@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "e9666362-1f05-45de-a06f-9ac1d249674d"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-10-04"@en, "1919-08-08"@en ; dcterms:description "All the News of the Creston District"@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xcrestonrev/items/1.0173635/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " litt^i-t-^t^AjU ~~M ^^irrilfmsJtrSvlSxU* Vol. XL C}-~-Wm 1919 1/ No, 288 -,\"*,���������*, mt\"--, ^ f*> *--*-*i **' ������ ? Selliiig Record ifignres contained in the Creston Fruit Growers Union advertisement this week furnish inteM-Bting reading. Southern Albertfe a������t*l part of Saskatchewan are facing: one of the worst crop failures in , the' history of these districts. ���������?l-������stG-s:h*^':Had practically the same weather io:^bntend with as these proyinees and in fact has even less rainfall. Under the same conditions that have come so neap spelling ruin for tbe praJrie fanner the local selling agency has Ij-sen able to show a big increase in shipments over last ���������year and alsc over all other seasons. No doubt part of this inci-ease is due tc the satisfaction tbe Union has been giving during the past two seasons and to the energy of the present man* agement in going after new business, but after making all due allowance for these factors the fact remains that the Valley has stood the test of what would appear to be disastrous weath er conditions of drought and exceptional heat, and has come out with the right side. That it has done so should be most encouraging to every rancher and every prospective rancher in the_J district, **After standing, up under this, year's drought it would seem almost certain that The Creston Valley is in-. sured against crop failure on any season and it is equally certain that given fayorable conditions there is no limit to the possibilities of crop production. One cannot read the figures referred to above without being Impressed with the fact that the valley is most fortunate in having such an efficient selling { agency; one that &~m~7?~s,i~^,.J^^pp' is at least severity en-ployed* 'The ������\"���������\"������������������ j tfmi ection of small cottages on the cleared tracts has already commenced, and the men with families are expecting their wives and children along. Misses Bess and Floss White of Yahl*- and Teddy Applewaite ane Alec. Beeston of Willow Point -and Nelson respectively, were week-end visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Witherhead. The nien are both returned soldiers, the former being with the Oreston forestry corps. '���������feis. *��������� *ar f: .���������-���������--.. ~ : ������T������ft*i** of his mission Airplane Wreck Just as wev-jfot' to press this (Thursday) aft^oon a telephone message came |?-om Canyon City that aviator Hall,who passed oxer town about *L3^ oi4 a flying trip from V^ncouve?^ \"Calgary via the Cfrows Nest baa been forced to alight for gasolia-s. He apparently made a perfect landing in the big hay \"field -near t-^e mill, and after the gasoline anil oil supply had been replenished the . aviator pre- Jb'enciug operatioiis on iine aat were ; pared to resume ���������pie-journey. W hen SP.p.im.-.*'A������--Aj**l tfxvp. -uTonnaanQir an^ rvvr. I ixt ���������% 1 _ -*������ =A������L^xz��������� .��������� \\x.���������..i. ��������� - ������ ��������� ~xr~..t,.7-07.x. xr.. .. 7.x.~7rw.7mj, xx~t. <->u j gut? \"-������������������ant*. ut-VL riESB aoouii -jvu teei Thursday the first of the cattle were MBMmm-mi s**sm~s-B *CP-.__**__ _._._. ��������� ~������7 ^?iii-^=*-i--Iiiii-- ��������� -^^'���������-^0-. i������.Prp4*\"l M������������pPt*L. \" '^*Ursv rx-r.ri07~.rx '.,.- ��������� xtxixvjrfjxjxx uruu w* .mat- LJxro G114PJIUO fUU\" Penticton.reports this year's cherry %0rx0.07L-x*x\".r0. %0~r^-.-rx-nA- ning at a 50 mill an hour clip the plane started te ^efieeiid and in the swoop along it glided with Floyd Rodgers' Ford -^acer which had been lert star-ding about 230 yards away. The smaili was direct, the plane turning ^somerrault and badly wrecking! It thro-aghont. Fortunately Hsjl escaped with a few |>r*ttises, cradling cut from the wre^feag^Br-well Staked with gasoline. TSe. autoilwas also badly wrecked.���������\"-'-'��������� Mrs. foreman,: who had been watching^vents from the doomed auto, ha^ quite an exciting escape Xn mal-gog the run from the car to get Zbnt of the'path of the oncoming nf^chine the wing of the plane graz|d her shoulder. Had the flyer uq| crashed into the auto it |s alq^Jst certain there would haye; b^i casualties to report, as ther& W'll'e a couple of dozen people in its gpurse and driving forward at 8i*tc|i a speed it__could not ha,ve missed;:-tbeni all. Hall, is _________ was to lyok intjO the possibility of securing quarters for the detachment of red coats that it is proposed to have stationed in the Valley. They will either be at Creston or at Hykerts, with chances mostly in favor of Creston, but it may be a couple of months before the matter is decf-'led. The Valley received its long waited drenching of rain via the thunder storm route on Friday night, while Sunday night was also showery in spots. On the two attempts we were favored with, almost an inch of the wet goods and in consequence of which the vegetable crop is coming along in J451 coa ouajje. jl is 0.r.l.~.~.rx���������i^~ ~^-'S* Sx I'^p^tPico Will uc MCi(j~U IO OUUIC ��������������� n vtm*-miiyvm9ii -wiiy \\\\T \\*r[tL���������x.i..,...i .. ;*..x,x..x,.xx.. wotking at Jaffrny since early spring returned a tow t\\nyn torn fon*- ��������������� M>*-������>-*������t stij>y on the ranch hero. There iu some little stir at tho siding thet-o dayn. F. Belanger is loading out pUiuj-j at the rat������ of a. car a day, -..bile thi' Company export of hunbt-r Ih quite heavy, despite the poor crops on tho prairie. Katiohci-H in tb.H nt-etion are muet- ing on Thnrtulay night, Auguut 7th, at tho Hch.iolhoiuii', to cnunider irrigation. W. J. E. Biker, the provincial wuti-r rlghtu man, l������ i-j-puettnl to lw������ nri-m-nt to i-xnliiiii r.mtli-iM N'.xv men are basing t;'.!p.i-a ou ������... iU~ laud nt'tt,lenu*nt. lK>ai-il clearing o|M*i-a~ i.'pfiiip *')fj\\in i4i 1 * ��������� . vrj * ir \\-% *J a very .TO ��������� ������ *T������ W\\~ *Mv~--r 4r~* lltA %m. ���������**. mZ. m m0*-mfx*f4'*>tj> ������ * in������y **~.m%~> UIM1 rW*\" Vwvi-uiuiie Htl,p* l *-** 4 V t M 4t , 'ts' to develop frcrr. the ply of moisture, which has already mul tiie eueot 01 putting tlie size into fall and wititei- applet-*, to say nothing of the beneficial effect on tomatooH in various direct ion'*. A noteworthy feature to tho revenue from this yoar*������'������ strawberry ,.--,5-. *-r *it-.* '<* ;.- n';-!;'.. ,'-'?'-r-n ��������� f tho entirfpfruit and ve&ctnblc crop of 1914. Accot-ding to tho yearly export trade uUitoineut ififtucd by tlus Board of Trado lb*. Valley did $6V,- itijui .pf b*.:i*:r,.t'.'^i ::: ,'iU V,-Ul ;���������.;.������! *>,- ch.ivd iiiouucitii in Xii i-i, wtiiio Un- cBtiinHt^d return from the. li)l!ft citravvberry crop alone iit Sii������r>.0l)0. Wii4imMimvmmm,lmmvi1 IH^f-M'l.'Irlfl.rMlli HitMtl IV^fflMltWIJ imii4mmmmmm*Jmmx0 i^sWrmWSmXmmmm 5iSIlI,iiS-5SSSS ff,,**H'^'.'.'^i*\"i-**?w?NwT|*'*v',*'?''y''*- ���������\"���������\"���������\"\"���������\"'���������������������������a\"*--\"\"^^ l?!*������������!������r>>?>^p?*^ smssi: MM 19H2E i._... B .iJOi W- CKBSTOT- Number Of Strikes Now Decreasing A marked drain in industrial strife is the feature of the labor situation at present, the number of large strikes under way being few as compared with a few weeks ago. In a number of cases where slops were being taken to name boards of conciliation, there are good prospects of settlements being arrived at by negotiations. a's Time m lesnisg Canadians have joyously and enthusiastically celebrated the signing of thc Peace treaty. Canada's unprecedented army of some hundreds of thousands of men is all but completely demobilized, and the \"vast majority of the soldiers are again at work in civilian occupations. One by onc, all the war lime orders-in-coun- cit, regulations ami prohibitions are passing away, and tlie Dominion is again rapidly being placed on a Peace basis. The acutcness of thc sorrows caused by the war is being assuaged by that greatest of all healers, time, and the feelings of racial bitterness and even hatred which are aroused by war are fading. The titanic struggle is already a matter of history, but while memory lasts people will remember thc horrors and stress of the past five terrible ycars, and all future generations will be more or less affected by the experience through which mankind was called upon to pass. But while remembering these things, it is well that as a people we should keep even more vividly in our memories the recollection of the heights of loyal devotion to country to which people attained, the self-sacrifices they so freely and gladly made, the patriotic services they so splendidly rendered. During thc war the people of Canada rose to undreamed of heights of greatness and achieved a national splendor of which any people might well be proud. In a word, Canada found its soul���������something which in the more materialistic days of old thi\"* country seemed to lack. In the past five trying years Canadians achieved confidence in themselves; tl*.ey learned to do by doing. They discovered latent native abilif*y Li. i fi, y cp\\i.. y a t y .lj y.Lj things and do them well. In the stress and tumult of war they learned many u---**pui;>. not least of which was the discovery that for well-nigh fifty yea*'-, the Canadian people had busied u'.i-ium-h. i s. and cjuarrcucc, and di-p'idi'-d, over many petty matters a-.xl animosities of a long Canadians called their a -.Kition, but it was not, .-���������r.'.lu I\"' v. hile its people .:>.-. al vision, a national otit- i:-..i:y n.'.ii'.in.'il aspirations. ry .'.;.- -���������;'. :;o;;t a real In ��������� '.'.-.-��������� ���������:������������������;������������������:��������� '���������: - --\".pplied what d'-a. 1 Joan J lac I I ideas id past. union i\" hie .4]' iit-O, ii'i-t and, lacking ini].'.lent in people, \\\\ ho big and n.asti-r- : ���������.-���������nam so in .:.;.',. pa 1: ich 1,,.*'. '��������� a M.oni.; ' he. r.a tha'. pi.u��������� r, an !, . ... . - ; I '.,.-. ,].,, patriots. Every man and woman was ready and proud to render national service. Criticism was stilled, even\" though it might be fully justified. The chronic fault-finder found Iriru- sclf decidedly unpopular, Our people pulled together for the common go 1J and the triumph of the common cause, instead 'of pulling against onc another. The danger is that in the relaxation from war effort, and in the pleasant and less crucial days of peace, wc fall back into old habits. Is it too much to hope and expect that the newer and better patriotism born of war will remain with us to flourish and develop thrqu-g-hout the gladsome days of peace? Canadian patriotism stood the test of war, but the real test of the patriotism of the people of this Dominion will come in the years of peace upon which we have now entered. It will be a sterner test, lacking, as it will, the incentive of a great struggle to win, a glorious victory to achieve. It will call for infinite patience and hard work. Yet, after all, the prize to be won is something finer, better, more lasting than the prize of victorious war. The winning of the war, to which the people of Canada were willing to bend all their energies, and in the accomplishment of which no sacrifice was too great and no service too arduous, guaranteed to us and our children their independence and liberties and the blessings of Christian civilization. But the possession of these priceless things will be of little value to us unless we use them as wc ought. Rather will their possession prove our own condemnation if wc do not worthily employ them to make Canada truly great and a benefactor among the nations. We enjoy independence to develop our country for weal or for woe, to create and firmly establish a nation renowned for reform and advancement, for\" thc elimination of social ills, for the splendor of its education; we enjoy thc widest liberty to do good, not license to do evil. With the dawning of this new era of peace, Canadians should practice self-control and continued self-denial. Thcy should find the same gratification in rendering service to the nation now as in the days of war. Thcy should be patient and earnest in instituting reforms, but impatient with all wrongs. In a word, Canada needs, and needs badly, thc war spirit of the country and its people carried into all the activities of the. ycars of 1 P1' a 1\" e. THE CAUSE OF BACKACHE Only in Rare Cases Does Backache Mean Kidney Trouble Every muscle in the body needs constantly a supply of rich, red blood in proportion to the work it does. The muscles of the back are under a heavy strain'and have but little rest. When the blood is thin they lack nourishment, and the result is a sensation of pain in those muscles. Some people think pain in the back means kidney trouble, but the best medical ciutuOfities agfee tuat LracKaciiS sci- dom or never has anything to do with the kidneys. Organic kidney disease may have progressed to a critical point without developing a pain in the back. This being the case, pain in the back should always lead thc sufferer to look to the condition of his blood. It will be found in most cases that thc use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to build up the blood will stop the sensation of pain in the ill- nourished muscles of the back. How much better it is to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the blood than to give way to unreasonable alarm about your kidneys. If jrou suspect your kidneys, any doctor can make tests in ten minutes that will set your fears at rest, or tell you the worst. But in any event to be perfectly healthy you must keep the blood in good condition, and for this purpose no other medicine can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can # get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Opportunities In tm%.. The Sheep Business Western Canada Offers Ideal Conditions for Sheep Raisers There never was a-better chance for the development of the sheep industry than there is in Western Canada today. Mutton and wool are both in great demand and will continue so while the livestock shortage iu Europe prevails. This shortage is not likely to be relieved for many ycars. In the meantime the farmer with a few sheep will be able to make good profits, which, if he is a beginner, will go ..a long way towards helping him to get firmly established. Farmers who have followed sheep-raising in many lands before settling in Western Canada claim thcy know of no couritry where sheep thrive so well as here. Do not allow worms to sap the vitality of your children. If not attended to, worms may work irreparable harm to the constitution of the infant. The little sufferers cannot Voip-C t-iiCir a-.iincn***, r-u?. xnei*,** are many signs by which mothers are made aware that a dose of Miller's Worm Powder is necessary. These powders act quickly and will expei worms from the system without any inconvenience to the child. At night smear redness and rougbness with Cuticura Ointment. Wash oIf in fiva minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water ���������and continue bathing a few momenta.' Treatment for dandruff and irritation: On retiring rub Cuticura Ointrneat into partings all over scalp. The next moraing shampo*** with Cuticura Soap and hoe water. Repeat in-two weeks if needed. Catfcura Soap S5e.. Ointment 25������na*������e..Te!- cumESe. pics Canadian datlas. Sold every whars. {\"on-ample cash free Bddresa: \" Cutle-jx*., 9tps. H, Siastan. IT. B. A.\" Even the man who never fails to keep his appointments is apt to fall down when it comes to answering friendship letters. A Mild Pill for Delicate Women. ���������The most delicate woman can undergo a course of Parmeiee's Vegetable Pills without fear of unpleasant consequences. Their action, while wholly effective, is mild and agreeable. No violent pains or purgings follow their use, as thousands of women who have used them can testify. They are, therefore strongly recommended to women, who are more prone to disorders' of the digestive organs than men. Pigeon Races Winging through the air at an average speed of nearly 45 miles an hour, sixty racing pigeons flew from Scott, Saskatchewan, to Edmonton, a distance of 225 miles, recently. The race was one of the weekly series put on by members of the Edmonton Homing Association. Out of the 60 birds released at Scott at nine in the morning, seven had reached Edmonton, within a few minutes of each other, about half-past two o'clock in the afternoon. The first pigeon to reach its home loft was one owned by William Ruff. The ease with which corns and warts can be removed by Hollo way's Corn Cure is the strongest recommendation. It seldom fails. ^atf'r Km���������mJ~m~-m~iLyi h3>} USIfBRSITI -CIWGSTON, Obta*su������ ARTS Part of tha Arts course may be covered by corresooadctxeftr MBOIGINB \" EDUCATION ������.������. ������ jw*������>������ ovum's u&k Miaiatl, Gbsmioal, CJt**., BrfoebsQioai tsn~ Eleetrioal BBtjineerici stjmiEB seissi BAViuma schooi July and'August. . December to April fe*. GEO. Y. CHOWM, R������gtsta������!*. \"The man who gives in when he is wrong,\" said the street orator, \"is a wise man; but he who gives in when he is right is���������\" \"Mariied!\" said a meek voice in the crowd. BLED TO DEATH Tried t-6 trim a wart with a razor and severed an artery. Thc only wart cure is \"Putnam's/' which removes warts, corns, callouses in one day. Insist on gelling Putnam's Corn and Wart Extractor, it's the best ,25c at all dealers. A fervent, but unlettered preacher among the mountain whites of the Carolina's was exhorting his flock to come forward and take advantage of the \"means of grace.\" \"It air pride that's keeping you settin' in yore seats,\" he cried, \"come to the altar and get down on your benders, and if they air too stiff with pride, ile 'em, ilc 'em, aa it says in the Scrip- lur', with the ilc of Patmos.\" ���������MtlrvavA**. Distemper. General Smuts Talks O*\"*! WnvA-rsonn T'-rniil)i''BS to Tha Great English ��������� Iiemedp. Tones and invigorate* tho whola 1 ncrvou--, system, makes netr Blood ia old Veins, Cures 1 ffervosa- Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despszr- tiency. Loss of EnergVt Palpitation of tha Start, STaiiint} Zttmory. Price .1 per hoz, sis for*?3. Oiks will please, six will cure. Bold by aU druggist*- or mailed ia plain pkg. on receipt ol Erica, New pamphlet mailed free. THEWOfiQ \"������������!������!NgCQ,.V0l0NT0:0rtT, lUmv-iWxlm* Sl^NBW^HMCHRHMEDY. N.1.M.1.NA U������ed in Frenctt Hospital* with frent success, cuxss chronic weakness, lost viooa ��������� V1U, KIPIpKT, JtLADDKM, DISKASXS. M.OOO POISOH. flLKB. SSTHgB. Ho, DROOQIST8 0X MAIL SI. TOST 4 CT������ rOUaKRA**CO. ������. IIIXMAMjST. M K W YORK or LYMAN ������������ri������ ���������TORONTO. WRIM FOlt FKBB --OK TO Oft. LS CLKRO aED.CO.HAVSRSTOOKHD. HAH1-STSAD. LOKDOH. EXO, tmt WJfpT ORAO������S ITAST-II.ES3) TQB.UO. EASV TO TAKffl \"\"���������\" \" \",**������\" ���������\"���������\"*\"- \"*** '���������',\"\"' * ���������**���������*\" -* \" ������A������* AS������ _ _ LASTING CUM. THAT MAD* UAIpKBO -WORD * TJJSHAP1DM' IS OS '. eovT.itTAMr A-r-ruutB to xu. okh~~hx rAOJUSTtk , Minard's Liniment Cures Garget | .. in Cows. \"What is the connecting link bc- iwii-n the animal rind'Vcgc-talile I'.ii.g- udiii-p,'\" .i*.l\\itl the torn\"her. \"Ihipli!\" vcllt-il the- class with onc An arlifn'ial uli'i.'Ul llll'icl:' ������������������iss is tne kind cm another. onc -%.. /\\ ,ry^C-.V^~0-mJmi^mvr0tZlm \"xT/\"m tf\\ iT^ E* tjrisT- \"C-s TT. . t. P. m.mjk.l L ������ **������ . ~z. . n'dC-v Tr~-r\\l ~J>1 ~ZJ%^, SLXJ'^z-^jl. Jp'rencn Jbiu wouia Help Shopkeephig ��������� builder of brain and brawn. Mighty good also for wo.*^ t* ->������-*-->. itr-4] /*-* ir\\ -*\\m*A vr-S^Ttry -i ~i m * m. m t, ~i-ttr.d-m.mm mi m id ������._������������.*. ~.--dd- 7x*-.d, \"l������*%jL.t X--d ft. 1 - PWN.4^44 44^-P. 'XT M ��������� t ���������\"\".-������ M- 0- * \"V jp-j -������**��������� j ������;.*- ITS ~Jr\\.rx0. ~~x.J> 0*0 Whose Businesses Have Been Destroyed By Reason of War Paris, 1'ranee.���������Mr. F.tienne Clc- mcntcl, minister of eoiiiinercr, has introduced in the Chamber of Deputies a hill ]>\\ u-plilin^' for the opening of credit for 100,t)0(),()()0 francs in favor of the sninll '���������lio-il.,'cepe is. manufacturers and workmen whose businesses have hern destroyed, or who have been placed out of work by- reason nf war. Mr. I'li-nientel, in inlrr.clucing the bill, said that artisans ami small shop- \\: I'l-'ir I .*. WlIC ill .1 11 III I C ihlhi.'i.iH JIU..1 timi tlian any other demobilized class. 'I he means ot' livelihood has disappeared as well as ctisinni. The cham- '.,��������������� u.iil ..hi..ily ....lul L'.OOO.OOO fi.inrs loAaul a people's bank. A ��������� j.'1'eat fil'iMt wn. being made, by the ! t ii.i' i ilu-1 '. i.f . . ml im-1 i c i'i i\" fi'i I s Ip) i.n-i-l im: .i.'ii ol Uu* iii'i.Miiini'l, .un.! oi. nl', --i-.iii 'icuple's b.ml.s were rstaldisheil and .18 were beiiij-' avy*- a ni ���������/������������������ il. Tlui bill ;ii.'ivid(*d thai '-ach covr I i.: vi*atH ii nr-r rssary, and amount io .\"','i'������') i i am si. It w.i������ aiinpti'd by tin* rhaniher. Strongly Urges Leaving Russia Settle Her Own Affairs London.���������Lieut.-Gcn. Smuts, of the Union of South Africa, and member of thc British Peace delegation, in a farewell message, advocates appeasement and reconciliation with Germany and encouragement of the \"present moderate Republican administration in Germany, which is succcss- fuly fighting the European battle against anarchy.\" General Smuts strongly urges leaving Russia to settle her own affairs, on the ground \"that a sobered soviet systcm may be belter than barbarism, to which the present policy seems inevitably to be tending,\" and declares that British statesmen should apply the. same medicine to Ireland that lliey applied to Bohemia. DO YOU WANT TO KNOW the facts about SHOStTHORN CATXiE f Th������ breed tor tho farmer or rancher Write tha Secretary to-dar for F*ftEB PUBLICATIONS, and -**������������������ your nama on onr iree ta si ling litt. DOMINION SHORTHORN BREEDER'S ASSOC'\"-* W.A.Dryden.Prea. G.E.Pay.Sss. I s Brooklin. Ont. Guelph. Ont 1 sa__:_ __ ���������_ J MONEY ORDERS Pay your out of town accounts by Dominion Express Money Orders. Five dollar* costs three cents. There is no telling what, a day may bring forth. A man may hi** liapny today and married tomorrow. Don't Hawk, Blow, Snoe/.-pp or Cough U^o; itCr,'v''v***'\\*t\\'rfy*r*iiLyt PREMIER Stoves and Ranges \"MARATHON\" \"LEADER\" \"ARGUS\" \"ROYAL\" \" CHIEFTAIN \" One or another of tlieso niotle.n will suit your taste and lit your purse. Cooking trouble*, aro unknown wlirre \"Davit-lion'.'! nni-ci are usr.1. Write ut for particular* anil v/ane of xtnr* iri your locality where o display maybe seen. ihe iiios. Davidson Mfg. Co. Limited Montreal WINNIPEG Toronto <7) mmm00md44dmltmm������ ������imhm���������mmvtm/mim r4*'4WN-p.4V%*Pl4^.'*Vl''W.''^ itvTi���������J 4���������������,0.r ^r- d,M.,iiHniu mfirn >m ,i* ./tt> tr- .iJtmm^mdt- I.PMI CA M. lf. 1774 When t-crms attack the lininj-j of the nose, make you fiiir-czi* and fjap*���������- wlirii hilor on ihry infest th'e bronchial tnht-s how ean you follow them with a lonp-h syrup? You can't tin it���������that's all. CourIi *,v''U|\"-:' r'.o to the r.lomach that':; why . p r ���������< Hut I'alarrhnzonr. roos evrywliere - K,etri lii-lil after the ni-nns Uillr. them hoal.'i the r.oroneKH--rures the inflammation-���������makes Catarrh disappear. Not difficult for Calarrhozonc In run**, 'nccriuir it containn Hie rs- .���������pcuc.o;. of pine balr.amr. and othr*r an- lisenticH that uiontli!.' trc:ii iiiciit; suialli-r si/cM .\"*.r'i0 ami 'Ah-., all OfniK- ���������Mi������tii ami -iini'-ipi-cpi-t a. IJ!-������������������-f toll _. , JXJIAl X X10I-IX. JX XX.. j Gift To France Have Sent Consignment of Lives-rccli. to Peasants , British fanners have just scut through lhe medium oi ilu: .i-.<,i ic*.11 - tural relief coinniilti-e an important consignment of livestock to peasant������ rcluruiii\"-' lo their farms in l-Vaini. in tlie nei^lihoi lioi.ul oi tlu: li.ittlc. /uue. 'Vhc |-,iit ccitnpi'ises 3'/ pe������ll������|-|l������ltp|lllWlWi1l HOiKiHi tmmim .^-jjjr^r^^r^^ VW^-ii-^x^; \"5r*L ������1 m W^yjrWWzM i&GJ-2Jl?rm'^2~~!-V- wmmmmm.mmtm~mamma. 'TrT'Z .,.,. .^r������m!^F?Fs^a-mrm ���������.'' \" THE Tf-EVT'FW.- ORltSTOX-, B. Q. \\jj&ljpBE~W--^~%m~~^ 'Zl'���������AZyy'*'ZZZZy';Z}, *-*-.\\'\\-V.y.*V^,V'^ ~*TWi$&$ffi\\ '��������� '-'Slu ie ������|������ ^lYlUCUl --&/19-1-11M A 11 SB Strikers Or Trial Ai- m WiMitinAft I A t Winnipeg Strike Leader at O London.���������Civilian disturbances in different parts of the country have been as destructive as anything committed by thc military. At Swindon gangs of youths and discharged imperial soldiers looted twenty business premises and burned the flagstaff outside the- municipal buildings. At Luton, where thc town hall was burned, further disturbances were quelled by police charges. Men aud four women were arrested, and further arrests arc imminent. At Coventry many shops were* attacked; 40 persons were injured, some dangerously, and police assistance was ���������ought from Birmingham. At Bilston the mobs tore down a wall anu uscu Lay, a-v*. Evidence Tendered on Conspiracy Winnipeg.���������A secret service whose ramifications extended even into the carefully-guarded precincts of the labor temple was named as the source of evidence of an actual revolution J by Sergt. A. E. Reamcs, chief of the Ottawa in Throes of Doubt as to Manitoba Royal Northwest Mounted A ���������*��������� T| - ���������*������������������ g*S, ���������\"SATff'fe'arTJ������-****? S^&~\\fo&--\\������tt-\\T~imWim^ f&CTamisg tituuaitiauvii Of Peace At Ottawa radium 53- (Sfe il S% tr~t m^t-n^xr% glass -** a** Afm . * - S fisSHSET'SS .-T-.X. ���������no *a*r������iT4g 4 1 MUSLtJ w-a.rLti*������- x vwvv When War Measures Act Expires Ottawa.���������Parliament will be in-session again before the War Measures Act expires, and with it the race track belting, prohibition and other wartime orders-in-council passed under its provisions. Such is the understanding here, and was the under- ��������� standing when parliament prorogued a fortnight ago. At that time the final complete text of the peace treaty the bricks as'missiles against the po- j with Germany had not been received in ilx-xt. S^-'-xLi.) tlV'I.PP I oolice T.verc summon ed from neighboring tow Honorary Degree Recipients Given to Leaders in War By Cambridge University Ottawa, and .1. T��������� ..1,1 -xr-it^ LllClCXUiC I.UU1U itvjx be submitted to parliament for rati fication. Drafts as prepared hat been received and changes made arc Police secret service, at the preliminary trial of eight labor leaders charged with seditious conspiracy. The accused, R. B. \"Russell, W. M. Ivens, W. A. Pritchard, R. J. Johns, Aldermen A. A. Heaps and John Queen, George Armstrong and-R. E.' Bray, maintained thc attitude they j adopted at the first sessions; they laughed outright at some of the evidence and continually passed laughing whispers. \"Reports I had from reliable agents were to the effect that there was a revolution in the making,\" Sergt. Reames declared, under cross-examination by E. J. Murray. He reit- Makes Concessions for Armistice, But Ties Serious String to Froposals London.���������A Bolsheviki delegation has arrived at Kishineff with an offer of *oeace to the commander of the London.���������Thc tender spot in British political life today is the dispensation of titles. These are awarded, of ccfurse, by the King, but on the nomination of the Prime Minister, and the criticism of reformers is that titles have been given for a long time and by various prime ministers for purely party services, and practically bought by contributions to - j party funds. Rumanian troops on behalf of Nikolai | The R ^ q������ Lords ^ & ^ Lenine, the Bolsheviki premier, ac- intere5t in th5s mattcr, because the cording to a Berlin government wire P*vtli A \"-\"CV-JLli -w-J. C*.*-*\" **-*. --m-w^vo -���������.������,^-^ ������- ��������� -~ cabled from Paris. It was not till the' crated quotations\" from speeches by rate not till the Canadian parliament had full opportunity to ratify. Since then, however, greater necessity has apparently arisen in Great arrival in Ottawa of Hon. C. J. Do- herty, who with Hon. A. L. Sifton signed'the treaty for Canada, that the Cambridge, England.���������General S*--\"ltext as sjgned at Versailles was avail- Lrthur Currie, commander of the j! .)le> Thc understanding with the Canadian forces, was among thosc j British government when Sir Robert ���������who received the honorary degree of, Borden left London was that there Doctor or Laws from Cambridge} wpuld_ be no proclamation of peace University. The ceremony took place by Britain for some t;me> and at any in the senate housc, which was crowded mostly with undergraduates \"dressed in military and naval uniforms for thc occasion. The vice- chancellor of the university, Dr. Arthur E. Shipley, of Christ. College, presided. Among the various recipients of the degree were Admirals Sturdce and Wemyss, and Generals Rawlin- son, Birdwood, Wilson, Hernc, Monass, the Earl of? Cavan and Gen. Pershing. The vice-chancellor then entertained the party at luncheon in Christ College haii, to which they -walked through the rain, thc students} Tor ratificatioii. following and cheering. Gen. Bird- wood was carried shoulder iTigh by lhe youths. {old \"noble\" families are jealous of 1 having their caste lowered by the addition to the newly rich and purely rich to the orders of nobility. The question was threshed out last year, and there was a general un- dci*stan-din������\" that hereafter when honors were announced the reason Crx��������� Xixr..��������� Sxr.r. Irxx,.-. t o'KriPPI.*! Tp. ������ nill*. armistice to last eight davs has ���������*���������\"-\"��������� *-1'*-'* ���������-\"--\"-*���������'������������������'*��������� ** -~ *��������� **** - -- - - ������������ - lishcd. This has been done in form, less dispatch. \"Lenine offers to cede Bessarabia to Rumania on condition that Rumania shall prohibit Ukrainian citizens and bands of Admiral Kolchak, head of the ail-Russian government at Omsk, lroni .crossing the Rumanian frontier. Wm. Ivens and Geo. Armstrong which counselled revolution. He said he believed the speeches were contri- butary causes to the general strike. \"I was not surprised that the strike was peaceful at first,\" he said. \"It would havc remained so if the strike committee could have retained control of everything in the city under the labor temple permit system. They wanted peace for a purpose.\" Evidence of an independent witness, Joseph T. Hill, who had attend been concluded on the Bessaragian front, and the delegation has gone to Rumanian headquarters. lasts enteneed In England Britain for an earl that a state of war no longer exists. It is understood Haat thc government here is in communication with the imperial authorities on the subject iand that stress is being laid on- the necessity for full opportunity being ly proclamation ed a meeting the day before the first riot brought out the iact thai Wuvr Ivens had told a large gathering of ignorant foreigners that their homes were in danger of violation by the special police. Mr. Ivens told a story of a special policeman stealing money given to the Dominion parliament fori from a striker^s-wife and children un discussion of the treaty's terms be-'der threat of his baton. When the fore formal proclamation of peace by End of Trial of Seven ir. Connection With Death o������ Epsom Policeman London.���������At the Surrey Bugler Robert Todd and Private E. A. McAllan, of the Canadian Forestry Corps, were found not guilty of manslaughter in connection with ihe death of Police Sergeant Green at Epsom and discharged. Privates F. H. Wilkie, 102nd Canadian B*5.ttn.; J. Connors, 113th Canadian Highlanders ;_A. McMaster, 3rd Canadian Re- thc King. Notice has already been \\ given of a special session in the fail While the question has not been but, it is alleged, not in substance, because several much criticized honors in the last list were described as \"for public services,\" -which might mean almost anything. Thc new national party, which has a few members iu thc House of Commons, has taken up the question. The chairman, Gen. Page Croft, has written to the newspapers proposing to prove before any judicial committee assizes that since 1910 one member of parliament has rejected an offer of a title in return for a cash payment to party funds, and that the father of a member of the House of Commons was offered a baronetcy for ������25,000. He charged also that a member of parliament who was created a peer after the beginning of the war, sub serve^ and D. Yercx and A. Masse, of scribed shortly afterward thc Canadian Forestry Corps, were special police had been attacked the fourui guilty and aentenced to twelve next day, thc witness had thought ���������^{months' imprisonment with htrd la mr*>*m tf������/*\"1l tr. lJ\\-Kd\\-XX -*.-*-r he believed it x T.��������� i, 1CJJU1 t 4. V 4.H; ins utuy iu the police. ' He said was contributory to the riots, and VV llUC 111C ^UCSUP-r-ll \"������3 ..74 x. ^r~ - discussed in cabinet as yet, it is pro- was -'vicious and that its effect at Resume Trade With Germany Traders of World Rush in With First Raising of the Allied Blockade ���������Berlin,���������The first results of the -raising of the blockade, says the Deutsche Allgemcine Zeitung, is the flooding of Cologne with foreign goods. ���������'French firms,\" the newspaper, adds, -'are offering hundreds of thousands of kilograms of cocoa powder, chocolate, coffee, ox fat, pork fat, macaroni and toilet soaps.* German imports companies have been offered large quantities of com starch and cocoa, hundreds of carloads of white beans and Chinese yellow peas, and raw coffee and chocolate in huge quantities. \"The American offers include bacon, olive oil, rubber coats, steam turbines, aurtomobilo machinery, various oils and vaseline. \"An Anglo-Japanese firm offers the direct importation of borax, paraffin, resin, flax oil, shellac and soap.\" Paris Honored Victim Paris.���������Paris honored thc memory of Sgt. Paul Mannheim, of thc French army, who was murdered in Berlin on July 13- The burial ol\" Sr't. Mannheim took place at thc Pcrc La- chaise cemetery. Great crowds followed the funeral procession, in which President Poincare. and Premier Clemenceau were represented. bablc that the date of opening will be advanced a week or two to avoid any unnecessary delay. But that peace will be officially proclaimed before thc Dominion parliament can be sum- ._���������,. :���������- ~4.n-it-AfiA liprrp n<; pxtrcmclv 1LLLJIL\\.\\J. tJ *P*������i������*- x-~��������� -- - unlikely. The point raised by Sir A. B. Aylesworth that thc war time ordcrs- in-council, notwithstanding their own provisions, will not be operative after expiry of thc War Measures Act is generally conceded. A similar opinion was given by a committee of legal experts in Greal Britain with regard to ordcrs-in- council passed under the Defence of the Realm Act. It is pointed out that under thc treaty with Germany peace cannot be proclaimed until after ratification by Germany and by three of the principal allied and associated powers. The principal allied and associated powers arc-defined in thc treaty as U.S., British Empire, France, Italy and Japan. Ratification of the treaty with Germany alone is not regarded as being sufficient to end thc war and thc War Measures Act. There will be also need to bc ratification of peace with Austria. Peace with Germany would be merely a partial peace. But whether ratifications of the peace with Bulgaria and Turkt-v first, would bc necessary in- .. . ���������_...*���������.. -. r 4i. r. \\\\r���������y SO Kit\" iiii llll\" H-iiiiiiiiiuuii *-\" >\"*- Measures Act is concerned is regarded as somewhat doubtful. There is little likelihood, in .adual practice, of much difference in time between thc proclamation, of peace in Great that time would be particularly bad.\" He said he had been shocked and horrified at the thought of a man having so little sense that he would make such an inflammatory address to such an audience. Dor. Victory For Clemenceau Retirement Checks For Postal Workers Fund Taken From Their Pay Will Be Returned as Sign of End Winnipeg. ��������� Retirement cheques which are due the postal workers who lost their positions as a result of thc strike will be mailed from Ottawa within the next few days, according to a telegram which J. A. Elrick, general secretary of the Amalgamated Postal Workers, received from thc Deputy Postmaster- General at Ottawa. Thc average amount of thc cheques is about $400. The message Mr. Elrick received was as follows: \"Retirement fund cheques arc being issued with all possible expedition, and will mostly be sent this week.\" Mr. Elrick explained that the money that was being sent was the late postal workers' own money. Il represented the five per cent, which had been deducted from their wages from the time thcy had joined the service, ibis rcl'n ciiienl fund system having been adopted in place of a pension system. Great Success of Premier Clemenceau When He Won a Vote of Confidence Paris.���������All newspapers, excepting those distinctly hostile to the government, comment upon the great success of Premier Clemenceau when he won a vote of confidence in the chamber of deputies. Some papers make the point that, the result shows the vote, in which the government was in the minority, was not aimed at the government, but was intended to obtain a more energetic policy de-1 signed to end thc high cost of living, which, it was declared, threatened to paralyze the country. The papers express pleasure that Premier Clemenceau had pledged himself to consult the country soon, through thc coming elections. very- large sum of money to a newspaper that supports the Premier. He mentions also instances in which he says titles were granted to a politician of so notorious a character as to be regarded as unfit to be a candidate for parliament, to another politician regarded as unscrupulous, and to a third man \"previously involved in a notorious social scandal.\" Prince To Visit White House Germany Wouid Be Friends With Neighbors Advances Along Path in Expectation of Revision of Peace Treaty Weimar.���������Dr. Hermann Mueller, minister of foreign affairs, speaking jbeforc the national assembly, urged thc carrying out of thc peace treaty to the utmost, while working also for its revision. He advocated aUo thc friendliest disposition towards Belgium by real .sacrifice's, thus paving thc way for an understanding with thc Belgian neighbor nations. Dr. Mueller favored non-intervention in Russia and an effort to pro mote friendly relations with Poland and Czecho-Slovakia, while not for- British Heir-Apparent Invited to Be , gclling- Germany's former allies, Bul- Our State-Owned Ships Ottawa.���������By the end of this year the government will have twenty thip\" with a tokil tu-l tonnage of HO,*- 000 tons operating in the North Atlantic and West Indian trade. Tlie voyages made by thf seven steamers already in commission have been vcrv profitable. Britain and its iirochiiiuilion m ada by the governor-general. Can Gucs't of United State--. Government London.���������Thc Prince of Wales will reach thc U.S. next month ������������������*���������������**. thc guest of thc U.S. government. King George, on' behalf of the Prince, has accepted an invitation sent the Princ.: by President Wilson, to visit the Pre sident in Washington. After his visit'\"to Canada, th garia and Turkey. Priests Must Pay Kingston, Out.���������Judge La veil has issued an attaching order to twelve Roman Catholic, clergymen in the 'M Kingston archdiocese for thc \"Catli- cdratium,\" the ten per cent, of the revenue of a patish priest which in ���������Ti-.p if.*,- '.-. -\\--l<'pp.-lpr.^ **nr:iil l'l'Olll Prince will go to Washington for ajl-->-*ulc -**-'.- ' ' . , ' ���������/,,���������.c. nirt, , ., T...-4-p i the respective parishes of these men. few days as a guest of the united . . . . . .��������� ��������� ',, J u . ,1.. -u Ths step s being taken to rca.izc Stales government und l.ilti* will! , , . , i ._��������� * v,. ic;., , , . , .., . . v x- . .,. under the judgment obtained by Sis- make a brief visit to .New Yui.-.,, J . . ... , , ... ,. , | ., ��������� ��������� iter Marv Basil a^aim-a Ai'ehtn>hop where he wiH live on board the Bri- *, - ..... \\. ., ��������� ,.,��������� ��������� i i ..i i- yj ��������� tcp . v -P.-1- Spratt and Sister Margrcgu, oi the tish battleship Renown in Kcw *** ork j , Tl ; ,, ._, _ ������r ^ tn'*���������H������>ii. Duncan M. scnted to unveil lhc memorial here, to I sifted to ihe i'aiiad'u'.n Pre**- tl Sir Etku.u: Curlier by prerr.in;- :* | ;-;.-..-j ������������������������������������'**.������������������' hr-.l W-<\"*> mri.V tc button at Balmor.il. Thc puke of [free oi charge, two carload- of ConnaUght cabled E. W. Villciieuvr, I for any one man, into r i-i Return of I*remier Borden Ottawa.���������Sir Robert Borden is expected back in Ottawa within thr nrvt frw duvs. He lu ou a cruise the Gulf of St. Lawrence. )n W. M. U. x~l-s president of thc Curlier ccutor.n'.y, of vvlucli llic loimci uuunu'4 *���������-���������*- wus a pa I ron, that His Maje.-ity would unveil thc 6tatue by this method on September 6, the anniversary of Car- tier's blrthd-iy. A wire will b-* run from Balmoral lo connect with thc Urea-. Mr. Mr.rshall stated Atlantic and Canadian cable lines, (good deal ot Hay and iccu thus forming a direct electrical con-1 locate :.... \"!...������������������ :---h.;ll at ;ir- ���������*hip. .-lock the lied '.rcas on th Pin A Ibert a. ��������� . - 1 . I - ��������� (,. r tx t-.������������������'.!,' r-'������������������ rta.!*.ti will be provided for seven cars ot hay ior any one man from any point in Manitoba, Sa*kat- ch<-w-.n or Alhrna to thr drouth that a (1 in ti:e r.i'i'tiinn \\z..\\ i * \\ ;\\\\- ������> f' r I}. in '������#������tn\"iW*fl!l**1������Wl'W'r1-u^ ���������HHBiSpiilS mmxivxiu^sri^. WmiWr'-tilm-mt-tJ-t^^ 0*t-l0~mH4xfaS}mr--) wiCTn^ iisiwsfWBwaB ���������*i*i������-|t--*iiTi)ipyl*w --.mux. Jto������. 00mt.0iiml.i:,~ l.xlix,A0*,.ul0l4!,ji^*,^.l*^kMuiffljfljlj.j'fflg'^jgiy^ ���������**���������*������������������-* ^&ti$W^idirfifi Mr. Sober-tson, live stock commissioner, in an address at Prince Albert, said that the horse was still the cheapest form of power for plowing. He said that actual experiments made during the summer had shown that the cost of plowing an acre of land with gasoline tractor was .$.U98; with 3team engine, $1.44; and with hoi-sea; 98 cents, Mr. Robertson said that Saskatchewan led the Dominion at present with over a million head of horses. He expected to see the price for horses advance as soon as the European markets were open. Creston is arranging for a visit by business men of the district to Kootenay flats during fair time It is a trip which many are likely to take. The whole discrict is vitally interested in the question of the reclamation of the flats and the trip will give an opportunity to see the ground. It is to be hoped that the provincial government will soon take steps to inform the public as to whether the plan is feasible. The general belief is that tbe flats cat be reclaimed on an economic basis. If that is so the earlier \"the necessary engineering data is secured and made public the better That is what, the Creeton people have asked.���������Nelson News. Since 1911 the miners of Fernie have been paying union dues at a rate of about $17,000 a year. The G W.VA. at Nelson has 290 members. During July 22 new names ororrg urJcJecl ij~* *-.\"hf> witl . xx. .-X. ��������� X, __ J Jl . Por the year ended June 30th, Rossland had 73 deaths. 51 of these were more or less due to the flu. Penticton was in datkness for four days last week, due to a breakdown of the engine at the electric plant. Nelson trustees are paying the new science teacher at the high school a stipend of ������2000 a year this term'. During July the ferry at .Nelson claims to have handled 7628 foot pas- RP.nor-e*rsi 792 autos, and 132 sins-is ri������S. Revelstoke had two delegates at the big Liberal convention at Ottawa this week���������the local M.P.P. and Sandy McRae. During the latter part of July the Courier informs that almost 1200 men were fighting fires in the Cronbrook districts Patrons os the \"Women's Institute library now have a list of 185 books fro'm'which to choose their week's reading. This week sees an additional ..thirteen volfunes added to the 172 .} formerly reported. A dozen of them are donated by Mrs. M. _Youngf while the other is kindly given by Miss Oan- *2y������. Here they are: The Great Amulet. \\ Windsor Castle. Old Curiosity Shop. Select Poems of Ella W. Wilcox. . Rob Roy. Miranda of the Balcony. ���������Sense and Sensibility. Long Liye the King. Song of the Cardinal. The American^ Jerroid's Jtiest Book. Ordeai of Jttichard Teverill. Old .Mortality. Mrs. Young has also given a table ���������a piece of furniture that is always handy about a library, and which is just as fully appreciated by the librarian. -.. ��������� &A.p.cmMPTQN fi-.-.lJlA~J T>;~~r. V0.00000 1 -^rtxIAAVJItiitd. A HP*.*.*? .- s-ssSs Eij?hfc ye-ssis experience. Highest references. Single tuning, $4. Two tunings a year,-87. REGI*Sr.BKep B B������!?B~% @kfi5?\"*U^ ~-~ri'Si a xxJ.^.S^^^ ������ .- S-~-^- - \" FCff*S������iWlOE --L.' .���������Gt&gxt ?f flisG-rs'v 'fifiianir fiil!Hf������l i ���������jISb m%WS.i -3_*a-a*ai*Bi vSww'S; ; .v-v W.V. JA&tXSQN; Oft^BTOtV Nelson had thirteen marriages during July, four births and six deaths. TENDERS FOR SCHOOL REPAIRS Sealed tenders will be received by the undersigned up to Saturdav, August 9, 1919,-for (1) Painting Canyon City Schoolhouse; (2) Putting plank floor in basement; (3)g Reflooring schoolroom. Lowest nor any tender not necessarily accepted. Fitii particulars of T. R.-MAWSON, Secy.-Treas., Erickson P.O. It would seem, from an author- i.A.iirn ex ���������rx X-rx .���������x rx���������m JvairlVO OLdrlfp^Am&CAlV JuSt issued, iFiftt in other parts of the province the returned soldier is getting pretty much the same generous consideration in the ws nt government employment as obtains in the Cres- ���������*. .��������������������� \"VolliiTr T*Trio {-\"m-1-v.oo otil-prprp'f fo/l %l ... v M.ivrj 1 jl .,\\r uguiv-Pi ^f..x4x*, x xlyy-x. discloses that all told over 1200 men are on the government payroll one way and another. Of these 160 are former civil servants who recently home from overseas. 110 are new men added to- the civil service, and 996 are variously employed as fire guards, with the public works and railway departments, and at land clearing under the Land Settlement Board. In view of the none-too numerous church attendance these times the question often arises as to how many people are actually church members. While this in formation ia, of oou'rhe, unobtainable as nueut- ing all denominations in a stated locality, th*:- nlalemenc of Rev. E. L. Pidgeon, a former prominent Vane over pastor, that \"of the 2,000,000 nernons west of the Great Lakes in Canada, -117.000 are Pres byterians nominally, but of this number more than 100,000 arenori- ���������\"���������ommunicantH of the church, ''will oonu; ana considerable -.ni.'prise. If all tlu; other denominations present ��������� i ~i.mi]f\\V -how]ttr������ r.i.r-t'ii))}\\- pve.-i'\"- ern Canada has a whole lot of church ineinberH who are not working at it, an the Having goes. ()ne of very many citi/ciiK who agree with Till-; ��������� rtKViKW that Lhe lot, next thn drugstore should be ae- | ^u ^]UK quired and fitted up for the sold- I ierri' memoriul, calhi ateention to; still another desirable feature. The I f0).,-p ,,..!������������������ '���������><��������� 0\"'A.\"������ *������\"��������� *:-:r,4.,. ,,��������� 1 1 Wales will bo panning through j (Ireston eastbourid on 11 im Hper-ia! ' tram. N'11. i.iini il 1/ Ihm mIoh Im*!'*- will he v.-i-y brief, bnt with tin- rnonn- ] ment ereeted on th.- Mite, rn.-iitiono.-J ; think how eonvenient an well an ��������� ���������intiii'-iiMy litLin;.*\" for the fi-hii*'. iv 111 ii 111 1 ���������'.' i*\" 1 i 1' I 1 1 ri'! j.'.i 11 11 i 1 1 im 11 i-i ���������,!'...���������.! '���������*'.'! V' '.I'' <\"'|\"''T'U' i':t 'i/'ili'\" i 1 the 1111 veiling eerernotiieil The Cranbrook district no.w has a returned soldier road foreman in Oliver Bristow, who has just been named for that position. Cranbrook Methodists are back at the summer school game again, this year, at Green Bay, and covering a fr.Ti������r*\\='*������ro.a1j**<3 i-*t.*>**r������5/*\\rl x. wm ve\"- vt >!.! I If/, llll.i llrlll lll'llll, i r (j; j(.|-!l|/'/' I'VfW'fl :,��������������������������� mill I'.'lVf ei|i,\" li>I.i be had HPfpl|p?������PIV i|iiite e(*iui|ii '.Shamrock' (H iiillli'l:.. ������JJ MmS. h Q CLP C^Q \"*^, ~ir*^\\-\\-\\^1L& & CO., Urt. If you aire needing now is usss i.ii������ss 1.0 wX&y We have just unloaded a car of these at Creston nyon Oil? mm. uompan LIMITED ansfer, Liverv and Feed Stables Sleighs and Cutters. Single and Double Harness and Supplies Several Sets of Second-Hand Harness Coal and Wood J?or Sale. a S Sirdar Ave. A recent shipment of the above���������useful, economical and. long-wearing goods��������� ��������� ��������� contain ��������� ��������� Plain and Fluted Kettles at $4.50, 5.50 Double Boilers $2.75 Sauce Pans, with lids $2.00, 2.25 London Kettles and lids $2.25 Preserving Kettles ,. $3,75 to G.25 Bread or Cake Pans, oblong, each $1/00 Syrup Jugs $1.50 Percolators .3.25 Large Mugs ���������;...:��������� 75 Tea Strainers..... 25 Individual Collapsible Cups 25 Pudding Pans 75, 85, 1.00 Combination Sets of live pieces 4.50 2 1 \"%.>*������lllriww<|iiiiailii MiMmm-Wm~'l<*'iM������iMB-^ sKV/ix-isrsaiB\" TME C5EEST0H fv: mniiiiimi���������iia win ��������� r~ **��������� A /; fl ' ���������*���������-\" i \"*-/* jj4..V> *>*'* -Jiy; T. ���������- \" , ������������������\"������������������!' '���������'*;! fi?: ������\\J. **..'- *��������������������������� ��������� V\" . - ���������-0|$.;���������&$������������$��������� War Savings Stamp which you cas ^^.rvjgr|^(>i^|5i^s������.-. -^odjAsr.. fQ-c* --a. ��������� f*ra.ctio������ over $4.0-3 jfec Dcmini^'Cf Canada is pledged to pay you $5.00 in 1924. If you cannot make an outlay of $4*80 at one tins^sccunralate sixteen 25-cent Tiinp ^eamps and exchange them for a $4.00 War Savings Stamp. l|uii uiuior ������. ro������i-ipp>i.. .���������!.... ��������� Anminl -rrf.-i-.lnir ix-nnt*- j'-^.j \\.ZZ~~ ������nanumbers ri.nn-<><\"; priority for e.-itult- Ziuiiux ..>������...-..,. onjci-i.vviicrii inuy form AHHo.-lutloiiB for ritiigo nuuinuo- tn-:nt. \"rrce, or partl.'.lly r;..������;. ix-imiin ��������� ill .....HI .., ppp.l.lr.ll. i.| I luVflUfl!, UU srk������m ��������� \\\\^MZmV%m4- S-I������*P������ ma-xS am40-M4.tz,a,a.������ & a&tt. Local Raspberries In the Alice Siding section more especially growers have had trouble this year with cane blight on the rasp- berry bnshes. The McMurtrie ranch yvani quite saverely hit in this respect. In endeavoring to get at the root of the trouble Mr. McMurtrie took the ���������matter np with the horticultural authorities both at Victoria and Ottawa, and we feel sure that the letters below which were exchanged will be of quite general interest locally. Ih reply to a letter describing the trouble as fully and ifet^li*if4^*i^'*a% a man on the spot can do so by correspondence. J. W. Eastham, the provincial plant pathologist, writes as follows: The form which winter injury takes will depend considerably on the nature of the conditions, as a number of different factors enter into what we commonly call \"winter-injury.\" Much of what we put down as this in the Lower Mainland is really more due to water-logging of the soil caused by the hardpan coming to the surface and foi ming pockets, the roots being water-logged are aimpiv drowned out. Our wet season being of course the winter one, we are liable to put this down under the general heading of winte-in- jury. The injury, however, is much increased by low temperatures at this time. Bushes in ihis condition are much more liable to suffer even in a comparatively mild winter. I have seen a good many cases where the canes have leafed out and borne fruit and then died as the fruit was developing, the fact being that the roots were not killed outright but injured to such a degree that they could not supply the sap necessary for the development of tho fruit, and the ���������whole cane died under the strain. Cane-blight is n fungus disease and when once established in a plantation .affects the young canes each season, being carried over on to these and showing its most destructive results GUAR^A-GAmST firs:. One Reason\"Why: Dry Creeks, Poor������c;fops^ when the crop is developing. There is ���������little that can be done except thorough pruning out of the old canes and destruction of them as soon as the fruit has been picked. Cut them down below the level of the ground if possible as the fungus can continue growing on the old' stubs; also gather up and burn any fragments of canes lying about as they can harbour the -disease. As long as you keep the canes right otherwise, it does not seem that it will prove a limiting factor in raspberry culture. I have not experience with regard to the King variety, but I know there is quite a difference in susceptibility even amongst other varieties. When attention was called to the trouble the Dominion authorities at Ottawa turned the matter oyer to the botany division of the experimental fsrm work near that city, *asd fo!!o*i**\"= Soasnoebi\" ing is the letter the head of that uepaitmeut writes on the subject: The disease which you describe as occuring on. your raspbearies looks yery mueh like cane blight. The -disease principally affects the fruiting canes, which all of a sudden wilt frcsis the top downwards and dry up.' New- canes are frequently killed as-'tHey- are produced. The infection is carried on the stumps of cut-off canes where it spreads into the parts below ground, communicating the disease ta the young canes. Nearly all varieties,are susceptibiev li^is said tisat Columbiana is mbre resistant than any in New York Stalfe.\"' -'���������������������������\" \"'/',... The District Horticulturist aid Vised yoh quite correctly as to the immediate destruction of the infected canes. Likewise all dead fragments should be carefully renioyed and burned. How your. 'infection originated is difficult to tell from your information. The disease is generally disseminated through infected nursery stock. Once established- it spreads from plant to .^W. ISiy^B is ho krio ������ n cm.- curejfor i-~. pocTtets, so in spite of a pretty good syttem of tiie drainage, many roots are kept too wet and then kill out or die in the spring; others that are weak* ened are finished off by the cane-blight which then appears to anyone who has not examined the other conditions as being the right cause. This was m own impression from specimens sent in until I had an opportunity of further study of the other conditions. ''mmPn~m\\Vrm LAM^-^il\" NOTARY PUB-..*-*' INSURANGE ��������� REAL. ESTATE OEAimER IN OOAlm _ ���������. . jja# T^0TG=T*f B V)C B W VUI ������ALUriW to ten . p tl'* ,., Il4-it-.pl. a BOU������lliinS Iii order to conserve moisture to the best advaht.-igoland must be full ploughed, and tho di-e|>t-*i* Uic l-cller. Tliib work cannot be attended to too soon either. CoiiiiiienrtiiK July l;*>lh I will ,. , , ^,.. . x .. 44/ 44.14.1, l.U.I IUC plough in-? of small or lurtj-o U.I--I.H with the now (*Uv.-laii-l tractor. Two furrow plough. All work iloii.- in lhe order it ih i .p... . . UIH.KIII, P. 'MIIIU'TP iiiiiui- Known ol) njijilication. LftJ U ������hi������8fcnii _ f!racfnn These are mostly for >bhe ladies, with a few attractive offerings for the girls and the boys. We especially invite ybur inspection of these. When you get acquainted with the quality of these lines, along with the price you will freely admit their all-round excellence. Some of the outstandingly desirable offerings follow: Ladies' House Dresses 1.75 to 3.50 Girls* Dresaeb, 1.25 and 2.00 Children's Rompers, 1.00 to 1.75 Ladies' Drill Skirts all sizes, 3.50 v fLadios' Pique Skirts all hi/or, 3.50 Ladies' Liu en Undorskirts, 1.50 Ladies' Middys, l.tft to $2.00 Girls' Middys, 1.00 to 2.00 Boys' 2-pieoe Wash .Suits 1.75 Boys' 1 pieco Wash Suita 1.C0 Ladies' All-Ovor Apron's, 1.25 An early solootion ih advisable. Goods of this xuality at the prices shown are not likely to remain- lonjjj in our Htorc. -See \"hem to-Uayjwiule thoy *n*o at their best. piauv* but the ujpiVfiotih'g of plants, their des- tiructiBh^-������b'iii'':i~~~,vti-,g as soon as possible a rievif j^ahtafcion, using thorough ly sound canes; Under no circumstances \"should'-these be plahted on ��������� land where 'the disease had been previously. E. C. Hunt, the local provincial horticulturist.,' made a personal inspection oi the raspberry area and at once placed his views and observations on the'trouble also before Mr. Basth.int, and to Mr..' Hunt the plant espert at the coast writes as below : There is a certain amount of cane- blight on the raspberry canes. In fact, we have quite a little of this blight in the nioistor sections of the country. I am inclined to think, however, that the disease itself is not the most important cause of the loss in plantations ���������where it occurs. I have recently been making a rather careful investication of some plantations in the Fraser Valley where cane blight was apparently becoming an exceedingly serious factor in the culture of this crop. I havo found, however, that its worst effects are produced on plants that have been weakened through poor under drain- ago and stagnate water combined with winter injury. In tho plantations that I am speaking of there is a hard pan of yery irregular form which oft- uu conies olo.it\". to the .surface forinuig We are distributors for the Ha Shock k r ,> Put oh for $25 and guaranteed to satisfy and not to break���������or money refunded. xi you want a car to woi*k for you, buy a Ford. If you want to work to keep up a car, buy something else. Oreston Auto & Supply R.S.Bevan COMPANY Manager T~~\\* 1 ���������' THE BANK'S POSITION Afl at 30th November, 19x8 Paid-up Capital . *> - $15,000,000 Reserve Fund - Loans * Deposits .... Total Assets . ��������� ��������� ��������� 15,000,000 249,151,984 353,158,816 440,310,703 ,*T3 0��������� vA P..\".. II i'n i ���������'* L���������r'iiii \\~I7^I ��������������� *rj* \"������PJ������������*4j>Pj tl *Ut li UU ������������.��������������������� ���������,\"x.L X���������L x��������� 70. I .... ,4 . n i ���������'* ,... ���������,. iMtP���������A I0T���������0X THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE it m m mk ���������ZS-J i tr* i������p.f..-,..i.,a,.Q,l^,^4Mi������������������pir-i*-4H������*^|i f I IfsTF^- TA T!4iQS f 1 (LI-UIL.i^ IV miu! I . SAYS CORNS LIFT j RIGHT OUT NOW s ..*������*..0������.9i.Q..0mm^ti*~&*0....������t.m..900..t..t..0\"0'0..*..0..0.i. You reckless men aud women Avho arc pestered with corns and who have at least once a week invited an awful death from lockjaw or blood poison are now told by a Cincinnati authority to use a drug called freezone, which, thc moment a few drops are applied to any corn, thc soreness is relieved and soon the entire corn, root and .all, lifts out with thc lingers. It is a sticky ether compound which dries the moment it is applied and simply shrivels thc corn without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. It is claimed that a quarter of an ounce of freezone will cost very little at any of the drug stores, but is sufficient to rid one's feet of every hard or spit corn or callus. You are further warned that cutting at a corn is a suicidal habit. them both extremely, wondered if perhaps he ought not to state frank- ly_his own position in life. Had uic opportunity offered, he might have done so, with perhaps thc infornia-\" tion that thc company owed its present great success to the mechaiiical inventions of his father, but that, owing to this parent's lack of business ability, he, Ruggles, had been obliged to begin with a subordinate position and to work his way up. But as neither lady showed thc slightest curiosity in regard to his personal affairs���������they fearing that possibly he might be \"in trade\" and preferring to accept him on his obvious merits��������� Ruggles held his peace. For since his meeting with Ruth Downing, ambition had seized his soul, to shake it as the swift current of thc Marne shakes a reed. (To Be Continued.) Had a Very Bad Attack ���������\"���������*���������-*. Dowei IT WAS CURED BY DR. FOWLER'S Extract Of Wild Strawberry who .paid the tram or bus fares, for the coffee that thcy sipped in front of some cafe, or for an occasional text book. Lorenz had a habit of setting out with no money in his pockets. But Rugglcs did not object. It is doubtful if he even noticed this peculiarity on the part of his fellow- student. Prohibition to Stand in U.S. Washington.���������With all evidence from both sides in, little hope was held out that the senate would modify thc strict provisions of thc house prohibition bill. LEMON JU!CE !S FRECKLE REMOVER Girls! Make This Cheap Beauty Lotion to Clear and Whiten Your Skin Squeeze the juice of two lemons Any onc suffering from bowel com������ plaints such as diarrhoea, dysentery, colic, cramps and pains in the stomach, summer complaint, etc.,\" will find th*at Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry will give quicker and more permanent, relief-than any other remedy on the market today. This old tried and proven medicina has been on the market for the past 74 ycars. You don't experiment when you buy it. Surely thc test of time proves this. Mrs. Daniel Hartwick, Mountain Grove, Ont, writes: \"I used Dri- Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry and have found that it is a good remedy. When my little girl was 2% years old she had a very bad attack of bowel complaint. Nothing prescrib-. ed by the doctor seemed to do her any good. She got worse, ui\"ktil -ji*-������ thought wc would lose her. I got a bottle of 'Dr. Fowler's,' and she soon found relief. Everyone who has children should not be without it in their home. Price 35 cents a bottle; put up only by The T. Milbiirn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Lorenz, however, proved an excel-',into a bottle containing three ounces lent teacher, and Rugglcs made ra pid progress. Thc conversations of the two were alternately in English and German, with French to fall back upon when either was at a loss. In thc course of this association Rugglcs confided to Lorenz his iriotive for mastering the German tongue as quickly as possible, at which the Austrian asked a-few pertinent questions in regard to Rugglcs's reasons for being so sure that he stood in the direct line of promotion. On hearing thc situation explained with the buoyant optimism, characteristic of his comrade, Lorenz became gloomily distrait for several minutes. Following this period of distraction, he returned to his English with increased application. The next day hc made himself disliked in the store by reason of certain fawning assiduities direct of orchard white, shake well, and you havc a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion beautifier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sw-cetly fragrant lotion into the face,' neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear, and how clear, soft and while the skin becomes* Yes! It is harmless. \"Khaki College\" Doing Valuable Work ot r-rc-s grcat organizers, from St. Peter tojed toward Durand, who, however n r 5 *���������*, r.ot c 1 \". .���������\".Iii:.*\": the faithful- h.is own service, but r before li im, and ��������� application for thc: ���������.e ������������������.���������--.\".��������� \"Vimim retail '.'.c;'. hc stated that .hi- French lanp,'uage 1 frra. :.* - ic;.l purposes .1 ��������� .. pardonable cx- '.l.a'. ..a-.iny.',' a naiu- :���������-;. -:. lie hoped to be ':; ..- ���������J.JJr h W iill G\"'\"> ���������'���������:' -.'��������� ..:���������\"'. 10:1-.; iu: Carnegie (which is a long cry), have been endowed with this genius. A caireful selection of bishops with a talent on the part of the said bishops for selecting other foremen, who may in turn bc able to distinguish thc skilled workman able to weld souls or iron, may be productive of tremendous results, always provided that thc material is properly selected. Then, as though thc star of Rugglcs's fortunes was at last to shine bright and clear through thc dissipating mists of mediocrity, there came a change in thc personnel of thc establishment which * seemed to thc boy as though ordained by Providence to further his interests, while at thc same time proving of benefit to others. Ruggles's principal chum and particular friend had been a I young man of his own age, a fellow ) salesman named Simon Strclctski, I who was a French Hebrew with a 1 decided talent for painting. On Sun- [days and holiday*', Rugglcs and Strc- V\"rA 1.1 i<* I lelsl-.i had frequently made short j tours on their bicycles to different diiVi . pin nrrsquf-. points in the environs of <������������������?��������� n J I'aris, w 11 erf, after their picnic lun- ���������!<������������������'-���������'i-in-on niid.-'i- the tree*- on the bank i 'Ji.i ������������������ j of.. .th.-. Seine, St relet si-i would make f hi- ! ��������� h.. l-ming little studies and sketches .niM.iov vim 11 ne was now bcn'iiuiing to / hi j und a -.owl market. Thus enconrag- '.;.i 11;. I - d, Ir: I'esi.Mied his position with the ;'��������� ��������� . ' '.ii.o.in y to devoli\" liiuis-.il\" entirely '.1 ' ilu ���������j.iinUii-'', and hi*, place was filled -.-. .. . ' i.y a i.iM, j.',,iuiit Viennese, silent and Im ?'.].. il:.- good French. I Lilian, besides his n;i- o|\" i-OUI'.e, but wllOSe ���������Ii.iiii- .11 ii'. f.-.r ' l'-\"l, v. Ii and 1 ��������� 1 j/11 ��������� ���������, r.i Li ! Kiii. appeared to accept these attentions as his natural due, and rendered for the first time by one who was sufficiently intelligent to understand the relative positions between manager and salesman. Thereafter he patronized Lorenz, but favored him. If Lorenz sent a pncuniatiquc to say that he was laid np with a sore throat Durand had been lenient in the extreme. When, on the contrary. Simon Streletski had got a bad spill on his bicycle and hurt his knee, Durand had been, as the pretty French typewriter (who loathed him with reason), declared: \"Tout cc qu'il y a dc mediant.\" Miss Challand had asked Ruggles to call, and Rugglcs had done so, to find the two ladies installed in a tiny studio apartment on the gardens of thc Luxembourg. He had already discovered, while lunching with them in their little hotel on the Marne, that thcy were very poor in this world's goods, for Miss Challand had mentioned their circumstances with the same indifference that one might use in speaking of a spell of bad weather. But it had been immediately evident to Ru('r1c-s, who had made, a considerable, study of human nature -��������� as seen ovor the top of his shoe-horn��������� that his new friend-* were ladies of bii th and distinction whose poverty was in no way commensurate with their brcediiiK and connections. Miss. Challand was the niece of a lord bishop, and Darthea was the orphan daughter of the laic. Captain West- brooke, of Ihe I'ritish army. Rugf-drs, who liked and respected There Is Only One 4T--.-.1.- v-JLLiy System Adopted Is that Tutorial Classes Winnipeg, Man.���������Thc \"Khaki College\" in connection with the University of Manitoba is doing valuable- reconstruction work. At present there are 113 returned men taking the courses who would, in all probability, have thought it hopeless to go oa with their education if it had been necessary to go back to high school or to resume at the university without this opportunity to gain time. Thnycr If Yc*u Don't See the \"Bayer Cross\" on the Tablets, Refuse Them��������� They Are Not Aspirin at AH li m 1 mi 1111 Mill, j ,1 a 1 11 '.'���������.ue was. i a'','-r to this tuii|Oie, h'ug- I 4 I I I I I I I'.' .mil * - I j.i/. . , , ., ��������� * I < .1 thai .hii h the op lliey Aus -Tniiw* of|. Res!*, Hf-ili WtXttsWf*, With,*!\", K���������*������������������*-'������ your Iv/en oo i &*2������~\\-mfr~--L\\ 'z!rf'Z' .*\"Y* .'.������������������?���������,���������,������������������.*��������� ������������������ fr*J0\\tfxtr7.xLJr;i^A0,.0^r-- .^... ..... , \" ...'*, .*\" , '. .7 ���������pfcuC,,. '���������^Tjrii-'*/.'- i'miti ,f '-\"ore. It ���������/���������'.-I'-ii, lnl!;������ni������������.4l or <.r.inulat< d, ..;.:: !.'.:;]:,': \",\"���������\",'.. .',jU.-. f' r '.:.'...:*>,: /'.���������!;i!' /'.' 'ill I -T-* lf'j-'l *!T H ������ . H *������ 4 MM O I I , ���������.���������Jit-111 ill a-uiuu x/itz$ i, pom' ��������� ,1 in i aiid'h -, : '������������������'.,��������� : ,��������� i\" it < I li I I ('.I | | 1 I 4 I I , miie ami oi oi i mlem <��������� I ' ' I I I > | ,, . ' I . I.!... P.i- < *- .. \\mWmm. wrj-BHiw-r-t ��������� w%mr~m^~mm^m 0^tS���������*~\\m~0i^400Mtmmd^^m^mlltmyjM Your druggist gladly will give you the genuine \"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin\" because genuine Aspirin now is made by Canadians and owned by a Canadian Company. There _ is not a cent's worth of German interest in Aspirin, all rights being purchased from the U.S. Government. During the war, acid imitations were sold as Aspirin in pill boxes and various other container*-. But now you can get genuine Aspirin, plainly stamped with thc safety. \"Bayer Cross,\"���������Aspirin proved safe by million!- for Headache, Toothache, liar- ache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tables, also larger \"Bayer\" packages. Aspirin is the trade mark, registered in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidi'stei- of Salicylic- acid. Berlin People Urged To Show Restraint Bd ^ial-r*^ It**!������-11.l.iJli .,im ' '.\"'���������'Btf'*1' Has Ruined Both Rich and Poor If communism in Hungary has succeeded in put ting the working classcn on top and thc moneyed and intellectual classes underneath, it niinht not be without its appeal. Bui it has done none of those things. It has ruined tho rich, of course, bnt it has ruined the poor alon-j* with Ihein. The man who was poor linds hini- -,ili poi.iei\" and with no hope of bettering himself. To the youlli in love whose salary ' ~r\\ . 1 ��������� ��������� P.O. ,ii ., ) .. liU.. .11: I'.l,' IM.O'I M^H III\" il' *> like a ui j-'him \"ire, And Not Allow Themselves to Incensed By Foreign Soldiers London, F.ng.���������A German wireless message states that a reward of 10,000 marks has been offered for information leading to thc arrest of the individual who killed a French soldier in Fricdrichstrasso, and Berlin paper* call upon thc people to exercise restraint and not allow themselves to be incensed by provocative acts of foreign soldiers. At thc -same time French soldiers arc advised not to walk in Fricdrich- strasse at night. Thc papers further state, that no lrouble, has been caused by American and English soldiers, who show more restraint than the French. A speech made at a banquet ia called a toast because of the dryness thereof. W. N. IT. 12/4 r.H������.BREM NF\"*-!*. nAT 8patitti������jv doesn't citrcbed-wettinr* ���������-the trouble in due to weakness of the internal organs. My r,uccc.*s- ���������ftil \"lome treatment will be found helpful. Send no money, but \"*'**' ���������������������������������- IW.. .'..,*, . -���������--, ti-���������Hi-.J \"-.\"IB. ���������?*���������*. coi.--t.11y r.ncc(.-:.rSul fo** adults troubled with -urinary difllcuUicii* jail3. tn. ������~mm-n~, vv��������� -ic ttiniu'-i.pjii,, <...*. iJ^ii^-ft\"^iy*jMS*.lfi^^)WN.ilWv������k.������*tJu������iB,.n, ,iL^~u���������^,iL.. ttuU*, )UL 'j~A..tMaliMJi.. JiAsi-is-aii!*!*-^ ���������*~>������-������������������*-**\".pWli<������������^^ ^���������SJi'^if'^iiiifT^' \"***********4T***********************f**********WH i. SS������ REVIEW, CBEST02r# ���������a I British Building AUTO SOD Ura^infT ��������� ���������*��������� msrm \"*��������� mmm **��������� m^ fv na-**- ��������� . ^kr m&- ���������mr a ������������������ m ������m^& V o A Special Dressing-Adapted For Automobile Tops This dressing is prepared from a combination of essential oils and gums, so blended as to impart a high gloss to the top that is soft and pliable, so that it may be folded tip without danger of the finish cracking or chipping. Once tried always used. DOMESTIC SPECIALTY CO., Ltd. . HAMILTON, CANADA ! r Beat Seville Orange Ma.rrn.a.lad*e All Orange and Sugar��������� No camouflage.. Boiled wiih care in SileerParu. ASK YOUR QROCER POR IT. G!k antic isirlgible One That Will Carry Equipment of Six Airplanes Washington.���������Word reached thc air experts of the United States government that the British government has begun the construction of the largest dirigible that has yet bi-n undertaken in the world, one that will carry an equipment of six airplanes Providing Recreation Facilities Realising the necessity of providing citizens and especially children, with proper recreation facilities, the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, plans to spend this year $209,469 on these operations. Approximately $119,511 will be spent for park purposes and probably $1,500 will be set aside for band concerts in the parks. In addition $62,962 will be spent on baths, or $17,000 more than last year. A.n appropriation of $26,996 is planned for thc playgrounds. Winnipeg possesses some of the most beautiful parks to be found anywhere in a city of its size. ���������5 /fjfjTL^Ss rr=r\\ -JJmtSSSSd IS ~*\\ WORKING AFTER SIXTY? ������ You surely must if you don't save when you are 5 young. An Excelsior Endowment is the best way. 5 Write for pamplet today 3 mmm, THE EXCELSIOR LIFE LNSURANCE CO. i iJmW\". -\" WINNIPEG SASKATOON EDMONTON VANCOUVER S Don't Experiment Be A Moody User Keep Your Land Clean Write for,Full Information Regarding Xvioody Separators Grain ] Army Deserting Bela Kun Strangling Back From Fronts With Lack of Discipline Paris.���������Dispatches from Budapest indicate ihat general demoralization has struck Bela Kim's army, which is straggling back from the different fronts with utter lack of discipline. The breakdown in the spirit of the troops is attributed to discontinuation of the righting against the Czechs and the Rumanians in consequence of an armistice, and to thc hasty increase of the well-drilled loyal army of 60,000 to more than 125,000 men. For Sprains and Bruises. ��������� There is nothing better for sprains and contusions than ZE>x- Thomas' Eclectric Oil. It will reduce thc swelling that follows a sprain, will cool the'inflam-. ed flesh and draw the pain as if by magic. It will take thc .iche out of a bruise and prevent the flesh from discoloring. It seems as if there was rnagic in it, so speedily docs the injury disappear under treatment. Quality of French Beer A soldier was telling his friends of his experiences out m x-rancc, sir-a amorig other things they discussed was the difference between the beers of the respective countries. \"Well,\" said the soldier at last, \"my idea is that drinking one of those Frcnchy beers is about like kissing your sister.\" Germany Must Start Work Repairing France Must Introduce Measures for Compulsory Work, if Necessary Berlin. ��������� Allied ^ representatives have told the German delegates at Versailles, it is reported here in government circles, that Germany must be prepared to introduce measures for compulsory work, if necessary. This, it was said, was intended as a means of bringing about prompt execution of the reparation work in northern France, utilizing troops Jir-d a half million civilian laborers.. Officers here said the allied conferences on this subject were conducted in a friendly spirit. These oflicials agreed that Germany has a problem in her labor troubles. I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. -n~^c.x t :-,: .-.-.x (tC/i X ly>lty un 4-liiiiiiCiiL. ^.j-t. MOISE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe, Que. Write For CasI or Time Price Separates the weed seeds from the grain, and bags them separately. , cleaned ready for elevator or for seed, and no dockage at elevator. A separa- j tor guaranteed to do good work in aii kinds of grain, threshing thc grain clean from the head, putting it in the bin, not i������ the straw pile. A machine that has stood the test of lime. Over 20,000 in use in Western Canada. Power Sequir������d: No. 6 A. 2-4-32, with hand-feed attachments aad stra-w carrier, requires 9 H.P. Engine, No. 6 A. 24-32, with hand-feed attachments and blower, require* 10 H.P. Engine. No. 6 A. 24-32 Moody Self-Feeder and blower, requires 14.H.P. En-fine. New 1919 model, No. 2-30-38, with hand-feed attachments and blower, requires 14 H.P. Engine. New Model, 1919, No. 2-30-38, with Moody Self-Feeder and Blower, requires 16-18 H.P. Engine. If you do not have an engine, secure prices on our 10 and 14 H.P. Victor Engine, made for Moody Separators, or our Parrett Tractors. If you have a Fordson Tractor, or a 10-20 Tractor, you havc just the right power. The New Home Machinery Francoeur Bros., Mitchell Hardware Company, Limited,- Camrose and Edmonton, Company, Limited, Saskatoon. Sask. Alberta Brandon, Man. Judge (severely): \"How can you be so mean as to swindle people who put confidence in you?\" Prisoner: \"Well, your honor, they are the only sort that you can swindle.\" - ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE 110 \"University Ave., Toronto, Canada Under the Ontario Department of Agriculture- Affiliated With the University of Toronto Session Begin* Wednesday, October 1st, 1919. Write for Calandar Containing Full Information *' \"~\" C. D. McGILVRAY, M.D.V., PRINCIPAL Saskatchewan Land Inquiries ER/ He: \"I dreamt I proposed pretty girl last night.'* She: \"Go on. What did I say?\" to a The Man With Asthma almost longs for death to end his suffering. He sees ahead only years of endless torment with intervals of rest which are themselves fraught with never ceasing fear of renewed attacks. Let him turn to Dr. J. D. Kcllogg's Asthma Remedy and know what complete relief it can give. Let him but use it faithfully and he will find his asthma a thing of the past. Cholera infantum is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. .It is a trouble that comes on suddenly, especially during the summer months, and unless prompt action is taken little one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets are an ideal medicine in warding off this trouble. They regulate the bowels and sweeten the^ stomach and thus prevent all the\" dreaded summer complaints. They are an absolutely safe medicine, being guaranteed by a government analyst to contain no opiates or narcotics or\" other harmful drugs. They cannot possibly do harm���������they always do pood. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers, or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. MtB*. jvser. E*****������ 53 ������7 B������MB\"*' IfNAll miKi JltNT TREAT I HIS LEGEND ON THE Tiii' IS ft GOVERNMENT GUARANTEE Of PURITY. Decree Issued On Rule In Tripoli Giving to the Natives Equai Kights With Italians Washington, District of Columbia. ���������Thc Italian government has promulgated a decree giving to the natives of Tripoli equal rights with Italians, while maintaining their special rig his and religious and social customs. Thc decree also gives reasonable administrative autonomy, notably by means of a small local parliament, deliberative and elected, side by side with the governor and composed of citizens of all religions. This parliament has full powers with regard to local laws, direct taxation and administrative provisions. i A government council, presided, ovcr by the governor and made up of government officials, and members eh.cu-d by llic local parliament, expresses its opinion as lo the choice of officials, which the governor appoints direct to the post of regional commissioner, delegate foi a locality and district agent. Deliberative and elective councils help these officials in the administration of regions, localities and districts. The municipal auilioiiiie.s also p.'oiii|>ii.->c i cjuc-pciila lives of thc population. A!embers of all religions arc to have a notable part in thc administration ul jllMii'O. When a girl thinks a young n.an is almost good enough for her, she is sure to think he is loo good for any other girl. Saskatchewan Land Settlement Association Doing Good Work Regina, Sask.���������Much advertising is being given this province in the \"United States as the result of the work of the Saskatchewan Land Settlement Association, formed at the instigation of the Dominion Department of Immigration recently for thc purpose of handling inquiries concerning farm lands received by the offices of the Canadian immigration authorities in the United States. During the past month 6,000 letters have been received by the association and distributed among the members, who under the provisions of the bylaws must answer the inquirers fully. From the nature of the letters received it is stated by the secretary of the association that conditions in this province are quite, imperfectly understood in thc United States. General Allenby Honored London.���������General H. E. Allenby, commander of the British forres ia Palestine that took Jerusalem ia 1917, is one of a large number of British officers awarded the United States Distinguished Service Medal, according to a list published in the official gazette. A small man's shadow is just as black as that of a great man. For years Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator has ranked as the most effective preparation manufactured, and it always maintains its reputation. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application* a������ they cannot reach 'tlie diseased portion of the ear. There 'tx only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, and that is by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICIN\"S acts threujrh the Blood on the Mucoun Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness fa caused by aa inflamed condition of the mucous lining- of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumDiinsr sound or _ imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, \"Deafness is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to -its normal condition, hearing may lie destroyed for ever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which is an inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. AH Druggists 75c Circulars free. _J F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. I-\"*** Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Salvage Hun Ships in Scapa Flow London.���������The iBritish Admiralty has placed contracts for salvage of thc German warships sunk by their crews in Scapa Flow, it was learned. It was said that \"satisfactory results\" were expected. Betting Still Under Prohibition Ottawa.���������No modification has yet been made of the ordcr-in-council prohibiting race track belling, but representations have from to time been made urging modification. Unless rescinded, thc ordcr-in-council will remain iu force till peace is formally proclaimed. This will follow ratification of the peace treaty. Don't get too swift; you can walk farther in a day than you can run. Increase Appropriation for Wounded Washington.���������Amended to provide $14,000,000 instead of $6,000,000 for the rehabilitation of wounded soldiers, sailors aud marines, thc sundry civil appropriation bill, which was vetoed by the President, was passed by ��������� senate. Do not ���������Miff et another day wlia 11 c h i n jr, HltieA* lnir, or Protrud������ in-.' inifl--. No surcloal opor. at Ion required. Dr. ChaBo'f. Olntmont will w-Uoto you nt ono* n.n-1 ao certainly euro you. eOo- a box: all dealorc, or Edinunuon. Bate*. St Co., L'inU������a, Toronto. S&mplo box tree tt you mention thi**\" papor and oncloue '.a. tttamp to pay poatajro. C-ffe ^\"*P\"**r*F**\\ l\"*^^ \"**l*4\"***p\"l **Qhi Bf *\"ft ff ^l********l********j********r ^IJJ****' rOHr-lf V-Tr*-1\\ TmP \\9\\~~XK\\ ~JP SL ~^-l~.mfi Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Dm tos: Ami has your luisbaiid had any lucid intervals, Mrs, Smith? Mr.;. Smith: 'li'a 'ad iiolhiu' except what yon ordrrf-d him, dorlor. 13^*-*. _ ���������0. Mtajp 00m. *&m) ������*U J43>u*k ~~7mm%-9~tK~m0. Wli.-n a d������ictor giver, a patient hop-* j lu- expects pay for it. ,,��������� y���������!*;\"��������� fjii^J JjUhei* | ... couffAio- rutttotix I mm���������mmitfm^ '**'^i^,*4mm^Lm*m&mm4^mimM44t^m4mmti I *,X\\lt*^4,l\"^tmf**&~-0*l\\mm,f-m I *\".i.l,.ll.L..l,..,~,.~'m.?*f ** III MirrLVuW ���������***\"- *������&. *\"-- 7.4. XXJLLi . _ ~ l,l,L0j, **���������\"** >. 'p. p.p'.vY.. rJ0-li^^ ���������*** *\" \"\"-''\"P-l |44������UJ *1 viola pj-..,^ -*���������****��������� p** j pppIttW-Ail ^'ilKUiiiUtt, IH*. \\ ^,m*to-*4x\\l2t:xxl^ lttl I Wit*-*** -aSS-a19 ^^^^^Lv-mAfM: w .:>/<*��������� I tw Sauces B ���������klNSGrNTS is pure pi'epatcu cum slai'di. delicate and nourishing, unexcelled lor all cooking purposes. It improves the texture of bread, biscuits and rolls if one-third of the flour is substituted with Benson's Corn <;f-.v^l-������ H mr-ilr/**������-������ ���������*-**'��������������� rvusli; litfht and liakey. There is a recipe for lhe most delicious Blanc Manga on the package, together with a dozen other uses. Benson*B is the be.������3t corn starch for making sauces and gravies smooth and creamy. Wfliu for booklet nf recipes nt* .���������in.m0mm mjmii^mmmHmm'mm immtixmmmmmam n04m4m-0um0i00mim������'ilir0l0m0t000H 4M.imm.ih ,.i iii^*.'\"**.'-' ',''\"''*'l''\"****'-''*-|*'*������'^ miirainrfflmwTilli .iMs������i4a-������ ji ������w mtv.tmimwdw TTrT. wm Mz p-v my mz '���������5 \"������������������ Ifc: III ���������������-' Jt. V ���������F- it . H*' I?, ir.T-. IV '? : 1 .-������������������ HZ I '-���������v. if I''' il- I JSri\" BE' lMl>HHJ \"\"P \"J\"\"--\"? ������*��������� ������������������������ss'srsntf&Ta''' tb s* v*5 p****** AxiH *Ij-Kj!'jSj8.\"oiJ5. JK/jTj \"*\" 4JK- **w f^REAM OF TARTAR? whkh ^^ is derived from grapes, has no substitute for making a baking powder of highest quality. That is the reason it is used in ���������p-r������rf-**.*r**-i pr-sssni- *~-t'-c-;**r\"���������\" ���������*-������������������-' ������������������ r*ifC3 CREAM PRE-EMINENT FOR MAKING THE FINEST AND MOST WHOLESOME FOOD ���������STANDARD FOR SIXTY YEARS .Leaves Ho Bitter Taste Local and Personal The Valley's vital statistics for July show three births, one marriage and one death. White \"Leghorn Cockerals for sale, from heavy laying sU-tun. Mrs. J. Stinson, Erickson. Mrs. C. M. Loasby of Sirdar, was a jj-uest of'Mrs. Jas. Cook a few days the fi ire part of the week. Major and Mrs. Mallandainp returned on Wednesday from a short visit with friends at Spokane. P. G. Ebbutt left on Wednesday for Winnipeg, Man., and expects to be away for some little time. Girl Wanted.���������For dining room work. Good home, and highest wages. Apply Creston Hotel, Creston. part of tho week, for a meeting of the British Columbia Iron Co., Ltd., of which he is a director. Earl Trotter, a resident of Creston a few years ago, with his father, Wm. Trotter, is spending a few days with Creston friends this week, And is hoping to locate a job for*the'wint*er. Geo. Hendren, who has the contract for the new High School building, already has the frame work started, and so far the weather has heen quite ideal for an on-time finish of the work, Prairie stockmen in quest of hay are already commencing to arrive. T. J. Noble and D. E. Bedford of Morley, Alta.,'spending the week-end investigating feed conditions in these parts. the application of E. C. Smith for the position of principal of the. Creston school this year. He^will draw $100 a month���������the same stipend as 'is now paid the yicc-principal. This year the yaluo of the. strawberry crop is placed at $55,000. According to the board of Trade figures for 191-1 the. A alley's entire fruit-arid and vegetable yield only brought in $57,000. Since the list of contributors-to the Soldiers Memorial was published donations totalling $30 have been added . to the list. The amount of caah paid in A dance is a mi mi need for Labor ; however, is comparatively small, a Day evening, Mondav, Sept. 1st. in j matter of less than $235 Thi* Auditorium. Full particulars later. Mrs. Sanderson of Moose Jaw, Sask. arriyed on Friday last on a visit, to her sister, Mrs. F, H. Jackson. Mrs. Nuggs and children of Mac- U-od. Alta., arrived on Thursday la*-t on a visit to Mrs. J. H. Fainter. Father D*'Miu.v\"as announces that he ' will hr- at Holy Cius.- Church.Creston, on Sunday. Ant**,-I '.-th, to givim the mission. L'\">:-T~ ...���������t wi-er- bridge. Mis-. Klla isl ant to I: for t lie pa*-' Wi.vi'Vi heir saddle- blanket��������� 'i'.pi.ii i.siifhand Coat river I.e.w.aii. C. Olson, Creston. Li-'.iny. who ha* i-trii.i*!'-:- Kuril- three nioiitli*-., heen ass- at Kaslo. returned hoiije Moinl.-.v. S.m'.i: uiont h M n.rii t *������w Foi.. ( loli'st eiu. Also !-.i\\- o.-iri .i i-i-.-i'y , ;*, 111'i io;- , :i<- l \\\\. S,ul-ll*-c, Wynndel. 1'mi; S \\ \".\"���������: ��������������������������� A'icker baby :*-'!o. \\ |..,, ['\".ili-on ,\\ in'i.'i ol,i, point, nearly new, niclurlin year old r old ..If, earria-j,!-. di;i ni' net ' \\'j. I'l'i:- Col. Lister, who is in charge of Land Settlement Boaid effort at Canyon City, is the* newest auto owner. Creston Auto & Supplv Co. this week got him in a 1010 Ford with the very latest, in starting and lighting features. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Moore were Nelson visitors on Monday, getting together equipment for a camping party which (hey will be in charge of, and which will pitch their tents at Cultus ('reek. ft. !���������'. I'ai-kiu.-ii'i and I<\". Wall of Calgary, Alta., were visitors in town the lilt er nart of lhe week, looking for ranch properties, each purchasing a ��������� en acre tract of the J. J. Grady holdings at Wynndel. i*i:vii'w orn fi' ��������� ini-'. '.ri 10. Kin[iiiri .1. T. Browning, Nelson's I'.N.YV.M 1*. oll'eer, was a ,-', .','.��������� : i > i .''I ii'i a 1 Wi r i 111 -s of day*- 1 lie 'at lei- part A, 11. (ii'i'i'ii, lln1 N'-i.piin mii vi-jur, was in (own t bi- wi-i-k. on he -'i ei urn rc-.iiii'tit ( 'rest on ;i <-iMl'|)l'- i if t le\" week. ���������!.-.< a. I The f\".\".'s of Lvil had (be Valley putty much their mercy last Sunday. There was no church service any- wbei-f in the evening, while one house of worship was open-ling in the tnorn- '-:���������;' \",;'li ��������� lol.il all eilda III e of liilie- I'-'-M. The ol'li' ' At the August meeting of Creston Red Cross on Tuesday Miss Candy was the only member to turn in finished work, her contribution being two sets of underskirts and waists. A cash donation of $4.55 from the Women's Institute is also acknowleded. Rev. T. McCord and family, who have been holidaying at Kootenay Bay with friends from Ned-cm the past two-weeks, expect to return the end of the week. Services will be held at the usual hours of\" worship in the Presbyterian church next Sunday. A Lindley of the B.C. Fruit Market Lethbridge, Alta., arrived on Tuesday on his usual midsummer business trip to the Valley. While the prairie crops are poor in many places ho is still confident that with the, export market available apple prices will at least equal those of 1918. The weather report for July shows that month' the hottest in spots for some years back. There were three days almost in a row when 06 in the shade was recorded, and others when the mercury travelled up close to SO. The total 'rainfall for the month was under half an inch. Bert Arrowsmith arrived back on Saturday, after about eighteen months in khaki, looking pretty much the same as ever. Bill Arrowsmith and Hilton Yonng, who were on police duty in England when Bert left, constitute about lhe onlv ones of the local recruits still overseas. Land owners in lhe Valley will be interested in knowing that the provincial government proposes having a .sale of land.1' in arrearn fi r taxes this yetn���������early in October. Lands in arrears for taxes up to 1017 are to be sold Last year's sale only accounted for the arrears at the end of 1015. they are not going to show last year's size. The crop of them, however, is limited, the 1916 horticultural, suryey showing less than 350 trees of them in the whole \"Valley. The Creston Board of Trade will meet in August session on Tuesday night. A good turnout is. asked in view of much important business, including arrangements to handle the visit of the Nelson board members who will be here on fair day���������to see the exhibition, the Valley and get first information on Kootenay Flats Reclamation. The ^ season's strawberry shipping figures have now been compiled, and these indicate,that-at least 13.000 crates went out to prairie points, while another 2300 crates of them were shipped to the jam factory at Nelson. The strawberry-crop alone should bring about $55,000 into the Valley, Wynndel, of course, getting the lion's share of it. Dr. Rae, the. Bonners Ferry dentist, was a motor visitor to Creston the latter part of the week. He states that the Boundary county, Idaho, is starting in at once to spend $192,000 on road improvements and is counting on this part of B.C.. to do something in the same direction, so as* to enable tourists to make their trip into Canada via Bonners Ferry,' Porthiil and on to Creston. The building committee of the fall fair directors have chosen a stie for exhibition -main building, at a point on the other side of the present grand stand, and some necessary grading to permit of its erection Is being done this week. It will'have to be, put up inside the . quarter-mile track, but otherwise the location lends itself admirably to the other- features of the fair grounds layout. A special meeting of Creston Farmers' Institute is called for to-morrow night at 8.30 at the Auditorium, when the matter of making a donation to the agricultural association to help finance the main building will be the feature nf the gathering. The matter of this season's haying on the flats will also be discussed. When the Institute sold its trading department to the Fruit Growers Union it had a cash surplus of over $1000. W��������� E. Ditchburn of Victoria. Chief inspector of Indian agencies in B.C., has been here the past few days, along with W. J*. Smith of the proyincial department*, of lands, taking a hand in defining Indian hay and pasturage areas on the flats, and along with R. L. T. Galbraith of Fort Steele, who is in charge of the local band.^ have at last laid down definite instructions in the matter, and have deputed Indian constable Fred Ryckman to camp on the job and see that the reds live up to the bargain entered into. The August meeting of the Creston Valley Auto Association on Wednesday night had a considerable grist of correspondence to dispose of, along with the report of W. B. Embree on the recent highways association convention at Lethbridge last month. At this gathering the definite assurance was given that the transcontinental auto highway wiii be built through the Grows Nest Pass, but as yet there is nothing definite as to when work will start on those parts of the present roads comprising the route to put them in first class shape for such traffic. A roads committee composed of S. A. Speers, J. F. Rose and Geo. Johnson was named to interview.road foreman, J. D. Moore, who was in town, on highway improvements, and the night of meeting was changed to the first Thursday of each month. *^*irii������i ir-i^ a This hot weather particular- ate v littie extra variety to the FOR SALE OR RENT For sale or rent for term of years 10-acre block, about four acres cleared and under cultivation, orchard fast coming into bearing. One of the best sm-ill fruit propositions in the Valley. Plenty of moisture. Inspection invited. Also have for sale good grade Holstein cow and grade Holstein-Jersey heifer���������cow due to freshen about the end of October. One pony, rubber tyred buggy, harness, robe, etc. Address owner, W. G. Birney, Erickson, B.C. ly your digestion will appreciate T3 little e daily menu, For the most beneficial results it is essential that the change should be at breakfast thus allowing of the entire day to edjoy the satisfaction of a sane dietic diversion. Among the several good things we have to offer we believe nothing is quite as appetizing as Marmalade, and our customers tell us that in WATER NOTICE DIVERSION AND USE Take notice that I, Robert Leslie Thomas Galbraith, Indian Agent, whose address is Fort Steele, B.C., will apply for a license to take and use for irrigation purposes 25 Miners inches of water out of China (hip Creek, which rises in Block 21, S.T.L. 20502, running through the Lower Kootenay Reserve, and about one and a half miles south of the Indian village. The water will be diverted-from the stream about 300 feet east of the Reserve boundary, and will be used for irrigation purposes on the Reserve. This notice wns posted on the ground on the 14th day of .June, 1010 and a copy of thin notice and an application pursuant thereto and to tlie Water Act, 191.4, will be filed in tho ofllct* of the Water Recorder at Nelson, B.C, Objections to the application may Infilled with the Wafer He.corder or the Comptroller of Water Rights. Par liiunentr Buildings. Victoria, B. C, within thilly doys after the appearance of this noti(:i\\ in a local newspaper. The date os the first publication of this notice is August 8th, 1010. 11. L. T. (SA LB RAIT l-l, Indian Agent. Applicai.t. r.i*-hier'-. e (ill ill'':-, for - v 111'..' : 11 tin- *-* 1111, ii i ��������� ��������� ' olil.l J- 1 ,1) 1 i-r |: lit ige mul lhe other I he I iiipi-i ial Bunk ! \" ���������: ������������������ out in place if I In- wi'i'l'., i^ix-itiji; I'eiidi ilu' t In- new pa -'ur ina !���������: in-/ hi-- M a ''���������''/' 'v Allan mul sin 11\" very coin- i oi ii' i i ,i in-. ��������� I 111- M i-i hi ,(| I I | . i v i ii ,i (.'!��������� , i... ..!',.,:. .;..'! i!;; ' o |. I! i ��������� M'l !''' ������������������! ���������' i oi 11 '. . ���������.��������� la I Week. Geo. Hunt of Kitchener has been awarded the, contract for the mile and a half of ncwroud at Goat River Ci-osh- in,\"-. which i-< tiein;*; built I.i. elimina.to the heavy grade on the highway at ���������ha', point. This is the new* by .1 road du.ti'w.t we have the finest breakfast \"finish-up\" to be had. It comes in both the sweet and bitter flavors, made the home way with fresh, ripe California Oranges, Grape Fruit, Lemons and granulated sugar���������and nothing else. Our COFFEE is equally satisfactory, while in Breakfast Foods Ave have llum all. .jaj-a-a Better Service A V U-HOI Low Prices This is the news brought I). Moore of Kaslo, provincial Miipeiiiiteiulenti for the Kaslo Creston -/nt, its first view of the lly- Iii*.- ina-'liiuf ye terday afternoon, P. i.4 4, t, .1 jl, . llll) 4,1 Y ,, | ,, I .4 , 4 4 I , . , 1,1 4 j: . .-!. !��������� '���������- I'M\"'1, ^ le. !,,i Ween ., ! in.il.in^ I lie Hi|;-|it from Vancouver to pat lent at Hi. l-ai-i-ene In i,.pit al, Cran-j Let hhriilge, via Nelaon and Crnti- (Ireilon Women'-, I M-t.i! nie kic'Ij Wiool-:. > 111 > -e 11 ic ,-,i \\ I y pari of M a v, a i-' I ii i ii ik, pii'iaei I over town .'000 feet np 1 I; i ���������; .������������������. f! er aii a in, \".h'l! vt .\"nin me . I ������ow ii.nl l.< .in. on Tl, ii, i J.i v i if |,n I wei-I-.. ii I ii ii it 1.1 til. lie was I'i 11 lo w i I ig t he rout e mul ll.i v ���������.'.,.' ,..' ��������� ..' ,r<;.'-. ' '; ���������������������������'���������' io'\"'- I I,I lime .elf .1 . ' of Die IM',11, :|ee| pa-ii'i II)-; I Iill .1 l|*;ll IVIln i i ' O IIIOII'O \\\\ . I ... I,. ,1 . I 'el I i I I I I I I I I I I .I' f ... I ... . pi o .1 In- V.illey. Protect Your FORD with a }/i-e iii I i ei I ih reel inn. I', li. I-'.I,WuH, vv ,, a, Wi il o, , \\ I I I I ' I '' MM|' I . . I . I.I i. The (il : I o| the *,eai-nii'i-p apple clop ' ' i ' : . i i. . i. . . , i ��������� ��������� . . l I \">������������������ -i ri- in. iv 11 ie ������������������'\" '������������������������������������\"l io :,.���������.���������...il t hi - w cr!.. The c ,u i Yellow Trail*, par- Defender Thief-Proof Ford Lock T-oclvK the box and locks the casing {'.'.\\''*vi\"-.'������������������ th.\" '-\"V'.\"Iv Defies tlu-. thii'.f. Cannot, lie picked. iM'.r AIRpS Ol 1 ,s CUE AS UK -iKm .'^---.iAi^ni^'^l^^^^ii:^ ���������:-'*'-^-**tttf*,������i'*-*������-'^ ft^mmfft^^fm^ p^^,"@en, "Print Run: 1909-1983

Frequency: Weekly"@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Creston (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Creston_Review-1919-08-08"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0173635"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.0975"@en ; geo:long "-116.5130560"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Creston, B.C. : Creston Printing and Publishing Co."@en ; dcterms:rights "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 ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "Creston Review"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .