"f6410648-c192-464d-a31f-55a70c481f15"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-11-27"@en . "1916-09-21"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/cranherald/items/1.0070519/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE ORANBROOK HERALD\nVOLUME 18\nCRANBROOK, BRITISH COLUMBIA,\nTHURSDAY. SEPT -'1st, llllll.\nUBlBlo\ne.mlily. A|ir.-lli\nNUMBER 38\nCRANBROOK HAS THE MINERALS THAT MAKE THE MONEY\nLIBERALS mm PROVINCE\nOul ul \u00C2\u00BB Total oi' 47 Scats Conservatives May Nut Havo Over 7\nI'remlor Bovtsor mill Entire Culiluol Among (lie Fallrn\nWilli I'ossllilo Kxei\u00C2\u00BBtlon of Hun. IV. It. Uoss\u00E2\u0080\u0094Soldiers'\nVoto May Make a Slight Change.\nlii'iilieie Columbia electors lu me un\ncortuln volco Imve' expressed tlii'lr do\nKin, for ii oluiiiKo In Qovornmont, uiul\nuh te CotiBOtiuonco Mr, ll 0. Drowstor\nwlll In, tin, iiromlor nt' llila iirovluco\nlu tli,' noxt UglBlaturo, Until nftor\nlllO BOldlors' VolO Is C Iti'll lu Octobor\ntin, ojcncl standing o( llto two purtloa\nlu tlu> noxt Iioubo will nut bo known,\nbut proBont InillontloiiB nro tluit tlio\nLiberals will lmvo from :!7 t,i tu. Tbo\nteeelelleTs' VOto Will not lUtOl* llllllle-\nitiiii'le cbnngo tbongli tt ts pusalblo tlmt\nwlioro BOlillor candidates lee tlte nold\num defeated ou the- present standing\ntin, seiiilli'i-s' voto may I'le'rt tbem, pur-\ntliulHi'ly lu tho case ut Lieut. MoKon-\nzio iii lit'ltti iiiiil Capt, Poster iu tbo\nIslands constituency, wbero Uie' tiiiijiir-\nItlees aro siuiiii.\nProhibition hus carried by a majority ot between 7,000 nud 8,000 nnd\nwhile, the soldiers' vote1 muy slightly\nreduce this It Is not likely to overcome it. and iu some quarters the belief is expressed that tlio soldiers\nthemselves will give it a majority.\nWoman suffrage bus carried In every\nconstituency, and Is a well deserved\ntribute to woman's rights.\niiiiijnrliy eif 341 uiul wiiinun suffrage\n880. Following Is tlie result in detail:\nCuvi'u King\nnlnrysvlllo m --\nKlmliorloy 10 84\nTu Tu Crook 14 2u\nSullivan Mine' IT 36\nWVst Waldo 8 11\nWnrdnor 21 61\nWyilill',. IS 88\nWestport r, ti\nCrnnbrook 848 888\nMission :i 6\nKlngsgnto to 11\nMayook 1 '2\nYulik ir, lfl\nMeiyiei 10 21!\nWattsburg 12 u\nWest Qatcway 2 4\n422 G02\nI'rielllbitleill\nPor\n.. 19\n.. 43\n.. 30\n.. 363\n.. 3\nMarysville \t\nSullivan Mine \t\nWycliffe\t\nCranbrook \t\nSt. Kugene Mission ..\nWardner 48\nWest Gateway 6\nWattsburg 12\nKingsgate 8\nWestport 7\nTa Tu Creek 18\nKimberley 28\nMayook 8\nYahk 16\nMoyie 20\nWest Wulilo 10\nWoman Suffrage\nMarysville ..\nSullivan Mine\nWycliffe \t\nI'runhrook ....\nFor\n. 24\n.. 43\n. 33\n363\nlilt. .1. II. KIM:\nUecie'il for Cranbrook Killing\nThere huve been many guesses ut\nthe niiikc-np of the new cabinet, but\ntlie only portfolios which appear In\nevery slate are the Premier, li C.\nBrewster: Attorney-General, M. A\nMacdonald; Minister nf Education, Hr.\nKing. Cranbrook will therefore he\nwell represented tn tlie Cabinet witli\nlir. King and Mr. Macdonald, a former\nresident of this city.\nTlmt tlie electors nf Vancouver took\nlittle stock In the plugging elmrges\nagainst M. .V Macdonald i- Indicated\nhy tlie fact iliiil lie headed llie poll lu\nthat clly wltli nearly UOO voters morc\nlimn tli u hlghcsl The clt) went\nsnllilly Liberal with six members, llnwser coining seventh\nl.llll-l'lll*\nMlii'iiii II i' UrewBlei\n\lliii I' Moberley.\nCariboo .1 Yorston.\nChilliwack K n Bnrrov.\nCranhrook Ur, .1 II King\nColumbia .1 A. Buckham\ne'lillinx 11 St,-Willi\nDowdnoy .1 Oliver.\niieltii \ it Pattorson.\nKsi|iilnt:ili A \\ McCurdy\nPernio \ 1 Plsher\nClrnnd Porks .1 I! Thompsou\nllreoliwnod Hi' C, 11 Ml l*an\nIslands \1 It Jackson\nKaslO .Inllll Kei'll\nKnmlooiis s w An n\nNorth Okanagan He l< C Mclloiiald\nNorth Vancouver Mayor llalne t\nNiiiiiitliin \\\ Slniill\nNew We-tniliist.i- 11 \\ liit.-t.l--\nNewcnBtlc Parker Williams.\nRichmond i: McOoer\nllovclstoko in w n Sutherland\nllosolaud Mayor Willson\nBotttli Vancouver .1 W Woarl\nBanulch F A Paulino.\nSlieeim T 11 I'otllllO,\nVancouver tslx inombors] Macdonald, Smith, Mcintosh, Coupcr, Donnelly\nVliiurlit (four mombors) Brewster,\nHell. Hurl. Hull.\nYule .1. Walters.\nConservative!\nCowiclian\u00E2\u0080\u0094Capt W. II. Hayward.\nNelson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ur. W. O. Hose.\nSimilkameen\u00E2\u0080\u00941, W. Sltiitfiiril.\nSouth Okanagan- Mayor Junes.\nSlocan\u00E2\u0080\u0094W. Hunter, leading by 18\nvotes.\nTrail\u00E2\u0080\u0094J. H. Scitotielii, leading by nu\nvotes.\nIn Doubt.\nOniiniTii O Miinsnii, Llboral loading\nPurt Ooorgo\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hon, W. it. Hoss, Con-\nBorvatlvo, leading.\nLiiiiini't - A. Macdonald, ConBorva-\ntlve, loading,\nCKANIIKOOK IlKSI ITS\nIn Cranbrook lir. King ims n major\nIty ot 200 tin II llleltil count, only\ntwo polls in il nun- riding, Mayook\nand WuUuliiirg registering a mujorlly\nfor riiveu. Priihllilllnii received a\nSt. Eugene Mission 4\nWardner 41\nWest Gateway 3\nWattsburg ll\nKingsgate 11\nWestport 12\nTa Ta Creek 24\nKimberley 30\nMayook 6\nYahk 23\nMoyie 2S\nWest Waldo r,\nFKKMi: RESULTS\nUphill Fisher Me\nFeTllle 271\nCrOW'a Nest 17\nWlilte Sulphur .. 1\nCorbln 13\nAg'st\n14\n8\n2011\n30\n1\n6\n11\n8\n10\n15\n6\nIf,\n16\n12\nAg'st\n8\n8\n20\n190\n3\n36\n1\n6\n10\n3\n3\n11\nMichel ....\nNatal \t\n(farmers ..\nHosmer ...\nCoal rre-e'k\nMorrlsBey .\nElko \t\nMcGttlres .,\nBaynes \t\nWaldo ....\nKrag \t\nDorr\t\nJittfrny\nHull Illver\nGateway ..\nI'eti Steele\nWusu \t\nFlagstone .\n21\n411\nS\n29\n9\n14\n19\n12\n4\n33\n11\n11\n30\n4\n12\n43\n47\nIt\n15\n1141 737 ISt,\nTlie majority fnr Fisher Is 96,\nMIL A. I. KISIIKR\nElected (or Fernie Riding\n(letting lloivn lu the I iiml Events \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nllllllllloillis lllie- Ml Players an\nEijuol Chance to\nWin lliil\nTlie Tennis Tournament or the local\nTennis riuh is aettlun down to tbe\nfinals now and some very exciting\ngullies lire ill prOBpeCt. Tilt' gullies ull\nthrough havo heen closely contested\numl much interest Ims been aroused.\n'I'lie handicaps were so arranged Unit\nIt nine nit players un equal chance, the'\nnewest players being given as much\nchance us tho older erne's, and In eon-\nBoeiucnce si,me nf tlie green piuyi'rs\naro still tu tin- ii,-l.l in tin. finals. Following lire llie results up to geilllR to\npress:\nI.AMF.S SINGLES\nMiss Cnrtwrlghl -16, Mrs. Moth -16\nwiin hy Mrs, Moth 9-7. tl-4.\nMiss 11. Hi mond +16, Miss Fisher\n+ 16, won Iiy Miss Driininiolid 0-1, 2-0,\ne:-i.\nMiss 15.0111 +15, bye.\nMiss E, Macdonald ser, Miss Roberts\n+%16, wem by Miss Macdonald 4-6,\n7-5, 6-3.\nMiss M. Wallinger ser., bye.\nMiss 11. Clll +15, Mrs. Fenwick\n-V, in. wem hy Mrs. Fenwick 6-3,12-10,\n6-1.\nMiss 1). Wallinger ser., Mrs. McKow<\nan -Mil5, ween hy Miss Wallinger 6-3,\n3-6, 8-10.\nMiss A. Woodland -16, Miss I'yc -40,\nwon by Miss Pye 6-2, 4-6, 6-4.\nSi't'ienil Reiunil\nMiss Drummond wem from Miss R\nGill 6-1. 6-3.\nMiss M. Wallinger won from Mrs.\nFenwick 6-:'.. 6-4, 8-6.\nMiss I'yc wem from Miss 11. Wallinger 6-3, 6-2.\nSemi Finn]\nMiss Pye won from Miss M. Will-\nlinger 6-3, 6-2.\nMiss !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:. (illl won from Miss Drummond 10-12. 6-0, 6-1.\nHEN'S SINGLES\nA. Raworth -1416, .1. Pye +15, won\nhy A. Huwortli 6-3, 7-5.\ns. Rumsey \"iir.. a, Me-mle +30, won\nbv s. Rumsey 6-0, 0-2.\nT. II. Kay +',iir>, C. Garrett -15,\nwem ley ('. lleirret 0-3, 0-6, 6-4.\nThe following also go Into the second round through byes or defaults:\nX. A. Wallinger -15. It. ('. (Hi-ling +16,\nV. Fink +30, 11. Mcllwalne -30, D. A.\nKay +15.\nSecond Itunni!\nX. A. Wallinger won trom R. E.\nGirling e',-1. 6-1.\nV. Fink wem from A. Huwortli 6-3. 6-4.\n('. Garret won from s, Rumsey 6-4,\nH. Mcllwalne won from D. A. Kay\n0-1, C-4.\nSi'ini-I'iiiiils\nH. Mcllwatae won (rom ('. Oarrett\nI.Allies' DOUBLES\nMiss M. Wallinger ami Miss B. Gill\n^i-.:lll Inst 6-1. !*-7 to Miss D. Druin-\nmond uml Miss le. Wallinger +V430.\nMiss l'y,- uml Miss Woodland -30.\nletsl 6-.. 6-4 ti, Mrs. McKowan und\nMiss Cartwright sit.\nThe following go Into the second\nround with byes: Miss 1-:. ('.ill uml\nMiss 1-:, Macdonald +HS0; Mrs. Moth\numl Mrs McLeod -15.\ns ml Round\nMiss Drummond nml Miss IV Wallinger won trom MiBS K. QUI unel Miss E,\nMacdonald 6-2, 6-4.\nMrs, Moth nnd Mrs. McLeod won\n(nun Mrs. McKowan uml Miss Cart-\nwrtght 6-2, 8-2.\nHEN'S DOUBLES\nA. Raworth and s. Rumsoy -30. won\n.:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0::. 9-1 from V. Fink unit J. Pye +15.\nThrough default or byes the following go lute iln- s.-innil round: T. H.\nKay iiml n a Wallinger -30; a A.\nKav nml ll Mcllwalne -80: C. Currelt\nand I' deVero Hum -30.\nHIXFH ROUBLES\nMiss M. mi.I.- mul T. Mecredy -15.\nwon i-fl, I'-n, 8-8 frum Miss Roberta\nmut Itev w. ll Bridge 15.\nMiss I've iiiiiI li. A. Kay -16 won\n6-1. 10-8 Irom Mrs. Moth uiul T, H.\nKa) 16\nMiss E, Hill nml II Melllvvulne -30\nwon 6-3. e:-2 freini Mrs. McKowan and\nN. A. Walllngor V\u00C2\u00AB>.\nMiss Macdonald uml II. E. curling\n! tr,. won ti-::, 6-4 (rom Miss Walllngor\nanil V, Fink +16.\nMiss II. lllll und .1. I've +15 won\n6-ti, 7-r, (rom Miss Drummond ami A.\nRaworth ser.\nTlie fnllnwliic play In lhe second\nrn I through byes: Miss W Hand\nnml s Rumsey -80; Miss Cartwright\nmut i' Oarrotl SO; Mrs Fenwick nml\nc Mead I 15\nSci-eiiiii Round\nMiss I'v ill ll. A. Kay won fronl\nMiss Cnrtwrlghl nnd 0. tlnrrett 11-9,\nMiss I-:, enn ami li Mclllwaine won\nfr Miss Macdonald uml It. E. Girling 6-2, 6-3,\nMiss H. lllll nnil .1. Pye won (rom\nMrs. Fenwick nml tl. Moad 6-3. 6-1;\nSemi Finals\nMiss Pye nml ll. A. Kay won (rom S.\nRumsoy uml Miss Woodland 6-1,6-3.\nS. A. OFFICIALS Til VISIT CITV\nMINING REVIVAL IN WINDERMERE\nParadise Mine Has Resumed Shipping and Work Will be Con>\ntinned During 11m- Winter. Employing About :to Men\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Others Expected to Start up Soon.\n(Special lu tin- Herald)\nInvermere B.C. Sept utli The!(ered by team tn rail; tlienee by rail\nMining Division has resumed ship*ito Revelutoke and Arrowhead where\nptng after an Idlenea extending over it was tranafored tu boat ami\nten yrurs. its first, cur ot ore Lett taken tu Weat RobBon, when it again\ntliis jiart un Tuesday tin* Vitth tpst.ihadto be tranafored tu rail uml Kblp-\ntur Hi.- smelter at Trail, Bight heavy hied tn Trail. Tlu* difficulties of that\nteams art- ai iircsnit engaged in haul- mode of transportation wen* sn great\nIng un- frum tin- mine tu the shipping and so costly that tin* owners became\npoint on Uu* railway und this number discouraged and shut tin* mine down\nwill shortly Ik* Increased. Tlu; mini; pending tin.* building of the railway.\nMr. 11. Wiley, accountant for the O\nP. II. here, Ih returning to Brandon.\nGeo. Fitzgerald was given :t0 days\nfnr vagruncy last Thursday In the lo\ncal pollco court.\nMr. Frunk Dunn of lin-C. I'. R. Htnff\nwas one of tlie tew hunters fortunate\n1'iioiigli to hag ii deer on IiIh recent\nhunting trip.\nQueen Alexandra lotlgo, n. of R. T\ngave a farewell last Thursday nlghl to\niMiHH KlHlo Park, and presented her\nI wilh u cut glass howl,\nis at present tn the great satisfaction\nof tlie dislrict giving employment to\ntwenty-one men and arrangements\nare being completed to Increase this\nnumber to thirty to whom steady employment will lie given throughout\ntlio coming winter.\nA short aerial tramway is being\nconstructed to carry tlie ore from the\nmine to storage bins which have already been built. Suitably shipping\nfacilities are being arranged for on\ntlie lino of the Kootenay Central Railway.\nTlio property is owned by tlie estate of the late Herbert Carlyle Hammond, who was a mmber of the firm\nnf Osier and Hammond of Toronto,\nand R, Randolph Bruce, O.E.. F.R.ti.s.,\nuf bis place, under whom the management of the property cornea. The offices of the company are established\nin Invermere.\nThc ore Is u silver lead. It wil be\nshipped continuously all winter. This\nproperty in old days shipped nut u\ncouple of thousand tuns to the smelter nt Trail. At that time the ore had\nto be brought tn the water,s edge and\nshipped down the Columbia River by\nboat to Golden where tt was trans-\nTim Kotenay Central Branch nf the\nCanadian Pacific Railway has now\nbeen completed thus enabling the ore\nto reach Trail Smelter both cheaply\nand quickly once it la loaded.\nsinco the Paradise opened up the\nowners of adjoining properties such\nas tlie Silver Pelt have commenced\nwork and It is understood thoy along\nwith thc Nette M, will start shipping\nIn the immediate future.\nThc revival of this indusary in the\nDistrict has alreudybeen the means\nnf inducing peoplo interested In mining\ndevelopment to visit here and come or\nthe other properties such aa the Dol-\nphine, the Chllbnry, thc Hot Punch\nund thc Homosteak arc now being examined. All these properties were\nformer shippers.\nIt would be premuture to make any\nannouncement regarding some of the\nabove. This re-dovolopment nf the\nmining Industry Is une of the first-\nfruits nf the building and operation nf\nthc Kootenay Central Hallway and It\nwill certainly materially assist in the\nBattlement nnd development uf the Dls\ntriot as a whole In the establishing of\na better local market and the assurance of more steady employment fnr\nskilled labnr,\nKEEP TIE TOWN (III\nLocal .Man (barged with Keeping a\nHouse of lll-tumc, (Jlven a Lee.\nttire and Warning by\nMagistrates\nTliat tiie decent citizens of Cran-\nprook arc interested In the efforts of\nthe Chief of Police to make Cranbrook\na clean city was evidenced by tlie attendance at the pulice cutirt un Thursday morning when a case of much Importance wus up fur hearing. It hinged on the case tried Friday last when\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Vllie Dunlop wus lined $10 and costs\nfor being a prostitute, pleading guilty\nto the charge.\nMILLINERY OPENING\nCommissioner and Mrs. Sowton, who\nare in charge of the Salvation Army\nthroughout the Western Territory will\nbe visiting Cranbrook for Sept. 26th,\naccompanied by Hrigudler McLean of\nVancouver, The Commissioner wlll\nha very pleased to liave as muny of the\n1 public attend the meeting ns possible.\nI Commissioner Chas. Sowton has\n! been an Olllcer fnr thltiy-two years,\n! during which time he has held almost\n! every field position In the Army. HIb\nfirst foreign appointment wus the ter-\njritnrlul leadership nf Norway, which\n[hud only been opened nine months,\nIth on followed Sweden, under the <-om-\njiniiud successively of Commissioner\nBldadol und Commissioner Ollphant;\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0the over-sight of the Scundlnavlan\nwork In America,\nA charge was then laid against a\nlocal man generally known as Mack-\nthe-Tailor, for being the keeper of a\ndisorderly house. This was up for\nhearing on Saturday and remanded till\nThursday morning. The chief gave j\nevidence as to arresting Mrs. Dunlop,\nthe convicted prostitute, In the house\nof Mack-the-Tallor, where she hud |\nbeen taken in ns a roomer, but appar-\nently had access to any part of thej\nhouse. Mrs. Dunlop was also put In ;\ntlle witness box and gave evidence\ntliat she had rented the rooms from ;\nMack-tlie-Taylor, with no questions\nasked, and that she had known hlm for\nseveral montlis previous. The chief in\nsumming up claimed that the evidence\nproved conclusively that the accused\nknew for what purpose his house was\nbeing used, aud in tlie Interests of a\nclean Cranbrook asked for a conviction, whicli alone would have a summary effect In preventing Clark Ave. j\nfrom regaining Its old-time reputation\nas n resnrt of Immoral women.\nMr. A. B. Macdonald, who appeared |\nfor the accused, agreed with tlie chief,\nin his desire to keep the town clean,]\nbut claimed that there was no evidence\noffered to pruve that the house was u j\nhouse of Ill-fame nr a bawdy house,\nas was necessary to secure a conviction. Magistrates Arnold and Hill,\nwho sat on the case, lu giving Judgment Justified tlie action of the Chief'\nIn laying the charge but regretted\nthat on the evidence submitted tliey [\nwero unable to register a conviction\nand had tn dismiss the ease. Magistrate Hill gave the accused a very j\nstraight warning tlmt It wnuld be necessary fur him to be very circumspect iu the future, and said: \"We are\nnut satisfied hy any means that you\nhave a clean sheet. Vou are living In\nvery questionable quarters. You were\nliving under the same roof with one\nwho pleaded guilty to being a prostitute. No white man hus a right to\nlive under the same roof with a colored woman. Von have been In court\ntwice during the last month, first fur\nselling liquor to Indians, and now on\na charge of keeping a house of Ill-\nfame. This ought tu be a lesson to\nyou. We urc determined to see that\nCranbrook is kept a clean town, but\non tbis occasion havo given you the\nbenefit of the doubt.\"\nThe. accused asked to he allowed to\nsay a word In reply nnd started in on\na loud harangue aB tn his having been\n\"a resident for 20 years and during\nthat lime no one bud been able to point\ntho llngnr of scorn at him\", etc.\nMet HKKRV BROS.\nMcCreery Bros, millinery parlors are\nthe rendezvous of the ladles of the city\nand district tliis week-end to inspect\ntlie beautiful display of fall und winter\nmillinery. Tlle show-rooms are In\ncharge of Miss Garbutt of Toronto,\nund Thursday marked the opening day\nof the season.\nKven In the line of millinery the influence of tlie wur is reflected In the\ntendency towards plain huts, military\nshapes and quiet colors, devoid of the\nsupcrflous and georgeous trimmings\nsometimes so much In evidence. Among\nthe leudlng colors will be found the\nnew toupe shade, purple, black and\nblack and white, together witli some\ngreen und blue. Birds and wings are\nthe favorites in the line of trimmings\nthis season. For the later fall and\nwinter wear tlie hats are very small\nand natty, the early season styles being considerably larger.\nOne of the taking hats noticed on\ndisplay was a very smart New York\nsailor, which gets its Individuality and\nstyle frum its natty lines. It is a black\nvelvet flop trimmed with a single rose\nand band of black ribbon, and is a\nvery becoming hat. It would be Impossible to describe in detail all the\nbeautiful and stylish hats nn exhibition, but one more which caught our\nattention was a very stylish hat in the\nnew toupe shade, with sjallnped edge\ntrimmed with bands uf grey fur, onp\nside nf the hat slightly rolled and finished witli a pretty ornament.\nMISS tfcLEOD\nMiss McLeod Is holding her fall millinery opening this week-end und has\nu beautiful display nf tin* very latest\nin full aud winter bats. Black, tuupes.\npurples and Russian Greens ucnipy the\nprominent positions in tlie color\nscheme, while the up-to-date tutus are\nthc leading shapes. There is a nice\nline nf metal trimmings In gold, silver and oxidised metal, together with\nthe lutest novelties In millinery.\nOne of the very latest models nn\ndisplay Is a black tain crown, finished with metal trimming- There ll atso\na splendid showing of sport hats in\ncolored felts.\nMiss McLeod is also showing the very\nlatest in colored lace veils In purple\nAfrican browns and Russian Green.\nMr. Jack Burton is spending two or\nthree weeks visiting friends at the\nCoast.\nMrs Crump and family of Revelstoke\npent, a week here with Mr. Crump,\nacting Superintendent in Mr. liar-\nshnw's absence.\nS. Irving, who was o resident of Calgary, has enlisted with the 241!nd Foresters Battn. for overseas service, and\nIs acting as book-keeper and stenographer for tlie Battalion here,\nCapt. Pinkbam of Culgary Is reported In the latest casualty lists us killed\nHe was a brother of .Mr. J. F. Plnkham,\nformerly a bank manager In Crnnhrook.\nf/llcLrciitii Jjraa\nlake piea&uxc in annauncinq tlioii\ntlo tin a I C pen I lit]\n4'\nJail JlUUinetii\nAuilu>.> e Ki'iulii-lo-wVui\nand J ru cJoaeeS\nnii\nJim x^tlaci oVpl. JwYmiIii-. 'ini\nano iollovt'iiLi paiji\n, 'on ate ivuliuliii mOiUv\nlo alletiu\nMcCreery Bros.\nCranb.-ojk's Dr/ Goads and Clothing Stores\nStill Talking Furniture\nBut we have a stock and values well worth\ntalking ahout. You'll agree with us when you\nsee them. A pleasure to show you whether a\npurchase is made or not.\nLinoleums and Oilcloths\nare selling rapidly at our verj' low prices.\nWhen present stock is sold out you will have\nto pay more for the next Don't he among\nthe late ones.\nNorbury\nV. V* o.\nAfter A Serious Sickness\nAfter mi) operation, ami c*peclall) ufter tin* trying hwi of inmmer,\nevery -imrit* cell in your bud) demand* mme help in building ii up\nHOW, mid lhe Hi.'hi kind of help |g found in\nVINOL\nIt N nature's builder- Contain* nourish men I for (lie blend and\nUaiuei In it- rich medicinal oil food no fake nonrfihmenl for ii doe*\nnot contain a trace of opiates or \"ther lUmnlantA\nCranbrook Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\n-TIIK VINOL STORE\"\nWhite Star Dominion Line\nMONTREAL\u00E2\u0080\u0094OUEBEC\u00E2\u0080\u0094 LIVEHPOOL\nI.AIlllK, MOIIKHN 18,000 TON STK.IMKHS, C.aKHYIMi CAIIIN AMI\nTHIRD II.ASS (IM.V\nI Sept, iillli S. s. \"Ii-Mimim\"\nOct. Htll, s. s. \"Northland\"\nOctober 28tli, s. s. \"Southland\"\nN'en. llli. s. s. \"Canada\"\nCabin rate J.r,0 nnil \u00C2\u00BBr,r, and up. iCeirno eeiily.\nF\er tiirtlmr Information apply i\" Company's e.illec, inn Second\nAve-.. Se-mtle-. A. K lilnei-y. Agent, or Deale A.- Klwell; J. W. Spence,\nAi;,iit. ('. P. u.. Cranbrook.\nSubscribe to the Herald -- $2.00 a Year PACK TWO\nTHE CRANBROOK HERALD\nTHURSDAY, SEPT 21st, 1916.\nTIIK CRANHROOK HERALD\nIssued tVookly by Tho Cranbrook\nHerald, Limited.\nT. H. Kay, Editor and Manager\nThursday, September 21st, llllll\nI LEAK UP THE .IIF.SS\nBefore the bar ol' public opinion M\nM. A. Macdonald has been declared ii\nnocent ol guilty knowledge ot tl\nVancouver plugging conspiracy, an\nhis return at the head ot thc polls i\nVancouver Is a striking vindication i\nills character, Tlu- return ni a solid\nphalanx ol Liberals rrom Vancouver\nanil Victoria Indicates a remarkable\nlack ot fullh In tin- bono tides ot tho\nConservative charges, li i- to I'- hop-\nTin BOldlors' voto is Htlll to be\ncounted hut ill view of the overwhelming ...ni 'in all over tin- provlneo\nugnlnst the Bowser government this\nvote is more likely lee be against the\nConservatives than lu their favor. The\nonly probable exceptions to tills are\n'where soldier candidates are in the\n: field, and It I? quite possible that these\nj may be elected by tlte votes of tli\n. comrades iu arms.\nit Is Io be regretted that the Hon.\n'.V. J. Bowser is among tlie fallen, as\neven his enemies will admit his enp-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 uul!ltie-e as a legislator, and his pres-\n\" elice in the house would have been of\nQ great value. While lie may be uble to\n! net il scut ile till' house if lie desires lie\n11 may take tlie opportunity now offered\n'land devote his whole time to his legal\nIlltlCB.\nOILLETT'S LYE\nEATS DIRT\n\"tun: KOll A CIIANOK\" (itv\nII Is quito\nil for He- good mini,, ni ihe province o( yCStorday'\nmi the clearing \"f th\" political al- ment of the\nUnisphere that lhe Liberal party eeill\ncontll Un- probe anil gel al Un' real\ntruth nf the matter, no matter who\nmay he hurt in tl xposuro. II it\nla true us charged by Messrs. Macdonald and Brewster tliat llie whole thine\nwas a Conservative plot in \"got Macdonald\" then the sooner the perpelra\ntors are shown up ami punished the\nheiler for tlie conservative parly ami\nfor public morale iu general.\nLllll\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uie Free l'ress)\nevident from lhe results\ns election lhat the sentl-\npriillnee for the time Ileal. The old battle cry,\nuntied against every geiv-\nt remains lee power fur\nin.\" Time for a ehange.\" lias\nnot under the skin of the electorate\nami the llnwser government has gone\ndown in defeat.\nwhieh Illl:\neminent\nWOMAN SlU'ltUli:\naller tnr i\nale\nraliihilinii thai\nulath\nurteil t\nTin\nIt Is a I\nthe right\niil/.eil by\nprovince in such a win\ntier iiii Thursday last\noverwhelmingly in favor nf Hie change,\nanil we have lui iloulil lhe lailies will\njustify the confidence expressed In\ntliem. Tho Introduction of the women's vote is unt likely tn iiiake any\nstartling changes e way nr the\nother, though it will have a tendency\nto raise tlie standard eif personal morality among aspirants for political\nhonors, and will help to eliminate tlle\nrough-neck candidate and those who\nrepresent the lower element insofar as\ntheir election to offlco Is concerned,\nWo fear, however, lhat those elements\nwlll still he able lu exereise their insidious Influence behind the seones unknown lo tlm lady voter, though possibly nut In quito su raw a manner.\nTin: I'ltOIIIIHTION WAVE\nProvince after province, state afler\nstate, und country nfter eaeeintry are\neither adopting prohibition in ono form\nur another, or making the regulations\nfor the sulo of Ihieeeir enure stringent\nand tlie present indications nro tli\nthc day ot tho legalized traffic in\nstrong drink Is fast drawing tu a\nclose, llrltlsli Col bin is Ihe newest\nprovince In Canada lu vote dry. and\nwitli tlie enactment of the li. C. Prohibition Law Canada will be dry from\nthe Pacific Ocean tn llie eastern borders of Ontario. It is only another\nshort step lei Domlnlon-wldo prohibition, whicli will follow as a natural\nsequence.\nThe voto In this province on Thursday Is an amazing testimony tn lhe\ngrowth of public sentiment against the\nliquor traffic. Willi an enormous campaign fund on the part of tlio lliiuor\nmen to defeat prohibition, with the\nlarge majority of the' press of the province either neutral or avowedly antagonistic to the cause nf prohibition,\nwith tlie liquor men's specleius arguments against the bill appearing In\nevery paper in the province with two\nor throe nntalile exceptions only, il\nwould have been small wonder if the\nhill had been del. ated. But despite\nall this and the limited amount of\nmoney available fur lhe prohibition\ncampaign a majority nf between seven\nand eight thousand has I u rolled up\n111 favor nf the hill, tlf course the\nsoldiers' voto Is still lei he counted bin\nlt is Inconceivable that they will vote\na great deal different freeni tlie civilian\nelectorate, and lo overcome the majur-\nIty tlio vote would have' tei be better\nthan two to one against prohibition,\nso it may be accepted as a foregone\nconclusion tliat tlie bill wlll onrry.\nI I.KSSON KOll (lOYKKN.ilKNTN\n(Lethbridge Herald)\nThere is a lesson fur governments,\nhuth Conservative and Liberal, tn the\nresult In Hritish Columbia. The hlde-\nIiiiuihI partisans are n minority every-\nire. The muii wiio will stand by\nthe party right or wrong are not as\ninerous as sume politicians imagine.\nTo re'taln power, and tlle respect uf\ntiie people, a government must serve\nihe people\u00E2\u0080\u0094serve them faithfully ami\nuuestly. Minor mistakes may be ex-\nused, but when a government defies\niihlie morality as did Hie government\ni' British Columbia there will Inevit-\nhiy como a day uf judgement. Men\nwill break parly tines and punioll the\n'eminent that casts a bint upon Hie\nty. British Columbia is nut a 1,1b-\n1 provlnc '; its record since its entrance Intn confederation shows that\nit is quite large ly Conservative. Mr.\nBrewster will lead practically the first\nLiberal government the provlneo ever\nhad. He has boen given power because honest Conservatives broke\naway frum their party on account of\nextravagance, corruption and maladministration. The Liberal party can\nonly remain in power by meeting tlle\ndemand fur honest, clcr.n government.\nTlie day is past when men support the\nparty right ur wrung, guod ur bad.\nTlie people: want real public, service.\nThey want their affairs to be administered as a busincs would be cmu'tic\n.eel.anii in Hie public interest. W\nbelieve this demand willbe greater\nnow that the women liave tlie franchise. Tlieir votes will never go to a\ngovernment, characterized by tlie misdeeds nf the Bowser government.\nplace was actually a remit nf the\npeoplo, iu many aspects without regard to political affiliations, against a\npullticu! group whose mothods had bo-\ncuiiie intolerable,\nKXrosiltK (IK II.C. OOVKHMIKNT\nI Medicine Hut Nows)\nCanada is nut hankering after any\nmore exposures uf wrong-doing by\nmen lu public life lu whom have been\nentrusted tlie keeping of the country's\naffairs. But at the Bame time there\nis a strung determination tu expose\nwrong-doing wherever it is known tn\nexist. Tlle uverthrnw (el tlle lluwse'r\nadministration opens the way fur a\nrevelation uf graft, corruption and\nwaste which has nut been paralleled In\nany other province nf Camilla. For\nyears the Liberals of British Columbia\nhave been trying to persuade the people that their resources were being\nrecklessly squandered, but proofs were\nliarel tn get as the government was\n'er iii its manipulations aud the\nparty had no representatives In the\neglslaturc tu force the government to\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uveal lhe facts that could be tibtalned\ninly In this way. But now they have\nllieir opportunity and Hie promised relations will he made.\nthings that might go a long way In\nsolving the mischievous boy probli'in.\nThe Ilrst Is organized play. Idleness |\nIs the chief causo of mischief among\nthe boys. When thev reach the \"gang\"\nago they Bhould be organized into clubs\nand led nut tu healthy activities. Tills\nis a matter for the city as a whole to\ntako up. The second Is that they\nshould be taught to cultivate u civic\nspirit.\nWe cannot afford tu allow police [\nmen to teach uur buys civic duties.\nThere is a belter way. an easier and\na safer way. Tiie schuul authorities, or tlie church, or the city, or\nperhups all three combined, should\nundertake tu final something I'ur buys\nto tlo after selioul hours, iiiiiI on Saturdays.\nWe see almost un every vacant\nhouse a card offering \u00C2\u00A55.00 reward tu\nanyone giving evidence loading tn tlie\narrest nf those whu may damage the\nproperty. Now this sign is Just an\nInvitation in a buy tu throw a stone\nthrough the window nf the house\nupon whieh it Is placed. II mil only\neiffcrs tiie suggestion, hut It throws\nnut ii challenge iliiii few spirited\nveilllbs can resist. If lhe people who\nare sn willing tn pay 15,00 after a\nwindow nr twu have i n broken\nwould pay the $5.00 hefnre any damage Is dono lum >i (und, the objocl nf\nWhich shall lie lhe welfare nf tho\nbuys. II WOUld be belter business.\nA prominent Calgary citizen set a\nplemliil example Iii handling boys a\nslitirt time ago. A gang of buys ninth'\nfroqtlont e-lllls In premises uf this citizen, tre'iulug Ills children roughly, do-\ntrunylng buildings, and looting the\ngarden. But he did not semi for a [\npoliceman. He had a better knowledge\nuf the buy's nature than thoso who a-\ndupt the punishment method. The\niianies of the buys were lirst secured;\nthen tlie co-operation of the principal\nuf the scleuul was obtained, and a huge\nlawn party arranged. The hoys all\nappeared, ate all they could lluid, engaged 111 games need had a splendid\nlime. Neeelless tn say the buys gave\nun mure trouble. We recommend this\nmethod tei anyone in trouble of the\nabove character.\nWHAT\nSOLDIERS\nWANT*\nCapt. Brooks, of No. 4\nCompany, Ith Battalion,\nwrltinglromthe front,says:\n\"My men would be very\ngrateful to anyone who will\nsend them Zam-Buk.\nlt is In great demand for\ncuts, blistered heels, etc.\nParcels should be addressed to Co. Sergt.-Major,\nNo. 4 Co., 7th Batt., B.E.K.\"\nHe sure to Include some\nZam-Buk in your next par.\neel to the front. 50c box, 3\nlor UM. all druggists, or\nZam-Buk Co.. Torunto.\nr/jWiMll'\nTravel East or travel West\nShamrock Brand Excels the Rest\nSHAMROCK HAM\nBACON\nLARD\nBUTTER\nMade in the Home of Sanitation. All produce\nguaranteed Pure and Wholesome,\n>. BURNS & CO., LIMITED\nH. A. M.UIMtN.aMN VINDICATION\nI Victoria Times)\nTin: vindication o\u00C2\u00A3 M. A. Mac tin n a hi\nis not tlit* least pleasing feature of the\nelection. The premier and Ii.h colleagues, home und foreign, were determined to accomplish the ruin of the\nman Who helped to lead the way in exposing tin? decrepit condition of the\ngovernment. Mr. Maedonald waa vle-\nously assailed and every possible arti-\nnv resorted to In order to defeat him.\nHis triumphant return at the head of\ntlm poll in Vancouver is a complete\nnewer to the malicious aspersions of\nhis unscrupulous opponents.\nII. C. ITKNS OVBH\n(Calgury Herald)\nThere lmvo been :i any causes for\nthe steady weakening of Conservative\nprestige In the oov.A province, bul\nback of them all, anil responsible for\nmost of them, lias been an autocracy\ntliat was fostered ami developed\nthrough years of government without\nopposition, U is inevitable thut in the\nabsence of strong and vigorous opposition any government will sooner or\nlater fall prey to the worst tliat exists\nin, and because of, tlie party system\nthen follows more or less quickly the\nend,\nThe new Brewster government may\nbc no more competent than that of\nex-Premler Bowser, but it will start\nwith a better chance for straight\ngoing. Judging by results thus far\nreceived, tiiere will be a healthy opposition in the new legislature, which is\nthe best tiling the voters of tlie province have done in this election. The\nquestion as to whicli party is in power\nis of lesser consequence.\nI'F.Om: LOST Fall\nI Calgary Albertan)\nI'll\nThe people lost faith in a careles,\nreckles, autocratic, intensely partisan government. It was a straight\nrase of revolt of th- e* miuon people\nagainst the rule of a faithless and\nInefficient uiimiuistratlon.\nIssues played no part In th'' contest. Tlie government at the dying\nhour had passed legislation of tlie\nmost valuable and progressive nature.\nIt was not so much a stilfo tons coming from nearly L00\ndifferent mines, 22 of whicli an* located in Washington and Idaho and Do !\nbalance in Canada.\nIn August the ore received amounted to 40,814 tons, and is the largest\ntotal by several thousand tons of any\nmonth this year.\nThe gold-copper ores from Hossland\nrepresent the heaviest output, the zinc\nand lead ores from the Sullivan mines\nof Kast Kootenay and the silver-lead\nof the Slocan-Ainswortli section being\nnext in volume. Ores from more than\na score of American shipping mines\ncontribute a goodly tonnage also, running over UO.OOO tons for the year to-\ndate.\nthi\nof\nthere is no quarrel. The people's win\nKoverr.s.\nUpon tin* Majorities shown by the\nfinal vote in a number of ridings will\ndepend the strength of the two parties\nin tlu* legislature.. Small majorities\nmay he wiped out by the soldlc's vote\nwhich at thc present time In vory\nmuch of an unknown quantity,\nTill: I'OI'ULAIt VKKDICT\n(Victoria Colonist)\nIt hus seemed well to tlie people of\nItish Columbia to demand a change\nof administration. We greatly regret\ntliis, for we think a mistake lias been\nmade, but the people are masters and\nwe nccept their decision witiiout complaint, Wc earnestly hope that Hie Incoming administration win be able to\nj-ive the Province policies that will\njustify Hie decision at the polls.\nThe Colonist Is staunchly Conservative, but il places the welfare of British Columbia before party considerations, it will not otter any factious opposition to ii new administration, but\nwhile reserving and proposing to exercise the fullest right of crltclsm, it\nwill give what assistance is can to\ncarrying into effect everything that\nmuy be done or attempted, whicli in\nour judgment Is calculated to advance\ntlie public welfare.\nCALLING FOK NEW STAND AMIS\n(Vancouver World)\nWe believe the explanation of yesterday's vote lies in causes which tliis\npaper has again and again emphasized\nin the last twelve montlis. lt was the\ndeep, firm voice of the people of this\nprovince calling for new standards In\nour puhlic life, new Ideals for our constructive thought, und new mediums\nfor expressing its wlll.\nThe voice was the louder because it\nhas been so long Inarticulate, Statesmanship in British Columbia lias beeu\na matter of material things\u00E2\u0080\u0094of ruil-\nwuy subsidies, of bonuses, of financial\naid to tliis and that industry. Our\npolitical men were ashamed or afraid\nto sound an ethical note. Our most\npopular leader Sir Richard McBride\ngave no Ideals even for his own party\nto follow. lie eliminated from his calculation Hie chlvalrlc instinct which\nNapoleon knew so well how to employ,\nand his successor has paid the penalty.\nThe party system in British Columbia\n(for there Is no real difference in the\nmethods of tlie two parties) is built\non a dual system of rewards on one\nhand and pains and penalties on Hie\nother.\nTbe results on Prohibition strikingly\ndemonstrate that there was a great\nbody of latent opinion iu this province\nwaiting to lie marshalled and consolidated. While politicians were using\npatronage actual or prospective, to obtain helpers, tin* prohibitionists were\nrich fn some of the best workers In\nHie city und province\u00E2\u0080\u0094busy men aud\nwomen who made extraordinary sacrifices of time to accomplish the result.\nThe liquor forces would be doubly dls\ngusted today If they knew how lltt.lt\nmoney was spent to confound their\nprodigal expenditure. Most of these\ncitizens have not been active in politics. It is to the permanent advantage of the public life of Hits country\nthut men became interested in public\naffairs, through tiie medium of a great\nreform Issue, whom the ordinary party\nappeals left cold. This was emphasized by tin* fact that tlie vote for Prohibition in Vancouver was larger thun\nthat for any candidate,\nDUNK WITH MACHINE POLITICS\n(Victoria Times)\nThe people of British Columbia are\ndone with machine politics. They are\ndone with a political doctrine which is\nthe very negation of representative\ngovernment. They are done with tin\ntyranny of the patronage system,\nwhicli In its various forms lias brought\nthis province to the very verge of ruin.\nAnd they have served notice upon tin\nexponent, of what Is known as \"praiv\nileal politics\", the politician who op-\norates on the th -y Hint the elector\neither is a purchasable commodity or\nmay li\u00C2\u00AB Intltnldatod Into line, that lie\naud his Kind are nol wanted. The\nlesson of yesterday In not Intended for\none party only It is a elear*rut In-\ntlmnllon to nil parties. What took\nPeaches, Plums and Pears for\nYour Preserving\nNew shipments of B. C. Fruit arriving\nweekly. This is the time to do your\npreserving.\nIRA R. MANNING, Ltd\nPHONE 56\nRoad laborers ut Nelson want their\npay raised to 40 cents an hour.\nTI.MIIr.lt SALE XO. o'M\nSealed tenders will he received by\nthi> .Minister of Lands not later than\nnoon on Hie 'S2ml day of September,\n1D1G, for the purchase of License No.\nt>94, to cut 500,000 feet of Western\nyellow pine, fir and tamarack, on lot\n.1572, Kootenay District.\nMue 10) months will be allowed for\nremoval of timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief Forester. Victoria, 11. C, or District Forester, Cranhrook. B. C.\nWanted Immediately\nSawmill workers, Woodsmen\nand all others interested\nTee pi Overseas wilh (lie '.'Iiml Foresters Battalion, ('. E. F. uiul\nWORK AT YOUH OWN TRADE\nLumbering for the Allies\nTills Bnttn. I\u00C2\u00AB rapidly mobilizing at Montreal uml geecs overseas soon\nO. C. I.I. (nl. J. II. WHITE,\nIIKCHIITIMI OFFICE KASTKHN, 11. ('.\nI. r .It. Laml Ileiit. Iliillillng, Cranbrook\nHen lifting Sergeant*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Isaac Hurch\n|llllllli;illillllllllJIII!llJ!lllllll!llllllllllilllllllllllllllliill!IM\nI WAR LOAN I\ns ================== n\n| DOMINION OF CANADA (\n| Issue of $100,000,000 5'< Bonds Maturing 1st October, 1931. j\n\u00C2\u00A7\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PAYABLE AT PAR AT =j\nll OTTAWA. HALIFAX, ST. JOHN, CHARLOTTETOWN, MONTREAL, TORONTO, WINNIPEG, |f\nS REGINA. CALGARY, VICTORIA. =\n\u00C2\u00A7 INTEREST PAYABLE HALF-YEARLY, 1st APRIL, 1st OCTOBER. g\n\u00C2\u00A7= PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD. g\nISSUE PRICE 971\nA FULL HALF-YEAR'S INTEREST WILL BE PAID ON 1st APRIL, 1917.\nTHE PROCEEDS OF THE LOAN WILL BE USED FOR WAR PURPOSES ONLY.\ns\nMISCHIEVOUS IIIIVS\nCalgary has boen troubled with mls>\nchovlous boys breaking windows,\nstealing from gardens, etc., in tbe\nsamo wny as Cranbrook, imel a ri nt\nIssue nf tbe Albertan lias tlio following e'llitorlu! on tin1 mutter:\nThe destruction of property by\nboys nf th,1 \"gang\" iiki' in tlie city\nof Calgary muy be- token us u sign\nthat thero Is u serious lack of training along e'ertuin lines. One cannot\nfull to notice tbe number of vacant\nbouses with broken wlnelows, especially tlue.se bouses situated on the\noutskirts of the olty, all of which\npoint to the fuct thnt us citizens we\nhuve- fulleel to meet the nee'ils of the\nboy.\nSomo people advocate more, severe\ndiscipline in the honee, nt school nnil\nhy civic authorities, but let us hope\nthat such will not be taken seriously.\nA few days ago a Calgary magistrate\nsontencod a boy of tender years to no\nelnys imprisonment for stealing a\nbicyclo: We may not blame tbe, olllcer for so doing, nevorloss it Is a\nvory serpens mutter tee Imprison n\nchild. All bucIi methods ot dealing\nwith boys simply amount tn nothing\nley wny of Improvemeiiit, und nre\nroally harmful. To suppress mlsillr-\noctod e'lieTgy by nei'n' negatives Is almost Impossible1, need when It can lee\ndono it is dangerous, lionco it should\nlee lebullileineil.\nThere are- ut I, ;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-,! Iwee practicable\nThe Minister of Finance oITits herewith, on behalf eaf\nthe Government, the above named Bonds for subscription\nat 97}, payable us follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n10 per cunt on application;\n30 \" \" 16th October, 1910;\n30 \" \" 15th November, 1010;\n27} \" \" 15th December, 11110. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe total allotment eif ieonels of this issue will lie limited\nto oue hundred million dollars exclusive1 of the amounl\n(if any) puid for by the' surrender of bonds us tlio equivalent eif cusli under the terms of the War Loan prospectus\nof 22nel November, 1915.\nThe instalments muy be puid in full on lhc Kith day\nof October, 1910, ,,r on nny instalmenl due date thereafter,\nunder discount ut the rute of four per cent per annum.\nAll payments are to be mado lee a chartered bank for the\ncredit eif the Minister eef Finance. Failure lo pay any\ninstalment when duo will render previous payments liabld\nto forfeiture uml lhe allotment lo cancellation.\nSubscriptions, uccoiiipuiiii'il by u deposit of ten per cent\nof ihe amount subscribed, must be forwardod through\nlhe medium of a chartered bank, Any brancii in Canaan\nof uny cliartorod bunk will receive subscriptions uml issue\nprovisional receipts.\nThis loan is authorized under Act of the Parliament of\nCanada, imd both principal nml interest will bo II chargo\nupon the Consolidated Revenue Fund.\nForms of application muy be obtained from nny branch\nin Canada of uny chartered bunk uml ul the ollice eif tiny\nAssistant Receiver General in Canada.\nSubscriptions must be for even hundreds of dollars.\nIn case of partial allotments lhe surplus deposit will bo\napplied towards payment of tiie amount due eeii the October\ninstalment.\nScrip certificates, non-negotiable or payable to bearer in\naccordance witli the choice of llie applicant for registered\nor bearer bonds, will be issued, after allotment, in exchango\nfor the provisional receipts.\nWhen the scrip certificates huve been paid in full ami\npayment endorseil thereon by Ihe bunk receiving the\nmoney, they may be exchanged for bonds, when prepared,\nwith coupons attached, payable to bearer or registered us\nto principal, or for fully registered bonds, when prepared,\nwithout coupons, in accordance with tlie application.\nDelivery of scrip certificates and of bonds will bc made\nthrough the chartered banks.\nThe issue will be exempt from taxes\u00E2\u0080\u0094including any\nincome tax\u00E2\u0080\u0094imposed in pursuance of legislation e'liucte'el\nby thc Parliament of Canada.\nThe bonds with coupons will lie issued in denominations\nof 8100, $500, $1,000. Fully registered bonds witiiout\ncoupons will be issued in denominations of SI,000, $5,000\nor any authorized multiple of $5,01)0.\nTlm bonds will be paid al maturity ul pur nl lhe office\neef the' Minister of Finance uml Receiver General at Ottawa\nor at tl flico of the' Assistant He Ivor (lonornl at Halifax\nSt. John, Charlottetown, Montreal, Teereiniie. Winnipeg,\nReglna, Calgary, or Victoria,\nThe inlercsl em the fully rogistorod Ueiuls wilt lie puid\nby cheepic, which will be rcmlttod by post, Interest em\nbonds with coupons wilt be paid on slirreniler of ootipoiis.\nMoth choquos nnd coupons will be payablo free of exchange'\nat any branch in Canada eif any chartered bank.\nSubject, in tlie payment of twenty-five cents for ench\nnew bond issued, holtlors of fully registered bonds without\ncoupons will have tlie right to convert into Ieonels of the\ndenomination of $l,Ollo with coupons, uml holders eif bonds\nwitli coupons will hnve the right lo convert into fully\nregistered bonds of authorized denominations wilhoul\ncoupons at any time on application Lo the Minister of\nFinance.\nThe books of the loan will be kept at the Department\nof Finance, Ottawa.\nApplication will be made iu elite course for the lisling eef\nthc isstifc on the Montreal anil Toronto Stock Exchanges.\nRecognized bond and slock brokers will be allowed u\ncommission of one-quarter of one per cent on allotments\nmude in respect of applications bearing their slump.\nprovided, however, that no commission will be allowed\nin respect of the amount of any allotment paiel for by the\nsurreneler of bunds issiuul under tlie War Loan prospectus\nof 22nd November, 1915. No commission will lie allowed\niu respect of applications on forms which have not been\nprinted by the King's Printer.\nI\nSubscription Lists will close on or before 23rd September, 1916. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 g\nDbpah'i'ment oy Finance, Ottawa, September 12th, 1910. sj\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU THURSDAY, SEPT 21st, 1910.\nTHE CRANBROOK HERALD\nPACK TI1REH\nHow About Your\nild's Eyes\nLET IS MAKE AN EXAM-\nI NATION\nami tell you just what the condition If. If glasses are nosdedj\nthat Is our specialty. No need\nto Buffer from eyestrain, headache or norvoiiBiioas, Roniom-\nber, our glasses are gunrantood\nto aatlafy you Ask ymn* neighbor or your doctor aboul\nW. H. WILSON\nMH.. OI'IMIW\nTOWiN TOPICS\nKilby Framcy Plcturea.\nMrs. Moth left tbis week for Moose-\njuw where her sister is seriously 111.\nQ. M. Sergt. Williamson of tbe 225tli\nwus a visitor in Cranbrook this week.\nBandsmen Elliott and Parker of the\naiaJGth returned to Camp last Saturday\nMiss Aslang Andcrst: d of Wynndel\narrived hero lust week and will spend\nthe winter In this city.\nA shower wan given at the residence\nof Mrs. 1-. Clapp un Thursday, Sept.\nlllli. in honor of Miss Klsie Park.\nMrs. R J. Harrison returned to the\neity lust Saturday nfter it two month s\nvisit in New Drunswloke\n8 PHONE 8\ni lion i: dairy mill ii\nCOOKKII Mlt'l'S\nSMOKED IIU1S nml BACON\nKlitiN Kdl.S\nItKKK, PORK, MUTTON\nVK.ll. AMI LAMB\nSAUSAGE, DEAD CHEESE\nOur own make'\nI'liriti uml Flavor\nEverything In lhe Meal Line Hint\nIs lusty nnil appetizing ut\nCranbrook Meat\nMarket\nWATRH NOTICE\nDiversion and Use\nTake notice that Arthur A. Ward\nwhose address is Cranbrook, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E will\napply for a licence to take aud use\n125 acre feet of water out of Pmd-\nboinnie Creek, whieh flows westerly\nfrom Moyie Mountain ami drains into\nPeavlne Creek about one half mile\nfrom tlle mouth of Poavine Creek. The\nwater will be diverted from the stream\nat u point about twelve hundred feet\nsouth east of the nortli east corner\npost of lot 207 ami will be used for\nirrigation purpose upon tlie land described as lot 2D7, This notice was\nposted on the ground on the llth day\nof September. 191C. A copy of this\nnotice and an application pursuant\nthereto and to tlie \"Water Act. 1H14\"\nwill be riled In tlie office of the Water\nHecorder at Cranbrook.\nObjections to tlte application may be\nfiled with the said Water Recorder or\nwith the Comptroller of Water Rights,\nParliament Buildings, Victoria. B. C.\nwithin thirty days after the tlrst appearance of this notice iu a local\nnewspaper,\nA a. WARD, Applicant.\nThe date of the tlrst publication of\nthis notice is September nth, lfliti.\n37-4t.\nN1.A1, INSTITUTE\nTlmt craving gnawing desire that\nconsumes your vor> soul is removed iu\nJust three days No had atter effects.\nor return of the desire, unless alcohol\nis willfully indulged In on the part of\nthe graduate Writ-- for booklet, Neal\nInstitute. Cranhrook. B C.\nI ninbriiok Tii\i-|-'riuls| lm* o- m1\nfor lhe him I In*. \u00C2\u00BB7*>2I\nPte. Tom Loo, who has been home\non furlough, returned to Vornon camp\nlast Saturday.\nAs announced iii .lune lust the Methodist Ladles' Aid will hold tlieir annual\nha/tiur on the afternoon of .Nov. Utli.\nMr. and Mrs. Marapodi and children\nreturned home from a few days' visit\nwith friends lu Fernie.\nMiss Beryl Cameron left on Monday\nfor Calgary to undergo treatment for\neye trouble.\nMrs. W. H. Ayers of Klngsgute is\nvisiting in Crnnbrook and is the guest\nof Mrs. J. S. Taylor.\nMr. C. C. Connolly of Lethbridge\nwas a visitor In the city over election\nday.\nStore yoiu* valuables in Beale &\nElwell's suftty deposit vault.\nLieut. Harris, Lieut. Richardson nnd\nLieut. Brechin of tlie 225th are now attending school qualifying for captaincies.\nMr. Charles Batson of Rocky Mountain House, Alta., one of the old-timers\nof this district, is visiting in Cranbrook.\nSpecial Picture Show Rex Theatre\nTuesday next, matinee 15 and 5 cents.\nevening 25 and 15c, auspices of the\nI.O.D.E, Ice cream and candy for sale.\n1'tes. E. M. Davis and Bert Murgatroyd returned to Vernon on Saturday\nlast after spending a month's furlough\nIn town.\nA dance wns held in tlie Maple Hall\non Friday, Sept. 15th, given by the\nyoung people of Crunbrook in honor\nof Miss Jessie Kennedy.\nMr. Cecil Holm of the 102nd, Sarcee\nCamp, is here on furlough. Mr. Holm\nis a brother-in-law of Mrs. Joe Marapodi.\nMr. Miller, accou.itant at tlie Cran-1\nhrook bank, is In charge at the Bank\nof Commerce here, while Mr. Benuct '-.\nis on vacation. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Creston Review.\nThe Udles* Aid of the Methodist j\nChurch will hold a cookery sale on !\nSaturday afternoon. Sept 80th, A\nfurther announcement next week.\nThe monthly meeting of the W.C.T.r.\nwill take the form of a parlor social\nat tho home of Mrs. H. White on the'\nj afternoon of Thursday. Sept. L'Sth at I\n; 3.30. A program will be rendered.\nBeale & l.lwcll\u00E2\u0080\u0094Steniuship Agents. !\nMrs.. Wolf.', a well-known Inhabitant\nof Cranbrook and Fort Steele, has requested the Herald to Inform Uie aux-\nious public thut she has left for purtH\nunknown.\n| We are carrying u full lint or boots\nand shoes.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Craubrook Exchange,\n; \nustruug Ave.\nI The Maple Leal Rebekell Lodge will\n. liolU a meeting on Wednesday 20th\nSept. ut S o'clock in the Oddfellow\n| Hall. All members are requested to\n; attend.\nA big picture program ut the Rex\nTheatre Tuesday next, proceeds in aid\nof th\" I. (V D. E, he cream aud candy\nfor sale, Matinee 15c aud Bc, evening\n25c and Lfic,\ni. O, li. E. gratefully acknowledge\ndouatlon oi fiu from the !. A. of B\nol It 'I'., and $20 trom the people of\nKimberley, collected by Mr- Kg.*, and\n$l from a friend\nMr A Carney of Kaslo, one of the\nold-Mmers <>i th.' district, was au Interested visitor here election day and\nspoke .it a Conservative meeting in\nMathoBOn'a hall the evening previous.\nTlie September Iruit crop report\njust to hand places the creston and\nWillow point apple crop at 26,000\nboxes, with about 33 per cent .No. 1.\nLast year Creston bad an outpu tvery\nclose to 21,000 boxes,\nSafety Doposlt Bo:\nBeale ,t ElwoJlb.\nto rent; nt\nTEcpolisKiluis\neasiest fouse-\ndiesliineiWs\nHOE POLISHE\nKEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT\nW* F. D\u00C2\u00ABll\u00C2\u00AB| Co. ol Cuudt, Lid., Hamilton, Canada\nThe ministers of the town intend to\nmake a house to house visitation of\nthe whole city, with tlie object of ascertaining tin* complete membership of\nthe churches.\nJim Cameron who has been holidaying at Victoria for a couple of weeks,\nis finishing up tlie vacation with a\nvisit with his parants here before going buck to Cranbrook. -Creston Review.\nA Social Service Council has been\norganized in connection with the English Church. Its chief work wl): be\nthe formation of public opinion along\nChristian lines.\nMillinery opening this Thursday afternoon at Miss McLeod's millinery\nparlors, continuing Friday and Saturday. The ladies are invited to cull and\nsee the new designs in millinery.\nProvincial Constable Dunkin of\nWardner is filling tlie position of provincial constable here until a permanent man is appointed to fill the vacancy caused by Constable McGuffie's\nresignation.\nHelp the i. O. D E. fund Tuesday\nnext by attending the Rex Theatre,\nspecial show, matinee 15 and 5c, evening 25c and 15c. Ice cream and candy\nfor sale,\nMr. and Mrs. O, L. Stong left on\nMonday this weok for Calgary where\nMr. stong takes a position as traveller.\nMr. Stong has been a valued employee\nin McCreery Bros.\" store for the last\neight years.\nAmong thoso from this city who\nliave joined the Forestry Battalion\nand have left during the last few days\nare: Bill Jones, Norman Criswold,\nOscar Crawford. Sid Basket, Jack Anderson. Jack White, all old-timers of\nthe district.\nMr. ii C. McQuffie has resigned his\nposition here as provincial constable\nI and lefl this week for the Coast where\nho intends to enlist for overseas ser\nvice. Mrs. McQuffie has also left th\ncity.\nMr. and Mrs. van Braam returned to\nthe city this week from Medicine Hat\nwhere they have lieen residing for the\nlast few months. Mr. van Braam will\nresume Ms position here as accountant wttti the C. P, R\nThe annual meeting of the St. John\n; Ambulance Association was held at the\nV M i'. A on Tuesday evening. A\nfull report of the work during tlie\npast year and the election of officers\nlor the coining year will he published.\nWe ure carrying u full line of boots\nand shoes. Cranbrook Exchange,\nArmstrong Avo.\nMr w ii. Oreaves returned last\nwei'k from Spokane wliere Miss Delia\nGreaves commenced another term Ia\nthe Holy Names Academy. Mr (.reaves'\nson Jhnnite Is also in Spokane Undergoing medical treatment.\nThe ladies of Craubrook and district are cordially Invited tn attend\nMiss McLeod's Millinery Opening,\ncommencing this Thursday afternoon\nand continuing Friday and Saturday.\nThe very newest styles and models In\nfull and winter hats will be on display.\nj Mr. nnd Mrs. Tom Herron left Frl-\n|day for North Port, Wash., whore Mr.\nHerron is opening up a new cafe. Tho\nL. D. hore hns been aold to Mr. Walter\nWalters wbo has boon fn possession\n.for some time.\nTho 1. O. D. E. nro putting on a\nspecial picture show nt the Rox Theatre on Tuesday next, with matinoo In\nlite afternoon aud evening show as\nusual. Proceeds will go to the I.O.D.E.\nEvening 25 and 15 cents, afternoon 15\nand 5 cents. Ice cream and candy for\nsale during lhe show.\nTh\u00C2\u00BB plant Jam gift organized by the\nProvlnclul Chapter Daughters of tho\nKmpire, request donations. Tins\nhand, und ladies can cull or send to\nRed Cross Sewing Rooms Mondays,\n; Tuesdays, Thursdays and Frldnys from\nMl to (1 p.m. .Trim wilt be called for\nOctober toil).\nThe annual Harvest Festival Thanksgiving services will be held in the S.\nA. Hall on Sunday, Sept. 22th, at 3.30\nand S p.m. On Monday, Sept, 25ili at\nS p.m. there will hv a sale of gomls.\nThese services will be conducted by\nEnsign W Kerr, a former ofllcer of\n'.'ranbrook. A cordial invitation is extended tu :*H\nBeale & Elwell have been instructed to sell a large modern residence\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n4 bedrooms, furnace, bathroom, and\nall modern conveniences; large lot,\nsituated in the best residential locality; property cost $4000. sale price\n$2000. Apply to Beale ti Elwell for full\nparticulars.\nMi^> Gladys Attree is organising\ndancing classes in cranhrook to bo\nheld olternati W< dnesdays ami Mondays commencing Wednesday, Octoher\nisth. There will be classes lor both\nadults aud children in ballroom and\nfumy dancing. For further particulars\n*Tit< }\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 O. Box :;o4. Nelson. B. C,\na letter was received last week\nby Mr Man McDonald ot tiie Wentworth Hotel from Harry Ferguson who\nenlisted a fow mouths ago, Harry is\nnow iu the trenches In Franco along\nwith the other hoys from here who\njoined with him. Thej were sent over\nas reinforcements and lost no time in\ngetting into action.\nKilby repairs\nshades.\numbrellas and sun-\nSergt. Brown of the 225th is lu the\nIty after new recruits and would like\nto get in touch with any who desire\n;erve their king and country. Sergt.\nBrown says that tlie 225th lias a staff\nof very competent instructors sent\novor from Kngland and the front, who\nare drilling the hoys for actual trench\nwarfare, lie also nays tlie Cranbrook\nboys headed the list in the school of\ninfantry.\nTlie 107th meets now at the Fink\nFurniture Store near the Kdison, ou\nMonday evening at S o'clock. Sergt.\nBrown, who will be in Cranhrook for\na month, will take charge of the drill.\nA largo turn-out is desirable. To\nsave conscription let every man Intor-\n9ted in the cause of human freedom\nrally around the flag. Don't be a\nilacker or shirker, \"shoulder to shoulder\" is the slttgon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094CONTRIBUTED.\nTho latest in millinery designs at\nMiss McLeod's millinery show rooms.\nOpening Thursday afternoon and continuing Friday and Saturday. A cordial Invitation is extended to the ladies\nto call.\nMiss Gladys Attree was la tho city\nthe first of this woek completing arrangements for dancing classes. Miss\nAttreo will teach dancing in tho King\nEdward School, and will also hold\nlasses for children and ndults for\nboth ballroom and fancy dancing. Miss\nAttree lias been touching dancing In\nNelson witli much success tho last\ntwo years, anil this year is organizing\nlusses in addition in Cranbrook, Fernie, Maeleod and Lethbridge, and Is\nmeeting with gratifying success In tho\nnumber of pupils enrolled to date.\nHORN\nSpencer\u00E2\u0080\u0094In ('ranbrook on tho llth of\nSeptember, at tho Cottage Hospital,\nto Mr. and Mrs. W. Spencer of Yalik,\na son.\nKLGEE~On Sept loth, 1816, to Mr.\nand Mrs. K. P. Elgee. a daughter.\nFernie milkmen insist tliat if the\ncouncil requires dairy inspection in\nthat city that no milk coming from\nAlberta be allowed sold without similar rigid inspection.\nDon't\nWorry\nabout your digestive\ntroubles, sick headache,\ntired feeling or constipation.\nThe depression that induces\nworry is probably due to a\ndisordered liver, anyway.\nCorrect stomach ailments\nat once by promptly taking\nBEECHAM'S\nPILLS\nThey aid digestion, regulate\nthe bile, gently stimulate\nthe liver, purity the blood\nand clear the bowels of all\nwaste matter. Safe, sure,\nspeedy. Acting both as a\ngentle laxative and a tonic,\nBeecham's Pills help to\nRight The\nWrong\nUnl S.I. of AwMjiUto. <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*. Worfi\nWANT ADS.\n2c per word fur first week, anil lc per\nword for cae-li week after.\nHill H.tl.K line' Kl li.l k~ln,' und\nboiler.\u00E2\u0080\u0094J. ll. Hayes, Pt. Steolo. :!s-;tt*\nFOR SAIet: lieeeeel COWS, apply Mm.\nCadwallader, Cranbrook. 38-8t\nto KKNT (inw -Furnished house\nwith piano, newly painted and panoroil,\ncareful tenant neely. Apply phono 74\n:is-i!t\nI'lKie feer Hiilf BOVOn we'eteee eelel.-\nKre.el I'leirle. Wyelltfev .8-2t\nAUDITORIUM\nFriday, Sept. 22\nTHE UNITED PRODUCING COMPANY\nOFFERS\nDorothy LaVern, William Sauter and a capable cast in\nTHE SUCCESS OF SUCCESSES\nTill': DELIGHTFUL COJIEM OF YOUTH\nTill) PLAV THAI' APPEALS TO EVERY CLASS OF THEATRE GOER\nSPECIAL SCENERY AND EFFECTS\nPrices $1.00, 75c, 50c, Children 25c\nSeats on Sale at Beatty-llurphy Drug Store.\n\"Please send\nme some\nChewing\nGum:\nWRIGLEYS\nis the kind the boys all like.\nIt's sealed in a wax-wrapper.\nAir, moisture and dirt can't\nharm it.\nThe chap with some Wrigley's\nto pass around is 'cock of the\nwalk.'\nIt's so refreshing and thirst-\nquenching. Send some of both\nflavors.\nThe boys like \___m^> after\nsmoking and JtfjRlGUEY* after\n**ftiwi*i*iaiit'ip*\neating. ^ r\nWrit*\nWrigley'a Ltd.,\nWrigley BIdg., Toronto,\nfor free copy of qunent MOTHER\nGOOSE book.\nIIKI.LIAN IIKI.IKK\nTwo more contributions to tho Belgian Relief Fund aro lee lieenel this\nweek, bringing Ui\" f\u00C2\u00ABnel up to almost\njsoo.oi). There is still need for much\nmore money and Hi\" fund will lee' kept\nopen Indefinitely All contributions\nKent to thc Herald or lee Mm. Klim\nwill lee. acknowledged through tha\nHerald.\nProvlously acknowledged Jtht.s.'i; ee\nfrle'llll fl Ml. II rrkllll 110,01 teetiel\n'm.'ti.\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\neel' Cumuli!. Limited\nOIHoe, smelting \u00C2\u00BBi\"l Refining Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nS M E L T E 11 S AN I) it V. FI N E It S\nPurchtaeri of Gold. Silver. Ceiimed and Lend Ores\nTRAIL HltANIi I'll; I.KAIi. BLUBSTONH AND si'Kl.TKR *>AGE FOUR\nTHB CRANBROOK HERALD\nTHURSDAY, SEPT 21st, 1916.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS LODGE AM) SOCIETY CARDS\nGURD A SPREOLL\nBarristers, Etc.\nVV. F. Gurd G. .1. Spre'eell\nCRANHROOK, 11. C.\nTHOMAS T. JIECREBY\nBarrister, Solicitor anil\nNotary\nP. O. Box SW\nCRANBUOOK. B. C.\nDBS. K1N<; & GREEN\nPhysicians nail Surgeons\nOllice ut residence Armstrong\nAvenue\nOFFICE HOURS\nForenoons 900 l\" 10n\"\nAfternoons = 00 to 4.00\nEvenings 7.30 to 8.30\nKlllielavM 2.30 lo 4 30\nCRANBROOK, 11. C.\nI. O. O. F.\nKEY (ITY LODGE, No. 42\nMeeta every\n*tf\u00C2\u00BBi\u00C2\u00BB>-l MonJ'ay a[*ht\n^\\y$mt at Fraternity\nojourning Oddfellows\ninvited.\nS. Fyles-,\nN. a.\nDISTRICT NEWS\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nCrunbrook, It. ('.\nMeets every Tuesday at s p.m. In\ntin.' Fraternity Hall\n]{. C. Carr, C. C.\nP. du Vera Hunt, IC H. & s.\nP, o. Box 6811\nVisiting brethren cordially ln*<\nvltetl to attend.\nMOXUJ\nMr. and Mrs. James Roberts who\nhave lived in Moyie for tlie pust twelve\nyears left last week for Eholt to\nmake tlieir home. Mr. Roberts is employed at the Emma Mine.\nMrs. and Miss Conrad were Cranbrook visitors the flrat part of this\n>ek,\nMrs, Charles Uvesley of Wallace\nIdaho wns a Moyie visitor tills week.\nMessrs. Lindsay and Taylor of Kim-\nrlev spent the first part of the week\nhero.\nWm. Bremnor of Kootenay Hotel Is\nill in st. Kugene hospital. Cranbrook,\nlis. James Whitehead is In Crnnhrook with her sou Joe who Is ill in\nMrs. Bent's hospital.\nJohn McTavish of Hull Hiver wus u\nbusiness visitor hero last week.\nDR. F. \u00C2\u00BB. MILKS\nDENTIST\nOffice tu Hanson Hlock\nOFFICE HOURS\n9 to 12 a m.\n1 to G p.m.\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nCRANBROOK COTTAGE\nHOSPITAL\nMaternity uml General Nursing\nGarden Ave.\nTerms on Application\nMRS. A. SALMON, Matron\nPhono 21)9 P. O. Box 845\nPhone 846 P. O. Box 685\nW.B. BEATTY\nFuneral Director and Embolmor\nUndertaking Parlors\nFenwick Ave, near Baker St.\nOVERSEAS CLUB\nMeets in Maple Hall second\nTuesday of every month at 8\np. m.\nopen to British\nmembers cordially\nMembers\ncitizens.\nVisiting\nwelcomed.\n13. Y. Brake, J. F, Lower,\nPresident. Secretary\nWOMEN'S INSTITUTE\n. ~v, Meets In the\n^yMj, V&Q Maple Hall\nUH Jli* art*. flrst TuoH(jay\nafternoon of\nevery montii\nat II p.m.\nPres., Mrs. W.\nB. McFarlane.\nSecy, Mrs. John Shaw, P. O. Box 4-ii.\nAll ladies cordially Invited.\nMAItYSVILI-E\nHorn. Ou Sept 7th at the St. Eugom\nHospital to Mr, and Mrs. Geo. llnwke.\nll sou.\nK.A.lllll J.P. and family of Cran\nbrook, A.D.McColl representing Clark\nStewart aud Co, Vancouver, and K.A,\nRice of the Amorst Shoe Co, N.S\nmotored iu on Saturday.\nI'uul Handley und family of the\nCentral Hotel, motored to Oranbrook\non Thursday taking tn tlie fair.\nMrs. L.K.Herchmer aud Mrs. A.Q.\nJames returned from Cranbrook on\nTuesday.\nJames FergtlBOn of Coeur D'Alen\nIs visiting with Ids old college chum\nPeter Hill.\nMr.and Mrs. A.J.James and Peter\nIHU were visitors to thu Craubrook\nFall Fair.\nAlex McDormld received thia week\nsad news of the death of his mother\nat Olds, Alta, Mr. McDermld left at\nonce for that City to he present at the\nburlel.\nMAIIVSVIIXE\nLAIDLA>V & DEWOLF\nCivil and Mining Engineers\nB. C. Land Surveyors\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nF. M. MACPHERSON\nUndertaker\nDay Phone 288, Night Plione 3,'*\nNorbnry Ave, next to City Hall\nPhone 105 P- O. Box 33\nPROF. C. F. NIDD\nOrganist Methodist Church\nReceives Pupils for\nOrgan, Pianoforte, Voice\nEtc.\nStudio: 23 Norbury Ave.\n(MAS. S. PARKER\nForwarding and Distributing\nAgent for\nLethbridge Coal\nXJ-Ito Powder\nImperial Oil Co.\nDrnylng and Transferring\nGiven prompt attention\nPhone till\nThe Shoe Specialist\nJOE MARAPODI\nSalNfuclion Guaranteed\nHeadquarters for all kinds of\nRepairs\nI,. M. SMITH\nHAT RENOVATOR\nLadles and Gentlemen's Hats\nCleaned and Blocked\nOLD STYLES REMODELLED\nPhono 204\nTHK HOME BAKERY\nHold. Frame, Prop.\nFrosll Itrcad, Cakes, Pies\nnnd Pastry\nPhono 37\nNorbury Ave. Opp. City Hall\nMiss N. and Mr. Kd Handley visited\nCrunbrook on Tuesday to attend tin*\nmarriage of Mr. W. Lindsay and Miss\nJessie Kennedy.\n. rovinclal Holler Inspector Sutherland passed through the city on Tuesday en route for Kimberley.\nDistrict Forester H. B. Murray, Mrs.\nMurray and Mr. Kelly, chief scaler,\npassed through on Tuesday for the\nSkookumchuck country on official business.\nMrs. \V. Meachen of St. Mary's Lake\nIs spending a few days this week at\nthe Central Hotel, the guest of Mrs.\nHundley.\nA case of vagrancy was tried before\nN. W, Burdett, J. P., on Monday at the\nlocal police court, a fine of $i> and\ncosts being Imposed, Constable Ship-\nman proved the case.\nBorn\u00E2\u0080\u0094On Sept. 18th at Sunnybank\nRanch to Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Awmack\na adughter. Nurse dor den, late of\nMrs. Hill's Private Hospital. Wlnni\npeg, now residing with Mrs. Alves, is\nstaying with Mrs. Awmack during li\nindisposition.\nPERRY CREEK\nI). Burton has been putting up hay on\nhis ranch und lias u splendid crop\nHaying is all done now on the ranclie\nhere.\nThere has been quite a rush of miners doing asaesment work. Mr. Carr\ntook up another load of men Saturday\nThey are rushing tlie work us fast as\npossible.\nD, Mackintosh made a trip Sunday to\nthe Verconda group where he has men\nut work doing development work,\nMr. Mailor of Marysvlle drove to\nPerry Creek on Tuesduy.\nMr. Wussen of Tobacco Plains roil\nup to the Seott und Wassen claims\nWednesday. Mr. Wussen is one of the\nPernio soldier hoys.\nThe work on the Pot Hole has been\ndolnyed again on account of the pump\nbreaking. Work will be resumed again\ntho first of October.\nEvan Day, who has been spending\nhis holidays at Perry Creek, has returned to Kallspell, to resume his\nschool work.\nMr. Howard, who has been hauling\nfor the Homesteak Mining Co., went to\nCruubrook on Wednesday.\nH, Miller went up to tlie Homesteak\nMine after a load of voters Wednesday\nFORT STEELE\nMr. Dove, inspector of schools, paid\nhis ollicial visit Monday 15tli.\nMr. r. l. T. Oalbraith, secretary of\nthe school board, visited the school\non tlio 18th.\nConstable Walsh paid a visit to\nCranbrook on the 18th and 19th.\nMrs. J. Crowe and family have moved to Wasa for the present, where her\nsons are working.\nA very unique affair wus held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Nlcol, Friday llitli in the form of a corn roast.\nTlte scenes of action were two large\ntepees in which the guests rousted\ntheir corn. The gulden and trees were\nillumined hy Japanese lanterns aud\ntogether with the moonlight this mnde\nharming picture, Those from out\nof town were; Mr. and Mrs. Hush, Miss\nTurnbull, Wasa; Mr. Shin. Hull River;\nMiss M. Bailey Wycliffe; Mr. Williamson, a most enjoyable time was hail\nby all aud the supper served of\nchicken and salads deserves special\nmention.\nWntch this column Tor furl her notice concerning a Red Cross danco In\nthe near future and a patriotic society\ndance for Hallowe'on.\nMrs. J. Watson ami sons returned\nTuesday from Lloydminster where\nthey httVo spent .several months visll-\nlug Mrs. Watson's brother.\nMr. Chlsholm aud sons drove to\nCranhrook on Thursday last.\nFort Steele was very busy at election time, many people living In the\nvicinity coining into town to vote.\nThe children of Division 1 arranged\na merry surprise partv last Friday in\nhonor of their teacher. Miss Stella\nMason. Games were played and refreshments served, and both children\nand teacher state they bad a \"lovely\ntime.\"\nPrivate Tom Chisholm of the 225th\nleft lust Thursday i'or Vernon. All\nwere glad to see him during his\nmontlis' leave, which he spent at his\nhome here.\nSunduy visitors were: Mr. Hrown of\nTu Ta Creek; Mr. aud Mrs. Bush,\nMr, Bryco, Mr. Quartley, Wasu.\nMrs. G. Baker Is spending a week\nat Bull River.\nMrs. F. Blnmore, the Misses Fenwick\nand Mr. A. Fenwick visited Cranbrook\nSaturday.\nMr, Norman McLeod and nephew are\nguests of Mr. Alex, McLeod at his\nmine near Fish Lakes.\nBaron Slninghnessy nnd party of\nMontreal spent a few hours on business in Fort Steele last week.\nA jolly corn-roasting party was\ngiven last Wednesday by Mrs. A Nlcols\nin honor of her sister, Mrs. Usher, who\nis her guest.\nSolln Dunlop has written that he\nhas safely arrived at the front wltli\ntiie 120nd aud 54th.\nMiss Pltchford bas written of her\nsafe arrival in Kngland and of the enjoyable trip across.\nWe regret to hear thnt Mrs. J. Tannhauser has beeu forced to go to the\nCranbrook Hospital for treatment, on\naccount of a very sore foot.\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nThe Latest Styles for Fall\nand Winter\nOur Ladies' Ready-to-wear Department is\nbubbling over with the most beautiful Dresses,\nSuits, Coats, Skirts, Blouses, Sweaters, etc.\nYou will be much surprized at the quality of\nmaterials used in all our wearables, notwithstanding the fact that they are hard to get.\nWE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION\nAircncv\nPICTOIUAL REVIEW\nPATTERNS\nYour Money Back\nIf Goods are not us\nRepresented\nCOEUR D'ALENE\nSpokane, Washington\nTIIK HOTEIi WITH A\nI'KIISO.NAMTY\nThis leejusej lias thee\nhappy distinction of belies tlio favorite stopping place In Spokane\nfor tho people of BrltlBh\nColumbia Wc appreciate\ntills patronage uml do\neverything In onr power\nto make! you comfortable.\nOur location Is excollenl\nclose to droal Northorn Station\niiiiiI il. V.'. it >\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 N, Milwaukee\nterminal, nnd within a minute's\nwalk trom the principal business\nhoiiHeis and places nf nmtteemont,\nHOO HIi'IIIIIhIiIiI Illl Iteee','\nDR. DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS tt\ngiitatlug Till ior Women. f,\"> it boi or Uireofur\n'in. Bold at iill I'm.- Stores, or mulled to nny\nutdrwon receipt ol |,rU*o. Tin sumku. muu\nCo , \"*t. I ii!liitnin'ii, Uiitiirlti. __\nVH-illty: fur S.rvo mut Until; Ihcwmbi \"Ht*j\n. matter':n Tonic -will build yon up. ts n boi, or\nI two (nr U, nt Unit* mon*. or by mall on receipt\no'l'Hi'i* 'lm, -aii'A ..:. I'ui'u Co , St. <-\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABu*,rlnei,\nOntario,\nCAM FIXATION HV RESERVE\n.NOTICK IS HEREBY (11VKN that\n(lie reserve existing on cerium Inuds\niu the vicinity nf Luke Creek, Crun-\nbrook District, surveyed uh Lot 0029,\nKootenay District, by reason of a notice which appeared iu tin Brltlsii\n( olumbia Onzettc ou the 27th of Dec-\nntnbor, 1907, Is cancelled, uml that -ill\nvacant Crown lauds within the boundaries of said lot wilt he open to pre\nomptton entry on Monday, the nth day\nnf November, nm;, at the hour of nine\no'clock In the forenoon.\nApplications for entry will he re\neolved nt the ofllco of the Government\nAgent, ai. Crnnbrook, und must lie confined to an ana not exceeding Kill\nacre:;\nll, ,V KFN'WICK,\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nLands Hftfit , Victoria, ll 0,\nlit) Boplcinbor, IOR BO-lOt,\nBen Palmer, mine host of the Krag\nHotel, D, S. Currie und Hill Bernard,\nthe well known Conductor of Jim\nHill's Casey Jones, left on Mondny for\nn week's hunting around Gold Creek,\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Ross were visitors to .(affray on Sunday hist.\nMr. T. II. Anderson and wife, accompanied hy MIbs Bessie Turner und Mrs.\nC. B. Kline, were sight seeing in Klko\non Sunday.\nMr. P. C. Lawe und wife and H,\nJohnson uud wife of Fernie were In\nWaldo on a pleasure trip on Monday.\nII. It. Hoss left this week ou a bind\nnoss trip to various prairie points.\nMr. uml Mrs. Gorman of Elko spent\nSunduy visiting .Mrs. A. Dryden.\nAlthough the woods here have heen\npretty well scoured ever since tho\nhunting season opened hy countless\nnumbers, only three deer so far havi\nboon accounted for. Our visions of\nnice tender venison steak are slowly\nbeginning to vanish.\nElection day iu Waldo was lull of\nall kinds of excitement; tn fuct It\nvery much resembled a barber's pic\nnic. However, now that It Is all ove\nwe huve settled dowu to the sliuph\nlife uml to forget party politics for\nthe next four yours.\nMrs. W. A. Totten und Miss Edna\nIlottercll have returned lo their home\nIn Moose Jaw, nfter having spent several weeks the guests of Mrs. A. M.\nHeattle.\nChlntu Singh, a Hindoo appeared before, Mr. A. J. Joule, J. P., at the\nWaldo Police Court charged with being drunk and disorderly, and was\nfined $20 nnd costs or two months\nhard labor. He paid the fine. Anyone who had seen this ease would\nhuve had no hesitation In voting for\nprohibition.\nJack Hart, Provincial Government\nCruiser, took a gang of men into the\nYahk country to cut trails.\n(loo. A. Mclntyre of Vancouver was\na business visitor In Waldo this woek.\nPaddy Mclntyre, Waldo's only representative of the Emerald Isle was noticed taking an automobile ride on\nlection duy. This wns Paddy's first\nauto ride, and according to reports he\nure enjoyed It. Paddy says*, thim\nmotorhlles are folne things.\nPies Hurry and Tom Parker, members of the 325tli Ilutt.. returned to\nVernon lust week end lo rejoin their\nregiment after spending several weeks\nfiirhmuli In town.\nM n, Price, It. Jones and Francis\nllrlndhy, all of Ferule, were visitors\nlown tills week\nWASA FAIR\nTho second annual fair at Wasa\nwus held on September 8th lust und\nwas a great success in every particular. There was a gratifying attendance, and everyone thoroughly enjoyed themselves. There was a good\nprogram of sports. Including horse\nruces, hoys and girls races, mens races\nladies race, tug of war, ete. A Well attended dance wus held In the evening\nIn tho hotel. Following is the prize\nlist:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHorses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Stallion, any breed 1st H.\nW. Harr, 2nd Yahk Lbr. Co.; mare, any\nbreed, Yahk Lumber Co., G. Hannant;\ndriving team, driven by owner, C. Stevens, Cameron; rancher's team, drlv\nen by owner, IT. W. Harr, A. .1. Miller\nsaddle horse suitable for military pur\nposes C. Stevens, S. Maker; mare und\nfoal. H \V Harr, G. Hannant; girls and\nboys' saddle horse. Miss Lum, Miss\nCameron.\nCattle\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bull, any age. Unionist Investment Co., II. W. Harr; beef animal\nany age, II. W. Harr, Unionist Investment Co.; dairy cow, A. J. Miller, Unionist Investment Co.; calf 1910, II W.\nHarr, A. J. Miller; heifer under three\nyears, H. W. Harr, A. J. Miller.\nPoultry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rooster, any breed, A. J.\nMiller, Mrs. Hannant; pair hens, any\nbreed. Mrs. Hunnant, Mrs. Harr.\nDairy, Fodder, Produce--Sheaf dairy\nfoihler, A. J. Miller, G. Hannant; crock\nbutter. A. J. Miller; butter in prints,\nMrs. Cameron, Mrs. Hannant,\nAgricultural Products \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wheat in\nstalk or threshed, H. W. Harr, G. Hannant; oats In stalk or threshed, 11. W.\nDurr. A. J. Miller: barley. II. W. Harr.\nA. Miller; rye, H, W. Hurr, (1. Hannant\nVegetables \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cucumbers. Unionist\nInvestment Co., W. S. Cameron; cabbages, W. S. Hush. A, J. Miller; potutoes, A. J. Miller, Wl S. Hush; turnips,\nJ. Wnlmsley, W. S. Hush; beets, Unionist Investment Co., W. S. Cameron;\ncarrots, H W. Hurr, J. Wnlmsley; parsnips. G. Hannant, W. S. Hush; onions\nA. J. Miller, W. S. Hush; tomatoes. W.\nS. Hush. W. s Cameron; collection of\nvegetables. W S. Hush, Unionist Investment Co.\nFlowers--bunch table flowers. Mrs.\nHush, Miss Mary Hush.\nFruit\u00E2\u0080\u0094Euting apples, A. .1. Miller. P.\nWendfeldl; cooking apples, A. J. Miller, P. Wemlfeldt; cr\u00C2\u00BBh apples, A. J.\nMiller,!1. Weiidfeldt; collection or apples, A.J. Miller, P. Wendfeldl.\nBakery\u00E2\u0080\u0094Broad, Mrs. Hannant, Mrs\nHarr; plain cake, Mrs. Harr, Mrs, Miller; fancy cake, Mrs. Miller, Mrs.\nHush.\nFancy Work Miss It. Mather, Mrs\nHarr.\nIlll KEE LOCK\nW. II. Wilson, the Optician, has a\nvery Interesting display In his wofll\nshow window, which Is the very newest thing on the market in thi* simp')\nof Eye Glass and spectacle mountings,\nIt Is known ns the KeeLoek, and the\nImsinufuoturers absolutely guarantee\nthat it will entirely eliminate wobbly\nlenses.\nThe KeeLoek Is a very simple mounting and consists of a slot eut in the\nlense, and the mounting is inserted into the slot witb a very powerful cement. There Is nothing to work loose,\nthero is no possibility of the lenses\ngetting out of line, which is often a\nsource of constant Irritation to eyeglass wearers nud a frequent cause of\nImpaired vision\u00E2\u0080\u0094there is never need\nfor retlghtenlng. lu fact everything\nfrom the standpoint of the eyeglass\nwearer\u00E2\u0080\u0094strength, .style und safety \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhas been considered In lhe KeeLoek,\nMr. Wilson hus installed tlie necessary machinery and carries n complete\nstock In both eyeglass and spectacle\nmountings,\nCROWE\u00E2\u0080\u0094I'ARK\nX.MAS HUTS FOK SOLDIERS\nA very pretty wedding took place ut\nthe residence of Mrs. E. Park, Durlck\nAve., on Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock when her daughter, Miss Elsie,\nwas united in marriage to Mr. James\nLloyd Crowe. The house was very\nprettily decorated with cut flowers and\nferns. The bride came in on tho arm\nMr. W. C. Adlard. to the strains >oldlers by their personal friends. W,\nMendelssohn's \"Wedding March\", I will willingly uml gladly take charg.\nThe following letter has been received by the St. John Ambulance Association from the Canadian Field\nComforts Commission:\n\"It Is to be expected that Xmas gifts\nwill be sent to many units from their\n^v^;\n3SSk*--\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL MINING\nREGULATIONS\nrendered by Mrs. Ira Manning. Miss | \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00AB *\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -toward thews gifts or attend to\nTena Park, sister of the bride, acted\nas bridesmaid, while the groom was\nsupported hy Mr. Edgar Davis. Following the ceremony it dainty breakfast wns served, the table being beautifully decorated. Thoro was a magnificent display of presents of all descriptions, cut glass being very much\nIn evidence, testifying to the high\nesteem in which tho young couple are\nheld by their large circle of friends.\nThe gift of the groom to tho bridesmaid was a cameo ring, and his gift\nto the groomsman wus n stick pin set\nWith rubies and pearls. The groom\nalso presented Mrs. Manning with a\nbroach set with pearls.\nThe young couple left on the noon\ntrain for Trail. B. ('., where Mr. Crowe\nis in business with the firm of Crowe\nBros. & McLeod, grocers. The bride\nwas dressed in a navy blue suit with\nfur trimmings with hat of white plush\ntrimmed with pink velvet, and carried\na boquet of white roses nnd maiden\nhair fern. The bridesmaid was dressed In a navy blue velvet suit with\npink plush hut, trimmed witli pink\nroses and forget-me-nots, and carried\na boquet of white roses and maidenhair-fern.\nLINHSAY-KENNEDY\nA pretty wedding took place on\nTuesday, Sept. lDtli at 11 o'clock, ut\ntho home of Mr. und Mrs. Geo. Kennedy, when their daughter Jessie wus\nunited in marriage to Mr. William\nLindsay. The Hev. W. K. Thompson\nofficiated. The bride was given uway\nby her father while Miss Edith Caslake acted as bridesmaid and Jack\nMartin as groomsman. Presents received by the bride and groom were\nnumerous nnd beautiful. The gift of\ntho groom to the bride was a beautiful \"Sunburst Pendant\", to otho brldcB-\nmuld a pour sunburost und to the\ngroomsman a pearl stick pin. After the\nceremony a dainty breakfast wus served, ut which a host of friends from\nCranhrook, Kimberley, Calgary and\nMarysville were present. After the\nbreakfast the couple drove to the stu-\nllou with the usual accompaniment\nof llu cans und old hoots, which also\nloft Crunbrook with them, tied to the\ntrain. The honeymoon trip will I licit! do Spokane, Seattle and Portland.\nOu their return Mr. uud Mrs. Lindsay\nwill lake up their residence nt Kimberley, where Mr. Lindsay Is employed us an engineer at the Sullivan Mill)\nThe bride was dressed fn navy bin\nsuit with fur trimming und dark pie\nture hat and carried a boquet of whit\ncarnations. The bridesmaid wore\ngreen suit and carried a boquet of pink\ncarnations. Among the outside guests\nwere Mr. und Mrs. Alex. Tnylor of\nSix Mile Creek, B. C, Mrs. C. C. Snowdon. Calgary; Miss Hunley, Marysville,\nMr. and Mrs. H. S. Gamble, Mr. and\nMrs. P. Edge, Mr. and Mrs. H, McKenzie, Mrs. Thos Evans, of Kimberley; Mr. aud Mrs. Hugh Taylor, Waso.\nThe happy couple received many messages of congratulations from outside\nfrlonds.\nCoal mining right?, or the Dominion, in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and\nAlberta, tho Yukon Territory, the\nNorth-West Territories nnd in a por-\nuonie towns uud to many individual j tion of the Province of British Columbia, mny bo leased for a term of\ntwenty-one yea's at au annual rental\nof fl nn acre Xo more than 2,500\nwill be leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lease must be\nmnde by the applicant in person to\ntho Agent or Sub-Agent of tho district iu whieh the rights applied for\naro situated.\nln surveyed territory the lund must\ntbe purchase and despatch of special\ngifts for Whicli money is sent. Hut we\nwish lu addition to scud oue little gift\nto every man at tho front so that no\nono may lack a Christmas greeting. ___ m\nIt must be remembered that some un-|b? described by sections, of iogal sub-\nits are drawn from all over Canada\naud rarely receive comforts from home\nas do those that belong to one place;\nalso the battalions that are broken up\nhere are drafted Into so many and various units at tlie front that it is Impossible to send to them ns u whole.\nOnly a general distribution will ensure\nthat i.o one Is overlooked.\n\"Wo ure nsking for $10,000 for this\npurpose, ns we shall require ut least\n100,000 parcels. We shall send what-\ndlvislons of sections, nud In unsurvey-\nod territory tho tract applied for shall\nbe staked out by the nppllcunt himself.\nEach application must be accompanied hy a fee of 55 which will be\nrefunded If the rights applied for are\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shull be paid on the merchantable output of the mine at the rate\nof five cents per ton.\nThe person operating tho mine\nshall furnish the Agent with sworn\nreturns accounting for the full quantity of merchantable coal mined and\npay the royalty thereon. If the coal\nmining rights ure not being opernted\never wo can buy to best advantage; j such returns should bo furnished at\na handkerchief, some good chocolate\nor cigarettes, a Christmas card, etc.\nOur kind friends in Folkestone will a-\ngain undertake to make up the parcels\none for each soldier. Tho purchase,\ntho packing uud the transportation nll\ntake time and it Is necessary that the\nmoney shull be in our hands early iu\nNovember.\"\nLust year the Association endeavored to send a parcel to each man who\nhud gone from hore, hut this year, on\naccount of the men moving around so\nmuch It will be impossible but they\nhnve decided to respond to tbo appeal\nIn the above letter by sending all the\nsocks they can obtain by the middle\not October, also some. Money. With\nthis object in view a \"Thanksgiving\"\nTea will he held on Saturdny aftor-\nnooii. October Tth aud n \"Sock Day\"\nwill be held ut the snme time und place\nfurther particulars to be given later.\nAnyone wishing to contribute money\nmay send snme to the Secretary Treasurer and It will be acknowledged\nthrough the columns of the \"Herald.\"\nleast once a ye\nThe lease will include the coal\nmining rights only, but the lesee\nmny bo permitted to purchase whatever available surface rights may be\nconsidered necessary for tho worklnng\nof the mine ut the rate of $10.00 nn\nncre.\nFor full Information application\nshould bo made to the Secretary of\ntho Department of tlie Interior, Ottawa, or to nny Agent or Sub-Agent\nof Dominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of Ihe Interior.\nN. B.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Unauthorized publication of\nthis advertisement wlll not be paid\nfor.\u00E2\u0080\u009430090.\n(AltO OE THANKS\nMrs. J. BJ, Livingstone and family desire to express their heartfelt thanks\nto their friends and neighbors ror the\nkindly expressions of sympathy und\nassistance rendered to them during\ntheir recent bereavement, nnd also for\nlho many beautiful floral tokens.\nMONTHLY ItKPOUT I. O. II, E.\nMaterial purchased by com ml Uoo\n146.57, Mrs. McHrhh*, convenor, and\nMrs. MacKinnon,\nMondny Convenor, Mrs. J. F, Smith,\nIndies sewing Mesdamos Grace, Yoe-\nlnnd, King, Brake, Kay, Kyckman, ]\nItninsey, Smith, Horsey, Cooper Miss'\nHigglns. Work finished I surgical j\nshirts, 2 day shirts, :t suits pyjamas, 8 <\nhelpless shirts, 15 hot water covers.\nThursduy Mrs. F. It. Miles, noting!\nconvenor; Indies sewing Mrs. Miles, i\nMrs. J. Pulnier. Work finished 1 day\nshirt, 4 wuter bag covers, I suit py- J\njamas.\nFriday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Scott. MacDonald, convenor; Indies sewing\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mesdames Harney, J. MacDonald, Curtoos, Lonmon,\nParks, Tisdale, G. Taylor, Henderson,\nK. Simpson. Work finished\u00E2\u0080\u009410 suits\npyjamas; 24 helpless shirts, 3 day\nshirts, 1 doz. eye puds, 1 bottle cover.\nReport cutting of committee\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mrs.\nMiles, convenor; Mrs. Bliss, fl helpless\nshirts, Mrs. Miles 17 suits pyjamas, 0\nhelpless shirts.\nGoods packed (853 pieces)\u00E2\u0080\u009475 prs.\nsocks, 25 hot wnter bag covers, IB\ntowels, 20 buck towels, IB knee bandages, 37 eye caps, 120 triangular bandages, 1 package old linen, 30 night\nshirts, 5 helpless shirts; 5 suits pyjamas, 6 day shirts.\nTIMBER SALE No. 708.\nScaled lenders will be received by\nthe Minister of Lands not Inter than\nnoon ou the llth day nf Octoher, 1010,\nfor the purchaBO of License No. 703,\nto cut 10,000,000 feet, of Douglas Flr,\nCedar, Lurch, Yellow Pine, Whlto Pine,\nCottonwood and Hviid nnd Down Timber; nlso 14,000 Cedar PolOS uml Sti,-\n000 Hallway Ties, covering that portion of Lot L'Tl. Kootenay District,\nsituated south of the rjoul RIVW.\nTwo years will be allowed for removal of timber.\nFurther particulars of tha Chief Forester, It. C., or District Forester,\nCrnnhrook, 11 c. 34-Ht.\nMEIIHHHSTl III III II\nPastor itev. Thus. Koyworth\nOrganlBl Prof Chas f Nltltl\nSet-vices at II n.m. and 7.80 pin.\nSahhalh School at 3 p ,111,\nThe pastor will prench ut both ser-\nlees. Rvoryhody welcome.\nIn 50 years Lord Klutcheiier Is the\nonly Hritish War Seecretury who has\ndied In office. As a mutter of fuct.lt\nIs a tribute to the vitality of British\nCabinet Ministers generally that it |e\nexceedingly rare for one of thorn to\ndie while In office, sir II. Cnmbcl-\nHnnncnnnn resigned Just before his\ndeuth, thougli the Interval wus less\nthun 3 weeks. Pnlmerntou wns the only\nPremier In muny years to die actually\nhi office. Clarendon was foreign Secretary when he died in 1870, I-ord\nFrederick Cavendish, though not In\nthe Cablnet.wus Chief Secretary for\nIreland when ho was murdered.\nCumpbel wns Lord Chancellor at the\nSocks knitted-Mrs. Manning 1 pair, I time of his sudden death, but no Lord\nMrs. J. S. Brake 1 pr, Mrs. phllllna 2 (Chancellor since that time has died ln\npr., Mrs. Miles, 3 pr., Mrs. Tisdale 1\npr., Miss McMillan 1 pr., Mrs Stendor\n2 pr, Mrs. Maslo 2 pr., Mrs. (1. Thompson 2 pr.\noffice. At prosent there ure living\nfive ex-War SocreetarloB \u00E2\u0080\u0094Lord Lans-\ndowne, Lord Mldletou, Lord Ilaldano\nOeneral Scely and Mr. Asipilth."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Cranbrook (B.C.)"@en . "Cranbrook"@en . "Cranbrook_Herald_1916-09-21"@en . "10.14288/1.0070519"@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 .