"f6410648-c192-464d-a31f-55a70c481f15"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1915-03-25"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranherald/items/1.0069230/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " X\nu\nTHE CRANBROOK HERALD\n\"\nVOLUME 17\nCRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA,\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 26th, i'JIS\nNUMBER 12\n...-.\"I.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*S=\nPETER LDID RESIGNS\nFROM\nAfter Many Yearn of Hard Work\nAsked to he Uvlleved of KeHpoustble\nPosition\nIt has been known for\" Hcveral\nyearn that Mr. Lund desired to be relieved ot the duties entailed In thc\ndirect nmiiiigetncnt or thl\u00C2\u00BB bit; company, nnd now tlmt thc lumber business in Ihis country is temporarily nt\na standstill, owing to the Kuropean\nwar nnd other oaUflOB, Mr. Mind, ou his\nrecent trip to the oftst, hns been able\nto perHiuule Ills iiiisuclutes that this\nIh an opportune (line to appoint a\nnew and perniinienl iminitK\u00C2\u00BBr.\nMr. Lund nnd hli- old partner, Mr.\nJohn llrtekenrldga,' organlred tlie\nCrow's Nest Paint Lumber (Company,\nLimited, about twelve yoara iiro, and\naetpilred large timber- holdings on the\nKootenay river and tributaries, and\nulso built their large mill at Wardner,\nIt. 0, At that time Mr. Lund also had\nassociated with him Mr. William Carlin and Mr. Alfred Doyle, of Fort\nSteele, and Charles P. Lund, a brother\nof Mr. Lund, residing In Spokane,\nPfi('.K-('AKTVVKlGlIT\nNtPTIALH\nPreWy Wedding at Erirkaon Today\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n' tniilraelintr I'ur W* I'optllar\nCranbrook People\nA quiet but very pretty wedding took\nplace today at the home of the bride's\nparents. Mr. and Mrs. Qeorge Cartwright. Krickson, when their daughter,\nLena, wus united in marriage to Mr.\nJ. Btanloy peek; city ticket agent of\nthe C. N. R. nt lOdmontoii. The ceremony wns perfoTirfsr by Rev. W. (J.\nlllake, pastor of tlle Presbyterian\nchurch ut Creston.\nPromptly at the hour of 18.80\no'clock, to the strains of Milieu grin's\nbridal Chord*; the bride entered the\nparlor on the arm of her futher and\n. . \u00E2\u0080\u009E. arch of\nI evergreen, from which\n1 biiHliiuttiteu, a large portion of which\n! in turn gets Into the hands of the\ni government in the shape of taxes and\nI other charges. Therefore, In my upin-\njlou, It ia the duty of the general pub-\nI He or that of the government to pro-\n| vide or to make adequate provisions\nI for Its unfortunate citizens who may,\n| through the ordinary course\nof activity, become Injured,\nAbout live yeara ago the -controlling disabled or 1 ncapacitated following\nInterest in tho company waa acquir-1 their usual employment or vocation,\ned by American caplUIlata, the. ma, ,from wWch*ther havff derived their\nJorlty of whom reside at Manistee, livelihood.\nMichigan. Since that time, about! \"Another matter that should receive\n$1,600,000 of new capital has been j tIl0 immediate attention ot the prbvfn-\nput into the company and nboutlcifti government is Iba-qucstlon of\n600,000,000 feet of standing timber \ flndIng a market for the lttmber fljjt\nhave been added to the company's (|6 manufactured In this province' in\nholdings, and a large amount t)f capi-< 8Xce89 of that whlch.can be absorbed\ntal has been invested in the develop- j by our own natural market, viz.; the\nment of the property, which ls now | provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan;\none of the largest producers of lum- -, Alberta, and British Columbia. There\nber in the province. , . *H an flnnua, accumulation-a* the coast\nMr. Lund is one of the largest stock-' mills of low-grade lumber, short\nholders in his company and will con- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 length and small piece stuff, that has\ntlnue as a director. Mr. Lund owns | had to be dumped at some time or\nmany Interests ln Western Canada; Is other, each year, on the prairie mar-\npresident of, and owns the controlling | ket, regardless of price, which has re-\nInterest in. the Western Canada Lum- j peatedly established a selling price\nber Company and -he Farmers' Lum-;In the provinces* of Manitoba,/Sas-\nber Company, with head offices at. katchewan and Alberta considerably\nLethbridge, Alberta. These concerns i below the average coat of production,\nare operating retail yards at many * Owing to the long distances and ex-\npoints throughout Southern Alberta. ! pensive freight rate from the coast\nMr, Lund is president of the Lund | to prairie market this has resulted\nLand -ft Development Company. This in loss to the coast mtlts themselves,\ncompany owns about 8,000 acres of It has also been the means of de-\nagricultural lands In East Kootenay, I moralising the natural market for the\na portion of which Is in high state of tnills located ln thc interior of Brit-\ncultivation. On one tract of this ish Columbia, who would be entitled\nland was located his beautiful resid- '*> a fair remuneration, and entitled\nence, at Wardner, which was totally, to prosper owing to tbeir favorable\ndestroyed by flre last month, during ; location and low freight rates into\nMr. Lund's absence Io the east. those prairie provinces.\nMr. Lund also owns a large farm I \"There Is no doubt ln my mind, now.\nassociates Or fellow-employees, and\nrarely through the carelessness or indifference of the employer. There is\nno one who has energy or 'brains\nenough to employ labor on a large\nscale that wishes to have men either\nkilled or ciippled. Minor accidents\ncan be settled by the employer or\nthrough accident insurance associations or companies. There Is no association or company, however, that\nwill Insure against accidents to an\namount In excess of say $1,500 or $2*\n000. IA the case Of a man who becomes crippled for life, and whose\nearning power haa been eut off, who\nhas a wife and a family of children,\nwho all andear before \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' jury that Is to\nsettle tho amount of damages, It Is\nnatural to Buftpotfe tbat the damages.\nIf the case 'Is considered or looked\nupon from a humane standpoint, wilt.\nI,, greater Ui... any'ono Industry *0\u00C2\u00B0k \"\"r \u00C2\u00BB'\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\"m\u00E2\u0084\u00A2,\"' \u00C2\u00AB\"\nran bear. TM money that W&\u00C2\u00AB1_ZT*; .\"',, \u00C2\u00AB, ,\"'\"\" ?w\nout for labor I- spent \u00C2\u00ABn.MM*l%d I \"ondcU \" hvilv **\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ml\u00C2\u00BB\" 0\u00C2\u00BBrtw*lfIrt\nthroughout tho country among other\nNEW TICKET II\nmOERMK RICE\nHOSPITAL HALL\nKASTKIt MONDAY\nNominations Tomorrow With Two\nPull Tickets In the Field-\nTake Vonr Choice\nApril Ath Wlil be the Date of lhe\nCranbrook Event\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Worthy\nCause\nBig\nCranbrook's leading pastime Is undoubtedly dancing, Nearly thc whole\n (year round there is two nr more\nIn addition to the ticket announced ; dances per week. There are farewell\nlust week another ticket-has been j dances, benefit dances, social dances,\nplaced in the Held. This ticket an-[club dances uud during the past year\nDounces that tliey bellevr the taxes there have been patriotic dances.\nof the city are high and. If elected, But there Is one event which has\nthey will use all their' energlea to- become a fixed institution in the Ms-\nward reducing the rate, as well as. tory of the city uud thut is the An-\nprotflCtlng the welfare of the pity Lual Hospital hall given iu aid of at.\nas a whole. Tliey wish to be known | Eugene hospital on Kaster Monday,\nus the solid b!x. The candidates nam- Tliat date is always keenly looked for-\nmade ii charming bride, being gowned\nIn a handsome dress of white\nbrocaded silk, with lace trimmings.\nTlie couple were unattended.\nImmediately after the ceremony a\nwedding breakfast was served, only ,\nthe Immediate family relatives and a\nfew friends being invited.\nFollowed by a host of congratula- I\ned are:\nThe Solid NU\n\V. it, McFarlane\nFrank Detail\nFred Qenest\n.1. 1). Hull\nMalcolm Horie\nYV. S. Santo\nMr. .McFarlane, who Is heading tills\nticket ,waS responsible for tho resignation of the former council, .having instituted proceedings In the\ncourts. The following la a coin*, of\nthe judgment in part:\nEaoh of them having by -their ccun-\ntlons, good wishes und confetti, thc\nhrppy young couple left by tlie after- i\nnoon train on their wedd Ing trip,\nwhich will be spent in coast cities, j se!' *MW\"Mtl and disavowed the of-\nThe bride's travelling suit was of \"*'\" Htl(1 nriviIf*es or alderman of the\nbrown corded silk, with hut to match. t Corporation of the city of Cranbrook\nBoth' bWde and groom are very!'11 tllt! -Evince of British Columbia,\npopular, as was evidenced by the large \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 H U a,,JU(,Bed lhat fte Bflld A!,re(l\ncollection of wedding gifts, which in-; Jan,PS Ba!mo,lt' LmieT c,aW' Qu?tove\neluded sliver, cut glass, china, furniture and other useful gifts.\nThe bride is a very pouplar Cranbrook young lady and a great favorite.\nShe has been a resident of this city\nfor a number of years, being a teacher in the Cranbrook Central school.\nThe groom Is an old Cranbrook resident being for years in the employ\nof the C. P. Ft. as ticket agent and\nlater engaging fn business for himself\nTuesday at noon Mr. Peck was tendered a \"shower\" of rice at the station by a number of his Cranbrook\nfriends, a large number of C.P.R. employees contributing toward the downpour.\nAmong thc Cranbrook people who\nattended the wedding were Mr. and\nMrs. H. A. McKowan und Mrs. (Dr).\nF. B. Miles.\nThe Herald Joins with tlie many\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Cricks on, Joseph Jackson, Oeorge\nRobert LeaBk nnd George Frederick\nStevenson, and each of them do not\nin any manner, intermeddle with or\nconcern themselves about the ofllce,\nliberties, privileges and franchises of\nalderman of the Corporation of1 the\nCity of Cranbrook aforesaid, but that\nthey and each of them be absolutely\nforejudged and excluded from exercising or using thc same or any of\nthem for the future.\nAnd that the said Walter Bruce McFarlane do recovor against thc-said\nAlfred James Balment, Lester Clapp,\nGustave Erickson, Joseph Jackson,\nGeorge Robert Leask and George\nFrederick Stevenson his costs' of\nthese proceedings to be taxed.\nward to by tlie younger set who ure\ndesirous ot having a splendidly good '\ntime and nn occasion hy which those\ntoo old to enjoy this strenuous pas-\nI time can participate in a small recognition of the work this institution\n| is doing in this district by buying a\n1 ticket and looking ou.\nEaster Monday this year falls on\nApril 6th and In the evening ou that\ndate you will tlnd the young and old\nall from far and near gathered at the\nAuditorium where dreamy music will <\nbo dispensed by the Cranbrook pr-1\nchestra, where the floor will he waxed\nand there will he smiling floor manag- i\ners and committees of Introduction\nto sec that all enjoy themselves. Dancing wilt commence about 9.30 and the\ncommute have announced that it will\nbe continued until 2.30 In the wee\nsum' hours which should he time\nenough for every one to have danced\ntheir till.\nSupper wilt he served by tho ladles\nof the St. John's Ambulance Corp at\nLiberals, Attention!\nVoters' List closes Monday, April 5th, 1915\nVisit the Liberal committee rooms at Mathe-\nson's Hall on Armstrong avenue and see that\nyour name is on. If not put it on at once\nDO NOT DELAY\nL\nIS WELL RECEIVED\nihe Rebellion ot Mrs. Barclay\"\nGreeted With a Good Houw at (he\nAuditorium\nCharles Patmore ad-\narrled this diincuK\nA large share of the t'ranbrook\npeople Were afforded two hours plea*\n-.ant diversion at the Auditorium lust\nFriday evening, when the Ladled Aid ably to tli\nof the Methodist Church presented u\ncomedy on domestic life which held\nthe interest of the audience by tts\ndramatic power coupled with eharac*\nthe nominal price of 26C. each. The | terlshUon of a highly artistic class as\ndelineated by the local I mpersona-\ntors.\nIt Is generally recognized that the\ntheatre; through the dramatist and\ntho actors. Is exercising a powerful\nhold on the mind of the rising generation of our day and uge. If ull plays\nproceeds of the supper will be used to\nbuy hospital supplies for tho hoys at;\nthe front so that all who attend will\nbe patronizing two most worthy\ncauses.\nThe following ladles have promised\nto act as patronesses: Mrs. (Dr). J.\nII. King. Mrs. Geo. F. Steven sou, Mrs.\nduction. Mr:\nvontageously\npart.\nMr.**. Powell as Mrs. ilrown. a sister\nof .Mr. Barclay, and Miss Kdith McBride. as hor Irresponsible daughter.\nCora, were character studies worthy\nel real artists and added consider*\ngaiety of the evening. It\nwas their criticisms Of the Barclay\nhousehold affairs which precipitated\nthe disappearance of Mrs. Barclay\nat the close of Act I\nMr A Raworth, as Details O'Hara,\nthe mau of all work, guve several\nimitation- of real Irish dialogue\ncoupled with some Irish love-making\nwith Miss O'Connor.\nMrs. McNabb a? Elsie Stuart proved\na friend in need to both Mrs. Barclay\nand her sister, and her friendly in-\ntaught similar lessons to that of Frl* terest in their affairs culminated in\n(Dr.) F. W. Green, Mrs. G. Erickson. t -jay night much of the un happiness of ** happy ending for all concerned. The\nfriends of the happy young couple lu \ ony in tho field Is supporting Mayor\nMrs. A. L. McDermot, Mrs. Geo.\nHoggarth and Mrs. H. II. Bourne.\nI * A splendid committee have the ar-\n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 | rangements In charge and are plan-\nThc Howness Ticket I ning all the appointments of thc forth-\nThe opposing ticket and the'flrkt 1\u00C2\u00ABMWl|j|'dance on a largo scale, They\nwishing them a life of wedded bliss.\nadjoining the town of Barons, Alberta,\nall of which Is In a high state of cultivation, and several hundred acres at\n'hat the Panama Canal haa been completed and Is now In operation, markets can bc procured for this ae-\nLundbreck, on which are located his cumulation or surplus* of cheap lum-\ncoal mine and the town of Lundbreck.\nnamed after Mr. Lund and his late\npartner, Mr. Breckenridge.\nMr. Lund is tho largest Individual\nshareholder In the Kootenny Telephone Lines, Ltd.. nt Cranbrook, operating telephone lines throughout\nthe south-eastern portion of British\nColumbia.\nMr. Lnud wlll continue to reside\nfn Western Cannda nnd will engage\nIn the active development of his large\nland holdings in tlie Kootenays nnd\nthe province of Alherta.\nIn the course of a conversation with\nMr. Lund the flrst of the week In reference to the lumber Industry Mr.\nLund said:\nMl OTJRICK\nDIED TUESDAY MOKNIX;\nSncrambw. (o the Great White I'lague\nat I'almry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Funeral Today\nNews of the death Tuesday morning\nof Mike Durlck at Calgary, Alta.. will\nher at points taking water-transportation, either on the Atlantic sea-ibe received with hearty sorrow\u00E2\u0080\u0094sor-\nboard or In Europe, la the thickly ! row of a peculiarly Intimate nnd per-\ntmpulated centres or districts where ! soiial sort, for there are hundreds in\nall the different industries, large and I thc city to whom this intimation of his\npassing will mean that of the passing\not a friend.\nWhen the news of his death reached\nthe streets ninny and warm were the -**\ntributes to his worth\u00E2\u0080\u0094no more popu-\n-minlt, arc continually Reeking a\naheap grade of lumber that cannot be\nnrocured by them from sources where\n'ransportatlon by rail for long distances is Involved.\nThe government aro < fully familiar j lar young matt has ever lived in the\nwith all the different conditions which,city, nor one essentially simpler or\nhnve led up to the present deplorable j |eBS pretentious. Mike Durlck was a\nlepression surrounding Uie lumber In-1 true type of westerner and was goner-\nlustry in this province. The govern- j ous and charitable to a degree,\nment have depended upon this Indus-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ry. nnd kindred enterprises, for the\nBowness on a policy-of economy and\nretrenchment. In fact, both tickets\nseem to be agreed ou economy1 and\n. the lowering of the tax rate. The bone\ni of contention simmered down to Its\nlast analysis seems to be the fS.OO\nj vote. Tliis Is something that should\nI not enter Into civic matters at all but\nshould be immediately taken up 'with\nthe provincial government, which Is\nresponsible for a very rotten law on\n: this mutter. About the only question\n' for the voter to decide In this election is whether he desires peace1 and\n1 harmony in the city council or a continual scrap. An opposition council\n; is not likely to work well with Mayor\nI Bowness. The tloket Supporting, him\nus follows: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA. J. Balment t\nT. II. Banfield ,\nLester Clapp\nti. Erickson ,\nJoseph F. Campbell | ...\nGeorge W. Leask \u00E2\u0080\u00A2. .\ngreater portion of Its revenue. These\nvery desirable channels Trom which to\n\"I hnve written tlie premier and I rather public revenue are now ser-\nolher members of the government nt lously threatened and the government\nlength, at different times, iu con nee- -must I mmediately take aggressive\ntlon with these same matters. No one\nhas so far taken the trouble to formulate any definite plan, or even to\ndosfgnnte tlie main features that\nshould be embodied In the Act.\n\"There ts no doubt that some provision will he mnde in tlie Land Act\nho that real, boun tide lumber manufacturer*, will be protected against\nthe loss of their tlmbor from their Inability, under conditions or this time.\nto meet the annual charges Imposed\nby the government. I think the Act\nshould be so amended that temporary\nrelief, whenever found absolutely ne-\nA short tlmo ago he flrst showed\nsymptom? of the disease which ultimately proved fatal. Its seriousness\nwns fully recognised from tiie flrst.\nAbout the first of January he came\nhere from Cnlgary to consult his favored physician, Dr. King, who realized\ntlu* seriousness of Ids case and had\nhlm immediately placed in thc St.\nEugene hospital. Everything possible In the way of tender caring was\n'done for hlni, but he gradually weak-\nWhatever else you are compelled , oniM,. I>HrinR h|| mnnnemont\nto give up during this period of m- thnt institution he was unable to leave\nadjustment, den't give - uu your In-, llUt room n(1(* |hfl f(l(,t tm ,)p Wfl8\nsurnnee. it Is a hard-ttmc* proposl-, st(lljdl|y prow||1K W0Mfl Mfl ob d\nHon-thnt is, yon need it more when | ,vft\u00E2\u0080\u009E -Kr(l,f ,)y \u00E2\u0080\u009E,, fr|) it appears that at a meeting\npaper on \"The Philosophy of Buddah,\" |o| tne gUpreme lodge held iu Wlnnl-\nand Mr. Fairbairn followed with an [m lai.t 8limmer u ru|a was passed\nlow can count upon In adversity.\ncesHsry, could be procured through an I other Investments may provo of no ac-\nI deceased ,snd formerly a resident of\nIn this modern day of uncertainty, L1JH kfl nR0 to ^ )n ,ittpn(illtlC0 llt h,8\n| bedside. Last Tuesday lt wns de-\nnrder tn council; and. In my opinion,\nwhatever measures ure provided.\nshould apply only to the actual operators aud employers of labor.\n\"What the lumbermen need, perhaps as badly as timber legislation, is\ncount. Many u man has believed\nhimself to be In good financial condition, only to awaken in the morning\nto find that he wasnt worth a cent.\nBut the man who in Insured Is absolutely certain that in the event ho Is\nelded to remove him tn Calgary, where\nhe sun -limbed, one week later, to tlie\nwhite man's plague\u00E2\u0080\u0094tuberculosis. His\ni equally Instructive essay entitled .\"The\nj Place of Angels In Art.\" ,\n: Refreshments were then served by\n, Misses A. Pye und Woodland,\ni Miss Woodland then sang \"Crossing\nj tho Rur\" nnd Miss Cherrington \"He\nShall FOod His Flock\" (Messiah).\n, . . , , , , The programme committee are plan-\nsincerity o spirit and bright courage. \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 , w|)|\u00E2\u0080\u009E drWo ,or Tue\u00E2\u0080\u009Ed J \u00E2\u0080\u009E\nll'a.laaa llllfalil III. Iaa liana, aalala. I., .all',, I \"\nManna' ailniiiiutii provision for tnklnu ralloil to lho droit Ilejrond those dc\ncare ot the men who snstoln personnl: dondent upon hlm will have some.\nInjury, or who lieeomo disabled or thing to count upon,\ncrippled, either temporarily nr (or life. | Not only should one manage to\naa the result of tholr employment In keep up Ms tnaurunrc ut this time, but\nthe different manufacturing plants and 11,,. should take out more at It, If It\nIndustries of this province. There.Is\nno man or company who can afford' to\nborrow largo sums or capital with\nwhich to create pay-rolls unless come\nprovision Is made by which hc will\nknow wliere he stands In connection\nwith the matter. A man may sustain\npersonal Injury or become disabled for\nIs at oil possible. For the man unskilled In handling money there Is no\nother investment any safer\u00E2\u0080\u0094and oven\nthe fellow who supposes he knows all\nabout handling money Is frequently\nmistaken. If there had not been a\nplace In thc economy of things for the\nInsurance companies they would long\nwere unfailing\u00E2\u0080\u0094he was able to nwait\nthe coming of the \"King of Terrors\"\nwithout fear.\nMike Durlck was a sterling man, a\nworthy, public-spirited, helpful citizen, a kind friend, a most lovable comrade\u00E2\u0080\u0094all mourn him who value these.\nHo has passed to that great land from I The following clipping from ah old\nwhence no traveller returns. May the country paper will be read with In-\nGreat Maker of all good rest his soul. ] terest by the many frlenda of Mr. h.\nThe funeral is being held today nt: s .Mackersy, formerly of this cRy:\nlife-and incapacitated from further: ogo have been forced out of business.\nearning power, i This man-will need I *'\"- - |I-IM \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nnroiaatnnce. He must, naturally, be-I.I . WJl\u00C2\u00A5 NOT IN B. Ct\ncome a charge upon the public; but '\nthere Is no single industry thnt should Ottawa, .March' Mi\u00E2\u0080\u0094In view of pre.\nbe made to bear this burden, Tlm\nman comes voluntarily and asks (or a\nposition In the sawmill or otlier manufacturing plant. Every person knows\nthat all who llve must die, either a\nnatural death or through nccidonMIthe\nUtter sometimes happens from hi*'\nown carelessness, and moro fre-\nIMatly boa the caraleaaneaa al hla\n18th,\nCome and hrlng your friends. Notify any member of the committee of\nyour intention of being present.\nFOR LOVE OF COUNTR*/\nCalgary.\nREV. FLEWELLING\nAT COTTAGE HOSPITAL\nvailing conditions due In a measure\nto tho war, tlte holders of gold quarts\nmining claims In northern Manitoba,\nAlberta and Snakatchawnn, wlll be relieved for a ***ir of doing work on the\nclaimn to the'vftlUe of at least $100 as\nprovided In the mining regulations.\nAnnaordor-ln-council to this effect ban\nJvMt'teat ****** *t th* HMual\nHis many friends will bo very sorry\nto hear that Ihe Rev. E. P. Flewelling\nla seriously 111 with heart affection,\nand-is ordeied by liis doctor to keep\nperfectly quiet for some time to como.\nOn Wednesday afternoon ho was removed to tho Cottage hospital. Tho\nUev. A. B. lane took the thrco services hero last Sunday nnd drove to I thc\nMr. Lindsay Stuart Mackersy, who\nhas been gazetted as a second lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery, left\na good appointment ln British Columbia, and after travelling over' 7000\nmiles, occupying twenty-one days ,he\narrived In this country on Christmas\nday, made application (or and1 waB\ngazetted (or service. His brother similarly gave up n good appointment In\nCanada, and Is at present serving\nwith the Second Canadian Contingent.\n| His youngest brother is serving with\n0th Royal Scots (Highlanders).\nMarysville and back and took the ; They nre sons ot Mr. W. 11. Mackersy,\nservlco thcro In tho afternoon. The | W.S., who was an officer (or sixteen\nVenerable Archdeacon Beer will tuke ] years In the Quoen's, Kdlnburgh, and\ntlio services hero neat Sunday, March | It is Interesting to note that all an\nMt*.\nenjoining all subordinata- lodges io\ndisplay thc hag of their country at\nthe opening of the meeting and fa>r the\nmembers tu salute tha' same ami repeat \"l-ong May ll Reign.\"\nIn the case of Crosaont IoiIk'', No.\n.ia, Cranbrook being under Hrltia.li\nprotection tin' I'nion Jm k Is alls-\nplayed; hut at the suggestion o( boy-\neral members ll a!i-<'iis:;lon anise a.\"\nto the right of such n procedure In\ntlie ease of a membi-r nf the Knights\nlof Pythias belonging to a lodge In\nI Canada and asked If It would he right\nI (or him to salute the Hag of another\ncountry to thnt from which In\nsworn allegiance?\nThc discussion entered Into wns'\nboth Intensely interesting nnd Instructive. .Many Instances were clta-d\nwhere the Union Jack wns sainted\nIn the States and Old Glory In return upon the occasion of visits to the\nseveral countries by officials of the\ngovernments. The discussion wan\nclosed by the opinion being expressed\nthat a member residing in nnotha'r\ncountry ond under another flag ami\nreceiving all of Its protective values\nwould salute the ting of that country,\n| and bo proud In so doing, out of\ncourtesy lo those with whom he wns\nrosldlng.\nAnother member signed the Router\nand another Interesting mooting Is\npromised for next week to which\nall members and visiting brothers are\nreqmled to be present\nbut no slave.\" with a droll bit of humor for every situation and was the Mary Ann O'Connor,\nsinaneeat comedy character in the pro- Mrs. Charles Patmore\nWaltz\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tales of Hoffman (Barcanolle) by John Klrauss\nOrchestra\nACT I.\nTuesday Morning\nScene\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Dining Room at the Barclays.\nKnter Mr. nnd Mrs. Barclay, the former In an Irritable mood, which Is\nfurther aggravated by the late arrival of the mall. Including letter announcing visit of Mrs. Brown (Mr. Barclay's sister) and laer daughter Cora.\nLater the arrival, following which this good lady sets herself to generally\ncriticising Mrs. Barclay's administration of the household affairs, la-adlng\nup to the \"REBELLION OF MI1S. BARCLAY.\" and the curtain falls as\nMrs, Barclay ls putting Into effect the suggestion of her sister Ruth, to\nloave home rather than endure the continual Interferences ot Mrs. Brown,\nand the annoyances of her daughter.\nSolo-\n-Thc Kerry Dance By Molloy\nMrs. (ieo. !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'. Stevenson\n.March-\nUnder tiie Double Kagle Hy J. K. Wagner\nOrchestra\nACT II.\nFriday Afternoon\nScene\u00E2\u0080\u0094Kitchen of the Barclays.\nWe find Mrs. Brown glorying In the management nf her brother's\nhousehold uffalra much to the annoyance of Mary Ann O'Connor, the maid,\nwho opened the s'lcund act with her criticisms of Mrs Brown and In her\nIrish brogue swears allegiance to ber old mistress. Mary Ann. however, Is\nhail discharged, greatly to the annoyance nnd disapproval of Mr. Barclay, and\ntha' climax of his good sister's doings Is reacha-d when Iaa- finds her about\nto discharge the hired man Dennis. We are eventually relieved to tlnd peace\nabout to be restored, the return of Mrs. Barclay and a general re-unlon of\nthe other members of the family.\nOrchestra National Anthem\nTHIS WEE K'S SPECIAL\nOn Saturday, March 27th: Christie's Sodas, 2 lb. tins at\ncost. 30c. tin, 2 tins for 56c. (They cost us 27 l-2o. tin. Regular selling 35c. or 3 for $1.00).\nThis is for CASH ONLY and not more than 2 tins to each\ncustomer.\nCall at the store or phone 183 and pay the delivery man.\nAnother shipment of finest oranges, $3.50 a case, any size.\nLemons still 35c. dozen.\nAll kinds of jams 26c. and 30c. bottle. Large tins 60c.\nand 85c. each.\nCUmCMI TEADI5S CMTAHT f AOB TWO\nTHI CRANBIloog HMULD\n***.*' -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . . j \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nIBE CRANBROOK HERALD\nIs. V. SuUlvaa, Editor\nJ. B. Thompson, Business Manager\nSapicrlpUei Betas\nOu Tear II.M\natm Months l.N\nthree Months 60\nAdiertlslni Betas\nDisplay Advertising, If cants per\nColumn Inch.\nBeading Notices or Classified Ada. 10\naaala par line.\nMUNICIPAL ELECTION 1915\nCruulirook, It. C-, March 2otli, 191.1\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nThoro Ih a good deal of \"rot\" talked\nabout imlitirs and politicians, and tin*\nterrible temptations and dangers of\ntlie life of a politician. Hon. W. S.\nFielding and Sir John Thompson\ncould huve made millions when iu offlce. And yet no clergyman or college professor has won a more honorable or stainless nnmo than these\ntwo men. And then are hundreds of\nother Canadians who could be named\nwho might have made fortunes In\ntlieir political offices, but who never\nmade a cent in a dishonorable way.\nSome of the ablest and most honorable of our puhlic men today are poor\nmen and there would be very little\nhope for our country if the views of\na certain few were well founded and\nthe poor man should keep out of political life because of its temptations.\nThe man who enters politics ready to\nplunder the country as soon as elect-\ned to office is a common thief and ;\nshould be behind prison walls Instead of representing tho people.\nTO THE RATEPAYERS:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nWe have consented to allow our names to go before\nthe people and respectfully solicit your support for\nAldermen for the City of Cranbrook. We rely on our\nplatform of economy and safe, sane, business government\nas the most necessary requisite for the conduct of muncl-\npal affairs this year.\nWe are tied to no policy except our own best individual judgment in conserving the best interests of the city\nas a whole. We realize that only by the strictest retrenchment can the city cope with the present financial situation and it will be our aim to save the ratepayers money\nand keep the tax rate as low as possible.\nIf elected, we will give our time and attention to the\ncity's business and will endeavor to see that the city\"s interests are in every way carefully safeguarded.\nA. J. BALMENT\n(J. ERICKSON\nT. H. BANFIELD\nLESTER CLAPP\nJOSEPH F. CAMPBELL\nOEORGE W. LEASK\nFOR ALDERMAN\nMR. W.\nS. SANTO\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 25th, 1915\nTHE CANDIDATE AND effected an entrance Into the baby's]\nTHE DUST Nl'ISAM'E \"llIk 1,ottle and ll(*d destroyed the\n j property of meek and lowly citizens.\nTheie is a well rounded prejudice\nagainst civil servants participating in\npolitics. Tlie men who are in the\ngovernment employ would do well to\nlet politics alone, if thy have any concern for tlieir job. The public know\nthat better service will be given when\ngovernment employees cut out poll-\nSome of the government em-\nl.utepajers Will (.ive I'nanimous Sup\nport to the Man Who Ih Big Enough\nlo Tackle This Matter\nHaving been approached\n'from time to time by various\nbodies of ratepayers and citizens of Cranbrook requesting\nme to become a candidate for\nalderman, I have decided to accept.\nWhile I have no complaint\nto put forth at this time against\npast systems or government of\ncivic affairs ,1 do contend that\na great deal towards the success and building up of our city\ndepends greatly on the council\nand whatever council be elected\nrequires the harmonious cooperation of the general citizen and ratepayer, and I further contend that one of the most\nessential things is the support\nand protection of the business\nThe reason for this failure to re-\nI move the dust while it was removable I man and his interests towards\nthe\nties.\nployecs In this district could serve\nthe public ns well under Liberal rule\nas Conservative. They havo their\nminds on their jobs and they do not\npersistently stick tlieir noses into\nother people's business. On the other\nhand we are possessed of a few civil\nservants who are conspicuous because of the prominent part they try\nto play In politics. At the recent Conservative nominating convention au\nimmigtatton inspector in full uniform\nnot only participated but addressed\ntlie meeting. One other government\nemployer* assisted In getting delegates to attend and two men with government jobs are running their legs\noff night and day for the local candidate. Another local government\nemployee abuses any Conservatl ve\nwhom he (inds giving work to tlie\nHerald. Ho has persistently done\nthis and some of these days we will\npublish his name with full details.\nThese are the kind of public officials\nthat are not only bringing the Conservative party into disrepute, but are\nmaking nf British Columbia a by-word\nIn the outside world as a hide-bound\npolitical autocracy ruled by politicians for the good of politicians only.\nGood government and British Columbia are not synonymous these days.\nIt was Abraham Lincoln, the sage\nof American politics, who said, \"Yon\ncan fool all the people some of the\ntime and some of the people all of the\ntime, but you can't fool all the people\nall the time.\" Sir Itichard McBride.\nour astute premier, would do well to\n-study the above saying. He has\nfooted all of British Columbia some\ntimes by catch phrases such as \"A\nWhite British Columbia,\" etc., und he\nhas successfully fooled some of the\npeople for the past twelve years but\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094by hand\u00E2\u0080\u0094Is not apparent to the ordinary citizen. When he ls caught ln\na cloud of dust, his throat filled with\nHere is an opportunity for candi-1 microbes and his clothing turned an-\nlates for alderman lc honors. This is- j other color It may strike him that the\nme will elect any man big enough ' proper time to remove tho nuisance Is\nmd serious enough to tackle the pro- while lt Is removable and before It\nosltlon, <*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 set in Us deadly work.\nA number of candidates-and there ' But if he makes enquiries he will he j know \"thaTto give the'clty and\nire more to follow\u00E2\u0080\u0094aro sparring for i informed that the custom has always \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - --.-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*.-\nipenlngs for civic honors, uldcrmanlc , DQen to |et the dust take care of lt-\nind otherwise. In fact It would be a I gpu, a number of reasons have been\nrood live issue for the candidates for\nho provincial houoe.\nBE NOT OVERCONFIDENT\nDiscussing the outcome of the ap'\nproaching provincial election tho\nKaslo Kootenalan, among other observations, has this to say:\n\"The McBride government, despite\nIts critics, wlll no doubt go back Into\nj power witb the bands playing and tho\n{flags flying. Sir Richard's govern-\n, ment has Its faults and has Its weak\npoints; It has made some blunders\nand Ib cordially hated by a bunch of\nwould-be spoilers, The fact, however,\nremains that the opposition has only\nso far developed a bunch of nincompoops for leaders.\"\nIt ls to be hoped that the Kootenalan did not wish to be taken seriously when giving publicity to tho\nforegoing. If It really wus ln earnest\nthe Liberals should bu delighted to\nhave our contemporary continue the\ngood work.\nTho late Sir John A. Macdonald Is\nauthority for the statement that thero\nIs nothing so uncertain as a horse race\nor a general election\u00E2\u0080\u0094-and he might\ntruthfully have added to the latter\nclause, particularly In hard times.\nIt Is too Boon ufter 1911 for the\nelectors to have forgotten the oft-repeated assertion of tlio federal Liberals that there was no cabinet material among the followers of It. L. Borden; yet the people of Canada returned\nhim and his party to power with a majority almost as large as tho Liberals\nhad prior to tho appeal to the people.\nIn Ontario in 1905 a similar cry was\nheard concerning the Conservatives,\nthen headed by thc late Sir James P.\nWhitney, but when the returns were i\natl In at the general election ln Janu- j\nary of that year It showed the Boss\ngovernment swept out of office and\nSir James In control of the legislature by a vote of almost four to one.\nThe Vancouver Province, about the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0...v upbuilding of our city.. _noBt \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nAgain it has come to my notice; ZTtaT' J\"*!*\" \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> the prov\nthat in some instances the fin-\_l* \u00E2\u0084\u00A2r car,<\"ul *\u00C2\u00B0 w\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 'he\nparty workers against being overconfident, remarking that \"when there is\na general sentiment of this nature It\nIs apt to lead a great many voters to\nancial circumstances of the\nmen elected to govern the city\nhave heen such that they have\nnot had the time to pay atten-1 ,h\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\ntion to the affairs of the City\r)\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00B0Z\u00C2\u00BB_ extrfm8\"\nieconomically and properly. I a-\u00E2\u0084\u00A20 Pnyiace '\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00C2\u00BBM\u00E2\u0084\u00A2t the Mc-\nBefore the next issue of this paper\nipppars we will bc reading of the\nadvanced as to why the dust is allowed to remain. Some say that with a\ndust mulch the moisture Is conserved\nand therefore helps to conserve mols-\nItiallflcatlons of the various candi- tuPe in tno ground. Others say the\niates In the field for honors innumer- dust haB never been removed and .there\nible\u00E2\u0080\u0094as view by themselves\u00E2\u0080\u0094their | ls no U8e introducing new systems of\nibillty to govern, to serve the people, j sanitation. No mayor or alderman\nI'he ratepayers ot Cranbrook will hear ever thought of such a thing as re-\ni( something marvelous. Wc will read i movlng the dust in the early spring.\nif all the good things they are going , ,,ndi of courfie( no well ordatned mayor\n.0 do-after they are elected. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 or alderman Is going to depart from\nWe have gone through all that on j the weM Deftten path, election card or\n-vernl and divers occasions and we : no eIectlon card. And for all these\ntill survive. nna> 8Undry reasons we have the dUBt\nNow, we desire to point out an open- nu|MnCe today and we well have it\n'ng for a smart man. If there is one unt\u00E2\u0080\u009E September or October and peril the running who can rise to the oc- i ,mp8 for a longer perlod( U0*,eB8 flom,,\n-union he will not jeopardize his nRplrant, wh0 ls In a position to say\nu '\"\" rises to the occasion, takes the\nihances n the next world by using\nip lint air In his election cards. If he\ns big enough nnd serious enough and\nfrank enough he has thc opportunity\nof his life time.\nThe fact of the matter is the taxpayer of Cranhrook want a man and\nthey want him now and they want hlm\nbadly to deal with the dust nuisance.\nWe want a man to deal with the dust\nnuisance while we have the duct nuls-\nniee with us in all ito glory, In all Its\nloath dealing glory. We have another\nuulsance, but lt only comes to town\nonce In a while, and as luck wlll have\nit, blows off In a public meeting and\nseldom raises much dust. Let us return to the dust nuisance.\nWe have the dust nuisance tackled\nnow. A few years ago one of the\naldermen of the corporation Introduced the subject of oil sprinkling\ntho main streets of the city, but he was\ntreated as a Joke. The sentiment of\nits affairs the needed attention\nthat at least a portion of the\nelected body can spend four or\nfive hours daily in the office in\npromoting and directing further industries towards the upbuilding of their city.\nI hereby announce my candidacy for Alderman for the\nCity of Cranbrook and solicit\nthe support of my friends, voters and ratepayers, and if elected will do my utmost in directing my ability and attention to\nBride government wlll be returned\nbut no sweeping victory Is anticipated,\nand It Is well that It should be so:\nIt is not good for any government to\nbe without a lively opposition.\nToronto Saturday Night, possibly the.\nstrongest Independent weekly paper\nIn all Canada, on more than one occasion remarked that \"You can throw a\nbrick through any country law ofllce\nwindow and hit a smarter man than\nJ. P. Whitney.\" Yet the lato James\nturned out to be one of the best all-\nround premiers Ontario has ever\nknown.\nW. S. SANTO.\nMYATIOH AaHMT\naffair In hand and compels an onslaught on the dust.\nThis does not seem like a very hard\nproposition. The streets are supposed to be cleaned up once a year anyway. Why not do lt now? There are\nmen who would be glad to get to\nwork. And the work would do them\na lot ot good now. Why wait until the\nsummer months, when work Is more\nplentiful and the laborer not so hard\npinched.\nA few years ago the Herald drew attention to this evil. At that time\npeople said we were \"getting toney.\"\nand other pleasant things. It was\ngenerally conceded, however, that wc\nwere right, but the excuse given was\nthat there was no money available and\nwould not be until the new estimates\nwere passed. If this excuse stands\ntoduy we sec an excellent opportunity\nhe people has entirely changed today for some enterprising and abbltlous\nmd we believe this could be made a young man. That excuse should not\nhis latest stunt hus caused some of Illvo isKU0 in t,lc romhiK city election, be allowed to live ono hour.\nthem to sit up und take notice. W\nhave been told that there Is going to\nbe an election ln British Columbia.\nThis followed previous assertions\nthat there would be no election. The\ndate was set for April loth. It was\npostponed, a new departure in Canadian elections. Every day the papers\nsaid that the date would be announced shortly. Now Sir Itichard\nIs going to Chicago and Ottawa, probably to borrow election funds and arrange for higher power to hetp hlm\nfool thc people and keep hold of the\ntreasury funds. The election may b<\nannounced on his return nnd It may\nnot. Sir Itichard has surely outdone himself In fooling the people this\ntime. They like tn be kept guessing |\nby our Dick. It vill ti\u00C2\u00AB..u them to\nforget they have no Jobs and that\nbusiness ls going to the how-wows\nSir Hick rules the roost and Is holding the attention of all British Columbia with his many little caprices In\nSeveral of the city streets need tho .\ntickling of a rake and birch broom. In\nsome coses years have passed Since IfMX SMASH THE MACHINE!\nlie city passed the sweeper over! \t\n\u00C2\u00ABme of our streets. The winter: What's the matter with the poor old\ndrought very Uttle snow and conse-1 machine? Everybody's picking on It,\niiicntly there is very little or no Ice just as though It had done some harm,\non our strets, But there Is lots of\nlust and the wind is blowing It Into\nhe faces of the pedestrians, Into the\nhomes\u00E2\u0080\u0094flour barrels and pantries,\nclothes presses and bed rooms. It Is\nblowing the dust into the stores, dry\n:oods stores, grocery stores, provi\nsion stores, drug stores and every\nother kind of stores, and the dust is\nI'ven tucking Itself away In the bed\nclothing.\nAnd from tlie very nature of that\nWe aro consumed with pity and with\nrago at thc threats of the Liberal\nparty to smash the machine. The\npoor, dear, decrepit old machine that\nhas been a friend of the government\nfor yearB and years and years. It Ib\ncruol, It Is unkind.\nAnd now they want to smash It,\nThat's tho reward of faithful service.\nBut we have a plan and we foe) that\n, The Conservatives fot Kaslo will\nthe promotion and upbuilding j do well to organize the strongest pos-\nof the city of Cranbrook on the; sibie campaign both on offense and\nmost economical basis. i defense. More unlikely things than the\nreturn of Brewster, Oliver, Macdonald et al have happened more than\nonce In Canadian political history.\nWe believe the electorate while appreciating tried leadership in a party,\nplaces a great deal of reliance on the\npersonality of the candidates. Men\nof broad and Independent views are\nmost valuable not only to the province but to their party.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Creston Review.\nSaturday, March 27th, a bright gos-\niiel service at 8 p.m.\nSunday afternoon children's company meeting at 3 p.m.\nEvening, at 8 p.m. a gospel service\nto which all are heartily Invited.\nMeetings Tuesdays and Thursdays\nit 8 p.m.\nCapt. and MrB. Hustler.\nKNOX PIlUYTHUJt CHUBCI\nPastor, W. IC Thomson\nMorning service, 11 a.m. Rev. C.\nA. Myers, M.A., Associate Secretary\nof Sabbath Schools and Young\nPeople's Societies will preach.\nS. S. and Bible class, 3 p.m.\nEvening subject, 7.30 p.m. Subject:\n\"Russia's, Temperance Sermon.\"\nThe pastor will preach.\nBAPTIST CHUBCH\nRev. O. E. Kendall, Pastor.\nRev. O. E. Kendall, pastor.\nServices, 11.00 a.m. and 7.30 p.m.\nMorning topic: \"Building Eternal\n.NOTICE\nAH owners of dogs are hereby\nnotified that the license for thc year\nmust be paid before April flrst or\nthey will be summoned and fined.\nP. ADAMS,\nChief of Police\nWAHTAPS.\nVOU SAM OB TO iElV-Tw\u00C2\u00BB roomed\nhouse on Armstrong avenue. Apply\nNeal lastltntt. 62-tf\nFOB SALE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pair canaries, male and\nfemale. Apply Mrs. Cory Dow,\nLumsden avenue. 10-2t\nfomale. Apply Mrs. Cory Dow,\nManslons-^-ChooBlng the LocsSon.\"\"* \ TO ESS CRKAP \u00C2\u00AB.\u00E2\u0080\u009E^ *.\nEvening topic: \"The Revelation of! house 1\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB .-Tr\"?\"*1*.'we' I\nJesus-A Momentous Silence In month \u00C2\u00A3281 *5?d. f/l* *B Per\nHeaven.\" ! '\nBible class, 3.00 p.m.\t\nSunday school. 3.00 p.m. j tor hatching\", ILoTp'eV iTabSm!\n\"It is appointed unto man once to! P. Sullivan, CranbrZvjtregTv \"\n dry, T\u00C2\u00BB s^s\nApply W. J. Atchlawn, _\n8. C. BHODE ISLAND BED EGGS\n! for haa.^M\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0** \u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\nlust, Hi,, accumulation or the winter's \"\"> viMIc wl\" J\"1\" heartily in the\nI illtla, It mo\u00C2\u00BBt likely contnlnn a large ] MlggMtlon, IM n\u00C2\u00BB preserve the ma-\ni aind assorted collection of gcrmB, I **l** \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\"* u\" k \" '\" the muioum\nI narniK of n large and varied assort- at Victoria and treasure It among\n] ment of dlscasea. mr most sacred rollcs.\n' Tlmt dust can he gathered up any i For this reason we would suggest\nflirting with nn election He Is linv- llny ln \",G \"***\" t'xcel,t the days when j the Immediate formation of a atrong\nIng n nice time keeping everybody I\"\", wln automobile who. unknowingly,\norgan of tho government, Is In a posl-. plasters everything and everybody\ntlon to announce thnt the election will j (i TIME\nDo you know that with our Vacuum\n*. Cleaner you can clean all the car-\n1aets In an eight-roomed house ln two\nhours? You do It better than with\nthe old style carpet beater and do\nnot Injure the carpet\u00E2\u0080\u0094ln fact you\nmake It look like new.\nWe rent Vacuum Cleaners at 60c.\nand $1.00 per bour and cartage.\nCranbrook Electric Light Co, Ltd.\nThis news, wc know, will set at rest i having the precious powder removed..\nall doubts to the contrary. The ^ People will speak a little kinder of | pede),,\npeople hnve been asking. \"When will j blm when be shoots down the road at | ( . , president\nthe election take plnca..\" and we nre | the rate nf sixty miles au bour.\nnble to say that It undoubtedly wlll.' Of course we know It has always\nit will lake place almost Immediate- boon the practice to wait until this\nly after the data, of nomination nnd i dust has almost completed Its des-\nwo have boen permitted to Inform the j Iroylng mission, until It had taken to\npublic that nomination wlll toko place i Itself wings und had worked Its way\ntwo weeks beforo election day. [down the throats of the ciUtens, had [care to Join-Western Howl.\nHon. W. J. Bowser, Chief B. C.\nMachinist, President.\nHon. Sir Richard McBride, Assist-\nent Machinist to B. C, Vice-President.\nAnd all the little machlnlsta who\nl-tf\nFOB HALEa-Nedera Cottage, ideal\nlocation; two lots. Apply S. L.\nCoop, Fenwick avenue. .13-2t\nYrANTEDa-StMat saddle, most be In\ngood condition; price reasonable.\nO. Box 576. 11-lt\"\nAddress P,\nNETTING HEN FOB tlMl also BnlT\n _ \u00E2\u0080\u009E.. -,.....\u00E2\u0080\u009E, aim, l.llll\nOrpington eggs from heavy layers,\n$1.25 for 13.\u00E2\u0080\u0094E. II, Iranian, Dox\n345, Phone 180. 11-lt* ,\nFOB BENT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Six ruoned hoase with'\nbath and toilet, etc., altuated on\nGarden avenue. For terms write\nB. Home, Bull Blver. Mt!\nFOB SALE-KJig Baspbeiry pianist\nbest for this district; vory hardy,\n$3.00 per 100.\u00E2\u0080\u0094J. Delmer, Box\n766.\n10-41* |\nFOB SALE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parlor organ, cabinet\nstylo, 10 stops and knee swells;\nsweet tnne and In good condition.\nOnly $35.00. Cost treble.\u00E2\u0080\u0094P. O. Box\n613, Cranbrook. 11-If\nFOB HALE AT A BABGAIN.-Elgin\nroomed house and three lots, all\nmodern conveniences; easy terms;\nbig reduction for cash. Apply K. II\nPatmore. ll-2t\nNOTICE\nTo the Owners of I-ot 3912, O. 1\u00E2\u0080\u009E Eaat\nKootenay:\nThe Annual Meeting of the Owners\not the above lot wlll bc held at tho\nresidence of F. H. Worthlngton on\nFriday, April Oth at 2 p.m. to vote\nirrigation maintenance assess-\nmnet, elect officers, and transact ail\nnecessary business In connection\nwith tho management of tbe Irrigation ditch to the above lot during the\nensuing season.\nJ. O. Cummlngs\nF. H. Worthlngton\nOny Russell U-U*\nFABM FOB BENT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two Biles from |\ncity; three acres cleared; has nice1\nlet of small fruits; good house and\nstable; $10 per month. Apply Box j\n8\u00E2\u0080\u009E Herald ofllce, JOtf |\nTO BENT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Conor of Armstrong\nAve and Edwards St., four roomed I\ncottage with bath, electric light,\nlarge woodshed, fenced, coal and\nwood heater, rango If wanted, $15\nper month. Apply Beale & Elwell.\nI.OST.-A bnnch of keys, either between Armstrong avenue or P. O.\nand C.P.R. station, Including P.O. I\nbox key, trunk keys and several\nsmaller keys nn chair ring. Return to Herald ofllce and receive liberal reward. 12\nWall Paper\nat Cost\nWe have decided to close out our\nWall Paper Stock and will slaughter it\nregardless of cost. All paper at one-\nhalf regular price and a lot of broken lots\nat your price.\nNO CHARGE FOR BORDER\nWe can furnish you first class men\nto do your work at very low prices.\nCOME AND SEE\nThe Beattie-Murphy Co, Ltd.\nWhere It Pays to Deal\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nPANTAGES\nI UNEQUALLED VAUDEVILLE V*/\nAUDITORIUM THEATRE\nWednesday, March 31 and Thursday, April I\nI. David Reeso and Company Present\n\"THE GAHIIKS OF THE UAJAII\"\nI'lii) and Music Framed in Feminine Daintiness\nQuite the Most Fluliorate and Gorgeous Act Seen In\nVaudeville This Season\nII. FI.OltKM'E MADEXA Si CO.\nIn a coined)' sketch \"Bargain Mad.\". A ver) amusing\ntravesty\nIII.\nIV.\nJAJfE HA ItH Kit AND JOE JACKSON\nIn their skit of musical nonsense. A Humdinger\nAIKKX, FIGG Si DUFFY\n\"The Three Jolly Songsters\"\nTHE THREE SHENTON'S\nSingers and Novelty Clog Dancers\nReserve Vonr Seats ut llcattle-Murphy's\nPOPULAR PRICES - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 SOc. and Mac.\nHOUSE CLEANING\nTIME\nDo you know that with our Vacuum Cleaner you can\nclean all the carpets in an eight-roomed house, in two\nhours? You do it better than with the old style carpet\nbeater and do not injure the carpet\u00E2\u0080\u0094in (act you make it\nlook like new.\nWe rent Vacuum Cleaners at 50c. and $1.00 per hour\nand cartage.\nCRANBROOK ELECTRIC EIGHT CO., LTD.\nFruit Trees For Sale\nA number of one and two-year-old Applo Trees; good\nbardy acclimatized stock, budded in the Valley: Wealthy,\nMcintosh Red, Duchess, Yellow Transparent, Hyslop and\nTranscendent Crabs.\nUsual Nursery Prices.\nCOLIWIIIA VALLEY IRRIGATED FRUIT LANDS, LTD.\nINVERMERE, II .('.\nRemember\nwhenever you aro troubled with minor ailments of the\ndigestive organs, that these may soon develop into\nmore serious sickness. Your future safety, as well\nas your present comfort may depend on the\nquickness with which you seek a corrective remedy.\nEy common consent of the legion who have tried them,\nBeecham's Pills are tho most reliable of all family medicines. This standard family remedy tones the stomach,\nstimulates the sluggish liver, regulates inactive bowels.\nImproved digestion, sounder sleep, better looks,\nbrighter spirits and greater vitality come after the\nsystem has been cleared and the blood purified by\nBeecham's Pills\nWwtli a Qultwa a Box THTOOMC. MARCH 25th, 1915\nrum dUKlROOK MOULD\nf\nFirst Aid to the\nwatch, is to rush it to our\nrepair department. There\nit will receive treatment,\nand all the treatment it\nneeds. It will go back to\nyou as lit as a fiddle\u00E2\u0080\u0094ready\nto be the faithful servant\nit should be. Ready to\nwork 21 hours a day for\nyou without pay or attention. If you've un Injured\nwntch let us put it right\nfor you. No one knows\nhow better,\nW. H. Wilson\nLocal postcards for sale at Gwynne's\nDry wood for sale at Ira R. Manning, Ltd.\n(Jwynne curries a nice line of tobaccos, cigars and pipes.\nSee Little & Atchison's special for\nMonday and Tuesday.\nFresh roasted salted peanuts; extra\nfancy stock at Gwynne's.\nKILLED IX ACTION\nTOWN TOPICS\nNext Sunday is Palm Sunday.\nHong Wrong, of Wattsburg, cams In\nSunday.\nSee the Cruubrook Agency Co. for\nlife insurance.\nJames Finlay returned Monday to\nBellevue.\nSee the Cranbrook Agency Co .for\nflre insurance.\nMrs. D. J. Speers will not receive\nagain this season.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Lund returned\nto Wardner Tuesday.\nToasted marshmallows at a snap\nprlce.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At Gwynne's.\nGet your Spokesman-Review at\nGwynne's on Sunday,\nPHONE 8\u00E2\u0080\u0094For all kinds of\nfresh killed meats and poultry.\nSpeery Phillips Is rusticating\naround the beauty spots of Cranbrook.\nPaul Handley, the Marysville hotel\nkeeper, was in the city the tlrst of the\nweek.\nDry wood for sale at Ira R. Manning, Ltd,\nGet Little & Atchison's price on\nflour before buying elsewhere.\nHeale & Klwell for life, fire and accident insurance and notarial work.\nFlre Insurance ts a specialty with\nthu Cranbrok Agency Co. See them.\nHorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094To Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Aw-\ninack at Wycliffe on Wednesday,\nMurch 24th, a son.\nMrs. W. J. Atchison will receive for\nthe lust time this season on thc flrst\nThursday In April.\nTho Masonic Social Club are holding their fifth dance of the series tonight in the Masonic hall.\nSafety deposit boxes to rent. Apply\nto Heale & Elwell. Absolute security\nand privacy at nominal rates.\nPHONE 8\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fresh caught fish\narriving from the coast every:\nWednesday at Cranbrook Meat\nMarket. _\nThe Ladles Aid of Knox Presbyter'\nIan church will hold a cookery sale\nand tea on Saturday, April 3rd, in the\nSunday school room from 3 to 6\no'clock.\nSurveyors are at work on the central school grounds. A fence wlll be\nbuilt around the school grounds and\nplots for the various divisions wlll be\nlaid out for spring planting.\nTho Ladies Aid of Knox Presby\nterian church will hold a Bpeclal meeting in the Sunday school room on\nMonday afternoon, March 29th, at 4\no'clock. All members are requested\nto be present.\nYesterday'* dispatches contained\namong the IM of casualties the name\nof I'rhate John Itrlgliind Twamley.\nwho was killed on Mtiirli \"Mi. He-\nceased toluuteered with tlie first\ncontingent from < nuihrn.-k and is lhc\nfourth man on Cranhrook** Roll of\nHonor. He was with the Kith tint-\n(allien, Canadian Expeditionary Forces.\nTwo sisters Mrs. A. K. Junes and\nHhIm Twamlej, and u cousin; Mrs.\nUeorge Smthl, are residents of the\ncity. He worked at the eurpenfer\ntrade In Cranhrook for several years\nbefore lemliiir for the front. His\nfather. Charles Tnumley, resides Ht\nVexall, Kiirloii-nii-Tieul, Cngland.\nDay hy day the \u00C2\u00ABur is eonilnir closer home, as the CniiHdlan ra*imlty list\nlengthens and the shadow of torrow\ndarkens the homes of lined ones,1\nthroughout the land. Canuilu Is to.\nday paying lis highest price for the\nI empire and sturdy young men arc of*\n1 ferlng the noblest sacrifice possible\nfor country and for llher'y. Mar Uoi]\ngrant that we may soon see tin\ndawn of the hope glimmering tl ...\nthe dark sea of sorrow which the\nTHE CKANBKOOK\nPUBLIC MARKET\nIf You Expert Cranbrook to Grow\nSupport the Farmers\u00E2\u0080\u0094Consider\n\u00C2\u00BB Few Facts in This Article\nCranbrook will have to ko some\nto keen abreast Of the people of Nelson with regard to the question of the\npublic market. A market committee\n: somevdi&t tike the Cranbrook one\nin constitution has charge of the Nelson market The chief point of difference i\u00C2\u00BB fn the fact that while tn\n, Cranbrook few seem to realize the\nultimate good that an institution of\ntin kind will bring to eonsumers and\nproducers fn Nelson everybody appears to take an active interest.\nNeiBon producers liave had experience ot factory prices which have to\nlie kept pretty fine if the factory ic\n\u00C2\u00BBio pay Its way, hence they have learned the less that It does not pay to\ncarry produce awuy from tlie market\nunsold, cost of handling becomes too\ngceat If such a spirit obtained in\nCranhrook there wuuld be au odd bar-\nKain or two going each week and\nthut would mean greater attendance.\n. .*. \"t ' .. V \"\\ \" ' ! that would mean greater attendance.\nJ\u00C2\u00BBwaef the Mmi glimmeringjhrortft ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E or ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E lnoreMod Mm_ce ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n(He dark .... of .arrow whicli tie wouU a|w \u00E2\u0080\u009E, 8om\u00E2\u0080\u009E who\u00E2\u0096\u00A0um ,or ,\nworld's greatest wnr has brought \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ndown upon Canada and Hn besl young\nmanhood.\nTlie Ladles Aid Society of tbe Methodist church will have a special meeting at the home of Mrs. E. A. Hill,\nGarden avenue on Wednesday afternoon, March 31st at 3 p.m. A full attendance Is requested.\nMr. E. D .Ireland, of the local C. P.\nR. staff, today received the sad news\nof the death of hla father, S. J. Ireland at Hamilton, Ont., at the age of\n61 years. Mr. Ireland haa been HI\nfor the past three months.\nLife insu.ance means sound busl-\nne.. end safe protection. See the, ^ ft ^\nCranhrook Agency Co. . ,0 ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E Eiirope8n ^ We ^ d|.\nW. D. Gilroy, manager of the Koo- j rect from Cranbrook via Canadian or\ntenay Telephone Lines, Ltd., was a J American ports. Special excursion\nFernie visitor Tuesday. 1 rates to Panama exposition through\n. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the Panama Canal. Apply to Beale\nMrs .W. O'Hearn was a visitor In j ft Elwell for ratee.\t\ntown thc flrst of thc week, leaving\nagain on Wednesday. ! For Uie next tw0 weeks the Bel8|an\nrelief committee will open up a store\non Armstrong avenue, next to Kit-\nMr. T. D. Caven and Mr. A. J. Balment went east on Monday on a vote\ngathcilng campaign.\nby's barber shop, where they will revive goods for the relief ot the Bel\nRECEPTION TO THK LORD!\nBISHOP OF KOOTOAY\nThe Rector and Church Wardens of Christ Church, Cran-\nbargain, but who ou seeing a good article at n fair price would scorn to\nwaft till tlie end of the market. These\nwould help to clear out tbe stalls of\nthe best produce and only leave Inferior stuff for thc cut In price.\nj The store windows, too, speak elo-\nj quently in favor of the market. When\n' lias a buyer had the opportunity of a\nsplendid choice of meats at prices\nbrook, do hereby -invite\"thel \u00E2\u0084\u00A2ng'?s 'rom\"0 CPfL *, \"f .\"\"'\n,., . , , ' Vie Cranhrook market ha. Just enter-\neltlzens of Cranbrook to the i \u00E2\u0080\u009E,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,tB third Bnd roost ,rj1ng\nMASONIC HAM, OX WED- stage of development.\nNESDAY EVENING, APRIL The first stage showed a few en-\n7TH, AT 8 O'CLOCK, to meet'' thuslasts who were convinced of the\nthe Right Reverend Andrew \"^\"f and. <\"\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB<\"?*<\u00C2\u00BB< \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB<* \u00C2\u00BB\nr. \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E ,, r , institution, standing in public to sell\nJohn Doull, D.D., the Lord Ul0 duco of U(e(r 8ea8on,8 work(\nBishop of the Diocese of Koo- and muny Inany who came to Bfi0\ntenay, on His Lord&hip's first e benedicts. During his stort stay \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - - - \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\"-'\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* \u00C2\u00B0*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBu\u00C2\u00ABj\n , in the city he was given a ton of ad-1 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 they returned home on Tuesday.\nLieut. Hicks and Capt George 1* 1 *ice by his many friends, especially f \" ..... ,\n\"I**************\u00E2\u0084\u00A2* ' The Sunshine Society wish to thank\nthose who hnve so kindly contrlbut-\nTtsdale returned from the const Mon-1 those in the employ of the C. P. It\nday, where they lmvo been the past\nsix weeks taking the ollicers course.\nHon. W. H. Hoss. minister of hinds\nwaB a visitor lu the city Friday. \"Bill\"\nwns quite cheerful and chatted with a\nnumber of the faithful who warmly\nshook his hand.\nA runaway yesterday afternoon at 4\ni o'clock made things lively In the\nj neighborhood of the Y.M.C.A. The\nhorse belonging to mack's Meat Market took fright as the east bound train\nwas pulling out, and travelling at thc\nI rate of about sixty mites an hour\nstruck out for thc east lane on linker\nA little girl, who said her father j |trMl( whprft **. ,onped the )oop fn\nwas behind with hi- subscription to j Uln n,nr of PnrkH. hardware store, do*\nthe Herald, brought us a pretty b\u00C2\u00AB>n- ,nR mtIo dflm\u00E2\u0080\u009EK0 beyond the fact that\nquct of wild crocuses this mornitiR \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,*,,,, (|UB||board became flattened out.\nand said daddy would pay up soon. , ,\n- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 - , The Liberal committee rooms, which\nUert llenttie Is a genuine farmer! are located on Armstrong avenue. In\nHo spent Inst week end out on the , the Motheson hall, are open and it\nfarm and worked from :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 fu the morn- ] will well repay Liberals of the Craning until 10 at night nnd never blinked hrook district to drop In and learn\nan eye. In three duys he harrowed | \"how things are going\" politically\n ..\u00C2\u00BB.u, ..uu <,ii*j uujt-r**\nsee that a fair amount ls taken up\nthere ls danger of the market closing\nand then\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, it does not need much\nexperience to get at the results.\nWc all know how easy it is for the\nsinner to have a relapse and how\ni . -a .\"\"'\u00C2\u00AB\", \"1\" much harder it Is to get him to make\n^riday evening, March ISth. J>a nty I 8Mond e8Bay ^ mt ^^ fa\u00E2\u0080\u009Eed\nk?^^!!^!/\"\"*-,! ^ \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\" the matter of a public mar-\n^ ^ ^^ ^^^ ^ ^ granted that\nshould the, present one fall through\noue will need to llve a long time in\nCrnnbrook before they see another\nstarted. At this stage In the game\npioducers and consumers need look a\nlittle further than the end of their\nnoses and get the prairie spirit. BB\nA BOOSTER\u00E2\u0080\u0094GET TOGETHER\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTRY IT OXCE AND SEE IT\nTHROUGH.\nThe government Is providing the\nfiirmer with seed o notes coming due\nIn the fall, so it ls up to the locality\nto sec that the same farmer has at\nleast a sporting chance to make\ngood. Better buy a man's produce\neven though you think he is putting\none over on you to the extent of a\nfew cents than have the same man\ndrawing relief through the Sunshine\nSociety.\nThe big farmers are all right, it is\nthe five-acre and ten-acre men who\nneed the market, and It ls during the\nnext two months that the big farmer\nand tlie' city buyer can do a lot of\nneighborly and kindly work, the one\nby keeping up the supply and the\nother by keeping It down.\nNext public market\u00E2\u0080\u0094Saturday, 9.30.\nAre you going?\ntime led 25\u00E2\u0080\u0094if..\nDuring the game an altercation\narose, one pluycr of tlu* Athletics ruled off the lloor for refusing to obey\nthe referee's mandate, and the Ath-:\nletics refused to play If he were re-!\nmoved. The referee was firm, but\nthe Stags carried the point In dispute\nu game continued.\nNext Monday night the Athletics.\nand Heavers meet fn the Dual game :\n1 of the league, and as the Heavers are\nlooking forward to revenge their fop-1\nmer defeat, this contest will be worth\ngoing far to see.\nThe Macs and the Whirlwinds, a\nnewly organized ladles team, engage i\n1 In deadly conflict as a preliminary feature.\nLine-up\u00E2\u0080\u0094Athletics, Wilson and S\nI'hlUpps, forwards; Mcllwalne, center; Kuhnert and McEwin, guards.\nStags, Crowe and Wallinger,- for\nHe had n gunshot wound in his loft\nforearm nnd was admlted to the hospital at Dromley, Kent.\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Thompson left\nSaturday for Ritzvillc, Washington.\nhaving received a telegram announcing the sudden death of Mr. Thompson's sister, Mrs. Paul L. Fowler. Funeral services were held on Sunday\nPRETTY OIRLS A FEATURE\nOF BIG PANTAGES ACT\n'The Harden of the Rajah\" Will be\na Sight for Sore Eyes aad\nAching Heart**\nQuit-* the handsomest ensemble that\nhas been seen on the Auditorium\nstage in many months will furnish\nthe climax of the forthcoming Pantages bill at this theatre on Wednesday, March \"1st. and Thursday, April\n1st. The scene for which everyone\nwill wait will be the appearance of\nthe eminent singer. Mr. David Reese,\nsupported by quite the freshest and\nhandsomest bevy of girlish loveliness\nthat one can readily anticipate. In\nan Oriental fantasy \"The Garden of\nthe Rajah.\" \"The Garden of the\nRajah\" is a new Oriental musical tab-\n in\nwhich Mr. David Reese is featured\nIn the principal role. Miss Estelle\nMcNeal, a beautiful, talented girl, with\na remarkably good voice, who has\nappeared as prima donna in some of\nthe best musical comedies In the\ncountry. Besides the three principals\nmentioned, the chorus includes:\nDorothy Hocking, Beth Merrill. Mar-\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 | Rajah\" Is a new Oriental musical\nwards, Dallas .center; Brechin and i lold direct from lhe producers\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0McNabb, guards.\nWESTRUCTION OF\nPUBLIC PROPERTY\nAgricultural Association Will Mart\nMove Badly .Needed in This\nCity\nAt the meeting of the Agricultural' *wu*ui nuv-ung, new \u00C2\u00BBemu, Mar-\nAssoclatlon held last evening tlie sec-' Knl*et Portia, Bessie Craig, Margaret\nretary reported that the doors of the, Bcnford, Viola Service, Margaret Nor-\nexhibltion buildings had again been :man and Bessie \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0082\u00AC\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nbroken open and that he hud put the \ in Mr. Reese, the sketch unques-\npolice on the lookout for the delin-1 tlonably boasts of one of the best\nquents. Several young people in this j tenors in the musical world of today,\nolty who are either about to leave j He has sung In London, Berlin, Paris\nschool or have just left, think that!and New York. The New York Globe's\nthe only way to show that tliey are'mu8|cal critic recently wrote of Mr.\ngrowing Is to open buildings that are!Reese: \"He is the best tenor voice\ntenantless and set to work to knock | heard In the United States In many\nthe glass out of all the windows fn j years.'1\ntbe place.\nGARDEN SEEPS\nFOR EARLY PLANTING\nWe are prepared to supply your needs in any variety of flower or vegetable\nseeds. We have the famous Simmers' Seeds. They\nare guaranteed.\nFor your flower garden\nyou may want sweet peas\nin variegated colors or separate colors, nasturtiums,\nmigonette. zinnia, pansy,\nmorning glory, poppy, aster, or many others. We\nhave them.\nFor the vegetable garden we have a variety of\ncarrots, beets, onions,\nsquash, spinach, radish,\npeas, beans, corn, tomato,\nturnip, mustard, watermelon, lettuce, parsley, or\na hundred and one other\nkinds which we now have\nto show you.\nFree Day Means That All\nthe Groceries ordered on\nThat Day Will be Free of\nCharge.\nlra R. Manning,\nUmlted\ned towards that worthy cause. The\nthanks of the association are due the I\nP. Burns Co. for the contributions j\nof meat which have been ns follows\nfor the months of December to March\ninclusive: December, $42.28; January, $1*5.76; February. $46.25; March,\n$27,84. Donations are also acknowledged from Mr. Supple, $15.95; Mr.\nWoods. |14.88.\nAT TIIE Y. M. CLUB\none hundred acres. ^^^^^^^^\nLieut Htcks, of Cranhrook, water\nrights engineer at that point, who on\nhis way from Victoria, where he has\nbeen taking nn ollicers' training\ncourse spent the week end with W.\nJ ,K. Biker, water rights engineer In\nNelson, returned to Cranhrook yesterday morning.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Nelson News.\nMiss Morlo Taylor, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Simon Taylor, wns taken to\nKamloops Sanitarium Tuesday for\ntreatment. She has been a victim of\nthat dread disease, consumption, and\nIs ln a serious condition. It ls hoped\nby removing her to Kamloops, where\nspecialists ln this line of treatment\nnro located, that her life may be spared.\nBruce Brown is In receipt ot a letter\nfrom his pardnor, Mr. James Milne.\nThe letter contained many Items of\nInterest to Craubrook people, but as\nthese two are sworn chums, even\nthough they be thousands of miles\napart, Bruce says the letter Is not for\npublication, as it contains something\nthat only frlenda should know\u00E2\u0080\u0094and\nThe third annual meeting of the\nGraduate Nurses Association of B>*lt-1 mimaww\nIsh Columbia will bo held In the Roynl j y\u00E2\u0084\u00A2*\"1 , \u00E2\u0080\u009E%?--\u00C2\u00AB-\nColumbian Hospital, New Westmin- ^^^^^^^^\nster, B. C, on Monday, April 6th. It I \t\nwill be purely business meeting this \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Tn the weekly tussle at the Young\nyear, with morning and afternoon ses-; Men's Club on Monday night the\nslons. Business and election of oil,- Athletics triumphed over the Stags\ncers at 10.80 a.m. and at 2.30 p.m.'j In the last meeting of these two\nto put the kibosh on Dick whi'ihi |J??\u00E2\u0084\u00A2e( totore,ttaB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB<[\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 *!\" ** *lven-1tenms by \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"J\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\" of 25-16' The\n..la.a.tf.aa, .ia.*\u00C2\u00AB i. ........a ..a i. 'Thi*. Is an o|\u00C2\u00BBoii meeting and oil nurHpn i gnme won like the previous, ones, well\nwho are lntercHtcd are Invited. 'attended, and kept the ciowd ln a state\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 [\"' excitement from beginning to end.\nOn next Monday evening Mr. II. | Tlio'Junior game resulted In a win\nWhite, Grand Master ot the Independ- j for the Night Hawks who, after sul-\nent Order ot Odd Fellows, wlll pay i fcri\u00E2\u0080\u009Eg ti,ree reverses, came through1'\nhis home lodge an official visit. Ho | W|t|V j, wln, ,ne More atondln, 13_18\nIt Is all figured out Just how we Intend\nelection dato Is announced, and lt\nreally does one's heart good to aee\nthe number of the old stand patters\nwho have found out the error of their\nway nnd are throwing In their lot\nwith Dr. King.\nBy using barnyard manure on\nyour lawn and garden you sow\na crop of bothersome and unsightly weeds.\nTry Instead a sack of Burns'\nComplete Animal Fertilizer\nand cut out weeding.\nIt contains all tbe elements\nessential to the formation of\ngarden plants In readily available form.\n$56 per ton lot, Sx lot delivered $3.75.\nP. BURRS a ctx, un\nwill bo accompanied by Mr. J. H.\nGlass. Grand Treasurer. Cranbrook\nOdd Fellows have been highly honored\nln having one ot their number chosen\nas the head of their most charitable\nand benevolent order. It proves conclusively that the Cranbrook order Is\nwide awake and well up In Its work.\n===== -\nSPECIAL FOB MONDAY AND\nTUESDAY ONLY\n2 tins choice\npeaches for 25c.\nBy the case, $2.86\nplums\nSee Window\nLITTLK * ATCHISON\nThe Teachers and the \"Macs\" again\nmet and this time the girls were victors, winning by one. point, the deciding goal being scored Just as the\nwhistle blew for the end of this game.\nThe win was apopular one, as the\n\"Macs'\" played n hard, determined\ngame, and although tbeir opponents\nhad hard luck In shooting still the\nvictory rested where lt waa deserved.\nBdltli Macdonald was top scorer for\ntlm winners and Miss Pye for the\nlosers.\nThe main game started with the\nStngH taking the lead, but ther soon\nwero overhauled by their rivals who\nthereafter were leading throughout\nUse..game. Tho Bcore at half time\nwas 12\u00E2\u0080\u0094f, In the Athletics favor.\nThn second half saw the Stags\n|i)\u00C2\u00AByli>K u fuster game and tbey be- \t\n[through several good ehota tlw *^|imnu.mMn,TI,. vinTJ\n'letics again drew away and at UD'ATCWSOITB POULTBY FARM\nHeight, 5 ftet 8 I nches. chest 36\nInches, other qualifications as required by the militia department.\nThe directs of the Agr,cuUUra, ^ _\"wTo^ZsTlV^^^^'^^\nAssociation with tr. draw the atten- \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E ^1\u00E2\u0084\u00A2! .^Ljl ^ ' *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*-\"**\u00C2\u00AB *>\u00C2\u00AB\ntion of parents to the fact that any CU\" '\"' se'\"\u00C2\u00BB'\"\"\"ns. months ^ ^ ^\none caught In such acts will be prose-1 n\u00C2\u00B0 ^ \u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB '\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00ABW\u00C2\u00BB delightful ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E CODStructlon corp, but w,\u00E2\u0080\u009E Kive\ncuted to the full extent of tlio law. I 3\u00C2\u00B0-m\"'ute \"X*1** \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBu\u00C2\u00ABully pretty ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E(tcad separmt|on ,Uowance of froB\nThe fair grounds belong to the city mi tl\"i c0\u00C2\u00BBtumlng Is very elaborate .\u00E2\u0080\u009E,. .. .... ... .. ... ...\t\nand two or throe times a year tho\nbuildings are broken into ua obove.\nThey do not think It fair that while\none portion of the community sup-'\nports thc upkeep of the buildings an-\n| , ,\u00E2\u0080\u0094. instead separation allowance or from\nand the costuming Is very elaborate ,20 to w5 ^ month tor tne \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.\nI The dancing throughout Is of high , rlpd men who r0 The p,, o( tne\nquality and there are many sur-1 meti ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,, corp w(n s^ regulated ae-\nprlses In store for the Auditorium cording to rank. Regimental pay\naudiences from this source alone. | |liM to s_ p., day, working pay,\n^...o ..... uvaatata,, o. me ouiiaiiigs an- Florence Madena and Company wlll (i.oo to 12.50 per day and a Held al-\nothcr should be allowed to come along Present a comedy sketch entitled \"Bar- a lowance of from 15 to 20 cents per\nand destroy them. RHin Mad,\" which Is an effective take- {day.\nIn this connection it might be well I ?\u00C2\u00BB.. <\"> \u00C2\u00BBt\"!. e|K\"*- \u00C2\u00B0'c'\u00C2\u00B0<* *\u00C2\u00BB*'W\u00C2\u00B0 I Tlic following numbers of the various classes of construction foremen\nfor the Incoming\"council To niaitean I lod|,-'\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a departmental store. It is\neffort to sUmp out this wilful ,jc,. j a very amusing travesty\ntructlon of -property. Wo have ro\npeatedly witnessed boys Jostroying\ncity residences and othefwfse doing\ndamage to buildings. There seems\nto be a disease among tlie boys of\nCranbrook in this particular line of\ndestruction and we believe there are\nabout twenty who should have been\nin Jail years ago.\nsnd men are required:\nl'osltion Rank\nJane llarber and Joe Jackson. _\nwell and favorably known vaudeville\nteam, will hold what la perhaps the f'M''1 clt'rk 8'*'\nsecond place of Importance on the bill 1)rl\" in'tructor Maj\nIn their skit of musical nonsense. Sl \"*<*'\"-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Snrt\nThey aro very entertaining and wlll no Track^ '\u00C2\u00B0_f\u00E2\u0084\u00A2^n_ J\u00C2\u00ABj\ndoubt come Jn for a lot of applause.\nAlkln, Figg and Duffy In comblna-\n: tlon sing quite agreeably. This Is a\nvery pleasing number and will no\n; doubt be much appreciated. They\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 | coll themselves the \"Three Jolly\nWe beg to adviBe our many; So\"B\",tr*\"\nNOTICK\nTrestle foremen Hrgt.\nSteel bridge foremen ..Srgt\ntirade foremen Srgt.\nTrainmaster Corp.\nMasonry foremen Corp.\nTelegraph foremen .. .Corp.\nRook foremen Corp.\nTrack foremen Corp.\nfriends and customers that we i The Three Hhcntons singers nml 1 urade foremen Corp.\nare now occupying new quar- -t novelty clog dancers are very clever TreBUe [or(!raen , .Corp.\n and help make up one of the best bills , gtMl brlaf() (mmtB _\u00E2\u0080\u009E\ngoing over the TanUges circuit In ! shovcl enf,new, ..cn),\nma\"''m001\"*- j Conductor. Corp.\n Firemen Corp\nC.K.P. CONSTRUCTION\nters in\nLittle & Atchison's Old Store\nThis move to larger quarters i\nwill enable us to serve you\nbetter. Thanking you for past\nfavors, and soliciting your\ncontinued support.\nECONOMIC MEAT MARKET\nIV. B. Black\nFOR SALE\nS.C. W. laeghorn Hatching Eggs,\ngood laying strain, from our best\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lock, $1.50 per setting, (7.00 per\n100.\nS.C. R. I. R. Hatching Eggs, from the\nbest winter layers, 11.50 per setting,\n18.00 per 100.\nB*ky Chicks\n12.60 per doien, $18.00 per loo.\nCORPS FOR SERVICE\nFive Hundred Meg to I'oBpose This\nCoithgtlta\u00E2\u0080\u0094List of Sea\nWaited\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway company have been authorised to organise\na railway construction corp for overseas service. Five hundred are to compose this contingent which wlll bo attached to the militia department. Applications from this district by any\nemployee of the company may be sent\nto the general superintendent at\nCalgary where full particulars will\nto given.\nThe physical oualUlcattiraa will be:\nMaster mechanic . .Corp.\n(Cooks Corp.\nl.oco. engineer Sapper\nTrainmen Sapper\nHolstmen Sapper\nBlacksmith Sapper\nFiremen Sapper\nMechanics Sapper\nBlacksmith Sapper\nFiremen Sapper\nCook Sapper\nClerks Sapper\nRodman Sapper\nChalnman Sapper\nCarpenter Sapper\nBrldgemen Sapper\nTeamsters Rapper\nTrack and gradmen Sapper\nBatmen Sapper\nBuglers flapper\nRapper\nNo.\n1\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n4\n2\n2\n2\n4\n4\n4\n4\n2\n4\n4\n12\n4\n8\n8\n8\n12\n18\n6\n2\n4\n70\n30\n31\n200\n14\ni\nI tk\u00C2\u00ABm FOUR\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 25th, 1915\nLODGE AND SOCIETY CARDS PROFESSIONAL TJARDS\ni\nI\n8\ng\nH\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nn\ntu\nM\nI\nLoyal Oraafe\nLodge\nNo. 1171\nMeets flrst aad tklrd\n, . Thursday! at \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 pas.\n! -'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2. \"'ss\u00C2\u00BB ln Royal Blaek\nKnights of Ireland Hall, Baker\nStreet.\nR. s. Oarrett, W.M.\nT. 0. Horsman, Rcc. Sec.\nRARVEY, McCARTER\nMACDONALD\nAND NISBET\nBarristers, Solicitors aid\nNotaries\nMoney to Loan\nImperial Bank Building\nCRANBROOK. BC.\nI.O.O.F.\nKEY CITY LODGE. No.41\n^heftft. Meet, every\nffiJrsmW&m Monday night\n1005S*W at Fraternity\nBall. Sojourning Oddfellow,\ncordially Invited.\nR. A. Racklyeft J. F. Broughton\nN.G. Fin. gee.\nW. M. Harris, Ree. Secretary.\nTHOMAS T. MECREDY\n(Successor lo W. F. Ourd)\nBarrister, Solicitor aad\nNotary\nP. 0. Box 859\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTRIAI\nCranbrook. B.C.\nMasts every Tuesday at I p.m. la\nthe Fraternity Hall\nR. C. Carr, CC.\nF. M. Christian, K. R. k S.\nP. 0. Box HI\nVisiting brethren eordlally ia-\nvlted to attend.\nDRS. KING * GREEN\nPhysicians and Surgeons\nOfllee ut residence, Armstrong\nAvenue\nOFFICII! HOCRS\nForenoons 9.00 to 10.00\nAfternoons 3.00 to 4.00\nEvenings 7.30 to 8.30\nSundays 2.30 to 4.10\nCranbrook, B.C.\nMAPLE LEAF RBBBKAH\nLODGE. NO. It\nMeeta every aeeond and tturtk\nWednesday at rrateralty Rail\nSojourning Rebekaka eorMal-\nly Invited.\nSis. A. E. Jones, N.O.\nSis. Ada Hickenbotham. Ree. See\n1)11. F. R. MILES\nDentist\nOffice lu Hanson Block\nOFFICE HOURS\n9 to 12 a.m.\n1 to 6 p.m.\n7 te I p.m.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nOVERSEA! CLUB\nMeeti In Maple Hall \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2aid\naad tourUi Tuesday ef every\nmonth at 6 P.m.\nMembership area ta BrlMak\ncltlsens.\nt. Y. Braks. J. F. lew,\nPresident Seereaary\nVisiting members cardbaUy\nwelcomed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2RANBROOK COTTAGE\nHOSPITAL\nkileioih and General Nnrslag\n(tardea Ave.\nTerms on Application\nMM. A. SALMON, Matron\nPkaae IU P. O. Box 845\nWOMEN'S INSTITUTE\nMeets In the Maple Hall\nflrst Tuesday afternoon of every\nmonth at 3 p.m.\nPresident, Mrs. W. B. McFarlane\nSecretary, Mrs. John Shaw\nP. 0. Iloi 442\nAll ladles cordially lavlud.\nPhone 346 P. 0. Box 681\nYf. R. BEATTY\nFuneral Director and Erabalmer\nBuilding Contractor\nDealer In Real Estate, Mining\nStocks nnd Mineral Claims\nLAIDLAW Si DEtVOLF\nCl.il and Mining Engineer!\nII. ('. Land Surveyors\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nCRANBKOOK FARMERS'\nINSTITUTE\nPresident A. B. Smith\nSecretary-Alb. H. Webb\nFor Information regarding\nlauds and agriculture apply to\nthe Secretary, Cranbrook, B.C.\nMeeting- -Tlie Seconal Saturday at 2.30 o'clock.\nF M. MACPHERSON\nUndertaker\nBay Phone 233 Night Phone li\nNorbury Ave., next to City Hall\nTHE CRANBROOK\nO R (' II E 8 T R A\nis open for engagement\nfor\nDances, Socials Etc.\nApply to\nMrs. Arnold Wallinger\n('ranbrook, B.C.\nPhone 105 P. O. Box II\nPROF. ('. F. NIDD\nOrganist Methodist Church\nReceives Pupils for\nOrgan, Pianoforte, Voice,\nAc.\nStudio: 23 Norbury Ave\nMISS la. M. SMITH\nHal Renovator\nRemodelling Ladies Hals\na Specialty\n15 Fenwick Avenue\nPhone 204\n)R. DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS\u00C2\u00A3*,:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00A3:\nousting I'l.) lor U'uDlbll, i.a aa MX or Itsrmtas\ntill. gi>iit tal I'll laraiic Shores, or aaa.lled to say\naalalreaaaiaiiia'avii.tnf |arlaaO. TlIK gfo.SLl. PSOO\n''al .St. L'iitliliralaa>a. lliata'rlii.\nVitality: tor Nerve end llraalia; lal.raMM, \"grey\nMatter':n TonIciailUaiitlat vaan lira. Uataoi.ft,\ntwo faar J'., ait Urns alaara>H. air la, mail on newt\nBeattie-Murphy Co.. Ltd.. Agent,\nMISS BANWELL\nPublic Stenographer\nPhone 485\nCranbrook - - -\nB.C\nIf you want satisfaction\nwith your washing\nsend lt to\nMONTANA LAUNDRY\nSpecial prices for family\nwork\nFRANK PROVENZANO\ntieneral Merchant\nEmployment* Agent,\nr. O. Box 108 Phone 144\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nCHAS. S. PARKER\nForwarding and Distributing\nAgent fur\nLethbridge Coal\nXMie Powder\nImperial Oil Co,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2rating and Transferring\nOlren prompt attention\nPhone 43\nTHE HOME BAKERY\nHobt Frame, Prep.\nFresh Bread, Cakes, Pies\nand Pastry\nPhone 17\nNarbury Ave. Opp. City Hall\nHeadquarters for all kinds of\nRepairs\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nJOE MAKAPODI\nThe Shoo Specialist\nPEERLESS\nDAIRY\nJ. Taylor, Proprietor\nHas Just purchased a car of\nHIGH GRADE COWS\n(All Tuberculin Tested)\nMilk and cream twice dally\nBattermllk twice a week\nThe only clarified milk In\nTown\nWa gaaraatee to Fleas*\n\"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2''\"tERUlB\n(From tbe Fernla Its* Praia)\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094On March loth, to Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Blyth. a son.\nDr. King, of Cranbrook, waa in the\ncity on Tuesday atendlng the meeting of tho local Liberals.\nA marriage license was Issued on\nMarch 15th to' John Perry and! Lucia,\nToquinta, bothief Fernie.\nJ. W. Bennett, grand chancellor of\nthe Knights of rythlae, Is making his\nofficial tour ot the province.\nThe copper cent has arrived In Fertile. It represents a cash equivalent for many things, Including some\nsouls.\nA local hunter is baVIng a white suit\nmade and he proposes to stalk the unsuspecting goat and sheep on hla native snow bank.\nA memorial aervice for the late\nPrivate David Logan, of the Princess\nPatricia regiment, will be Md lft\nKnox church on Sunday evening next\nAa we seem to have sufficient calls\nupon our patriotism to exhaust the visible supply, In some cases, I) 'would\nseem tbat to try to ' work that sentiment from the stage, for the purpose\n'iof, boosting a poor imitation song,\n_ j would be almost a hopeless case.'\nEdward Boyce, O.N. station agent\nut BaynoB Lake, was charged by Constable Dryden, of Waldo, with killing\na deer out of season. The case was\ntried before A. J. Joule on March 5th\nat Baynes Lake. The defendant was\nfound gttllay and contributed $25.00\nto the provincial exchequer.\nIn Judge Thompson's court on\nWednesday and Thursday, Leon De-\nGray and Henry Gustave pleaded guilty to the theft of several articles, from\nC.P.R. cars .chicken coops and elsewhere. The court room waB loaded\nwith a bunch of Junk which was taken\nfrom the house occupied by the men.\nand thc pollco had taken care to\nprepare perfect casos against the men\nIn case,they choose.to plead not\nguilty. The men were not represented\nby counsel, They got two years each.\nOn Wednesday In Judge Thompson's court, Tony Ratio sued the Italian Society, for sick benefits. The\nsociety had chopped, him off when his\nhabits Indicated that he was no longer\nentitled to benefits. During the trial\nof tbe case an Interesting incident occurred. There were several hens and\ntheir husbands''confined in crates ln\nthe court room as exhibits In a case\nabout to be tried. An Italian named\nPeter Uttle was giving evidence. He\nmade a statement which he waB asked\nby counsel to repeat. He repeated the\nstatement, \"and hmnetMately, while he\nyet spake; the oock crew\" three times.\nTbe weight given-to Peter's evidence\ni may be Imagined. Judgment on the\n1 case was reserved.\n\t\n:> CBESTON\n(From the Creston Review.)\nMrs. C. A. Loaaby, of Sirdar, spent\ndie week-end in Creston, the guest of\nMrs. J. w. Dow.\nMrs. C. U. Bennett returned on Saturday (rom a month's visit witb her\nparents at cranbrook.\n, Mr. and Mrs. McKay, of Moyle, were\nvisitors tills week with tbe letter's\nmother, Mrs, Ed, Lupton.\nI Death\u00E2\u0080\u0094in Creston, on March 17th,\n; .'uiinollu .Josephine, daughter of\nCharles Romano, aged t months.\nI Four extra section men were put to\ni work tills week\u00E2\u0080\u0094to help out on tbe\na mud slides between here and Kitchener.\nAlthough the one-cent pieces bare\naeon available since the flrat ot tha\nmonth there is said to be less than\n100 of tbem taken out of stock.\ni W. u. Robb, of Kaslo, waa a visitor here on Tuesday and Wednesday\n-on an Important political mission it\nis Suld. a\nE. Cartwright waa busy a Jew daya\nlast week hauling wood for :A. B.\nStanley to Ull hla contract with the\nBank of Commerce.\n1 Mrs. Q, F. Bales left yesterday for\nMcUillivray, B.C., where ahe wilt spend\nthc summer, Mr. Bales having a .position there with the Sereth Lumber\nCo.\nMilt Beam haa put away hla bunting and trapping paraphernalia (or\ntho season, He holds tho provincial\nrecord for tbo season's cougar catch\nHe killed eight of them this year.\nHome pretty fair specimens of full-\n, bloom dandelions wore gathered near\nthe C.I'.R. tracks north of town on\nWednesday. Aa soon as the bock beer\ngets here spring may surely be said\nlo huve arrived.\nJas .Wilson, one ot the men who\nwas badly burned In the Haro lire at\nWest Creston the latter part Of November, and who haa since been in\ntbo Nelson hospital, will be well\nenough to leave that lastltntlon tbis\nmontli. His recovery la considered\nsomewhat remarkable. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 In moat\ncases where one-third of a man's body\nIs burned he seldom pulls through. In\nWilson's case more than forty per\ncent of his body was In contact .with\nthe flames yet he la now out of danger. Alex .Nclml, the other fire victim, left the hospital some time ago.\nChrist church waa hardly large en-\nougli to accommodate tha congregations at both the morning and evening\nservices on Sunday laat, the occasion\nbeing the first visit from tbe new head\nI of the Kootenay. diocese. Bishop\nDoull. At matins the church was consecrated by his lordship and at the\nclose there was a celebration of holy\ncommunion. In the evening the rite\nof confirmation waa conferred so four\neudldatM; At both strvtcts.be\n; MAGIC r^the;\n! BAKING1*\"1!\niu.- POWDER\nbishop delivered able addresses making an exceptionally favorable impression an all who were fortunate\nenough to hear him. , ' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\" On Saturday Mra. Cherrington gave\nan afternoon whist in 'honor of Miss\nLena Cartwright. The punch, cards\nwere In the shape of wedding, bells,\ndaintily painted In water colore, and\nthe prlae score was made by'Mrs. Mallandaine. Alter cards all sat down to\nlunch. The favors were hidden under,\ntbe centerpiece, and aa each one pulled a white ribbon they drew a snapshot picture of the guest of honor on\nwhite ribbon. Mhnr- Cartwrlght'a own\nfavor had a long-erring attached, and\nshe was told to follow- It. Her little\ntrip took her pretty much all over the\nhouse,-here and there encountering\none of the little bells, which were nil\nInscribed with somo motto or a IHtle\nadvice. She finally arrived at the \"kit-\nchen'and' was-agreeably surprised-to\nfinish at a table covered with firs\ncontaining all kinds of lovely things,\nand no two alike. Then It dawned on\nher It was a Jam shdwer. Although\ntaken completely by surprise Bbe waa\nfinally able to thank them all,\nfor their kindness and after the, usual\nfelicitations the party dispersed.\n(Special correspondence).\nWilliam G. Carlin came In on the\nK. C. R. Friday from Victoria, Just as\nthin aa ever.\nOeorge Geary and his four-legged\npartner motored to Bull River Tuesday in search sf hidden treasure.\n. A.. B. .Macdanald and party from\nCranbrook were visitors this, week tn\nsearch of pleasure and fresh air.\nPolitics I collector, passed away on Wcdnos-\n: day, February loth, at Winnipeg. Tho\ni ELKO NOTE!\na irjttt \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lu8\" ot Wl mtim i:\"\"\"'bel1' a\not screen doors for teepees. 'n0\"\"* \"I,\"\"or of \"\"\">' ymr\" '\"IO' Mi\nufterwurd, and it most vigorous writer\ni The llth of March was celebrated ! ln the old-fashioned style. A fow\nIn style here by a dance under the years afterward, about 1800, lie and a\nauspices of the Curling club. Evory-1 brother typo, the late Mr. Thomas\nbody was.In the shape of the green,oolrns, who canto here from Kingston,\napple tree and had a swell time. Un-! started the Perth Expositor, and when\nfortunately St. Patrick himself was the latter was appointed posttnnstor of\namlsslng. - He didn't get in from the i pcrth, his palmer continued In until\nSix Mile Sanitarium till the day after 1872, wi,en he Joined the throng of out-\nand gave aB an excuae tbat he went gocrs from Ontario to Fort Garry, or\nfishing for his Friday's dinner. Winnipeg, whero hc lived until he\nMarried vs. Single\u00E2\u0080\u0094Such was the i died. In the meantime, Mr. Scott,\nheadliuer in Steele on Sunday when ! who had taken to military affairs,\nthe above experts of basebell met for ! Joined the Perth Infantry Company\nthe flrat time and not the last either, ! (\">e late Mr. W. J. Morris, captain),\nfor vengeance la sweet In time of war. j passed through the military school in\nThe married stilts got licked to the' Toronto, becamo captain of the com-\ntune of 24 to IC (and what's worse I'nny here ,und in 1856 headed Ills\ntheir wives were there and seen it).. company, which went to tlio \"front\"\nSome sensational ball was witnessed, where he and his men remained four\nBUI Myers from Saloonvllle, who months on duty, ln the Riel Rebel-\nswings the bat like a rusty gate, made illon in 1870 lie had a high command\na awing, so far, as the ball has fall- under general afterward Lord Wolse-\ned to return. The acting constable '>'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 tbe eminent British general, In the\nbas a detachment of Austrlans out' expedition to Fort Garry, with the\nsearching for It.\nwas Invited.\nI \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe cltlsens of EUto turned out en\nmasse to do honor to Capt. H. J. Pake\nof Company F., 107th Regiment,' Elko,\nwho is leaving for active service In\nthe army medical .corps this month.\nMr. Pake has been in charge pf the\nBklo Drug company's business here\nand one ot the leading sports of the\ntown In baseball and hockey, and the\ncitizens farewell took the. form it a\nconcert, supper and danco. and from\nevery point of view was the best .attended and most successful ever;hild\nIn Elko. Jim Thistlebeak waa' M. O.\nC. and Toastmaster, aad ths festivities\nstarted when the cuckoo clock waa\nstriking nine with railroad promptness, but without prayer. Tho White\nHouse String Bean Band from; Fernie\nsupplied the music, sad have everything beat in (heir line In the has. tt\nbeing SL Patrick's day and the programme proved an excellent 'one;\nAll the old Irish songs and airs were\npresented snd tbey were heartily applauded.. Jim Thistlebeak In his opening remarks spoke on Ireland and the\npart she is playing in the present\nwar. Tbere were many beautiful numbers on Uie program. Opening chorus\nby the audience, Tlpperary; song,\n\"Take Off Your Hat. to Princess Pat\nfor the Wearing of the Green,\" by Billy\nKvans. Address, 8L Patrick; J. Hockley; the Elko Ladles Quartette, In\n\"Eileen Allanab\"; song, \"The Hat Me\nFather Wore,\" Percy Brewer; march,\n\"Tho Dear Little Shamrock,\" the band;\nrecitation, 'The' Irish Philosopher,\" J.\nGuest; song, \"On the Rocky Road to\nDublin,\" Harry Leckton; song, 'The\nSong Thst Reached My Heart,\" Mrs.\nKnifton. This was one of tbe strongest features on the programme. March\n\"The Irish citizen,\" the Elko String\nBean band; song, \"Old Black Joe,\" J.\nWebster (In character); song, \"My\nWild Irish Rose,\" Private J. Roberta:\nselection, \"The Fighting Fifth,\" by\nthe squad, Company . F; Highland\nFling and Jigs, A. Blrnle; song, '.The\nStrains From Klllarney Tore the Tall\nFrom My Coat,\" Frank Gallagher;\nmarch, \"A Wee Drop o' Crulskeen\nUwn,\" the band; song, \"When Irish\nEyes Are Smiling,\" .J...Bedford.\nVotes of thanks were tendered.tho\nladles for decorations and the .excellent aupper provided, aad tbo dtlaans\ncommittee who bad charge of tbe affairs. On the platform seatkd on\nthe right of the. chairman .was Capt.\nPake, on the left Privates Ayre, Roberts, Hockley,. Sheridan aad Height\nIn uniform who bad. been granted\nleave to attend tbe celebration from\nthe p. C. regiment at Pincher Creek.\nAfter the supper tbe dance commenced\nand wbb kept up till 4 a.m. the morn-\nbig after the night before. Before\nsupper Mr. Pako waB presented with\na purse of gold showing the, appreciation In which he Is held hy the citizens of the town. There was several\nvisitors from outside points, snd was\nthe biggest social success ever bold la\nCOI. THOMAS SCOTT\nPASSES AWAY\nUncle of Robert Kellock of This City\nBios iu Winnipeg\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Well known\nin the Kootenays\nThe death of Col. Thomas Scott at\nWinnipeg will be rocelved In ilita city\nwith profound regret. The Col. was\nwell known In tho Kootenays und was\nan uncle of Mr. Robert Kellock of this\ncity. A short time ago we announced\nWhat Doctors i Use\nfor Eczema\nA soothing combination of oil of\nWintorgreen, Thymol, and other healing Ingredients called D. D. D. Prescription is now a favorite remedy of\nskin specialists for alt skin diseases.\nIt penetrates tho pores, gives Instant\nrelief from the most distressing Itch.\nIts soothing oils quickly heal the inflamed tissues.\nTest Its soothing effect. - We have a\ngenerous trial bottle for only 25c.\nCome and let us tell you.about our\nmoney back guarantee offer to free you\nfrom your distress. Ask also about D.\nD. D. Soap.\nCRANBROOK llRI'll A BOOK CO.\nD. 1). D. Is Made In Canada\nCANCELLATION OF RESERVE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN that\nthe reserve established by a notice\npublished iu tlie British Columbia\nGazette on tho 27th of December, 1907,\nIs cancelled in so far as it rolutos to\nLots 117(12, Il7ll:l, 117(14. 11757, 11765,\n1170(1, 11708, 1171111, 11770, 11771, 11773,\n11774, 11776, 117711, 11777, 11778, 11779,\n11780, 11825, 11820, 11827, 11828, 11829,\n118114. 11805, 11866, 11871, 11889, 11881,\n11882, 11883,11884, 11885, 11886, 11887,\n11888, 11889, 11891, 11892, 11893, 11894.\n11895, 11896, 11897, 12138, 1X139, 12140,\n12141, 12142, 13*48,12H4, 12145, 121411,\n12147, 12148, 12140, 12150, 12156, 121511,\n12157, 12168, 12169, 12100, 12161, 12162,\n12103, 12164, 12165, 12166, 12167, 12239,\n12240, 12241, 12242, 12243, 12244, 12245,\n12246 and 12247, Kootenay District.\nThe said lots will bo open to entry by\npre-emption on Tuesday, the 18th day\nof May, 1915, at nine o'clock In tho\nforenoon. No Pre-emption Record\nwill be Issued to include more than\none surveyed Lot and all applications\nmust be made at the ollice of the Government Agent at Cranbrook.\nR. A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Minister, of Lands.\nDepartment of Lands,\nVictoria, B.C.,\nMarch 12th, 1915. 12-8t\nMOYIE\nFrank Carrier le/t for Xingsgaate\non Saturday.\n! Mr. and Mrs. J. McKay have left to\nmake their home In Creston.\n1 Ttai.st Patrick's dance held in\nMisers' Union ball on Wednesday was\n.well attended, and most enjoyable.\nMr. A. Raworth, tho Cranbrook Jeweler, was s visitor to Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. T. Browning on Sunday.\n* On Friday the newly appointed\nteacher of the junior department, Mrs.\nJennie Cunningham Baker, of Nelson,\nreceived Mrs. Roberta, Mrs. James\nWright and Mrs. Pitman as visitors\ntitle of colonel. Afterward lie moved\nto Winnipeg, before the first boom\nthere, and with his brother David,\nopened a furniture store. He was\nelected member of the young city, to\nthe house of commons, defa-nting Mr.\nDonald A. Smith, afterward Lord\nStrathcona, and finally wns given the\noffice of collector of customs In that\ncity. About 1S98 he was superannuated. He was last seen here a few\nyears ago, when his eroct martial figure, his white moustache and his\nImperial bearing gave him a distinguished appearance, and on liis way\nthrough Toronto attracted the notice\nof the Globe reporter, who referred\nto his \"picturesque figure,\" with suggestive aptness. Col. Scott was married about 1864 to Miss Margaret\nKellock, gaoler, who and one son pre-\nMINERAL ACT\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nVictor Mineral Claim, .situate in\nthe Fort Steele Mining Division of\nEast Kootenay District, located oa\nWild Horse Creek at Old Town or\nChinatown.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Oee. M. Judd,\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 67313b. Intend, sixty days from date hereof, to\napply to the Mining .Recorder for a\nI Certificate of Improvements, for the\n1 purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant\nof the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder sect'on 85, must be commenced\nbefore tlio issuance of such .Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 3rd day ot March, A.D.\n1916. |.|t\nGEO. M. JUDD.\nto the school,\n-Two. picks and four shovels arrived deceased her husband many years,\nin Moyle last week. The residents Thtee 80nB mi tw0 daughters sus-\ncan understand why the two picks and vlvc ,K,,h Parents: Froderlck Robert,\ntwo shovels should srrlve, as there are now ** colonel ln the Imperial army,\n'only two mon on the road gang so far. \mi stationed In London; John, in\nOne man has It figured oul that the I Winnipeg! May (Mrs. Nash), of Wlnnl-\nroed gang will have to work with both! ne*> 8nd Mabel (MrB- Durroll) of Cal-\nMINERAL ACT\nCertificate of laprovesieati\nNOTICE\nKING GEORGE, HELEN FCT.; DIXIE\nCOMET MINERAL CLAIMS, BIT*\nUATE IN THE FORT I STEEL*\nMINING DIVISION OF EAST\nKOOTENAY DISTRICT.\nWliere Located\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Sullivan Hill,\nKimberley, B.C.\n.bands .this year.\n., On Tuesday a meeting of the local\nConservative association was held to\nreceive the report of the delegates\nconcerning the central executive meeting at Oranbrook. T. Bates was appointed to accompany the president,\nM. Bonner, aa delegate to the nominating convention at Cranbrook.\nOn Thursday a well attended meeting waa held to meet Dr. J. H. King,\ntho Liberal candidate for Cranbrook,\nand Charles R. Ward, president of the 1 200 egg incubator, Peerless.\nCraabrook Liberal association, when \ 1 120 egg Incubotor, Chat-\ntho local, association was re-organls-1 ham.\ned In readiness for the election cam- j 1 Pen Brown Leghorns, 1\npelgn. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The gentlemen were en- male and 3 females,\nthuslastically received and on all aides j\nwere heartily welcomed to the mining |\ngary. Colonel Scott hail many elements In bis character to make him\npopular with the people among whom\nhe dwelt, and had vigor. ;force and\nperalatencc in his Individuality. There\nare very few in Pcrtll who were his\ncontemporaries here, and they wlll\nsorrow at his death as the passing of\nono who wns popular and prominent\nin his day.\n; TAKE NOTICE that the Consolldat-\n: ed Mining & Smelting Co. of Canada,\nLimited .Free Miner's Certificate No.\n(75935B, Intend, sixty days-from the\n; date hereof, to apply to tha Mining\nRecorder for a Certificate - ot Improvements, for the purpose ot obtaining a Crown Grant of the above\nclaims.\nAnd further take notlco that action,\nunder section 85, must be commenced\nbefore the Issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this llth day of February,\nA.D. 1915. ax 7-St\nFOR SALE\nIMPERIAL BANKof CANADA\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nCapital Authorised ....|10/MX)/M*vM\nCapital Paid Up 1#0t>M*M\n'Reserve and Undivided\n1 Prodis \t\nS. Macdonald.\ncity.\nBILLY SUNDAY GETS 41,781\n. CONVERTS AND 151,000\nCORPORATION OK THE\nCITY OF CRANBKOOK\nMUNICIPAL ELECTION\nPUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY\nPhlledclnhiai Mneeh \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00C2\u00BB mn\u00E2\u0080\u009E o... \u00C2\u00B0IVBN to the electors of the Muni-\npniiaaelphla, March 22.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Billy Sun- clpallty of the Corporation of the city\noar ended hla religious campaign ' of Cranhrook that pursuant to a war-\nhere In a blase of glory. Four times i r\"\"' l\"\u00C2\u00BBued by His Honour the Lieut,\nduring the day the evangelist preach-' ?a,T,a\u00C2\u00B0'' d,ateJ. \"'e 6th day of March,\nedte audience, tha, oJertlow'cd g. ttaT&XTl^ar\ntabernacle. The total number of his bury Avenue, Cranbrook, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E nn the\nhearers was sixty thousand. Four -'''\"' dBy \"' March, 1915, at 12 o'clock\ntimes be called for converts ami \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E! n.00n (1 \u00C2\u00B0'clot'k I'm. local time) for\n\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB Z.Z.T.. Z ,I,r,Z , **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"ur,\"\"e \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00BB elect\"1\u00C2\u00AB \"\u00C2\u00BBr\"0\"\u00C2\u00BB 'o re-\nan aggrogate sf 1,826 for the day. present them In tho Municipal Council\nThe number of converts for the \"* Aldermen.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0He*** weeks of the campaign Is M.-LTi\".?.0,?'..01! nom,!l\",tlon\u00E2\u0080\u009E\"' '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"\"\"-\nIts- \u00C2\u00BB, sssss ..i. k... nan \u00E2\u0080\u009E d\"te\" \"lm\" bo ** followa: The candi-\n7lt It aot only beats Billy Sun- dates shall bo nominated In writing;\nday a record, but probably surpasses | the writing shall be siihsirlbed by\nthe record of every modern cvnngo- lwo voters of the municipality us pro-\nlist. ' ' \t\nBefore he left the city, however, the\ncommittee turned over to the cvango-\nlist a draft for $61,136, the lesult of\nthe free will offering which Philadelphia gave to him. It In the largest\noffering he haa received in any city.\nAccounts of Corporations, Municipalities .Merchants, Farmers aad\nPrivate Individuals Invited.\nDrafts and Letters of Credit Issued\navailable In any part of the world.\nSAVINGS DEPABTMEND-Bpeclal\nj attention given to Savings Bank Ao\ncounts. Deposits sf $1.00 and upwards received and Interest allowed\nI from date ot deposit.\nA branch la Also established at\nAthalmer, B.C., under tbo management of Irving C, Wodd.\nCraabrook Branch\nH. W. NCPPI.E, Manager\n. NOTICE\nThirty days after date I Intend to\napply to the Society Olrl Mining Com-\npoay. Limited, for a duplicate certificate covering Certificate No. 808, dated\nJanuary loth, 1116, for 6052 shares\not stock In said company.\n: Ihe original certificate has been\nlost.\nSigned Allan M. McLeod.\nDated Stanford, Mont., U.S.A. l-4t\nFebruary \u00C2\u00ABrd. 1916.\nNOTICE\nNumerous complaints having been\nmade recently In reference to chickens\nrunning at large and doing damage\nto gardens, etc., notice Is hereby given\nall residents to. coop or otherwise confine all fowl or proceedings will be\nInstituted against them.\nP. ADAMS,\nChief of Police. I B.C., this 16th day ot March, IMS,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I Ibe ChM of Police , T. M. ROBERTS.\nOwisiHa mr, Msreh letb, IM,\nposer ond seconder, nnd shall be delivered to tho Returning Offlcor nt uny\ntime between the dale nf lhe notlco\nand 2 p.m. (3 p.m. locul llmei of the\ndny of tlie nomination; the wild writing may bo In the form numbered 5'\nIn tho Schedule of this Act, uml shall\nstato the names, residence, mid oc-\nOUPation or description of I'lloh |aolstin\nproposed, in such manner us sufficiently to Identify such candidate; and\nIn the event of a mall being necessary,\nsuch poll wlll be opened on the 30th\ndny of March, 1915, at the Municipal!\noffices ul'orosaid of which everV per-\nboo Ib hereby required to take notice j\nand govern himself accordingly.\nQUALIFICATIONS FOR ALDERMEN I\nThe persons qualified to be nomlnat-:\ned for and elected as Aldermen ot a\ncity shall be such persona aB are male j\nBritish subjects of the full age of\ntwenty-one years, and who are not dls-\nqualified under any law, and have been\nfor the six months next preceding the\nday of nomination the registered\nowners, ln the Land Registry Office,\nor land or real property In tho city ot,\ntho assessed value, on the last municipal asscBsment roll, ot five hundred\ndollars or more ovor and above any\nregistered Judgment or charge, and\nwho aro otherwise duly qualified aa\nmunicipal voters.\nOlvcn under my hand at Cranbrook,\nTht\nHOTEL\nCOEUR D'ALENE\nSpokane, Washington\n\"THE HOTEL WITH A\nPERSONALITY\"\nWe believe wa\nhave more regular patrons (rom\nBritish Columbia\nthan any other\nHotel in Spokane\nOn your next trip\nto this city, let ua\nahow you why\nthis la true.\nOpposite new Union Station. Close to all places ot\nInterest. Rooms elegantly\nfurnished. Rates as low\naa at the more ordinary\nhouses.\nBeaSUaraslilpoBthaaUal"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Cranbrook"@en . "Cranbrook_Herald_1915-03-25"@en . "10.14288/1.0069230"@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 .