"dd3f405e-a07d-42ec-b580-1f5a35e58b98"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-17"@en . "1915-01-06"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mherald/items/1.0311303/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " REVELSTOKE\nChief lumbering, railway, mining, agricultural and navigation centre between Calgary\nand the Pacific ocean.\nThe Mail-Herald\nTHE MATL-HERALD\nPublished twice weekly\u00E2\u0080\u0094Read\nby everyone\u00E2\u0080\u0094The recognized\nadvertising medium lor the\ncity and district.\nVol. 22\u00E2\u0080\u0094No 2\nREVELSTOKE. B.C. WEDNESDAY, JAMJAKY (i, IU\u00C2\u00AB\n$2.50 Per Year\nSUBJECT OF SERMONS\nA i SPECIAL SERVICES ON SUNDAY\nClergymen Expound. Patriotic} Sentiments Righteousness of Cause \"Demands Prayers'of People\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ho\"me\nCuard and Rocky Mountain\" Rangers Attend' Service at St. Peters Church\nIn compliance with the proclamation of His RoyaU Highness the\nDuke of Connaught services of humble prayer and intercession on behalf of the empire and its allies and\nfor a speedy and favorable peace\nwere held at all the city churches ou\nSunday and in every case Bpecial reference to the war was made by the\npreachers, eloquent and appropriate\nsermons being preached.\nThe Home Guard and members of\nthe 102nd, regiment attended service\nat St. Peter's church in the morning.\nThey .assemblies at the drill hall and\nmarched to the church where the order of service appointed by the Arch,\nbishop of Canterbury was used. The\nbymtis were appropriate to the occasion being \"Onward Christian Soldiers, ** \"To The 0 God wc Cry\"\nand \"Cod Bave and Bless Our Fatherland.\" At the conclusion of the\nservice the National Anthem was\nheartily BUng. Among the members\nof the Home Guard present were\nOapt. T.FI.I.. Taylor, l.ieut. W. H.\nWallace. H. H. McVity, L. W. Wood\nH, Gordon. S. Holmes, G. Hawker\nand J. Anderson. The Kklnd regiment\nwas represented by Lieuts, A. Grant\nnnd u.H. Brock. Capt. Taylor, RT,\nM. Robertson. .I.E. Dickson, Sergt.-\nmajor Quintan of Kamloops and\nthree of the members of the Columbia River bridge cuard.\nPreaching from the text \"Fight the\nCool Fight\" Rev. C.A. Procunier at\n{^t. Peter's church said: \"In accordance eriek tbe imnuliUimtinn nf\u00E2\u0080\u0094++\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB-\nMajesty King George V. We are offering special prayer and supplications to Almighty God in this time\nof dir\u00C2\u00BB and dreadful distress of individuals and nations. God is still\n< ur help and refuge, but it is only in\nthe dark hours of awful distress and\ncalamities that the nation meets Him\nface to face. As wttb Individuals so\nwith nations it is only in supreme\ncrisis that God is sen tn His true\nreality and power. Ordinarily He has\nm semblance to a working hypothesis\nsuitable and applicable to christenings, marriages and burials (of othei people) but today the whole British Empire cries: 'I believe In God'\nnnd prays: 'Our Father which Art In\nHeaven.'\nHe welcomed the Rocky Mountain\nRangers, because they were a link\nin the great chain of Uritain's sailors\nand soldiers |i |g tbey who guard\nand keep the State. The highest lunc-\ntion of every state was hei will, and\nof wh t us\" waa Wj|| without an\nadequate power to enforce that will.\nThe will of the Uritish empire was\ntruth, liberty, freedom and lair-play:\nand the soldiers were thc gleaming\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0words that guard and Keep these\nprecious brith rights. All honor to\ntbe soldiers. \"There are,\" said thc\nlate Vi. E. Gladstone, \"only two professions of honor open to men, viz:\nthose .ef parson and soldier.\" Truly\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aid .is all the reil Dnd their merit\nand seek th\"ir reward in material\nprofit and advantage.\nHe welcomed them also because\nthey nre the defenders of our homes.\nIn tunes of peace we arc afraid that\nUm e.Idler Is not appreciated as he\nought to be, but when thc grim demons of bloody inst and barbaric\nrrimes defile women and mutilate\nchildren, as they have in the giguntic\nfctruggle and debacle, then thc soldier rises to his true worth and we\nsalute him as our defender.\nHe welcomed them because of their\ncourage. There ts no gainsaying tho\ntruth thnt it takes courage to be a\nsoldier under modern conditions of\nscientific warfare, on the land, In thc\nair, nn the sea and under the sea.\nLanguage fails to describe it all and\nes| lally the artillery lire. What does\nit mean' It means death, But\n\"How can man elie better than fac-\nm- fearful odds.\nKni the iihIic-i ofbll fathers and the\ntemplet of ins cods?\"\n\"But you have this moral courage\nand that is lUmmum bonUm, GniiiT.il\nKuropatkin In dimming the ten\nsons fm SUCCCSS of tbe Japanese m\nthe Russo-Japanese Win lays much\nemphasis on the 'moral strength' or\ncourage of Japan. He says that a\nRussian expert insisted at the opening of the war that one Russian\nwas as good as three Japanese: but\nas the war went on he admitted his\nmistake and said that tbey would\nhave to send a Russian s. .ldier to\nmeet every Japanese: and that towards the end he held that it would\nneed three Russians to overcome one\nJajpenese. Tho superiority of \"the\nmen of Nippon\" lay in their moral\nsuperiority. They believed ifa their\ncatiBe. They would rather die than\nlose. Moral courage sustained the\nUnited States soldiers who lought\nunder Washington. Moral strength\narmed the British who finally fought\nNapoleon when he threatened to conquer Europe. And so we trust that it\nis this same virtue that quickens\nblood and brains of British soldiers\nso that they may conquer that modern Atilla and Prussian militarism.\n\"Wherefore brethren we must 'tight\na Good Fight.' There can be no doubt\nabout our right to make war or our\nduty. Fight we must: if we don't kill\nthem they will kill us.\n\"We are called to (1) Worship.\nWorship God: because we become like\nwhat wc worship and because our\nprayers will be answered.\n\"More things are wrought by-\nprayer.\nThan this world dreams of.\nIf, knowing God, they lift not hands\n.of prayer.\nBoth for themselves and those who\ncall thorn friends\nFor so the whole round earth . is\nevery way,\nBound by gold chains about the feet\nof God.\"\n\"We are culled (2) To penitence.\nArc there not individual and national sins. If these be, and there are, we\nought to repent. There is mercy with\nGod. If we confess our sins He Is\nfaithful and just to forgive us our\nsins and to cleanse us Irom all un-\nlighteousness.\" Thus may wc us a\nChurch militant \"fight a good fight\"\nas well as the state militant.\nMETHODIST CHURCH\nIn the Methodist church the morning meditation (based on Matt. 7,11\nand James 5, 10) raised the question\nwhether prayer made any difference.\nIllustrations individual and national\nwere given by Rev. Vi. Lashley Hall.\nPrayer mates no difference in God\nbut in circumstances; does not alter\nlaws but alters us; puts us twhere\nprayer is effectual i in accord with\nthe divine arbiter, in a condition of\ninnd and mood which makes possible\nthe change of events. Prayer makes\nuse of existing forces, like getting in\ncommunication with the telephone,\nand sets In operation new lorces of\npersonality. The goal iu view was a\npound and lasting peace in God'B own\ntitiii' and liod's own way.\nIn the evening Mr. Hall took as\nhis text, Luke 18, 7 \"Shall not God\nAvenge His Elect who Cry unto Him\nduy and night'.\"* Two fecliugs strove\nlor mastery, he Slid, heurtsickjness\nat the awful slaughter\u00E2\u0080\u0094gratitude thut\nbehind the conllict and contusion\nirere Issuei in which Sod Himself\nwas interested. We must clear our\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nlnd of irrolevanries. It was no occasion for vindictive utterances. We\ncould not straighten out the tangles\nof contemporary events. But wc\ncould grasp the vast issues tbat lie\nbehind.\n1 One issue was the inviolability ol\ntruth. Are we to stand by truth as\nsomething sacred, something supreme? Or are we to play tricks; palm\noff false statements on unsuspecting\nIiCDple; Inculcate and teach that\ntruth is something conventional,\nsomething thai doesn't matter. What\n>ou like to make it, In short; something to suit your own convenience,\n! which hns no eternal significance?\nThe nation tbat answers that jurs\ntie.ii aright ll the nation that will\nsurvive V, ItevCT els,' we lose, we\nmust not lose tbi capacity for moral\ndistinctions.\n\ econd issue was tbe sacredo-MM\n' ol lil'i'ity. II peopl a r it tit to\nOFFICERS OF\nFIRE BRIGADE\nAnnual Meeting Held\u00E2\u0080\u0094Apparatus Compared With Other\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2j Cities\u00E2\u0080\u0094Forty One Calls\nThe annual meeting of the tire brigade No. 2 up town was held on Monday night with a full attendance present. After thc routine business the\nI'vunts of the year were considered\nand the brigade was seen to have\nbeen called together 41 times since\nthe last annual meeting.\nAt some of the calls it looked as\nthough the tires would he serious but\nthe brigade was able by hard work\nand quickness in getting to the scene\nto hold the hres to only small blazes,\nexcept for the big lire on McKenzie\navenue which had got well under way\nbefore the brigade was called.\nComparisons were made with the\nlighting apparatus of other cities\nwhich shows Vernon and Kamloops\nto have up-to-date auto trucks and\nladders and appliances with 150U feet\nof hose on truck and J000 reserve on\nthe walls. Revelstoke has been getting along with a sleigh and wagon\nund only infill feet ol hose; the brigade has not asked Ior more, as it\nhas tried to keep expenses down, but\nas the city grows it was considered\nthat provision must be made for\nmore. The city council has been very\nhelpful and supplied the brigade with\nthe necessaries asked fer.\nThe speeches of the various officers\nshowed that general good feeling exists in the brigade. The .newly appointed officers Ior 1916 are:\nChief. Vi. A. Foote. .-\t\nAsst. Chief, Roy Macdonald,\nCapt. Hose, K. G. McRae.\nCapt. Hook and Ladder, R. Squarebriggs.\nSecretary, C. R. Macdonald.\n.Asst. Sect. H. Mulholland.\nPublic Meeting\nFriday Evening\nA Public Meeting called by\nMayor McKinnon will be held\nin the City Hall on Friday\nEvening at which a discussion\nof civic affairs will be invited.\nThe annual civic fiinancial\nstatement is published in this\nissue of the Mail-Herald for\nthe inspection of the public\nand His Worship and the aldermen will be prepared to answer any questions concerning\nit.\nPlan to Form\nTourist Association\nELECTIONS\nDRAW NEAR\nTwo Candidates for Mayor-\nFour for Aldermen Two\nfor School toard\nWill Endeavor to Make Revelstoke Tourist Centre of\nMountains\u00E2\u0080\u0094Time to Act\nNow, Says Business Man\nSUDDEN DEATH\nAT GLACIER\nWorker at Tunnel Dies in Bunk\nHouse - Hearl Disease\nProbable Cause\ni\nC. Williams who was employed at\nthe tunnel died suddenly early on\nSunday morning. His companions in\nthe bunk horse heard him breathing\nheavily and summoned Dr. Gallagher\nbut he waB dead before the doctor\narrived. Dr. J.H. Hamilton, coroner,\nwent to Glacier on Sunday but decided that an inquest was unnecess-\nI ary as heart failure was the apparent\ni.cause'of death. The body has been\nbrought to Revelstoke and an attempt is being made to discover the\ndead man's relatives.!\nWith nomination day only tive days\nfrom today the liklihood of more\nmunicipal candidates entering the\nheld grows remote.\nFor mayor there are two candidates\nin the field, W. A. Foote and W. I.\nDriggs. H\t\nIn ward one the only candidate at natio\npresent is Aid. J. H. McSorley.\nIn Ward two Aids. G. W. Bell and\nW. A. Smythe arc candidates.\nIn ward three Aid. F. H. Bourne is\nin the field.\nA movement is on foot, and is being heartily supported by a number\nof business men, for the formation of\na Revelstoke Tourist association.\nThe object of the association will\nbe to take whatever steps may be\npossible to attract tourists to the\ncity and to make Revelstoke tlie\ncapital of the mountains us a tourist resort.\nThe advantages of the city as a\nnal playground both in summer\nAid. Needham\nand winter will be advertised, stress\nbeing laid upon the beauties of the\nRevelstoke national park and upon\nthe varied attractions from a tourist\nand sportsman's point of view of tbe\nis another probable district of which Revelstoke is a\ncandidate in ward three. A. Hobson centre. Tbe advantages of the city\nwho was expected to ofler himself as as a centre for winter sports will al-\nalderman in ward one has definitely eo ne impressed.\nannounced that he wJll not be a The possibilities of catering more\ncandidate and it is doubtful whether widely to the tourist traffic will be\nK. G. McRae will allow himself to\nl.e nominated..\nFor acbool trustees\ndiscussed and steps will be taken to\nprovide in the cit> whatever .equipment tourists are likely to require,\nand A. Kenward will probably he it is the intention also to approach\ncandidates for re-election for the two the Canadian Pacific railway officials\nW. A. Sturdy\nvacancies.\nROCK LIKE\nNEW YORK'S\nPASS THROUGH\nON SUNDAY\nFour Revelstoke Volunteers\nAmong Reinforcements for\nPrincess Patricias\nNew Record for Tunnel Boring\nSet Up by Gangs at Mount\nMacdonald\nlive, and live in peace, without having someone come in by the back\ndoor to stamp the life out of them?\nls there any meaning in the long\nstruggle of democracy, or iB . the\ndivine right of kings to oonie back?\nThe issue is squarely jcUnod and wc\ndo no good by slurring things over.\nEvery man to the remotest bounds of\nthe earth\u00E2\u0080\u0094every nation, big and little\u00E2\u0080\u0094every socialist\u00E2\u0080\u0094every father nnd\nmother\u00E2\u0080\u0094is concerned. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The issue is\nwhether, in view of possible contingencies, wc are to have an iron\ncollar fastened round our neck and\nthe life stamped out of us by the\nirou bcel. Suppose iu deference to\ncertain suggestions you throw down\nyour arms\u00E2\u0080\u0094what theii? The alternative is the iron collar. Are we to\nlearn the lesson all over again? Is\nListory astray in its teachings? Or\ncan we count on God\u00E2\u0080\u0094who will\navenge His own elect?\nThis brim s us fCo the paramount\nissue\u00E2\u0080\u0094religion. Let there be no mistake. In event of certain contingencies all that we have bean tuugbt ns\nChristian is ruled out of court. Violence is exalted as religion. Now ws\nknow what militarism is\u00E2\u0080\u0094unmasked\nculture by the sword with God left\nout. That is the issue. Wc can no\nlonger make appeal to God\u00E2\u0080\u0094the God\nwc have believed in\u00E2\u0080\u0094the God ol\ntruth and right, the God of eternal\njiistne', to whom wc could -tuke our\nwrongs\u00E2\u0080\u0094the Godot heaven and\nearth, the God and Fathi r of our\nLord Jesus Christ. Another God is\n1 ut in His place\u00E2\u0080\u0094a loreign god, a\nheathen god\u00E2\u0080\u0094a nod of violence, cruelty, perfidy, hate, a god of fruud and\nforce. A god who has no connection\nwith the heavenB or the earth except\nas represented by the depraved wills\nof mankind.\nThe issue is\u00E2\u0080\u0094Christianity is challenged\u00E2\u0080\u0094In Its efficacy and authority:\nput aside as a back number, and in\nits place a pseudo-religion set up, cul-\nt ure based Oil the IWOrd, with Qod\nleft out; which either acknowledges\nno Qod or B god alien tei the Chris\ntiaii K.'iith.\nThe ball to prayer is lest we for-\nget. The most patriotic thine is to\nturn om thought! to prayer. The\nspeaker referred to the boys in the\n'James Kenneth Forbes. William\nBurland, Herman Kaisergruber and\nWalter Ernest Robinson all of Revelstoke will be among a contingent of\n127 officers and men who will leave\nVictoria on Saturday to reinforce\nI'rincess Patricia's regiment at the\nfront.\nOapt. Charles A. Moorhead, a\nSouth African war veteran, now ia\ncommand of a draft of 127 officers\nand men from the ?-0th battalion,\nVictoria, has been officially advised\nthat he and his command will leave\nthe capital On Saturday, Jpn. \"J, to\nn inforce tbe princess Patricia rcgi-\ntnent, reported as being on the firing\nline at the present time. Fully five\nhundred officers and men will leave\nCanada for this purpose on a transport to sail from Halifax on Jun.\n17.\nThe majority of the men in Victoria\nlm\e been vaccinated and 'inoculated\nIor typhoid. There were enough volunteers to lill the detachment three\nor four times and the very best men\nwere picked.\nOapt. Moorhoad was born in Belfast, Ireland, in 1S77. He saw ser-\nv ice in the Boer war and with the\nNatal Mounted Killes went through\nthe Zulu rebellion of 190-8, for which\nhe li.ilds the medal and clasp. He he-\nram\" lieutenant and Signalling officer\nin the Sn.itiisb Horse In 1913, he\nJoined the 88th Fusiliers (Victoria), and served as captain of that\nregiment until he voluntoered for\nactive service with the 'lOth battalion\nin the same capacity.\nl.ieut. James S. Harvey, son of the\nlate James Harvey, of N'annimo, Is\nsenior lieutenant, Lieut, Oarew Martin, son of Mr. Justice Martin of\nXictoria, ie another officer who will\naccompany the detachment.\n\t\n: Drilling in the pioneer bore\nRogers Pass tunnel undertaking,\ngangs at work in December broke\ntheir best previous record and set up\na new record for boring on this continent with a progress of 84-J feet.\nThey heat the best American record\nfor one month by :i2 feet.\nTbc big drill machines are bringing\nwith a view to securing the co-operation of the company in any steps\nthat may be considered advisable.\nThe advantage of the city will be\nimpressed upon tjhe company's officials who will be asked to include Revelstoke in its advertising an 1 to assist In diverting to the city the\nstream of tourists which passes over\nthe main line. The company will also\nbe requested t.i assist in providing\naccommodation iieed\"d by visitors to\nthe Revelstoke National park.\n'Now is the time for Revelstoke to\nin the get busy\" said one ot the business\nthe men who ig interested in the project.\nyesterday. \"Next year the Panama\nexhibition and the scores of conventions that will be held iu Sar. Francisco will brine thousands ol tourists\nto thc gates of the city. It will be to\nour advantage and to the advantaard. has reel Ivrt fl i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 J, M. Mi\nKay, Canad I euper-\nintendent, a letter Inl > thnt\nphotographic I Ims taken on Mount\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ke last summer have proved\nhighly successful. The letter is as\nfollows\nJanuary 2, 1914.\nT. Kilpatrick, Esq.,\nRevelstoke, 11 r\nPear Sir.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It oteerds ,,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.,< great pleasure to advise you thai the BOO foot\nMm taken of Mount Revelstoke by\nMr. Trautman last year, was highly\nsuccessful.\nMr. Trautman tlso r^uMted me to\nadvise you that this tilm would be\nexhibited it the Panama Exposition\non.\nYours truly,\nJ. M. McKAY\nThe number of pupils enrolled at\nFernie public ichools at the close of\nthe term wus about 725\nUg^sgippi dH Ceaeare, a condemned\nItalian in the Nelson (all hung up\nins itockitigi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cbrli l found\nthem well loaded up With Christmas\ndatnth \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 FACE TWO.\nHEhfMLO ^''\"ei.ST'OKE\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1915\nWe wish\nUm\nHAPPY AND PROSPEROUS\nNEW YEARj,\nto tJLW\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBOURNE BROS., LIMITED\nImperial Bank of Canada\nCapital Paid in\nReserve Fund\n$7,000,000.00\n7,000,000.00\nPBLBQ HOWLAND, ESQ.,\nPresident\nKLIAS ROGERS, ESY.\nVice-President\nEDWARD HAY, General Manager.\nWILLIAM MOPPAT, Assistant General Manager.\nSavings Bank Department\nDeposits of $1 received and interest allowed from date of deposit\nArrowhead Branch Revelstoke Branch\nA.B. McCLEXEGHAN, Manager.\nWISHING YOU\nr n >>i p/iments of the Season\nP. BURNS & CO.\nSAM MCc^VIAHON Light and heavy Wagons, light and heavy\nSleighs. Buggies, Cutters, Plows. Harrows\nGeneral Blacksmith Farm Implements. Wagons mads and repaired\nAgent for John Deere and Company and International Harvester Co.,\nFarm Implements\nHORSE SHOEING A SPECIALTY REVELSTOKE, B.C.\nDo Too Buy from Mclntyre s ?\nMixed Peels, fresh, per lb, _ 25c\nDates, 2 lbs _ 25c\nFresh Ground Coffee, 3 lbs $1.00\nDried Green Peas, 3 lbs 25c\nVan Camp's Chicken Soup, per tin 15c\nFRESH GOODS ARRIVING DAILY.\nXMAS STOCK NOW IN.\nMCLNTYRE \u00C2\u00ABfc SOX\n.\.\na pton, Kit\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 inufacturing\nnever nn-\n-.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 as\nI r.ow exist. E\nj Bible man\nilling i\nown in its\n- in many\ntbe i-spn \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0pays a good rk. The\nleading fact\nhigbtst pressure .lay and Bight\nrids When there\nin iiip .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nthere will\nmaking \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nliirmirighan, Ct ia bl\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ere lm-\npoi ted .reek,\nmainly Iron \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n- ten the\nBirmingl\nherself Vt the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 n governn eni\ncrnrn'ent.H of OUT alliei\n:' | (tire Is re\nand tons; hospital bedfl by tl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nand; fencing hy t.he n.ile.\nfinds, amoi g il\ndem mds fier , ,, [|\nrazors, two Million table tonivM a\nmillion spoons me] n em' lion\nThe electrical and ilectric ti on\nworld expected to suffer, p ,,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. ids\nthut it. will i.e bettei ofl than bef ere.\n\"I be tremendous Qerman com]\nIn t.he business a competition ' ei\ni'i at every turn hy Protection ims\nbeen suddenly cui oil,' declared the\n\"Tramway.,and Railway World,* when\ndescribing the new condition ol things\n'It is a unique opportunity.'\nThe Dominions aro beginning with\ntheir orders. Australia is spending\n\u00C2\u00A3200,000 on the motor aquipment\nulone for her expeditionary force.\n'There seems no doubt that British\ntrade in South Africa will receive au\nenormous impetus,' writes the South\nAlrican Trade commissioner. 'Our\ntrade with Germany haB finally ceased,' wrlteB one ol the largest Canadian buyers. 'Neither ourselves, our\nsons, nor our sons' sons are going\nto do business with the nation that\nmakes widows and orphans in our\ncitlies. England is going henceforth to\nhave all our trade that Bhe can take.'\nA SOl')kID WATCHWORD\nEdmonton Journal. Archbishop\nMcNeil of Toronto, in addressing the\ntroops in that city, gave them thiB\nadmonition. \"Be physically tit to\nlight and spiritually lit to die.\" It\nwould be hard to improve on this as\nu watchword for the present crisis,\nand it could quite properly he applied to those who are not actually\nunder arniB but who have to hold\nthemselves in rendincsB for any emergency.\na a h is a a n l\u00C2\u00BBi !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i\u00C2\u00AB* :>]iiii\n1\n1\nil\ni\n1\nI\ni\nI\nI\ni\nI\nl\ni\ni\n\"\nll\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\ni\n* [fi] * X' *K * K X '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 K \u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB' -\nAll changes of advertisements must positively be\nhanded into this otfjee by\nMonday evening in order that\nthe change shall appear in\nWednesday's issue, and any\nchanges intended for Saturday's issue must be handed in\nnot later than Thursday\nevening of each week.\nA -ileal Lever Simulation\nGOLD WATCH FREE.\nA rtim'iiiitforward nwrrMii\nitfliT iruia i :j (ntai)li-hi-d\nlinn V>a an1 i iv.in; nway\nWatiliw o lb Hetnitdil ' f\n|i\u00C2\u00AB j Lil OTfll t!.';\nwoi.j b t\ li im\nti.ivo ttacaenL ni toelnn\neii\nTO 1\nIons offer. We enpect vou to\nabout us antl tfun/ thrnt tl'*\nDon't think thin oiler too n .fid In\n35 cent***, today \u00C2\u00BBn>l mi\nwi' \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 imi-'c' William* -\nJawRlim (lMpfaUl >, w. ciui-wit\nEnuland.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .. I\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 n .\n! U) -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ni *..' rli. n-li.\nIMI1 ll\nr. *i..\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0i-';'.,\n0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ni .. it-cat \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .. :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\nac i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n>ii!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0..\nFor Hair Health\nIf Rexall \"93\" Hair Tonic does\nnot Improve the health of your\nscalp and hair, we will pay for\nwhat you use during the trial.\nWc could not so Btrongly endorse\nRexall \"93 \" Hair Tonic and continue\nto sell it to the same people if it did\nnot do all we claim. Should it not\nprove entirely satisfactory our customers would lose faith in us, we\nwould lose their patronage, and our\nbusiness would Buffer.\nIf your hair is lulling out or you\neBufler any scalp trouble, we believe\nKexall \"93\" Hair Tonic will do more\nto eradicate the dandruff, give health\nto the Bcalp, stimulate new hair\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0growth and prevent premature baldness than any other human agency.\nWc want you to make us prove\nthis. We aek you to rbk no money\nwhatever. Buy a botUe of Kexall\n\"93\" Hair Tonic, use it according to\ndirections for thirty days; tl.rn if\nyou are not entirely satisfied, come\nnnd tell us and we will promptly hand\nbark the money you paid us for it.\nWc won't ask you to sign anything, nor even to bring the bottle\nback. We won't obligate you in\nany way. We will take your mero\nword. Could anything be more fair?\nCould we do anything more lo prove\nour belief in Kexall \"93\" HairTonio,\nand our honesty of purpose in recommending it to you?\nKexall \"93\" HairTonic is as pleasant to use as spring water and Itaa\nbut a faint, pleasing odor. It comet'\nin two siies of bottles, lillr. and J I.(III.\nYou can buy Rexall \"93\" nair Tonio\nin Una community only at our store:\nWALTER BEWS.\nRevMntoke llritlnli Columbia\nTh. TmVttall Store\nThere in a Heiall Store in nearly every town\nend city in the United States, Canaan and\nOreat Briinin. Thero ia a different 1|. lall\nItemed-/ for nearly every ordinary human ill\u00E2\u0080\u0094\neach eapselally deiifned for the particular ill\ntor which it ia recommended.\nTIM Rexall Stores are America's Oreatert\nDrug Stores\nQUTTON'Q\nOEEDO\nfor garden and farm are beat\nfor BC soil See Catalogue for\nsolid guarantee, of purity\nana ger mi not ion\nSend now for Copy free\nSutton S Sens The Kind's Soodmon\nR\u00C2\u00BBadi i,j\u00C2\u00A3 E i, jl I ond\nA J.woodward\nVictoria o\ Vancouver\n.I't Port er 617 GrenvHIa %t\nlote aqcntx ma bk'tism ttoiumha\nJ.P.SUTHERLAND\nTransfer Draying\nHandling Pianos a Specialty\nPhone42 - Night Phone85\nTrinting\nThat . .\n\Vay \nDates, Dromedary, pkg. .15, 2 for .25\nWalnuts, California, per tb 35\n40\n.25\n25 to .50\n 70\nWailnuts, Grenoble \.25\nPecans, per tb .35\nFilberts, per Ib .25\nAlmonds, per Ib .25@ .30\nBrazils, per Ib .25\u00C2\u00AE .30\nMEATS\nFresh killed beef, retail .06@.27J\nPork, retail 18\u00C2\u00AE .25\nMutton, retail 12i@ .25\nVeal, retail 13J@ .27\nHams, retail 25\u00C2\u00AE .30\nBacon, retail 28\u00C2\u00AE .10\nLard, retail 17\u00C2\u00AE .20\nChickens, retail 23\u00C2\u00AE .25\nausages, retail 13\u00C2\u00AE .15\nTurkey, per tb .30\nGeese, per tb .25\nDucks, per Ib .28\nSUGAR\nGranulated B. C. Cane\n100 tb. sack 8.00\nLump sugar, 2tbs .25\nGran. B.C., JO Ib. sack 1.65\nBrown sugar, 'libs .25\nSyrup, mnple, bottle .60\nSyrup, gallon 1.75@2.00\nHoney, comb, per lb .30\nHoney, lib. jars 25\u00C2\u00AE .35\nFLOUR\nRobin Hood 2.00\nB. & K Bread Flour 2.15\nFive Roses 2.25\nLake of the Woods, bag 2.25\nRoyal HouBehcId _-., 2.00\nPurity Flour 2.25\nKing's Quality 2.15\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, creamery .40\nButter, dairy, per tb 32\u00C2\u00AE .35\nCheese, Canadian, per lb. .25\nCheese, Can. Stilton, tb. .30\nCheese, Imp. Stilton, tb. .60\nEggs, local new laid, doz 60\nVEGETABLES\nParsley, per bunch .06\nDry, onions, 5 tbs. for .25\nCabbage, local, each ... .05\u00C2\u00AE .10\nNew Potatoes, Ib .02\nLettuce, tt) 10\u00C2\u00AE .16\nTomatoes, Ib .15\nNew Carrots, lb .021\nTurnips, per Ib .02i\nSweet Potatoes, 4tbB. for .25\nCelery, per Ib -.. .5\nGREEDY FOR POWER\nKaiser Arrested His Mother\nIn these days when everything concerning the German emperor is ol\npublic interest, it may do no barm to\nrecall the article published in the\nAmericnn Magazine some three years\nago by Octave Mirabeau, in which, in\nthe course of an intimate study of\nthe German emperor, he told this\nstory:\nBismarck never cared for the Emperor Frederick, who be thought\nwished to change the order of things,\nand as tor the empress be abominated her because of her English ideas\nland referred to her as \"thc stranger\"\n! He devoted himBeli to Ailing William\nwith the' appetite for power, taught\nhim to criticize every written and\nspoken word of hiB father and to believe that the 'influence of his English mother was anti-national and\ntherefore dangerous. But Bismarck,\nshrewd as he was, could not foresee\nhow far thie young man's love of\npower would lead him.\nThfr relations between the Empress\nFrederick and her son became at last\nso bitter that William placed spies\nabjout her\u00E2\u0080\u0094even in the bedroom of his\ninvalided father.\nThrough one of these spieB William\nlearned of the existence of a journal\nwhich his father had kept for some\nyears. Frederick had a taste for writing and the fact that there was coldness betw?en him and his sou led\nWilliam to fear that this secret journal might contain some criticism of\nhis conduct. The fear of it haunted\nhim and he bent all his thoughts to\nObtaining possession of 'it.\nThe Empress, however, was clever\nenough to conceal the diary before\nher husband's death. Eluding the surveillance of ber son, she sent the\npapers to her mother. Queen Victoria,\nBREAD AND HONEY\nBREAD is the start of life, but this appPics only to good bread, we\nventure to say thut if you will (jive our bread a trial we can convince you that our Bread is worthy of the name\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Staff of\nLife\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094in style and quality as Bakers loaf, Home-made, Vienna, Cottage, French, Twist; also Rye, raisin and Graham Bread.\nHONEY, that is absolutely pure, gathered and bottled in B.C., as\nthis is the season for honey, we vqould advise you to give this a\ntrial as to purity. Only a limited quantity. Come early if you want\nhoney that is honey only.\nPhone 41 HOBSON'S Box 734\n' I 'HIS Book will tell you tion for the retailer, vvhole-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 how you can double sale merchant and manufac-\nyour available floor space turer. It may prove worth\nwithout adding to your pre- hundreds of dollars to YOU.\ntent building. It will show It is brimful of suggestions\nyou how to make every for the wideawake business\nsquare inch of floor space man who desires to increase\npay a profit. It contains a his efficiency. We'll gladly\nwealth of valuable informa- send it free ujxm recjuett.\nOTIS-FENSOM ELEVATOR COMPANY\nLIMlTCO\n50 BAY IT., TORONTO\nor to her brother, then Prince of\nWales\u00E2\u0080\u0094I don't remember which.\nHardly had his father drawu his\nlast breath when William, over the\ndead body, performed Wis first official\nact.\nIt was to demand of his widowed\nm tier the journal, which he termed\ni memorial.\"\nTho Empress leigned ignorance.\nWilliam insisted. He spoke as master, giving his mother the order to\nobey. She persisted in declaring that\nshe knew nothing of the paper. Her\nson menaced her hrut.n\"v with his\nwrath. To his dry eyes her tears\nwere ooly stratagem. The more she\nresisted the more determined he became. It seemed to him thut the importance of the papers might be measured by the stubbornness of her opposition, besides which he was enraged that iu the first hour of the\nreign he had so feverishly awaited\nsome one dured thwart him.\nWas not his mother merely a princess of the house of which he was the\nhead? Was she not merely lady colonel of one of his regiments? WaB she\nnot his subject? Anger drove him\nstark mad.\n\"Well,\" he commanded, purple with\nwrath, \"you will remain under close\narrest until you have obeyed me.\"\nBismurck, arriving at Potsdam two\nhours after this, found the palace Bur-\nrounded by squadrons of armed cavalry.\nThe emperor whom he found still\nexcited, told the old chancellor how\nhe had met the disobedience of his\nmother.\n\"And she need not expect pity or\nconsideration until she has obeyed\nine!\" he declared. \"You understana\nthat, Mr. Chuncellor? Until she has\nobeyed me!\"\nThe pupil had gone much too far.\nBismarck saw at once that the buffoonery continued might mar the\nwhole of William's reign. Later in\n'life, he said, he used to wonder how-\nhe kept from laughing in h'is sovereign's face.\nWhat he ditl was to receive William's news with deferential silence,\nand later, when the emperor was\ncalmer, bIiow him that his course was\nsure to meet with general disapproval. There was a way, he thought, of\nproceeding much more rigorously and\nat the. same time efficaciously. Why\nnot rather cut down tbe income of\nthe empress? Suspend her appanages?\n\"I know her majesty,\" said the\ngood Bismarck. \"She has pride. Forced arrest she can hrave out, accepting it as a sort of martyrdom; but\nthe money, Sire, the money!\u00E2\u0080\u0094who\ncan resist money?\"\nFurther he laid tactful stress upon\nthe probable representations of England. \"Is it really the moment, Sire.'\nThe kaiser, becoming appeased, listened to Bismarck's counsel. The arrest of the empress was removed.\nThe officers led their cavalry hack to\nquarters and William turned his attention to the details of his father's\nobsequies, which lie wished to fie most\nfastidious.\nTbe struggle \"between the dowager\nempress and her son lasted for several months, six at least. Finally the\nemperor obtained the manuscript aud\nthe empress her money.\nWas it not a worthy debut, I ask\nyou, for an emperor who, despairin?;\nof ever attaining the glory of having\nmade a Bismarck, dlscerae I that the\nglory of daring to dismiss him was\nthe only thing that could be thrown\ninto the balance*'\nSchool Boys' Basket\nBall Schedule\nJan. 8.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whitewashes ;vs. Jnnes.\nJun. 12\u00E2\u0080\u0094Whitewashers v. Baby Giants\nDec. 1.1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prunes vs. Flyers.\nDec. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Junes vs. Spitfires.\nDec. 21.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Baby Giants vs. Spitfires.\nDec. 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Flyers vs. Whitewashes\nDec. SS.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Janes vs. Prunes\nOn Wr In -iday evening, December 2\nthe teams lined up for volley ball at\nthe Y.M.C.A., as follows:\nFrench Recruits.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 w. Legallals\n(Capt.) Dr. Heard, .1 I,. Hay, A\nRobs, j. Couling, Georire Menne,l,\ntch Reserves.\u00E2\u0080\u0094N. R. Brown,\n(Capt.) John Little, Vi. Velth, A. c.\nHaddon. J. S. Boss, II. Twiss.\nThe game was fust and interesting\nall tbe wm through, with the fol-\nlowine result \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 French Recruits, 2;\nScotch Reserves I.\nCorporation of the City\nof Revelstoke\nPROCLAMATION\nPublic notice is hereby given to tho\nelectors of the Municipality of Revelstoke that I require the presence of\nthe said electors at the City Clerk'B\nOffice, City Hall, McKenzie Avenue,\nin the said City, on the llth January\n1916, at 12 o'clock noon, for the purpose of electing persons to represent\nthem in the Municipal Council as\nMayor and Aldermen, and nlso for thq\npurpose of electing Two School Trustees.\nThe mode of nomination of candi-\nI dates shall be as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe candidates shall be nominated\nin writing; the writing shall be subscribed by two voters of the Munici-\npa.ity as proposer and seconder, and\nshall be delivered to the Returning\nOfficer at any time between the date\nof this notice and 2 p.m. on the day\nof Nomination; and in the event of a\npoll heing necessary, such poll will be\nopened on Thursduy the 14th day of\nJanuary, 1!U5 in the City Hall,\nin the City of Revelstoke, and kept\nopen between the hour of nine o'clock\nin the forenoon and 7 o'clock in the\natternoon for taking and recording tho\nvotes of the electors of the said City,\nof which every person is hereby required to takj notice and govern\nthemselves accordingly.\nThe persons qualitied to be nominated for and elected as Mayor Bhall\nbe such persons us are male British\nsubjeots of the full age of twenty-one\nyears and are not disqualified under\n'any '.aw, and have been for the sK\nmonths next preceding the day of\nnomination, the registered owner in\nthe Land Registry Office of laud or\nreal property in the city of the assessed value on tbe last Municipal Assessment Roll, of One Thousand Dollars or more over and above any registered judgment or change, and\nwho are otherwise duly qualitied aB\nMunicipal Voters.\nThe persons qualified to be nominated for and elected as Aldermen\nshall be such persons as arc male\nBritish subjects of the full age of 21\nyears and are not disqualified under\nany law and havc been for tbe six\nmonths next preceding the day oi\nnomination the Registered Owner in\nthe Land Registry Office, of land or\nreal property in the City of the assessed value, on the last Municipal\n| Assessment Roll of Five Hundred Dollars or more over and above any registered judgment or charge, and who\nare otherwise qualified as Municipal\nvoters.\nThe persons qualified to be nomi-\n[ nated for and elected as School Trustees shall be such persons as are\nBritish subjects of thc full age ot 2L\nyears and having been for the six\nmonths next preceding the date of\nnomination the registered owner, in\nthe Land Registry Office, of Innd or\nreal property in the City School district of tho assessed value on the last\nrevised assessment roll of five hundred dollars or more over and above\nany registered judgment or charge,\nand being otherwise .qualified to vote\nat an election ol School Trustees in\nthe said School District.\nEvery candidate nominated shall\nsignify liy a writing accompanying\nthe nomination paper, his consent to\nsuch nomination, except in case such\nperson be absent from the Municipal-\nit v when such absence shall be stated\nin the nomination paper,\nEvery candidate nominated for\nMayor or \u00E2\u0096\u00A0Udentian shall, on or belore the hour of 2 p.m. on thc day\n.ei Nomination, furnish the Returning\niiflteer with a statement In writing\nspecifying the bind or real property\nupon which he [ualiflss.\nGiven under my hand, at Bevel\ntle.ke, this 2nd day of January, 1911.\nII. R. REYNOLDS,\nReturning Olliccr.\nHARDWARE! !\nWhile thanking our customers forGtheir patronage during the past\nyear and wishing one and all a\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nVERY HAPPY NEW YEAd*\nWe wish to extend an invitation to all citizens of Revelstoke to\ngive ua a share of their patronage.\nOUR PRIDE\nIs to keep good goods, To sell them at a reasonable profit to treat\nall customers courteously and when we extend credit, we want to\nbe treated fairly as to payments\nOUR BUSINESS\nIs Hardware and we bring to our business over 25 years experience.\nWe claim to be experts in our line\nLAWRENCE HARDWARE CO., Limited\nTinsmithino & Plumbing\nCarpet Squares $7.75 up.\nFloor Oilcloth 45c sq. yd. up.\nLinoleum 60c sq. yd. up.\nHOWSON & CO., Ltd.\nBlankets, 7 lb\t\nFlannelette Sheets 12x4\t\n$4.40 up.\n$2.20 up.\nIN\nTHE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nIn the matter of the Winding Up Act\nbeing Chapter 144 of the Revised\nStatutes of Canada 1906 and\namending acts.\nAND\nIn the matter of the Interior Publishing Company, Limited.\nThe creditors of the above-named\ncompany and all others who have\nclaims atjainst the said company,\nformerly carrying on business in the\ncity of Revelstoke, B. C., are on or\nbefore the .list day of December A.D.\n1914, to send by post prepaid to\nElrnest G. Rooke, Esq., of the City of\nRevelstoke, B. C, the provisional\nliquidator of the said company, to\nhis office, Revelstoke, B. C, their\nChristian and surnames, addresses\nand descriptions, the lull particulars\noi their claims, and tho nature and\namount of the securities, if any, held\nby them, and the specific value of\nsuch securities verified by oath, and\nin defnult thereof tbey will be peremptorily excluded from thc benefits\nof tbo said Act and Winding Up Order.\nThe undersigned District Registrar\nof the Supreme Court of British Columbia will on Thursday the 1st day\nof February, A. D. 1915, at the hour\nof 11 o'clock in the forenoon at bis\noffice at the Court House, Vancouver\nB. C, hear the report of the liquidator upon the claims of creditors submitted to him pursuant to this notice and let all parties then attend.\nDated this 27th day of November,\nA.D. 1914.\nA. B. POTTEN'GER\nDistrict Registrar\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL,MINING\nREGULATIONS.\nFIRE ALARMS\nIj\nR. F. Tolmic, deputy minister ol\nmines, reports that last month a record was created at Rossland lor ore\nshipments, Mon' ors was sent out\nfrom the ramp than ever before in\ntbe history ot Rossland.\nThe by election in St. John county,\nN.B.- consequent on tht appointment\no! J.H.M. Baxter, K.C., ns attorney\ngeneral will be on January 7. Nominal Ions will take plat e on D '* \"\nber 31, On lanuary 7 there will also\nbe the bj eleT(>KK B.C\nAdvertising Pays\nIF you advertise\nin the Mail-Herald & FOUR\nTHE MAIL-HERALD REVELSTOKI\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1015\n;be flfcail*1beualb\nPUBLISHED WEDNESDAY AND\nSATVRDAY AT\nRKVKLSTOKK. H. T\nmmmffflBBl&>m.\n\n\t\nItertot publishing Company\nLIMITED . HTU'lm ,\nIG. ROOKE, Manager and Editor.\nWar is Subject\n(Continued from Page One)\nInches and the wonderful spirit dis-\nlyed; and used this for a final ex-\nIlium as to the war in which the\nnpons are not carnal and the call\nto be soldiers ot Jesus Christ.\n.t the tfose the speaker referred to\nrisit the previous evening of some-\n1 who had been suddenly summoned\na neighboring citv as result ol\n|vs of the death of a sister in Eng-\nid\u00E2\u0080\u0094a nurse\u00E2\u0080\u0094who had broken down\n1 died under the strain of minist-\nng to the Belgian refugees. Iu one\nway and another the war is comiOg\nclose home.\nPrayer was oflered morning and\nevening by several laymen Messrs.\nFlockhart, Gobel, Walter B\u00C2\u00ABws, C.B.\nHume and the week ol prayer is to\nbe observed. The choir rendered an\nanthem; besidcB which there was a\nladies chorus and a solo.\nPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nIn the Presbyterian church the day\nof humble prayer and intercession\nwas observed at both services. The\nprayers, hymns, readingB and addresses, all centred around the great\nwar, and expressed the desire that it\nmight soon end, and that a favorable and permanent peace might be\nestablished. The morning text was\nHeb. 13: 18, 19, \"Pray or us, for we\narc persuaded that we have a good\nconscience, desiring to live honorably\nin all things.\" Rev. J. W. Stevenson\nBaid that this national call to prayer was neither a sign ol weakness nor\nfear. After live monthB of war the\nposition of the allies was stronger\nthan it had ever heen before. It was\nstronger than it hnd ever been before. It was rather a sign of assurance nnd faith\u00E2\u0080\u0094assurance of thc\nrighteousness of our cause and faith\nin God to vindicate the right. If we\ndid not believe that the war was a\nrighteous war, we dared not ask\nGod to bless our arms. This was not\nii war for territory, but a war in defence of rights and liberties and to\nfulfil pledges solemnly given. At the\nbottom it was a great moral and\nreligiouB question. Mr. Stevenson\nthen quoted the Bishop of London\nwho had sa'id, \"I believe that we\nmay pray for victory. Awful as thiB\nwur is, it has drawn out prayer in\nthe most extraordinary way. In order to have the true benefit and power of prayer we must retuliBe that\nthere is an answer promised, and we\nmust be quite clear what we shall\npray for.\" He then went on to say\nthat the Bible taught that God\nwould do as a result of prayer what\notherwise He would not, and could\nnot do. It was one of the causes\nthrough which results were attained\nin this world.\nThe speaker then applied the words\nof the text and said the men in the\ntrenches had a right to our prayers,\nior they have a good conscience. These\nmen stand between us and danger,\nand they have unselfishly given up\nall for the cause of liberty and\npeace. We can do much for the defenders of our country but not the\nleast is to pray for them, that their\nnoble efforts may be crowned with a\nspeedy victory. This call to pray was\nnot a call to the churches only, but\nto all the people. It was to be a day\nof humble prayer, in which we should\nconfers personal and national sins.\nWhen we humbled ourselves before\nGod and acknowledged our own insufficiency, then God would hear and\nanswer our prayers.\nIn the evening Mr. Stevenson took\nas his text, Nehemiah 4: 14, \"Be not\nye afraid of them; remember the\nLord, who is great and terrible, and\nfight for your brethern, your sons\nand your daughters, your wives and\nyour houses.\" He said among other\nthings that Nehemiah who was a\ngreat soldier and great statesman\nwas also a great man of God. He\nmade every preparation, did all that\nhuman skill could devise, then made\nhis prayer to God, acknowledging\nHim as the ultimate source of victory. Cromwell and Bruce were given\nas examples of generals who led\npraying armies to victory. The\nrighteousness of theBritish cause in\nthis war had been established, and\nthe call of duty was very clear, and\nmen, might well pray Ior success.\nThe nation had sought peace up to\nthe last moment, but the time cume\nwhen we had to choose between peace\nand righteousness. We might have\nhad peace, a selfish, enwardly peace,\nbut if we had chOBen that we should\nhave been the scorn of the world. We\nentered the war because we had\nplighted our word to defend a weak\nnation, and to maintain liberty and\njustice. If God Is with us as we believe He ia, our success depends on\nHim. Nothing must be neglected that\nforesight and sacrifice can supply,\nbut at, the same time we realize\nthat victory does not always go to\nthe biggest battalions. The empire\nhaB gone into the war not in boastful spirit, but with the sense of God's\napproval and protection, and\nthroughout the nation there is the\ncalm assurance that, \"if God be for\nus, who can be againBt us.\"\nThe speaker concluded by asking\nthe congregation not to overlook the\nlessons God would teach ub by this\nwar. The prophets always thought\nthat national calamity waB tho\npunishment of sin, and we may be\nsure there is some connection between our sin, individual, social and\nnatUonal, and all that haB happened.\nWe need to repent and pray for a\nnew sense of duty, to God and to\nmen. There are not lacking signs of\na new and clearer conception of duty.\nWe want to stnnd with God for the\nright nnd to walk in thc path of duty.\n\"Not once or twice in our fair\nisland story.\nThe path of duty was the way to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 gjlory.\"\nI ST. FRANCIS CHURCH\nI The following injunction was rraeT.\nin St. Francis church by Rev. J.eCU\nMackenzie.\nAlthough it has heen prescribed au*\nobserved, from the very beginning ot\nthis unhuppy war, that prayers ait*\nintercessions to be offered at cverjr\nMass celebrated throughout tbe Arcfr-\ndiocesc, that God may be pleased ta\nturn away His wrath from the afflicted world and restore to it the blessings of peace, yet we gladly coroplji\nwith tho praiseworthy wishes ot our\ntemporal rulers, giving special attention to a particular day of Natic*\nat Intercession for tbis most desirable end.\nWar, indeed, is always deplorable,\nand cannot be entered into without\nthe gravest of reasons; our judgment*\nhowever, in this matter, as in other*\nof importance, must be governed b%\nreason nnd religion. In accordance-\nwith these principles war cannot always be condemned as unjust, neoir\ncan those who engage in it be considered as alway doing wrong. W*\n'are human, nnd states and nation*\nure composed of men. Disagreememtu.\ntherefore, nnd controversies will ner>-\nissarily arise thai can in no way b*\n1 settled except by the issues ol tb*\nbattlefield. Hovere)' n rights must b\u00C2\u00BB\n; (Continued on Page Five)\nCorporation of the\nCity of Revelstoke\nCash Statement for Year Ended December 31.1914\nReceipts\nTAXATION :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nteal Property Tax 1014 $14,533.42\ntea1. Property Tax Arrears 14,047.Hi\n,ocal Improvement Tax 1911 4,%:i.'.i8\n.ocal Improvement Tax Arrears 3,7*41.46\nchool 1914 W.885.96\nnterest on Tax Arrears 1,764.03\nload Tav 871.20\nlog T;ix .ri4J.40\n'rade Licenses 2,199.50\n.iquor Licenses H,7-_'O.O0\n'ax Sale Surplus 87.91\n \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $ 56,148.95\nPOLICE:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n'dice Court Fines $ 1,967.60\nfeigh Fees 27'(l.*J.i\n'ound Fees 1)0.50\nonstables Fund 7;'.(10\n $ 2,400.85\nHEALTH:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nemetery Receipts $ 001.60\nlumbing Permits 18.50\n 8 645.00\nSUNDRY RECEIPTS:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n'ommutution Sidewalks 50.25\nv.ndrics \u00E2\u0080\u00A2>.\"\">.\".' \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\na* Sale Costs 29.80\n\ncial Govt. Schuol Grant 11,526.65\nSchool Loan Repaid 6,357.30\n $ 17,999.95\nWATER & LIGHT DEPT.-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2roceed6 of Debentures sold 1:2,800.95\night & Power, charged per contra 10,999.98\nurplus (Costs) 7,689.92\nep..sits 11.411\n $ 81,532.25\nTEMPORARY LOANS;\u00E2\u0080\u0094\niOan Street Pavine 23,01*0.00\ncan Taxes 2 ,000 K)\n J tli.ii'i'.'\"'\nSCHOOLS:-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0alauce Savines Dank, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2** S.lO-sW\nnter?st on Savints Bank acct --* 7\"\nrocedn of Debentures, etc 22,910.2*7\nalance of School Trustee? acct 105.21\nnterest on Special Bank Account I.I '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n J 32,27\">.34\nBANK BALANCE DECEMBER 31, 1914.-\nver.lr.ift $ 7,2\n.ess Cash on hand 3)8.13\n J 7,021.9a\nTOTAL\n>atrd, Revelltoke, u.\ni:;. . i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n11 S.R.:323.77\nJanuary Ith, 1011.\nCertified Correcl\nter., Wjn. Gardiner\nOtti liudltori\nPayments\nElection Expenses \t\nOtliee Expenses \t\nOffice Furniture\t\nOilice Salaries \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \t\nAudit\t\nLegal Expenses \t\nJanitor, \t\nGuarantee Bonds\t\nAssessment \t\nPublicity \t\nIntereBt Paid, \t\nRegistration ol By-'iaws \t\nFuel, City Hall\t\nMayor's Salary\t\n248.0S\n734.36\n24:1.35\n2287.10\n450.00\n502.75\n210.4)0\n71.00\n450.1X1\n99.70\n98:1.75\n11. SO\n327.60\n500.00\nTax Sale Purchases $ I,\"7-2.54\nSewer Loan Repaid 111,000.00\n$ 7,122.59\nSundry Creditors,\n314.114\nPUBLIC SAFETY:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPolice Salaries $ 7,650.85\nPolice General Expenses, 1,303.83\nPolice Clothing 448.00\nPolice Magistrate's Salary 900.00\nPrisoners' Maintenance 1,468 24\nPrisoners' Provincial Jail 354.|5\nPrisoners' Hen'ith 4r'..70\nPrisoners' Clothing W.65\nJail Fuel 235.7'8\nif12.086.5S\nFIRE DEPARTMENT:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFiremen Payments $ 1.7t:i.95\nFiremen Clothing 160.50\nFiremen Insurance 325.00\nFire Hall General Expenses 790.67\nFire Hall Caretaker, ,., 532.50\nFire Hall Fuel. No. 1 47.35\nFire Hall Fuel No. 2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.\"V\"'*.\nFire A,arm. R. it M 1*13.37\nFire Equipment 447.03\nFin Team Expenses 163.79\nFi. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Teamster 180.00\nDistrict Fire K \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- 50-.75\nS 12,457.85\nPUBLIC HEALTH:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHealth \t\nPlumbing Inspector\t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\n\t\nCemetei Wa \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ee\t\nBuildlngr R. \u00C2\u00AB M\nR a: M\n< 1,842.94\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n1*16)63\nol.l5\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPUBLIC CONVENIENCE:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n.' 16\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nStreets R \u00C2\u00AB M\n. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - I\n- fitl\n-\nTeamster, ..m^m\mmmmmmWmmmmmWil>~'] '*\nTeam F.x; \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\nR * M\nt In g\ni'. ft\nBoulevards It. & M \u00E2\u0080\u009E\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n*\n10-2 1\"\nSCHOOLS\nPUBLK ^\t\nSalaries, Iil.986.ti0\nGenera! Kxpcnscn 5 ' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ll\nInsurance\ntnten I Debentures \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMoUons Bank 1-oan Repaid.\nHi eh School Hid?. A Bquipmi\nBalance Bavings Hank Bldg, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBalnnce m Bank, (ep-acial icet I '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I\n3PE( [AL RATE ACCOUNT\nfntei. Debts ' I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ntnterest on Loral fmpt. DebrS,\nInterest on Special Loan\nInt. i;en. ii\".'. Arrears,\nSinking Fe; ..! I 0\nPUBLK 'HARITY\nsick and Destitute, .... I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGrants,\nGrants, Light .md Heat free, I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I art\n*\nGENERAL hank BALANI F. fAN :\nDebit Balance I\nLess i 'nub on hand, l* '7\n ' ; i . i\nTOTAL\nReteletoke, B 0 , in, January, 1915,\nCertified Correct,\nW. T. BTEIN A CO F ' *.,\nTer. W. U. Gardiner,\ni / City Auditors.\nLiabilities\nDEBENTURES ISSUED:\nGeneral $158,300.01)\nFor Water & Light 171,500.00\nWatir & Light 107,000.00\nLocal Improvement \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 134,702 41\n . $631,502.11\nADVANCES ON DEBENTURES (NOT ISSUED):-\nStreet Paving Loan $ 20,000.00\nSUNDRY CREDITORS:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSchool Trustees (Special) 8 VOS.26\nTax Sale Surplus 379.63\nCoupons not presented 2,1463.!K>\nMolson's Bank Overdraft 7,230.06\nMolson's Bank, Temporary Loan, 35,000.00\nDeposit Accounts (Water & Light) 1,013,10\n $ e36.495.-25\nSURPLUS ACCOUNT:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBeing Excess of Assets over Liabilities, Thus:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSinking Fund Accounts $78,095.74\nSpecial Rate acct. for Sinking fund 36,274.92\nGeneral Account, 115,*\"l-2.C5\n$229,983.31\n$229,983.31\nTOTAL\n$917,980.97\nAssets\nASSETS AVAILABLE:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nArrears of Taxes, General $31*1,447.86\nArrears of Taxes, Local Imp 7,129.13\nCash on hand 2(>-- 13\nSundry Debtors and Stock 2,983.15\nASSETS NOT AVAILABLE \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAdministrative, City Hall & Furniture\nPUBLIO SAFETY :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJail, $ 7,2M.0O\nFire Halls 5,730.85\nFire Alarm System \u00C2\u00AB 2,916.00\nFire Brigade Equipment 4,740.33\nIsolation Hospital 812.85\nOther Properties, 2,335.47\nPUBLIC CONVENIENCE \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nStreets & Sidewalks $109,503.49\nParks < 7.200.00\nRoad Machinery & Equipment, 9,315.00\nScwerB * 110.778.S3\nWATER, LIGHT & POWER \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCapital Expenditure S887.857.61\nExtension ol Syetem 7,07!;.45\nBook Debts & Stock 9,924.90\nSavings Bank 82,923.65\nPUBLIC EDUCATION:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSchool Sites, Bidgs. & Furniture $1**8,017.:.8\nSavings Bnnk (for school) 861.73\nSavings Bank, (Special) lot,.26\nSINKING FUND INVESTMENTS*\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSavings Bank * 42,38*1..\"\nCity Debentures purchased 36,128.13\n- I46.768.3T\n$ 5,811.93\n$23,785.30-\n$2\u00C2\u00BB6,7H7,2Z\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0=387,782.51\n$138,517.62\nJ78.M7.83\nTOTAL\n$917,9*\u00C2\u00AB0.97\nCertified Correct\n(Signed) W. T. STEIN & CO\nF.C.A.\nPer. Wm. Gardiner\nCitv Auditors\nDated, Revelstoke, B. C. January 4th, 1915.\n$ 3 *\nt 52.1\nWater and Light Department\nProfit and Loss Account for Year Ending\nDecember 31, 1914\nBj Water RatM $16,9<'.6.25\nLight Rates 42,041.33\nPowei Rates 6,169.68\n $ 65,177.26\nBj Metei Rente $ 1,337.75\nTapping Maine 231.25\nInstallation X- Futures 383.58\n $ 1,052.58\nTOTAL $67,129.84\nTo i itioncry $ 2-^3.51\nElectric R A M Power House 3,201.77\nWater It * M 1,766.04\n 8,221.26\nPostagi A Telegrams 122.mi\n 3H.0O\nOls, 82.39\nrliding R-t.t 29.00\nollectlons 8,1-4.05\n 1,320.02\ni \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Powei 66.60\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Wall 1.333.93\n[nterest on Deebentures 16,170.00\n $ 40.MI9.46\nDpi rating $ 26,320.38\nMOTE Tbe ibove Statement includes charges for Street.\nLighting and other City purposes, uh shown In\ntin Superintendent's report.\nDated Revelstoke, li. '*.. January 4th, 19115,\nSd) ff T. STKIN It 00., F.C.A.\npri. Wm Gardiner, City \miiti>r.\nStatement of School Expenditure for year 1914\nAccount, Public School H.gh School\nTeachers $15,405.00 $ 3.OS5.0O\nJanitor 1,91(1.00 505.00\nSecretary \ 162.00 18.00\nMedical \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 75.00 25.00\nFuel l,at)'.\u00C2\u00BB.M2 748.89\nRepairs 1,179.90 111.30\nSupplies I rtUte.^6 317.42\nLight 35.80 \i.3\u00C2\u00BB\nPower 112.6< ,ii.:,0\nGrounds 19.70 31.00\nPrinting, 81.05 9.7S\nInsurance 306.16\nFurniture 89.20\nIncidental > 275.If. 65.23\nTotals, $22,34 ^ 73 $5937.89\nWc hereby certify that the above is a tru, ind correct\nstatement of the Revelstoke School Board, for the\nyear 1914.\nDated, Revelstoke, B. C. January 4th, 1915.\n(Signed) W. T.\" STEIN & CO., F.C.A.\nPer., Wm. Gardiner\nCitv A, 'itorn r WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1915\nMAIL-HERALD. REVELSTOKE\npage rrvi\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nEDITED BY MRS. U. RALPH LAWRENCE\nWar is Subject\n(Continued from Page Four)\nThose having items for publication\nin tbe Mail-Herald social and personal column are requested to call\n4ip phone 62.\nThose receiving are:\nWednesday,\nMrs. Walter Bews.\nMrs. W. M. Lawrence.\nMrs. Horace and Miss Manning.\nThursday.\nMrs. C. Holten.\nMrs. W. J. TomlinBon.\nFriday\nMrs. W. H. Sutherland.\nMrs. W. J. Coultbard.\nSaturday.\nMrs. Ernest H. S. McLean.\nDr. Hamilton\nGlacier.\nspent\nSn dav at naaintained, and supreme justice must\nprevail; but, to bring about this\nhappy issue, the awful ordeal of the\nMrs. and Miss McCarty will not re- battlefield must be encountered, the\nfearful carnage of war must he borne,\nthe terrible sacrifice of multitudes of\nmen must be offered. It is the poor\nindividual member of tbe empire or\nthe nation whose fate seems, in the\nterrible conflict, to count for nothing, and as a minor unit he must be\nVancouver utterly sacrificed for the saving of\nwill not re\nceive on Saturday\nMrs. J. P. Kennedy\nceive on Suturday.\nMr. W. A. Anstie returned on Sun\nday evening from Winnipeg.\nMiss Mai'ion Adair of\n, is here on a visit to her sister, Mrs\nKeegao.\nMiss Marie L'idy, had the misfor-\ntune to sprain her ankle on New\n, Years night.\nthe great body. This, too, is in accord with the principles of justlice\nand right; and the soldier, when he\nobeys the call of his nation in such\na cause, is following the supreme\nlaw of justice and the sovereign duty\nMiss Marjorie Lee entered the of patriotism. He enters the rank of\nQueen Victoria hospital on Sunday as heroes, he goes forth to do that\na probationer. greater than which no man can do;\nnnd, whether victory or death bc his\niot, earth ns well as Heaven crowns\nhim with approval.\nIt is far from tbe truth to assert\nLittle Miss Daphne Rooke returned that the war is anything like a fail-\non Sunday afternoon, from Nelson, \u00C2\u00BBr- f\u00C2\u00B0r Christianity. Sooner will the\n. Where she spent the holidays. *-*un refuse its light than will tbe\nThe Hev. Lashley Hall preached at\nMr. Harcourt of Golden was a New\nYears visitor in town.\nMrs. Wm. Morris is now convalescent after ber recent illness.\nMiss Lillian Pettipiece is spending\nu short time at Malakwa with\nIriends.\nMr.T. Hooper of Victoria spent\nSunday with Mr. and Mies Wilson\nenroute to New York.\nthe Big Eddy school room on Sunday afternoon.\nTbe many friends of Mrs. Keegan\nwill be sorry to learn that she is in\nthc hospital agaiin.\nMr. H. Viney returned to Calgary\nOn Monday having spent the past\ntwo weeks, with friends in town.\nMrs. J. Gorden of the Big Eddy,\nlift on Friday night for Ontario, to\nvisit herduughtei, Mrs. Belcher.\nMiss Jessie Sommerville spent the\nholidays with her parents 'in Malakwa\nreturning on Sunday to her school\nduties.\nMiss Loretta Dupont and Miss Ora\nand Mr. Kenneth Corning, have returned Irom their holiduy trip to ,ake\npoints.\nVi. Lightburne returned to his\nschool duties this week. He hus been\nspending his vacation at hi6 home in\nArrowhead.\nMiss Delia Will.ird returned to her\nMr.\nChristian religion fail in 'its mission.\nJ. Baynes one of the bridge Both the sun and\nguards at Donald, is the guest\nMrs. C. A. Lidy for a few days.\nof\nthe church were\nbuilt by God, the one simply commanded to shine forth, wh'ile, against\nThe Dramatic club bas resumed re- thc otber' the Almighty Builder has\nhersals, and all are looking lorward ,,ledged His word that tbc SateB of\nwith much pleasure to the play to uel1 8hould not Prevail- Its mission,\nbe on this month. then' can never fail of accomplish\nment in dealing with men of good\nJ. E. Dixon, mlinager for ' P. will; while failure, when there ie\nDunns & Co. returned on Tuesday failure, lies with the human element\nfrom a short business trip to Chase of religion which refuses to co-operate with the Divine action. God left\nand Salmon Arm.\nman free will, and He gave no authority to Hie Church to interfere\nwith it; nay, He has decreed that\nHe Himself would neither impair nor\ndestroy it. It is the abuse of this\nGeorge Moth left for Calgary on sublime privilege of free will on the\nSunday to meet his wife and son rart of man, that giver rise to dis-\nwho returned from a holiday Bpent cord and controversy, and to the\nThe W.C.T.U. will meet on Friday\nafternoon at the home of Mrs. F.W.\nLaing. Mrs. McDonald will read\npaper on temperance.\nwith friends on thc prairie.\nMiss May Field returned to her\nschool at Rogers Pass, on Sunday\nhaving spent her vacation with her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Fi^ld.\nMiss Irene Procunier returned to\nwars that grow from them.\nIn the midst of the awful ravages\nwith which it is overspreading whole\ncountries in Europe, and notwithstanding the fact that our own\nmighty empire is engaged in it, we\nare not without consolation even, in\nborne on Monday from the Queen Vic- her S'ho01 at Taft \u00C2\u00B0n Monday morn- this festive season. We are filled with\ntoria hospital, where she had\ntbe past month.\nspent\nJ. M. McKay, superintendent Canadian Pacific railway, returned on Friday from Winnipeg, where be had\nspent the holidays.\nBen Dickie and Clifl Urquhart returned to the coast on Sunday, after spending a short vacation with\ntheir parentB of this town.\nMr. C. Sommerville teacher at the\nBig Eddy school, returned on Sunday from Malakwa where he had\nspent Christmas and New Y'ears.\ning, having spent the past two weeks\nwith her father, Rev. C.A. Procunier.\nMr. S.H. Forbes, book-keeper for\nSwifts, left for the coast last week,\nhaving spent the past two months at\nthe comforting consciousness that we\nhave no responsibility to bear for\nthe beginning of this dreadful\nscourge. All that could be expected\nfrom tbc wisest and most humane of\nmen, was done to avert the catas-\ntheir oflice in this town the Revel- . _'v .. . ' . .\n.\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABir- vr . ** i l trophe by our statesmen in the Mot-\nstoke Meat Market. v. ,-, .\nher Country; nnd now we hnve the\nA snow shoe club has been formed com,ort to know that we are angag-\nstruggle for\nwe may add\nfor Christian civi-\numong the young people of the Met- ed in an honourable\nhodist church the lirst meeting to be riSht and ],1BtIce' and\nheld on Thursday night, at the home\nof Mrs. E. Dixon, Fourth street.\nThe annuail installation of tbe Re-\nwithout rashnesB\nligation.\nAnother comfort is offcted to us\nfrom the principles of our Holy Faith\nvclBtoke Royal Chapter, was held in \u00E2\u0080\u0094that God still in His Almightiness\nthe Masonic Temple on Monday even- can make \"light shine out of the\nThe Girls Auxiliary of the Method- '\"*?\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Jnn- **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At the conclusion of the darkness,\" In the beginning this was\nist church will meet at the home of\nMrB. Jones, McKenzie avenue on\nWednesday evening at 7.30 o'clock.\nMiss E.E.R. Davis M. A. returned\nfrom Vancouver on Tuesday morning,\nwhere she had spent the Christmas\nand New Year holidays with friends.\nMr. A. J. McDonell, of the Revelstoke hotel, Mrs. McDonell, and\ndaughter Estelle have retAirned from\ntheir vacation spent at Chilliwack,\nB. C.\nCongratulations are due Mr. and\nMrs. James Gordon, on the birth of\na baby girl, which occurred at the\nQueen Victoria hospital on\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 lay last.\nexercises of the evening the members the creative act, tbat out of chaos\nadjourned to the banquet hall, when God caused the light of creation to\na sumptuous bunquet was spread, the \"aBh into being. Since then the same\ntables being tastefully decorated with act of beneficence has been exercised\nplants and flowers. After partaking from time to time throughout bis-\nol the good things provided, the tory for the benefit of humanity. The\nmembers spent a vcry enjoyable even- calamity of the war may be, and no\n.ng listening to music, songs and\nspeeches, provided by tbe different\nmembers of the order, c'iosing with\nthe National Anthem.\nA very nice letter from Jack Morgan, one of our soldier boys at Sur.\nprise Creek, wishing all hi6 friends\nthe compliments of the season, has\nbeen received. Jack is having a fine\ndoubt is, in the desiens of God, for\n\"the healing of the nations.\"\nBritain was threatened with dissensions at home and abroad. In\nthe very first stages of the war a\nmarvellous unity in sentiment and\naction was manifested, and has since\ncontinued to the advantage of the\nempire.\nBelgium may be consiucred the Job\n1,\"\" time when ofl duty, tobogganing, and of the natjons, and, though stricken\nThe Misses Trethewey, who have\nbeen visiting their sister, Mrs. Walter Coulthard, left on Tuesday night the bottom\nfor Vancouver, where *hey will re- swell bump.\ncume their studies at Diuemar school\nsayB they have a fine slide of 600\nyards. As they are not so lucky as to\nown sleds of any kind, they use\nshovels, and be says when they reach\nof the h'ill they get a\nThe government was\nvery good to them at Christmas, giv-\nby God, there is every reason for\nconfidence tbat she will be restored\nto her possessions with an immense\naddition of glory before the nations.\nFrance, Borne seven year6 ago sinned an enormous sin of irreligion and\ni-ijustice. The devastation with which\nMr. John Watson, formerly organ\nist of St. John's Presbytcriain church home in a couple of\" weeks,\nhere, ie now organist of Christ church lew days leave\nVictoria, B. C. Mr. and Mrs. Watson \t\nhave resided in Vernon, B. C, since\nleaving Revelstoke.\ning them a turkey, cake, cigars, Iruit the face of her country is laid waste\nand other things. Jack is expected jb a weu merited\nfor a\nThe Kpworth League of the Metho-\ndiBt church, met in the vestry of the\nchurch on Tuesday evening. Rev.\nLashley Hall gave a New Year's address to the young people, and a few\nchoniBes and solos were rendered by\nthe members.\nOn New Y'ears night, Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Gordon entertained a few\nfriends at cards. Dainty refreshments\nwere served ahout 11 o'clock, and\ngood music wns enjoyed, afterwards\nincluding solos by Miss Parker, and\nchoruses by thc whole party.\nMiss Currie of the Selkirk school\nhas moved with her entire clnss to\nthe Central school, where there was\nan extra room, the Selkirk School.hie.\ning over crowded, Mr. J. Walter\nHughes Is thc new assistant principal, and Miss Lilly M. Mauley has the\nsecond primary of the Selkirk school.\nMr. Hughes is from Port AJbertii,\nVancouver Island, and Miss Mnnley\nfrom WetiiHkawin, Alberta.\nchastisement, and\nis bringing her children to a splendid\nsense of duty that will, doubtless,\ncontribute much to restore ber re-\nA. B. Stanley, who edited tbe Cres- ljgioue and social status. Tbe law 'is\nton Review, for over a year, has quit at least a very harsh one which com-\njournalism and gone ranching. prig pricstB, conBecrated to the ser-\nKid Burns, uf Spokune, and Billy vice of the Prince of Peace, to take\nSmith, of Fernie, put on a boxing their place as soldiers on the battle-\nmatch in the latter place at Christ- Held, to vanquish by death their fel-\nmas. The result was a draw.\nDECLINE SUBSTITUTES\niow men; but their splendid heroism\nbefore the foe and their apoetolic zeal\nfor the salvation of th^ir fellows,\nwill blaze forth in all history for the\nidification of men. These are some of\nthe advantages that God may draw\nout of evil, Borne light that He\nmight make flash from the darkness\n, for the healing of nations.\nLet this be the object of your frequent pruyers, and especially, of all\nyour devotions and exercises of pSety\non the day of national intercession.\nIt behoves us to remember that the\nhand of tbe Lord is not\nshortened, that He may still\nsave us, both as a nafion and as\nindividuals. That these blessings of\npeace may be ours and tbat the peaco\nof tbe world may be happily restored, recite fervently Five Our Fathers\nand Five Hail Mary's for this intention.\nC. B. HUME & CD, LTD.\nRevelstoke's Departmental Store\nFAMILY SHOE\nOUTFITTERS\nWe Aim to Cive Maximum\nWear at a Minimum Price\nDRY GOODS DEPARTMENT\nJANUARY PRICES\nDuring January we will have each day some attractive Bargains in our\nDry Goods Department. Lines that we are clearing before stocktaking. Each with a big red card. Watch the red price cards.\nSTANDARD STOOL COTTON Any color\nall sizes at 3 for 10c or 1 dozen 40c\nCHINA SILKS-20 in. wide, all colors. An\nextra good 25c line on sale at 15c\nLADIES' COAT SALE\nThis week all Ladies' Coats on sale at\nridiculous prices. A collec- A Q /\\ntion of good ones at T. v/U\nVAL LACES New pattern and very much\nWanted. Grooved edges and inserts.\nWhite and cream at 5c, 10c and 15c\nA BIG COLLECTION OF HANDKERCHIEFS - All ladies and children's.\nWhite and colors. A mixed lot at each(\n5c\nA PILE OF PRINTS AND GINGHAMS,\netc- of different prices. A lot of good\ncolors and very worthy goods. Make\naprons, etc.\n10c\nMen's Furnishing and Shoe Dep't\nJANUARY BARGAINS\nDuring the first three weeks of this year we are putting\non our tables many articles at greatly reduced prices. Our\nprices are all well known to the public and our reputation\nfor HONEST bargain giving will be increased when these\nvalues are compared with the regular prices.\nMEN'S OVERCOATS\nAll the 20th Century Brand and all this season's stock.\nYou have now three months of overcoat weather ahead\nof you and these coats will wear and hold their shape\nmany seasons.\nHEAVY ULSTERS in browns, greys and mixed cloths- Either\nwith convertible or plain wide collars. Reg. I imJ r\"/\\nprices, $30 and $35. now | | wtJ\J\nULSTERS and CHESTERFIELDS in mixed cloths\nand plain grey. Reg. $25, now,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0qronto\nCHESTERFIELDS -Single breasted, velvet collar.\nand blacks, either 44 or 50 inches long.\nRegular $22 and $23, novv*\t\n14.50\nPlain greys\n14.00\nGrocery and Crockery Department\nSALT FISH\nCodfish, 2 pound boxce.\nCodfish, 2 iKiiind packages.\nLabrador Herring, by the dozen.\nSea Trout by the pound.\nCOCOA\nVan Houten'e 1, I and i fb. tine.\nCroes & Blackwell 1, } and i lb.\ntine.\nFry's Breakfast, l tb. tine.\nFry's Homoeopathic J Ib. tln9.\nBakers Breakfast, i fb. tine\nCowanB, 1, i and i lb. tins.\nBulk sold by thc pound.\nPICKLES\nDill Pickles, by the dozen.\nHeinz Sweet (Jerkins by tbe pint\nor quart.\nYoung Beets in Vinegar by the\nbottle.\nPearl Onions, by the bottle.\nCross and Black wells Chow-chow,\nOnions, Mix-id, Walnuts and\nOriental Pickles, pint and quart\nbottles.\nStevens Pickles; chow-chow, Mixed, Gerkins and Walnuts, lpint\nbottles.\nHeinz Sweet Pickle, Gerkine and\nMixed in bottles.\nHeinx Sour and Chow-Chow in\nbottles.\nHeinz Indian Relish.\nSpecials\nFOR\nFRIDAY\nAND\nSATURDAY\nCOCOA, peril....\n 25c\nQntkerOOFFBK\nper tin 40c\nWaKstatre'H Mar-\nmalade,.**! pound\ntins 6.\">c PAGB BIX.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BCue MAii.ueoAin oc-wc-i\nTHE MAIL-HERALD.REVELSTOKE\nWHDNffSffATOW U iJW W \"\"\"\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nWinter Excursion Rates\nFROM ALL KOOTENAY POINTS\nTO\nALL STATIONS IN\nOntario, Quebec, Maritime Provinces\nand Great Britain\nFirst-Class Round Trip, 90-Day Limit\nTICKETS TO GREAT BRITAIN LIMITED TO FIVE MONTHS\nTickets. Berth Reservations, Details from\nany Canadian Pacific Agent or write to\nA. WARRINGTON\nTicket Agent, Revelstoke\nRevelstoke Meat Market, Ltd.\nPhone and Mail Orders Our specialty. Phone 251\n-THURSDAY-\nChoice lean Mutton Chops. .20 Cod, 15\nLoin Pork Chops 20 Halibut 15\nLean Pork Chops 15 gmelts 15\nPrime Ribs Beef 20\nPremium Bacon, half or whole .32 Hemne *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00C2\u00BB\nPremium Ham, whole 23 Kippers, 2 for 25\n5 tbs. Lard, each , 75 Geese 22\n3 tbs. Lard each, 40 Turkey 28\nRevelstoke Meat Market, Ltd.\nKING EDWARD HOTEL\nH.J. MCSORLEY, PROP.\nREVELSTOKE, B. Ci\nStrictly First-Class\nRooms\u00E2\u0080\u0094Single, en Suite, and with Bath\nRevelstoke Wine and Spirit Co., Ltd.\nImporters and Wholesale Dealers.\nManufacturers of Aerated Waters\nWINES\nLIQUORS\nCIGARS\nAgents for Calgary Beer\nJack Laughton, Proprietor First Street, Revelstoke, B. C.\nWINDSOR HOTEL\nEUROPEAN PLAN\n\u00C2\u00AB D ACCOMMODATION REASONABLE RATES\nCAPE IN CONNECTION\nBEST ACCOMMODATION PHONF. 207*1\nHotel Victoria\n,11. Laugh n in, Prop.\nChoicest of Wines. Liquors. ;;r.d Cigars\nUnion Hotel\nA P ,**H, Vn-,\-\nHHsr STREET, REVELSTOKE, It. < .\nMEAL I ICKETS\nORIENTAL HOTEL\nsuitablv fiirnishefl with the choicest the\nmarket affords. Best Wines, Liquors and\nCigars. Rates $1 a day. Monthly rates.\nJ\". ALBERT STOHSTE PROP-\nTO REGULATE\nNEUTRALS\nSome Rules Laid Down in Regard to Neutrality Described\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Summary of Regulations\nAn interesting; article concerning\nthe attitude of Holland in the present crisis and also giving the reasons for the disarmament of the\nnaval brigade in that country appears in Tit-Bits. It reads as follows:\n\"Will Holland, in spite of any pressure which may be brought to beur\nupon her by Germany, maintain her\nneutrality in the present crisis? It\ni6 a question which is exercising the\nminds of not a few people at the\npresent time, and Holland's decision\nwill undoubtedly have considerable\nhearing on the result of the great\nstruggle. In the meantime, it is not\nuninteresting to note some of the\nrules laid down by international law\nin regard to neutrality.\n\"The main principle of the doctrine\nof neutrality is that, while other nations are at war, those which are at\npeace are able, without molestation,\nto pursue their ordinary business.\nNeutral countries, however, must\nshow absolute impartiality in their\ndealings with the combatants, while\nthe latter must scrupulously respect\nthe neutral position of countries at\npeace. Germany's great crime is that\nshe, in defiance of all international\nlaw, ignored the neutrality of Belgium, because that country stood In\nthe way of swift invasion of France.\nAnd there are not a few people wlio\nthink that if it suits her purpose to\ndo so Germany will similarly ignore\nthc neutrality of Holland.\nAi neutral state is not permitted to\ngive armed assistance to either\nbelligerent, even though such aid may\nhave been promised before the war.\nNeither must she lend money to either side, guarantee a loan, or allow\nthe passage of belligerent troops\nthrough her territory. The reason\nwhy thousands of our Naval Brigade\nand Belgian troops are at present interned in Holland is because a neutral State is bound to intern a>nd disarm any troops which attempt to\ntraverse her country. Should a neutral State not observe this law and\nassist .my hi-lligirent force which\nmay be driven into her country, the\nenemy is entitled to treat such deviation is a just cause for war.\nOn the other hand a belligerent is\nnot permitted to carry on hostilities\nin neutral territory, nor use neutral\nharbors for th? purpose of fitting out\nexpeditions against his enemy.\nTin- ships of neutral nations are\nentitled to go about their business\nin the usual way, provided they are\nnot carrying contraband of war, but\nthey arc liable tee he searched by\nbelligerent ships. Belligerent ships\nmay noi tl .1 out in neutral w it\ners, but if they are driven by force\nof circumstances into a neutral har-\npllied witb suf-\ninable them to pro-\nige. They must,\nport\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-.ty-four hours, or be interned\n' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the war \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nist see\nthe til the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2v.ir.\nlikely to help belligerents to prolong\nthe war, and the transportation of\nsuch articles hy neutral ships is prohibited by international law. The\nlist of articles includes arms of all\nkinds, explosives, military clothing\nund equipment, boats, and in certain\ncircumstances foodstuffs, bullion,\nfield apparatus, horse eEq\")iipment, and\nall UiiidB of nautical instruments.\nonions about the\nagan.\nsame in the Okan-\nWESTERN EEOAT\nBy R. T. LOWERY\nThe GermanB are still Teuton their\nhorn.\nSouth Port Gaorge has a 'motor fire\nengine.\nThe price of bread has advanced in\nVancouver.\nChicken pox is prevalent in North\nVuucouver.\nMrs. F.M. Gillespie died in Hedley,\nDecember 23.\nNatural gas has been struck at Colbert, Wash.\nKamloops was an American town\n75 years ago.\nEnderby hus a Tipperary club,\nis ,uot a blackthorn.\nIt\nMorgan O'Brien is running the Enderby hotel in Enderby.\nUp-to-date no bombs\ndropped on Three Forks.\nhave beeu\nln the Slocan a post oilice may be\nestablished at Bear Lake.\nLast week turkeys were selling for\n11 cents a pound in Ontario.\nNear Oroville two shifts are driving a tunnel on the Ivauhoe mine.\nConstable Dishon of Tete Jaune is\nnow provincial policeman at Silver-\nton.\nThe Ivauhoe mill at Sandon is\ntreating Irom 50 to 100 tons of ore\ndaily.\nThomas Pessereta, of Nelson, is\nnow running the Blairmore hotel in\nBlairmore.\nAccording to the Smithcrs Sentinel\nTom Sloan has received a new carload of coal.\nRecently in one day five carloads ol\ntobacco were shipped (rom Kelowna\nto Montreal.\nBilly Cowan is the oldest resident\nof Revelstoke. He came to that city\n80 years ago.\nJohn Mclunis delivered an address\nupon socialism and the war in Prince\nGeorge last week.\nThe spring rush for copper will begin iu February. The price will ad-\ni vancc in that month.\nResolve to pay your paper promptly. You do not get dry keeping a resolution of tbat kind.\nI Since the war quicksilver has risen\nin price from 835 to $100 a flask. A\nBask contains 75 pounds.\nBy the middle of January trains\nwill be running to Lillooet on the\n|Pacific Great Eastern railway.\nP, A. OFarrell has an idea that\na canal should be built between\nShuswap and Okanagan lakes.\nTiis season the average price of\nI otatoes has been $22 a ton, and\nIt is reported that tan in place\nhas been discovered on the coast,\nabout 180 miles north of Vancouvor.\nJust 22 years this week, a prospector from the Slocan bought 105\nbottles of champagne iu one day at\nNelson.\nAlex. Ferguson Is working the\nMarion mine near New Denver. This\nis the mine that Jim Marino owned\nyears ago.\nThis season up to December 1,\n1087 carloads of fruit und farm produce bave been shipped from the\nOkanagan.\nThis season one carload of crab-\napples was shipped to Ontario and\nnine to the United States, from the\nOkanagan.\nNeil McCoy, a railway sub-contractor was found frozen to death .on the\nroad near Quesnel. He was a native\nof Bruce county, Ontario.\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelt\ning company, paid a dividend in December at the rate of 8 per cent per\nannum. At its Trail smelter it will\nhold its supply of metals for higher\nprices. It can aflord to hold .silver\nfor three years.\nThe Penticton Herald understands\nj that Alex RobinBon has beeu success-\nJful in getting the Kettle Valley rail-\n, way to haul ore from Carmi and\nBeaverdell this winter. Robinson is\nboosting Penticton us a headquarters\nfor mining men of the West Fork.\n| Greenwood business men should get\nbusy.\nA junk dealer from Republic had\nheard that Ford the auto manufacturer used tin cans in the construc-\n' tion of his car. He gathered up several hundred tomato cans, sauerkraut\nand oyster cans and sent them to tho\nFord factory along with a request\nthat they be made into an auto. A\n' week later he received a Ford by\nfreight and a check for $0.80. He had\nsent in too many cans.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chesaw\nNews.\nRAILWAY TIME TABLE\nNo. I from Montrcul to Vancouver,\nurrive at li.05 p.m., leave 6.25 p.m.\nI No. 2, from Vancouver to Montreal,\narrive at 11.05 a.m., leave at 11.25\na. m.\nNo. '.I, from Toronto to Vancouver,\narrive at 7.05 a.m., leave at 7.20 a.m.\nNo. 4 from Vancouver to Toronto,\narrive at 12.15 a. m., leave at 1.05\na. m.\nNo. S04, from Revelstoke to Arrowhead, leave 7.30 a.m.\nNo. ^03, from Arrowhead to Revelstoke, arrive 1.10 p.m.\nNo. 3 makes connection with the\nOkanagan line at Sicamous, returning\nleaves Sicamous at 10.50 p.m.\nTrains Nos. 1 and 2, make all local\nstops between Revelstoke and Sicamous.\nTrains Nos. 3 nnd I, make local\nstops between Sicamous and Kamloops.\nIt is semi-ollicially atatod in Johannesburg that tho government does not\nintend to go to extremes in the policy\nof leniency with the leaders of the late\nBoer rebellion, including General Do\nWet and Lieut.-Col. Maritz, but that\nthey will be made to realize the full\ngravity of their offence.\n1\nmi #*$-\u00C2\u00A5(&\nH. W. EDWARDS.\nTaxidermist.\nBear Rugs Mounted. Fura cleaned\nand Dressed.\nIt Second Street, Revelstoke.B.O.\nSELKIRK LODGE No. 12\nI. O. O. F.\nMeets every Thursday evening in\nSelkirk Hall at 8 o'clock. Visiting brethren cordially invited.\nH. H. FERGUSON\nJAMES MATHIE, Secretary.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00AB.\nKOOTENAY LODGE, No. 11 A..T.\nand A. H.\nRegular Meetings are held in\nNew Masonic Hall on the Fourth\nMonday ln each month at 8 p.m.\nVisiting brethren are cordially\nwelcome.\nWALTER BEWS, W. M.\nROBT. GORDON, Secretary.\nO. W. O. 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, O.O.\nH. W. EDWARDS, Clerk.\nCOURT MT. BEGBIE NO. 3461\nOF I. O. F.\nMeets in St. Francis Lodge Room\nevery Second and Fourth Monday\nIn month. Visiting brethren are\ncordially welcomed.\nH. V. MORGAN, O. R.\nG.W. CARTWRIGHT. Rec.-Sec.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\nGOLD RANGE LODGE, No 26\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nMeets every Wednesday\nevening at 8k., in Selkirk\nHall. Visiting brothers\ncordially invited.\nH. KBMPSTER, O. O.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i a\nRevelstoke Lodge\nNo. 1085 . \\nLOYAL ORDER '\nOF MOOSE\nMoots every second\nand Fourth Tuesday\nin the Selkirk Hall.\nVisiting Bret hren are cordially-invited.\nDr. McLKAN, Die. II.L. HAUO.Sec.\nIN HEART OF CITY\nHOTEL SAVOY\nSEATTLE\n\"Twelve Stories of Solid Comfort\"\nAbsolutely fireproof\u00E2\u0080\u0094concrete,\nbU'i'I and ninrl.lt!. Enlarged lobby.\nNew Urill\u00E2\u0080\u0094filiuHt on Coast.\nEUROPEAN PLAN $1 per day up\nWith ll.illis i2 per day up\nCITY TRANSFER CO.\nBaggage Transferred\nDistributing Agents and Storage\nGENERAL DRAYING\nFurniture and Piano-moving a\nSpeciality\nPhone 40-276. Night Phono 846\n8WITZER BROS.\nJ. II. CURTIS\nin\nTYPEWRITTEN CIRCULARS\n\",W#t\nK.\npossess the personal note that ordinary printing lack*. Drop In\n'he Mail-Herald and a ,V lor quotation I r.n uv.t j.nntH fai\ntypewriting. [Letters, circulars, mailing a \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ith all Ibt\neffecti ve ness of res! typewriting at n fraction of iiv est\nJ\nIT LfliJLKrtO'jU e\.\nl.tiuD POLICY\nlt'sgood policy to think of tho future,\nIt's sti il hot loi- policy 10 provide against\n'.be misfortunes ii may have in store\nfor yon. The surest way of protecting\nyourself and family is a\nLIFE INSURANCE POLICY\nwith ;i reliable company. Tho hi^i\nfinancial standing and long business\ncareer of tbe Kootenay Agencies\nmakes it absolutely trustworthy.\nYoni time mav be near at hand,\nDon'l delay. Takeout a policy now.\nKOOTENAY AGENCIES, Ltd.\nA. E. Kincaid. Manager.\nLum!)\nKAISK.K IN Mil-. HKI.I)\nThin highly interesting photo ihowi ths Kaiier consulting with General Hmrlnger, one of the commanders\nof tbe Army Invading PrlnOI Oicar, the Kaiser's fifth son. who bas been repeatedly praised for his\nberola work it the v. sxamflnlng lome plani and watching the movements of some troops\nthrough the telescope I I\numaermen\nIt will pay you to\nmake a call at\nF. B. WELLS,\nFur Buyer and Exporter\nOld Town, - Revelstoke, B. C\nbefore buying your outfit of working clothes\nfor the bush. 1 make \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nspecialty of Logging\nShoes, Pants, Sox, Shirts\nBlankets and everything\nrequired in vour bnslneaa.\n\"i WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1015\nTHE MAIL-HERALD. REVELSTOKE\nPAGB S**VHH.\nI\u00C2\u00BB\nWhat is Doing in the Province\nmM\nfj$|\n \u00E2\u0080\u009E^_^_.. ^Sjggf\nThe Kootenay has a nickeled steel oven which is as easily\nwashed and kept clean as any cookinj- utensil. The\nlarge roomy ash-pan catches all the ashes. Ash\nchutes direct all ashes into the pan which is easily ftJSSSSIft'lS\nremoved. iwiWivm\nThese two features of cleanliness are: \"** '\u00E2\u0084\u00A2sJUL\Aim.\nthat the woman who is partlculai\nhouse will insist on having tin\nshould make sure of these features\nselecting your new range.\nH U\n.cacNt.\nBuild Concrete\nCrib Floors and Supports\nTPHEY keep the rats, squirrels and other\nrodents from carrying away your profits.\nMillions of dollars are lost to farmers each\nyear through the ravages of rodents in\ncribs and granaries. Part of this loss is\npaid by every farmer whose crib floor\nisn't built of concrete.\nConcrete crib floors and supports stop the waste because\nThey Protect Your Grain\nConcrete is strong, durable and clenn. It never wears\nout and needs practically no repairs. It is the cheapen of all materials for cribs and granaries.\nWrite for this free book What the Farmer can do\nwith Concrete.\" It tells all about thc uses of con-\ncrrte and will help every farmer to have better\nbuildings and save money.\nFarmer's Information Bureau\nCanada Cement Company Limited\n633 Herald Building, Montreal\nI f\nkm\ni \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'/\nFor Baking Success\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094This Oven Test\nSuccess on some baking days\ncan be expected no matter\nwhat flour you use. But constant success is rarer. It can\nbe assured in only one way.\nThe miller must select his\nwheat by oven test.\nSo from each shipment of\nwheat we take ten pounds as\na sample. We grind this into\nflour. Bread is bc.ked from\nIf this bread is high in quality, P\u00C2\u00A3j RITV\nlarge in quantity, we use the /\nshipment from which it came. /\nOtherwise we sell it. /\nConstant baking success comes /\nas a matter of course from/\nflotir bearing this name /\n/\n\"More Brhd and Hotter Bread\" and\n\"BettcNPastrv/Too\" 526\nThere are cattle ranches In the\nCariboo carrying 1600 bead each.\nIn one store room alone the Trail\nsmelter has over half a million dollars\nworth of silver in safe keeping.\nIn the Kamloops District the surveyed lands at present available for\nsettlement amount to 72,017 acres.\nTo date Trail has paid $1200 to the\nBelgian relief fund $ti0H to the Patriotic fund and has !S704 cash on\nband.\nVernon Ratepayers' Association\nwants the government to establish\nagricultural schools at central points\nthroughout the province.\nDuring last summer and thus far\nthis winter some SOO treeB Buffering\nIrom tire blight have been removed\nfiom orchards in Penticton district.\nIn future bartenders at Kaslo must\nhave a town license. They are issued\nfree of charge to persons of good\n| moral character and temperate\nbabits.\nMoving picture business is slow at\nBellevue, and in future the house will\nonly show three nights each week\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n! the other three will be devoted to\ntoller skating.\nLast week, C. B. Winter, secretary\nof the locnl Patriotic Fund remitted\n|8'266.65 to the branch of the Cana-\n, dian Patriotic fund in Victoria. This\namount was raised iu Greenwood by\nconcerts and donations.\nKaslo Kootenaian:\u00E2\u0080\u0094The municipal\npolice court is having a rest these\ndays a sharp distinction to last Bummer, when there was someone before\nj the beak nearly every day in the week.\nDuring the past month or so the only\n1 cases requiring attention were those\ni of a couple of interdicts who had\nmade the raise of some booze.\ni Grand Forks curling club boasts of\nj twelve skips this season.\nThe financial statement of the Trail\nfruit fair shows that $1,009 was paid\nin prize money.\nIt is not likely any of the British\nColumbia Coal companies will pay\ndividends this year.\n[ There is an agitation afoot to remove the land registry office from\nFairview to Princeton.\n|\nArrangements are being made to\nbold a monster patriotic bonspiel in\nFernie early in January.\nAfter paying all prizes and a.l other accounts the Grand Forks fall\nfair has still some money in the treasury. \"\nThe scholars of Trail Presbyterian\nSabbath School contributed $28 to a\nfund for buying Christinas preBents\nlor Belgian children.\nA bugle band for thc 107th infantry\nregiment is being formed auid the\ndrums and bugles have been subscribed for by Fernie's business men.\nA correspondent asserts that thc\nsmelter at Trail is now piling up\nenough silver bars to pave Vancouver's main street from end to end.\nIn future a traders license will not\nbe issued in Rossland unless the recipient of it gives bonds that he\nwill stay in business for one year.\nThe Merchants Bank of Canada\nhave closed their branch at Elko B.\nC The Fernie branch of the Bank of\nCommerce huve taken over their accounts.\nDuring the month of December the\ntotal enrollment at Greenwood school\nwas I Oil. This is an increase of 11\nover the corresponding month of a\nyear ago.\nRecord of Pure\nBred Cattle Issued\nReport No. 6 of th*1 Canadian record of performance for pure bred\nduiry cattle has recently been issued\nby the live stock branch of the Dominion department of agriculture.\nThis report covers the period irom\nMarch 31, 1918, tc March 31 1914,\ni.nd includes the records /of production of milk and butter fat of 120\nAyrshire, 165 Holstein, 30 Jersey, 9\nShorthorn, 2 French Canadian and 2\nGuernsey cows, as well as the names\nund progency o' several Ayrshire,\nHolstein and Jersey bulls that have\nqualified, by reason of production of\ntheir offspring, for registration. In\nan appendix to the report will bs\nfound the records of a number of\ncows, which produced sufficient milk\nund fat to qualify for registration,\nbut failed to freshen within 15 months\nI hfter the commencement ol thc test.\nIhe rules and regulations governing\nthe record of performance tests -and\nthe standards for registration for the\nvarious breeds of dairy cattle arc also given. Copies of this report may\n1 e had on application to the publications branch, department of agriculture, Ottawa.\nALL HAD MONEY\nDUTY DEMANDS SACRIFICE\nOttawa Free Press: Sir George Fos-\n] ter is the fortunate possessor of a\nlogical mind. And it waB a logical\nsensible \"war talk\" that he gave the\nt udience in the First Baptist church,\ntie expressed the war spirit in a manner that must appeal to all. \"We do\ncot get down to the right plane until\nthe war draws something from us\neither in blood from our veins or\nfrom our pockets.\" he said. Are all\nof us \"down to the right plane\"? Is\nthe war taking something from us?\nIs the Btate getting its contribution\nfrom us for carrying on the war\u00E2\u0080\u0094not\na forced contribution in thc way of\nadditional excise tax on something\nwe buy, but a voluntary contribution?\nThose of us who for personal or family reasons cannot give of services\nfor the battlefield, havc the more reason to think of this. The duty thut\nwe can do at home is one which calls\nfor less sacrifice. The sacrifice can be\nat most nothing more than a share\nof our possessions. It is little to give\nto the state we profess to hold so\ndearly. It is talks like that of Sir\nGeorge Foster which are of some uhc\nin this war time. Not speeches about\nthe horror of wur and the desirability of peare. We are at war. Let\neveryone understand his position in\nconnection with it, his duty towards\nit.\nToronto Star: It was a sensational\ndiscovery that the police made when\nthey arrested and searched 75 men\nwho applied for and received a charity meal at the House of Industry\nyesterday. Most of them had money\nbidden all over them; some a little,\nbut most of them a great deal of it.\nThe total amount found on the 75 of\nthem was about 94000, yet they professed to be out of work, penniless, in\nneed of free food and other civic aid.\nIf the police were to arrest and\nsearch the membera of the Albany\nclub or the National club at the\nlunch hour, or the guests in the dining room of one of our leading hotels\nthey would probably not uncover\nnearly as much money as these men\nat the House of Industry had on\nthem. It must not be supposed, however, thut these men are types of the\nunemployed. They arc not. They are\nforeigners who, biaving worked\nthrough the summer ami saved their\nmoney, have no wish to part with\nany more of it than they can help.\nThey feel it no disgrace to accept free\nmeals If they can get them, or cheap\nmeals and lodging for which they do\nn little work. Our own people will\nnot seek aid of that kind unless they\nmust. No doubt these foreigners want\nwork and cannot get it, but their arrest and the result of it shows in a\nsensational way that it is necessary\nfor the authorities to use some discrimination to see that men who are\nnot in want do not prnctice imposture on relief funds meant to succor\nthose\u00E2\u0080\u0094Kind tbey nre numerous\u00E2\u0080\u0094 who\nare in dire need.\nIt is reported that the Trail smel-\njter basin stock a million dollurs\nworth of silver.\nPITY THE YOUNG MAN\nCollier's Weekly: Bismarck said in\n1801: \"I pity thc young man; he is\nlike the foxhound that barks at\neverything, that smells at everything\nthat touches everything, and that\n< ikIb by causing complete disorder in\nthe room in which he is, no mutter\nbow large it may be.\" Without naming any more names, one may quote\nalso Wolf von Schierbrand: \"He poB-\nhesscs a smattering of nearly everything in the wide domain of human\nknowledge, due to his quick perception and his retentive memory. If\nfate had not iflaced him on thc imperial throne, he would have had tho\nstud for a good journalist in him.\nBut his often fntnl .mistake Is to assume that he knows everything; that\nthc little he has been able to pick\nup about the sciences, military lore,\nliterature, and art is all thcre is\nworth knowing about these matters,\nand that he must direct and guide\nevery subject that comes under his\npersonal observation.\" The subject of\nthiB paragraph Is not, however, to bc\ndismissed as a superficial man. Risking lese majeste, he Is the moet egift-\ned anachronism of the twentieth century.\nThere is no Investment\nthat brings such sure and constant\nreturns and profits as printed salesmanship as we do it. There is no\nother method of getting business\nso inexpensive. At the present\nmoment you may be in need of\nBillheads, Letterheads, Catalogues.\nLabels or Receipt Books. Now is\nthe time to get in line with those\nwho have found that good printing\npays by helping build up business.\nLet Us Do Your Printing\n1\nThe Mail-Herald\nJob Department\nPrinters and Publishers\nMcKenzie Avenue Phone No 8\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 the attached coupon, enclose\n$i 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 bc 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 lor six months\nto the lot/owing address\nlor which I enclose the sum ol $1.\nYours Truly, f.*aB RIGHT\nTHE MAIL-HERALD, REVELSTOKE\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1915\nBRIEF LOCAL NEWS\n\u00C2\u00A3\nD. D. Mclsaac spent tbe week pi A\nnt Three Valley.\nCapt. Petar of Kamloops was at\nthe King Edward on Sunday.\nUiss Rowan of Vancouver was at\nthe Hotel RevelBtoke on Monday.\nS. Sutherland left yesterday morning on a vinit to Halcyon.\nM. Stein of Victoria registered at\nthe King Edward on Monday.\nThere are now 3- inches of frost\nunder the bitulithic pavement.\nJ. E. Hargrave of Minneapolis was l. B.'Skinner of London registered\ntit the Hotil Revelstoke on Monday. nt the Hotel Revelstoke yesterday.\nThe Y.M.C.A. Literary and Debating society will hold its next meeting\nen Friday January 15.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Stott of Kceler,\nt-\";\sk.. were registered at the King\nEdward hotel on Sunday.\nMoat of the automobile owners of\nthe city have taken out renewals of\nlicenses at the court house.\nAmong the guests at the King\nEdward hotel on Sunday were Mr.\nand Mrs. Whiteway, Vancouver.\nThe Y.M.O.A. rink is proving a\ngreat source of attraction. A great\nmanj ire taking 'advantage of the\nsplendid ice.\nJ. i'. For.le of Nelsou. Dominion\ngovernment engineer, was in the\ncity .i tew hours last night en route\nto the coast.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Weir of Winnipeg\nan.*: Mr. and Mrs. Campbell of Moose\nJaw were guests at the Hotel Revelstoke jn Monday.\n.1. K. J ohnson accompanied by his\nsister Miss Johnson passed through\nthe city last night, on his way to\nthe coast from the south.\nF. M. Lyttle leaves tonorrow on\nB visit to Ne'lson, Rossland and other cities in the Kootenay and Boundary in the interests of Multiples\nMining & Millinc company.\nGeorge Archer charged With vagrancy appeared before Police Magis-\ntrate J.H. Hamilton on Monday and\nwas sentenced to six months hard\nlabor. In one ot the hotels on Satur-\ndaj veiling he stripped oil the greater part of his clothing and began to\ndeal' 'jut the bar of its customers. He\n-was taken to the police station in a\n. strugglii ising much\nstro.m language\nNotice is given in the current issue\nol the British Columbia Gazette that\ncertificates ol Incorporation have been\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0granted to the following: Oceanic\nOlnl Limited, Vancouver, capital\n110,000; Vernon Central Garage, Vernon. $15,000; Union Trust Company,\nLimited. Toronto, with head otliee at\nVancouver. The Hedley Shaw Milling\nCompany. Limited, of Toronto, is\nlicensed is a/a extra.provincial cora-\nI any.\nEmpress Theatre\nProgramme\nT( \u00C2\u00BBDA\\" \ < 'ou\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2j . . reign | Sti\nei nal Mac!\nRSDAY\nM \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 k MclJ . ie Fatal\n\| \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nsod- Nee. {. The Mystery of The\nHa. mted Moils.-\nHi .\nnoce- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -;iCv.\nSATURDAY. ttatine rhe\nOutcast\nDays. I;, e.i.d I rling\nCon War .-er:\ntegt new\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nMillion Doiiir *\n:\nr:. te tt\nev-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ntint \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 K ll\nft * \"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0** * \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nher friends.\nB, Trimble, of Kevelstoke, was in\ntown during the week.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Goldan Star.\nR. Barlow came up from Arrowhead ou Monday and was a guest at\nthe King Edward.\nJ. H. Sheahan\u00E2\u0080\u009E of Revelstoke,\npent a couple of days iu Golden thiB\nweek.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Golden Star.\nNominations for tlie- municipal elections will bc hifld on January 11 and\n'elections on January it.\nAmong the guests at the Hotel Revelstoke on Sunday were, R. V. Mar-\ntensen, L. Larson and 0. Larson ot\nDevils Lake, N.D.\nFour members ot the 102nd, regiment have beer, recalled to Kamloops\nfrom Cedar Cr-eek charged with being\nabsent from duty without leave.\n.lames Willens charged with being\ndrunk aud disorderly appeared before Police Magistrate Hamilton this\nmorning .ind was dismissed with a\nI warning.\n' The Tango club committee wish to\nthank all those who helped\nmake the dance on Newt Years a success, especially the ladies who con-\n|tributed refreshments.\nThompson Porter, shipping clerk\nfor the Lawrence Hardware compnny,\nin whose employ he has been for the\nlast four years, left on Sunday morning for Los, Angeles, California.\nCapt. J. ('. Gore of Nelson superintendent of the British Columbia\nlake and river service of the Cana-\ndian I'acitic railway passed through\nthe city last night on his way to the\nOkanagan.\nThe Ski club will meet this afternoon for another tramp and will first\nmarch through the principal streets.\nLast week _*:*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 members of the club\njoined the weekly run the tramp be-\nIng across the Columbia river.\nSemi-weeklj train service will supersede the present train service south\n.ef Golden and itage service te. Cranbrook, effective on Monday, with\ntrains leaving Golden at \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 30 a.m. on\nlys ind Fridays and arriving\nto p.m. on Mon.; \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -. - md Thursdays.\nA! I. A ri!' I back in\nmorning alter spending\n. days in the Hinterland. He\nsnowfalls at Re-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ke ire almost entirely lost\nsight of In view of the uiii[Uenchabl.'\nardor being displayed in the electioneering [Camloops Inland\nW \ ' iwatt stipendiary magis-\nerate I \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 im-.---'!\nin the city on rom Nelson\nfor Edmoc-\nIne thi\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n:.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n- vessels\n-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\ne.-inal.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .her\nFire Hall and Business\nMen Equal in Bowling\nNow that the ('Inistnius season is\nover, the members of the Y.M.C.A.\nare taking a keen interest in the\ngymnasium classes. The seuior class\nheld every Monday aud Thursday\nnights, from 'S to 9.SO o'clock, is well\nsuited to any of the younger men\nanxious to have a little training.\nMuch enthusiasm has been worked up\namongst the members of the class.\nThe bowling alleys are proving as\nstrong as ever. The league games are\nbeing played oil regularly und some\nbig scoreB havo been already rolled.\nThe Fire Hall A and Business Men,\nhave the same number of games to\ntheir credit, and both teams show a\nkeen determination to carry ofl flrst\nhonors, when the league finishes early\nin February The business men have\nalready bowled '21 games, with an\naverage of \"79 pins per game. The\nFire Hall A come next, having played 21 fames, showing an average of\n7'68 pins per game. 0, Newsome for\nthe Fire Hall team is high individual\naverage for the league with an average of 169' pins to his credit. J. Palmer is close second with an average\nof 107 pins. II. Burridge takes third\nplace with 1114 av.-ruge, and Lonzo\nDupont fourth place with an average\nof 160.\nTonight the J.tLC. and C.P.R. play\ntheir return game. These two teams\nare well matched and a close game\nis anticipated.\nTonight at S o'clock there will be\nan interesting game of volley ball between the Scotch Reserves and the\nFrench Recruits.\nmarried friands. At 2 o'clock a splendid dinner was served, Mr. Hoffman\nthe chief cook looking like the real\nthing In hia white cap and silk apron.\nAfter dinner cards were played until\n!**> o'clock, ufter which dancing and\ngames were indulged Un. A few\nmusical numbers were rendered by\nMr. and Mrs. Stewart und Mr. Alder-\nto^, everyone enjoying a thoroughly\ndelightful time, Among the guests\nwere noticed The Rev. Mr. Larder,\nMrs. Larder, Mr. and Mrs. Briggs,\nMr. and Mrs. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs.\nTo the Ratepayers:\nj Ladies and gentlemen,\u00E2\u0080\u0094I beg to\nsubmit myself as candidate for aider-\ninan for Ward III. I havc had considerable experience in municipal affairs and if re-elected will do my beBt\nfor the city's welfare.\nF. H. BOURNE\nTo the Electors:\nLadies and Gentlemen,\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the request of a large number of ratepayers\nI have decided to he a candidate for\nre-election ns alderman for Ward 2.\nYours truly,\nG. W. BELL\nTo the Electors:\nLadies and G?ntlcmen,\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the request of a large number of ratepayers I have decided to offer myself for\nre-election as alderman for *Ward 1.\nYours truly,\nH. J. McSORLEY\nFarmers' Institute is\nFormed at Craigellachie\nCraigellachie, B. 0., Jan. 5.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\nbranch of the Eaglle river valley far-\nmers' institute, with headquarters at\nMalakwa, has been formed at\n.Craigellachie. Officers elected for the\nyear are W. Wnddcll Sr., Vice-\n1 president and J. E. Paulding, Secretary..\nBachelors Hall at Craigellachie was\na scene of unusual gaiety on New\ni Years day. Mr. Hoffman and Mr.\n\ Carlson entertained a number of their\nTo the Ratepayers:\nLadies and Gentlemen,\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the request of a large number of citizens,\nand realizing that much of the work\nof the present council is uncompleted\nso that this years experience will be\nof value on next year's council, I\nhave decided to offer myself for reelection as alderman for Ward 2.\nI have In the past endeavored to\nserve the city faithfully to the best\nof my ability nnd if re-elected will\ncontinue to do so.\nThe present council has taken steps\nto put the civic power plant in a\nstate of thorough efficiency nnd if\nelected I shall do my utmost to see\nthnt the work is accomplished as\nspeedily and effectively ns possible.\nYours truly,\nW. A. SMYTHE\nTO THE ELECTORS:\nUp\u00C2\u00A9a thl Inslltene* of my friends nn^l th\u00C2\u00BB kindly feelir.us and proffered\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0seppert of many who were not wir.h ma tut year I now offer myself si\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 candidate for the office of Mayor for\nIf elected It will be my a le . :r to eondi Iain ol - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nbusiness lines. Finances will have to be carefully watched Extension\nImprovement? will \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ntrollcd hy the\n(.'-. i i'ii i ity mii-i however, 1* maintained al . ;-i\nI bave alw j ind hope when the pre \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nl w\n**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i' L business! depressli n n mediate i\ntrade, [look to th< tninin and lumbering industtii i ir chief n i md\nhe n ti, -i. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0! ... \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 > \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 |\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'111 Ist ti\nIf i.|i-i.i.mI | will make it my duty to thorough!] lnv not come from\nanv special party or faction.\n1 feel that Revelstoke requires\na BUSINESS MAYOR, and\nmy'own business record, as\nwell uh my four'yf-.ars served\nandidature for the position.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' i ass .red that your interests\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - '.ng the largest property owners\nown, as well as the -public's interest,\n. watched.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ONOMY, the THOROUGH\n[gai ion a: d rhauling of our water\n'II I IV. SYSTEM and in all matters that come up\nIK-'I GOOD TO THK GREATEST NUM-\nto put in new\n- work will require proper\n- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!. te. give my lime to\n-f.n tory conclusion, so\nfeel ashamed of darken*\ni our Mi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * their customers with\nIf elect tion to call a public meeting of the\niii f-timat'- and, if any can suggest a\nepartmi the ime will be discussed and\nare tinaily passed. This will\ntheii opinion on the tax rate,\nand \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 irk together with a view to n ra\ntion in taxa I real \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 importance In Imving the tax\noil I work tO this end as far as is\nble without endangering the financial position of our City,\nth ipportunil of placing my platfonn\u00C2\u00AB before the\npub! lie for me bo meet nil the Electors\nperson\nVouri sincerely,\nW. A. FOOTE\n.Paulding, Mr. and Mrs. Alderton, Mr.\nJ. H. Johnson, mayor of Malakwa\nand others.\nMiss A. Blackberg has returned after spending the Christmas hc*ldays\nwith her parents in Revelstoke.\nThe Rev. Mr. Larder held an intercession service in the school house on\nSunday.\nMr. and Mrs. McKenzie of Kamloops are visiting in Craigellachie\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Drum-\nmond.\nA disastrous Are occurred at Squamish last week, completely destroying\nMcCallum's rooming house, Buckley's\nlivery stable, a smull dwelling Iioubc,\nthe Marion Buildinc, M, and H.\nHall and Poolroom, and McKenzie's\nclothing store. Most of the residents'\nelTects ^vere saved. Estimated loss\nlj.1'3,000.\nChicken pox is prevalent among\nsome of the junior residents of Nelson.\nThe November snowfall at Golden\nwas 20 inches, the heaviest for several years.\nAn nttempt is being made to reduce the running expenses of the Nelson hospital by $'240 per month.\nA new meat market lias been opened in Cranbrook that Is known as\nthc \"Economic\" meat market.\n! BUSINESS LOCALS j\nSkates sharpened at Palace garage\n25c per pair.\nOur coal burns best, Palace Livery.\nSaw mill machinery, situated\nThompson River. For snlle cheap, 25,-\n00 feet daily capacity, only cut 1,-\n00,000 feet. Address -107 Cordova St.\nWest, Vancouver. J.16.p\nSelect line of China ware at Howson's.\nComfortable dressing rooms at thc\nY.M.C.A. rink,\nGALT COAL burns all night. Revelstoke General Agencies, Limited.\nBANKHKAD BRIQDBTTES BURN\nBEST.\nPrompt delivery of coal or wood.\nPalace Livery.\nWiring a house requires, skilled mechanics. Lawrence Hardware can supply them.\nDry Birch and Cedar any length at\nPalace Livery.\nBand Tonight at the Y.M.C.A. rink.\nIf you are looking for a snap ln\ndishes look at Howson's prices.\nTry Palace garage for skate sharpening.\nLump or nut coal at Palace Livery.\nThe ladies ol thi Relief Society will\nte pleased to rocelve old or new magazines to be sent to the guards along\nthe lines of communication. The literature may bo left at A.E. Kincald's\noffice. t.f.\nEloctrfcnl repair work of all kinds\nLawrence Hardware Company.\nBest Ice yet at the Y.M.C.A. rink.\nCall up Palace Livery for lump or\nnut coal, nnd dry birch and cedar any\nlength, Phone 201.\nFancy pillow lops, hand embroid\nered, for sab' at tin1\nWorks.\nParisian Dye\nWANT ADVTS.\nWANTED.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Girl for light housework,\nand care of young baby. Apply\nMail Herald.\nLOST.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A bunch of keys. Finder\nplease leave at post office. A. J.\nBergoust.\nFOR SALE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Young Berkshire Plgfc.\nW.H. Pottrufl, Phone 0.56. U\nJanuary Snaps!\nMen's Reg. $6.00\nSweater Coats\nHeavy, shaker knit\nCoats, also medium\nweights. Both with\nshawl collar and a good\nchoice of colors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094January Price S3.95\nMen's $20.00 to $35.00\nOvercoats for $12.50\nThese come from the\nbest makers in grey,\nbrown mixture and black.\nThese we consider the\nbest values in the market,\nbut you are the judge.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094January Price $12.50\nBoys' High-grade Suits, Reg. up to $14 for $6.95\nThe cloths are in Bne worsteds and choice tweeds. Patterns arc In\nnew brown shades ami mixture, coals aie double-breasted and fnll-\npeg bloomers.\n-January Price $6.95\nMcRAE MERCANTILE CO.\nFIRST JANUARY SALE\nFOR TWO WEEKS ONLY\nGIGANTIC\t\nShoe Sale\nStarts Tomorrow\nThursday, January 9,1915\nW 5,000 Pairs\nOF-\nMen's, Women's,\n-AND\nChildren's Shoes\nAT PRICES CUT TO THE BONE\nDo not buy a Shoe or Slipper till you\nsee what the Royal Shoe Store has to\noffer. Our prices are 50 per cent,\nless than any other store in town.\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nBIG BARGAINS\nROYAL SHOE STORE\nHowson Block\nPhone 217\nI\nV\n2"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Revelstoke (B.C.)"@en . "The_Mail_Herald_1915-01-06"@en . "10.14288/1.0311303"@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 .