"3725a5e6-1ccd-4bca-bd00-c67cccf0b246"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2016-08-30"@en . "1910-06-09"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xkelownarec/items/1.0184846/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " B\nVOL. II. NO. 28.\nKELOWNA. BRITISH COLUMBIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1910\n$1.50 Per Annum.\nKA\nMeeting of\nCity Council\nBrief Meeting Transact Routine\nBusiness\nA meeting of the city council\nwas held on Monday last, June 6,\na full attendance af aldermen being\npresent.\nThe minutes of the previous\nmeeting having been read and\nadopted, the following accounts\nwere referred to the finance committee, to be paid if found correct:\nCan. Fairbanks Co., supplies for\npower.house $ 8 90\nCrane Co., water works supplies 26 25\n.. .. ., .. .. 76 g7\nC. P. R., express and freight on\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 supplies 10 20\nR. Golightly, constable's salary lor\nMay .'. : 70 00\nDr. Keller, rent...... 15 00\nE. Fowler, lineman's salary..... 85 69\nH. Blakeborough, 2nd engineer.... 100-00\nS. D. Colquette, 1st engineer 140 00\nG. H. Dunn, sal. and petty cash.... 110 10\nWater works pay sheet for 2 weeks\nending May 28th , ;. 684 40\nFive men raising electric light\npoles. .' 4, 60\nE. S. Bate, duty on meters, etc 95 55\nR. Draper, work on streets and\npark ; 50 00\nJ. F. Burne, police magistrate sal, 2083\ndo, city solicitor's salary... 60 00\nL. C. Beetham, work on water\nworks A........... 4 00\nC. P.R., freight... .............;..:\u00E2\u0080\u009E '.< 4 94\nLee Fat, work park.....'...... .;..,..., 4 00\nBuffalo.Water meter Co, 24 meters 22& 00\ndo. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'do. do7 -.'r 24 dial ex\ntension and curb boxes...-,.y,.....,;\" 60 00\nLequime Bros. & Co., rubber boots 10 00\nG. DilloiS,-hauling.pip^A-Ar^;^^^\n'Wi Haug, \"fire brick, nnd clay.... 4.88\nMorrison-Thompson Co., supplies\n' for water works 237 89\nCrawford & Co., stationery 4 50\nT. Lawson, supplies 2 60\nG. Patterson, teaming.... ....*.. 6 00\nC. G. Clement, - 79 yards earth to\n. Water St.. .' 27 65\nA. Ri Davy, watering streets... 30 00\nWestern Municipal News, deben.\nregister, etc 32 80\nR. Edwards, work on water works 10 42\nA. Han more, do. 13 89\nH. H. Millie, telegraph and 'phone 19 05\nWater works pay sheet, week ending June 4th... 333 80\nJ. W.- Sanders, work on water\nworks ;. 21 38\nK. L. O. Co., rent, nuisance ground\nto April 30th 50 00\nTwo men repairing pole line 4,05\nBoard of Trade\nMeeting\nBureau of Information in Town\nSuggested\nA meeting bf the Board of Trade\nwas held Wednesday evening.\nThe principal business was the\nconsidering of ways and means of\ninducing the University Site Commission to investigate the advantages of Kelowna as a location for\nthe proposed B. C. University, and\nof bringing before their notice the\ngenerous otter of Mr. Rembler\nPaul of 125 acres of land situated\nnorth of the town. For this purpose a deputation, consisting of\nMr. Paul, Mr. D. W. Sutherland and\nDr. Boyce, were appointed to appear before the commission at their\nsitting on Saturday next at Vernon,\nto present plans and description of\nthe site and to induce them if possible to pay a visit to. Kelowna to\nmake a personal-inspection of the\nground.\nA .motion to co-operate with\nother boards of trade on the lake\nin presenting the advantages of the\nOkanagan district as a whole was\nlost.\"'.;\nMr. Pitcairn introduced Jthe\nquestion of \" night lettergrams,\"\nwhich the G. P. R. had recently introduced into their telegraph system. He pointed out that Kelowna\nwas debarred from this privilege\nowing to the fact that the C. P. R.\ntelegraph system did nob extend.to\nthis town. Gomnnunication between.\nLicense\nCommissioners\nMeeting\nTransfer of Lake View and\nRoyal Licenses\nRutland News.\n(From our own correspondent.)\nBlack Mountain School.\nA meeting of the license commissioners was held yesterday\nmorning in the council chamber,\nthe mayor and Commissioners\nBoyce and Jones being present.\nThe minutes of the last meeting\nhaving been read, Mr. R. B. Kerr\nannounced that he appeared on\nbehalf of two applications for transfer of license. The first was ior\nthe transfer of the license of the\nLakeview Hotel from Jas. Bowes to\nFrank S. Coates. Mr. Kerr presented files of the papers to show\nthat the regulations as to advertising, had been complied with.\nWithout further discussion the\nchairman announced that the commissioners would allow the transfer.\nThe other application was that\nrespecting the transfer of the Royal\nHotel license from J. E. Wheeler to\nLavigne and Dunk. In presenting\nthe application, Mr. Kerr said that\nthis particnlar case had often been\nbrought before the commissioners.\nThe conditions, however, at the\npresent time were hot quite the'\nsame as oh previous occasions.\nThe grievance, for instance, of Mr.\nJas. Bowes, would not apply in the\npresent case, as the Lake View\n.Hotel had passed out of his hands,\n .\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,... _w \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00C2\u00A3nd the new proprietor had pur-\njiir^&Vli^ . with. a full Jcnowledge of\nThe account of $2,500 due the\nCanadian Fairbanks Co, for reinstalling the plant of the power\nhouse, which had been hanging\nfire for a considerable time came\nup again for discussion, and it was\ndecided that it be paid, less a deduction of $70.65 for certain apparatus which had been returned.\nMoney had already . been voted\nfor the purpose of meeting the\nliability.\n, The following motion was passed\n\" That the Mayor and Treasurer be\nauthorized to borrow from the\nBank of Montreal the sum of $2,-\n500 to pay balance due on power\nhouse machinery.\"\nMr. S. T; Elliott waited on the\ncouncil again with a plan of his\nsub-division near the creek. The\nmatter in discussion was the pon-\nstruction of .certain streets, but it\nwas found necessary to consult\nwith other interested parties, and\nthe plan was laid on the table to\nbe taken up at next meeting.\nIt was mentioned that a temporary constable had been appointed\nin the person of Ian McRae, who\nwould fill Golightly's place until a\npermanent selection had been\nmade. '\nOn the motion of Aid. Leckie,\nseconded by Aid. Harvey, the\nfollowing motion was put through t\n\" That the Mayor and Treasurer be\nauthorized to borrow $6000 from\nthe Bank of Montreal, being the\namount due,on the Waterworks\naccount.\nThe meeting then adjourned\nuntil Monday next; June 13th.\non the C. P. R., was by means of\na government wire, and the company had refused to take messages\nover the phone to be forwarded as\nnight lettergrams from thai point.\nMr. McTavish suggested that the\nC. P. R. might be induced to extend\ntheir telegraph system down here,\nwhich would be a great advantage\nto handlers and shippers of freight\nin tracing cars, etc. Other members\nspoke to the same effect.\nOn the motion of Mr. Pitcairn\nit was resolved to write the Dominion\" Telegraph Superintendent of\nthe C. P. R.,, asking if the system\nof night lettergrams could not be\nextended to Kelowna, as it would\nno doubt lead to increased busines.\nMr. Pitcairn also referred to the\nbuilding of fruit packinghouses at\nVernon and Summerland and felt\nthat similar facilities should be\nafforded to Kelowna. A motion\nwas accordingly put through that\ntHe C. P. R. be asked to do so.\nMr. DuMoulin spoke on the advisability of of the Board of Trade\nhaving an office inJown, and a live\nman in charge who could take\nvisitors round and show the advantages of the district. At present\nvisitors were left largely to their\nown resources, and frequently left\nthe town without seeing any of its\nattractions.\nMr. Pooley supported the idea,\npointing out that although Kelowna\nwas one of the best advertised of\ntowns, yet it lacked any system of\nfollowing up its advertising results.\nIt was resolved that the publicity\ncommittee consider the feasibility\nof establishing a bureau of information in a central part of the town\nas early as possible.\nAfter some further discussion on\nthis topic the meeting adjourned.\n_*\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nIan MacRae has been appointed\nto temporarily fill the position of\nconstable in place of Mr. Golightly\nwho has resigned. '\nThe Water works pump will be\nclosed down Saturday forenoon\nnext whilst some alterations ordered by the boiler inspector are being made,\nThe W.C.T.U. 'v ill meet next\nTuesday at 3 o'clock at the home;\nof Mrs. Glenn, Ethel street.\nThe Secretary of the Kelowna\nHospital begs to acknowledge receipt pf the following Subscription :\nYoung Ladies Aid $ 100.00\nCollection boxes 16.50\nLt. H. W. Innes-Lillingston 10.00\nA.Ncwbold 5.00\nCapt. Woodmas8 , 5.00\nW. R. Pooley 5.00\nthe conditions, and therefor*- could\nhave no cause for complaint.\nMessrs. Lavigne and Dunk, he\nsaid, were exceptionally well fitted\nto have the proprietorship of the\nRoyal Hotel. During the time they\nhad been jn occupation the hotel\nhad been conducted in a highly\nsatisfactory manner,-and no complaints of drunkenness or disorderly conduct of any kind could be\nbrought against them.\nThey were at present running\nthe hotel nominally as agents for\nMr. Wheeler, but that was a very\nunsatisfactory airangement, and\nserious difficulties might arise at\nany time. The hotel was a necessity in the town fpr the accommodation of working men, and it would\nbe a1 great disaster if at any time it\nwere closed. The town had grown\nsp rapidly of late that it could not\nget along with less than three\nhotels. The Lake View did not\npretend to be a working man's\nhotel, and the accommodation provided by the Palace was altogether\ninsufficient. The closing of the\nRoyal would be the means of\nthrowing a large number of people\non the streets who would have no\nplace to look for a bed. The present shortage of labor as indicated\nby the signs of \" Men Wanted\" in\nthe windows of the land companies,\nwas bringing a great many people\ninto town, and they must have,\nsomewhere to stay. To restrict\nthe town to two hotels would do a\ngreat deal of harm in preventing\nit'development. It would be like\nputting an iron band around the\nbody of a young and growing\nchild.\nAs for running the hotel without\na license, he did not think it was\npracticable. He did not know of\none temperance hotel in the whole\nof Kootenay or Yale districts which\nwas running successfully where\nthere were other hotels holding\nlicenses. Summerland hotel might\nbe pointed out, but there was no\nother hotel holding a license to\ncompete with it.\nIt v- ould be a calamity to the\ntown at the present time to be reduced to two hotels, and in order\nto avoid any such disaster he\nwould ask the commissioners to\nsanction the transfer of the license\nto Messrs. Lavigne and Dunk.\nAfter a short consultation the\ncommissioners announced that\nthat they had decided to adjourn\nthe meeting until next Wednesday\nmorning in order that they might\ninspect the hotel in question.\nThe following are the names of\nthose making highest marks for\nMay:\nJunior Grades\nFirst Primer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mona R. Woolsey,\nMary Woolsey.\nSecond Primer\u00E2\u0080\u0094Amy Fleming.\nFirst Reader\u00E2\u0080\u0094Merriam Woolsey.\nSecond Reader\u00E2\u0080\u0094Consuelo Woolsey.\nIntermediate Grade\nLoraine Woolsey, Frank Sproul.\nSenior Grades\nSenior IV.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jimmy Baker, Alda\nMcDonald.\nRev. Vance the newly appointed\nminister for the Rutland and Ellison districts, preached his opening\nsermon at the Rutland church on\nSunday evening last. A large congregation was present, being much\nimpressed with the earnest, helpful\nmessage. The preacher took for his\ntext the well-thumbed passage,\n\"They that wait upon the Lord shall\nmount as upon the wings of eagles,\nthey shall run and not be weary,\nthey shall walk and not be,faint.\" It\nwas a message of promise and hope\nto the soul bearing life cross patiently and quietly, revealing the secret\npower enabling one to carry the\ncheerful and sympathetic, and forgiving spirit amidst the numberless\ntrying and vexing difficulties of life.\nCalling for the sympathy and prayers of the congregation, he promised on behalf of himself and wife\nthat they would do all in their\npower to make his ministry amongst\nus here a sucte'ss in the* bestsence\nof the word, and it is to be hoped\nthat the people will earnestly cooperate with Mr. and.Mrs Vance to\nthat end.\nNorthwestern\nFruit Markets\nMr. J. G. Metcalfe's Report\nFrom Prairie Provinces\nThe Sundayand week day schools\nare uniting to hold a grand picnic\non June 25.\" The place chosen is\nby Stoney creek, on the Vernon\nrd. Races and other sports will be\nheld, and the folks are asked to\nbring baskets, and a collection will\nalso be taken to pay for the prizes,\nor other expenses.\nMiss Fullerton is going on a trip\nhome to Nova Scotia in a few weeks\nThis is the reason of her resignation.\nMiss Myrtle Fullerton is also going\nand some two years absence from\nhome gives a pleasant anticipation\nto the trip. \u00C2\u00BB,\nMr. J. C. Metcalfe, who is touring\nthe prairie provinces on behalf of\nthe provincial government to enquire into market conditions there,\nand generally to further the interests pf B.C. fruit-growers, has returned his first report to the Dept.\nof Agriculture. The report contains much that is of vital interest\nto all engaged in growing or selling\nfruit or green produce.\nMoose Jaw, Sask.,\nMay 30th, 1910,\nW. E. Scott, Esq.,\nDep. Minister of Agriculture,\nVictoria, B. C.\nDear Sir:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI have the honour to report as\nfollows: On arrival at Calgary,\nand after interviewing wholesalers\nand retailers, the general consensus\nof opinion was that the. crop of\nvarious kinds of fruit in the American Coast States would be a very\nheavy one this season, and from\nthe present reports prices would\nrule low. At the present time,\nWenatchee Valley is reported to\nhave 500 carloads of fruit for sale.\nThe McPheison Fruit Company\nhave been offered 100 ' cars of\nmixed fruit on consignment by\nFruit Organizations in that valley\nindicating the abundant crop.\nThe present quotations for future\ndelivery from Wenatchee. F. O. B.\ntj^a,.M,ft,,as follows:: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,._;... . *.\nSunday's Sacred Concert\n71 he concert held last Sunday\nevening turned out to be a very\nsuccessful affair. There was a large\nattendance in the Opera House in\nspite of the rain.\nThe chair was taken by tee Rev.\nD. J. Welsh, and an excellent programme was rendered.\nMrs. Huycke, Mrs. Dilworth, Miss\nLamb, Mr. McKenzie, Mr. Meugens\nMr. Ely and Mr. Jack Harvey\ncontributed to the vocal part of the\nprogramme, while cornet solos\nwere given by Mr. T. Robertson,\nviolin solo by Miss Lamb, and a\ntrombone solo by Mr. Hillier.\nMr. A. Ely presided at the piano,\nand the success of the concert was\ndue largely to his efforts. The\ncollection, on behalf of the hospital amounted to $41.70 minus a few\ndollars for eXpences of hall, etc.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Mr. K. F. Oxley has certainly\nachieved a reputation for selling\ncheap lines amongst his Saturday\nbargains, but many housewives\nwould be surprised to see him advertising last week three pounds of\ntea for 25c. This was a typographical error\u00E2\u0080\u0094it should have been\n$1.25\nA strawberry and ice cream festival, the first of the season, is to be\nheld in the park Friday evening,\nJune 17th at 7.30. The eve'nt, is\nbeing arranged by the Young La*\ndie\u00C2\u00BB' Auxilliary of the Presbyterian\nchurch. ,\nPeaches, per case .........$ .45\nPrunes, per case..... .40\nApples, per box No. 1 80\nApples, \" \" No. 2. 65\nPears. \" \"No. 1.. 1.00\nPears. \" \" No. 2 80\nCherries, per box 10 lbs 50 to 60c.\nCherries, per box 10 lbs., May 18\nand before, 85c.\nCherries from California, earlier\nthan May 18th', costing jobbers\nthere $ 1.25 per 10 lb. box. Express\n7c. per lb.. Duty 2c. Total $2.15,\nselling to the retail trade $2.60.\nStrawberries .. from \u00C2\u00AB Tennesee,\nMissouri and Hood River have\nbeen coming in and supplying\nmarkets here, but other Oregon\nberries are in now. By express\nHood River berries were costing\njobbers at Edmonton per case\n$4.25. Missouri berries at Edmonton $3.15. The Missouri berries\nwere brought in by freight via\nWinnipeg and Saskatoon to Edmonton, but at the present time\nstrawberries are coming in from\nMilton and Freewater, Oregon, by\n(..:_.)..'_>.i:_i_i_:j j , j_ i\"1-!\u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\nt_e:g\u00C2\u00AB.t costing iaiu uuwn u_A_a_gafy\n$3.25. They are then distributed\nfrom there, selling retailers at\nCalgary $5 per case. Country\ncustomers $4.75 per case. The\nvarieties 'are: Oregon, Gibson,\nClark Seedlings, Magoon and Dollar. Arrive generally in good\ncondition, a few showing mould,\nthe baskets full and well packed.\nMr. Morgan, manager of the\nOscar Brown Fruit Company of\nEdmonton, informed me that Mr.\nGriffen, representing the American\nhouses, had bought the output of\nstrawberries on Vashon Islands\npaying F. O. B. there \u00E2\u0080\u00A2$ 1.50 per\ncase.\nThe last report of the out-put of\nthe Island I have had placed it at\n75,000 cases. Salem, Oregon, are\noffering strawberries $1.50 per\ncase F. O. B. there, but cost of\ntransportation is higher from there,\nmaking it almost prohibitive to\nbring them in at the present time.\nA few strawberries from Mission,\nHatzic, and Hammond, B. C. have\narrived at -some points. this date,\n28th May. Arrived in good condition, but somewhat green, and\nnot graded as to size., I may\nState that carloads of strawberries\nare coming through from Spokane\nto Calgary by freight in four days.\nFreight rate $1.00 per .00 lbs.\nDuty 48c, icing I Oc.\nLocal grown lettuce on market\nhere now, but not in sufficient\nquantities to supply the demand,\nSold by jobbers to retailers at 40c.\nper dozien, selling imported lettuce\nat the same price.\nThe B. C. vegetable growers must\nget their products on these markets\nearly if they are to obtain profitable\nreturns.\nI would advise fruit growers and.\nshippers of B. C. to perfect their\nshipping facilities and marketing\narrangements and give the greatest\ncare to all the details in putting up\ntheir fruits this season.\nFrom the present reported heavy\ncrop, the good and finished product\nwill sell, whil the poor and unfinished may go begging for sale.\nPeaches are likely, from recent\nreports, to be an exceptionally\nlarge crop everywhere. This with\nthe energetic efforts being put forth\non the part of American growers\nand shippers to sell their products\nin. these markets will have the\ntendency to reduce the price. I\nwould also advise growers and\nshippers to get quotations into the\nhands of wholesale and retail deal-.\ners with estimate' of crop, and\nvarieties for sale as soon as the\ncrop is assured.\nThere is a very determined effort\non the part of jobbers everywhere\nhere, operating through their boards ,\nof trade, to get the present tariff on \"\nfruit reduced frorn the American\nside. These efforts and agitation\nalong this line are likely to be continued. Any action by the Domin- <\nion Government in this direction\nshould be opposed by fruit growers\neast and west most energetically. '\nYours truly,\n(Signed) J. C METCALFE,. i\nCommissioner.\n%\\nKelowna Public School\n.SI\nHONOR LIST FOR MAY, 1910.\n^ Tl^j^l^wihg is\nof the various divisions\t\nlie school for the month of May;*'\nDivision 1.\nSenior IV.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oaring to approaching- ,i^\nentrance exams, no reports pul>->\nlished.\nJunior*IV.\u00E2\u0080\u0094G. Whitehead, A.'Mc-\n. Lennan.\nDivision 2.\nIV.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Stafford Cox, Eniz Clarke,\nDorothy Leckie.\nSenior III.\u00E2\u0080\u0094George Silke.\nJunior Ill.=~-Marguerite Budden.'\nBessie Cox, Lena McMillan,\nLydia McKeown, Ewart Fletcher.1 ^\nDivision 3.\n1 st Reader.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lois Homuth, Judson\nCopeland, Fred Whitehead,\nGeorge Pettigrew.\n2nd Primer Sr.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Emma Rutledge, ;\nNettie Dahlburg, Evelyn Fletcher.,\n2nd Primer Jr.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ray Elliott, Bert -\n. Davis, Stanley Stiff, Robert Hall. l\n1st Primer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Marian Hinsley, Graham Evans, Kathleen McKenzie. ',\nA Division\" 4.\nA.\u00E2\u0080\u0094V. Lawson, C. Gaddes, H.\nBrunnette, W. Raymer, B. De\nHart.\nB.\u00E2\u0080\u0094L. Wilson, H. Bawtenheimer,\nL. Marshall, Weddell, J. Davy. \u00C2\u00AB,\nC\u00E2\u0080\u0094.E. Marty, A. Wilson, A. Stiff A\nC. Josselyn.\nDivison. 5. -''.^I\nSenior II.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Willie Bradley, Dorothy \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nEvans, Francis Buckland, D. For- >\nrest, V. Jones, E. Steckley.\nJunior II.\u00E2\u0080\u0094G. Sutherland, F. Ritchie, 44\nH. Kohler. > ^ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWith the close ofthe present term A]q\nof the public school many changes.. |^p\nwill take place in the personnel of ';'('][\nthe staff. Mr. A. R. Lord, a grad-f i'C\nuate of Queen's University, Toronto, ;JwI\nhas been appointed, principal. ' Mr., U$l\nLord has been selected frolm **$M\nlarge number of applicants,-andtiks>w\na teacher of high attainments ^rVf.'A\nwide experiense. He is in'pOsseiJ-A\nsion of many testimonials aa to'^iijCl\nability to fill the position, includ^^p\ning the highest recommendaHon^irT\nfrom Principal Gordon and C|e\u00C2\u00ABi|i^\nConnell, of Queen's Unive'rti^M\nFor the past year*he has bee\u00C2\u00AB,\"^\nprincipal of a large seven-roome^f\nschool at Fenelon Falls, Ont. ^'tfj^\nMiss Messenger, Miss W*d&/J\nMiss Coppinger, arid Miss Came^fi &\nfrom Didsbury, Ont., and Miss ^>\nKathleen Cockreil, Of Vancouver. '\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'ft\nu1 AA ,r.& The Orchard City Record\nThursday, June 9\nHOB PRINTING\nWe are particularly well fixed\nto execute all your orders for i\nprinting. With new type, new\nmachinery, skilled mechanics\nand every labor saving device\nwe can do your work quick,\nwell and at reasonable prices.\nlaM up 94, we'll wait upon you\nI The Record Job Print Dept.\nLASS AND CUT GLASS\nPressed Ware at Times\nceives Even Experts.\nDe-\nA GUIDE FOR THE UNWARY.\nI THE ORCHARD CITY RECORD\nPublished eoery Thursday al Ihe Ojjice,\nKclou\nB.C.\nJOllX LEATHLEY, Editor.\n\\"HAS. 11. LEATHLEY. Business Manager.\nSubscription $1.50 per annum.\nTo United States $2.00 per annum.\nAdvertising tales upon application.\nCommunications\nUnder this luuiding communications icill\nbo r.c_iceii upon untj subject o. interest.\nLetters must be signed, be brief, ucoid\npersonalities. Tlie Kditor does not nee\ne88iirilii| endorse opinions giceii tcloio.\n. Editor Orchard City Record,\nI Dear Sir:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI$7 Kindly permit me to make a few\nI remarks through your valuable\nspace on the care taken with some\norchards in this Kelowna district,\nmore pariicularly with reference to\nthe bottom lands, as seen by a\nI prairie prospective buyer.\nDriving along some of your\nprominent splendid roads may be\nseen orchards that have won for\nI Kelowna the name it proudly upholds and certainly merits, viz:\n\" The Orchard City of the Okanagan.\" Such orchards are a credit\nto the man who owns and cares for\nthem, and, of course, as a natural\nconsequence to the vicinity in\ngeneral.\nBut there are some other orchards\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094not many, I am pleased to say\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n'that displays to public view, even\non prominent corner lots altogether\ntoo many dead trees left standing\nas an evidence of total failure ' as\nfar as being'able to grow fruit trees\nis concerned. Now, I am not in a\nI position to say why they should be\nl/left standing as a public eyesore to\neveryone who sees them. Fruit\nenthusiasts should see to it ,that\nthese dead trees should be removed and the sooner the better. If\nthe owner is.so indifferent as not\nto take the trouble to remove them,\nthen in such cases some means\nshould be taken to have- them got\nout of sight for him for the benefit\nof the fruit industry, if not for* the\nI pitiable sight it too plainly displays.\nA prospective buyer notices all\nthese signs of failure or success and\nthe man or company who has land\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094orchard land to sell would do\nwell to have such tell tales speedily\nremoved.\nHoping what I have said may\nbe of future use, I remain\nYours truly,\nPROSPECTIVE BUYER.\nThe Seeker After Cut Glass Is Safe In\nPurchasing \"Closed In\" Articles, as\nThey Cannot Be Duplicated In Pressed Glass\u00E2\u0080\u0094Art of the Cutter.\nTeacher\u00E2\u0080\u0094\" Jonny, what remains when\nyou take three from six ?\" '\nJonny\u00E2\u0080\u0094\" I donno \"\nTeacher\u00E2\u0080\u0094\" If you placed six marbles in\nyour pocket, and three had gone when you\nlooked agin, what would you find ?\"\njonny\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"Hole, 1 guess.\"\nMI-O-NA\nRelieves Stomach Misery almost\ninstantly.\nIf the food you ate at your last meal did\nnot digest, but laid for a long time like lead\non your stomach, then you have indigestion\nand quick action should be taken.\nOf course there are many other symptoms\nof indigestion, such as belching up of sour\nfood, heartburn, dizziness, shortness of\nbreath and foul breath, and if you have\nany of them, your stomach is out order and\nshould be corrected.\nMi-o-na tablets have cured thousands of\ncases of indigestion and stomach trouble.\nIf you have any stomach distress, Mi-o-na\nwill relieve instantly.\nBut Mi-o-na unlike most so-called dyspepsia remedies, does more than relieve;\nit permanently cures dyspepsia or any stomach trouble by putting energy and stcngth\ninto the walls of the stomach, where the\nBuyers for large houses are sometimes deceived wben buying cut glass\naud find they have bought what is\ncommercially known as pressed glass\ninstead ot the genuine article.\n. et there are a tew simple rules\nthat will safeguard the ordinary buyer\nat retail. The chief one is to pick out\nonly what the manufacturer calls\nclosed in articles. By this he means\nvases, jugs, pitchers, bottles and tbe\nlike. !\nThese cannot be duplicated ln pressed glassware, which is first molded iu\npatterns and the edges ground. This\nprocess gives it so close a resemblance\nto real cut glass that even experts '\nmay be deceived. i\nBut in the \"closed in\" articles some '\nway is yet to be devised by which the\npressed Hues can be followed through\nthe opposite side when put on the\nwheel to be cut, as the pressed part\ninterferes witb the workman seeing\nthrough the glass, which he has to do\nin order to follow the lines of tbe de- j\nsign on the cutter. j\nThe kind of cut glass that is coun- !\nterfeited is called open work, such as\nplates, nappies or any flat article\nthrough which the workman can read j\nily see when finishing it '\nAnother help in selecting cut glass\nis its weight. The genuine is made\nfrom pure lead glass, made chiefly in\nAmerica, especially for cutting. This\nlead glass is very heavy.\nThe first step toward cutting is to '\nmark on the \"blank\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094that is, the dish\nin the clear glass\u00E2\u0080\u0094in red or other pa mt\nthe design that has been selected for\nit.\nThe most common designs are dla\nmoud shapes, stars of various poiuts,\ncrosses and squares and other geometrical patterns.\nThe design must be marked on the\nglass exactly to stand the test ot com\npass and rule. When all lines are iu\nperfect accordance with the pattern\naud also fit the blank the \"roughing\"\nbegius. This is cutting the heavy work,\nsuch as the necks ot vases and bottles\naud the heavy lines on the stars.\nThis is done on a machine called tbe\n\"mill,\" a big wooden framed affair, on\ntop of which is a hopper holding about\nhalf a ton of Berkshire bills sand .\nThis sand is the only kind in tnis\ncountry that has proved satisfactory\nfor this work. j\nThe sand runs down through the\nhopper, is moistened with water aud\ncomes out of a large steel disk, the\nedge ot which is sharp. This disk is\nturned by power at a very high speed.\nThe wet sand of the disk gives It a\n\"tooth,\" which wben the glass is held\nagainst the edge of the disk cuts very\nrapidly.\nAll the coarse and heavy cutting is\ndone on this \"mill.\"\nThe cutting iu ot the finer work begins on u mill witb a stone disk re\nsembling an old fashioned gftndstone.\nbut much narrower aud with a beveled\nedge. These stones come chiefly from\nItaly or Scotland. They are very hard\naud carry a keeu edge a long time.\nThey are used for the fine cutting altogether.\nThere is a stone found in Nova Scotia much softer tbat cuts quicker and\nis used for fluting on water bottles\nand compotes where heavy cuts are\ndesired. Very often as many as fifteen\nor twenty different stones of varying\ndegrees ot hardness are used tor the\ncutting of one article.\nAfter the desigu bas been all cut\ncomes one of tbe most difficult parts\noi the work, the polishing.\nThis is done on the outside of the\nwork witb a very high speeded brush\nwheel covered wltb molsteued pumice\nstone powdered. This stoue is lava\nthrown off by a volcano.\nbarge wooden disks made tb fit tbe\ncuts and fed with pumice and water\nare used for polishing the fine work ln\naud around the delicate tracery of the\npattern.\nTbe baud ot the glass cutting expert\nmust be steady, strong and accurate,\nfor the least mistake spoils a whole\npatteru. In the case ot a fourteen\ninch pum li bowl this mean, the loss ot\nipM.\nAnother kind or glass cutting Is\nknown as st(*ie engraving it id done\nwith little .tuiii- \u00C2\u00ABtieeis and coppet\ntools entirely liv Hand The designs\nare cliletlv vines and (lowers. They\nare not cut deep ami are often mis\ntaken tot pressed glass. In reality\nthey are the most expensive kind ot\ncut 'glass, the price tor a \"single piece\nol large sl?e iiimI ornate decoration\nDENTED HIS DIGNITY.\nThe Cook's Familiaritv W>tn the Captain Was III Tim ed\nBnos Silshee iiiki i.tiian Knight\ncame from tne same .uii>- imvn on the\ncoast ot Maine. as uo.\. they bad\ngrown up together, mm oow as men\ntbey were sailing togeiiici on die same\nschooner. Ethan was captain.' and,\nlilnos was the coon I heir positions\nmight well nave oeen reversed, tor\nEthan wa. Detter vviui the sUiilet than\ntOoos. and linos probably Knew as\nmuch about navigation us nis friend.\nStill, they maintained .nn-ut respective\nplaces, and noittvi uioiimii ot a shift.\nUsually on Doan) ihe Maria there\nwas littl.e forma.ii.\ neiween ihe cap\ntain and the crew in port, however.,\nand on certain oi-cn^mii. n whs thought\nnecessary to ma!>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2''iness. Captain\nKnight received nun in nis nest ma'n-\nnet. tlltlliKIng his star, dial he happen\ned to have his _>>di \"oat on when the\nofficer arrived tine .pivieiiiy.\nln the midst ot Uieii interview in\nthe captain's enhin l_nos. apron tied\nbehind, as was his wont when not\nvery busy, poued nis head m at tne\ndoor.\n\"Ethan,\" be said. \"Where's tbe saucepan V\"\nCaptain Knight frowned, and the officer lookPd at once surprised and in-\ndifferent.\n\"Your conduct Is amazing, sit.\" the\ncaptain said tn nis most algnlbed manner. \"Your saucepan must ue where\nyou left it.\"\n\"You had It last.\" protested Bnos.\n\"You said you could try\"-\nBut the captain had slammed the\ndoor.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Youth's Companion.\nINVADING A MOSQUE.\nRoughshod Methods of Sightseers In\nTurkey.\nAlbert Bigelow Paine says in describing a visit to a Constantinople\n, mosque:\n\"Some kind ot ceremony was in\nprogress when we arrived; but, as\nusual in sucb places, we did not mind.\nWe went right in Just tne same, and\nour guides, too, and we talked and\npointed and did what we could to\noreak np the services. Old turbaned\nsons ot the prophet were uueellng and\nbowing and praying here and there\naud were a good deal ln tbe way.\nSometimes we tell over tbem. Dut we\nwere charitably disposed and did uot\ntick them\u00E2\u0080\u0094at least I didn't, aud I\ndon't think any ot the party did: We\nmight kick a dog\u00E2\u0080\u0094kick at nim..l mean\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094it we tripped over one, but we do\nnot kick a Mosiem-not a live one. We\nonly take bis picture and step on him\naud muss olm up and make a tew\nnotes and go.\n\"1 have been wondering what would\nhappen to a party oi tourists\u00E2\u0080\u0094Moslems, for Instance\u00E2\u0080\u0094wbo broke Into an\nAmerican church during services, witb\nguides to point and explain, and stared\nat the people who were saying their\nprayers and stalked over them as if\nthey were was figures. An American\ncongregation would be annoyed by a\nmob like tbat and would remove it\nand put it in tbe calaboose. But. then,\nsucb things wouldn't nappe'u in America. We have cowed our foreign visitors. Besides, there is nothing in an\nAmerican church that a foreigner\nwould care to see.\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094Outing.\nGoing Astray at Sea.\nThe difficulty ot keeping a modern\nsteamship ou a straight course is no\nslight one. The helmsman steers by\ntbe compass, and, while a single degree ot deviation appears very small\nou tbe compass card, It would if con-\nduued carry a fast steamship four\nmiles out ot her course iu a single\nday's run. Yet the compass gives the\ncourse more accuratefy than the ship\ncan be steered. Owing to tbe deflecting power ot tbe waves and tbe roll-\nlug ot tbe ship, which It she Is ot tbe\nt win screw type causes first one ot ber\npropellers and then tbe other to exert\ngreater effect, tbe course Is continually shifted a little this way and that\ndespite tbe helm. Tbe only safety is\ntn correcting tbe compass course by\nfrequent observations ot tbe sun, moon\naud stars.\u00E2\u0080\u0094New' York Tribune.\ngastric juices are produced\nA large box of Mi-o-na tablets costs but | reaching toin figures.\n50c at P. B. Willits & Co. and are guaran.\nteed to cure or money back. When others\nfail, Mi-o-na cures. It is a producer of\nflesh when body is thin; it cleanses the\nstomach and bowels; purifies the blood\nand makes rich red blood.\n(PMOUHW WGHO-ME)\nCURES. CATARRH, ASTHMA,\nBronchitis, Croup, Coughs and Colds, or\nmoney back. Sold and guaranteed by\nP. B. WILLITS & CO.\nGlass culling is not only a trade, but\nan art. and an., one alter seeing tilt,\nmethod Hir.pioved will readily understand wuy genuine cut g:uss commands high prices.--Boston Globe.\nThe Job Department.\nFormer Employer-And so you are\nu newspaper man uow. Thompson'.\nThompson Ves.. sir; I'm the editor ot\nthe Job depart nicht. l-'urmei Employ-\ner\u00E2\u0080\u0094Editor ol the Job department'/\n'Thompson-Ves. sir; I carries iu coal,\naud scrubs the Door, aud cleans tbe\nwindows, and all such editin' as that,\niBlr.-Londnn Graphic.\n, Violence In the voice Is often only\nthe death rattle ot reason - in . the\nthroat-Uoyer.\nLeaves It to Her Judgment\n\"Am i tbe first girl you ever kissedV\"\nasks tbe fair young thing from the\nretuge ot his shoulder.\n\"Welf.\" he replies, \"after tbe -way\nmy arm Just naturally slipped around\nyout walsi as you unconsciously leaned toward tne and my Ougers tilled\nyotii chin as you unconsciously lifted\nyout neitd und I bent forward where\nyout ilps were walling and didn't get\nthe kiss either ou yout nose or your\ndim. but where It belonged after all\ntnat. and with the knowledge ot the,\nsubject which you have displayed, 1\nshall say nothing, except that i leave\nthe question to yum own Judgment\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLite. f.\nSaving His Mate.\nOn one occasion at a crowded performance at the Ito.vai theater ln.Sydney, N_ S \\.. n number ot years ago\nu couple ot sailors who had been\ndrinking were seined ln the gallery.\nOne lost his ha la nee and tell Into tbe\nstalls Ihe other Immediately cried,\n\"Man overboard!\" and dived after his\n.'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ompunion. With the proverbial luck\nol drunken sailors tbe first escaped\nwith a tirnkeu teg aud tbe second\nwithout a scratch.\nWfySftt&fi*.*. ^\n, _ . * J&_\u00C2\u00AB5_w\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00A3* * -\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*M-;a\u00C2\u00BB>a-a_g_\nA Robbery That Paid.\nScott -1 always thought it was rough\nnn Adam to mb him ot his rib. Mott\n- Ves: but. ou the other band. It was\nthe making ol Eve.- Exchange.\nWp nrp nevet so happy or so nn-\nimppy as we suppose.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Uoebetoucuuia.\nGREAT\nOF A\nBountiful Harvest\nIs already in evidence throughout the district.\n.-' \i' vwjwwsf*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2! ,.i. \u00C2\u00AB,\"*^%Tjirtrafc .ite* '-^ft/H- i\"Tits'\n.A ^.AAyA^yyM^yA^Mf^\n\"MEN WANTED\"\nPlacards are dotted around the City, denoting the greetf\nactivity with which development and improvement\nwork is going on. Land is steadily and naturally rising\nin value. You can get in now much cheaper, than later.\nFor information as to fruit growing, tobacco\nraising, general farming, etc., write to\nThe Secretary,\nBoard of Trade,\nKelowna. B.C. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0Arfyi\nT'huraday, June 9\nOrchard Gity Record\n3\nlet\nWE HANDLE\neintzman Pianos\nWe purchase them direct fro,m the factory and' can\nsave you $/50. $/50 should be as good to you as\nto a travelling agent.\nGet our prices on these instruments.\nx , - t \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0,\nWe handle other makes and can ' give you a full\nsize Piano, 1\ octaves,-in Mahogany or real Walnut,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 guaranteed for ten years, for $275.\nKelowna Furniture Co.\nA COLOAiWL\nliiJS\nTLER.\nA business thai is not worth\nAdvertising is not worth\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Running\nThe value of persistent advertising has\nbeen repeatedly demonstrated.\nKeeping everlastingly at it is what\npays.\nWe are open to\ntake contracts for\nMoving Buildings\n. -AND.\nPile Driving\nESTIMATES GIVEN\nClarke & Byrns\nCONTRACTORS ,\nBox 131 . Kelowna\nREMEMBER\nTHAT\nGLENCOE\nOffers the best and only reasonable real\nestate investment in - the Valley. If you\nwant to pay $1000 for a poorer soil, that's\nyour business. Glencoe offers the best\nsoil in the Okanagan Valley at $50. per.\nacre. Quarter down,* remainder in three\n/ears. 5 per cent off on tracts of 160 or\nover. 5 per cent, off for cash. Ideal opportunities for dairy and mixed fanning,\nhay, fruit, berries, and vegetables.\nW. Curtis Hitchenef\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'' GLENCOE,\nWestb&nk, British Columbia.\nA want ad in the\nRecord brings results.\nSutton's Seeds\nORDERS TAKEN NOW FOR\nTomato Plants\nCabbage Plants\nBedding Plants\nAsparagus Roots\nRosa Bushes, etc.\nRiLYSONS\nKelowna.\nGreenhouse.\nBelleoue Hotel\n' SOUTH OKANAGAN ,\nr\nRates, two dollar* per day.\nBeautiful situation on the lake\nfront, close to the new wharf.\nFishing,, shooting and boating,\nand tennis.\nGilbert Hassell, Prop.\nColonel Samusl Slope* Was a Jack of\nAil Trades.\nIt is iipffssiir) tiini ih*' pioneer be\no man nt illlilllli' resource, who cud do\ntut' iiiiuseit hi uis iieiyiiiinrs every necessary l;isU Su.-li ii man was Colonoi\nSamuel Slope, nne ot Hie early settlers of KlamlforU Alass. whose as-\n.tuiiisliiiiK versa.ilif.v is iwordcd by S.\n(J. Wood iu \"'I'liverns and Turnpikes\not Bluiulfonl.\"' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nColonel Siii|ier. ;imnii\u00C2\u00BB ot'her things,\nUept suiiieilunn (it h . simile and-pastured horses -mid stork l-*or the mu-\nuiflceut reward of H shillings the old\nveteran in 1 TSft moved the family ot\nDavid Kntix y.v means ot \"teauie and\nboy.\" Now mid then ne turned bis\nband to odd Jobs tie carted and laid\nout John Waldo Wood's tlaa one sea-\nsou for t\"7 His.\nHe seems to have made shoes and\ngarments for tils family and for his\nneighbors fr'or Kpos l.ooitils' young\nson, who was bound out to him, be\ndid on tbls wise: \"fuping your son's\nshoes. 1-:.\" \"One Imttlp-grwn coat\ntrimmed und matte for Moses. 7 still-\nlings\" Ile> made several shirts and\na frock for the Mart In Leonard company.\nThe number ot tlunjrs wbicb.tbls veteran and \"dabster\" did make an astonishing list He was surgeon In ordinary to the parish ot Blandford and\nthis long before he had accumulated\nnn army experience. Veterinary, too,\nbe was. His journals are peppered\nover wiib charges for tbe treatment\not young horses In the account of\nKliphai.et Thompson in thp year ,1772,\nalong wiib a \"trying i'ann\" and \"1\nI'r Kizers.\" is the charge, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'To Beting\nyour buys rist. twelve shillings.\"\nJames sinnett in I7s.\"i became Indebted to \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Seting your1 Unee and Dressings\" awl to^'Suiidn Dressings,\" 4 and\n:{ shillings respectively.\nNEVER OPENING FLOWERS.\nA Largo Number of Plants Bear Cleis-\ntogamous Blossoms.\nTlie never opening tjiiwer. or, as botanists (i. This vast treasure bad\nbeen gathered chiefly by conquest from\nvarious nations of Europe, Asia and\nAfrica. There had been extensive\nmines iu Spain and In tbe Attar mountains of north Africa, but their yieSS\nin the wealth of kings and of cities ia\nAsia and Egypt had been despoiled\nand carried away to enrich the conquerors.\n' ! /\nThe Climbers.\n\"1 once k no wed a man.\" said tbe oH\nrolored brother, \"wbo used ter fall two\nfoot ter -ever' one he climbed, bat \u00C2\u00A3_B>\nIn' didn't stop bim. He _ep' a-cttmb.\nIn He'd git so clost de top dat ben\nreach out for de highest limb, w'ea\ndown he'd go. Rut onct w'en he'd\ndone fell out de tree an* hit mighty\nhard n hurricane come 'long an' took\nde tree off wld It. an' dat man ssyt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Dur. now: Kf I'd been in de top sr\ntlat tree, wbar would 1 'a' been? A_f\nbe wuz des so happy dat be wuz boM>\nlie' his groun' dut be went ter\nIn .\"-Atlanta Constitution.\nNews of the Valley.\nMr. Richardo, of the Coldstream\nranch, Vernon, estimates this sea-\nsen's crop in the Okanagan at 500\ncars\u00E2\u0080\u0094three times larger than last\nyear.\nMr. John Tait, of Summerland,\nis experimenting with some seeds\nof the calabash plant, which have\nbeen forwarded to him from South\nAfrica. The calabash plant furnish'\nes the famous Calabash pipes.\nA Civilian Rifle Association has\nbeen formed at Salmon Arm, and\nword has been received that the\nrifles and ammunition will be at\nonce forwarded from the stores at\nEsquimalt.\nMr. H. W. Buckland, of Vernon,\nhas been appointed police magistrate in place of Mr. Frank Mc-\nGowan, who has resigned.\nThe Vernon city assessors have\njust completed their task for the\nyear. The assessment roll shows\nan increase of $370,000 over last\nyear. The total assessment is\n$1,880,000, of which $800,000 is\non improvements, and the. balance\non land values.\nThe Okanagan Mounted Rifles,\n(whose name, by the way, has been\nchanged to B Squad on British\nColumbia Horse), are going into\ncamp on the lake shore near Okanagan Landing on the 20th of this\nmonth.\nThe engineer engaged on Vernon's water works sheme, Mr. A.\nMcL. Hawks, and the Vernon city\ncouncil are at present at loggerheads. The relations between the\ncity and its consulting engineer\nhave been a little strained, and\nmatters have been brought to a\ncrisis by a lengthy report from, Mr.\nHawks, in which he indulges in the\nseverest criticisms of the council\nand its methods of doing things.\nHe refers to their book-keeping as\n\" purely feminine,\" and practically\naccuses them of manipulating the\naccounts so that his commission is\n\"always $100 to $500,less than it\nshould be, under his contract.\" He\nsays that \"their negligence has\nalready delayed cornpletion of the\nwork, and caused him damage and\nunnecessary expense.\" The aldermen have hotly resented Mr. Hawk's\nremarks, and in their reply have\nplainly told him that he is overstepping his authority and that\nmany of the actions he criticises\nare \" none of his business.\" They\npointed out some serious inconsistences in his reports, which they,\nask him to explain and also request\nthat the offending report He withdrawn.\nOn Monday evening a mob,\ncomprising the knickerbocker element of the community, (we will\nnot insult our respectable English\ncitizens by. calling them English)\nentered the \" Press \" office and demanded that the editor devote the\nnext issue of the 'Press' to an\napoligy for an article- entitled,\n\" Mock Loyalty and Mock Mourning,\" which had appeared in the\nlast issue of the paper. The editor\nrefused their demand, whereupon\nthe mob seized him and dragged\nhim out with' the intention of throwing him tnto a pond of filthy water.\nThree citizens came' to the assistance of the editor and things were\npretty lively for a few minutes..\nThe ringleader was choked, decked\nand rolled in thi mud and water.\nA number, of the other prominent\nrioters were thoroughly ptinched\nand clubbed. Another, who had\ntaken a brave part when he, along\nwith the eight or ten others, had\nonly one man to handle, succumbed as soon as a man got ahold of\nhim. The rest of the rowdy crew\nfled like jackals. The editor got\nlittle more than his feet wet. Seven\nof the most prominent members of\nthe mob were arraigned before\nStipendary Magistrate Guernsey on\nWednesday and fined $10 and\ncosts each.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Penticton Press.\nOver the Mark.\n. \"Does he aim at realism ln tbe stories he writes?\"\n\"He may aim at It, but be doeaatt\nhit within a million miles of it\"\n.\"How's that?\"\n\"The bero of his last story is a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2spendthrift Scotchman.'\" - Houston\nPost. Q\nA Conacient.oua Declaration.\nDrummer - Will you be mine? All\nm.V life I will worship you from Feb-\nunry until April and from August ontil December The rest of the time\n1 am on tbe road - Fllegende Blattet\nAlways e Way.\n\"She Is reputed to be a cold beauty.\nDid yon win her heart with orchids?*'\n\"No I sent some very flue Imported\ncausages. to Der dog.\"~PItuburg Post,\nPARISIAN SAGE\nCURES DANDRUFF\nIf it Don t Willit's Will Give\nYour Money Back\nYet, Parisian Sage, the moat inviupBgraJ\nhair restorer, curea dandruff and grow*\nhair. The women of Canada, who have\nluxuriant hair, know it does, and that ia\nwhy thousands of attractive women\nthroughout the land are regularly using it\nFor years this almost marvelous grower\nof lustrous and beautiful hair was confined\nto the elite of Europe and New York Gty,\nbut about two years ago it was given to a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2elect list of druggists, and today can be\nobtained in any city or town in America\nwhere society women of refinement dwell.\nParisian Sage is the most delightful hair\ntonic in the world. It makes the hair soft,\nlustrous and luxuriant in a few days. It is\nperfumed most daintily and is not sticky\nor greasy, h \u00C2\u00BBtoP* falling hair, cures dan-\ndandruff and itching scalp in two weeks or\nmoney back. '\"\nP. B. Willits & Co. sell it for 50 cents,,\nlarge bottle, and guarantees it, or direct, all\ncharges prepaid, by Canadian makers,\nGitonx Mfg. Co., Fort Erie, Ont.\nWe sell the Best Goods at Money Saving\nPrices. Bring your orders to\nBiggin & Poole's, there is value in\neverything you buy.\nPURE ICE CREAM,\nALL FLAVORS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094t \u00E2\u0080\u0094-\nMade from fresh cream daily.\nAny size bricks always ready, or made specially to order.\nEverybody knows the Ideal Quality.\nFresh Fruits, Vegetables,, and Alberta Creamery\nButter by express every week.\nThe same wholesome Bread and Delicious Cakes and\nPastry baked every day.\nThe quality and prices we offer cannot be equalled.\nBIGGIN & POOLE\nGROCERS and CONFECTIONERS.\nPhone 39 Phone 39\nKELOWNA WEST BANK\nSTEAM FERRY\nPrices Quoted to Any Point\non the Lake\nFerry to Bear Creek every Friday.\nL. HAYMAN\nBox 66 Kelowna, B.C.\nL. C. AVISS\nBoat Builder\nLaunches, Sail Boats\nSkiffs, Canoes and Scotos\nRoto Boats and Canoes\nfor hire.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 KELOWNA, B.C.\nCheap Fire Wood\nKelowna Saw-Mill Company, Limited\nwill deliver 20 inch wood for\n$1.50 per Rick\nOrders filled in rotation.\nMILLINERY\nSALE\nI wish to announce that I will\nplace on sale\nAT COST\nAll Trimmed and Untrimmed\nHats and Flowers,\nAlso also all other goods at\ngreatly reduced prices.\nCall and see, You will not be\ndisappointed here.\n\\u00C2\u00AB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\nM.TUTCHER,\nMillinery PmlofS. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0my:-\n. The Orchard City Record.\nThursday, June 3\nb\"\nts Save\nAmerican Fruit.\nHow far science can go in akling\nthe up-to-date agriculturalist in his\nfight against the blighting forces\nnature sees fit to launch against\nhim has been' fully demonstrated\nby orchardists to the south of us,\nin the successful use of smudge\npots to overcome the effects of\nspring frosts.\nThe smudge pot is tlie last word\nThe fires glow strangely as the found a majority of fruit raisers\ngloom increases, and the dark fig- using smudge pots,\nures walk from one smudge pot to This year it is safe to say that\nanother, keeping them replenished, two'-thirds of the orchardists in the\nwith fuel and sending the heat highly developed fruit regions of\nwaves and the black smoke rolling the great west have been using\nupwards omong the trees. I smudge pots and have saved them-\nThe battle for supremacy be-1 selves from a disaster that would\ntween Jack Frost and his new en-' equalled that of 1907, as the spring\nemy has begun. With machine- opened early and the buds arrived\nby the middle of April.\nIn most of the western fruit districts the danger of killing frost is\nnot over until the middle of May,\nwhich leaves a month for jack\nFrost's operations. In addition to\nsmudge pots the oachardists are\narmed with combination thermometers and alar.r. clocks, which\nsound a warning at the farmer s\nbedside when the frost reaches\nof protection. Jack Frost has jjet' in the union will have its smut!\nhold of them, but he cannot pene-! pot army, as statistics show that\ntrate more than one or two rows! there are comparatively few local-\nwithin those long lines of smudge! ities in the United States where\npots. ! there is absolutely no danger from\nFinally a streak of grey appears1 spring frosts,\non tlie eastern horizon, and the'\nfarmer breaths a sich of relief. 7 he,\nhue regularity the daik forms pass\nand re-pass between the long rows\nof dimly lighted trees. Midnight\ncomes and the therinome'x-r is\nstill descending. Two oclock find..\nit 28 above zero, and the next two\nor three hours will be the critical\nin scientific agriculture. It hast time, and the fuel is heaped rapid-!\nbeen in practical demonstration; ly on the smudse pots. Outside\nonly two years, but it has saved; the orchard area tlie thermometer\nmillions of dollars worth of fruit; is descending steadily. i\nthat otherwise would have been! Now it passes 27, 26, and finally danger point.\nlost, owing to the heavy frosts. ; reaches 25. In the centre of the| Eastern orchardists are fully as\nIt can be made in various forms! orchard the thermomr'a-r, which is interested as those of the west, as\nby the orchardist himself, or it can| consulted every few minutes, shows they have suffered from the late\nbe bought if he is not enough of ai a maximum of ten to fourteen deg-' frosts of the last few years, and are\nmechanic to make his own line ofj rees higher than that indicated by! as eager as their western rivals to\npots. the thermometer on the outside.; fi\u00C2\u00BBd some means of combating the\nVarious kinds of fuel can be used! Some of the trer.s nt the edge of( common enemy. In a few years it\nin it, and the average cost of pro-| the orchard begin lo show .he lr.ckl is predicted that nearly every state\ntecting an orchard during the\nspring season of cold nights will\nnot be more than $3 or $10\u00E2\u0080\u0094surely cheap insurance in these days\nof fancy prices for orchard products.\nThis spring the smudge pots\nhave been in general use- throughout the large commercial orchards\nof the middle west. The treesbe -\ngan to bud early, which generally\ncauses apprehension amongst the\norchardists. I hen came the inevitable cold snaps, but Jack Frost\nfound an unexpected enemy disputing his progress. Warned ot\nthe impending fall in temperature\nby the ever vigilent weather bureau\nthe orchardists were not caught\nnapping.\nEvery up-to-dute farmer has telephone connections with the nearest town and the instant the weath\ner bureau sends the dread warning\nof an impending cold snap, the\ntelephone bells are kept ringing\nthroughout the orchard districts,\nand the warning message is sent\nover the wires: '-'frost to-night, get\nready your smudge pots.\"\nThe descending sun and the descending thermometer find a busy\nscene in the orchard, after the\nwer ling has been .received. The\nfarmer and his entire family are\nlighting long rows of smudge pots\nof various shapes and sizes under\nthe blossoming trees.\nThe Churches\nANGLICAN\nSt. Michael and All Angels' Church'.\nHoly Communion, first and third Sundays in the\nmonth .at 8 a.m.; second and fourth\" Sundays, after\nMorning Prayer.\nLitany on the first and third Sundays.\nMorningPrayer at 11 o'clock j Evening Prayer at\n7:30.\nREV. THOS. GREENE. B. A., Rector.\nPRESBYTERIAN\nKnox Presbyterian Church, Kelowna.\nMorning Services at II a.m.; evening servicesat 7:30\np.m. Sunday School ot 2:30 p.m.\nWeekly Prayer Meeting on Wednesdays at 8 p.m.\nBenvoulin Presbyterian Church.\nAfternoon service ot 3 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p.m.\nREV'. A. W. K. HERDMAN, Pastor.\nmTwrCTm\u00C2\u00ABBgBBi!gaKyaLy_w_\u00C2\u00AB_^__f___B___i.i_w^\n''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ''' ' IX1\nIf you Want Your Jam's, to keep, they 1\nmercury has touched the lowestj\npoint now\u00E2\u0080\u009424 above zero\u00E2\u0080\u0094but\ninside the orchard the mere-try'\nstill trembles above the freez ng\npoint at 32. Soon the streak of\ngrey is touched with pink, and\nthen the edge of the sun rppears\nabove the hills, and the farmer . \u00C2\u00AB*_ ot the success or uiamberiam s\ni iL _ !_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 C L\u00C2\u00AB. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 _ .1 \u00C2\u00A3 . Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is th_,t it\nknows that his nght agamt the rrost\n\"It cured me\" or \"It saved the Hffi of\nmy child,\" are the expressions you hear\nvery day about Chamberlain's Colic, C liol-\ncra and diarrhoer Remedy. This is \ I rue\nthe world over where this valuable remedy\nlias been introduced. No other remedy in\nuse for diarrhoer of bowel complaints has\nreceived such general approval. The se-\nf the success of Chamberlain's Ccl\nMtTHODlST\nKelowna Methodist Church.\nSabbath Service at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nSunday School at 2:30 p.m.\nMidweek service Wednesday at 8 p.m.\nREV. S. ). THOMPSON. Pastor!\nking has been won. ,\nThe disastrouse fruit year efi\n1907 awakened the orchardists r.fl\nthe country to the necessity of;\nsome means of combating frost. In:\nthat year practically the entire fruit\ncrop of the United States was a' j\nfailure. Orchardists were indesp.v'\",! ij\nas the previous year had been little! j\nbetter, and many were heard to;j\ncures. Sold by all druggists.\nMEHTS.\ndeclare that one more such season j 3\nwould bring them to bancruptcv.\nThe following spring, however,\nwas not so severe and witnessed\nthe first actual test that was watched\neagerly by every drchardist in the-\ncountry. Those who used the!\nsmudge pots in the spring bf 1908i\ndemonstrated conclusively that this\nnew form of frost protection wn.. al\nsuccess and the spring of 1909\nAT THE OLD STAND.\nA. WILSON\nj SUCCESSOR TO A. R. DAVY\n\ When you toant a choice\na cut, gioe us a call,\n| \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' or ring up 24.\n| Franh Baiutinhimer, Manager.\nBAPTIST\nKelowna Baptist Church, Ellice St.\nSabbath Servicesat 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nSabbath School at 10 a.m. AH welcome.\nWed . 7.30. Rev. D. J. Welsh. Pastor.\nC.P.R. TIME TABLE.\nThe sailing schedule of the S.S. Okanagan during the summer months is as follows.\nDaily Except Sundays\nOkanagan Landing\nOkanagan Centre\nShort's Point\nNahun\nKelowna\n. Gellatly\nPeachland\n1 'Naramata\n5:25 Summerland 4:52 j\n5:00 Penticton 6:30\nRead up\n10:45\n8:05\n7:15\n6:45\n6:15\nd down\n12:45\n2:25\n3:05\n3:40\n4:15\nKELOWNA HOSPITAL.\n. Donations of vegetables, fruit, dairy produce, eggs etc. will be gratefully received\nat the Kelowna Hospital. If more convenient same may be left at the shop of Messrs.\nCrowley Co ; Ltd.\n. \"HOSPITAL INSURANCE.\"\nThe Kelowna Hospital Society have an\nInsurance in force which they wish to\nbring before the notice of the public.\nFor the sum of $10 bachelors or married\nmen rray obtain a Hospital Insurance\nTicket which entitles the holder to Free\nHospital Attendance for one year from\ndate of issue for any sickness or accidents\nexcept contageous or infectious diseases,\nwhich are not be admitted to the hospital.\nApplications for tickets or for further information should be made to the secretary, P.O. Box 69, or Room 4, Keller Block,\nKelowna, B.C.\nshould be put up with\n.\nne-bugar\n!\ni\ni\nAll B. C. Sugar Refining Company's Products\nConsist Solely of Pure CANE SUGAR.\nMANUFACTURED. Ar VANCOUVER, B.C.. BY\nT!_ British Columbia Sugar Refining\nCompany, Limited.\nJ. '\nFINE FEATHERS\nMAKE\nFINE BIRDS\nAnd fine business stationery will give\na higher tone and dignity to your\nbusiness, whatever line.\nTRY THE \"RECORD\" NEXT.\n^vr^vrrrMmr*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2**-.^'. mt __ _E w\u00C2\u00ABwwai mgwew\nitew^r Sol^ One Third Off Saturday\nlieWeai Oaie Monday, and Tuesday\nEvery whitewear garment in stock, no matter how fine the quality, will be reduced one third less at this Big\nDiscount Sale Saturday, Monday, and Tuesday. Our showing of high grade Whitewear surpasses anything showing\nin the valley, and prices were never lower.\nThis is a Sale considerably out of the ordinary, wherein you are privileged to pay one third less than the market\nprice. This offer should appeal strongly to all bargain seekers.\nLadies, you simply can not afford to miss this offer!\nWomen's Corset Covers,\npriced One Third less\nWc\nomen's Drawers,\npriced One Third less\nWomen' Combinations\npriced\nOne Third less\nWomen's Night Gowns,\npriced One Third less\nWomen's Petticoats,\npriced One Third less\nSaturday Specials at Lequime's\n\ >\nWomen's Fine Lisle Hose,\nregular 35c, Saturday, 4 for $1\nWomen's D. ot A. Corsets, i\nregular 75c, Saturday, 55c a pair .\nNice Summer weight, Long Hips, and Hose Suspenders\nWomen's Summer Vests,\nregular 20c, Saturday, 15c\nw\nomen s\nHats\nHalf Price\nMen s Fine Lisle Socks,\nregular 35c, Saturday, 4 pairs for $1\nFancy, Tans, Greys, Greens, Garnet, and, Black.\nMen's Fine Balbriggan\nUnderwear\nregular $1.75 Suit, Saturday, $1.40\nJust received a big shipment of Welch-Margetson Famous Shirts (Collars Linen and Soft). Latest London Creations\nBigger and Better\nBargains\nLEQUIME BROS. & Co.\nEstablished 1850.\n' (\nWatch our\nWindows\n. USED)\nr im.\n:7&3lti\u00C2\u00BB_ Thursday, June 9\nThe Orchard City Record\n6\nIA\ny-.y\nleadaches\nand\nizziness\nThese are nine cases out\nten the direct result of Eye\nStrain. v\n/Eye Strain\n(Asthenopia)\nis caused by:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1. Close application to any\n\u00C2\u00BB , work.\n2. Errors in the refractive\nmedia of the eye.\n3. Muscular weakness.\nThe dangerous results of\nthese can be overcome by\nProperly Fitted\nGlasses\nProvincial and Genera! News -\nOur Optical Dept.\nis fully equipped and is\n> at your service.\nREMEMBER that in case you\nshould require glasses,\nYou take no risk\nWe guarantee absolute satisfaction. Call and see us.\nCHILDREN'S EYES\na, speciality.\n..BJliS&ft.\nDRUGGISTS and STATIONERS\nKelowna. B.G\nPHONE 19\nJ. A. Bigger\nBUILDER and CONTRAaOR\nPlans and Estimates Furnished\nResidence, 10 Lawrence Ave*\n7 , PHONE 95\nDAVIES & MATHIE\n^ Ladies* and a\nGents'Tailors\nPENDOZI STREET'\n,;Repairingahd Pressing..\npromptly attended to. .\nEverybody reads our\n'\"Want\" ads/\nTry one next week.\nCharacter\nIs expressed in every\ndetail of your business\n, .\" v..\nstationery.. '\nOur study^ is to improve,\nnot -mereiy imitate, the\nindividuality, and distinctive character of\nyour office supplies.\nLet us convince you on your\nnext order.\nThe Orchard City\nRecord Job Print\nDepartments\nEdward Hupman, probably the smallest\nman in Canada, died last week at his home\nin Allendale/ N.S. He was thirty-eight\nyears of age. His height was two feet nine\ninches, and he weighed, .thirty pounds,\nHe had been ill five months with stomach\ntrouble, but the immediate cause of death\nwas paralysis.\nReady-made farms are being prepared\nfor British colonists who will arrive next\nspring are being rapidly developed in the\nvicinity of Sedgewich, Alberta. Contracts\n\"have been let for drilling 50 wells and the\nerection of 90 miles of fencing, and already\nthe breaking is well under way. Members\nof the first party of ready-made farmers are\ncontracting for some of the, work. The\nGovernment is extending the telephone\nsystem through the whole colony, and ia\ngrading 12 miles of road. Elevator companies are also preparing for a rush, and\nare building an additional 50,000 bushel\nelevator.\nA steamship company has already ten\nahips engaged in carrying bananas from\nthe West Indies to England, and the trade\nhas lately increased so much that two new\nsteamers have been ordered.\nA white leghorn hen, belonging to an\nEskbank gentleman, laid an egg the other\nday measuring eight and a quarter by six\nand a half inches, and weighing quarter lb.\n, Hon. Chas. Rolls, last Thursday peform-\ned the feat of crossing the Channel between\nDover and Calais and return without\nalighting in 90 minuter, establishing a\nrecord.\nBeaver are getting quite plentiful along\nthe Okanagan River between Okanagan\nand Dog Lake.\nDr. William Greene, the well known\naviator will attempt to fly from Rochestejr\nto Toronto, a distance of 86 miles, across\nLake Ontario on June 21.\nThe Liberal executive states that Sir\nWilfred Laurier's coming trip to the coast\nwill give the premier a fortnight in the\nprovince. The tour is limited by engagements at Lethbridge on August 17 and\nCalgary on September 13. He will reach\nVancouver on August 19 going immediately to Prince Rupert, thence to Victoria,\nand will spend the week end at Vancouver\nleaving in time for the meeting in Vernon\non Monday evening. He will leave the\nprovince by Revelstoke and Crow's Nest\nPass Route.\nThe people of Montreal are endeavoring\ntd raise $50,600 by public subscription for\nthe purpose of erecting a memorial to King\nEdward. It' is probable the memorial will\ntake the forrri of a monument and statute.\n- At the big,sale of school lands held last\nweek at Weyburn, Sask, a total of 233\nparcels were disposed of. These parcels\ncomprise 36,812 acres in all, and the. total\nproceeds of the sale was $596324, or an average per acre of $16.20. This is regarded\nas one the, most successful sales in the\nWert.' A'\nWithin twelvehqurs Vancouver respond\ned to the call for $9000 for Canada's first\nnational apple show, to be held in that\ncity in October. The City Council having\nalready promised $6000, this gives Maxwell Smith and his co-workers $15,000 as\nthe initial fund for British Columbia's Big\nRed Apple Show, which promises, to\nexceed anything of the kind ever held in\nAmerica'.\nEveryone, farmers especiplly, are jubilant\nat the results of the snow storm June 1st,\nThfi r.rnruy nan mwrt-\u00C2\u00BB'j. ernnA \u00C2\u00ABf\u00C2\u00BBl*K Ann (Kg\nsoft, moist snow provides sufficient moisture to force a bumper crop for Alberta. .\nIndians will not be allowed to kill deer\nindiscriminately, and in the event -of an\ninfraction of the law they are to be brought\nunder the penalty in common with white\nmen. This edict was recently issued from\nthe Attorney General's office at Victoria.\nCoal sella at $120 a ton at Quesnel.\nIt is computed' that'there are 75 blind-\npigs in Prince Rupert.\nAs a result of investigations into the\nGreat Waterways deal, Premier Rutherford of Alberta has resigned. Chief-justice\nSifton was sworn in and formed a government. Amongst the members of his cabinet were Judge Mitchell, of Medicine\nHat, as Attorney General, Hon. Duncan\nMarshall, as Minister of Agriculture, and\nDr. Wharnock as Minister of Public Works\nUnited States railways which operate in\nthe province of Quebec after January 1st\nnext will be obliged to issue all jickets,\nbills of lading, notices, and other, public\ndocuments in French and English as a\nresult of the passing of the Lavergne dual\nlanguage bill. ....\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\n- Secret service agents claim to have* revealed the fact that the Hindoos in and\naround Vancouver are being heavily\ntaxed to support the anti-British movement in India.\nPROFESSIONAL AND\nBUSINESS CARDS\nJ. P. BURNE\nSolicitor,\nNotary Public,\nConveyancer, etc.\nKELOWNA. . :: B.C.\nR. B. KERR\nKootenay Steamer Beached.\nBarrister\nand Solicitor,\nNotary Public.\nKELOWNA,\nB.G\nCHAS. HARVEY\nB. A Sc., C E.. D. L. S., B. C L. S.\nCIVIL \"ENGINEER and LAND\nSURVEYOR\nKelowna, B. C\nW. T. ASHBRIDGE\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nAmoc. Mem. Can. Soc. C. E Graduate Toronto\nUniver.ity\nWaterworks and Sewerage System*. Pumping and\nLighting Plant*, Concrete Construction, eta.\nKELOWNA :: B. C\nThe Kootenay Lake steamer,\nKaslo is at present out of commission. A heavy wind drove her\ninto the wharfe at Ainsworth. Little\ndamage was apparent, and the\nsteamer continued her course, but\nlater discovered that she was taking\nu ater rapidly, and the damage ?*as\nmuch more serious than at first\nsuspected. The steamer was turned and headed for the shore at\nfull speed as ij: was feared the furnace would be flooded, if the boilers might not burst. The steamer\nwas safely beached just as the stoke\nhold was flooded, and with some\ndifficulty lines were carried ashore:\nA feature of the accident was\nthe calmness ofthe passengers and\ncrew. The freight is being saved\naltho the. boat is almost submerged\nin fifteen fe\u00C2\u00AB*.t of water. Unless the\nvessel slips back into, deep water,\nthis will.most probably all be salved. The. crew and passengers\ncamped in and around a nearby\nhouse during the night The Kaslo\nis one of the biggest) boats in the\ninterior lakes.\" She was built twelve\nyears ago at;ja cbs( of $80,000, and\nvill be greatly missed on her regular route. ,, '\nRICHARD H. PARKINSON\nBRITISH COLUMBIA LAND\nSURVEYOR,\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nP.O. BOX 137\nKELOWNA\nDr. J, W. Nelson Shepherd\nDENTIST\nP. 0. Box 138\n'Phone 06\nCorner' Peneozi Street and\nLawrence Avenue.\n'\" CLIFTON\nNURSING AND MATERNITY\nHOME\nMrs. LAWRENCE, Graduate Nurse,.\n-- , Glenn Ave., Kelowna, B.C\nPhone 134 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. -,\nVeteran Grants Cancelled.\nThe Ontario provincial government has decided to cancel scores\nof veteran land claims in Rainy\nriver and other parts of Northern\nOntario, because of failure to comply with regulations. Many of\nthese grants have got; into the\nhands of speculators, who are illegally holding them to the detriment of the settlement. The object, of the government is to encourage colonization and settlement.' Veterans who still hold\ntheir lands are O.K. Speculators\nwho have got hold of them and\nhave done no 'improvements, will\nlose all.\nCOLLETT BROS.\n, LIVERY AND DRAY '..,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\nHorses bought and sold on commission. Dray meets all CP.R.\nboats. All kinds of heavy team\nwork. 'Phonb20.\nFor the Farm, Garden*\nor Field.\n1 . . . 7. .. ;;JA'.,\nBEESUPPLIES.\nIMPLEMENTS.\nCATALOGUE, :- - - . FREE.\nM. J. HENRY\nOffice and Packing Grounds,\n3010, Westminster Rd., Vancouver.\nJOHN CURTS\nCONTRACTOR & BUILDER\nPlans and Specifications Prepared\nand estimates given for publicBuild-\ning8,Town and Country Residences\nJOHN CURTS, KELOWNA\nA PHONE No.93.-\nMONEVTOLOAN\n'On improved property al\u00C2\u00BBo other gecurities\nG. A. FISHER\nROOM. KELLER BLOCK\nFire, Life, and Accident\nInsurance.\nMiss P. Louise Adams,\n' AXCM.\n.Scholarship graduate in Piano and\nT.acher'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Courae of Toronto Conservatory\nof Music Late Teacher in Westminster\nCollege, Toronto.\nWill receive pupils for pianoforte\ntuition at the studio. ' '\nLawrence Avenue, off Pendozi Street.\nAddress: P.O. KELOWNA.\n4m\nTHOMAS. P. HILL\nBANKHEAD,\nPlanting, Pruning, Spraying\nEtc.\nP.O. Box 174, Kelotona.\nALFRED HANMORE\nPipe Fitter, Wells Dug and\nDrioen\nPumps, Windmills, Drains,\netc., repaired and iistalled.\nHarcey Aoenue, East.\n/ .\nlieloUma tEennte\nClut)\nThe committee of the Club\ncordially inuites all club members,\ntheir friends, and all those interested in tennis to a\nSocial\nTea\nto be held in the club's ground\non Thursday afternoon, the 16th\ninst., at 2 o'clock.\nJ. B. WHITEHEAD;-\nSec.\nYou Don't Have to Wait\nIndefinitely for returns when\nadvertising in The Record.\nYou may confidently expect a generous response almost immediately.\nYour Photograph\nma\nde at\nAti\n;can be mounted in the very latest\nstyles. w\nNOVEL FOLDERS ' :J:\nARTISTIC DECKLE EFFECTS\nBE$T STANDARD MOUNTS\nCall and see samples and arrange for a sitting.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0/-_\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 'i\nMl\n'v_51\nThe largest and most Complete\nstock of farm implements and\norchard tools, buggies, etc., in-,\nthe Valley.\nST. ELLIOTT\nImporter and Dealer In all hinds of \"\n\u00C2\u00AB\"i\"\nv A\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00C2\u00BBMM\nThe Kelotona Land\nand Orchard Co., || Ann*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2^^-!!--\nW. C. T. U. Notes.\nConducted by the Ladies of the Kelcwna branch\nofthe W.C T.U.\nThe W.C.T.U. meet every second Tuesday of the month at the home of one or\nother of the member?. Visitors are always\nwelcome.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0II NISI 11 I I ll__)'.\"W,_MM-____\n.:_.._-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0__ .P_rar^_\nLIMITED.\nRESIDENTIAL LOTS\nIN THE CITY\nCadder Avenue Abbott Street\nWillow Avenue\nFIVE ACRE LOTS\nWITHIN ONE MILE OF CITY\nLIMITS\nOn Easy Terms\nTEN ACRE LOTS\nON THE' BENCH\nUnder Irrigation and Domestic Systems\nCALL OR WRITE\nK. L. 0. Co.'s Office, Leon St.\nT. W. STIRLING\nFINANCIAL AGENT\nI HAVE FOR SALE\nTwo five-acre blocks, partly planted in four-year-old trees.\n1 Adjoining City limits.' Price $2,250 each.\nAlso some roomy Lake Shore lots near Cadder Ave.\nsuitable for Summer Residences.\nMONEY TO LOAN\nON REASONABLE TERMS. '\nPhone 58\nOffices on\nLeon Ave.\nRO. Box 273\nWe are specially equipped for the production of\nHigh-grade job Printing\nand you will be consulting your own interest in\nletting us figure on your work\n\"Record\" Job Prir>t Dept.\n. The Fifth Annual Convention of the\nDisrrict W.C.T.U. met at Armstrong June\n1st and 2nd.\nA public meeting was held in the Opera\nHouse in the evening, which was well attended, the president Mrs. Dr. Lipsett,\nSummerlnnd presiding.\nAddresses of welcome were given by\nMis. Ed. Chambers and Revs. Freeman,\nKing and Gifford, and responded to by\nMrs. Labadie, of Vernon.\nA very interesting and instructive ad\ndress was given by Rev. B. D. Welsh of\nKelowna.\nThe evening was brightened by two vocal solos, one violin solo and a recitation.\nA very substantial collection was given.\nThe rneeting re-opened again on Thurs-\nmorning in the Methodist in convention\nproper.\nA very impressive consecration service\nwas conducted by Mrs. Gamble, taking\nfor her topic our Master's command to his\ndisciples \"Launch out into the deep,\" showing how Peter's obedience to the command\nled to such remarkable results. The address was brimful of inspiration and helpful\nsuggestions.\nMrs Lipsett formally opened the convent-\nonwith the crusade Psalm (146)and prayer.\nThe committees on credentials, resolut-\n'ions, courtesies and plan of work were\nappointed.\nTwenty-one delegates responded to the\nroll call.\nSplendid reports were received from er-\nery department of the work.\nA paper on '\" Women Suffrage,\" sent by\nMrs. Smith, of Summerland, was read by\nMrs. Robinson, of Peachland. The, paper\nwas well received and a lively discussion\nfollowed, opening the eyes of those not\nfully in favor of franchise, while some people who are not fully informed on the\nsnbject criticized the action of our English\nsisters who have come to the front in so\nconspicious a manner, fail to notice the\nother side of the question, which is being\n: carried on in a quiet effective educational\nway.\nThe morning session was brought to a\nclose by the noontide prayer service, led\nby Mrs. Dqcherty, of Vernon.\nThe delegates were conducted to the\nSunday school room of the church where\na very sumptuous lunchern was served by\nthe ladies of Armstrong.\nThe afternoon session opened at 1.30 by\nthe reading of the minutes.\nThe Liquor Act was then read and discussed and it was the unanimous feeling\nof the convention that if this law be enforced much good will result, and as the\nCanada Temperence Act has been so\namended at Ottawa to apply to British Columbia, the temperence people are very\nmuch encourged.\nThe electson of officers'resulted as follows :\nPresident\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Dr. Lipsett (Summerland)\nre-elected by acclamation.\nVice-president\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Ed. Chambers\n(Armstrong).\nRec. Sec.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. W. J. Labadie, (Vernon).\nCor. Sec.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. J. B. Robinson (Peachland).\nTreasurer\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. T. Ball (Armstrong) reelected.\nThe convention then adjourned to meet\nin April at Kelowna.\nThe delegates were royally entertainded\nwith a drive around the town and sur-\n; rounding district,\nA very hearty vote of thanks was tender,\ned to the people of Armstrong for their\n. hospitality and the officials of the Method-\n, ist church where the convention was held,\n, and also to Mr. Sawyer for the use of the\n' hall, and to all \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 those who took part.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n| Armstrong Aduertiser.\nTown and. Country\nThe Rev. Father Verbeke, of\nOkanagan Mission, is away o,n a\nvisit to the coast. His place in the\nmeantime is being taken by the\nRev. Father Pelletier, of Lumby.\nMrs. and Miss Reekie, mother\nand sister of Mr. Reekie, of the\nK. L. O. bench, arrived last Monday\nfrom Manitoba for a visit. They\nwill probably take up residence\nhere.\nMr. McCollum arrived last v^eek\nfrom Dakota, and has been visiting\nMr. Hugh P. McKeown, of the K.\nL. O. bench. He returned last\nMonday, but intends returning to\nB. C. shortly and will settle in\nVancouver.\nThe Kelowna Tennis Club is\narranging a social tea, etcs, held\nin the club's grounds' next Thursday afternoon, the 16th inst, at 2\no'clock. This is the first general\ngathering of the club members, and\nan enjoyable time is anticipated.\nDuring the afternoon a meeting will\nbe held in the grounds for the pur-\nclub\n,!_\nChamberlain's Cough Remedy is sold on\na guarantee that if you are not satisfied\nafter using two-thirds of a bottle according\nto directions, your money will be refunded.\nIt is up to you to try. Sold by ajldruggists\nPhone 34\nPhone 34\n\"ECONOMY\"\nFRUIT JARS\nKeep food products for ever, and are specially adapted for home canning of\nVegetables, Fruits, Meat, Soup, 0^\"^,**tc.\nCome in and let us explain itc many uses.\n- ,. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 . - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . ., , . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \ \t\nC. C. Josselyn\nFor Staple and Fancy Groceries.\npose of arranging the club rules,\nand laying plans for the future.\nEveryone interested in tennis,\nwhether members or not are\ninvited.\nThe Baptist Young People s\nSociety will hold a social evening\nnext Monday, June 13. Rev. Mr.\nWelsh will give an address on\n\" Salt Lake City, the Home of\nMormonism.\" Refreshments will\nbe served. An offering will be\nreceived in aid of the Hospital. A\ncordial invitation is extended to all\nfriends of the society to be present.\nDr. Boyce's latest act of generosity to the Tennis Club is the\nofier of a handsome cup to be\ncompeted for locally.\nRev. C W. Whyte, of Peachland\nwas a visitor to the city on Monday\nlast, returning same day.\nThe attendances at all, the\nchurches last Sabbath evening was\nthe smallest, on record, owing partly\nto the rain, and partly to the influence of the sacred concert that was\nto be held later in the evening.\nWhat is the matter with the lady\ntennis players of the district ? Out\nof thirty members who have already joined the Tennis Club only\nthree are ladies !\nA distinctly nove.1 attraction at\nthe Opera House to-morrow.\n(Friday) is to be furnished by the\nEckhardts, the Swiss hand-bell\nringers, n?usical experts, vocalists,\nand entertainers. The Eckhardts\nhave achieved a wonderful reputation for their clever manipulation\nof out-of-the-way instruments, and\nmusical juggling generally. An\nadded attraction is provided by\nMiss Beverly Thornton, vocalist and\npianist. The engagement is under\nthe auspices of the Ladies' Aid of\nthe Presbyterian church, and the\nadmission is 75 c. and children 50c.\nThe two front rows of seats are\nbeing reserved especially for the\nlittle ones, in order that they may\nsee to thei best advantage.\nThe Young Ladies' Hospital Aid\nwishes to thank all those who so\nkindly helped in making last\nSunday's sacred concert a success,\nand also Mr. Ely and the other\nartistes for their efforts on its behalf.\nA very successful social, with\nmusical and literary programme\nwas carried through in Knox church\nlast Monday evening under the\nauspices vof the Young People's\nSociety. The event was the close\nof the session, and the society will\nnot meet again until September\nnext. Among the musical items\nwas a quartette by Messrs. G; McKenzie, T. Hill, McFarlane and\nJ. N. Thompson j a violin solo by\nMiss Laidlaw; a duet by Mrs. McTavish and Mrs. J. N. Thompson\nand a cornet solo by Mr. T.\nRobertson, while Mrs. Armstrong\ngave a recital. The secretary read\na report ofthe last quarter's meet-]\nings, and announced that an invitation had been received from\nthe Baptist Young People's Sqciety\nt'o meet with' them nfext Monday\nevening in the Baptist church, when\nthe Rev. D. J. Welsh is to deliver\na lecture.\nFor Sale or Rent.\nA seven roomed house with\none and one-quarter acre df\norchard and garden, situated\non the Vernon road, 1!, miles\nfrom Kelowna post office.\nFor particulars apply\nS. BARBER, Box 365,\nKelowna Post Office.\ntl\n\"The Mighty Reo.\"\nThe car with the get-there-andrback\nquality. J\nWait until you have seen a Reo\nbefore buying your automobile.\nROBIN HOOD FLOUR\nIS DIFFERENT.\nImpress upon your minds these two special facts:\nRobin Hood Flour must satisfy you in two\nfair trials, or you can have your money back.\nIt is the guaranteed flour. >\nRobin Hood Flour absorbs more moisture\nthan other flours, therefore add more water\nwhen you use\" it, and get a larger whiter loaf.\nOats. Bran, Wheat.\nBarley and Oat Chop\nFresh Clean Stock, Just In.\nCAR OF FINE BUGGIES\nJust placed in stock.\nDALGLEISH & GLENN,\nDealers in Farm and\nOrchard Implements\nPendozi St. and Lawrence Avenue.\nPHONE 150\nPreserve Your Teeth\nAnd retain your youthful appearance.\nNA-DRU-CO.\nTOOTH PASTE\nCleanses, whitens, and preserves the teeth,\ndestroys germs, neutralizes acid secretions, and\nsweetens the breath.\nSEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY.\nTRfiNGH,\nTHE DRUGGIST\nGet Ready for Hot\nWeather and Flies.\nWe have a large assortment of\nRefrigerators from $10.50 to $75\nIce Cream Freezers, all sizes.\nScreen Doors, Window Screens.\n\ SOLD BY\"\nTHE MORRISON-THOMPSON\nHARDWARE Co., Ltd.\n,k \u00E2\u0096\u00A0&#<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nt ?<<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. Thursday, June 9\nThe Orchard City Record.\nA Snap in\nResidential\nroperty\nFine modern house for\n-sale in the highest and\nhealthiest part of Kelowna\nten minutes walk from the\nwharf. Large lot with\n110ft. frontage on the main\nstreet. House has four\nlarge rooms on the first\nflour, four bedrooms, bathroom,' arid linen closet, and\nlarge concrete cellar. Complete plumbing, with taps\nfor hot and cold water, hot\nwater cistern and large\ntank inside. Papered\nthroughout. Garden plant-,\ned with fruit trees. Concrete path. Will be sold\ncheap.\nFor further particulars apply\nOrchard City Record\nG. H. E. HUDSON\nBest Selection of\nLocal Post Cards\nand Views\nLargest Studios in the Interior\n\u00C2\u00BB Portraits by appointment.\nPendozi Street - Kelowna\nSmith Street\nPenticton\nDo You Know\ni\nTHAT\nWestbank\nreal estate investments are the best in the\nOkanagan in quality of- soil, location,\nprices, etc., and that they will triple in\nvalue in one \u00C2\u00A3ear ? Have you' stopped to\nconsider? If not, just remember that\nWestbank will be the largest, most industrious, and influential place in the valley.\nNow is your opportunity. Most excellent\nbargains. The lots are cleared, cultivated,\nfenced, and have young orchards on them;'\nwell irrigated,, and have 'good dome.sti\nwater. Prices, $175 to $200 per acre.\nOther most valuable land bargains v\n$25 per acre' up.\nW. Curtis Hitchner\nGLENCOE\nWestbank - British Columbia\nHE NEVER MISSED.\nA Well Paid. Fiery Job T*at Wears a\n- Man Out In Fifteen Years.\nIbe tnati who sinmi ai the lever bad\na storj that Is common ail over America Ten years before ne bad beeu a\npeasant lad m \u00C2\u00BB dull Utile village Id\nIreland l\u00C2\u00BBniun up and along by tbe\nemigrant tide, he nnd drifted to -bleu go, ana pere in Hit- works lie bad\ncaught the rrue spirit ot tbe place,\nwblch in to sii'iim every nerve and\nrise He had risen. His (wy was $9>0\na ween He - wor. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ii evi\u00C2\u00BBr> nijiht froto\n6 p in. io ti a hi. twelve vigilant\nhours Wuti-imm iimse three mammoth tiinKs. t>) ilie iinih aud Dues tn\ntheir columns oi tliime ne could tell\nJust wtieu to u-reii.-n om-k a lever.\n'1'bls tie did ovei ii ininiirMii rimes tn\nllle ulght. HIKt It lie iiiIs-mH o> .0 IMUCb\nii.m i tiift,\ sei'niKi). in- \u00C2\u00AB|ioiieii ttiousaurts\nor dollars' worth ot _t<-ci. He never\nmissed.\nlo hold ihie job I. to Jinn tbe\nstrength of a lifetime into fifteen\nyears nt $1HI a wwk I'he man recognized this as a nmtier nt course, only\nquallfyltiK It u.v i he remark I hut be\nknew ot a redheiuleil ScotiMlllllltl at\nHomesteab who uaii nein it seventeen\nyears before hren. intf\" 1'tint tiJs whole\nlife nan iieeti.ciiniicejfi. tbat tbe tittle\nIflsh vtlini;e. tne iiiimi,\ iiou and tbe\nhovels were . inii:i< iii another age. on\nanotnet planet'an mis ne ten vaguely and sumiiieo it up. wltb a twinkle.\n\"Shure.' ne said \"it's a lerrlble quick\nspin this oom wur'rt is aft.hei takln-.\"\nKm tie mveo > (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- iiHry |oi>. called tbe\nbuge'tanKs \"in. Tiiriyi s nun said be\nwould mule' 11* \u00C2\u00ABinn ni. w\u00C2\u00AB_ tfiao be\npresident,; Krnest I'ooie in Ifivery.\nbody's\nWNA LAI CO., II\nH. J. HEWETSON, Manager.\nTHE\nROYAL BANK OF CANADA\n31 BRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\n>A\nCapital Paid Up\nReserve Fund -\nTotal Assets - .\n$5,000,000\n5,700,000\n7^,000,000\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nSpecial Attention Paid to Savings Depositors\nP. BURNS & Co., Ltd\nWholesale and Retail\nMEAT MERCHANTS '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFresh Meat\nDaily\nFull supply of Hams and Bacon\nFresh Fish in season\ni \u00E2\u0096\u00A0< ' -.\nW, LUDLOW, Manager\nKELOWNA\nPhone 135\nCOLORS IN FLAGS.\nRed Is the Most Frequent, and After\nT*at Cornee Slue.\nIt Is eniire.y appropriate ot course,\nthat red. the wm .-omi should appear\nso frequently in tbe tings nt tbe varf\nous nations Ol the tia/js ot the.countries ot the eastern neiin.s|ihere there\nIs oo:y one ihm ol tireeie- wblch\ndoes not -show tiii- niHi-tlU. color. In\nthe western iieinHptieie however, we\ntiiu) severtu <:l<-. i.ih/.ii ,\. iiniirua. Uiiateinala,\nt riignay inut tt\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>iniiiias i-outalo no\nreil\nin this 'fiiiimry ttiere Is no red In\nHo- oi-ioii lien oi in uie Hags of tbe\nsecretar* oi itie'iuir.c the admiral ot\n'he iumn the iv;u mliiiiril' senior tn\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0aiik min in. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,!< ii.iiiiinii luiilot In\nniiiK ii'-o ippf.-i-s in ilie pennant ot\niin- n>ii.' miii'ii'ii -eiiiiiii in ranis and\nriic peimsiiii ot the revenue marine.\nI tie I mi i'ii rha' are a:most entirely\nred. except for itie device* shown\nthereon ar* those of Austria Hungary,\nlOirypt Moroci'ii Him\"Japan, i'be flag\nnt liuKtM is pi'iiitii-aiiy of a solid red.\nA'ttei reii tne prevailing color In flags\nis oiue. Harper's VVeettly/ ,\nSomething Wrong.\nThe fin ileum puot lauded In tbe tittle\nniii'Kvviiitiis viiiiiue ana toirt tbe loiter*\ners the ttirlilluu story ot bis escape.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Ami at one num.\" lie related, wltb\ndra n hi tn- tone. \"I was in a storm and\nsweeplim over a vast desert. There\nwas iioihiiiK to do but throw ont sand\nand prepare ror the worst. Gentlemen,\nat one tune I felt as It i bad lost my\nhead and Kotie pintub crazy.\"\nThe oldest ininiiiliant slowly lighted\nhis pipe aud drawled, wltb a sarcastic\nsmile:\n\"You must have beeD plumb crazy,\nhub. to throw sand ou a desert. Didn't\nyou thluK there was enough sand\nt here. already '/\"-Chicago New*.\nWhat Intermittency Mean*.\nInteruiitiency is that form of Irregularity lu wbicb tbe pulse appears to\ndrop a beat occasionally, lu some to*\nBtHnceg ii occurs reouiar!\"- and two-O!^\nthree times per minute for several\nhours. Sometimes also It Is very irregular aud is noted a number ol\ntimes within a few seconds and not\nagain for a minute or more. Ibis peculiarity generally causes much an*\nttuHluess. Vet. while li may be a very\nserious symptom and associated wltb\ngrave auo incurable disease ot tbe\nbeart. It often signifies merely a functional disturbance which Is Id nowise\ndaugerous.\nW*v He Got Up.\nIt was only aimui noonday, but tbe\ncotumutei yuwueii He yawued heavily two ot ihree .iiiieti.\n\"Uot up at ti ocioc-.\" be explained.\n\"Bad to catch my train. Wben my\nwife waned me i said to ber: 'Six\no'clock, ihe thickens nav'en't begun\nto crow yet. nave tbeyi Why must I\nget up he fore the chickens do, I'd like\nto Know.\n\"*i don't know, she said, 'unless It's\nbecause you're no chicken.'\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094New\nYork t'ress.\nFatal Curloilty.\n\"How did the. manage to get such\na One thumb print ot the burglar?\"\n\"The house had been painted that\nday. and be Just couidpt resist the\ntemptation to feel of the paint to see\nit It was dry \"- Houstou I'ost \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nHer Worry.\nMrs Ho?lt\u00C2\u00BB- You seem unhappy.\nMrs lioyie I am. I don't believe\nthat it I were to die my husband\nwould wear us deep mourning aa be\ndid fot his first wire - New York Press.\nsci'iin'xi.' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB.t- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 'rt nro nothing else\nlull 'jyllACtlWll J;. Ule. tioelhe.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY\n/\nTO SECURE\nAN ORCHARD HOME\nHaving the advantages of both Town and Country Life.\nOUR FIRST SUBDIVISION OF\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGLENMORE\nIS ON THE MARKET.\nYou will have to act quickly if you wish to secure a lot in this desirable\nsub-division, for it is selling rapidly. The location is ideal, half-a-mile\nfrom the town limits and one hundred feet higher, commanding a\nbeautiful view of the Lake, City, and surrounding country.\nThe soil is a light loam, with slope sufficient for irrigation and drainage.\nUnimproved land, as desirably situated as ours, is selling readily in the .\nfruit sections of Washington and Oregon for from $650 to $1200 per\nacre. Conditions are changing here; before you realize it, this land will\nhave doubled in price.\nNOW IS THE TIME TO PURCHASE.\nWe advise you to inspect the property at once, and make your selection.\nIt is going fast. The property has been little more than a week on the\nmarket, and at the end ofthe week, May 21 st, there were but nineteen\nlots remaining unsold. Our town is rapidly growing, and it will not be\nlong before this property will be practically a part of it, and we feel safe\nin saying, the choice residential section.\nWe might also state that it is the Company's plan to reserve the adjoining\n1,000 acres, to be improved and planted out in one large orchard and\n/ retained for itself. .\nJKCaps of the sub-division, together with information regarding prices and terms may be\nhad at our office. ., % >\nThe CENTRAL OKANAGAN LANDS, Ltd.\nKELOWNA, B.C.\nCAR\nCARRIAGES\nJUST ARRIVED.\nOn View at the Kelowna\nFarmers' Exchange\nBuilding.\ns.\nThe Up-to-date Implement Dealer,\nTEMPORARY OFFICE,\nKELLAR BLOCK, BERNARD AVENUE\nKELOWNA, B.C.\nj i\n_>4-_\nw\nv4\nAl\n'SM\n<4\n'IP\nAS\n' A ,_,\n. yyy 6\n3H3E__________\nThe Orchard City Record.\nThursday, Jun^ 9\nWe Specialize,\nTHE\nOffers Special Values for Saturday. The' greatest\nvariety of everything to eat.\nIt is a well-known fact that you can get the best goods\nfor least money at Oxley's. Let us fill your orders for Sat.\nPic-nic Hams, reg. 24c, Sat. 22c lb.\nWorcester Sauce, 2 bot. 25c. Big snap\nCold Cream Toilet Soap, 1 2 bars 25 c.\nBraids Coffee in lib. tins, for 30c.\nHeinz s Mustard Pickles, reg. 40c bot.\nSaturday, 30c.\nGreen Vegetables and Fruits for Sat.\nGreen Peas, Wax Beans, Ripe Tomatoes, Lettuce,\nStrawberries, Cherries, and Bananas\nat the Lowest possible price.\nIf you are not a customer, we invite you\nto become one.\nOlden Time \"Raiment.\"\nId early Bible days richly etnbroid\nered raiment was enumerated with\nthe gold, sliver and other valuable\nproperty ot a rich man. JLn that primitive age Dame Fashion was not the\ntickle goddess she Is at present, and\nthe \"raiment\" so frequently mentioned in the Holy Scriptures descended\nfrom father to son as a valuable part\not the inheritance. Raiment was ot\nten sent, with gold and gems, as a\npresent to dignitaries. It took not\nmonths, but years, to ornament some\not these garments, and the gold thread\nso lavishly used ln embroidering them\nwas real gold. Moses describes the\nprocess of making the gold thread that\nwas used tn ornamenting the tabernacle. The habit ot making presents\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>t rare needlework Is still common\namong eastern nations that changed\nihelr customs so slowly.\nGo Straight to\nK. F. OXLEY'S\nPhone 35\nPhone 35\nOPEN EVERY NIGHT for\nIce Cream only.\nWeeping Trees.\nThe phenomenon ot \"weeping trees\"\n- that is. ot trees shedding drops of llq\nuid is ascribed by Dr. Sharp ln the\nCambridge Natural History to tbe tn-\ntluenc. ot plant bugs. Tbe familiar\nfrog nopper which produces the so\ncalled cuckoo spit on so many ot our\nplants Deiongs to this family of Insects. A note ln the London Field\ncans attentiou to some interesting observations on this subject made by Ur.\nAunandule and contributed by him to\nthe records of the Indian museum.\nDr. Annandale while collecting insects in western Bengal felt what he\nthongtit was rain from a clear sky\nthrough the foliage of the trees. On\ninvestigation he touud that it tell from\nthe leaves and was due to a species\nol plant bug present in enormous nura-\nhers.\nAn Impostor.\n\"Mebbe you'd like to put a piece\nabout rae in yer paper,\" quavered the\nout man. hobbling up to tbe city editor's desk.\n\"What have you doneS\" demanded\nthe arbiter of publicity's destiny.\n\"Notbin' much, but 1 was a hundred\nyenrs old yesterday.\"\n\"A hundrpd. eh? 'But can you walk\nwithout a stick and read fine print\nwithout glasses?\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\\ no\" .\n\"You are an impostor!\"\nThe old man broke down and confessed he was only ninety-seven.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCleveland Leader.\nHis Luck.\nTom-I wtsb that 1 had Alfred's\ngood luck. Dick\u00E2\u0080\u0094So he's generally\nlucky?- Tom\u00E2\u0080\u0094Luckyt If he walked\nout ot tbe window tn his sleep at dead\not night there would be another man\ngoing by below carrying a featherbed.\nThe Harder Task.\n\"My ambition is to wrtte a history\nI of the world There is no task more\ndifficult, 1 Imagine.\"\nnr_ wrwii\nThe People's Store\nPhones: Grocery, 214 Dry Goods, 314 Office, 143\nANOTHER IMPORT ORDER.\ni.H\nHuntley and Palmer's Biscuits.\n-_H-_M___B______H___M__H________-a-__MM__M_-t_____MN^M_M_M\nNineteen Varieties, and everyone fresh, crisp, and tasty.\nThere is nothing more appetizing on the supper\ntable, or for afternoon tea than a plate\nof H. & P. Biscuits.\n\\nMH_____M_____M____M___M______H____M________B___^^\nt\nMcLaren's Cheese,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2_*W_-____----_M--_i-a--____-_--M_N_______-___________--B_-^\nDo you know that there is more nutriment in Cheese*\nthan in meat?\nMcLaren's Cheese comes to us direct from the\nmanufacturers, and is always in good condition\nIn foil packets, 10c. In jars, 35c. and 65c.\nFor Cooling Drinks and Appetizing Camping\nSupplies we can satisfy the desires of all.\nRemember Five off for Cash at Lawson s.\nTHOMAS LAWSON, Ltd\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHeadquarters for, the Economical Buyer\nr\n-v.\nTHE POKER.\nHardly Changed Since the Days of the\nEarly Metal Workers.\nA3 the first fireplace was a circle of\nstones at the mouth of a cave, so the\nfirst poker was a piece of green stick.\nIt was necessary to have something to\nknock the logs together witb when\nthey began to bum through the middle, and as primitive man did not wear\nboots be could, uot use tbem to kick\nthe hot embers Into place, as some of\nus do to this day. That was a refinement, if it can be so called, wbicb\ncame later. The green stick lasted until the age of iron and was then superseded by a handy piece ot metal which\npossessed the advantage of being\nstrouger and of not burning away.\nBut since the days of the early workers In metal we have made no ad*\nvance. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nThe poker bas hardly, if at all,\nchanged through the ages. It Is. as It\nalways has been, simple and severe of\noutline. It lends itself to no vagaries\nand to little ornamentation. It Is one\not thev few things whlcb no one has\never patented, because it may be said\nto have leaped from the first foundry\nperfect and complete in every respect.\nThe only notable attempt at Improvement bas been to make tbe poker of\nbrass wltb-a twisted column, but even\nthen the Iron poker lurks at tbe side\nand Is known, as the curate, because It\ndoes all the rough work. Ttje ornamental poker Is not a poker at all, but\na sbam, an upstart masquerading under an ancient and honored name and\ngaining credit for dudes whlcb it is\nunable to perform.\u00E2\u0080\u0094London Globe.\nA GREAT BATTLE ..\nWANTED\n2 Cents per word, first insertion and\n1 Cent per word each subsequent\ninsertion, minimum 25 Cents.\nFOR SALE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Twelve acres of good fruit\nland on benches, with water record,\nalso an 8-roomed house on Park Ave.,\nKelowna. Apply P.CX'box 175.. I3tf\nHOUSE TO RENT\nEight-roomed house (Morden's) opposite\nPridham's orchard, with half acre land,\nsmall fruits, etc. Apply Geo. E.'Boyer. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n. TO RENT -\nA large store in Water Street. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Apply\nCampbell Bros., Kelowna. '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . 18 tf\nr notice! ~ ~~~\nE. A. Pay will not be responsible for\nany debt contracted in his name and without his written order. 26-38p\nBICYCLE WANTED\nSecond-hand, in fairly good condition.\nApply Record Office.\nTHREE ROOMED COTTAGE '\nTo let, with cellarage and stable at back.\n$10. a month, situated in Pendozi Street.\nApply ih first instance to Box J, , Record\nOffice. A '20tf\nICE CREAM AND CONFECTIONERY\nBUSINESS FOR SALE.\nIn Bernard Ave. Kelowna, one of the best\nstands in city, doing a goqd cash business.\nFresh, new stock. Investigation solicited.\nLeaving district. Low price for'quick sale.\nApply, E. J. Pettigrew. Kelowna, 23tf\nThe One Known In History as the\n\"Victory of Victories.\"\nThe battle which is known In history as the \"Victory of Victories\" took\nplace at Nehavend, ln Bcbatana, and\nwas fought between the new Moslem\npower ln 63? and the empire of Persia, then one of the most powerful of\ntbe eastern monarchies. It was one of\nthe most absolutely decisive battles in\ntbe history ot war, and it was all the\nmore amazing by reason of the fact\nthat It was won by a people who\ntwenty years before had been unknown barbarians, lost in the deserts\nof Arabia.\nArabian historians place the Persian\nloss in a single day at 100,000 men\nI killed. This may be and probably is\nan exaggeration, but the fact remains\nthat the Persian dynasty came to an\nend when the battle was over and that\nZoroastrianlsm. which had been the religion of Persia for over a thousand\nyears, was at once supplanted by islam. Its modern representatives, as is\nwell known, are now the Parsees of\nIndia.\nThe victory was so absolutely decisive tbat It extended tbe Arabian dominions over the whole of the region\nlying between the Caspian sea and the\nIndian ocean. With the exception perhaps of the battle of Tours, no single\nfight ever made such a difference In\nthe after history of the world.\nFOR SALE\nTwo tents 14x16 for $30 cost $42.50/ Also\nlumber, linoleum, rugs, beds, stoves,: etc.,\netc. ' Apply, George F. Stirling,' Ellison\nDistrict.- x\nPRACTICAL TAILOR\nWants situation or opening in Okanagan\nValley. Apply, Tailor 415, 10th Ave. Calgary Alta. 27tf.\nFOR SALE ;\nImproved 10 acre lot, house' and' barn,\nLot 36, map 425. Apply Box l40,.Stettler,\nAlta. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -A 24-27\nWANTED.\nYoung girl to assist housework. Small\nfamily on ranch. Mrs. Frank Crane, Rutland, B.C. 28tf\n'j FOR SALE\nTown lot and beach lot at reasonable price.\nC. C. Josselyn 28-9\nShe Knew the Reason.\nHe was smoking and musing over\nthe ways of the world. \"Odd. Isn't it,\"\nhe said at last, \"how few people attain their Ideals in this world?\"\n\"In what wayT Inquired his wife\nsuspiciously, for she was not a woman\nto be caught off her guard.\n\"Well.\" he replied slowly. \"I was\nthinking of Wilmer when 1 spoke. He\nhad an ideal woman that be was always talking about when he was ln\ncollege. She was tall and stately ln\nhis dreams; and he seemed to have no\nplace ln his heart for a small woman,\nand yet\u00E2\u0080\u0094and yet\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00C2\u00ABweur\n\"Why, be finally married a little\nthing who hardly comes to his shoulder. 1 wonder why it wM.\"\n\"Perhaps, Fred,\" she said very slowly and distinctly, \"he is like the majority of ether -ssss and was afraid\nto take any one of his size.\"\nHe changed the subject\nKELOWNA HOSPITAL\nApplications will be received Hy the undersigned for the position of second Nurse\n(qualified) at the Kelowna Hospital at $30.\nper month, duties to commence on July 1st.\nApplicatants state age'and experience.\nSeretary, Kelowna Hospital Society. P.O.\nBox6S>. 28-30\nLAND ACT.\nOSOYOOS LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT OF YALE\nTake notice that I John Delbert McTavish\nof Rossland, occupation Laborer, intend to\napply for permission to purchase the following described lands :\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted half mile\nwest of the north-west corner-of A. J. Edwards pre-emption claim': thence west\neighty (80) chains; thence south eighty (80)\nchains; thence east eighty (80) chains;\nthence north eighty (80) chains to point of\ncommencement.\nJOHN DELBERT McTAVISH\nDate April 13, 1910. 24-51\nNOTICE.\nA 8hooldng Tree.\nThere Is a peculiar tree in the forests of central India wbicb has most\ncurious characteristics. Tbe leaves of\nthe tree are of a highly sensitive nature and so full ot electricity tbat\nwhoever touches one of tbem receives\nan electric shock. It has a very singular effect upon a magnetic needle and\nwill influence It at a distance of even\nseventy feet The electrical strength\nof the trees varleji according to the\ntime of day, it being strongest at midday and weakest at n^ldnlgbt ln wet\nweather Its powers disappear altogether. Birds never approach the\ntree, nor have insects ever bean seen\nupon it .\nOld English Pairs.\nFairs and feasts were formerly held\nln churchyards in honor, of tbe saint\nto whom the church was dedlcutpd.\nIn consequence of these popular gatherings being much abused' they bud\nto be suppressed in the thirteenth yeur\nof the reign ot King fid ward ill., as\nappears by the following extract quoted by Spelman: \"And tbe Kyuge com-\nmandetb and forblddetb tbat from\nhenceforth nrdth'er fairs and markets\nshall be kept in churchyards for tbe\nhonour of the Church. Given at West\nminster, tbe VIII ot Octobre. the XIIJ\nyeare ot K^uge Ddwarde's relgne.\"-\nLondpn Queen.\nNotice is hereby given that an application will be made to the Water Commissioner to change the point of diversion\nunder a certain water record dated the 29th\nday of January, 1900, and held by Joseph\nSaucier, and numbered 719,- the present\npoint of diversion being on Priest's creek,\nand about five hundred yards from the\nsouth-east half mile post of District Lot\n360 in Group one of the Osoyoos Division\nof Yale District, and the new point of\ndiversion is situated on the said Priest's\nCreek, about 600 yards above the original\npoint of diversion hereinbefore mentioned\nand is just below a small fall.\nThis notice was posted on the nineteenth\nday of May, A.D.. 1910, and application\nwill be made to the Water Commissioner\non the 25th day of June, A.D., 1910.\nJoseph Saucief,\nKelowna, B.C.\nVary Suggestive.\n, Mrs. Towne\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thera was a spelling\ncompetition down at our institute tbe\nother night- The pastor gave oUt tbe.\nwords,. Bid you hear about It. Mrs\nBrowne\u00E2\u0080\u0094No. Was It interesting. Mrs\nTowne\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rather. The first three words\nhe gave ont, wew \"Increase,\" \"pastor,\"\nAsaya-Neurall**\nTHE NEW REMEDY FOK\nNervous Exhaustion\nIndigestion, Heartburn, Dyspepsia and Constipation result more\noften from nervous exhaustion\nthan from food. Dieting or pills\nwill not avail. The only remedy is\nnerve tepair. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2AsAYA-Nau-\nraia\" Is and makes possible this\ncurt. It feeds the nerves, induce\nsleep, quickens the appetite and\ndigestion, and these disorders disappear, $1.50 per bottle. Obtain\nfrom the local agent.\n_>f b. wnxrra\nTremendous\nReductions\nIn Dainty\nWash Suits\nDresses and\nSkirts\nSee Window Display.\nLadies' Repp Suits,\n. Pale Blue, White, beautifully trimmed Lace Insertion, $15,\n.cut price, $11.50\nLadies' White Duck\nSuits,\nat $6.00, cut price, $4.45\nat $7.50, cut price, $5.75\nLadies' White Pique\nSuits,\nat $13. cut price, $9.75\nLadies' Brown Linen\nSuits,\nat $7.50, cut price, $5.95\nLadies' Pink Mull\nLingerie Dresses .\nat $7.50, cut price, $5.75\nLadies' Pale Blue,\nWhite, Mull, Lingerie\n. Dresses\nat $10.50, cut price, $7.75\nWashJkirts\nFancy Striped Duck\nSkirts,\n. at $3.75. cut price, $2.90\nBrown Duck Skirts,\nat $4, cut price, $3.15\nFawn, Blue, Repp\nSkirts,\nat $4, cut pries; $3.15\nWhite Duck Skirts,\nat $3.50, cut price, $2.75 '\nThese garments show\nonly the Season's'\nNewest Style Features\nThe Kelotona\nThe Store of the\n> -\nStylish Shoe\nW.B.M.pDER\nProprietor\nFOR SALE\n3 One-acre'Lots between Pendozi\nand Richter streets. One of these\nis a corner lot. This property contains about half an acre of bearing'\nfruit trees. Price $2,200 with very\neasy terms.\nAlso wanted a one horse wagon in\ngood condition.\nA. FRANCIS, Kelowna, B.C.\nP.O. Box 80.\nt. U:__.L r J__\nror nigu uiauc\nWatch Repairing\ntry Parker the jeweler. You should\nchoose your watch repairer \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"you\nwould your Doctor. Your watch needs\ncareful attention when in need of repair. All kinds of watches, clocks and\njewelery repaired at moderate prices\nand all work absolutely guaranteed.\nA nice new line of Blouse Sets,\nBeauty Pins and Sash Buckles just come\nin, which 1 would be pleased to show\nyou, also a full line of watches,'chains,\nlockets, bracelets, lipks and fobs.\nAll new petterns and designs.\nWALTER M.PARKER\nWATCHMAKER & JEWELER -\nBernard Avenue.\nAll work absolutely guaranteed\nTQ RENT\nLarge and attractive\nrooms and offices in the,\nRaymer Block\nAppb io H.W'. RAYMER\nBernard Avenue.\n\u00C2\u00AB>_\u00C2\u00BB<\n;Si."@en . "Titled The Orchard City Record from 1908 to 1911-11-16. Titled Kelowna Orchard City Record from 1911-11-23 to 1915-01-14. Titled Kelowna Record from 1915-01-21 to 1920-09-30

Print Run: 1912-1920

Frequency: Weekly"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Kelowna (B.C.)"@en . "Orchard_City_Record_1910_06_09"@en . "10.14288/1.0184846"@en . "English"@en . "49.8880556"@en . "-119.495556"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Kelowna, B.C. : Chas H. Leathley"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Orchard City Record"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .