"dd3f405e-a07d-42ec-b580-1f5a35e58b98"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-17"@en . "1914-10-14"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mherald/items/1.0311151/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " *\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00BA\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 4 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0+\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 +\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nm \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n4. REVELSTOKE \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00A5\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n\u00C2\u00BBf Chief lumbering, railway, \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n4> mining, agricultural and \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2f navigation centre between -4\n4 Calgary and the Pacific ocean 4\n>\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n4444444 4*4 444444\nThe Mail-Hepald\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 4 4-* 4 4> \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 *>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00A5 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nTHE MAIL-HERALD\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 Published twice weekly \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n 76\n^\nREVELSTOKE, B.C. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914\n$2.50 Per Year\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n\\nGOVERNMEiv\nBUYS POTATO^\nGrains and Grasses will be\nUsed by Canadian Pacific\nRailway for Advertising\nThe Alberta government has secured the entire Revelstoke exhibit ot\npotatoes at the Calgary Irrigation\ncongress, to be used ns seed on Its\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2experimented farm. Another tribute\npaid to the Revelstoke exhibit is\nthe purchase hy the Canadian Pacific\nrailway lands department of the\nsheaves of grains and grasses for\nadvertising purposes.\nOut of 13 entries, Revelstoke received the first award, gaining this\nprize in competition with some of\nwestern Canada's foremost farming\ndistricts. Amongst those competing\nwere entries from The Alberta Government school of agriculture, the\nCanadian Pacific Railway company's\nLand Department farm and from the\nlarger cities of Manitobe, Alberta.\nand Saskatchewan.\nThe success of the Revelstoke exhibit is highly gratifying. It has\nbrought Revelstoke and district well\nbefore the investing puhlic and prov-\n\u00C2\u00ABed conclusively that the district has\nagricultural lands of high standard,\nas well ns the climate Ior production\nIn the words of the Hon. Price Ellison, minister of agriculture for British Columbia, Revelstoke's exhibit\nwas \"neatly and correctly arranged,\nmagnificent in quality, and impossible to be improved on\".\nThe average nightly attendance at Ore Mow Being Shipped Coes Over Fifty Dollars to Sack\nthe congress was 10,0(in which crowded the Calgary Horse show building\nto the '.Imit. A choir of 50*1 voices\ngladdened the hearts of the visitors.\nThe Revelstoke Agricultural association wish to thank the many supporters for their generous assistance\ntowards the signal success gained,\nand more particularly wish to mention and to express gratitude to\nMesdames T. Steed, H. N. Coursier,\nFlames This Afternoon\nDestroy Serianni Home\nCause of Fire Unknown\u00E2\u0080\u0094Occupants Absent at Time of\nOutbreak of Flames\u00E2\u0080\u0094Contents of House Saved\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFuoco Home for Some Time in Peril.\nrnpv\u00C2\u00ABir.HT UNDERWOOD * UMnKIIWOOD. N. Y.-\nCOPYRlGNT UNDERWOOD A UNDEilWOUJ. N. t.\nRUSSIAN AND AUSTRIAN GENERALS?FIGHTIKG EACH OTHER\nGeneral Rennenkampf (left),'the Russian Commander, who is successfully fighting the Germans in Bast\nPrussia, and gradually making his way toward Berlin. On the right is the Austrian General, Victor Danki,\nwho is 'unsuccessfully opposing the advance of the Czar's forces in Gaiacia.\nLanark's Past Record Will\nBe Exceeded in Future\n-Twenty-three Hundred Ounces of Silver to Ton\nAerial Tramway to be Built Hext Year-Paid Fifty\nThousand Pounds Sterling in One Month.\nOre going over s:,0 to the Back is are 14 claims in the group now oper\nnow being shipped at tho Lanark ated by the Dorenberg syndicate\n. Some years ago the mine was work\nmine and some ore has assayed\nhigh as 2950 oz ol silver to the ton\nThe mine is now being op-\nK.K.R. Smythe and Messrs. George erated ,)y wmiam Dorenbcrg assisted\n* by M. Abbey and J. F. Rice. Seven .\nmen are working at tbe mine and the\nore is being taken out by pack train\nto the railway, a distance ol three\nmileB, and thence shipped to tbe\ntrail smelter. Four carloads have\nalready been\nand a filth is now being packed out.\nThe ore is silver-lead and gray\ncopper, and the latest work iB being\ndone on a streak ol high grade gray\nW. E. Leetsch who is employed in copper. The gray copper is beside the\nMcDonald's barber shop hus heard silver lead vein on a hanging wall,\nnothing of his wife and boh since a The vein varies from four to 25 feet\nfortnight before the beginning of the jn width and has been opened by a\nwar. His son, who was with his number of tunnels at different levels. camp tbere ig\nmother in Namur, was running a a. large amount of shipping ore has l(Unkhouses.\nhotel and hurher shop, and is now heen blocked out as well as a quanti-\nfighting in the Belgian army. Mr. ty of concentrating ore. J. F. Rice\nLeetsch 3ays tbat Belgian papers con- the engineer is now working on the\nfirm the perpetration of hideouB out- problem of concentrating, which is\nrages by the \"German soldiers. not expected to be difficult.\nard, The Hume ranch, D. R. Campbell, W. H. Pottrufl, Wah Chung, W.\nR. Smith, C. Haner and W. M. Lawrence..\nNo NnwioTwifi\nand Son in Belgium\ned by the Home Payne syndicate by\n.vhorn ore to the value of hundreds\nof t ousands of dollarB was shipped,\nvein which was of solid silver\nlead 12 feet wide by 16 feet long,\ntwo levels high, was however lost\nand the mine was closed. The Home\nPayne syndicate stoped out from the\nlower tunnel to the eurlace, 500, leet\nand Mr. Dorenberg has picked up\nshipped this summer thg ore shootB in every place where\nwork was discontinued. Operations at\nthe mine will be continued until the\nend of the year and supplies have\nbeen obtained so as to make an\nearly resumption of work in the\nspring possible. At tbe mine there is\na four story house with blacksmith\nshop and tram buildings and at the\ni residence, barn, and\n\"In the past this mine paid \u00C2\u00A350,-\nimO in one month\" Baid 0. T. Bibb,\nwho recently pa'id a visit to the property \"and I believe that it is going to make a greater record in the\nF. G Fnllis, B.A., Ph. D., late of be erected at the mine next summer\nthe high school Victoria, has been ap- The tram will be Vj miles long and\npointed Professor of History at the will give direct, access from the mine\nNaznrene University, Pasadena, Cal., to the railway. ,\nfor which place he left Victoria last The Lanark mine in 30 miles east\nweek. Professor FnlliB is the only of Revelstoke and three miles east of\nCanadian born of a faculty of 25 Illecillewaet. It is 1-J miles in direct\nprofessors, and is a cousin of Rev. .'.ne from the Lawrie tunnel on tbe\nG.O. Fullis ol Kamloops. t.he Canadian Pacific lailway. There\nAn aerial tram will, it is expected future than m the past The mine i8\nREVELSTOKE FOURTEEN YEARS AGO\n(FROM THK KOOTENAY MAIL, OCT. 11, 1900)\nThc city council met as usual on\nFriduy evening, there being present\nacting Mayor Abrahamson, Aid. Patrick, Kilpatrick, Newman, Gordon\nnnd McMahon. A plethora of communications from R. Tapping were\nread. One re the position of the\nOpera House on certain lots; smother\noffering the use of Opera House as a\npolling booth for the sum of $10;\nand a third asking payment of an\naccount of 841.17, for building a culvert on Campbell avenue. The location suggested by the committee for\nthe reservoir and pipe line Is on\nCanadian Pacific properly, nnd Aid.\nKllpatrlck pointed out thc necessity\nof Obtaining a lease of sites before\ngoing any further Into tho question.\nA pretty wedding took place in the\nCutliulie Church yesterday morning,\nRev. Father Thayer officiating, when\ntwo of Uevelstoke'H well known uud\npopular young people were made one.\nThe principal! were Mr. Ahx. HiibHon\n\u00C2\u00BBnd Miss Edith Lewis. Tho brldo was\nsupported by Miss Blanche McCarty\nwhile Mr. J Do>le performed a like\nservice for the groom. The happy\ncouple left this morning on their\nhoneymoon trip to Spokane.\nH. G. Parson's liquor headquarters\nis being removed from Front street\nto the A. Macdonald warehouse recently purchased for the use of the\nwholesale house.\nWm. Kikup entertained a number\nol his friends at a fish dinner which\nwaB served ou the beach across the\nColumbia, Sunday atternoon.\nAs a result ot the Labor Convention at Nelson last wjek tbe political\nfight in Yale-Cariboo Kootenay is\ndestined to he a three-cornered one.\n| The appearance of a third candidate\nin the field makes the situation some-\nI What comi'lii-.'ited an I will .necessitate harder work on the part ol the\nfriends ol candidates Oallihsr nnd McNeill, Chris Foley, the Labor nominee, is looked upon as the strongest\ncnndldnte tbc Labor people could\nli.iv put in the field.\nwell located and immense depths can\nbe obtained oy tunnelling and no\nsinking is required\". Mr. Bibb is\nconfident thut the property is of\ngreat value and that the results now\nbeing obtained will tend to stimulate the mining industry in the - Revelstoke district.\nBowling Club Formed\nOfficers are Elected\nLast night a meeting was held of\nthe Y. M. C. A. bowling club with 12\nmen present. K. McRae wub elected\npresident ol the club for the ensuing\nyear, N. R. Brown as vice-president,\nand J. L. Hay as secretary.. A committee was appointed to druw up a\nschedule and 'it was decided to commence the fiiBt league game on Tuesday -20th.\nSeven teams have already entered\nfor the league^ and as the schedule\nhas to be drawn up for Friday, all\n1 teams wishing to enter for the lea-\nI gue must have their names in at the\nsecretary's office not later than\nThursday night. The Fire Hall have\n' entered two teams A. and B. A preliminary game between the two lat-\nj ter teams will be played ofl tonight.\n1 The game commences at 8 o'clock.\nThe Manitoiilin Indians are showing their loyalty in a very practical\nmanner by requesting the department\nol Indian Affairs, Ottawa, to pay to\ntbc Canadian war fund out of the\nIndian (und various sums as agreed\nupon by each band.\nTAKE TOLL OF\nFISH AND BIRDS\nMany Parties Spend Thanksgiving Day Hunting and\nFishing\u00E2\u0080\u0094Good Bags\nThanksgiving day was observed as\nja public holiday in Revelstoke on\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' Monday, and although the sky was\nt overcast during the greater part of\n! the day only a few drops oi rain fell\nand the holiday was generally enjoyed. The turkey supper ut the Y.M.\nC. A. in the evening was the centre\nof attraction and many subsequently\nattended the lecture by Dr. Dawson\non his long tramp round the world.\nIn the morning the Home Guard held\na well attended practice shoot at\nthe rifle range. Many went into the\nmountains shooting and fishing and\nsome good bags were brought back\nto the city.\nJos. Hack and his son Harry, G.\nR. Lawrence and his son Dick, J.'\nLidstone and John Markstrom spent\nSunday and Monday on the upper\nlorks of Crazy creek, east from Taft\non a fishing and shooting trip. While\nthe weather was not. very \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 agreeable,\n! yet they enjoyed fair success, bring-\n\ ing out about 175 trout and a few\ngrouse. Caribou promise to be very\nI plentiful in that country later in the\nfall after snow comes\nWhile walking up the trail on\nMount. Revelstoke, W. E. Shuttle-\nwood encountered a huge black bear.\nMr. Shuttlewood's dog was much\nalarmed but Mr. Shuttlewood looked\nthe hear steadily in the eye and it\nturned tail and crashed through the\nundergrowth at its best pace.\nSeveral parties went up the Jordan\non fishing excursions. K. McMahon\nand J. Henderson caught 25 fine\ntrout and on their return covered\nthe 11 m^es of trail in less than\n1 three hours. Another party also up\nthe Jordan trail found their cache\nj and purloined some ol their fish, but\nMcMahon and HenderBon compelled\nrestibutlon of their property.\nHart Munroe, E. Corley and F.\nTillman spent the week end hunting\ncaribou, but their bag was light on\nthc return journey.\nA. Parker and J. Brown who went\nup the Jordan returned with one\ngrouse and a trout.\nV. Tomlinson and G. Tomlinson\nwent to Clanwilliam and Greely creek\nand secured a fine basket of fish and\nsome grouse.\nW. I. Briggs and Lemuel Briggs\nwho were out hunting, returned with\na good bag of grouse.\nDIVERS FAIL TO FIND\nBODY AT HALCYON\nHalcyon, B.C., Oct. IH.-The search\nfor the body of W. H. Murray, Armstrong, who fell from the wharf into\nthe lake on September 2',\, has been\ngiven up ns hopeless. A brother, H.\nHI. Murray, arrived last week with\ntwo divers und apparatus from Vancouver, who searched under and\naround the wharf and exploded sev- j\noral heavy charges ol dynamite. '\nFire this afternoon totally destroyed the home of Ed. Serianni on\nTownley street in the Italian settlement on the outsklrks of the city.\nAn alarm ivas run in from Box 21,\ncorner of Fourth and Townley street\nabout 2 o'clock and the tire brigade\nwas quickly on the scene, but could\ndo nothing as no hydrant was available.\nMr. Serianni's two story frame\nhouse and outbuildings were completely destroyed, but most of the\ncontents of the house were saved,\nbeing carried out and piled on the\nroadside by neighbors. The house oc\ncupied bj Jo Fuoco was for some\ntime in Imminent peril as the outbuildings of the two houses closely\nadjoined, hut with the aid of water\nIrom u garden nose the tire was kept\n'r.ein -spreading.\nMi. and Mrs. Serianni were out at\nthe t'mie the tire started and tbe\ncause ol the outbreak is unknown.\nSmoke was first observed issuing\nfrom the windows ol the bedroom ou\nthe upper story.\nThe damage is estimated at $2000\nwith no insurance.\nThe lire attracted a considerable\nthronz of onlookers who arrival in\nvebecles of all kinds and on foot.\nSPOON AND\nMEDAL WINNERS\nHome Guard Hold Rifle Shoot\non Thanksgiving Day-\nHandicaps Announced\nThe silver spoon and gold medal\nwere won at the Thanksgiving day\nshoot of the Home Guard by H. H.\nB. Abbott who at 2O0 yards scored\n.13, being top score without his\nhandicap allowance of 2. E. G. Hadow with \"27 took the silver medal\nand G. Hawker, who also scored 27,\ncarried ofl the bronze medal.\nAt the weekly shoots ol the Home\nGuard the silver spoon is awarded to\nthe highest score including handicap while the medals are won without considering the handicap.\nAt the 500 yards range Capt.\nSmith made highest score, 32, R.\nGordon and Lieut. Brock being Becond with -29 each.\nAt the shoot on the preceding day,\nCapt Smith won tbe gold medal,\nCapt. T. E. L. Taylor the silver and\nDerr the bronze, Smith making 29,\nTaylor 2S and Derr -27. Derr's handicap allowance put him at the head\nol the list and he carried ofl tbe\nsilver spoon.\nThe scores were as follows:\n200 yards.\nTl. h.c. al. h.c. tl.\nAbott, (spoon) ... 33 2 35\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Sgt. Gibbcrd 29\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Lieut. Brock 29\nHadow 27 1 28\nHawker 27 7 34\nLieut. Wallace 26 scratch 26\nMortimer 24 2 26\nrftouex 23 23\nCapt. Taylor 23 1 24\nMcVity 22 4 26\n*R. Gordon 22 22\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2G. McMahon 22 22\nDerr 21 2 23\nParker 21 6 27\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Robinson 20 20\nWood 19 10 09\nCapt. Smith 19 scratch 19\nH. Gordon 18 10 28\nBews 17 17\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Pte. Cotcher 17 17\nMiirshell 17 5 22\nC. Gordon 13 13\nHolmCB 13 9 22\nMacdonald 13 13\nSiquarebrlggs 12 10 22\nDavey 10 10 20\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Denotes not eligible for spoon us\nnot members of Home Guard.\n'Continued on Page Eight.)\nTELLS OF TRAMP\nROUND WORLD\nInteresting Lecture by Dr. Dawson after Thanksgiving Day\nSupper at Y.M.C.A.\nAfter the than! sgiving dinner at\nI the R.Y.M.C.A. on Than-sgi.-ing diy\nDr. Dawson who is on sn s5,'iiu' .nile\nj tramp around the world for a ', :\u00C2\u00A3e\nof 8*25,000, gave an interesting account of his experiences.\nR. Howson introduced the sr'al'er\nland mentioned that Dr. Daw in was\n1 for 10J years prior to tbe StaTting -in\nthis tramp exploring in Austr\u00C2\u00BB ia ior\nthe Australian government, by which\n, be has been granted a pentii'jti.\nDr. Dawson'Stated tbe rules \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>! tre\nI contest in which he was eugiged as\nalready published in the Mail l^ra'd\nand gave a brief account of the rout\u00C2\u00AB\nover which he has travelled. :!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' mentioned sever il rmusing incidents\nwhich happened to him in \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0? countries through which he haa pa\u00C2\u00AB<\"0\u00C2\u00AB.\nHe visited the principal :iti-s in\nevery county in Europe and \"ild >'\nbeing imprisoned for five Te rxs *n\nSiberia and of a serious fracas with\nRussian officers. Through Gam la Le\nj had rather a bard tilp during last\nwinter, one of his experiences being\nfalling into Lake Superior with the\nthermometer registering :lfi degrees\nbelow zero and freezing his ten. He\nlectured in all the large iia:->s he\npassed through. He had found tbe\npeople oi' the west and especially ot\nBritish Columbia much more bi.Fplt-\nab'e than those of tbe eastern p'O-\nvinces.\nAfter the s\"ea* er bad concluded,\nMr. Howson asked him to explain\nhow he fell into Lake Superior find\ncot wet when the thermometer v. as\nregistering 36 degrees below. Dr.\nDawson in reply stated that >,\u00C2\u00BB. ing\nto an exceptionally heavy gp.le tbe\nice along the shore in places 1 ad\nbeen broken up and after slip.) ig cfl\nthe railw.iy ties he could not get a\nfooting on the icy rocks.\nA collection was taken up for Dr.\nDawsnn and the meeting closed with\nthe singing of the nutionul anthem.\nMax Linder. probably tbe most\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2roted cinematograph art \"t in thu\nworld was killed in action at the\nbattle of thc Aisne.\nFor three centuries English weeks and some are already work-\nbusiness programme to be submitted jng. The regulations require absolute\nto parliament at its next session conformity. The shells are taken in\nwill, it is learned, from official \"clr- lots af 100 and one in each lot is\neles be very brief und devoid of con- tested, ll it. proves faulty the whole\ntentious measures. It is anticipated, ' lot is returned.\nin consequence that the session will : \t\nbe unusually brief, having regard to Twelve months' famine which only\nthe conditions which obtain because outside aid can avoid, faces the\nthe Empire is at war. In consequence Kwang Tung and Kwnnd Si provin-\nof this, if a sesBion beginning Nov. ((>g jn China which were devastated\nI, would have any chance of conclud- by floods on July 10 with a loss . of\ning before Christmas it will be sum- ::,00O lives and more than 100,000\nmoned, if not it will probably be homes. Consul-General Cheshire resummoned in January.\" ports from Canton that more than\n6,000,000 people suffered losseB\nSir Charles Johnston was last and mony mlll'ions would need food\nweek elected Lord Mayor ol London until the next harvest.\nfor one year, beginning November 9. \t\nHe succeeds Sir Thomas V. Bowater. J Owing to the failure of the United\nBecause of tbe war there is every states to approve regulations gov-\nprobahllity that the annual pageant enning the taking of food fish in\nof November >l will be abandoned, boundary waters, tbe Canadian gov-\nond it is probable that the great ernment is about to serve notice that\nbanquet 'in the Guildhall, which an- it will resume its liberty of action,\nnually marks the installation of the ,\ treaty between the two countries\nnew Lord Mayor, alsominy be obmit- was signed six years ago for tbo ap-\n*e I ine guns, capable of tiring\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 iiiiniit.ee To each gun\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 train of three more\n chines, The forepart of\nre the driver sits, is\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . pi I A hood,\ni low steel\nn height, be\nI in lie\n\ /. e gllllH\nI direct ms Tho\nTwo and a Half Hours\non Operating Table\nSpecialist Could Not Remove Stone\nIn Tha Bladder\nGIN PILLS PASSED IT\nBelgian soldien\nKm \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 il II\n;n I he di 'v\nide, *| he nldii I tin thi\nnn\nI mi BATTL1 OI HO.FSTADE\nwhich liny gum\n. railway\nmini\nnl ihe trenches\nlip loi\nwith *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nthe\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i- Q,\n\"Th t last, 1 t to .Moii-\n' l.e \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 11\ni.e iii the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ild the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I too\n! .- ml\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' ! (\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> try\n-\niin, i took two\n-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 but he\nCeOUld nOt 1 til' e|\nI \"irn.-d\nlr in. andi c,l\\" PILLS,\nnnd I\" .end joy, I\nI tl\n! the besti\nirld e thi\nnun ll \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 il\ntli. !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\". I,\n1. At.imnT l,vs*Mtn.\n50c sh ri at slid\naivl in it ii ih. v 1 nl 'o give\nrelief. Sample fn nsl Drug &\nCham. Co. ot 1 mads, United, T< \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nMR. H. N. COURSIER has moved temporarily into our building\nwhile his own is being repaired, everyone is pleased to see him\naround again after his illness. We read that those Buffering from\nLumbago usually drink too little fluid, we should not have suspected this in Mr. Coursler's case but can readily understand why\nthe Medtical Fraternity do .not worry much over this complaint for\nthe reason that they never have it themselves. We have pr-escribeBd\nfor Mr. Coursier and il he taken the treatment, he should spend a\nvery pleasant winter.\nIn the meantime you can buy Oonrsier's Coal and McClary's famous Stoves In the same building. We have a large stock of\nHeaters, Ranges, C&c.,\nthe brat made, also stove pipes, elbows, coal hods, stove boards.\nWe are just unloading a carload of NO. 1, WHEAT. Government\nInspected, guaranteed free from rust, smut, weevils and gollywogs,\nit is not too good for chickens, tut is too good to last long at\ntbe price we are Belling it at.\nBOURNE BROS,, LIMITED\nGROCERS AND HARDWARE DEALERS\nA. Douglas Tourner Photographer\nFor Good Portraits Have a Sitting at Once\nFilms Developed and Printed\nFirst Street\nNext to Union Hotel\nHave You a\nFriend\t\nor acquaintance out-of-town who\nwould like to read all that happens\nin and around Revelstoke from Sunday morning to Saturday night?\nYou get tired of writing\u00E2\u0080\u0094everybody\ndoes\u00E2\u0080\u0094let us tell the news in the\nmost interesting way it can be told,\ngraphically, fully, and truthfully.\nHere is Our\nOffer\t\nFill in thc attached coupon, enclose\n$1 only, and we will send Revelstoke's best newspaper to any address\nin Canada or Great Britain for SIX\nFULL MONTHS. Take advantage\nof this exceptionally good offer today. It may be withdrawn at any\ntime. If you wish to boost Revelstoke here is the easiest, cheapest,\nand most effective way.\nCOUPON\nTo The Mail-Heraid, Revelstoke\nSirs: Kindly send The Mail-Herald for six months\nto thc following address\nfor which I enclose the sum of SI.\nYours Truly,\nMail-Herald\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2#\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"',\nPrinting\nWILL PLEASE -YOU \u00E2\u0080\u00A2WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD. REVELSTOKE\nPAGE THRBB.\n- IN HEART OF CITY\nHOTEL SAVOI\nSEATTLE\n\"Twiilvo Storlei o( Solid Comfort\"\nIn tlio centre of tliinsi\u00E2\u0080\u0094theatrea\nand Itoreaon both rides, Buildliw\nuhiilule ly fireproof\u00E2\u0080\u0094concrete,8t\u00C2\u00ABeeil\nand marble.\nEUROPEAN PLAN\u00E2\u0080\u0094tl p\u00C2\u00ABr<).yop\nWith Batha\u00E2\u0080\u0094(2 per day up\nH. W. EDWARDS.\nTaxidermist.\nBear Rugs Mounted. Furs cleaned\nand Dressed,\nti Second Street, Revelstoke.B.O.\nKOOTENAY LODGE, No. 15 A.F.\nand A. M.\nRegular Meetings are held la\nNew Masonic Hall on the Fourth\nMonday in each month at 8 p.m.\nVisiting brethren are cordially\nwelcome.\nWALTER BEWS, W. M.\nROBT. GORDON, Secretary.\nC. W. 0. W.\nMountain View Camp No. 229\nMeets Second and Fourth\nMonday In each month in\nSelkirk Hall. Visiting Woodmen are cordially invited to\nattend.\nJAMES McINTYRE, 0.0.\nH. W. EDWARDS, Clerk.\nCOURT MT. BEGBIE NO. 3461\nOF I. 0. F.\nMeets ln St. Francis Lodge Room\nevery Second and Fourth Monday\nIn month. Visiting brethren are\ncordially welcomed.\nH. V. MORGAN, C. R. '\nG.W. CARTWRIGHT. Rec.-Sec.\nSELKIRK LODGE No. 12\nI. 0. 0. F.\nMeets every Thursday evening ln\nSelkirk Hall at 8 o'clock. Visiting brethren cordially invited.\nA. G. DUCK, N. G.\nJAMES MATHIE, Secretary.\nGOLD RANGE LODGE, No 26\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nMeets every Wednesday\nevening at -k., in Selkirk\nHall. Visiting brothers\ncordially invited.\nH. KBMPSTER, 0. 0.\nhi a\nReveUtoke Lodge\nNo. 1085\nLOYAL ORDER\nOF MOOSE\nMeets every second\nand Fourth Tueesday\nin the Selkirk Hall.\nVisiting Brethren are cordially invited.\nDr. McLEAN, Die. H.L. HAUG, Sec.\nFor Rent\nFIVE ROOM\nCOTTAGE\n$15.00 per Month\nAlso House vacant by Oct. 15\nCheap rental\nDominion Security Co., Ltd.\nCITY TRANSFER CO.\nBaggage Transferred\nDistributing Agents and Storage\nGENERAL DRAYING\nFurniture snd Piano-moving a\nSpeciality\nPhone 40-5J76. Night Phone 340\nSWITZER BROS.\nJ. H. CURTIS\nLumt\numbermen\nIt will pay you to\nmake a call at\nF. B. WELLS,\nPur Buyer and Exporter\nOld Town, - Revelstoke, B. C\n>before buying your outfit of working clothes\nfor tbe bnsh. I make a\nspecialty of Lodging\nShoes, Pants, Sox, Shirts\nBlankets and everything\nrequired In vonr business.\nSUTTON'Q\nfor garden and farm ore boa 1\nfor ft C noil Sev Catalog-*** fox\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2olid dunrnnl\u00C2\u00BBe of purity\nana jjermination\nSend now for Copy froo\nSutton ft Sons Tho King's Soodmon\nH m m A \ \u00C2\u00BB4 r. n jf loud\nA. J.Woo ol w ard\nVitlane m V antouuir\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 IS r\u00C2\u00BBrr ft. 4\u00C2\u00BB7\u00C2\u00ABr\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABvlll\u00C2\u00AB Set\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2IMTt ton \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABfTIIH COLUMBIA\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 in-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nitlmi:! \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 to come I America.\nIn add I they i red on\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nering thi e had in tbe\nThe same I pened after the\nDECLINE SUBSTITUTES\nVPPBAL TO WOMEN\nTo the Editor of the Mail Herald.\nBir. -The Revelstoke Relief society\nwould like to make ar urgent appeal\nthrough the medium of your valuable\ncolumns to tbeir fellow women to\ninterest themselves in sewing, knit-\ntin -. etc. for the benefit of our I rave\nwho are going to the front.\ni Is fast approaching and it is\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2he dut\ and privilege of every iron-inn in the British empire to do\n' *' v can to mitigate the sufferings of the men who are wi':.\n!aj lown their lives for\n\- the outset of w\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nvas heme entered op. that would\nre to\nThere n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -lace-\ning now. 1\ntime and\nThere is a meel\nand\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ndirectly d r the\nf< r tli\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . I\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nAT THF: THF.ATRI ,\nt tbi\n' The flnaft\nirlcufl,\ne j ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E which\nMl Ins\nrival from tbe trlbun in the\nCirrus .1 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 nun- ei,, of .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-;-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 lions In the - iw, The\n-\ni ndered I hat one wonders in the\nions are not & i at the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0eets Of NorlCUl left f\"r their\nbill of fare BpartaCUS IS decidedly\n' he l.e t uroi 'i In pictures.\nTonight it the Apollo a strong\n, -ii um \"Tin- Return oi Oal\nClawson\" win be shown 'ne two parti\n\"The Hour of fouth,\" \"An indlans'\nHonor\" mil \"A Kiim Johnnie\" will\nll 0 he Heen.\nTomorrow Bight, Bpliode No Ol\n\"The Million Dollar Mystery\" will\nhe shown With three other pictures,\n\"Tlir' .Second ClilO,\" \"An Amateur\nAnimal Trainer,\" and \"A Rural llo-\nle'lll.\"\nBasketball Season at\nY.M.C.A. How Beginning\nThe basket ball season is just\nstarting, and already the old teams\nhave applied for practice nights, indicating that the sport is going to\nhe lively this year. It is hoped that\nall tbe old teams will organize and\nget into the big senior league. The\nintermediate und school leagues will\nl.e soon organized and regular practice commenced. A high school class\nhas been formed and the boys have\ncaught the scbool spirit and by all\nindications are going to make the\ngame a great success. Their chief\nambition seems to be to out do the\nintermediates in gymnastics, athletics\nand basket ball.\nThe business mens' class is growing\nin Im th numbers and enthusiasm and\nall it needs now to make it an ideal\nclass is a few more members.\nThc hilliard tournament which has\nbeen going on for tne last two\nis ni w ahout finished. A. E.\nRose and Qeorge Ross played oft in\nmi-final, the score at the finish\ni pin.: Ion ni: I'insl 135 in favor of Mr.\nRi se. Mr. Haddon and J. Purvis\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 to play off when Mr. Rose\nwill play the winner, this being the\ng game in the tournament.\nwould like to enter for\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 tournament can do so by\nsicnir.i' their names on the bulletin\n-istant\n-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nng lorward I icces\u00C2\u00AB-\nM nd\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 d\nse of\n-\n- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 winter months.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n- a lit-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 public\nwill\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n. I - Thp series of\nI\n-\nPRICE OF SUGAR\nIS UP AGAIN\nIncrease of Fifty Cents Per\nHundred Pounds Made\nLast Saturday\nThe retail price ol sugar was increased another 50 cents per lOOlbs.\non Saturday and sugar is now selling nt SS.50 per 100 lbs. as compared with .-57 a couple of months ago.\nPlums and tomatoes are growing\nscarcer but there is an abundance of\nother seasonable fruits and vegetables on the local market.\nFRUITS\nBananas, per doz lO-ffi .50\nLemons, per doz .50\nPlums, per basket 15\u00C2\u00AE .Ar>\nApples, new, 4 to lilbs. .25\nCrab Apples, per box .75\nOranges, from -5@ .35\nPears, 3lbs. for .25\nPumpkins, lb .02\nCitrons, 111 , .04\nGrapes, tb .15\nGrapes, basket .\"5\nFigs, cooking, i!tbs. for .25\nDates, Hallowi .16\nDates, Fard, 2tbs. for ... ,38\nDates, Dromedary, pkg. .15\nWalnuts, per lb .35\nPecans, per Ib .25\nFilberts, per tb .25\nAlmonds, per tt .25Q .30\nBrazils, per Ib .25\u00C2\u00AE .30\nMEATS\nFresh killed beef, retail .05@.27'j\nPork, retail 18(a> .25\nMutton, retail 12*,@ .25\nVeal, retail 13fcg .27\nHams, retail 25\u00C2\u00AE .30\nBacon, retail ~ 28@ .10\nLard, retail 17@ .20\nChickens, retail 23\u00C2\u00AE .25\nSausages, retail 13\u00C2\u00AE .15\nTurkey, per tb .30\nGeese, per lb .25\nDucks, per lb .28\nSUGAR\nGranulated B. C. Cane\n1001b. sack 8.50\nLump sugar, 2tbs .25\nGran. B.C., 201b. sack, ... 1.75\nBrown sugar, 31bs .25\nSyrup, maple, bottle .60\nSyrup, gallon 1.75(32.00\nHoney, comb, per tb .30\nHoney, lib. jars .25\u00C2\u00AE .35\nFLOUR\nRobin Hood 2.25\nb. & K. Bread Flour 2.15\nJive Roses, 2.25\nLake of the Woods, bag 2.25\nRoyal Household. 2.25\nPurity Flour 2.25\nKing's Quality 2.15\nUAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, creamery .40\nButter, dairy, per Ib 32\u00C2\u00AE .35\nCheese, Canadian, per lb. .25\nCheese, Can. Stilton, Ib. .30\nCheese, Imp. Stilton, lb. .60\nEggs, local new laid, doz. .50\nVEGETABLES\nCauliflower, each 15\u00C2\u00AE .20\nParsley, per bunch .05\nGreen Peppers, per lb. ... .18\nDry, onions, 5 lbs. for .25\nSilver skin pickling\nms, 3tbs. for .25\nBrown pickling onions,\nlli.s. for .25\nCabbage local, each ... .0.\">@ .10\nNew Potatoes, lb .02\nLettuce, Ih 10@ .15\nGreen Unions, I bunches .10\nTomatoes, irate .'jo\nN'ew Carrots, Ib .02J\nTurnips, per lb .(I2J\nPi tatoes, lii'S. tor ,25\nThe pi.rt Arthur wagon works has\nler for 35 special transport\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tbe use of the first Cnna-\nI -a'ent.\n\ee e-i [c in I. N'atLonals t\n* 5. National! 3\nBoston 4. Philadel-\na l.\nREVELSTOKE MEAT MARKET\nPhone 251 LIMITED P.O. Box O\n!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nwith\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lorf Is\nby the 500 rnllen\n.\"Hhoiit. a landln - and foui of the\nI the feat w*it.h-\n' ui mishap.\nOnly nadle n p ire so\ntered for hearing before the Privy\nCouncil which reassembli <.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2. net,,\nI ei !0 Judgment In the itiebeo mar-\nII age \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . ie ma \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 no! I pected lor\n'\"\"ei lime yet, iis It is ilnderHtooil\nthai i heir Lordships have no! yet.\ndrafted their Indi'iiieiit M,,||,e,H of\nblghei moment have occupied their\nenergies ilnoo hearing tho argument,\nii.cli Disease\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 about Sumach i roubles\n. .Ill iH\ni oiiily iiiui\nr' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I Ley lend\n*'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' 'I by HtOllllnll\nI ' 1 II |. I I .Me l-l beSlp\nhy appetite, aid diges-\npromoti i. itritlon, As\nevii ... i.iii. en ih.-in, we iwk\nlieu, nl ...a n\u00C2\u00BBk. If Ihey\n'I'1- tlftl -ell'ltl, WO\n(he mono) you pud nn\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.... form 'in y, I hns\n.' ents, and $1.01).\nY\".i ran bti i,- . || i lyipegptla Tablcta\nIH I'e '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 IV Hi OUT StOTSI\nWALTER BEWS.\nIleirl.l.ili.. iiriii-.li ( olumbla\nTho fevnaSX, Slots\nThrre in a Reiall Store In nearly every town\nnml rity in thr Hinted BtfttcR, Oniwi.!., and\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Urrnt llrilnin I hern ia n dlfforrnt Itri\u00C2\u00AB||\nKrniody fur nearly .pon ordhmry tiumnn III \u00E2\u0080\u0094\neeee I. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 'I \"''-\"> li , \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i,';..-.J for ill'! pilTlii illeer ill\nfor whioti It ia rriiiiimii'iirlrd.\nTha Rexall Storra .re Amcrlca'a Urcatcat\nDrug store*\nPrompt attention to all phone and mail orders.\nWatch this paper for week-end specials.\nOn Saturday, We Offer\n3It>. pail Silver Leaf Lard, .55\n51b. pail Silver Leal Lard, .90\n101b. pail Silver Leaf Lard, 81.80\nFancy Rolled Roast \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E .29\n2 lbs. Lean Pork Chops 45\nLocal Mutton Chops < .20\nShoulder Mutton, 5 ribs 15\nBuild Concrete Barns\nand Barnyards\nVOU will find that they are best\n*** at first and cheapest in the end.\nConcrete buildings cannot burn and many dol\nlars are saved in lower insurance rates. They\nneed practically no repairs and never need\npainting.\nConcrete barnyards make the best kind\nof a feeding-floor and save many dollars in\nfeed bills, as your stock gets every particle\nthat you feed to them.\nSend for this free bonk'\"What the Farmer\nCan do With Concrete.\" It shows just how\nto build your own concrete barn, feeding-\nfloor or any other building that you may need.\nFarmer's Information Bur run\nCanada Cement Company Limited\n535 Herald Building, Montrtnl\n0-\n;-;\n!\nThe Manufacturer's\nProblem Solved!\nTHE solution will be found on\npage 4 of \"The Elevator,\"\na new book jusl off thc press. We\nwant to place a copy of this Book in the hands of every\nprogressive manufacturer in the country.\nIt may prove to be worth manufacturer owes much of\n-hundreds of dollars to YOU. his success to the intelligent\nIn its pages appear many il- arrangement of his plant and\nlu:,!rations and suggestions the elimination of needless\nfor marufnclurers. retailers, effort and wasted energy,\njobbers and wholesalers, any This Book points the way to\none of which may be the bigger profits and greater\ntolution of your individual efficiency. Write to-day for\nThe successful YOUR copy.\nproblem\nOTIS-FEN SO M\nELEVATOR COMPANY\nLIMITED\n60 BAY ST., TORONTO\nTear oul, fill in and mail this\nCoi'ixin now.\nA'ltlrcss\t\nDon't merely smother your cough\nftw ||\"|ri -fffl Mathiru's Syrup of Tar and Cod Liver Oil not only\nI III I' I promptly arrests coughing, but thanks to its tonic and\nVfVl.mMJ ** strengthening properties it helps the system to throw ofl\ntlie cold and time effects a |>ermanentcure. It li this quality which has won for\nit the largrlili tUMilru'i Sorelm Po\u00C2\u00ABtlen. U\u00C2\u00BB wonArrtnl limnOeh. onto, *KH\n>llr .li-i\u00E2\u0080\u0094l u\u00C2\u00BB f.r.r ul emm lm ef^la ftou ami. back ud llml*. Dm ol II\nTYPEWRITTEN CIRCULARS\npossess the personal note that ordinary printing lacks. Drop in\nthe Mail-Herald and ask for quotatious on our printed facsimile\ntypewriting letters, circulars, mailing cards, ac, with all the\neffectiveness ol real typewriting at a fraction of its cost. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD REVELSTOKE\nPAGB im\nxz\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nEDITED BY MRS. RALPH LAWRENCE\nThoBe having items tor1-publication\nan the Mail-Herald social and personal column are requested to call\ntip phone 62.\nThose receiving are: ,\nThursday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. C. B. Hume.\nFriday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. W. I. Briggs.\nFriday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. A. Kenwood, MrB.\nAngus McLean.\nSaturday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. E. H. S. McLean.\nSaturday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. A. Hobson.\nMrs. .1. W. Stevenson will not re-\nreive until the third Thursday in\nJanuary.\nMrs. J. Hume will not receive until the third Thursday in November.\nMr. J. W. Stevenson spent Thanksgiving in Golden.\nMrs. Robert Siiuarehriggs will not\nreceive until November. r\nMiss Mabel Henderson spent the\nweek end at Salmon Arm.\nMrs. J. M. Patterson will not re-\nteive until thc third Friday in No-\n-vember.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Haney are\nmoving to thc corner of Fifth street\nnnd Vernon avenue.\nOn Friday evening, October 23, a\nwhist drive will be given at the city\nlall hy the ladies of the Hospital\nguild;\nMrs. Ernest H. S. McLean will receive on Saturday of this week and\nafterwards on the secend Saturday of\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ach month.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Howson are\nleaving for Kamloops today to\nspend a few duys, Mr. Howson will\nautomobile to Merritt Irom there.\nMiss McKay and her guests Mrs.\nHood and Miss McCall of Banff, are\nspending the day at Kamloops, and\nfrom there expect to visit the Okanagan Valley for a few days.\nOn Saturday evening, Miss Susan\nHill and Mr. S. T. Griffiths were\nmarried by the Rev. J. W. Stevenson. Miss Bush and Mr. Cooper were\n-Witnesses. Mr. and Mrs. Griffiths are\nspending their honeymoon at Banff.\nA plensiant atternoon may be enjoyed and a delicious cup of tea\nprocured by all those who attend\n.the tea given by the Womens' Aid of\nSt. Peter's church, on October 21. lt\nis to he held at tbe Forest Mills office, upstairs, in the dining room.\nMrs. Fred Frazer entertained a\nnumber of her friends at afternoon\ntea on Saturday, in honor of her\nlaughter Mrs. McNaUghtbn. About\n1*0 guests arrived, some with their\nsewing and a delightful afternoon\nwas spent. Dainty refreshments were\nserved.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized on\nMonday evening at 6.80 o'clock, at\n '< \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2%**\n[',KM'- h-^raP*3\u00C2\u00BBta\nF.W';-'v^0';- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2--. \u00C2\u00AB>*^3KM#aa\nBest\nFor Frying\nThe goodness and\ndelicacy of fried foods depends\nupon the fat used for frying.\nSwift's Silver-Leaf Lard\nmay be heated to a high degree without scorching or discoloring. This puts a delicate brown crisp crust on the food so\nquickly that it prevents its becoming grease\nsoaked, and it enables you to use yff00^^\nSwift's Silver-Leaf Lard many times for j^^ v.\t\nfrying before clarifying.\nIt is economical, pure, efficient and\ndoes not flavor the food cooked in\nit. Canadian Government in\nspected put up always in tight\ncovered, new tin pails, 3 sizes.\nqWlfffc\nAfk\nVour\nDealer for\n( SUver-Leaf\nSwift Canadian Co. Ltd.'\n.Toronto Winnipeg Edmonton\nrV<>4\n'QDftWWV\nC. B. HUME & CD, LTD.\nRevelstoke's Departmental Store\nFAMILY SHOE\nOUTFITTERS\nWe Aim to Give Maximum\nWear at a Minimum Price\nAn Important and Remarkable Announcement\nin Women's Wearing Apparel\nthat Will Be of Special and Unusual Interest\nWe have made arrangements with Messrs. Carstens,\nGoldstone, Limited, whereby their exclusive line of\nCoats, Suits, and Dresses will be shown in our mantle department by their Mr. Carstens on Friday and\nSaturday, October 16-17.\nIt is an event you have been waiting for; an opportunity to have a custom-tailored suit at a moderate price, and this line is one of the newest and\nmost complete made.\nCarstens' Goldstone, Limited are described by the trade\nas the \" House of Practical and Stylish Clothes.\"\nEvery garment they make possesses a distinction that\nis compellingly attractive.\nA feature suit at $27.50 that we would particularly like\nyou to see, comes in three styles and in several ofthe\nnew cloths in copen, maroon, purple, blue, and black ;\nthe coats have cape effect backs and the skirts are the\nnewest Hare tunic styles.\nMr. Carstens will take your measures and each garment will be tailored to your individual requirements.\nDelivery will be made in ten days or less.\nChildren's owbtnere JERSEYS nr SWEATERS for Iiovn and\n(tills up to 8 years. This is a particularly Rood lot. any color,\nthu fitifat cashmere wools, British make. Reg. $1.50 for 75c.\nNew FRILLINGS in all the widths that are heing used. White\nand cream at 30c tu 75c\n.Standard SPOOL COTTON, black and white, auy size. 3 for 10c,\nor per dozen , -tOc\nThe CLASSIC Shoe for Children\nNew styles, new lasts, and the very best of leathers.\nAll made in the usual high standard that Classic Shoes\nare famous for. Workmanship that is real shoe making. Lasts that are made with a scientific regard for\nthe shape of the child's foot.\nNeat, snappy little turns in patent, vici-kid, and\ntans. Either button or lace. Prices $1.35 to 1.75\nBeautiful box and velour-calf Boots for the\nlarger kiddies. Both button and lace, they wear\nlike iron. Prices $1.50 to $2.50\nHigh top button Shoes with colored or black\ntops. They come in gun-metal and patent. Prices,\nper pair $2.50 to 3.50\nIf your kiddie once wears the CLASSIC he\nwill always wear them. ,\nMen's Caps\nThe day of the cap has come.\nNot the old cap which was merely a\nmake shift, but the dressy, neat,\nstylish head wear that is as much a\nmatter of a man's wardrobe as any\nhat. Our stock is complete with\nnew styles and snappy patterns.\n75c to $2.00\nGrocery and Crockery Department\nVegetables for Winter\nOur Vegetables this year very fine and\ngrown on our own ranch\nPotatoes, Turnips, Cabbage\nBeets, Carrots and Celery\nOkanagan Onions\nWe will bc pleased to quote you Prices on\none or more sacks.\nHew Goods\nHunt's Supreme and Staple Brand Canned\nFruits. Peaches, halfs and sliced, Apricots,\nPears, Raspberries, Strawberries, Rnyal Ann\nCherries, Black Cherries, Gage Plums, Egg\nPlums and grated sliced Pineapple.\nFruits\nMackintosh Red Apples are now in stock,\nvery heavy pack. Watch our corner window\nfor sample.\nCar Winter Apples\nnow shipped. Will soon be put in stock.\nCall around and let us show them to you. We\nwill give you a price on one or more boxes.\nFresh Fruit in Daily\nCalifornia Grapes. Concord Grapes, Oranges,\nlemons, Bananas, Pears.\nDamson Plums, a few days only, 75c- a crate:\nEqual E^gs 2\">c tin equals 2' dozen eggs.\nTry a tin Spaghetti with tomato and cheese.\nSpecials for Friday and Saturday Only\nPin Money Pickles 25c bottle Mangol Sliced Chutney 30c. bottle\nRed Cabbage Pickles 30c bottle Clark's Pork and Beans, 1 Ib, 3 Tins, 25c.\nQuaker Pork and Beans, No. 3 15c tin. VAOB SIX.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD, REVELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914\"\nWHAT GOES\nWITH THE TURKEY\nis what makes the Thanksgiving\ndinner es\u00C2\u00A9 fine. Get the grocwy\npart of your f-tast here and you\ntan be sure that the \"fixings\"\nwill equal the finest bird and\nthey won't cost you a whole lot\neither. Quality with economy is\nour motto.\nHOBSON'S\nPhone tl Box 7HI\nP. BURNS & CO., LIMITED\nIF YOU HAVE NOT TRIED\nShamrock Hams And Bacon\nTRY THEM THEY WILL PLEASE\nP. BURNS & CO., Limited\nKING EDWARD HOTEL\nH. J. MCSORLEY. PROP.\nREVELSTOKE, B. C.\nStrictly First-Class\nRooms\u00E2\u0080\u0094Single, en Suite, and with Bath\nMINISTER HOME\nFROM KOOTENAY\nMinister of Public Works Tells\nof Conditions in Southern\nInterior\nThe Hon. Thomas Taylor, Minister\nol Public Works, returned on Wednesday Irom a tour of the Kootenay\ndistricts. He visited Revelstoke, Nelsou, Cranbrook and intervening\npoints, inspecting the status ol various public works which are in progress and inlorming himself as to\nthe present conditions and the outlook for the winter, saya:\n\"While the disruption of the normal position due to the war is, ol\ncourse, making itself manifest in the\ninterior of the province, as well as\nat the coast cities, I can assure you\nthat I was agreeably surprised to\nfind the general situation so satis-\nlactory On all sides there is a determination to see the thing\nthrough,', and with everybody cooperating to make the iljeBt of things,\nmatters are not nearly so bad as\nCOAL FOR NAVY\nIN B.C. MINES\nGreat Anthracite Deposits to be\nDeveloped in Groundhog\nDistrict\nWithin a comparatively short space\nof time there will be available from\nBritish Columbia mines an unlimited\nsupply of the finest anthractite coal,\nwhich is claimed to he the best fuel\nobtainable for naval and mercantile\npurposes.\nGreat anthracite coal deposits have\nbeen discovered in the territory\nthrough which the Grand Trunk Pacific transcontinental railway runs\nin this province.\nD. A. Thomas, the Welsh coal magnate, is now credited with the intention of making an early start on the\nGroundhog district, which is estimated to contain 1,141,444,000 tons of\ncoal. Plans have already been made\ntor a short line of railway from the\nconl fields to Nusoga Pay, fifty miles\nto the north of Prince Rupert.\nThe product of the Groundhog district is said to be the only hard,\nthey would be if this courageous ,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.. \u00C2\u00B1.\ni smokeless, steam anthracite coal in\nspirit were absent.\n\"I found that the problem of unemployment was not nearly bo pressing as in the coast cities. This ia\nBEST ACCOMMODATION PHONE 207\nHotel Victoria\nR. Laughton, Pbop.\nChoicest of Wines, Liquors, and Cigars\nHot and Cold Water Steam Heat Baths\nNewly Furnished Throughout\nNEW SELKIRK HOTEL\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nCorner Orton Avenue and Firnt Btreet --REVELSTOKE, B.O.\nRevelstoke Wine and Spirit Co.. Ltd.\nImporters and Wholesale Dealers.\nManufaetupers of Aerated Waters\nWINES\nLIQUORS\nCIGARS\ndue. no doubt, to railway activity,\nwhich still continues. The Kettle\nRiver Valley line is making splendid\nprogress and employing a large number of men The Canadian Pacific\nrailway is also employing a big staff\non the double-tracking and other undertakings.\nThe Kootenay Central Line.\n\"In respect to the Kootenay Central branch of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway, I was informed that construction throughout its entire len-jth\nwould be completed by December 31,\nand the last spike driven shortly\nthereafter. The final connecting rail\nwill probably be laid at a point\nabout 10 miles to the south of Invermere.\nThe work of constructing the\ni the world outside of Wales, Penn-\n| sylvania and West Virginia.\nI The opening of the Panama Canal\nI will enable naval and other vesselB\nusing hard coal to come through the\ncanal with a small amount o.* fuel in\ntheir bunkers and replenish their\nsupplies at either Prince Rupert or\nNasoga Bay with coal from the British Columbia mines.\nMany Mines are\nActive Near Sandon\nSandon, B C, Oct. 13.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Mountain Con has packed down over 1,000\ntacks of ore.\nOn the Reco hill, where several\nlessees are working. EricBon & Johnson have a big showing. It ia ex-\nMay Install Mil\non Lemon Creek\nAgents for Calgary Beer\nJack Laughton, Proprietor First Street, Revelstoke. B. C.\nWINDSOR HOTEL\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nGood Accommodation. Reasonable Rates.\nCafe in Connection\nswing bridge to the north of Inver- j pected that they will be shipping ore\nmere is being pushed forward, and . as soon as rawhiding begins,\nsteel is being laid as rapidly as the George Mavreudy will have 20 tons\nroad bed can be made ready. Anot- of ore packed from his claim to the\nher JO miles has been taken over hy | Rambler mi1!!.\nthe operating branch ol the railway, I Tne Payne mine has started up\nand trains to that part will be , again after closing down for repairs,\nbrought forward by the end of the ' J- Kecne of the Wonderful has tak-\npresent month carrying both freight \tn ?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 lease on the Ivanhoc mill and\nand passengers. The telegraph line intends to treat the ore from the\nhas been brought to steel-head, and j Prise and the Wonderful.\nthe system before long will be in op- j\nerat'ion to Edgewater.\nBanff-Windermere Road.\n\"The work on the Banff-Windermere automobile road is being\nbrought to a conclusion this year.\nSome seventeen miles leave been con-\nstrutted on the western division,\nwhere it leaves the main wagon road \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 group 0[ mineral claimg at tQe head.\nfrom Goiden to Invermere. About 22 j waterg of Lemon creek they haTe ..\nmiles have been completed on its' pr08peCt for w.h,ch the tuture\nnorthern section, running from the 8uredp T. S- Pulmer und\nmain line of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway at Caatle.\nthis the road has\nout for some further distance on the ; The properties lie adjacent to the\nweetfcrn end, to enable the newly-ar- | Golden Beef claimg which ^\nrived settlers pre-empting in the worked by Gib8on ft mrd and are\nKootenay River Valley to use it as a BituateJ about ,o mlles [rom w,Uow\nalei,h road during the winter season. Point on thtf We8t Afm Koot\nThe completed work will leave in the ]a[;e\nneighborhood of '.. mile, to be tack- Mr. P;Umer 9tRtM tnat he Qas\nbrought down from the property\na\nis us-\nassociates,\naccording to Mr. Palmer, intend next\nIn addition to j Bpring or 8ummer to m8tai on the\nbeen \"roughed\" ; propertJeg a small\nCentral Hotel\nAbrahamson Bros.\nProps.\nFirst-olaa* in all renpert*\nAll Modern OOBTtntoOCea\nRATES, $2 PER DAY\nSpecial Weekly Rates\nREVELSTOKE. B. C.\n71*,*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nORIENTAL HOTEI\u00E2\u0080\u0094*-\nsuitably furnished with the choicest the\nmarket affords. Best Wines, Liquors and\nCigars. Rates $1 a day. Monthly rates.\nJ. ALBEBT STOHSTEJ :FIR0:F.\n'Nelson I found to bf going along\nin a thoroughly satisfactory manner,\nso characteristic of the metropolis of\nthe Kootenays This 'is one of the\nabout 300 or tno Its. of samples ol\nwhich he is having a milling test\nmade and if these tests are successful, of which he i8 confident, the\nmost tolid and promising centres in 8mall pinnt will be\nthe interior and unquestionably has lhP property\na -iptandMtatan.Iti eltlaena have The ore ,s'high grade silver-lead\n\"\"- with ,i slight ledge of free milPing\nestablished at\nkef echetne, as -.uu have it in Vic\nind I wim told that It is ;>ruv\nIte the mircenn anticipated. An\nI effort ll being made to drive\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '')nne*e vegetal,li> ;,.\ntold nearby. The properties were all\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2talced, Hays Mr. I'almer, In the days\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2if the boom in that vicinity and\nbave bean reataked.\nThere lrt an abundance of water In\nliruaife . corn Lb, vidnity ,lf th< prop,rUtt and ull\nllnet the wh.te farmer and thftt ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E r lr,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E op)nl(Jn ^\nmake the locations ideal |g better\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0The people of Ntlflon an- ent.ertng transportttiOO\nInto the work -,f lending a helping west Ar,\nIn the war with tbe same pat- I.emon ..reek ffblcfa he ballOTM w\n ''talna in the coaet ,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E..,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ... U1 \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E... ar\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\nSltiea. While I wu there they were ,,,,*,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,, t\u00E2\u0080\u009E th, \u00E2\u0080\u009E,,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E |)(\nmaking arrangements to form a local\nbranch of the Red Croat eoclety.\n\"The fruit, grower* in Velnon and\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I are preparing to take an ng-\nuressive. part in the campaign to sell\nmore apples, which has heen inaugur\nated hy the Dominion government.\nTwenty eight boxaa of prize fruit\nfacilities from tbe\nto the headwaters of\nill\nat\nra-\ntlofta and with a road this drawback would he greatly reduced, be\n'ays.\nBvery mentffei ol tha civil service of\nIba province of Quebtc, from Sir Lo-\n\"\"' Oouln ami Wh mlnlHtere down,\nm contributing one dar's pnv to tho\ntwelfth p8tri0t,( ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\nUnion Hotel\nA. P. LKVKSQUK, Proprietor\nFIRST STREET, RKVKLHTOKK, B. Ce\nMEAL TICKETS $b.oi\nannua! Nelson Krult fair have been\nshipped tu Calgary, 'where they are\non view at the irrigation OongraM.\n\"The nrrnoty at Nalion has bean\nreopened on Inatructloni received\nfrom the D.O 0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2! Victoria, Ool\n(toy, and drilling and training of\nvolunteers f,,r the necoml contingent I**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 w\"r ' *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB broken up fnmlllns leaf\nih axpaetM tbat tho\ncontribution will amount to about\n$fl0,000, representing an It done a\nffty'a pay from every rogletrnr clerk\nand Officer of every kind In the civil\nservice of the province.\na poignant llluatratlon of the way\nwill take place at once.\"\nOattaro, when; an Austrian eqnaJ-\nrr>n In bottled up, wne orlglnnlly a\nRoman city, and ban alnoa been la\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 um Venetian, Austrian, Italian,\nFrench, Monteneegrin, and finally Ail\u00C2\u00AB\ntiinn ognln.\nforded l,v the (MM of a certain North\nLondon fnmllv, The father Is Tterman\nlhe RlOthei KngPlsh. The two eldest\nhour, born in lermany, have returned there tei join the Oermnn army;\ntlie two younger sons, horn In England, have mine,I the flrltlah\nand Imve gone to the front.\narmy\nWHETHER IT BE\nA DOG HOUSE\nor a large dwelling you'll find it.\nbetter to use our thoroughly 86^\n9oned lumber in its constru .tallon.ry. It P\u00C2\u00BBrei\nMaJI-M.raid\nto h.*e tin- )*\u00C2\u00AB( ttlftt'l going W.\nrl\u00C2\u00BB!i th. hlgha.t quality at iti\now.lt prlc*. r'rro e.i In.le.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I.c\nctrlo fi\nPr...\nW. off.r you ti0\nand costs last week.\nAlready 10 men have enrolled in\nthe Michel volunteer company ol the\nEast Koocnay regiment.\nRossland's customs receipts for the\npast six months are over $800 greater than for thc same period last\nyear.\nOn municipal work Grand Forks\ncouncil is paying $M a day for teams\nand s-J for men for an eight-hour\nday.\nPenticton has an annonymous letter writer and t.he Heiald is offering\na slOO reward for information leading to his detection.\nJim Cronin has been working all\nsummer on his nig silver property in\nthe Babine district. He will soon return to Spokane for the winter.\nThe No. fi mine nenr Cumberland\nhas enough coal in sight to keep it\nworking 2fi years. It was thought\nyears ago that this mine was worked\nout.\nCranbrook Herald.\u00E2\u0080\u00940. J. Wigen, a\npioneer and successful fruit grower of\nWynndel, B.O. was a business visitor\nin the Oity today. Mr. Wigen states\nthat the fruit crop in the Wynndel\n:.nd Creston districts has been very\ngood this season.\nAnother slice ol 10 acres of Block\nSI2 in the Canyon City district of\nthe Creston Valley was disposed of\nthis week by C. O. Rodgers. The\nbuyer was John M. Butler of Sher-\nhrooke, Que., who paid spot cash for\nthe property and who is already t>UBy\ngetting it ready for cultivation.\nIt is reported that potatoes may fco\n?70 ,v ton before next summer.\nFrank Staples was a Bonner's\nFerry visitor last week, returning\nSaturday.\nFor the lirst time in its history\nthe Creston calaboose has an inmate\nthis week\u00E2\u0080\u0094a short termer.\nE. White an assistant provincial\ninspector of fruit pests and diseases\nis paying the Creston Valley an official visit this week.\nEd. Austin, the veteran railway\nman has moved from Kevelstoke to\nVancouver. He ran the first engine\nover the Canadian Pacific railway in\nthe mountains.\nFour Kaslo citizens nppeared before the magistrate, charged with\nsetting fires without a license. Three\npaid $50 each and the other took a\nsix months jail sentence.\nShipments of fruit and vegatables\nfrom the Vernon station have been\naveraging about 18 cars per day during the past month. It is estimated\nthat the output of produce will exceed that of last year by over 25\nper cent.\nThomas Powers had a box of Ben\nDavis apples on display at Grand\nForks fair that was somewhat unusual. It contained the entire product of a four year old tree and the\napples were first quality and uniform\nin size and color.\nFernie Free PresB:\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Herman Elmer,\nsecretary of Michel Local, U. M. W.\nof A. was taken into cuseody by the\nprovincial police acting under military instructions, and will be held\na prisoner of war until alter the\nhostilities have ceased. Elmer was\npreaching sedition and speaking disrespectfully of the militia. He is a\nGerman He will he sent to the military prison at Vernon until after\nhostilities have censed. Then he will\nprobably be deported. A military\nprisoner .receives no hearing or trial.\nWIFE SHOT\nBY HUSBAND\nPreemptor Falls While Hunting\nCausing Gun to Explode-\nDistressing Affair\non October 5th, 1914, at Highland\nValley, B.C., and died Irom loss of\nblood and heart failure on October\n(ith, 1914, and we further agree that\nsaid death was accidental and due\nlo misadventure. Signed, J. Fair-\ntlough (foreman), D. L. Munro, E.A.\nCollett. W Bell, I.. Hemsworth, Andrew Ewart, G.H. Tutill, Coroner.\"\nFIRE ALARMS\nThe best WAX to buy is\nJACKSON'S\nit's real English. Gel a sample\nSole local agents -LAWRENCE HARDWARE CO.. Ltd.\nREVELSTOKE,\nMAIL-HERALD: BEST FOB LOCAL NEWS\nA shooting accident happened at\nHighland Valley some distunce Irom\nMamette Luke, last week, resultiug\nin the deith ol Mrs. Flora Nellie\nJones, a young married woman ol 21\nyears o! age.\nMr. Jones, who has a pre-emption\nat Highland Valley, was out hunting\nfor deer, accompanied by his wife.\nAfter going some distance thev came\nto very step and rocky part. Lending the way the husband who was\ncarrying the rifle over his aim, was\nclosely followed by hia wife. By some\nmeans or other Mr. Jones slipped,\n[ailing heavily ui the rocks, Mid the\nconcussion resulted in the gun being\nfired, the hullel a 80-30 soft n.ise, en-\ntering tbe unfortunate woman's thigh\npist above tli\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I nee am! taking an\n' course i em a out the othi i\nbide i f the thigh leaving a terrible\nwound and smashing everything In\ne urse.\nThe , e en husband did\neverything possible for his wile.\nand applying g tourniquet, bandaged\nred i\"\n;e.;, tbe blee l|n Pi r neaiIj a mile\nthe wagon road,\nover iund.\ni 'ii' lining a ie! [bhours team and\ndrove\nShulus hospfl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0! of nearly\nir,vial- aboul \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 o'e\n i baying hap-\n> cloc)i the 11\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nnnd In rhlle was al tbi\npossible\nbad bi one ( - rtunate lady\ni.30 a.m.\nAn Inquiry w is hi Id on T\nand -Wednesday. On 'i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 jury\n' Coroner Dr. Q,\nil. Tutill expla ned the caus\nI the Jurj\n: i . I\ned, b ei tie, vi rdlcl\n*\n\"We, your Jurj i iparislli\n'mire I olrcum I\nrounding tha di th ol Mrs fobn\nbody, :\nI I\nseveral witnesses,\ntee ber death ti >tn b\u00C2\u00AB\n-ii the thlgl\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 un ,., nu,, carried by\nber hui I list banting foi dwr\nFire alarm signals are given thus.\nTwo strokes, interval five secondB.\nlour strokes, Box 24. No of box will\naiso be shown on indicator at tire\nhall.\nPractice signal.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Six (6) strokes ol\nbell slowly.\nTesting signal.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three (3) strokes\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . bell slowly.\nFire Out signal.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two (2) strokes\nol bell slowly.\nDefect signal.-One (1) stroke of\nbell slowly.\nFIHK BRIG \l*.K NO. TWO\nBox No . ll Corner First street\nMcKenzie avenue. C. It. Hume & Co.\nl'\"\ No. l'i. Ceii,it First street\nand Rokeby avenue,\nBoi No. 16.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Corner Sec,uni street\nand Government Road and Opera\nHouse.\nBoi Nn. it. -Corner Third\n- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 >\u00C2\u00BB1 Campbell avenue, Globe Lumber\ncompany,\nB '\ No. 18. -*. P. It. station.\nBoi No. 21, i ui ner Pllth street\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .ml McKenste avenue Catholic\nchurch.\nv.e *!5 Corner Stxtl treel\nnd i ii ton avenue, \v. a. Pool\nBox Nu Ji,. i loi nei Poui 11,\nml Me \i ii.ui avenue,\nBox No. 2 i Poui Hi\nand Townley avei\t\nBox Nn. treel\nand Robson ivonuc, Mis. Baker.\nBox n... 31.- i* re ball No. .'.\nBox n.i. .:\".. Hospital;\nBoi Noi 18. Central Bchooi.\nBox No. 17. Bi ehool.\n|e*ii(K BRIGADE NO. ONE\nBox No, M. P|re Hall No, one.\ni'e\"\ No. 26, Pront Btreet west,\nnear C.P.R, IiimI ,\nBox No. io, L'orni - King and\nDouglas streets. Palace Meat \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\niiox No. 17. (* irner Becond street\nin.I \v,ii, 11,, i, bac ol Court\n;- Corner Third and\nCharles streets, Cowan i sk,\nHon, i >11r.'-.-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ii Marshall, minister of\ni \u00E2\u0096\u00A0rlculture, being asked bow\noi en,. Mberta\ncould furnl n. ild \" Ub< rta could\nsupply from'7,000 to 10,000 horses for\ncavalry and artillery purposes.\"\n-Printing\nThat ..\n*Pays. .\nWay of you\nYour business status is often judged by\nthe style and quality of your Printing. A\npoor circular hasn't half the convincing\nand business-bringing power of the better\none. A cheap and common-looking letterhead lowers your credit with the wholesaler.\nWays lAr\nYou are delighted with MAIL-HERALD\nPrinting\u00E2\u0080\u0094for we do our utmost to please\nyou. We have the staff, stock and equipment to deliver the goods\u00E2\u0080\u0094so we get your\nnext order, sure. Then your satisfaction\nresults in recommendation and so our\nbusiness grows.\n-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\nLooK. For\nThis Sign\nIt means SATISFACTION in PRICE,\nSTYLE, QUALITY and DELIVERY.\nLet us estimate for your next job, or ask\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0js for ideas, specimens, information--we\ncan help you.\nWe Trint s\nCatalogues - Billheads \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Cards\n- Menus\nBall Programs - Books and\nBooklets\nLoose Leaf Account Forms - Envelopes\nPrograms - Wedding Stationery\n- Tags\nMemor'utn Cards - Lumber Forms, Etc.\n4\nMail-Herald Electric Tress\nRevelstoke, B. C. Phone No. 8 PAGE BIGHT\nTHE MAIL-HERALD. REVELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1914\nBRIEF LOCAL NEWS\nA new floor is being placed in\noffice of H. N. Coursier.\nthe\nG. S. McCurter spent yesterday in\nKamloops.\nSergt. J. Cleland \"starts on his\nannual holidays today.\ne\nDr. Dawson was ,t guest of Dr. and\nMrs. E.H.S. McLean yesterday.\nMr. W. Alexander ol Three Valley\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0was a visitor to town lart week.\nT. Kilpatrick returned to his mining properties at Sheep creek ou Sun-\n5* John Whitebread of Nelson regis-\nDetective-sergeant McBrayne of tittered at the Kiug Edward on Mon-\nR.N.W.M.I'., spent Thanksgiving day day.\nm the city. j A R Kincaid, of Revelstoke, was\nMrs. G. J. Ranuni ol Illecillewaet a visitor here on Tuesday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Golden\nwas among the guests at the King Star.\nEdward yesterday.\nThere will be a meeting of the\nReliel Society every Wednesday from\n2.30 to 5.30 p.m. at the R.Y.M.C.A.\nCapt, Sawyer, Capt. Smith and\nLieut. Hr. ick were prospecting for a\nsite for a new rille runge on Monday.\nMrs. A. S. Saunders of Rogers -Pass\nregistered at the King Edward yesterday.\nJ. 1'. Forde, Dominion government\nengineer at Nelson arrived iu the\ncity yesterday.\nAmong the guests at the Ki'Ug 13d-\nW. H. 1'uttrutl and W. E. Smith re- ' Ward yesterday was J. R. Macdon-\nturned on Sunday trom Calgary ;li(i 0[ Tappen.\nWhere tbey had taken the Revelstoke\nexhibit ut the Irrigation congress.\nJ. B. Owens of Saskatoon\namong the guests at tbe King\nRobert McDougall. late city editor ward ou Monday.\nof the Vancouver Province, has re-\nsigned his position en that paper\nand has purchased the plant of the\nPenticton paper.\nwas\nEd-\nH. Manning's tastefully decorated\nThanksgiving window is attracting\nmuch attention.\nfrom Kootenay Landing to the Crow.\nMr.'Deschamps having the contract\nto supply thc poles. The work was\narranged by R. P. Green, M.P.\nA cork blown from a bottle in a\nMcKenzie avenue store on Sunday\nnearly caused a panic. Visions \"of a\nholdup or murder were aroused until\nit was found that the noise had not\nbeen caused by a revolver.\nThe last stretch of the bitulithic\npavement on McKenzie avenue ha=\nbeen begun. It is expected that the\ncontract will be finished this week.\nThe pavement has been laid as far as\nthe hospital on First street.\nH. M. Parry has received a post\ncard hated October 9, from Canadian\nPacific railway constable Limbert\nfrom Montreal in which Mr. Limbert\nsays, \"Arrived safe in Montreal.\nLeave tomorrow on Manitoba.\"\nH. M. Parry, chief of police, bas\nreceived a letter from A. G. Bolaml\nof Ottawa enquiring as to the whereabouts af his son Willie Boland to\nwhom he wishes to send a telegram.\nBoland wrote to Wis lather on Oct. U\non Selkirk hotel stationery.\nMrs. Ted Taylor of Revelstoke is\nspending a week at Craigellachie, the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Alder-\nton. Mrs. Taylor will return to\nRevelstoke on Saturday.\nOnly a lew members of the Home\nGuard, Rocky Mountain Rangers and\nRoyal Engineer corps reported at the\ndrill halt'.on Monday afternoon, con\nsequently the fbld day was not held. yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. L. Alexander and\nson were guests at the Hotel Revelstoke yesterday.\nMrs. J. D. Carscaden, and A. D.\nCarscaden of Vancouver were guests\nat tbe Hotel Revelstoke on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. Otto Scmitz and Mrs.\nClara V. Beckwurth of St. Louis were\nregistered at the Hotel Revelstoke\nThe Forest Mills ol British Colum- AmonK the guests at the Hotel\nhia. Limited is renting its cottages at Reveist0ke on Monday were: Mrs.\nJohn C. Hogg, Miss Hogg and Mrs.\nRobert Mowat of Kamloops.\nTaft tr, unemployed railwaymen at\nthe rate of $5. per month. This includes free wat\u00C2\u00AB'r, wood and electric\nlight\nMr. T. N. Reade left on Saturday\n(or a few months visit in the states\nMr. Reid is taking an extended vacation, part of which was spent in\nRevelstoke renewing old acquaint-1\nances. j\n\"Although I have only had my advertisement of coal and wood in the'\nMail Herald for one insertion I have\nAlready found it a great stimulus to\nmy business,\" declared H.E. Hulett\ntoday.\nMr. and Mrs. Tupper White and\nMaster Reggie, of Vancouver are\nvisiting Mrs. White's parentB, Mr.\nand Mrs. Jollifle, for a lew days ou\ntheir return from a trip to Pem-\nl.rook, and Ottawa.\nSpoon and Medal Winners\n(Continued from Page One)\nOctober 12th, 1914\n500 yards\nCapt. Smith 32\nR. Gordon 29\nLieut. Brock 29\nCapt. Taylor 27\nAbbott 25\nG. McMahon 24\nHalverson 24\nMortimer 23\nParker 22\nSergt. Gibberd 18\nMcVity 15\nA successful meeting was held in I\nthe Golden court house last Friday \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nto take initial steps to form the\nGolden company of the East Koote- j\nnay Infantry regiment.\nH. B. Walkem, resident engineer tor ]\nthe Canadian Pacific, railway at Nelson came up Irom the South last\nnight to meet Mrs. Walkem who is\nreturning from a three weeks trip to\nVancouver. They left for Nelson this\nmorning,\nof\nthe\nThe death occurred on Friday,\nJohn Charles Ranch, one ol\npioneers of the t'.olden district,\ndeceased had been engaged for\npast two weeks superintending\nerection of poles on the new Golden-\nWlndermere telephone line. A few\ndays ago he complained of illness,\nwhich gradually became more serious\nand resulted in his decision to return Mc!< ity \t\nhome. Accompanied by his two sons Marshall \t\nhe started on the journey home hy Squarebrlggs\nautomobile, but death overtook him Abbott \t\nwhen nearing Edgewater.\nOne of the largest crowds yet, attended the Tango club dance held in\nthe Masonic hall, Monday evening,\nabout iii' couples being present. Delightful music was rendered by Orr's\norchestra. The next of these popular\ndances will be held a week from to- NotiCe is given in the current issue\nday, October 21. j lf The provincial gazette that cer-\n\ir. Charles A. Procunier spent tho tlficatea \u00C2\u00B0f incorporation have been\nThanksgiving holidays with his par- Sranted *> tb\" following companies:\nents. the Rev. <*. A. and Mrs. Pro- Ttl\" Gagewrtgh Scale-Truck company,\ncunier. Mr. Procunier and Mr. Wlth Headquarters it Vancouver, at.\nThomas left Comaplix in a motor capltalited at\nlaunch. about \u00E2\u0080\u00A2**> a.m. on Saturday\nand arrived in Revelstoke about 8.30\np.m. They spent Sunday in town and\nreturned on Monday to Comaplix.\nRobinson 16\nHadow 13\nWood .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 13\nHawker 12\nSquarebriggs 12\nMarshall 11\nDavey 11\nC. Gordon 10\nMacdonald 9\nLieut. Wallace 8\nHolmes 7\nBews 2\nOctober 11, 1914\n200 yards.\nCapt. Smith, 1st 31\nThe i Capt. Taylor 2nd 30\nthe Derr, 3rd. (spoon) 33\nHadow 27\nLieut. Wallace, 2(5\nStones 26\nMortimer 2S\nParker 32\nthe\n29\n30\n33\n24\n22\nTillman 21\n20\n26\n18\nA very pleasant time was spent on\nMonday evening at the No. 1, Fire\nHall, when the members, with their\nwives and children, to the number\nof B0 sat down to a bounteous\nThan- -.-;-.- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .- dinner. After the dinner cards were played. Mrs Ma I\n\" I Cook tied fur tirst\nt last after cutting\ntwice. Mrs. Ma Idocl was the lucky\nwinner. Mr. Pi '. McMahon won the\np\u00C2\u00BBntlernnn's ff if and Miss A.\nSmythe tl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' D prise After\ntl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the floor w,is clear\ned ' i0i i pie,\n40 Lions The greatest Sim\never shown in Revelstoke.\npi ices fen I mtgbt onl). adults\n26c. children i1\"-.\nTHURSDAY,\nDiction.\nPhe Mask Of Af-\ntTRIDAY...Lucille\nOf Mystery.\nI,.,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0..', The Girl\nTUKSDAY, The Port of Missing Men, S parts.\nWKDNKSl'V V \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lion (If Venice,\n('. parts, Gnat Annual Picture.\nSix Piece Orchestra.\nHnl.ling company. Limited, Vancouver. -M1 l'nited Bakeries.\nLimited. V>lonial Brewni? <- .mpany.\nLimited; Famoi Com-\npany Limit \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 e &\nCompany, Limit\nThe ri ,v, Hawk\n*,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB* i . Back, 1\". Aii-\nfLbrahamson, 10;\n-Uoner, I; H Gordo\nI\" Macdonald, 10. Remainder nu\nAPOLLO THEATRE\nWEDNBSDW\n'The Ret f Cal Cla\n\ Itrong WMtei D In two\nparts pi od iced . thi H\ne |\n\"The Houi a Than\ni Drama\nAn Indian' i Honor\", i\nby the New Vork Mot\n' lomp in,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a Film Johnnie\", \ k>- rtoni\nI .inedy.\nTHURSDAY\n\"The Second Clue\", Ity the .\i>>\nerican tHlna Co., featuring Bd.\nt'oxen and Winifred Greenwood.\n\"An Aimiitenr animal Trainer\",\nThanhouier,\n\"A Rural Demon\", Key I one\nComical Comedy.\n\"The Million Dollai Mystery\"\n(every Thursdnyi Episode No. 5,\nAt The Bottom of The Sea.\nFOR RELIEF\nOF BELGIANS\nAnother Shipment of Clothing\nwill be Made This\nMonth\nThere will be another shipment of\nclothing Ior the Belgians, about\nOctober 2d. Any parcels left with\nW. Horne'l will be lorwarded by the\ntransportation company free of\ncharge.\nThe following letter has been received by Mr. Hornell from J. M.\ni'arson, acting secretary of the Belgian relief fund in Calgary:\nCalgary, Kith, October, 11H4\nW. Hornell, Esq.,\nc-o. C.B. Hume & Co.\nDear Sir.\u00E2\u0080\u0094i am in receipt of your\nletter of October 7, intimating that\nyou have sent 'oil by Dominion Express three parcels of clothing.\nPlease convey the committee's\n'hanks to the ladies of Revelstoke ior\ntheir generous donation, and accept\nsame yourself for your good services\nin the matter.\nThe goods will go forward with\nthc first shipment immediately, and\nwill reach Belgium free of all\ntransportation charges.\nYours truly,\nJ. W. CARSON\nActing secretary, Belgian relief fund.\nBUSINESS LOCALS\nThe Crown Tailoring Co., bave appointed Mr. F. Leleaux their agent\nfor Revelstoke and district, next to\nBourne's store. tf.np\nDoor mats from .15 centB up. Revelstoke Hardware Co. Ltd.\nNo dust, no clinkers, but a nice\nclean lire with Coursier's coal. tfnp\nUse Gait coal in your kitchen stov\nRevelstoke General Agencies, Ltd.\ntfnp.\nSee our window for door mats.\nRevelstoke Hardware Co., Ltd.\nHousekeeping is a pleasure if you\nuse Coursier's coal. tfnp\nLadies' Tailoring, we make Ladies'\ntailored Suits and Skirts. Cressman\nand Co.\nLadles' cloakings by the yard $1.50\nto \u00C2\u00A72.50. Newest and up-to-date\ngoods. Cressman and Co.\nCoursier's stove coal is\nfor cooking.\nthc\nkind\ntf.np\nC. B. Hume & Co., have t*bade arrangements with Carsten Goldstone,\nLimited of Vancouver to show this\nexclusive line of Su'its, Coats and\nDresses in their ready wear department, October 1(1, and 17. Friday and\nSaturday, Mr. Carsten 'twill take\nmeasures and every lady will have\nher garments tailored to her individual requirements.\nWe guarantee perfect satisfaction iu\nquality and fit. Crown Tailoring Co.\nF. Lefeaux, agent, next to Bourne's\nstore. tf.np\nThe ladies of the Relief Society will\nte pleased to receive old or new magazines to be sent to the gunrds along\nthe lines of communication. The literature may be left at A.E. Kincaid'a\noffice. t.f.\nThe extreme long tunic, extending\nto within ahout six inches of the\nbottom of the skirt, is thc demund of\n' i - \"'a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- eii -ihis and in seperat.e\nskirts. Cressman and Co., Ladles and\n.lens' tailors mnke all thc new\nstyles to order.\n.SPIRELLA CORSET CO.\nMiss Uriel \"iiting the above\n0, is at the Royal Shoe store,\nprepared to demonstrate and\nirders for these famous corsets.\nOffice hours 2 to 1 p.m. Phone 217.\nWANT ADVTS.\nit. tween the old post 'office\nand li'eyie avenue, a ladies B pearl\nting. Fuller please Is ive same at\nMail Herald .nice.\nCOR RBNT I I 0 Ill-S houses all\nmode-am convenience . close in. ISfi,\nptt ne'.i ii Apply Revelstoke Gen\neral Afencies, Ltd, tf.\nWANTFf) House |n Hevelstaike, ln\nexchange for fruit land in one of the\nbest, valleys in the Interior of British f'oliiinhm. Apply Box K., Mail-\nHerald Office.\nWA.NTKD. Uan.lv man wants work,\nsawing wood anything round house\nor ranch Anplv Bo* B10, Kevelstoke, 0.17,pd\nFOlt SALE Kate opportunity, Pedigree rose comb Rhode Island Red\ncockerels, 8 months, ?2, and 81.50\neach. Gale, Connaught avenue\ncity. OlTnp\nFOR SALE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Young Berkshire Pigs.\nW. H. Pottrufl, Phone 0.56.\nWANTED.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Orders for pastrtes, meat\npies of all kinds, cakes etc. Thomp-\n?on & Spencer, 119 Second street\nwest, Phone 82.\nWANTED.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Boarders by week , or\nmonth. Home cooking. Thompson\nson & Spencer, 119 Second street\nPhone 82.\nMILK.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Fleetham, First street\ncan supply a few more customers\nwith finest quality milk, delivered,\nten quarts for SI.00, ten cents per\nquart. Phone 227.\nNOTICE!\nThe adjourned annual meeting of\nthe Revelstoke Hospital Society will\nbe held in the hospital on Monday,\nOct. 19th, 1914, at 8 p. m. W. D.\nArmstrong, secretary. Oct.17.np-.\nLIQUOR ACT 1910.\nWANTED\u00E2\u0080\u0094Young\nhousework, had\n146. T. Jack.\nJnpanese wants\nexperience. Box\nOctllpd\nFOR SALE or EXCHANGE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Two\npure bred Berkshire sows and seven\nyoung pigs, live weeks old, for good\ncow. Sweede turnips and good\nonions for sale. Apply Mike Luck-\noff, Craigellachie, B.C., 0.21 p\nTO LET\u00E2\u0080\u0094Front room on Third street\nabout a block east of McKenzie avenue. Gentleman preferred. Apply\nW.S. in care Mail-Herald. t.f.n.p.\nNOTICE is hereby given that on\nthe first day of December next application will be made to the Superintendent of Provincial Police- for a\nrenewal of the Hotel Licence to sdl\nliquor by retail in the hotel known\nas the City Hotel, situated at Arrowhead, in the province of British\nColumbia.\nCALEY BROS.\nApplicants.\nDated this 11th day of October. 1914.\nOFFICE ROOM to rent. Centrally\nlocated. Apply Box 205. Revelstoke\nB. C. t-f\nPhone No. O 215\n(Two rings.)\nH.E. HULETT\nCOAL and WOOD\nDEALER\nGALT COAL\n$7.50 to $9.25 a ton\nDRY WOOD\nin any length\nSlashing Prices\nIN\nNew Fall Suits\nand Overcoats\nRegular $25.00 Suits\nSpecial $16.50\nMcRae Mercantile Company\nNewest Fall and Winter Shoes at\nROYAL SHOE STORE\nTHE 8TORE Or VALUE\nOur display of beautiful shoes is the most superb to be seen\nin the Interior All are quite astonishing value; a fact\nworth notice at a time when seasonable economy is desirable.\nSKK OCR MIDDLE WINDOW\nFOR BPECIAL BARGAINS\nROYAL SHOE STORE\nHOWSON BLOCK\n(WATCH\n[THIS BOTTLE\nlOWNHCES\nAlways Something New\nArriving at This Store\nNEW BOOKS\nPrince ol Giraustark Geo. Barr McCutcheon\nKyes of the World Harold Bell Wright\nWheat and TureB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Paul Trent\nUnto Caesar Baronees Orzy\nBow's Parisian Gold ^ream Joz. jar ~..25o\nBid REXALL COMBINATION COLD PACKAGE M.OO\nOontalni:\n(OI. Bottle Cherry Bark Cough Syrup.\n1 Boi Throat Pastilles. , j l.j\n1 Box Rexall Gold Cure Tablets.\nI Tube Cutnrrh Jelly.\nILLUSTRATED WAR PAPERS WEEKLY-\nArrny and Navy Illustrated 2Uc. Mirror, 10c. The Great War\nIllustrated 20c. Sketch, 10c. The War Bulletin 15c. London\nNdVK, JOc.\nBEWS' DRUG STORE\n#\n\"\u00C2\u00A5\""@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Revelstoke (B.C.)"@en . "The_Mail_Herald_1914-10-14"@en . "10.14288/1.0311151"@en . "English"@en . "50.998889"@en . "-118.195833"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Revelstoke, B.C. : The Interior Publishing Co. Ltd."@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 . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Mail Herald"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .