi have brokeu his\nIteart, musi huve strained himself, in\nmaking that offer to the municipalities, Nor could Mr, Bowser, see tiio\nibject of thu minister, in his budget\njpeoch,. going out\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0enaction upon ti\nthe fuel Hint the Butnaa reeluinntlon\nsi-iienie, one promised us uu election\nap- halt to aecuro tho election In tins.\n' to nf no.- present minister or agriculture,\nthe wns being gone abed with on plans\nprepared by n mnn who could not in\nany osnse be rogarded us un engineer\nof u tun ding, Hi urged thut lu thai\nscheme ns well us In the proposed ill-\nversions of the line of the P. Q. B.\nnear Quesnel, tlie government should\ni ecure the report of onglneers or undoubted knowledge and thus assure\nthe provim-e against loss. He suggested that if Hie premier woud forget for the time behiR his assumed\nlimit ideations us nu engineer) railway builder, uud general all-around\nexpert, leaving these mutters to men\nwho were really qualified therein, und\nspend more attention to his warring\nmliiisienw, the results from the stand-\nf his way to cast I point of tlie people would be more sat-\nmunicipallttes for isfactory. He hold thut If the govern-\nAORICI l/ll -HAL ASSOCIATION\nV.I.YATH OFFICERS} W. E.\nWOHDKN NEW I'ltKMIDKNT\nAt the adjourned general meeting,\nof the ('runbr|)ok District Agricultural Association, held in Hie City hall\nlast Friday ovenin, W. EX Warden,\nwas olected president for the tusiiiny\nyear.\nA general discussion us regards tlie\nfinancial standing of the association\nwas had, and the meeting derided to\nappeal to the Provincial government\nto secure its assistance in connection\nwith curing for the mortgage on the\nfair property.\nThe election Of officers resulted in'\nthe following heing chosen:\nPresident- W. K. Worden.\nFirst Vice-Pros F. H. Detail.\nSecond Vk-c-Pres. Dr, J. W Itut\nledge.\nA request wll he inr.de of the Agricultural depurlmcni ut Victoria to\nhave the Fall fuir dates sn arranged\nthat the rah* hero can be held on Sopl\nI und 2, thut more favorable weather\ninn be hud und which (Into will permit of more attractions coming this\nway, heretofore prevented from taking\npun because ot the oid dntos con-\nlllotlng with otiier anil larger fairs\nl I'M ut tlie sume time.\nIW I'm\nheir present Ihiuncial position, They j ment doslred to develop a colonization policy it must ,pluce that work\nunder n competent head, one who\nwould give all his time to it. At\nfaults of the past; they I present the hind settlement bourd'r\nul received ti stone. Ho pointed, |wosk was being handled by a mlnls-\nio, tn the minister's Intention of ter of agriculture ns u mere Ude-llae\nI polities by the und the result was no considered\nced u\nwns ,purt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2clure then\nlilting tin\n-ondition mil a theory and\nof tlie minister's duty to\nThey usketl for aid. ad-\ntbo\nmum\nt ami froclng\niated loans at u rate of 5.50 per cent,\nho lirst loan by the present govern-\ncul lu'.d cost, seven pere cent, uud\n.ly within the ,pust year had ii been\nmnd posslhlo to float loans on as\nivoramble terms us hod been done in\nJ Hi. .The reckless charges made by\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Liberals in 1910 concerning tht\ncredit of the province had been re\nsponsible, Mr. Bowser held, for the\nlater difficulties iu floating loans, tin\ncalamity howling of tlie then Liberal\nopposition having naturally broughi\ndlBcrcdli upon D. C. Instead of taking credit for restoring Uie credit of\nHie province the minister should, Mr.\nBowsor said, admit that credit would\nnevi r have been impaired were it not\ntor tlie Liberals themselves. He declared that in the face of the saturnalia of expenditures and borrowings\nindicated by the present budget tlu*\nminister need not expect that a domestic loan would be possible, ami\nin | ctured the minister's claim\nin having secured lust year the most\nfavorable terms for a loan of *2.4r>0,-\nOOQ by showing thnt through Hon. Mr.\nHurt's Inexperience in llnnnce that\nloan would actually cost, not five and\none-half per rent, ns claimed but nine\nper cent. That issue, a five-year, live\nper cent, one with principal aud in\nteresl payable iu New York would, ii\nview of tho present adverse rate of\noxchange, nn adverse rate that could\nin- expected lo continue for the next\nlive years, would coBt for exchange on\nthe annual interest payments alone,\n$14,700 per year or uu -ggregiite of\n$76,500 In live years, At maturity it\nwould cosl the province $204,000 to\ntransfer Ihe principal to New York.\nIn ull there would have to be paid\n$307-000 in addition to the regular Internet charges of $013,500, Just because the minister did not know enough of finance to have made the principal ami interest payable In Canada,\nor huve made the loan I'or twenty\nyears within which time the adverse\nexchange rate would have disappeared, He'recalled the Liberal critics hi\nIBlfl wen wont to score the then administration for having alienated nil\nilie natural resource.', of the pn\ntin- lauds, limber, mineral*,, etc Vet\nthe present government had mil In en\nui iittiic g|g months before il wus ls-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nlug the most glowing advertise-\nmolnts telling of the millions of acres\nnf land, tin billions of fe.resi limber\nand the scores of million* of acres or\ncoal mul other minerals possessed by\ntho people, Perhaps, be said, he\nshould nut he too hard upon them.\nThey were lifter offico in HUB and nny\nmenus to an end seemed good to them,\nThe people hail been misled .md took\nthem at ihelr word. Now the atirn\nduties of office faced them nml they\nrere compelled lo make good. Mr.\nBowser recalled tin declaration by\nthe minister of finance two yenrs ogo\nthat he was \"going to the mat\" with\nHie fedeural minister of flnaiicetn\nforce tho latter to leave this province\nin undisputed control of the enforcement of the income tux. But, Mr.\nBowser said, the provincial minister\nhad never even got his coat off, he had\nproved u most docile warrior and now\nhe proposed to hold a conferenco with\nthe federal minister. He criticized the\nminister for proposing to still further\nIncrease the Income tax burden by\nrestricting the exemption lin|it for\nwidows, widowers, und unmarried\nmules, declaring the only practical\nresult of sueh n step might he to encourage matrimony tbuo permitting\nlho minister to colleot a few more dol-\nlurs through the Usuance of mnr-\nrlngo licenses. He held the. present\nwas not the time In reduce tho exemption but rather, In (he face of the'\nlie municipal sinking funds in return for which they would roc-el vt\ngovernmeni bonds wliUch might or\nmight not be disposed of at par. The\nminister, he said, having used up all\nhe loose change of tlte Workmen's\nCompensation Borurd wus now. ap-\nmr.ntly. to go after tlmt of the municipalities, for lie knew Hie future\nif tlie money market was likely to be\nunfavorable and would not absorb\ntlie provincial bonds under seven per\nDye That Skirt,\nCoat or Blouse\n\"Diamond Dyes\" Make Old, Shabby,\nFaded Apparel Just Like New.\nDon't worry nbout perfect results.\nUse \"Diamond' Oyo.t,\" guaranteed to glvo\na new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric,\nwhether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed\ngoods\u00E2\u0080\u0094dresses, blouses, stockings,skirts,\nchildren's coats, draperies,\u00E2\u0080\u0094everything!\nA Direct inn Book is in nnckngc.\nTo mutch any materiul, Imve dealer\nshow you \".Diamond Dye\" Color Card.\nent.\nhem to relinquish scheme but h haphazard plan costing\nlarge amounts with no return In concrete settlement.\nWhen the vote for the provincial\nlabor bureau was being considered,\n.1. 11. Hawthornthwaite, Newcastle,\nurged that tho time had arrived when\ni here should be a separate labor department. His suggestion was corn-\nbatted by P. \V. Anderson, Kamloops.\nwho however, felt the need of taking\nthe land settlement and colonization\nwork away from the department of\nagriculture and placing it ln u separate department.\nThe policy of the government in\nplacing large areas In the Peace River\ndistrict where Indications wore petroleum exists wns criticized by opposition snd government members.\nTiie discussion centered around an\nMr. Dowser devotod seme time to\nthe failure of the land settlement\nboard to produce results despite the\nlavish expenditures of public moneys\nand the heavy overhead cost or that\nbody. The minister of finance hud referred with unction to the fact that\nthrough the bourn's efforts! settlementj itcm of $25,000 Tor further explornt-\nvvus proceeding, tiiat through the ef- Ion work In that field this year. W.\nforts or the board the returned ment I r. r08s, Fort Oeorge. asked for an\nare going upon the land, (but Individ- explanation of the vote and also for n\nu-ill.v nnd through community settle- declaration nf the government's pol-\nmonts the men are taking up furn; icy ns to petroleum exploration by\nami ure making good. Mr. Bowser private parties. |\nsuggested the minister Was merely t The propriety at this stage when\ndrawing upon his Imagination. The the home market cannot be supplied.!\nfact was Hie returned men did uot of spending large sums upon the lum-\nknow when. If ever, ihey were going ber trade extension work of the pro-\nto get on the land and at the very mo- vtnctal government, was called into\nment the minister was displaying such question by P. Ololmn, oC Victoria.\nsatisfaction at tho work of the Hoard, during the discussion of thc estimates\na delegation or irate veterans from of the forest brunch in the legislature\nthe Courtenny soldier settlement ureas Monday.\nwas Interviewing the government and The member suggested that the\ndemanding tlmt they be given their item of $40,000 for that work he cut\nlauds und insisting their- many griev- to $10,000, suggesting that as It wan\nances be met, Tlie eoldler settle- apparent that under existing condition I policies of tlle governmeni had Ions British Columbia lumbermen\nproved n long sorlen of mistakes und can nol supply the home demand, ft\nblunders. Already $800,000 had been j wns u waste of money to seek to\nspem on the sottlement shemo and extend the foreign market for the\nthough promised u ye r ago they home product. Mr. Glolma's motion\nwould tie given their allotments not ii to reduce tho amount was defeated.\na mini had so fur been granted his ,\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ..\u00E2\u0099\u00A6-\u00E2\u0080\u009E\t\nfarm. Tlie cost pro-ruled over the\nholdings would bo so grent ihat the\nfederal authorities would never loan\non the valuations fixed hy the province. So fi r the board members appeared Ui spend Hielr lime lii'ghling\namong themselves, The Creston soldier area was aiioiiict* ovldonc. of Incapacity, Mr. Bowser asserted, as he\npointed to the fact thai OUI of 7.001)\nacres purchased, 2,000 were useless,\nhm would be charged up against the\nsoldiers, Hint a large amount lias\nbeen spent uud not a BOllllor know\nwhen. If ever, he would get his allotment. The sume Story of Incompetence attached to ihe Christian Ranch,\nnear Kolowna, ihe area on which\nsome- 56,000 has been spent, of which\n$9,000 Weill as a rake-off to the president of the local liberal association.\nhut area had been purchased hy thej\nboard without lirst ascertaining thnt\nnot u drop of water for Irrigation\npurposes was available. Mr. Bowser\nslated it was quite clear llrnt there\nlias in en absolutely no co-operatton\nbetween the hoard and tho minister of\nlands nnd while the quarrel between\nthe two yas going on, Iho returned\nmen were, suffering und public moneys being dissipated.\nThe opposition lender .pointed to\nMOST HI U TIH I, MKL ON\nSCRKKN COMING TO REX\nRuby do Romor, whose Intesi work\nls thc rreutlon of one of the principal '\nroles in \"Ashes of l.ovc.\" the new\nphotoplay written nnd directed by,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ivan Abrumson for the Graphic Film j\nCorporation, al the Rex theatre, Fri-\nday and Saturday, onojy, n dual popu-\nInrlty, accorded to many of the pres-1\nciil-day young slurs. \u00C2\u00BBn u singe nml\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 11'ci'n favorite, Possessed nf a won- j\n[ derfiil voice, Iii nddillnn to marked'\ndramatic iiblfjty, she has not only\n: sinned lu many photoplays but Is,\n, well known for her work AS prlmn\ndonnn In u number of Ilroudway must-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cal shows, She Is looked upon IU\n| one or tin- must henuHful girls on tlie\nscreen,\nLIFT OFF CORNS\nWITH FINGERS j\nFew Drops of \"Fraetone,\" Then I\nI Cormt Lift Off\u00E2\u0080\u0094No Pain I I\nU.tll|n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009El,|,<\u00E2\u0080\u009E|l1,H,\u00C2\u00BB.T,l.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E .....*\u00E2\u0099\u00A6}\nA tiny bottle of \"Freosone\" costs so\nlittle nl uuy drug storet apply a lew\n.Imp- upon any corn or OflltllS, In-\n-I'Hifly it stops hurting, tlietl nlinitly\nvmi lift that botbemum*. corn or callus\nright off witli your lingers. Truly!\nXu humbug!\nSOUR, ACID STOMACHS,\nOASES OR INDIGESTION\n\"Pape's Dispspsin\" neutralises cieea-\nslve acid In stomach, relieving\ndyspepsia, heartburn and\ndfstrtss at ones.\nTime It! In Hv<- minutes nl! \u00E2\u0080\u00A2torn-\narji distress, dm- tu acidity. *V.i go.\nNo Indigestion, In'nrtliurn, wnirm-wi or\nbelching of pai or eructations of undigested fond, no dlulncs-i, illuming, foul\nbreath or headache.\nPane's Dlnpepshi te noted for Its\nspeed in ri'pu In tin\" itpMt stomachs.\nIt in the unrest, quickest stomach sweet-\noner in the whole world, snd besides It\nis hurmlt-HR. Put an end to stomach,\ndistress ut once hy getting \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 large fifty-\ncent ease of Pupe'i Dlapepain from any\ndrug store. Vou realise in five minutes\nhow needless it ia to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia nr any sloma..li disorder censed by fermentation due to\nexcessive acids in stomach.\nSubscribe for tlie Herald, $11 year.\nCANADA'S\nAUTOMOBILE\n1NDUSTKY\nThroughout Cuuua.i there Is one\nautomobile for ever) twenty-five people, the Domlniou In tbis respect\ntaking ouly second placo to the United States, where there is one to\nevery flfteeu persons. Since the Introduction of the car into Cauadu,\nthe industry has tnude phenomenal\nstrides. Just how remarkable the\ngrowth bus been may be realized\nfrom the fact thai whereas In limr,\nfn ail the breadth ot the Dominion\nihere were but 220 car owners. In\nlum the- number of registrations totalled 324,88(1. By provinces the registration of cai'B is as follows: Ontario. 138,288; Saskatchewan, 64,7B2;\nAlberta, 34,uuo; Quebec, 29,183;\nManitoba, 29,163; British Columbia.\n19.500; Nova Scotia. !>.900; New\nBrunswick, 8,061; Prince Edward island, 08!), e\nAt the present time the sum of\n$50.ii0u,uy.j is invested in the Canadian motor industry, und Its various\nlines account for the employment of\nmore than 15,ouO people. The estimated aggregate sale of cars In Canada\nlait year wa^ over J 100.000.000 and\nexpert Investigation has elicited tbe\nprobability ol a 35 per cent Increase\nover litest- rlguros for tho year 1820,\nOnlariu t'iiiiuda\ Motor Province*\nOntario is the motor province of\nCanada in manufactures as wnll us\nownership. Windsor, with Its sur-\nroundtug communities of Walkerwllc\nkUil Pord City, Oshawa nnd Toronto\nare ibe most Important munufactur-\nlUg town.*, The Ford Motor Company\nat vYulkervllle employs 3,470 employees at tlie home oftice. The\nplain covering 9 acres. The recently\nCompleted plants of tho Canadian\nProducts, Ltd.. division of thc General Motors of Canada, constructed\nat SValkerville, cost $0,000.Gnu. Other\nlarge plants in tbe Windsor district\nar* Maxwell':', und Iho Studebaker\nCorporation, in addition to whlcb\nthere Is u Urge number of plants\ntUrulliS out accessories ami automobile parte. At Oshawa, tbe General\nMotors Corporation of Canada bas\ntine*' large plants, where McLaugtlU,\nChevrolet and Oldesmoblle cars are\nmanufactured. Last year between\n$2,000,000 and $3,000,000 wus spont in\nthis town on extensions and Improvements in connection with the Indus-\ntry. In Toronto the Willys-Overland I\nj, tbe principal plant, whilst Loudon. '\nChatham, Kitchener, Hamilton und\nBrockvlfle ure also Interested in ibe\nnanufacture. Montreal, In Quebec,\nis also largely Interested In motor in-\nlustrles.\nlin pn Ms uud lApurls.\nCanada is largely interested In\niotb lhe Import and export of unlo-\nmobiles. In 1010 the Imports ol cars,\nnails and accessories amounted to\nM-.2Ul.119. while exports for tho\nisme period were vnlued at $10,88!).-\nHi, The imports were practically\nUl from tbo United States. Tbe\nirowtb nf tbe export trade can be\nteen from a comparison with the fig-\nires of 1917 and 1918 which were |3,-\ntio.120 aud $4,418,976 respectively,\nAustralia Was the Dominion's best\niuyei last yesr tbe Common wealth\ntuyins $2,440,000 worth of cars. New\ntealanri came next with $1,185,000,\n.ben tbo United Kingdom, $7iH.00O\ntod India $664,000. Turkey took\n'relght automobiles lo the value nf\n1621,022. exports to tbe United States\nstalled $329.(108. mainly parts, and to\nhe Argentine Itopubllc $5F.2.46il.\nTbe British preferential tariff\nrhlcli went into effect on September\nst, 1919. Ib expected to Impart n mn-\n-tderable stimulus to the Canadian\noitomoblle Industry, tt grsnts pre-\nsrence of one-third provided that not\ness than 25 per rent of tbr labor on\nbe finished car shall have been\none within the British Empire,\nDo not forget\nto file your\nIncome Tax Return\non or before the 30th of April, 1920.\nDominion ot Canada\nDepartment of Finaiu-r\nAl.l, persons residing in Canada, employed in Canada, or carrying on\nbusiness in Canada, are liable to a tax\non Income, as follows:\n1. Kvery unmarried person, or widow, or\nwidower, without dependants as dettned by the\nAct, who during the calendar year Ull received or\nearned $1,000 or more.\n2, All other individuals who durinft the\ncalendar year lilt received or earned $2,000 or\nmure.\n.1. Kvery corporation and joint slock company\nwhose proltis eiceeded $2,000 during th* fiscal\nyear ended in 1911.\nForms \"'h* UM'li'\" \"\"\"'\nreturns on or hetore\nthe 30th of April, 1420.\nALL INDIVIDUALS other than\nfarmers and ranchers must use\nForm T 1.\nFARMERS AND RANCHERS\nmust use Form T IA.\nCORPORATIONS and joint\nstock companies must use Form\nT2.\nPenalty\n(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> ptr-ton riqulrcd oi *n*L\u00C2\u00AB * return, wrm\n(alia lo do au nlihln ihv lima limit, sii-tll ti.<\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ubjaci Is a panaliy ul l\u00C2\u00BB*mv ll.r pet cantuin\nuf tha amouni of tha tin payahlr\nAny paritiii, whether tumble, ur uiherwlae.\nwho falta to maka a reinrii ur provide Infurnta-\ntlun duly required an Hiding lu the provialou uf\n(ha Act, ahall be Habit on eumtuar* ronflctlan\nto a penalty uf llll) fur each day during\nwtilch tha default continue*. Alao any person\nmaking a Uta* aiatemani In any return or tn\nany information iequlred by (ho Mlalatar, ahall\nbe liable, on luminary conviction, to a penalty\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ut aictfdlRtfIft-Mt,M to ell monthi tinprlaon-\nmani or lo both fine and Imprlaonmant.\nGeneral Instructions.\nObtain Kurnis from the inspectors or\nAssistant inspectors of Taiation or from\nPostmasters.\nRead carefully all Instructions on\nForm before tilling it in.\nPrepay postage on letters and documents forwarded by mall to Inspectors of\nTaiation.\nMake your returns promptly and avoid\npenalties.\nAddress INSPECTOR OF TAXATION.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nR. W. BREADNER,\nCommissioner of Taiation.\nMY LADY NICOTINE IN CANADA\n(1) Hauling Tobacco to the Curing Barn. (2) Full grown White Buiiey Tobacco in O\nliter\nTobuct-o culture la Canada it an\nlmliihi ry of comparatively recant\ndan-. Bxtenalva development haa\ntal.en place in the pant twenty-five\nor thirty yeara, ana recent Heaaona\nhaw (in-wii iiii- adaptability of\nWidely ai'im rated uectlons of the\nDominion to thta very profitable line\nnf agriculture. Since the protective\nduty ot L'K oe&la per pound haa been\nImpoeed on all foreign leaf tobacco*,\ntbe Canadian Induitry *>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB woelwd\na yet greater Ktliiiiilua, and intercut\nIn tlie culture la becoming wider and\nmore diversified yearly.\nTlie two principal provlncea where\ntobacco ban been luoceilfully grown\nfor many yearn are Ontario and Quebec. Very successful result.! have\ntbe heavier type la-grown in certain\nsections. Tbe cost of cultivation In\nthe province. Including the labor of\nthe grower ban been estimated at\nfrom $6fl to I7& per acre, and the\naverage yield ahoat 1,30ft pounds\npar acre.\nTbe lnvraaaed dettand, and higher\nprlcea of recent yeara have given\ntobacco growing In Ontario a con-\nalderable Impetua. The provincial\nBoard of Agriculture, realizing Ibis,\nInatlluted a tobacco autlov ai the\nHarrow experimental farm, whlcb\nban done valuable vnrk In proving\neperlei of plant* adapted to tha\nof Lhe province, and\nf\nper\nii \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ni in-\n.'ni\ncoring and aal< of Oousloch\nlob lobacro aa alien* and binders for\ncigars. Tba aoctety sells annually\nfrom GM.000 lo *0<-.0*Jfl I'm,i,,|\ntobacco ai from ',W lo 4u cents\npound. The purchase ot lobacci\ncording to quality hait great Ij\nproved method* nf rulilvailon\ntreatment,\nThe growing of (ObSCi'O It li 'ith\nColumbia ia practically confine I In\ntbe area minoiiml.nr Keluwnn lu\nIbe Obauagan Vallev. Tbe (oleI IHIS\noutput, which amounted in ulimit\n120.000 pnnndn WSl sold nl 20 renli\nper pound io a Quebec oianulai lurbr,\nintereat in tobacco produrilon li, iliu\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2line,\nvarloiiK hoIIi _. _. ,\nencouraging limited production and I Pacific province I\nImprovement In quality rather than I and In many icellons of u* area can\n a large acreage and mediocre quality, be found warm, innnv, well drained\nbeen obtained alio at Kelowna, In by Improved method*-- of culture. alnpe* of Hand*, ileposlli Woll adapt-\ntbe Okanaxan dlatrlct or Brltlab The tobacco production of the od to the cultivation ol ioUrco\nColumbia, and the growing of to-1 province of Quebec foi the year 191-9 I plant* of tbe heavier lypp\nbaeoo may be aald to b\u00C2\u00AB firmly estab-, WKfl about 10.00d.000 pouodtt and I The possibility ol successfully\nHahed ua an Industry there. Recent: there wero 22,40-t acre* under cultt-' growing aud curing lobacco tn\nexnorlinetits lu the Lethbrldge Iiii- vatlon, Aa a tobacco growing area, Southern Alberta I.-- born Olcarly\ngatlon district In Southern Alberta, | the French-Canadian province ban demon hi ral ed by Hm experimental\n-would Indicate great possibilities for, been coming more io tlie fore every fnrm at l^eibbrldge 81X1) nt-i-Hs,\ntht growth lu tbe prairie province,'yeav< xblH in Illustrated by tbe fact 'grown In the lessen IBIS, produced\nTobacco, ln Ontario, is grown In1- \u00E2\u0080\u0094 -.-... ...\nthe counties of Kbscx, PeelB, Kent,\nPrince Edward. Elgin, and Lincoln.\nA total of 9.22C acres among these\ncounties was devoted to the culti- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\t\nvatlon of the tobacco plant In lSlfl. chere\u00C2\u00AB and Yamaalta tbe Industry Is | proposition in (he Irrigation bell,\nthat In IMl l there were only IS,-1 prolific foliage, which waa \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nre < nu\n134 acreH devoted to ihis culture. In (be farm and niadt- into rlgara, El\u00C2\u00AB\ntbe counties nf Rerlhler, Jnllette,' perlmenl* will be carried nu h li ore\nI/Aftaomptlon, Montcalm, Portneuf. I eitenalve scale with u view tn eatab\u00C2\u00AB\nRichelieu, Roiivllle, Terrebone, Ver-|||sbtng the Industry Hs h rommei ial\n10,70!MOO\nnf 1,150\nIIIAIi TIIK HKKAM) ANII UET THE\nIVHffS-ONll 9lMW 1KB VK1R\nPET CORNS\nFew Drops nl \"Kreesone,\" Then Lift i\nCorn Right Off |\nA liny bottle of \"Krec/.one\" coitfl so\nlittle nt any drug storei Bpply a few\ndrops ujioii any ooril or Cltllua, Inntnnt-\nly it stoirn liurtlng, then shortly you lift\nihul bothersome corn or callu* right off\nwltb your fingers, Truly! Mohuubugil\nproducing a yield of\npounds, nr an average\npounds per acre.\nThe Hurley, variety, suitable for\nchewing, Is grown In five counties:\naeed leaf In Kssex; snuff in Kent;\ncarried on a very large scale. There | The successful growing of tobacco\nare federal government stations at i calls for rich and light soils mn.\nBalnt-Jacques de 1/Achigan county talalng a good supply nf vegetable\nof Montcalm, and at Haint-Ceeaire, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 matt-ar, aid will yleltl the best re-\nRouvllle. In many counties the to- suits. Soils deprived of humus,\n baeoo plant is growntfor cigar manu-j however, rich in mineral element*.\nand Havana In Lincoln. Maryland; fact ure, the principal species sown are not aultafcta for Ha growth. Oood\ntobacco has been Introduced Into being Havana. Connecticut, Penn dratnaf* of the anbaoll water Is\nPrince Edward County with success. [ aylvania, Ohio. Wisconsin. Comstock, j aoaeatnl. The soils of hillsides.\nDuring the pant few yeara tbe grow- simmer.-- Spanish, Cannellc. and Per- with n gentle slope, generally give\nIng of bright tobacco (flue cured) stan Rone; bul cnatter success J* excellent reenlta, asalnly on account\nhas extended rapidly on tbe light' achieved wli li pipe tobacco*!, .such as. of the rapidity wtth which an excess\naandy loams near the ahorea of Lake white hurley, n-rl hurley, blue prior, of water drains off. Tbe best soils\nOntario, and some gravelly hills with' yellow prim-, heater yellow nmmntotb i for successful growing are thoaa\ngood drainage. The annual pro- nnd Tennessee Ucil. which contain a sufficient .proportion\ndnctlmi or this variety Is nearly; The planlera of tbe v: i,I\"...;,* 0f clay nnd humus to enable them\n1,000,000 pounds, with tbe yearly de- j Valley have formed a cn-nperailv tn retain a good supply of mnistnre, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ntinnd increasing, A limited amount aoclety and frtHhllsheil at pain'- mown as \".eamy soils.\" fluff clay\n%\\ tdM U>l %aA ftff toyed ggg| \u00C2\u00A7f ^eaaUe a Urge wajn>\u00C2\u00BBusa ter Ua a\u00C2\u00ABUa mo Ua least anltabla. - .\u00E2\u0080\u0094-\nm I'liurKcliiy, April 15, III2H\nTHE ('It A Ml It li li K 11 Kit A Ml\nP a q t: i it it t: r\ni$G'0\nUse Sweet Milk-Sour Milk\nButtermilk or water\nwith\nEGGO\nBaking Powder\nEgg-O Bilking Powder Co., Limited\nHamilton. Canaaa\nFormer Cranbrook\nMan Dies in North\n; Rotor! tl. Jcnnlnu-. Si uutbl ill Ills\nCabin al Mn Kulwrt\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Will\nKnown In Cranbrook\nj The Prince Rupert Neva\n\u00E2\u0080\u009Er tin\nm\u00C2\u00AB! THE SEA MUSSEL\nI INDUSTRY\niiiivt in:\nSllV Willi\nWATER\n\"SsMl\nMrs. Wilcox s.iys b'.,o Im\" loiwnod\nUnit u makes n illltoronco liow iniicli\nwiiter Bin; uaoa In rarllli' Milk.\n\"Don'l I\"' nliy wll\"' water,\" alio suys.\nWhen a roclpe callB for n cup ot milk\nnoo le-..-. than half Paelllc Milk anil\novor lull\" water to imiko up lho dtp.\n.Mrs. Wilcox Is rlghl\nPACIFIC MII.K CO.,\nI.IMITKlt\nfactory at lailiu-r, II. I'.\n: -'*;-'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Tri\"\"T \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2^'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'J'fn.TT\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nARRIVAL AM\u00C2\u00BB DKPAKTDRK\ni)V TRAINS\nSo,\u00C2\u00AB; >o. us\nlinlly Dally\n12.15 p.m. Ar. Cranhrook l.v. 1.15 p.m.\n12,25 pin. Lv, t'ranbronk Ar. 4.011 ti.m.\nTrain S\";: will lenve for Klmberley\ndally ew.-i Sunday al 1 k, and train\nSiu'-wlll arrlvp from Klmberloy dally\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0xi -j'l Suiulny at 2.10 !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 in.\nKool-'mij ( entrnl Hmnrli nn change.\nAH \NTfC SAILINGS\nWHITE STAIJ DOMINION UNK j\nI'nrlliiiol. Mr.. Ililllflix. Liverpool j\nI rom 1*01 -Hand -Unlltel\nCanadn April 17th\u00E2\u0080\u0094April IStli'\nMoiilrciil, Quebec. l,iw-i*|.ool '\nMcgarttlc May BSntl; Juno 10th\nCannrtn June 18th; July 80lh 1\nami Kit v\ i.im:\nSen York, Plymouth, litorbiiiirg*,\nSun Hid nijil un\nPhiladelphia \: rll I7tli; May lBUi\nXe* Vork Vprll iM-li; May ffind\nSt. Paul May 1st! May 2Dlll\nSY.W lollh. HAllltl IHi\nMongolia April mill -May I'-'inl\nMniutlitirin Mi y 8th; June LOtli\ni:i ti STAR i.im:\nNev. Vo'vk, StiuiImmplan, AnlHcrp\nPlnlnud viiril 7tli\u00E2\u0080\u0094May I6lli\nKroonlnnd ., -May Lei; Juno Btli\nLapland May 8th; Juno lath\nIVIIITK STAB MM:\nXow -lark, Liverpool\nCodrlc April iTiii\nMiilili Vprll IV Hi --May 22\ul\nCeltic . ... .Mny ifith; Juno 19th\nStow Vork, l licitiiaiitru. Siiutliiiiiiplmi\nAdlmtlc Vprll 24th; Maj 30th\n\im\ Vnrk, lUhriillcr, Staples, flonon\nCanoplr ay Mth, July mil\nCretii . - May 20th; July 21sl\nPor n eryntlonn ami tickets apply\niu local agents or Company's ofllce,\nu, i' Siirgoiit. Olfl Second Vvenue.\nBen tlte, Win litniton\n1 i ins. s. IMRKKR\nForward to \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 mid Tiistributiug\nAti-'in fur\nUthbrldge and tlrecnhlll Coal\nIm^t-rliil IIII fo,\nIMstti-Ulloii i'art' it Specialty\nlinn inr nml I riHistVrrlliff\ntil it>n prniup' alHuillou\nPboae 63\nA novel Industry which piomlsee\nrapid t-vpuiisii.il mid greai popularity!\nhi im less ttihii iii\u00C2\u00BB> developmeui <>i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2**-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nitu.tst flute ior iln* suCiiultiUl lml\n'somewhat coelly oyster. This in the\ni-i'i mussel, fiiiiml lu vahi i|iiau-\ntiileh hIiiiir tlir low nil* mark of Hit\nAiltunii' cou-t. il.icfl> iu New Brutm-\nwlr-h. The Dominion (rovertiuietil,\nwitii ihe co-operation or scientist.),\nlien conducted m penmen Is to this\nend lu Western University laboratories aud It Is now claimed that\nmussels can l>e produced commercially und sold profitably at 16 cents\nper quart, an compared w lib the fl.00\nim-i quui t urotiud nilifli oyater price*\nhover.\nThe mussel Is li) no ulceus a new\narticle of diet to tlie people of Can-\ntula, and betide9 being u\u00C2\u00BBed ttsteu-\nalvely iu coast towns haa found ire\nway to tin' milieu of inland eltlea In\nI'ftiii-iii Canada. Its delicacy of\nflavor and high food value have tieeu\nmuch advertlaod sjnee the establlth-\nueut uf government in vertical loa\nand experiment, ami deserve to ht\nmuch bene, known, There Ik yel\nuiiiili io be done in the line of re-\naearuh to ascertain condition! under\nwhich production \u00C2\u00BBuuld he most\nrapid and ptoriinble, and to thla\nond tbe Council of Industrial uud\nacleutific Iteaearck la devotlujs ii-> efforts\nA aurvey or the muaiiel beds of ilia\nSt. Cioix River, which conatlnitea\nthe boundary between New Brunswick and Maine, has occ.ipicd the ai-\niemkl)nni|iloushfpa\n,i,l\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 'Iiu I\ni nml\nudor i\neight\nwill l,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n,l|l 1,1 !\nill have\n:l I'rntti\nii'iilhlv\nin\nMl iUlllil,\ni tin potato men antl tlo,,i\nush, 'lb,' TuxiH Itnya who old.\nr win t'ompoto In lho running hrrail\nump, running high Jtnrtp, ihrce po-\nIrrigation Pest Fund of Farming\ni\nCol, J. & Iteunta lcil*i ui [nUvdue\narts i-etiaiii localities\nwhich conatl-\niiiip landumrkfi in tin\nglowtng atory\nof Western progress,\nnainea already\nfi'Bgmnl -Mth hUl\nii leal aroma,\nblendlni ih.' lonmnce\nof early settle-\nmenl with lhe hustle\nof modern in-\n(lnsiiN mnl asiicull\niral provresi,\n'l'ti.< HaMli-iiMl .1 ii\n11 is one ot\nTlie olt) ol l.,.ii .\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2]. Uiuniftilly\nsltualeil win it thi I\ntitle river and\nirle\ntht-\nr30S?8i-5COUGHS\ntlou,\nJust why tht lartnera of tbe south-\nlorn territory or the prairie provinces\naro olamorlng tor further extensions\nof the existing Irrigation echptuea\nwan nude clour recently, when\nCul. .f. ti. Dc-imi;-. ui th-. r. 1*. K.\nDepartment of Colonisation and lic-\nvelopmout, uddruaaed tha profesaon\njand liiiuliinu ol Macdonald College,\nh'.u. Auuu iiu Dolloyue, \u00C2\u00ABu irrigation\nin this wost Tho large aLtendanot\nlistened lutorostedly to the leutur*.\nwhich -wa:; admirably Illustrated\niwitii a aorfe-3 ol lauteru slides depleting thu progress of thu C. K K.\nIrrigation Bystem and Lhu fnilts of\n'this' method of farming.\nThe upwUter divided bis discourse\nunder tbrea head:,, dealing witli the\nIntroduction nf Irrigation in Alberta\nhy thu C.V.U., and the motives\n[which had Induced him to rct-oiu-\noiend and urge this; the buoccss aj*\n[proved bj tho company hut the lorn*\nl***rai*y failure of \u00C2\u00ABoiiii; Bettlcrs due\ntu lack of experience in the applica*\nlion of wuler aud cycle of wet years;\ntbe reversal of <>j>iuioii after practi-\ncai tests, and the consequent ovor-|f\nwhelming demand for further irrlga- i\nhum projecw on the prairie. 1\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0f'or a loug time.\" said Ool. 'Jen- \u00C2\u00A3\n'ilia, \"there were many who claimed\nthai irrigation wu:. unnecessary in\n'Western Canada. Uecausc eondi-\n^'\u00C2\u00AB \" i--\"if**- -\nr- ' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\$Mr\nf ^\n*>i ...\nBuy More Service for\nEvery Belting Dollar\nThe purchasing power of a dollar\nis so small that most buyers compare price and select lhe lowest\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand in the end l!u- article bought\nproves im ne expensive than the\nhighest priced. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB mi\n* In buying belts there are few\nwho know value, and fewer still\nwho consider service\u00E2\u0080\u0094a belt\nis usually just a belt if it il the\n*' right size and price. --\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *\nf Knowledge and experience have\n-'' taught a different lesson to many\nmanufacturers. That is why\nDominion Friction\nSurface Belting\nis giving efficient sen ice in practically every Canadian factory of\nimportance. -s\nSmut: specify it exclusively.\nThey have taken advantage of\nt ' our fifty years Ijelt-building experience, and by making our engineers\nresponsible for all their transmission equipment have eliminated\npractically all power waste- have\ndone away with shut-downs for\nrepairs and replacements\u00E2\u0080\u0094 have\neliminated idle machines and\nemployees\u00E2\u0080\u0094have maintained\nmaximum production\u00E2\u0080\u0094have cut\ntransmission upkeep to a minimum.\nThis service may be yours for\nthe asking\u00E2\u0080\u0094phone or wire to our\nnearest service branch.\ni\nDominion Rubber\nSystem /\nService Branches\naSDKNNl\u00C2\u00BBC'MO\nCHii, g,KHi\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei,xt, mt\nc0-.omiation 4 tmvtMtnttsy\n\l)\i PAINTING\nWll\nPAPERHANG I NO\nnt.\ni','iiiiiiiiii,'\nJOHN flARD\nI'll! Nil. 4IIII\n(lillll,I,i\"k. . . .11. (',\nREFUGEE\nBRASS FROM\nERASER\nVALLEY\nIk'l'tlKt'i' 11,'alf, Kl\":iv 1 lilt, nirr-\nHii, PrtMier Valley Timj- nr.\natrltlBlOM\n(jl Aklll llll A Ml\nis I'll, ,'linli'pal nl iti,--.,*. mnl only\nIlie i\u00E2\u0080\u009E,il,',i fiitpt art- ninttrtl u-'-\nllor lltli- riiinntia lir.nto.\nClilct\ncueral\nlrtual-1\n,5 Hi,\nrlmplc\n,,t C- nail\nI n clll\nIt Is III III** It'\nlliiiiiliiliin 1'aniit.r* H. I'.,\nIl,i,l OUIro\nVancouver, H. C.\nLid.\nlil.r VOUR\nJob Printing\nAT TIIK\nHerald Office\nItn-tlllllV\ntutilicltK. fur nil I '.-male C'niiipliilnl. J\", \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 box,\nnr tltrre I'or JIU, iu tlniij .ions Multeil to tiny I\niiiiiiiM-s-.ti H-i'iijit nt i>i i.f ThuScobul Dido j\nv.u., St. <-_.itlii.riin.*. On Inr in. !\n* Kiia' VluHlj*:\nfur Nerve and lli.iin; liicidi-n. \"jiiry iujUci\":\nhTohu' -will htilldyouiip, f.lnliOK,nrtwofor j\nIS, nt dnijt slot ci or Iiv ninil on reeflpt of unce\nTUB Same1.1, Hn CO Co., KI. Cnllmi iutu, imiuHo.\ndistrict* tlmt;\n1 luiiti owned;\ntn ilie c.l' l: If .in-1 humming avail-!\nable for riM11< monl It is ii heuntKulj\nl.uil. aim nt iilclnrsaqiia fthady\nsrtivt'*. lollliiK npliiiiil nml luxuriant\nmendows, The eountry in admirably\nmil ted to mixed rarmlng and tba live!\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 t.n I, imliihtrv. fur it- rolling (dope*\nproduce fine hay. and lu clumpa '\u00C2\u00BBf(\ninvs, whiiHi offerlna no serloua obstacles to uraln growing, afford eliado\nIn the mmmer nnd shelter in Lite\nwinter. The soil i* a rich chocolatoj\nloam in lib a clay RObioll cniui'lnj a'\ncouervallon of llieee Imrredlenta\nwhleb iiiahe fur rapid nn\\ liunly|\nKrowth. Wheat Is grown exteuslreljr\nand successfully mh well *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-* otheri\ncereal crop*. Kver\u00C2\u00BB poasn of ngrl-!\nculture In fact, baa heei, \u00C2\u00ABiireesn-\nfully o*rrled on. Poultry rafstav,\nmarket Rsrdeninp. snd vegetable\ngrowinr flourish, whilst there lu no\nbetter dairying locality in the West*\nem provlaces.\n-**\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00C2\u00AB e> *\nIf you want newa white it news,\n; Rithscribe for tbe Herald.\nWt*\u00C2\u00ABot* >i\u00C2\u00ABldod $170 It fte mn, eft-\nfaica %m, aad wheat flM fee erne.\n, , The annual report HmtH to the\ntions ->f droughl do not regularly oc- ^ d f TnAtJiu thtt ^ m\ncur Lliore, thej arguyd, there was UOt w wmim\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\niho sam\u00C2\u00AB urgency tor Irrigation ne SowIm tie resuEi of\nin other loss loitimately situated mnv\"^ me wuU\u00C2\u00AB ,rf\nofmntrlW where tlie rainfall Is usually ao small as to make agriculture\npractically lmpos\u00C2\u00BBlbte wiiliuut arU-l\niicial application. It la rather gratifying now.\" wiid itie Bpeaker, rwn-\nlulacently, \"lu view of thla tremendous opposition, in bob the radical\n'rigbl-albout--tAce lu sentiment and lo]\nhear these sami men aaaort tJiun\npractically tho whole of the south\nKaUf-u,\nForrWiUlsa,\nSt. John,\nWlnnJp\u00C2\u00ABa,\nQuibtc.\nMrudoa,\nUtwmi,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tgln*.\nOttsm,\nSadtn-MMi;\nToronto,\nEdmuatoa,\nHimUton,\nCatganr,\nLondon,\nUthbtMge;\nKitchiaar,\nViacouvir,\nNerthiar;\nVictoria.\ninto nice, Iiv.' pi\nshot pllt.\nIn places wbar\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 there Is only <\nKrou|i ami n competition cannot\nheld, special nrr;\nnuenient*. are m.\n)OMiNlOl\n.RUBBER,\nOar Dominion Hose,Packiit\naid Indsittnal Rubber Goods\nart all the Same High Standard as Duminian Frietian\nS.rfate Bttiint.\nCUANDIIOIIK tOTTAOl\nHllSlifAL\nI'lliuli' \ai\u00C2\u00BBliij llama\nl.lirimai.il by l'rtivlnclal Oovt.\n*\u00C2\u00BBlernll> anil (leneral Nirillf\nMiBHKge and llaat Cure, lllglieat\nHaterances, terms tuottarate.\nAuply Mr,. A. Crawford, Matron\nPbout IU P. O. Box 146\nAddiM,. Uardta Aft. Crutrook\nOPERATIONS\nUNNECESSARY\nHKI'ATOI.A remorai Oalt Stones\ncorrecta Appandlcltli In H ttoura\nwithout pain. HaRlttered undar\nI'nri, Food aud Drug Aet. $6.00\nNol* Manufacturer\nMHH. OKO. 8. AMI AS\nBun IN* N* 41k Am. \u00C2\u00BB.\nSore Throat. Colds\nQulekly Relieved By Hemlln'e\nWliard Oil\nHamlin> Wizard OU Is a simple\nand effective treatment for sore\nthroat and chest colds. Used as a\ngargle fur sore throat it brings quick\nrelief. Rubbed on the chest it will\noften loosen up a hard, deep seated\ncold in one night.\nHow often sprains, bruises, cuts\nand burns occur in every family, as\nwell aa little troubles like earache,\ntoothache, cold sored, canker sores,\nstilf neck, and tired aching feet.\nSoothing, healing Wizard Oil will at-\nWays bring quick relief\n(let it from druggists for .10 cents.\nIf not latisJird return the buttle and\nget your money back. c.\nEver nmstipated or have sick\nheadache?* Just try Win id Liver\nWhips, olcaiant little pink pills, 30\ngenif Guaranteed. -; \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\ncountry needs irrigation to make\n[agriculture permanently successful.\nTlit* experience of the pnsl Iwo years\n-witli a rainfall In southern > Irrlgationlsts, Is\nirosucnslMe In uo small meumire fur\nItbla great change In. opinion.'\nOutlining ii.\" *'\u00C2\u00AB-\u00C2\u00AB'\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- of the aeiiU-\nlarld portion \u00C2\u00AB\" lhe [irovlnce \u00C2\u00BBf Al-\njberla. which be atated Btrelched 160\nbiles north \u00C2\u00BBf lhe Aiperlcnn bound*\nfry and from tbo Itocky Mountains\nto the CyproBs Hills in Stakatche\u00C2\u00AB\n.wail, the speaker Btated t imt Ainorl-\nlean Irrigation engineers <-f prominence, after Investigating condlilona\nthoroughly, hod given ll as Ihelr\niopinJon thai thi rainfall was Insufficient to follow farmln-g profllab >,\nend the qiioatlou hi ha decided \u00C2\u00AB\"*\nnot whether water wan needed, but\nIralhor Juat how long Uila H rrltory\n'could grow any kind Of crops without Irrigation.\n\"Irrigation, whin practical!) up-\nplled, i-'' tho best kind of rarmlng,\"\nsaid ibe colonel witli conviction, \"be-\ncause it Ih the only system thai per-\niinits of ibe moBt Intelllgchl treatment or every Individual crop io suit\nits own requirements. It ellmlnnU \u00C2\u00BB\nthe necessity of btunmpr tallow and\nlolnborate troatmenl of the soli to\nconserve moisture. II Is quite agreed\nIthat mixed farm ng '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the basis cf\nagricultural prosperity aud Ihlasys.\ntem flourishes eplendlflly under Irrigation m the raising of special f\u00E2\u0084\u00A2l-\nrder i rops whh h it Is difficult m raise\nwlthuut wuter.\n\"In everj case whero It has bi-tn\nput io the test in competition with\nordinary farming methods, irrigation\nhas been proved to increase produc\ntion from 25 i\" l\"'1 por cent. This\njaccounla for lhe fad that in tho Irrigation bull land-Is bolng sold for\nloonslderably over -* Io acres whilst the\nf-^gr.-gate length of iu eeuals had\nditches is greater iban (.auada's\nlongest liver or ibe rail distance\nfrom Vancouver to Halifax. To thia\noriginal block a further area of im,-\n000 at'ies in the i.eihhrtdge Aetna\nwas added when the C. F. R. took\nover the block otiKiuall? developed\nb) llu- Alberta Railway aiid lrri#a-\ntlon ruiiipitnv, aad this ha. shown\n'be -am.- remark a Mt-. progress and\nprosperity*\n\"Agiiatwn at ihe preseni time ie\nfor furlb-M irrigation and t|Ulck irrigation,\" eouimued Col. liennii. \"farmers claim with justification tbat\nit te a life and dcaih Isius *itb theu.\nIf ihey are to remain on the land\nthey i-i'-*i have it; if they do not get\nit the onl) ihing to do is get oue\nThat the Provincial novemruetit\nrcallxca this also is very evident\nfrom the fac1 that tbey have can-\nget leal ly taken up tbe new project*.\nThe Lethbrldge Northern Irrigation\nDistrict scheme comprises tbe Irrigation nf a-Kiiil 100,000 acre!\" and w.il\ncost botwoen three and four million\ndollars. Just recently fanner.-, In\nihe Raymond; Magratb and Sierltng\ntlistrln' wm,- called upon to vote on\ntlie formation of a further Irrigation\nproject which would embrace r total\narea of 190.000 acre, au.l Irrigate\n06/jOO. When the tiallot came to be\nno jilted there waa not a solitary vote\nrecorded a gain si the project,\n\"A Vast sum of money,\" raid COl.\nDennis m concluding, ' -mi- pul into\ntho Irrigation Hcheute by the C.P.R., \\nlml li ba:. proved a wund propoil- } Diamond Dyes\" Maks Shabby Apparel\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2JIU.Iil n nv\|s in \"Knoll\nHA.VII TO Mill IH.\" I'MtASKS\nMildred Da.:- mi ke* her Srst ap\npeanun \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 oa Harold Lloyd's leading\nlady in \"From Hand to Mouth,\" and\nit distinctly favorable impression the\npetite blond.- made on the 11 Ith - who\nhave seen the newe I \"J the two-reel\nLloyd taugb prbvoki r\n\"Mlldren Davis,\" wrote one reviewer, \"who i- now playing tbe pretty\nt-'irl part in the Harold Lloyd come-\ndlen in place of Bebe Daniel . gives\nwill make ,i lasting Impression on\nall win, see her\n\"OASCARETS WORK\nWHILE YOU SLEEP\nPer tick Headaeht, Sour 3tbm\u00C2\u00ABcti,\nSluggish Liver snd Bowels\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTake Caacartts tonight.\nFurred Tongue, Had Taut*, tadlgea-\ntion, Sallow -Skin ami MlsenUe Read-\nsclim come irom a torpid Hv\u00C2\u00ABr ami\nclogged bowels, witicii muss your stomach to b-MOfne flll\u00C2\u00ABl with iiiidigi-sted\nfood, wliiob sours nnd ferments like nt-\nhags in a swill barn!. That's the first\n-teji tu tintold misery\u00E2\u0080\u0094Indlgostlen, foul\ngSMi, bad breath, yellow akin, mental\nftars, everyttiiug tiiat i\u00C2\u00BB horrible and\ni ii-turiii,.. A Csicaret to-night will\n(jive your constlpateii bowels s thorough\ncleansing aud straighten you out by\nplanting, They work while you sleep\u00E2\u0080\u0094\na 10-etnt boi from your druggist will\nkeep you feeling good for months.\nDyed Her Faded '\nSkirt, Also a Coat\n\u00E2\u0080\u009Eii wlio -,.\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Iter.'\nAnother \u00C2\u00AB*,.,,/\u00E2\u0096\u00A0:\n\ preujr \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 1-miI-\nlog lady .upporu\nHarold Lloyd In\nIhe neraon ,,r Mil,\nr,-,l 1,'vi*.\" wlilli\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BAnil a third \u00C2\u00BBald:\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Har\u00E2\u0080\u009El,l Lloyd ha.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E , lite and breexy\nlittle leading \u00C2\u00BB-,,-\nluai, In Mildred U;\nvu '\n\"Prom Hand t,, ,\i\n,utli'' 1- Win tea-\nlured i,i the lirv 1\nhoatn v.-.-.i, .--..i.i.\nand Thunder\nnml.\nl\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nI'll,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ik<\nbumper ' in\ni,..l farm th\n,. ral.pit on\n* lilgli prl^ei\ni ll\nHi\n,. 1 .Hill 1.-. I..'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ll.ll'l in la:\nill, ibe \".. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\ntuniry rnt t\nl!,f lolUCl-\nIII .. IO loll,\n..' rlaimu In\nt.n,. ',i ,n*\n,1'uict' pan\ntl th, URO[| N\u00C2\u00ABHAB\u00C2\u00AB I WIMtHUN I N.ISHUI I Nl 1 I\nMARTEN\nii\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nII'iiiimI\n.Mt\nlufffii\nBlown\nIF-le\nI l>\u00C2\u00BBik\nI ll,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n' Pal,\nizint.m lo ldo.HAll50.00ta IKM\nl5lllillloliHl.H0 75.0U lo M.00\n75.0010 50.00 45.00 lo 35.00\n100.00 lo 80.00 75.00 lo 60.00,\n75.00 lo 60.00 55.00 lo 45.00\n50.00 lo 10.00 35.001. M.00|\nfwnaw\n50.00 lo 40.00\n30.00 le MM\n50.00 lo 40.00\n40.001.30.00\nMOO to 24.00\nutim\n35DOI.2J.00\n25401.2040\n3S.00I.2I40\n2140 te 2240\n20.001. ItM\nMki.m\\nS540I.20.00\n2S.00I.1S.00\n35.001.20.00\n21401.1140\n0J.I24C\nFISHER\nFlno, Dark\nBrown\nPale\nBllllllloMO.OO\n175.00to 150.00\nI25.00IO 100.00\nI7S.OOIoI50.00 125.001.10040\n12S.00lol00.00 00401. 7040\n80.001. 0040 55.001. 4540\nM.OOt. 7040\n05.00 le 4540\n40401.3040,\nS040l.40.00\n05401.3040\n4040I.204CI\nMINK\nFine, Dark\nUsual Color\nCoast\n40.00 te 32.00\n30.00 to 25.00\n22.00le 1040\n28.00 te 2240 20.00 to 16.00\n2040 le 1740 15400,1340\n15401a 13.00 12401*1040\n1500 le 1340\n11240 te 1040\n8.00 lo 740\n1540 le 140\n12401* (40\n8401.440\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nYou've got lo iiliiii your Furs to a reliable House to (Ot the \"most money\" lot\nthem. \"SHUBERT\" has bees satisfying Fur shippers for \"mora than a third\nef a century\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094sinco 1883. That's a record that speaks for Itself. Take no\nrisk\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"THE SHUBERT GUARANTEE\" protects you absolutely\u00E2\u0080\u0094bundle up\naU the Furs you have on hand and SHIP TO \" SHUBERT\" TO-DAY.\nYOU'LL IK MIGHTY OLAD YOU DID\nSHIP >U YOUR WWi. MM.CT TP_\nSHir AU Yguw \u00C2\u00A3!\u00E2\u0084\u00A2^!!flZltmK,immi am\nNORTH AMERICAN RAW FURS\n524 Donald Si Dept218 Wi\u00C2\u00BBa*p\u00C2\u00AB'|*****\nWuTmly if/\numi of power plants will release 500,-\n000 workers for otlier jobs. Moreover, 500,000 men HOW eus-iui'd in\ncoal production con bt switched io\nother industries by tbe proper utilization i>f the country's coal resources.\nThe United States is burning up 500,-\n000,000 torn-, of bituminous coal annually. 11.1.000.000 tons nf tliis is\nconsumed by ttie railways. Only 20',\not tin- energy or of the values in this\nmormons tonnage are utilized or recovered. The average cost of tliis\ncoal to tho railways, not ;|t ihe mines,\nhut at the place ftf consumption, te\nnot less than $5 per ton. The byproducts lust lu smold- when Xhte coal\nis burnt in ii locomotive arc worth nt\npresent prlcee $-\" i>-r ion in otlier\nwords ihe railways lose $2,300,000,-\n000of the chemical by-products in con-\nmiming 115,000,000 tons of coal tor\nilieir motive power.\nWere this 116,000,000 tons or conl\ndistill Oil or ri-linctl and Its valutilc\nma tier converted before the carbon\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ontouts were utilized for fuel, the\ndistillation would be:\nfU5,OuO,000 gallons of motor Bplrli;\n1,840,000,000,000 gallons of fuel or\nillesi-l oil;\n80,500,000 tons ot Htnokolesa fuel capable of producing more heat than\n150,000,000 tons of original coal.\n700,000,000,000 cubic feet of rich gas\nwhich could he used for besting, llght-\n'ng, generating electricity, or for steel\nmaking or metal making;\n1,035,000 tons of ammonia sulphate\nlor fertilizers.\nConsidering that motor spirit is\nnow worth HO cents a gallon and fuel\noil 7 cents, the motor spirit and fuel\noil lost in smoke yearly In locomotive\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2team engines Is the equivalent of\n$1,400,000. At 50 cents a thousand fur\nMils rich nan tlte waste Is $350,000,-\n000 a year, and the sulphate of ammonia lost, and the greatest efficiency\nof the fuel, will brim; ii up to over\n$2,000,000,000 yearly. Thus the Ue-\npubile's annual loss through failure\nto utilize nl! the valuable by-products\nof coal equals ?lo.000.00O,ono yearly,\nor one-third of the CO t of lhe World\nwar lo the United States.\nWere coal properly distilled and refined 100,000.000 tons uf coal would\ngive all the light, heat and power now\nproduced hy fi00.0flo.000 tons.\nSixty years agon the petroleum\noosinlg out of the ground wns a waste\nproduct and u veritable nuisance to\nfarmers and fishermen. Then cheui-\n! is try solved the problem of distilling\n' or refining the waste. That discovery\n| is adding $3,000,000,000 yearly to the\n! wealth of thc United States and it has\nj revolutionized the transport ot the\nWorld on land and sea and made the\nnavigation of the air a reality.\n1 The distillate of coal will add a liim-\nj dred fold more wealth to the World\nj than all the gold and silver ever recovered from the earth since man's\n; advent to (his planet.\nI Between one-sizth and one-.seveuth\nI of the coal resources of the World are\n. in Alberta. Their conservation and\nproper utilization will make Alberta\n1 the richest nation ot the earth. In\nuo other Commonwealth can coal bo\nmined so economically as here. The\nby-products of this coal nre worth today $*jft a ton, and tlie smokeless fuel\nleft in the retort has a heating power\nequal to the finest anthracite, :,nd 5096\n1-er cent, greater than good bituminous. Alberts has one thoufland two\nlutndrod and sixty billon tons of conl\nthat can he distilled for petrol, oil,\ngas. carbon and fefrtilizers. To put\nit in another wny. Alberta can harvest more wealth from her coal mines\nin this century than all) the nations\nof the Old World accumulated since\ncivilization's dawn.\nIt has six times the coal resources\nof Greal Britain ind more than all\nl.iiropc and Attica and Asia combined tf we leave out China's coal.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0The United Stftt-M possesses moro than\nhalf the coal or the World but it Is\n.mainly at the Atlantic seaboard, while\n, Alberta's eonl is hut live or six hundred miles from ihe Pacific.\nTin World's petroleum or oil sup-\nI ly will reach its peak of production\niu 88 years In fifty yeara petroleum\nwells and sands will be negligible.\nTlii-n petrol, kerosene, toluene, pile-'\nnot, paraffin nnd other petroluem must-\nhe distilled from coal or oil shales.*\nThere is enough fuel oil and petrol\nin Alberta's eoal dQJKMlU to provide j\nfntI oil and petrol for the World for\na country or two even with treble the\ni pri'scni consumption,\nThe marvellous wealth of eonl Ib\n, chiefly on the Kast slope of the lio.lt-\nIe8i where mining nnd carbonization\n1 of the conl can be. most economically\n: secured. There ure four railroad lines\nalready linking Alberta to the Pacific\nthrough the lowest passes of the Rock-\ni les. Alberta bus immensiv hydro-el-\n! ectric power of her own and at her\nWestern gates ure the greatest water\n! powenst of the World. It needs no\ni prophet to foretell that n day will\ni come when the whole World of the\n! Pacific will be drnwln1.; its fcl oil and\n1 petrol and Its toluene nnd .phenol and\nsulphate of ammonia from Alberta.\nThe pioneers treking westward from\nI Kentucky and lown may not know nil\n| this but they don't know that Albert--\nj has the richest and most prolific grain\nj fields and meadows of the World.\nj Thoy are wlsor than they think, for\n! Alberta, with Its glorious clime and\nI wealth of soil and mine Is infallibly\nf destined to lead all thc nations In\nj wealth, In prosperity, and In Indus\ntry.\nI lt la -wall known thai th\u00C2\u00BB two graat\neconomic revolution* essentia] to the\nprogress of the World nre the electrification of thu railways ami the most\neconomic utilization of coal which\nscientific research can devise All\ncoal should be distilled at tin pit's\nmouth ami Die oil, petrol, and gas\nshould theu bo utilized to manufacture\npower and llgih. Thme .smokeless\nfuel could be phlj iied for heating, but\npower and light iu the economic world\nof the future will be distributed fim\nthe waterfall or from the pit* mouth\nover ooppe? wires to the cities, homes,\nfactorle nnd railways. The United\nStates can dispense with tlie mtuiue,\nand distribution u( 400(000,000 tor,, t\ncoal yearly Miroiieh the proper titiliv\niition of 100,000,000 tons, and the dis\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Illation of thla liio.ooo.ntio tons will\nsave %2 \"if\" Oon.oOO if commodities now i\nlost.\nAlraudv .!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ri Paul is drlvluq In\ntrains be ween Untie aud Seattle Willi\nhydro-electrl< energy. If finds ih\"\n\".ear ;i-i i t\u00C2\u00ABni of -** tracks and mil,\nin'- les it nn (\Ith .team locomotive*,\nIt finds it1- cost of operation amazingly\nieduced, it lis* i iated the tr- i for\ntlectrill'-iiioii ol '.cry railroad management which is up to date Knows,\nthat electrification fs not only Inevlt-\nble inn mn\"! desirable.\nli will taken ten billions It Hie'\nState*, and tM*o billions in Canai'.ii lo\nnance thel.e |n'\u00C2\u00BBustrlnl reforms, tmi\nCanada and the United States hud ! .\ntie dlcutty In financing a war waste\ntreble thia expense. The railed State.-\nwill save the whole cost of tho transformation the first yenr these Indns-\nrinl reforms are completed The'\nCanadian people are paying $80,000,-\na year, including tost of transport, for\nthe coal they secure from the United\nStates. This means 4'i on two hill-\ns of capital, Let Canada electri-;\nly her railroads and distill her soft\ncoal and not one pound of fuel, or oil,1\nor petrol, or gas. or ammonia sul-\nphate need he imported from the\nCulled Stutes.\nPilose economic reforms release for.\nother industries ROO.OQO railroad workers nnd 500,000 coal minors. 1,000,-;\nooo effective men released for agriculture and other industries, the new;\nwealth created by tliis million of\nworkers will be at least a billion and\nprobably $2,000,000,000. This is how\ndiscovery und scientific luduatrty enriches the World. Invesors will say\nthat the carriers will be ruined If the\nconl truffle be eliminated. This is\nbltndnesn for far more profitable truffle will develop, and besides the rall-\nroads are no longer capable of handling the present traffic. To build and\nequip now railroads ami restore the\nold iind provide adequate equipment,\ntracks, yeards, terminals and maintenance to care for tho abounding and\nexpanding truths, will cost within five\nyears fully ten millions.\nEliminating the coal traffic and electrification will dispense wlht an enormous amount or new construction\nand will restore efficiency of transport.\nI KAMI ROOK\nFARMKHS' l\STHl\"IK\nIti'cubr Meeting \"\nM.roMi sniKI-U uf earn i\nI men 111 m t p.m. In the CH) HkII j\nWOMEN'S INSTITUTE\nMeet* lu ths\nParish Hail\nr.ril Tii-aday\nsfte:uooa of\nevery month\nat S pm\n^^^^^^^ Pr* Mrs E\nil boaman\nSwj, ftfrt, J. W. Burton, P. O B.-i 621\n!sdle\" t'tHf *t*t\'' *>+%> m*Jll\" mW\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"*%' \"*lm>.'m\"i\nwhy?\nl man at sixty\nyears of age is\neither a failure\nor a success. BEECHAM'S\nPILLS have been made for sixty\nyears and have the largest sale of any\nmedicine in the world!\nMillions use\n''-i'iV--- ^ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ~-'' -~ I\"\nMlaninknlaCa-^.\nnus\nii uim. Ue, set.\niHetlio.otgt Cljttrt!)\nSfMl.VV NEXT\nII A.M., iiivim: IVOHSHir\n\":!til P. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Divine n'oMhip,\nPreacheri RF.V, li. H. I.KK\nYou are Invlteil\nFREE*\n[FISHINC\nTACKLE\n| \ Get all your equipment in return for a\nLille spare lime woik\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *- - i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0. unce In\nTheBCVeterans\nWeekly\nV-^r; . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-,- p| ovin. . Tn- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\noftet .- - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 geaeron* it btrdJy\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094r: .. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 trU\u00C2\u00AB So K \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"-' \u00C2\u00BB 31 '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nI'ROl'KSSlONAl, CABDS\nDrs. Oreen tt MmKIddod\nPL)-Ulm). and Surgeon,\nurtl.t at re.ideure, Armatroog\nAvenue\nOFFICE HOURS\nForenoons HM to 10.00\nAfternoon, 2.00 to 4.00\nEvening, 7.30 to 11.10\nSunday, i.30 to 4.30\nURANBROOK, B.C,\nREMEMBER THE SUBSCRIPTION\nPRICE OF THE HERAlD REMAINS\nTHE SAME-ONLY $2 PER YEAR\n1(111 UUUUUII \u00C2\u00BB lUll K\nI\" im o ^ ,'e%tti*t v.,(rr **i\n| Vuawm, B c I\nJ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .1 mc f . pM-t .-tr- ot nft.L\nI . 1. . I\nL -J\nlilt. V. II. MILKS\nHIMIHT\nilltli e iu llaukou Block\nOFF1CK HOURS\n9 to 1. am\n1 to & u.tu.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nOVERLAND 4\nSA^MM^\niv. A. v v. it ij 11:\nIIKMIMI\niHinpliell-MunuliiK Itlork\nI'hone ii;\nllfllte llniir.. II In IS, I to ,', |i.ui\nV^\u00C2\u00ABa^-\u00C2\u00AB^\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB^-*,^,>a^->a^--a^\nI'l.ANH, 8ri:i'IU(,ATIO>S.\nESTIMATES ANU\nSIPKMINTEMIAM t:\nKrnodelllug and Repair, a\nSpecialty.\nJ. F. HUCHCROFT\n1111IV I A M\u00C2\u00BB K I \ (i\n..MINING KNUINHKR\nVlce-Prcslilcnt\nThe C. M. Fosselt Cff.j Inc.\nI.naincers. Melallurglsts\nChemist*', Assayers\nl.nborntory BltpplleB\nJii;.'iilll*-2II*2I3 Hall Street\nSI'OKANE, VVASIIINfiTON\nP. Jl. MACPHI.RNON\n1'ndertaker\nIMmae IM\nNarkiry kit, Hit l\u00C2\u00BB Clly Hall\nThe Triplex Springs of the new\nOVERLAND 4 make possible the\n| lirst light car with the steadiness ot\na heavy, long car.\nI'iiIiII. npprcclallotl oi llu* Hun iV.iliin-*. uf (lit- OvitIiiimI I te -.Ihhiii In llu- nrr-iurreaitliifr\ntliiiiiiiiil tot llll- iiu* I'pkH'p enst I- l->\u00C2\u00AB beMUBe tin- Tr||*U-\ Sprlnii*. pmtrrt tin' Dn-fhiiiiNin\nI'm in tlir limn! road nhockn* l.lulit nrltthl crealOR urvni Icinnmj ot furl und tlr#--\u00C2\u00BB.\nFRANKlllZALL, Local Agent PVI.I. SIX\nTHE IK A N It It till K III! It A I, II\nThursday, April IB, 1020\nREX THEATRE\nA tn use in i'h t I'nr hxci'llt'iiiT\nFRIDAY AND SATl'HIUY\nASHES Df LIIE\"\nSTARRING\nJAMES K. IIACKETT\nSENNETT CO-IIKDH\n\"HER SCREEN lillll.\"\nWIMIAY A Nil Tl'KSIlAV\nt'ONSTAN'CE TAUIAflCK\n-In\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEXPERIMENTAL MARRIAGE\nii.mn comi:iiv\nKnlllli'il\n-HUNT SHAVE\"\nViul Lust Eiilsodo in'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0I'lIK TIGER'S THAU,\"\nUMiMSIiAl THUIISIIAV\ni:\iii iii.\\i:tt\nlu\n\"Stepping Out\"\nmul\nHA 1101,11 I.I.IIVIi\nin hi* lllll'il one liiiiiili'iil limns\numi Hollar (' eilj Kiilltli-d\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I 1111)1 IIAMI Til MOUTH\"\nOver tbe Cca Cups\nInsure witli Beale &. Elweli,\n+ + +\nA dunce was held nt Jaffray last\nnight which wus quite largely attended by dancers from this city.\n+ + +\nThe annual meeting or Uie Itallwaj\nVoung Men's Christian Association, i-\nio in- held in the Association building\non Tuesdny evening, April 27th, beginning ut S.llll o'clock.\n+ + +\nl-Ved Ititlt.r. district organizer of tin\nLog Workers' Industrial Union, was\nUie principal siieaker at n meeting\nheld in thu union hall on Sunday\nApril 4tli. Find Brown occupied tlte\nchair.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0f + +\nTlie Demllle Quartette, the fourth\nnumber of the Lyceum course here,\nwhicli was heard al the Auditorium\ntheatre '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2( Wednesday evening, wn:\nmast highly enjoyed. The personnel\nui tho quartette follows: 1st tenor,\nitlie Baker; Uned tenor, Ernest Hazel-\nillne; baritone, Hartwell Dc Mllle;\nbasso, All' .). Atkinson; pianist. HI kin\n\V. Buckingham,\n4* + +\nc. Gardner Sullivan, ramous screen\nwriter, who provided the ftlory for\n(Snld Bennett's latest picture, \"Stepping Out,\" which is on view at the\nHex theatre Wednesday and Thursday, is an original writer of plot anil\ntechnique. Mr. Sullivan lias furnish-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 il sonic of the best .picture plays of\nthe screen. They have ull been based\nmi originnl stories which he himself\nas placed into moving picture technique,\nNOTICE\ntill-,1 math\nfor member-1\nMunicipal!-\nThe Annual Meeting of the Rnllway\nVim nn Men's Christian Association\nwill be held in the Association building on Tuesdny evening, April 27th,\n:ti 8.30 o'clock. All members anil\nfriends arc hereby m'ged to be pros-\nt nt.\nThere will be u reception of the various reports for the year, discussion of\nnext year's activities, and election of\nDirectors for the filling of the vacancies, caused by retirement or other-\nwire.\nThe Board of Directors for tlie pnsl\nyear stands as follows A. A. MacKinnon. Pres.; Q. J, Spruell, Vice-\npresident; J. I-. Palmer, Itec.-Hec'y\nand Treas.; II. White. F. W. Burgess.\nW. I). McLeod. W. J, Hied, J. 8, Beaton, W. S. MacDonald.\nNomination 88 must be immediately\nhanded in to the General Secretary,\nBy order of ihe Board of Directors\nII. B, POW.\n4-16-21 General Secretary,\nRegular Meeting\nOf City Council\nConsiderable Business Transacted by\nCity lulhers 0. >V. V. A.\nSecures u Grflnl\nAt tlu regular meeting of tho City\nCouncil held on lasl Thursday even-\nInn Mayor Genesl ami Aldermen Mackinnon, Jones. Enkltti Flowers and\nDunn were in attendance, Alderman\nalnieni being absent.\nThe Special Impoit Film Co, bad\na communication before the council\nBiiggosUng the sale to the city of a\nfilm of the Peace Day lelebration for\none hundred dollars. The letter was\nreferred to the Rex ihoalro management.\nThe Board of Trado through its Secretary, Mr, \V. M, Harris, thanked the\ncouncil for the grant\nin tho board,\n. The annual fee of $1\nihlp in the Union of It.\nlies was ordered ,pald. Nelson will be\nilie next place of mooting of the organization.\nCity Engineer Easlo and Fire thief\nBeen' presented their monthly reports.\nThe Farmers'' Institute was represented at the mettlng by a delegation\nted by A. H. Playk and P. M. Morrison, who wanted to confer with the\ncouncil regadjng the pound law now\nin force, Al ihe suggestion of the\nspokesman or the delegation, Mr.\nPlayle, a commute) consisting of Aid\nermon ISutctn, Flowers and MacKinnon\nwere named to meet a committee from\nthe Farmers' Institute.\nAs chalrmnii of lhe special committee named to confer with the li. W. V.\nA. relative to the grant of $1500 asked\nfrom the council by tbe veterans, reported, recommending a grant, of $800\nbe made. Alderman Eakln moved\nii grunt of $700 be made, tbe motion\ncarrying unanimously.\nTin old buildings adjoining the veterans' hall, whirh were not included\nin the orfglnal arrangement when the\nhull was given over to ihe veterans\nfor ii home, were voted to their use.\nUpon motion of Aldermen Eakln\nand Jones citizens will be notified to\nhave all garbage arranged in a suitable .place for the garbage collector\nfor removal before May 1st.\nTho question of Improving the street\ncrossings, brought up by Alderman\nKakln, was referrd to ihe city ongl-\nnorr for report nt the next meeting.\nThe Hoard of Works was given the\npower to co-ojiernte wftll tin- oard of\nTrado mid the (', I*. It. in the contemplated iniproemvents ou Baker street\nnear ihe c. I'. It. station, whieh Improvement will he commenced very\nsoon.\nThe roud lax by-law will be finally\nconsidered ut tlte next regulur meeting\nA number of miscellaneous accounts were allowed uud ordered paid.\nThe ('. P. II. has made rnpnirs to\nthe station platform by renewing some\nor the slightly decayed planks.\nFollowing are the newly elected officers of the Cranbrook Lawn Tennis\nclub: Hon. Pres.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Col. C. II. Pollen; Presldenl\u00E2\u0080\u0094X. A. Walllnger; Hrt-\nrelury-trensni'er\u00E2\u0080\u0094 S. S. Rumsey; Executive \u00E2\u0080\u0094 President, secretary and\ntreasurer, Mra, n. a. McKowan, D, A.\nMcDonald and (1. Simpson; Ladles'\nCommittee\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. M. A. Beale, Miss\nCartwrlght, Miss Walllngor, Miss\nWoodland I Mrs C, It. Ward.\nTAKES OFF DANDRUFF,\nHAIR STOPS FALLING\nSocial-Personal\nWlieu III S|i,,knu\u00C2\u00AB- Mike\nIt the\nHotel\nCoeur\nd'Alene\nThe Hotel Willi a Person*\nallty.\n\" (iiiiiciiii-iit to Every Hi\nrytliini;\nVery Moderate Mute*\nflSiM.rBi.naniirt.nnni ini fr\nSave your Hair! Get a small bottle\nof Danderlne right now\u00E2\u0080\u0094Alio\nstops itctilny scalp,\nThin, brittle. MorlesB mul sewfljry\nImir i\u00C2\u00BB mute evidence of h ncglwi*d\nm:;ilji; of dandruff\u00E2\u0080\u0094that awful scurf.\nThere la nothing bo destructive to\ntlie Imir us dandruff, it robe tlie liair\nof itu lustre, \u strength and Its ver)\nlife; eventually producing 4> 4> 4> 4> 4> 4> 4* *\nt COMING EVENTS *\n4> < 4>4>*r*64*4>4>4\"i'4>4>4>4>4>4*4\nY.M.C.A.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Annual meeting on Tuesday evening. April 27th, S.R0, In tlie\nAssociation building,\nHANDKERCHIEF SALE AND TKA\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094By the teen ago girls' Mission circle\nof tbe Methodist church, lu the gym.\nSaturday April 17th.\nCELEBRATION\u00E2\u0080\u0094Watoli for the announcement of the 24th of May Second Annual Celebration.\nREX THEATRE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Good program all;\nduring the week.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^ \>OTHKK\nSHIPMENT\nOf Waterman's ideal\nFountain Pens have\njust arrived, and it\nmakes no difference\nwhat style you require,\nwe have It. The Waterman Pen Co. are to\nbe commended In that\nthey huve made\nXo Advnnee In Price\nduring the war and up\nto tbe present time.\nItelall prices set by\nthe L. i:. Walerinan Tn.\n3 frnm P2..\u00C2\u00BB, had a wide and varied career ha director, pro ,ueing many rue-\ncessful pictures, including Clara Kimball Young iu \"The Reason Why\" and\n\"The Claw;\" \"The Vampire,\" \"The\nReward of Patience.\" \"Great Expectations,\" \"The Fortunes*ot Fill.\" \"Her\nBetter Self\" nod \"The Love That\n.Lives.\" His skilful handling of the\nperlmontnl Marriage,\" In which Con\nstance Talmadge fs presented by Low-\nis J. Selznick and which can be seen\nou Monday and Tuesday at Lhe Rex\nilwutre. stamps, him as one of the\nforemost directors of the day.\n\"Experimental Marriage.\" which Is\nan adaptation of the stage play, '\"Saturday to Monday,\" by Wm. J. Hurl-\nbu^ Is a farce stnr yof a woman's\nliberty after marriage, und is full of\nsprightly humor. Constance Tnl-\nmiidge is excellent in the character-\nlatttton of Suzanne Brcoll, the widow\nwho feared to marry again because\nshe thought she would lie compelled\nto .sacrifice too much of her dearly\nprized liberty. Popular Harrison\nKord again plays opposite Miaa Talmadge. Walter IIior. Vera Slsson,\nKdythe Chapman. Muym Kelso -ind\nRaymond Hal ton complete the cast.\nHE ill THE HEHtl.O. **.HI A YEAR\n(JIVE \"SYRUP OF FIGS\"\nTO CONSTIPATED CHID I\nDelirious ul'rult Laxative\" Can't Harm\nTender Little Stomach, Liver\nand Bowel*.\nLook at the tongue, mother! If j\ncoated, your little one's stomach, liver\nand bowels need cleansing at once.\nWhen peevish, cross, listless, doesn'l\nsleep, eat or act naturally, or is fever-\ntail, sitomach BOur,breath bad; ha., sore\nthroat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a\nteuspoonful of \"California Syrup of\nMlgH,\" and ln a few hour., all the foul,\nconstipated waste,undigested food and\nsour bile gently moves out of Its little\nbowein without griping, and you have\na well, playful child again. Ask your\ndruggist fo a bottle of \"California\nSyrup of Figs,\" which contain* full\ndirections for babies, children of all\nages and for grown-ups.\nFIVE ACRES FOR SALE- A SNAP-1\nLocated two miles Kast of the city |\nCheap for cash. Good frame house\nand olilken houses, outbuildings\nand him. Good well and springs\nat door. All cleared. Apply at tho\nHerald office, 4-15-41\nWE ARE OFFERING SIX MONTHS\nfret subscription to tlte Toxaes Pa-\nPaclflc Oil News to all persons\nsending in their name on or before\nthe lst of June. 1020. Latest in-!\nformation from all points direct i\nfrom Texas. Keep posted If you!\nhave Invested or contemplate Investing. York & Webster, publishers, 4iit winch Building, Vancouver, B. O. 1-lii-lt j\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0n\u00E2\u0080\u0094b\nfissSi 7\nWANTED -Voting woman lo cook fori\nsmall country hospital; live in.'\nState experience and salary required, Fisher. Seertftarja, Invermere,;\nB.C. 4-l-.ll\nPICS FOR BALE Purebred Yorkshire pigs for April del Ivory. A.\nIt. Smith. Crauhrook. H-18-5t\nCORPORATION OF TIIE CITY OE\n(RANBROOK\n.aitllAE NOTICE\nPUBLIC NOTICE Is herefoy \"Ken\nthnt all residents will be required to\nclear up their yards and to have tbelr\ngarbage and refuse placed In proper\nreceptacles In thc. alleys nt tho rear\nof their dwelling, on or before the 1st\nday of May, 1020.\nPersons not complying with this\nrequest will he required to remove\nthe said refuse nfter thnt date nt tlieir\nown expense.\nT. M. ROBERTS,\n4-lfl-at City Clerk.\nFURNISHED HOUSE WANTED With\nall conveniences; three or four\nrooms or larger. Apply pat the Herald office, Box B. U-18-.U\nBW-EEP, SWEEP, SWEEP\u00E2\u0080\u0094I clean\nyour chimneys good und cheap.\nTake no chance of lire, have your\nchimneys swept. W. J. SELBY,\nP. O. box 210. 3-11-lmo\nFOR RENT IMMEDIATELY\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two\nlarge front rooms, well furnished\nand heated; un Garden avenue;\nsuitable for gentlemen. All conveniences. Apply box A, Horald\noffice.\nIF VOUR NERVES NEED NOURISHMENT AMI VOUR\nSYSTEM -TALIS FOK NEW STRENGTH, NOTHING\nUIIL HELP VOU QUICKER THAN\nPenslar Dynamic Tonic\nFOB OVMC.YtlKKl.II II IN AMI WOMEN, KOIt KKIIHI.K\nFOLKS OK 111,11 AGE AMI FOK DELICATE CIHUIKKN.\nHUS TONIC IS IIIIIIII,V RECOMMENDED.\nKEAII THE EXACT KlltMI'I.A ON THE I.ABKI,.\nPenslar Dynamic Tonic Comes in Two Sizes,\n75c and $1.50\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AT TIIE-\nCRANBROOK DRUG & BOOK CO.,\nHay I'Imiiif \"4\nNight t'liunr 211-t\nAM, MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO\nThe toon nf-e Kirta MIhkIoti Circle\nnt lho Methodist church, will hold a\nllaiidkerclitcf Mile and afternoon tea\nIn Iho Gym on Saturday, April 17th,\ncommencing at :t o'clock. The puh-\nllc are cordially Invited to attend.\nHOUSK POll SAI.K\u00E2\u0080\u0094Eight rooms,\nfurtiiicp heated; newer connections\nand bath room; concrete buMc-\nment. etc. Por terms, apply lo\nMr\u00C2\u00AB. Cleo. l.ollch. H-ll-lt\nIWVtHIKS I'lIK HAI,i: Sinners and\nbens, rrlees on application; rens.\nonntile. Bin Ml, Knstu, B. 0,\n3-lt-li\nIf you ar\u00C2\u00AB In tlie oul-oMiinii tllslrlcl. drop un * letter ar card aud\nanything ynu want in our line will lie sent by return mall or express. IVe give special attention to out-of-towu orders.\nOUR SUNDAY HOURS ARE 4 tn ft P. M. and 8 Io I P. M.\nHH\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Cranbrook"@en . "Cranbrook_Herald_1920-04-15"@en . "10.14288/1.0069167"@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 .