@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "a17e542b-48c0-454b-a4bc-64fa79c123d1"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2013-01-23"@en, "1912-05-02"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xenderby/items/1.0178824/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " '���������������������������\"������������������ ~?ir r������������������j^taXgsgy���������������������������^jgyv^ft^ I'll.' ^ I 11 i News of the Town and District of Interest to Enderby Readers t 11 Boy Scouts' dance to-morrow night Celebration Committee meeting to night. The School Board has ^building troubles of its own to solve. The spring Court of Assize will be! held at Vernon on the 14th' of May. The Misses Glendenipg,of Cedar Hill, Victoria, are visiting Mr. Alex Bisland, an old friend of their, father of the early Cariboo days. They are delighted with Enderby. with .him a colony' of Ottawans, all of whom he has located at North Naramata! his new,\" town 'baby and the apple of his eye. Mr,. Robinson' spent the winter months at Toronto and Ottawa. He llled both cities full of Okanagan, with the above boted result, which is only a fore ! runner of that which is to follow. ��������������������������� The Enderby Brick & Tile Company U\" The Celebration Committees have been busily engaged the past week or, has all the orders on hand for brick two getting a line on the best at-' that the company can handle this The Harvey home .rounds present, tractions avaiiable for May 24th. It season. , The demand for Enderby picture of early spring .g noped that- tbey will be able to, brick has grown in leaps and bounds announce the general programme and the* company is experiencing a next week. - ' [ great amount of difficulty in keeping 'Mrs. Wm. Sewell left on a visit to' Pace with the growth of.its business^ the coast and eastern ooints, Tuesday Nearly'a million brick have been or-' <--��������������������������� iv- a beautiful bloomers. - Next Tuesday evening, in the Methodist church, the Toronto Ladies' Quartette. . The Allan Players will open a three night engagement in 'she Opera House next Thursday evening. , Born���������������������������At the Enderby Cottage Hos- -pital, Sunday night, April 28th, to Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Brimacombe, a son. The street roller looks as** if it .would like to get busy. It's a'costly, _ ornament, but; a mighty, economical \"road builder.\" ~~; .- \"-\"-- .\"_���������������������������- afternoon. Mrs. Sewell will be ab-' dered for Revelstoke \"alone sent three * months or more. Enderby City Hospital will .charge of Mrs. Bishop 'in Mrs ell's absence. X 17 ��������������������������� Some Sage gives this recipe for obtaining a new -bonnet:-.\"Kiss your hubby regularly' for a.week befbr payday. . Then make him an old-tim supper, and touch\" him at the sico' logical-moment.*- If ^that\" don't' work Stick to. Enderby,\" is a-\" slogan wait until he goes .to sleep and'then I\" I: if which if adopted and stuck to would*r , mean dollars'in the pocket of every property owner and resident. E. M. Sandilamls has been appointed Government Agent for the-Queen Charlotte Mining Division, in the place of John Hugh McMullin. ' A party of Canadian Northern surveyors are working up the Valley, and'are now as far as ^Larkin. - They are _ experiencing some dific'ulty in getting a grade .into Armstrong. ., j -'\"The best that could possibly* be said of the Toronto Ladies' Quartette is not -too much to say. They give a programme of unsurpassed excellence.\"���������������������������Mr. Ruthven McDonald. roll him.'.' - A meeting of - all* members, of ��������������������������� - Yet, as. the waves-'engulf-them, .those dauntless men' play ~on. ^ ;'\"���������������������������: - O,', little band of-heroes: O stoutrpf, heart and-braye, '-':///��������������������������� .;;_.���������������������������_���������������������������-. . The sting from death'is-taken; ye. triumph'o'er\", the efave;'\"<-\" %-*> - _ --. i , ,_ . p - . * > >��������������������������� * r i - . ' -p, * , ,-\" ,.,.... > ���������������������������\"And. though\" pur tears fall\" thickly, ~and -hearts ,'are; wrung \"���������������������������with - pain,* y, By'faith we'**catch\" the\"; echo of ���������������������������that .triumphant-strain.,l; - /'--- I 7--71-. -y -:,<��������������������������� - -t~SA\\ - yf i-l V* *\\ 1* -*f?r _v> ^iji.^jy-s y <, ~~y I \"A ������������������?f%l v?yy Curling, Club; is; called, ,for;to-night ^ to.morroW) Friday> Hall and the grounds planted in j night,' promises to flower beds, etc., would cost some I eclipse anything j of this nature held :.his season. The money, but for every .ollar spent the dcgire is generally felt to ma}ie this event contribute a good fat sum to , l,~ ������������������*������������������.,_. ���������������������������v..., and will or should -carry 'off most of the surface-water which overflows the low places in town and causes so much annoyance in the spring. The proposition seems to be one of _the best the ratepayers have been asked to pass upon. The by-law should, and no doubt will, receive a large majority of the votes cast, for it is to'the interest of'every citizen to have the surface water taken j care of. O, may we as' a' nation, bowVneath; the ''���������������������������chastening\" r,od,;7- _.'. 'V'VJ: -And may.the cross laid on us still clrawus nearer God. 1, ;--''-, ������������������; .And when-to \"each there cometh, the^ end of all things here,' \" ' ' -* .; Let' faith\" then rise triumphant, o'ercoming doubt and fear. . **��������������������������� - '\" ,- Then, Lord of love and;mercy, let'iis thy goodness see; *v \"* *\"'. Bend \\lown in tenderest\"pity and take us unto Thee. '\\ ��������������������������� . -. & . Z' ' ' ��������������������������� \":\\ ''��������������������������� \" ' \" X * J M/ ALICE'PEACOCK, - Mara, B., C, April-26, 1932. ,'.,'\" \" -.- \"*: * 77* '^ ��������������������������� y .v. fr-jfi \\b in V value of the improvement would add :=three'\"to=tlie=cityJs-pro\"sperityf=:==,===== The C. P. R. is laying heavy rails on the Okanagan branch line, and is to fill in all the trestle bridges. This will enable the company to run its heavy main line engines over this branch. A. Jacobson has taken over the Newmarket hotel, New Denver, and -will close-the bar-in the St.-James hotel. Henry Stege intends building a brewery at Fort George, thc Record says. Considerable complaint is heard owing to thc many early spring flowers being taken from thc gardens in the dark of night, evidently by somebody too indolent to plant a posy bed and care for it. The board of police commissioners met on Tuesday evening, and gave orders that the by-law against the pasturing of stock in the streets and against bicycle riding on the side walks should be strictly enforced. Jas. Bell's,black Percheron stallion was shown in Enderby, this week and attracted much attention. Such first rank horses as this and Marcellus Junior point to the best on foot in horseflesh for Enderby and Mara district. Mr. L. Harris, provincial foul brood inspector, will be in Enderby on June 6th, and give a demonstration and lecture in K. P. Hall that evening. This will be the only stop he will make within the territory of the Northern Okanagan Farmers' Institute. \"aid the Scouts in the good work the organization is 'doing. Our Trinity Valley correspondent states that the residents of that section are looking forward with eager- \"ness to the opening of that valley by TORONTO GLEE CLUB The entertainment given in the Methodist church last evening, by the Toronto Glee Club, was something of exceptional merit, and su-. perior in many respects to anything' the road giving them an outlet this,' evcr lleard nerey Mr- Ruthven Mc- way, work on yvhich is to be pushed from the Enderby end. He reports a snowfall of 118-inches for the winter, some of which still remains. P. H. Murphy has purchased the property of Chas. rikeelcs, situated in the Glenn Mary valley just west of thc Elson place. Mr. Murphy has developed a fruit valley on thc hill overlooking his orchard on the low land of the Elson property which he believes will surpass anything now planted in the district. The first consignment of bodies recovered from the -vaters where the Titanic, went down, reached Halifax on Monday. There were 190, including'the bodies of John Jacob Astor, C. M. Hays, and several other notable men. Hundreds of others, too far gone, had to be reconsigned to the waters of the ocean.. \"A little more patience, a littl more charity for all, a little more devotion, a little more love; with less bowing down to the past, and a 'A1J- Boy Scouts attending the social silent ignoring of pretended author- dance to be given in K. of P. Hall, ity; a brave looking forward to the Friday evening, May 3rd, will be re-, future with more faith in our fellows,| quired to be in Scout uniform, and; and the race will be ripe for a great! to present at the door a letter from' burst of. light ancl life.\" one of their parents giving permission Mr. J. M. Robinson returned to to attend, the Okanagan last week, bringing G. G. CAMPBELL, Scoutmaster. Donald is a great favorite. He hasj been heard in Enderby before, and; can always look for a .warm.welcome! however of������������������e*n he may return. He is well assisted by the tjlce club singers-, and the singing was delightfully in-: terspcrscd by monologue and readings- of cxcsptional merit. | Mr, McDonald anaounted thc com-! ing of the Toronto Ladies' Quartette, I who will appear in the Methodist' church on the evening of the 7th of' May. This organization of lady singers are spoken of in the highest praise by the eastern press, and an entertainment even better than that of the glee club is promised. The committee responsible for bringing to Enderby these high-class entertainers are to be congratulated, and they deserve the hearty support of all lovers of good music and clean entertainment. SCOUT ORDERS Miss Marie Thompson, of thc Aden Players, who will appear at thc Opera House on Thursday next. Make sure oE hearing the Toronto Ladies' Quartette, in the Methodist church, next Tuesday evening, May 7th. They arc thc cream of the best. * Wanted���������������������������A good general servant, for ranch, 2 miles from Enderby. Apply to Box 36, Enderby. You will regret it if you fail to hear the Toronto Ladies' Quartette, in the Methodist church, next Tuesday evening. 'Ranch Apply, P. Boy wanted immediately. , Walker Press, Enderby. More young pigs for sale. DeHart fruit farm, Enderby. Apply 0X KXnKI.BY PRKXS. AND WALK KITS' WKKK1.V Copyright, 11)11 Bt) WILLIAM CARLETON [Hy Sniall, Mnyiwud & Co., Inc. CHAPTER X.���������������������������(Continued) Tho Emigrant Spirit BoNXINUTON was a clerk with ;i Ih'j. insurance company. He lived four I louses below us on our street. I suppose he was cumin.,' about $1,M)U a year when he died. He left live children and he never had money enough even to insure in his own company. Uc didn't leave a cent. AVhen Helen 1-ionnington came back from the grave it was to face lhe problem of supporting unaided, either by experience or relatives, live children running from twelve to one She was a .shy, retiring little body who had sapped her strength in just bringing the children into the world and caring for them in the privacy ol' her heme. .She had neither the temperament nor tho training to face the world. Bul she bucked up to it. She sold out of Lhe house what things she could spare, secured cheap rooms on the outskirts of thc neighborhood and announced thai she would do sewing. What it cost her to come back among her old friends and clo that is a particularly choice type of agony that it would be impossible for a tenement widow-to appreciate. And this same self-respect which both Helen's education and her environment forced her to maintain, handicapped her in other ways. You couldn't give Mrs. Bon- nington scraps from your table; you couldn't give her old clothes or old shoes or money. It wasn't her fault because this waa so; it wasn't your fault. When her children were sick she couldn't send them oil to the public wards of the hospitals. In the first place half the hospitals .wouldn't take them as charity patients simply because she maintained a certain dignity, and in the second place the idea, by education, was so repugnant to her ��������������������������� that it never entered her head to try. So she stayed at home and sewed from daylight until she couldn't hold open her eyes at night. That's where you get your true \"Song of the Shirt.\" She not only sewed her fingers to the bone, \" but while doing it she suffered a. very fine kind of torture wondering what would happen to the five if she broke down. Asylums and homes and hos- - pitals don't imply any great disgrace to most of the U'nement dwellers, but to a woman of that type they mean Plell. God knows how she did it, but she kept the five alive and clothed and in\" school-\"until the \"boy- was about ���������������������������fifteen and went to work. When I hear of \"the lone widows of the tenements, who arc apt to be very .husky, and who work out with no great mental struggle, and who have clothes and - food given them and who set the ehil- ' dren to work as soon as they are able - to walk, f'feef like getting up in my seat and telling about Helen Bonning- ton���������������������������a plain middle-classer. And she was no exception either. I seem to have rammed off a bit here, but this was only one of many contrasts which- 1 made in these years which seemed to mc to be all in favor of my new neighbors. The point is that at the .bottom you not only see advantages you didn't see before, but you're in a position to use them. You , aren't shackled by conventions; ��������������������������� you aren't cramped by caste. The world stands ready to help the under dog but before it will lift a finger it wants to see the dog stretched out on its back with all four legs sticking up in prayer. Of fho middle-class dog who fights on and on, even after he's wobbly and can't see, it doesn't seem to take much notice. ===^Hmvavcr^=IUittual3xL&d__LiK__wi 1 h_ a~f ew. reforms of her own. She made it a point lo go down and see young Michele every day and watch that he didn't get any more macaroni and gravy. The youngster himself resented this Interference but the parents look It in good pnrL Then in time she ventured further and suggested that tho baby would be bettor off if tho windows were washed to let in thc sunshine \"and\" the floor Bcrubhcd a-bit. - Finally she became bold enough to hint that it might be well lo wash some of thc bed clothing. The\" district nurse appreciated the change, if Michele himsolf didn't and I found that it wasn't long before Miss Colver wan making use of this new influence in the house. She made a call on Ruth nnd discussed lier cases with her until in (he end she made, of her a sort of first assistant. This was the beginning of a new field of activity for Ruth which finally won for her the name of Utile Mother. It was wonderful how quickly these people discovered the sweet qualities in Ruth that had passed oil unnoticed in the old life. It. made mc very proud. CHAPTRR XI Now Opportunities [ had found that I was badly handicapped in nil Intercourse with my Italian fellow workers by the fact that I know nothing of their language and that they knew but little English. The handicap did not lie so much In the Tact lhat wc couldn't make ourselves understood���������������������������wc could after a rough fashion���������������������������as It did in the fact that this made a barrier which kept our two nationalities sharply defined. I was always an American talking to an Italian. The boss was always an American talking to a Dago. This seemed to mc a great disadvantage. It ought to be just a foreman to his man or one. man to another. The chance to acquire a new lan guage I thought had passed with my high school days, bul down here everyone was learning English ami so I resolved to study Italian. I made a .bargain with Giuseppe, the young scxilptor, who was now a frequent visitor ui our llat, to teach mc Iiis language in return for Instruction in mine. He agreed though lie had long been inciting good instruction at the night school. Uut lhe lad had found an appreciative friend in Kuth who not only slneo'-eiy admired the work he was doing but. who admired his enthusiasm Mid his knowledge of art. 1 liked him myself for he was dreaming bigger things than I. To watch his thin cheeks grow red and his big brow.i eyes flash as he talked of some old painting gave me a realization that thi re was something else to be thought of even down here than mere money success, lt was good for me. The poor fellow was driven almost mad by having to offer for sale snmc of the casts which his master made him carry. He would have liked to sell only busts of Michael Angeio and Dante and worthy reproductions of the old masters. \"There are so many beautiful things,\" he used to exclaim excitedly in broken English; \"why should they want to make anything that Is not beautiful?\" He sputtered time and time again over the pity of gilding the vasts. I'ou'd have thought it was a crime which ought to be punished by hanging. \"Even Dante,\" he groaned one night, \"that wonderful, white sad face of Dante covered all over with gilt!\" \"It has to look like gold before an American will buy it,\" I suggested. \"Yes,\" he nodded. \"They would even gild the Christ.\" Ruth said she wanted to learn Italian with me, and so the three of us used to get together every night right after dinner. I bought a grammar at a second-hand bookstore but we used to spend most of our time in memorizing the common every day things a man would be likely to use in ordinary conversation. Giuseppe would say, \"Ha Ella il mio cappello?\" And I would say, \"Si, Signore, ho il di Lei Cappello.\" \"Ha Ella il di Lei pane?\" \"Si, Signore, ho il mio pane.\" \"Ha Ella il mio zucchero?\" \"Si, Signore, ho il di Lei zucchero.\" .There wasn't much use in going over such simple things in English-for Giuseppe and so instead of this Ruth would read aloud something from Tennyson. After explaining to him just what every new word meant, she would let him read aloud to her the .same passage. He soon became very enthusiastic over the\"text itself and would often stop her with the exclamation. . \"Ah, there is a study!\" Then he. would tell us just how he would model whatever the picture happened to he that he saw in his mind. Jt was wonderful how clearly he saw these pictures. He could tell you even down to how the folds of the women's dresses should fall just as though he were actually looking at iiving people. After a week or (two when we had learned some of the simpler phrases Ruth and f used to practise them as much as possible every day. \"We felt quite proud whon \"we could ask one another for \"quel libro\" or \"quell' abito\" or \"il cotello\" or \"il cucchiuio.\" I was surprised at how soon we were able to carry on quite a long talk. This new idea���������������������������that even though I was approaching forty I wasn't loo old to resume my studies���������������������������look root in ^nolher-^direc-l-ionr^V-s^I^had^beeorne- aecustomed to the daily physical exercise and no longer returned home exhausted 1 fell, as though 1 had no right to loaf through my evenings, much as the privilege of spending them with Ruth meant to me. My muscles had become as hard and tireless as those of a well-trained athlete so that nt night I was as alert mentally as in thc morning. Jt mado me feel laxy lo sit around the houseafler an hours lesson-In Italian and watch Ruth busy with hor sewing and see the boy bending over his books. Stfll I couldn't think of anything that was practicable until I heard Giuseppe lalk one evening about the night school. 1 had thought this was a sort of grammar school with clay modelling thrown in for amusement. \"No. Signore,\" he said. \"You cun loam anything there. And there is another school where you can learn other things.\" J went out that very evening and found that the school he attended taught among other subjects, bookkeeping and stenography���������������������������two things which appealed to me strongly. But in talking to fie principal he suggested that before. I decided I look into the night trade school which was run in connection with a manual training schoolc. I took his advice and there I found so many things I wanted that I didn't know what to choose. I was amazed at the opportunity. A man could learn here about any trade he cared to take up. Both tools and material were furnished him. And all this was within ten minutes' walk of the house. I could still have my early evenings with Ruth and the boy even on the three nights I would be in school until a quarter past seven, spend Iwo hours at learning my trade, and get back to the house again before ten l don't see how a man could ask for anything better than this. Even then l wouldn't be away from home as much as I often was in my old life. There were many dreary stretches towards the end of my service with the United Woollen when J didn't get home until midnight. And the only extra pay Wc .-���������������������������alaried men received for that was a brighter hope for the job ahead. This was always dangled before our eyes by Morse as a bait when he wished lo drive us harder than usual. 1 had my choice of a course of carpentry, bricklaying, sheet metal work, plumbing, electricity, drawing and pattern draughting. The work covered from one to three years and assured a man at the end of this time of a position among skilled workmen who make in wages as much as many a professional man. Not only this, but a man wilh suih training as this and with ambition could look forward without any great stretch of .imagination to becoming a foreman in his trade and eventually winning independence. All this he could accomplish while earning his daily wages as an apprentice or a common laborer. The class in masonry seemed to be more in line with my present plans than any of the other subjects. It ought to prove of value, I thought, to a man in the general contracting business and certainly to a man who undertook the contracting of building construction.' At any rate it was a trade in which I was told there was a steady demand for good men and at which many men were earning from three to five dollars a day. I must admit that at first I didn't understand how bricklaying could be taught for I thought it merely a matter of practice but a glance at the outline of the course showed me my error. It looked as complicated as many of the university courses. The work included first the laying of a brick to line. A man was given actual practice with bricks and mortar under an expert mason. From this a man was advanced, when he had acquired sufficient skill, to the laying out of the American bond; then the building of square piers of different sizes; then the building of square and pigeon-hole \"corners, then the laying out of brick footings, The second year included rowlock .and bonded segmental arches; blocking, toothing, and corbeling; building and bonding of vaulted walls; polygonal and circular walls, piers and chimneys; fire-places and , flues. - The third, year advanced a man to the nice points of- the trade such as the foreign bonds���������������������������Flemish, Dutch, Roman and Old English; cutting and turning of arches of all kinds���������������������������straight cambered, semi -circular,, ' three_ centred elliptical, and many forms of Gothic and Moorish arches: also brick panels and cornices, t Finally it gave\" practice in the laying out of plans'and work from these plans. Whatever time was left was devoted lo speed .'n all these things as far as it was consistent with accurate ancl careful workmanship. J enrolled at once and also entered a class in architectural drawing which was given in connection wilh this. I came back and told Ruth and though of course she was afraid it might b(j too hard work for me she admitted lhat in the end it might save me many months of still harder work. If it hadn't been for the boy I think she would hove liked to follow me even in these studies. Whatever new thing I took up, she wanted to take up too. But as I told her, it was she who was making ihe whole business possible and that was enough for one woman to do. The school didn't open for a week and during that time I saw something of Rafferty. He, surprised me by coming��������������������������� nrotinri-ln-thP-fint-nnp-nig'h.���������������������������fnr._ what I couldn't imagine. I was glad to see him but I suspected that he had some purpose in making such an effort. T introduced him to Ruth and we all sat down in lhe kitchen and I told him what 1 was planning to do this winter and asked him why he didn't join me. 1 was rather surprised that the idea didn't appeal to him but I soon found out that he had another interest which took all his spare time. This interest\" was \"nothing\" \"else\" than' politics. And Rafferty hadn't been over here long enough yet to qualify as a voter. In spite of this he was already on speaking terms with lhe state representative from our district, the local nldei'nian, and was an active lieutenant of .Sweeney's���������������������������the ward boss. At present he was interesting himself In the candidacy of this same Sweeney who was the Democratic machine candidate for Congress. Owing to some local row he was in danger of being knifed. Dan had come round to make sure I was registered and to swing me over if possible to the ranks of the faithful. The names of which he spoke so familiarly meant nothing to me. I had heard a. few of them from reading the papers but I hadn't read a paper for three months now and knew nothing at all about the present campaign. As a matter of fact I never voted except for thc regular Republican candidate for governor ancl thc regular Republican candidate for president. And 1 did that much only from habit. My father had been a Republican and I was a Republican after him and I felt that in a general way this party stood for honesty as against Tammanyism. But with councillors, and senates and aldermen, or even with congressmen [ never bothered my head. Their election seemed to be all prearranged and [.figured that one vote more or less wouldn't make much difference. I don't know as I evn thought that much about It; I Ignored the whole matter. What was true of me was true largely of lhe other men in our old neighuor- hood. l'olilius, except perhaps tor an abstract 'discussion of the tariff, wa.- not a vital issue with any of tis. Now here 1 found an emigrant who couldn't as yet qualify as a citizen knowing all the local politicians by their first names and spending his- nights*' working for a candidate for congress. Evidently my arrival down here ha'd been noted by those keen eyes which look after every single vote as a miser does his pennies. A man had been found who was at leasi a .speaking acquaintance with me, and plans already set on foot to round me up. 1 was inclined at first to treat this new developmnet as a joke. But as Rafferty talked on he set me thinking. 1 didn't know anything about the merits of the two present candidates but was strongly prejudiced to believe that the Democratic candidate, on general principles, was the. worst one. However, quite apart from this, wasn't Rafferty to-day a better citizen than 1? JSvcn admitting for the sake of argument that Sweeney was a crook, wasn't Rafferty who was trying his humble best to gel him elected a better American than I who was willing to sit down passively and allow him to be elected? (To be Continued.) ONE EGG FOR TEN One of the persecuted Protestants, just.after the massacre of St. Bartholomew, lived, we are told, for some time on one egg a day which a hen laid regularly in the hay near where he was concealed. If he had been equally favored by an ostrich, he might have got along on one egg a month. A good idea of thc enormous size of an ostrich's egg is afforded by -the account of a dinner that was once given to some' visitors to an ostrich farm in California: \"Ten of us?\" said the host. \"One egg will be enough.',. Having given utterance to this' remark, he made his way to the paddock and soon brought to the house an ostrich egg. For an hour it was boiled; and, though there was some misgiving as to its being cooked, the shell was broken, for the guests' curiosity could no longer be restrained, and a three-pound hard-boiled egg was laid upon a plate. Apart from its \"size, there is nothing peculiar about thc egg. The white had the bluish tinge seen in the duck egg, and the yolk was of the usual color. It tasted as it looked, like a duck egg, and had no flavor peculiar to itself. But if was immense. As it takes twenty-eight'hens' eggs to equal in weight the ostrich egg when ,cooked, it is evident that the host in the case mentioned knew what he was about in cooking only one egg .-for ten persons. There was sufficient and to spare\" and-.everybody was satisfied. SHARKS IN THE ARCTIC Those old piscatorial , pirates;- the sharks,\" often invade the Arctic, no doiibt tempted' by the carcasses of the whales or seals and walruses -left by white men engaged in (heir pursuit. Natives angling from'their skin canoes in deep water occasionally catch a sluggish shark which has engulfed the bait, but there is no use pulling against such a mountain of flesh and relying upon sheer strength to bring him up; and. this the native fisherman knows and he overcomes the shark's inertia' by sagacity. \"When the shark becomes irritated and pulls briskly, the Jine is lowered to appease him, but cautiously hauled in again almost immediately, the shark slowly rising to this strategic manipulation until he rests upon the surface of the water, when ihe fisherman dexterously despatches him by a well- directed thrust through the spinal cord. Considering their well-known voracity in warmer climes it seems singular thai sharks do not of tenor attack the native fishermen in their little skin-canoes.-hul���������������������������there.������������������s_=_ao ���������������������������UaJcno.wn. instance of such attacks even on the west, shore of Greenland, where they are the most numerous and where the natives catch large numbers of them��������������������������� from 10,000 to 20,000 a year. The most usual method of catching these fish can hardly be said to be fishing at all. Near a hole in the ice a lighted torch is placed and two natives stand on opposite sides of the hole with sharp hand-hooks. Presently tho shark* \"sticks his\" nose out, 'when \"he\" is hooked and hauled on the ice. THE ARAB SOLDIER The Arab soldier has suddenly become a factor of importance in world politics. J'^or years a source lo France of trouble and expense, he may Lurn out to be a good investment. The first native recruits in Algeria were of the Zouawn. tribe, which gave its name lo the corps of Zouaves. Other elements combined with the old janizaries of the Algerian Deys to form those units called Turkish companies. Hence the popular designation \"Tur- cos\" given to Algerian riflemen. These rapidly increased in number. Jn 1S41 the Turkish-'companics became battalions of native shap-shooters and in 1855 regiments of Algerian riflemen. An inherited taste for fighting, a contempt for the work of me fellah and laborer, above all the material advantages secured by regular military service, combine to attract the native. During summer, when harvest and the vintage season enable men to earn enough to live on, there only present themselves for enlistment the dregs of the population, But in winter, after plowing and sowing, when the climate makes its rigor felt in tent and cabin, applicants swarm. Commanding officers have left to their discretion the choice of means to promote enlistment and maintain regimental effectiveness. It does not do to wait until would-be recruits make application; it is necessary to invite the enrollment of the most promising ma terial that is to be found in Algeria. For this purpose there are organized eiiher patrols made up of non-commissioned officers, with'the battalion pipe, tambourine, and drum-players, or detachments that travel through the thickly populated districts. Since these parties are composed of thc best men in a regiment and carry excellent rations, the lure is great to the tribesman, always appreciative of appearances and good cheer. Yet, although he can fight and march Lo perfection, the native soldier does not do so well in garrison or in ihe occupation of a conquered country. Thero are other drawbacks, lie is useless either as a clerk, a surveyor, an overseer of works, or a drill-master. Hence it is necessary to suplemonl all native troops with .European soldiers. FORCING PLANTS BY LIGHT To force the growth of plants by the use of artificial light is not a new idea, but the system hitherto has been too expensive in proportion to obtainable results. Recently a Scotch lady engaged in horticulture discovered an efficacious method of appying light for this purpose. Arranging in winter quarters her plants as she wishes them \"to grow, she supplies a lamp with mercury vapor for fuel, find the seeds germinate in less than half thc ordinary time, while the vigor and intensity of the color of the flowers is superior to that of tjie product grown naturally. Among curious phenomena which she has noticed in connection with the action of this light is an infinite multiplication of the downy substance commonly found on stems. Those grown in shadow have the stems relatively bare. Very good practical results have been obtained by this system. DOES THE SNAIL SEE? The physiology and habits of the snail have long interested naturalists, and, among othor questions relative to this mollusc, its-blindness has often been debated.. Certain specialists are inclined to believe that it does see, but ' - that its eyes are unable to bear \"much light, adducing as an argument the - known fact -that the snail is passive during the night but during the day looks, for shady .places.\" Another' naturalist differs, and, after, having studied 2,400 cases, he thinks the distribution of the snails in dark enclosures during the day is accidental, that the snail neither flies from the light nor - u seeks the dark. If a brilliant light be brought in contact with its eyes at a distance of from one'to two millimeters no reaction is' noticed, and thc same thing happens after putting it in the dark or if it be subjected to the rays, of electric light. The \"snail does not\" \\ seem to take account of obstacles of any kind and crawls only from odor, -������������������������������������������������������-' temperature, and from agitations'in the .. -7 air (\"suchas that'produced by a\" mouth\"-\"' '\" organ, for instance),' or disturbances \"��������������������������� -\"��������������������������� in-the earth around it. The snail ' '���������������������������--: doubtless does not see, hear, or even feci, except as.it is \"acted-upon from.\" .\"��������������������������� such disturbances as\" have beeii.men- , - tioned. The removal of it's eyes, does \"'\" not' produce any modification whatever .. \" either in its activity, mode of-1 life, oro even in its sensibility to pain. -- - - NEW, OLD MASTERS _ Sometimes we are told that Europe has now been ,so carefully combed oyer that'the search'for .picture masterpieces is foredoomed to failure. And yet two pictures by Rubens have just been found in second-hand shops in Belgium. One of them is \"The Holy Trinity,\" and the other represents Lot fleeing from Sodom, and they had been sold for about twenty dollars each by their original owner, in whose.family thoy had been for generations. Another remarkable discovery of a - similar nature is that of a hitherto unknown room in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, a room that is believed to be the famous \"scrittojo\" or study of Cos- imo Medici., It measures forty feet by .twenty^feetT-=ancl=^has==a=1mligriificerit\"= ceiling with beams from wall to wall, the whole being covered with paintings. The hall is surrounded with a beautiful painted frieze, and on one of the beams is the artist's name, \"Franc- Bach . . .,\" evidently Francesco Bachiacca, who died in 1557, and who is known to have liad a commission from Duke Cosimo to execute just such a work. Jt seems strange that there should stMl be uncxplorcd_parts_of-the_. grea't\"Florence palaces, of which the existence must surely be disclosed by the architectural plans. The transmission and receipt of telegrams iu tho Chinese Empire is not so easy as in Western countries,-because the Chinese language lacks an alphabet and expresses itself by characters and signs thai, represent words, ln consequence, for purposes of telegraphing an exact list has been made of signs in quantity sufficient for ordinary correspondence and to each one of tho signs a different number is given which is transmitted by the Morse telegraphic system, The code consists of 9,800 ciphers, the whole forming a pamphlet of forty-nine pages, each one of which contains ten series of twenty characters wilh its corresponding number. On receipt of a telegram the operator looks up in his book the characters represented by the numbers transmitted by the apparatus and transcribes them into legible Chinese. A log of wood and a roll of paper are placed in a new match-making machine, and when human hands next touch the material it is all bound, up in packages containing one gross of boxes of matches, ready for the consumer. During the process the machine cuts the wood into proper lengths, sulphurs the ends, counts them, makes the paper boxes, prints the labels on them, fills each box and packs them. The machine has been patented by^a Norwegian match company. f*a ';pimtTifi**n___Ti J'. ^.if������������������.i KXDKRBY I'KKSS AND W AI.KK11 \"S WKKKI.Y # f' ;;��������������������������� * ) i i't Is. [pr $ ft I *H m # ,������������������ i i������������������������������������. !*��������������������������� jl ,-, ft II What Followed a Cut Magistrate's Wonderful Experience With Zam-Buk Mr. J. E. Arsenault, a Justice of the Peace, and stationmaster at Wellington, on ihe I'rince Edward Island Ry , has had a wonderful proof of lhe healing power of Zam-Buk. He says: \"Four years ago, 1 hud an accident. I slipped in the station and fell on a freight truck, sustaining a bad cut on the front of my leg. 1 thought this would heal, bul instead.of doing so it developed into a bad ulcer and later into a form of eczema which spread very rapidly and also slaried on the other leg. Both legs became so swollen and sore that 1 could only go about my work by having them bandaged. My doctor said 1 must stop work and lay up. \"After six months of this trouble I consulted another doctor, but with no better result. 1 tried all the salves, liniments and lotions I heard of, bul instead of getting better I got worse. \"This was my condition when I got my first box of Zam-Buk. Greatly to my delight that first box gave me relief. 1 continued to apply it to the sores and day by day they got better. I could see that at last 1 had got hold of something which would cure me, - and in the end it did. \"It is now over a year since Zam- Buk worked' a cure in my case, and thererhas been no return of the eczema or any trace of it.\" Such is the nature of the great cures which Zam-Buk is daily effecting. Purely herbal in composition, this great balm is a sure cure for all skin diseases, cold sores,, chapped hands, .frost bite, ulcers, blood-poisoning, varicose sores, piles, scalp sores, ringworm, inflamed patches, cuts, burns and bruises. All druggists and stores sell at 50c. box, or post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price. \"Mythology says thai Orpheus san so well that the rocks followed him.'*. \"So does Caruso, doesn't he?\" . - * * * Mrs. De Style: 'Oh, doctor, you ->*.tis- do something to get me on my feet This is my \"at home\" ,to-day. ,- Doctor: Don't worry,1 madam. You\". be at home all right. When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eve Romcuy. No Smarting��������������������������� Feels Fine���������������������������Acts Quickly; Try lt fur Red, Weak, \" WatrryEycs and Granulated Eyelids.- lllus-' tratcd Book in eai-li P-icik.-ige. Murine, ia compounded by our Ociillsis-not. a'-l iiieiit Mcd- ' _cino\"-biit used in sum!M>Hil.Physicians' I'rac-- -\" tlcc for many years. Now dedicated lo ilie lJub- ��������������������������� lie nrd sold by Uru.rclsts at &ai������������������l 5Co per Bottlo. \"Muri..c liyo Salvo in Asepiie Tubes, 25������������������ and 50c. -7Bflurino Eye.Bemedy Co., Chicago Trappers,Dealers, in any Kind of Raw I urs,A eannot afford*_to dispose o������������������ their collections wi th o in ' lirst ~\"obtJiining\"our prices \"sent .upon request.' \"Remittance forwarded day gords n-ceivrd, .Express and mail charges on all shipments paidbvu';. C ���������������������������������������������'������������������������������������������������������*>���������������������������\" a's L-rrf������������������st FurOperntor. You ir correspondence solicited. John Hallam. Toronto CANADA BEATS THE UNITED STATES MORE HONORS FOR GIN PILLS Holyoke, Mass., U.S.A. - \"Having taken two boxes of your excellent GIN PILLS, they relieved\" me \"so much that I am quite satisfied with the results. I gave an order to my druggist about three weeks ago to send me some more. Nothing has come yet . and 1 hud to borrow a box from a lady friend who is also using GIN PILLS. ���������������������������=-1���������������������������l_ave=none=lefl=and^am^sending=you- $1.&0 for three boxes which I would ask you to send at once as I am not quite so well when 1 am without GIN PILLS.\" AGATHE VANESS-3. Gin Pills must be good when people ln Massachusetts send all the way to Toronto to get them. There is nothing like Gin Pills���������������������������nothing just the same or Just as good. Don't accept substi- ._lutes_if.y_ou value.your.health,and want to be* cured of Kidney and Bladder Trouble, or Rheumatism. Insist on having Gin Pills. 50c a box, (i for $2.00. Sample free if you write National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Depnrt. R.l-\\, Toronto. 92 Adventure With a Black Mamba Picture to yourself a small up-country siore���������������������������really a one-roomed, win- dowless shanty, filled with miscellaneous goods. Inside, somewhere near the closed door, lurked a rage-stricken ten-foot mamba, one of the most fierce and venomous snakes in the world; a reptile which, when at bay, will attack a human being with incredible fury. The man who had aroused Its ire, in his efforts to avoid the snake, had knocked over the light, leaving the store in total darkness. Thc mamba, however, still continued its wild attack, lashing out in all direction, while the man crouched down, horror-stricken, expecting every moment to feel a blow and the deadly fangs buried in his flesh. Such was the awful predicament of Mr. Austin Berry, who, a few years ago, was running a small Kaffir store in Natal, near a valley where a syndicate were prospecting for gold. One evening, after telling his native boy to close the store, he was sittingi outside Ins hut enjoying a smoke, when suddenly the boy came running up, shouting, \"Baas, baas, inyoka umkulu, kakulu!\", (\"Master, a big, a very big snake!\"), adding that it went into the store just as he was about to close the door.. Mr. Berry, from the boy's description of the reptile, took it to be a 'young python,- able to inflict a severe bite, bul not venomous. Having received a fresh supply of goods, which were lying about the store, however, and which would give the creature plenty\" of hiding-places, Mr. Berry thought it better to have it out with the-brute there and then, otherwise it-would mean turning out the store next' morning to look for it. \"Selecting a- good stick and taking a lighted candle,\"said Mr. Berry, when relating his awful experience, \"I went to the store, slipped quietly in, and closed the door behind me. Placing the candle on the counter, I looked around in the dim light. Hearing a slight .noise at the end of the store, I ������������������rept towards it, and presently, saw the head of a snake appear ja* ANYONE can use WOMEN ARE FASTER THINKERS The Suffragist is at a disadvantage in lhat she cannot boast lhat her brain is heavier than hor contemporary man. But she can say this that what little- she possesses thinks at a faster rate than the mind of the superior sex. This fact has been proved by a scries of interesting experiments to test the brain power of the two sexes. The tesls were carried out as follows: A cardboard disc was prepared having a hole in the centre. This disc wa: connected with a clock, controlled \"bj electricity, and which was-able to measure as little as ,the thousandth part of a second. Seated opposite this disc the person undergoing the experiment had to keep a look-out for a little card which suddenly dropped into' the hole in the disc's centre. This card completed an electric circuit and started the clock- going. The moment the sitter saw the card drop hc or she touched ,a key which' stopped the clock at once. By this-jneans the time was fixed that it took the observer to think and to act. It was found that in nine cases out of ton the gentler sex beat the men. This fact probably accounts for the marvellous \"intuition\" of women, intuition that is really only rapid thinking. I 'I dyed ALL these ^DIFFERENT KINDS of Goods with fhe SAMEj>ye. I used 3DY01A [ONEDYE���������������������������ALLKINDS������������������\"m������������������s| CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use. NO chance of using thc WRONG Dye for the Goods one lias to color. A'. I colors from your Druggist or Dealer. FREE Color Card nnd STORV Booklet 1������������������, The Johnson-Richardson Co,,- Limited, Montreal, STAMMERERS , can be cured, not merely of tbe habit, bat of Its cause. The Arnott Institute has permanently restored natural speech to thousands���������������������������Is doing tt to-day. Write for full.,. Information and references to _ -.,, 11 THE ARNOTT INSTITUTE. - BERLIII, 8HT. Can. ���������������������������l ONLY THIS? '-- The following advertisement'appear; ed the .other day in the New York* World: ''���������������������������.-.- \"I have \"just- arrived; - have hands that love no rest, brains.marvellous in energy, depth, ' imagination, power, conception,\" organization, comprehension, instruction; am brilliant lecturer, noted journalist, clever linguist, competent \" mechanic/\" electrical \"engineer, fair typist, good automobilist, excellent' demonstrator, - known / scientist, able physicist; - methodical\" experimenter, fine * ^conversationalist, - expert\" .\"psy_- chologist, -master,, occultist,^.- inventor, Dust Causes Asthma. t Even a little speck too small to see will lead to agonies which no words can describe. The walls of the breathing tubes'con-\", tract and it seems*as if the very life must pass. From this condition Dr. J.' D. Kellogg's \"Asthma Remedy brings the user to perfect''rest and health, lt relieves\" the passages .. and- normal breathing is firmly established again. ���������������������������Hundreds, of testimonials reccived-.an-, nually prove, its'effectiveness.\" '-\" J-; \" :��������������������������� patentee, .\"hypnotist, , traveller, etc.;\" . appearance\", -studious,, -thoughtful;\" - manners' refined; bright,\" engaging,'__* gentle,_-tcordial; - 'character and/ prin^'- ciple; , -faultlessly .honest, ^sincere,';? truthful; non-smoker.'-total abstainer;-'*; best'public,\" private \"references;-;willing-V ly\" become private secretary,'-compan-\"7 ion,- tutor -to anyone who appreciates^ sterling(7*merits; salary no\"; c_uestio'n\";\"7;ff07lj. I good-'po'sitiori.essential!\",7,'\";��������������������������� 7,->.; 77, .--.-. 7 . *>..yk- .^--y ''ZyiV-^-y^;:^U yyzil *--\"-4.f ���������������������������***��������������������������� ri m^k\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\m*i-* \"-���������������������������Z'ts ^^^B r$*Z ^7,'J ���������������������������'/?/'���������������������������*������������������������������������������������������������������������;& ISO ���������������������������21 J rj- ly ll V THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, May 2, 191 ENDERBY PRESS Publish\"*! every Thursday at En/ler.by, B.C. at 52 per year, by the Walker Press. These delightful Spring days bring a longing for ther hills and gardens; hill climbing and garden making bring tan and sunburn. Na-dru-co Royal Rose will keep the skin soft and smooth. Ask for a sample packet of it. A. REEVES Druggist & Stationer CliffSt. Enderby Advertising Rates; Transient, 50c mi inch first insertion, 25ceach subHequent-insertion..-. Contract advcrtisinir. $1 an inoh per month. LpkuI Notices: 12c a line first insertion; 8c a line each subsequent insertion. Rending Nctices and Locals*. 15c a lirw. ������������������&ft 14 il 28 6 m n 2 9 16 23 S3������������������ 3 io 17 24 31 II Id El 5 12 19 25126 M 6 g 12 27 SECRET SOCIETIES MAY 2. 1912 MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING cushions. Our business is publicity, and we give enough of it away to local 'people, without opening the gate and letting the world tackle the free lunch. We notice that many editors are fooled by this disguised advertising, and give it a place in their columns. Such editors have a blank spot in their upper stope, and should be feeding chickens on a hen ranch, instead of pottering around tho lever that moves the world. Thoy arc the kind of scribes who get short-changed at the circus, and they seldom have money enough to buy Master bonnets, a cold bottle, or a stack of blues. If il were not for such journalistic dummies the free publicity schemes now flooding the country would soon cease, because few fish very long when their bait is treated Avith silent contempt. Owing to high prices of wages and supplies few papers are making any money, and thc editors cannot afford to give their ads away, any more than a grocer can give you a sack of sugar for telling him that he is a good fellow. COAST DEFENSE NECESSARY. A. SUTCLIFFE W. M. A.F.&A.M. Enderby Lodge No. 40 rietrular meetings first Thursday on or after the full moon at 8 P. m. ro Oddfellows Hall. Visiting brethren cordially invited, F. H. BARNES Secretary J. 0.0. F. -i^ez^ - Sk'Sx-S*-!**''^***^^ . .WE HAVE A FEW SPECIALTIES WHILE/THEY LAST-.. ,Xi\\ \":7_^ Cull boards, $5.00. per thousand: . No. 2 Dimension, $12.00 per thousand. ���������������������������'���������������������������... Some cheap Flooring, Ceiling and Drop Siding, $10.00 thousand . No. 3 Cedar Bevel Siding, $10.00.thousand. X \" s-~ Also some short Moulding at a reduced nrice.' ' Get in early on some of the above bargains.-. OKANAGAN SAW MILLS, Ltd. jm* Finest in other, and all , are nettercd thereby. The Boy Scouts, to raise money, advertise to give a dance, one of thc most popular and most enjoyable nreans of social intercourse and pleasure. Thc same parents, the sairrc boys and girls and young people that arc met at thc church fairs, bnznars, lawn socials, etc., are asked to-enjoy themselves-at the dance, to aid the Boy Scout movement. And most of them will. In fact there will hardly be n person ut the dance that does not attend the church services, church bazaars, etc. But a howl of holy horror is raised because thc boys have asked their parents and friends to enjoy a popular social function given under their auspices ' Will these parents ancl young people comport themselves with less courtesy and chivalry at a social dance! than at a church bazaar, lawn social or what-not ? If so they had better stay at home, for if we know anything about Scout regulations, there will be something doing if any parent or prayerful citizen gets naughty. FREE PUBLICITY AGE. This says R. almost coated is thc age of free publicity, T. Lowery in his Ledge, ancl every mail brings us sugar- advertising matter with the suggestion that our readers would be delighted to read the dope. Thoy might be, but we have chased ads too long to allow deadheads on the serve for them and their people all the wealth they have assembled in the land east of the Rocky Mountains. \"The next point, from the view of citizen responsibility, 1 would like to -d oaWwi th -i s-\\v h at._B r i ti sh _Col u mbi a owes to Canada in the assisting, opening-up, and in the development of the province. We have a large and rich country. We feel today, wc residents of British Columbia, whether wo are a municipality, a city or a government, that there is a groat d'ea lgoing on in fhe country, that wo have our share to develop it, so that humanity may take every ad- vnntago of those wonderful riches. But we hnve'onlybogiin-ln this-programme of transportation and development. There is a lot more lo bo clone, Wc are only in the early .stages. Tlie large and far-seeking schemes are yel to come. It behooves ns, whether we are engaged in matters political or not, whether in the brighter walks of life, to see. how much more can be done. I think lho people of thc country have already demonstrated the confidence they have in their province, such as to mako the most indifferent Canadian in the far Bast understand, that we have the courage to live up to tlie faith that, we profess in this western section of the Dominion, and that we propose to leave nothing undone as true Canadians to discover to our fellow Canadians of the Empire especially what has been done in the province lying west of the Rocky Mountains.\" ' 'Enderby is a charming villiage with eity airs. When Paddy Murphy shook the snow of Sandon off his feet he came here, and now owns one of finest brick hotels in the country. Although Paddy is an Irishman from Michigan, he calls his hotel the King Edward. In addition to the excellence of the meals, breakfast is served up to 10 o^clockt__whi_ch_is an added attraction for tourists.\" TExtract from Lowery's Lodge.) King Edward Hotel/ H MURPHY Proprietor Enderby When Home Building Has it ever occurred to 'you that in building a\" frame-house,- costing-say .$2,000, you are losing every year $100, or 5 per cent, in depreciation, apart from the cost of repairs, as the life of a frame house is about 20 years at the outside? The Enderby Brick & Tile Co. Build brick ancl you will have a .house _that__ nceds_.no,.;repairs to jthe. _ walls and will be worth as much, or more, 50 years hence ae it is toJday, saving you quite a considerable sum in painting, insurance and fuel mean- ��������������������������� while. A large stock of first-class brick now on hand. Enderby BLANCHARD & ENGLISH Enderby, B.C. Contractors & Builders First-class Cabinet Work and Picture Framing. Undertaking Parlors in connection. Next to City Hall. Deer Park Fruit Land E'NDERB Y No Irrigation Required These lands are situated on the benches near Bnderby and are especially suited for Fruit and Vegetables, and, having been in crop, are in splendid condition for planting. An experienced fruit grower is in charge and will give instruction to purchaaors free of charge, or orchards will be planted and cared for at a moderate charge. 160 acres, sub-divided into 20-acre lota are flow on tbe market at .$175 per acre. Get in on the first block and make money on the advance. Apply to��������������������������� GEORGE PACKHAM, Deer Park Land Office, BBderby. -r^-A-py . jL^js.--wg-w������������������������������������.^-_..^_T,aL^saa_ tS5Sra������������������a������������������s=3fe-!!SnKS������������������ JUS, til' $> I 11 fr'fc t it 1.^* tl I \"5. ��������������������������� I i'^*'- Li >!' i* III is i Thursday, May 2, 1912 THE ENDERBY PKESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY n > ^.:9atron \"''������������������ *tf''������������������*������������������ - president ,> . j/ir^GarxadiarA Highway Association * Moved by the same public spirit and singleness of purpose���������������������������the bringing of/the roads of Canada up to a standard that will be .a credit to the nation, and an example to the world at large, His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught, and W. J. Kerr, hold'the two highest positions in the gift of the Canadian Highway at sociation, that of patron an'd president respectively. ��������������������������� . f - The Canadian Highway will, be an accomplished fact within the next few years, and the outside world will then know that in this broad Dominion there is' a road more than 3000 miles long, over which an-automobile can travel from coast, to coast in safety and comfort.' ,The country * that ^offers the .wealthy tourist \"the splendid opportunities , of investment, ' will reap a^large harvest* from its visitors. This association- was formed in .New Westminster-'ast November, and it was at this meeting\" that Mr.- , Kerr, a' wealthy resident at the coast, and the principal mover in the con-, vention 1 that resulted in the formation' of the association,\" was elected1 president. Some time* later the Governor-General of- Canada, was approached and requested to permit his name to be used as Patron. \" To this \\ he readily assented.- - ' - ��������������������������� ' - , more donations. 2. That those Scouts only whose parents are willing ,,-hould appear at the dance in full uniform, prepared to aid in the serving of refreshments and to solicit to the comfort of the guests. Those Scouts who do not attend, will not be questioned, nor will their standing .in the troop be affected in any way. We thoroughly respect the \"feelings of the parents and expect the boys to do the same. Respectfully submitted, FRANK P.. PRINCE, Assistant Scoutmaster. vision during the work will be undertaken whereby a farmer having a complaint to make, it can be investigated, not as at present where he is laughed at. Thanking you in anticipation. WM. OWEN. SYNOPSIS OF COAL MINING REGULATIONS THE EVER-ALIVE TOPIC. I JZZXZ PRO BONO PUBLICO - r, . \" BOY SCOUT MATTERS - * -Editor The Enderby Press:- 7 :��������������������������� 1 r . ^'Dear Sir:.-As-you are-a'member, of .the local organization _of Boy Scouts, I feel-.this letter7is' well; addressed.* . * /'\"There has-/been���������������������������since the day'the 7_advertising'matter> -jam^/lout for--the Scout- dance���������������������������a great*, deal\" of. criticism upon the- idea,\"* of teaching the boys to attend dances.1 ' There seems to be a prevailing idea that the boys arevunder orders to attend \" this, affair, an'd co' remain until the-end.'* That comes' from the fact of: someone ,> jumping at conclusions, .before taking the matter' up with one of rthe officers -for- facts,, which \"really ars as follows: .,���������������������������/.������������������������������������������������������/* .,v\"' \"J 1.7 The. officers' of,' the Enderby Troop of\" Boy. Scouts'are giving this ..dance in the name of '-the-organiza: tion - because the ��������������������������� organization needs money, and' we; are. not willing to JEditor the Enderby Press. Sir,���������������������������It will\" soon be time for the usual yearly road work to get under way, and by the published reports v/e are to have a large amount expended in the Province, and in this Riding in particular; the Agent or sub-Agent of the district in ^which rights applied for ar(B ���������������������������situated. ' In surveyed territory the land must be described by sections, or legal sub-divisions of . sections, and in uh- surveyed territory the tract applied for shall be staked out by the,applicant himself. Each application must be accompanied by a fee for-$5 which will be refunded if the rights applied for are not available, but not otherwise. A royalty shall be paid on the merchantable' output of the mine at the rate of five cents per ton.^ The person operating the' mine shall furnish the Agent with sworn return's, accounting for the full quantity o! merchantable coal mined and pay the royalty thereon. ' If the coal mining rights are - not being operated,- such returns should be - furnished \"at least once a year. , - - -'*.-.' JThe'^lease will include,the coal mining rights only, but, the lessee may. be' permitted to purchase whatever, available \"surface rights may,be considered necessary* for the working of the mine at the rate -of, $10700 an acre ��������������������������� For < full. - information application should - be' made to the Secretary of* the' Department of the Interior,;-Ottawa, or' to any -Agent or S ub- Agent - of Dominion Lands.- . *-. -.*7V : ���������������������������;.. ;\"7- ;. j ,-w. >w^ cory,i \",. Deputy Minister of the.Interior. v .'N^B.���������������������������Unauthorized .publication _ of this advertisement -will not be paid for.;-:---^*; :Zy '-'fW*;-7 .\"?���������������������������: y's^ E. J. Mack Livery, Feed & Sale Stables ENDERBY, B. C. Good Rigs; Careful Driv- | ers; Dray ing of all kinds. Comfortable and Commodious Stabling for teams. Prompt attention to all customers Land-seekers and Tourists in\" ��������������������������� vited to give us a trial. Fresh Meats If you _want prime-fresh meats,*'we have themV Our* cattle are grain-fed*;'/** and selected by our own^buyers from\", - the richest' feeding, grounds in Alber-', 7 ta, and are** killed- and cut strictly.;-- \"FRESH. \" \\ *-'X .We buy first-hand for spot cash'/so, -;'( can give you the best price possible.*-7 G. R. Sharpe, 7 * - - -'-.\".,'. ' Enderby, B. ' **-.). v -1- - r^i < ���������������������������?!;���������������������������\"*���������������������������' ***j*y '-- '���������������������������& I t������������������������������������������������������LL,ar. ��������������������������� ��������������������������� - - 4.U ~ - - 1 1. 'oads it is only, reasonable for the further call ��������������������������� upon; the - people, who settlers,to eipect that sonie improved have already -been'-so , generous, for'methods of - inspection, and' super- J.^lIG)HNSTONE ^���������������������������Cement, Building .' v :. .*/ Contractor, ���������������������������.::\"��������������������������� X .- M- -* \" -r\" ���������������������������-. - '���������������������������\" Is*prepare^ ^o ��������������������������� furnish straight- blocks veneer - blol, V -' cement..' brick /- lawn jr. vases, peer,' '*v_v sks, chimney blocks; also lime andcX\\ent.^ _ \" ~-/7. Leave orders. earjiS^ \\ ,. .. derby, B.C., BUY [A'.CARBO, MAGNETIC KNIFE *-^'->-n**r-������������������'*,-<5| X \" -*.y -- ., '���������������������������v'-;;\"(*j> ���������������������������J-: =���������������������������\" 'Hi yysrm ,\"'.. --A' - / ' \"For Sale by -\" '��������������������������� ,.1- THE ENDERBY-:TRADING;C0: ' -- .^-i \"'r^l J~-J������������������ ^V-i- j_ ���������������������������^vvl Jy Real .Estate, Insurance,. Etc. , Post Office.Block, Enderby,; ��������������������������� ' s :*��������������������������� r> ������������������._ GOOD land in SMALL acreage, VERY close to town, ^.oa the MONTHLY :��������������������������� \"-V PAYMENT (without -nterest) plan, s a new thing/-. WE-ARE-SELMNG^IHIS-RI&HT���������������������������ALONGf See us for fair dealing. Big variety of propositions, and no urging to buy Get Our List Fire, Life, Accident Insurance Agencies REAL ESTATE Semi-ready Suits Tailored to Order WE CAN show you 300 Cloth patterns���������������������������from which you may choose���������������������������and we will have a Semi-ready Suit tailored to your exact measure in four days, plus the- time it takes for transportation. The Suit will be made for you from a physique type photograph, so that, there can be absolute surety of a correct fit. We take all the risk, just as is done when you buy a Semi-ready Suit anywhere. We can make to \"Special Order\" any suit in any one of 30 styles which can be shown you in ojur Fashion Book. ENDERBY TRADING CO., Ltd ENDERBY, B. C. Fru it Land Hay Land Town Lots Thc Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. Thu Phoenix Insurance Co. of London. ' Lon4on-L������������������neashir������������������ Fire Insurance Co. Roynl Insurance Co..of Liverpool (Life dent The London A Lanciuihire Guurantc* Accident Co., of Cunudn. BKLL BLOCK. BNDERBY Orchardists: The Fraser Valley Nnries, Ltd. ALDERGROVE���������������������������,B.../C, Have the Finest' Home-Grown Nursery Stock Including��������������������������� / APPLES, PEARS, PLTJM3, CHERRIES, SMALL - FRUITS AND ORNAMENTAL SHRUBB1RY. For full particulars, write��������������������������� RICHARD McCOMB, - General Manager, LIVE DISTRICT AGJ3KT WANTED. Aldergrove, B.O THE ENDERBY PRESS AND: WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, May 2, 1912 7. ���������������������������rare Profitable Crops to Grow Between the Trees in Young Orchards We are in receipt, of Circulars Nos. i 12 and ly, the lirsl.on lhe growing ol' crops between orchard trees, and the second on the culture of cabbaye, celery and tomatoes, recently issued bv the Department ol\" Agriculture. * V\\i lo the year 19 09 the practice of growing crops between young orchard trees was not widely followed because of failure in marketing. Though in many districts the first producers found a ready local market up to a'certain point, later pro-j - ductions more than equalled the de-1 mand and prices,fell because of in-; discriminate consignments of small- lots to retailers and-to commission ��������������������������� may men which failed to bring remun- it is erative prices. About 1909 a number of districts had managed to work up'their production to a point where they could ship car loads of potatoes, etc., and market them properly. Since that time the growiug of crops between orchard trees has been commercially successful in many parts of the Province and it has done a great deal to render possible the development of voting orchards by men of limited capital. On this account we believe that the matter in this circular on orchard inter-crops winch deals with the general principles which should govern their use, will be of much interest to our readers. As in the case of other circulars of this series, a limited number of these was printed ancl there are not more than 150 copies left for distribution at the present time. Circular No. 15 gives technical information on the commercial production of cabbage, celery and tomatoes, in \"British Columbia. The methods detailed arc those which have given results and which are now in use by the most successful producers ot these crops in our interior country. Anvone interested should send to the \"uartmeni for a copy of 'this iar, as the information contained is ' of great value. ' \"Onlv i annual crops should be grown in fruit plantations,\" says Circular No. 12. \"In general, some low- growing crop which demands ^good tillage and comes off early is\" best. Almost any ��������������������������� vegetable crop may be grown, but with all such crops the question of-markets should be care- ' 'fully considered before planting anv large'area.- In'any section there is alwavs something in^the way of vegetables that can be grown at-a profit. The kind of crop grown will also depend largely .on the type of soil and the location of the orchard. . \"Grain or hay should never be \"grown in the orchard. They are especially objectionable because they 1 do not permit the cultivation of the soil nor shade !t sufficiently to keep it from baking. Of course, such crops as wheat, rye, oats, clover, etc., may be grown late in the season as ( ' cover crops to plow under, but if, grown for grain or hay it is too hard j to preserve the moisture ancl thei physical condition of the soil is not improved. A hoed crop is much more desirable. The growing of nursery stock in young orchards should be discouraged. This crop makes the same demands upon the soil as orchard itself, and it does not allow the variations in cultivations and management which are possible when different crops are grown. danger of leaving bush fruits too long in the orchard: In irrigated sections strawberries are /sometimes grown with good results. There is not the clanger of over-watering this crop that there is in the case of the bush fruits, as the strawberry season is over quite early. \"Young orchards should never be left in sod. Sod lands are not only drier than cultivated ground, but ihey are favorite breeding places o insects. Mice often harbor in sod lands, and they often do considerable damage to young trees \"There are a few cases where sod be grown in old orchards, but the exception rather than the rule. In such a case as a very steep i hillside where there was plenty oi moisture available it might be an advantage to leave the orchard n sod- 'However, nothing should be, taken off the ground. The grass should be cut and left on the ground. The Corporation of the City of Enderby Loan By-law No. 9 for to of Raising the Sum of Provide for the Con- Drains in the City of A By-law $6,000.00 struction Enderby: WHEREAS it is deemed necessary to construct certain drains in the City of Enderby, for the purpose of carrying off surface water, to-wit, a main drain on George street from or near the southern boundary of the, City, to Knight street; and on Regent street, fromj Sicamous street to the river; with-; such lateral drains leading theretoi as may be deemed necessary; and I WHEREAS, it is necessary-for such J purnose to raise by way of loan upon the credit of the Oity of Enderby, the sum\" of\" ������������������6,000.00, payable* on the first day 'of June, 1932, bearing interest'in the meantime, payable.half- yearly at the' rate of 6 per centum per annum, . the ' principal of * such loan, when raised, to be'applied for the purpose aforesaid; and WHEREAS, for the payment of the said principal and\" interest, it is- necessary to raise the sum of $561.49: in each and every year; and ! WHEREAS, the value of the whole_ rateable property of the City of En-, derby, according to the last revised assessment roll is $008,145.00; j NOW THEREFORE the Municipal j Council of the City of Enderby, in open meeting assembled, hereby enact as follows: 1. That it shall be lawful for the the-Mayor of the City of Enderby to raise by way of loan, from any person or persons, body or bodies corporate, who may be willing to advance the same on the credit of the on all the rateable property in the City of Enderby, in addition to all other rates, for the '-payment of the interest, on the said debentures ; 7. That the sum of -$201.49 shall be levied and raised annually by a* rate on all the rateable property in the City of En'derby. in addition to all other rates, for the payment of the debt hereby created, when clue ; 8. That it shall be lawful for thc said City of Enderby from time to time to repurchase any of the said debentures- at such price or prices as may be mutually agreed upon between the said City and the holder or holders of the said debentures ; and all debentures so repurchased shall be forthwith cancelled, and no re-issue of any debenture or debentures shall be made in consequence of such repurchase ; 9. That this By-law shall, before the final passage thereof, receive the assent of the electors of the said City of Enderby, in the manner provided for- by the Municipal Act, 1906, and amending Acts ; 10. That this By-law shall come into force and take effect on the lst day of June, 1912; 11. That this By-law may be cited for all purposes as \"The City of Enderby Drainage Loan iiy-law, 1912.\" TAKE NOTICE that the above is a true copy , of the proposed By-law upon which the vote of the Municipality will be taken, at the City Hall, Enderby, on Tuesday, the 7th day of May, 1912, between the hours of 9 a. m. ancl 7 p.m. ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������,��������������������������� GRAHAM ROSOMAN City Clerk. Dated at the City Hall, Enderby, B. C.*, April 18th, 1912. LAND REGISTRY ACT Re. Lots 1*8 ancl 19, Block 8, Map 211 A, City .of Enderby. WHEREAS proof of loss of Certificate of Title No. 13383A of the above named property, issued in the name of Andrew Amos Faulkner, has been filed at this office. Notice is hereby given that I shall at the expiration of one month from the date-of first application hereof, issue a duplicate of said Certificate of Title unless 'in the meantime valid objection be made to me in writing W. H. EDMONDS, District Registra Dated this 23rd day of April, 1912, Land Registry Office, Kamlocps, B.C. JUST MARRED A LITTLE BIT Sandy was an elder in the church, and a truly pious man. He had an eye for beauty ancl a love for it, but he married Tina because he knew sho would make him an -xcellent wife. \"I suppose Tina is a handsome lass ?\" said Sandy's cousin, who met him in Glasgow not long after the marriage, and had never seen the bride. \"I ken ye've glide taste, Sandy,\" \"A weel,\" said the bridegroom cautiously, \"she's the Lord's handiwork, Tammas.) I'm no prepared to say she is His masterpiece.\" SUTTON'S SEEDS FOR 1912 Flower, vegetable \"and farm seeds- imported in the original scaled packets from Sutton & Sons, the King's Seedsmen, Reading, England. Send for catalogue. ������������������ A. J. WOODWARD, Sole Agent 512 Granville St., Vancouver CITY. OF ENDERBY Voting on Proposed By-law FIRST TIME OFFERED FOR SALE IN THIS COUNTRY Machela, Nature's Scalp Tonic, removes dandruff and prevents falling of the hair. Has a record for growing hair���������������������������-95 cases out of 100. Each package contains a .nacket of Machela Dry Shampoo Powder. Price for complete home treatment, $1.00. Sold and guaranteed by A. Reeves. Choice Bluestem rtced Wheat and Seed Oats for sale. Place your order NOW as we have only a limited \"quantity on hand. The Columbia Flour ing Mills Co.,* Ltd. PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given to the Ratepayers, of the Municipality of the City of Enderby that I require the presence of the said-Ratepayers at the City- Hall, Enderby, on TUESDAY, the 7th -.lay of May, 1912, between the hours of 9, a.m. and 7 p. m.', for the' purpose of voting, by ballot^ either to confirm or to negative a- certain \"proposed By-law, to wit: A By-law for raising the sum of $6,000.00 to 'provide for the, construction of drains in the City of Enderby. Any person, male or female, being a British subject' and the assessed owner of land or real property within the Municipality, is entitled to vote on such proposed By-law. Given under my hand at the City Hall, Enderby, this 18th day of April 1912. GRAHAM ROSOMAN, Returning Officer. OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE iATENTS Trade Marks Designs . w.. Copyrights Ac Anyone sendlnu a sketch and description may onlcltly ascortnln our opinion free whether an ?nvp Vtlon Is probably pntentable. Commmilc*. uonMU^^Mentfil. HAHDB0W o^ mu sont free. Olilcat^oiicy for BecuriiiK patoiiia. Patents taken tFirouitli Muun 4 Co. recolTe special notice, without charge, lathe Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I*n.e������������������t dr- ailaUon o������������������ any scientific oumal. Terms for S $3.75 a year, portage prepaid, bold by all newsdsalers. - ��������������������������������������������� t MUNN & Co.36,Broadw,iy Hew York Br\" Ofllco. 625 F St.. Washington. D.C. Marcellus Junior (14758) ; /. Grand Champion and, Special Champion Clydesdale Stallion at Seattle \"and Victoria Exhibitions , DAM ���������������������������. Melanie[16612](14685) i Nina [16613] (8673) ; Nance, [4700] (573) , Lily ���������������������������- \" ��������������������������� SIRE Marcellus [4683] (11110) Lord Stewart [5976] (10084) -Macgregor [4486] (1487) Farmer (3056 286) . Garibaldi (318) Bred by James'McGaw, Stranraer, Scotland Will travel .nd stand for service as follows: - Leave stable Monday morninsr, arrive Endcrby noon: Armatroiitr at 2 p.m.; Stepney Ranch at nip-lit. ferms-120 for tht season. A,m fc P Property of STEPNEY RANCH, Enderby Nurserv stock is known to be par-'sai(*t City, by way of tbe debentures ticularlVjiard janJajTd, so much so hereinafter mentioned, _ji sum of I that nurserymen seldom grow two raoney not exceeding in the whrole-j in succession! tlie sum 0f $6,000.00, and to cause such sum of money so raised and received to be paid into the hands of nurserymen crops of nursery stocl on the same area. \"Potatoes may be mentioned as a cetvecl t0 t)e paui _UL(J UiiC _.*,_.._, u. crop well adapted to grow in young the Treasurer 0f the said City for the orchards. U is a staple commodity rcs an(1 witll the objects hercin- and is often shipped across the con- ])cforo reciteci . tinent, but in order to do this the ,, ThaL -t ghall be iaWful for the community must produce a sufli-*ga.\"j RTayor to cause any number of cicnt (niantity to ship in carload lots. I (lenent,nres to be made for the sum If early potatoes are grown a cover, of nQt less tnan $500.00 each, bearing \"interest\" at the\" rate of-six per centum per annum, not exceeding in the whole the sum of $0,000.00 ; and all such debentures shall be sealed with '/ytm^ *$,* Don't let repairs eat up your profits Komotimos. after tho -crop-of rye or wheat, or clover, may be planted potatoes are harvested. Potatoes thrive best on the light or medium soils but occasionally heavier soils are found that are adapted to tho fro p. Potatoes require the cultivation of ihe soil in the spring and early part of the summer, and consequently are among the best to grow in the orchard. \"Early corn, onions, carrots, beets, etc., arc good crops to grow as intercrops in the young orchard, because thev all renuire good cultivation and generally tempt the manager to liberal fertilizing. \"Tn fruit districts where canning factories are being built, such crops as tomatoes, corn, and beans may be grown, as it is often difficult for the factories to get a sufficient supply these crops. \"When clovers or vetches are grown it is well to leave a good wide strip on each side of the trees for cultivation, especially where irrigation is not available, so that the trees will not. suffer from lack of moisture. One crop can then be taken off, and the second crop allowed to grow to plow under next spring. This supplies nitrogen and adds humus to the soil. Small fruits are often grown as inter-crops and sometimes with very good results. Bush fruits should never be planted of the City nf Enderby, the Mayor, and counter- Treasurer of the said said debentures shall 1st day of June, 1912, the row ofj ������������������* 1 p / ������������������ pH >. 'I 9? 'I Li'.1' I' H��������������������������� ^ IVA K V V ��������������������������� > 1,4 . / \\Y 1 B- ���������������������������i -��������������������������� 5 I ty If SI ft; I'\"' 7' r a:-- 17 ft' i i? Thursday, May 2, 1912 THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Mum^amit EIGHT DAYS MORE of these Bargain Prices Are you doing- as hundreds of others are���������������������������taking advantage t J \" of this exceptional opportunity of supplying your wants at less than first cost? Read this story: IT MEANS DOLLARS FOR YOU: ADAMS STANDARD WAGON A synonym for thoroughly seasoned timber, skilled workmanship and neat finish Cockshutt Y 12-in Plows, regular'price, $23.00, SALE PRICE Cockshutt.Y 8:in. Plows, regular price, $19.25. SALE-PRICE Hillside Plows, regular price, $18.50.\" SALE PRICE' : - Adams' Heavy 4-in Tire Wagons; reg.price'i$115.00; SALE\". 'Adams'-Single Horse Wagons, reg. price, $94.00; SALE Price-.., Democrat Wagons, regular, $115.00; SALE PRICE . ���������������������������...'. Buggies, regular, $110.00; SALE PRICE Screen Doors, reg. price; $2.40; SALE.PRICE ,= y-i- y ��������������������������� V.-THE.-WAGON THAT LASTS ; -;__- ---'���������������������������-������������������������������������������������������ ' The Boxes are-constructed of thelb'es't southern box boards,; iron banded and securely braced; extra heavy\" bottoms reinforced over the bolsters.--Heavier than\" any other bottoms made. _ Other special features are. ri yetted wheels,\" patent \"end gate and\", patent truss skeins that add double'the carrying capacity without additional weight.. Made in all sizes and handled by the ,\"���������������������������.--'.', .t, \\ - \" ,,n COGKSHUn PLOW COMPANY, LTD. Also a complete line of lorries, heavy teaming gears, dump carts/stock racks and low wheel trucks. Catalogue and descriptive matter oa application. Get full particulars from '.���������������������������.'\" - \" -- '���������������������������SI-?3?.; 14.50 : 4.0b 87*95 71.50 ���������������������������9I.06 82-������������������������������������ $1*75 ,1.25. 45c 25c 17.so 12-oo 14c 650 .25 . Screen Doors, reg. price, 11.75; SSUE PEICET Screen Windows, reg. price 65c; SALE PRICE ., Screen Windows, reg. price, 40c; SALE PRICE, Trunks and Valises of all kinds at 30 per ct. off Tinware ^arid^ Granite ware, 30 per ct. off 20perct. off Harness and Accessories of all kinds Sharpies Tubular Cream Separators;reg. price, $75.00; SALE .... Sharpies Tubular Cream Separators, reg. price,'.$55.00;-SALE' Sewing-,Machines, regular price, $27.00; SALE PRICE-.' .... Ideal Woven Wire' Fen-:e, reg. .price, 42c; SALE PRICE, per rod Ideal Woven Wire Fence, reg. 62c; SALE PRICE, per rod ......... Ideal Woven Wire Fence;-reg. price, 94c; SALE PRICE per rod^ - Cyclone Lawn Fence; reg. price, 16c; SALE PRICE per foot-... Cyclone Lawn Fence, reg. price, 16c SALE PRICE, per foot '\"..:,*' 55������������������o 40-00 19,50 32jc 45c 65c ; 14c U_c White Enameled-Sinks, :eg. price, $4,25; SALE PRICE ;:....:. McClary's Famous Steel-Ranges, reg.' $51.00; SALE PRICE New Century Motor Washing Machines; reg. price, $22.00; SALE Eureka Sanitary Crock Barrell Churns, reg. price, $16.90; SALE Multiped,Garden Hose, reg. price, 20c; SALE PRICE, per foot 1 King Garden Hose, in 50.ft. lengths; reg. price, 7.50; SALE Eureka Potato Planters, reg. price, $1.75; SALE PRICE , Eureka Corn Planters, reg. price, $2.00; SALE PRICE Wash Tubs, reg. price, $1.25; SALE PRICE Axes, reg. price, $1.75; SALE PRICE Axes, reg. price, $1.50; SALE PRICE 7 Axes, reg. price, $1.25; SALE PRICE '. Brush Ho,oks, regular price, $1.50; SALE PRICE Garden Hose, reg. price, 45c ioobj SALE PRICE, Cleveland Bicycles, reg. Price, $55.00; SALE PRICE, Cleveland Bicycles, reg. price, $65.00; SALE PRICE . Standard Bicycle, reg. price,, $45.00; .SALE PRICE, .50 90c J.25 J.10 90c J.10 25c 45.00 5500 3500 ���������������������������Shelf- Hardware, Wire Cable Blocks, Etc. 25 per cent off ��������������������������� Bicycle Supplies of all kinds at 25 per cent off Simonds* and Prince,\" Rupert-Sawsj\" reg.-price, $1.00; SALEfper ft) oUC\" 7 1 3.OO $40������������������^ McClary's Famous Steel Ranges, reg. price, $58.00; SALE ...\" ��������������������������� 4fc / McClary's Famous Kootenay Ranges, reg. $68.00; SALE PRICE . McClary's \"Famous Steel Ranges,\" reg. price, $61.00; SALE ......\"...'. Steel Ranges, reg. price, $22.00; SALE PRICE '...::..;.:.'...\" :.. ' Stee'rRanges, reg. price. $19.00; SALE PRICE_ :.J..../..:Z..li Steel Ranges,'reg. price, $37.00; SALE PRICE '. ....... Boys' -Wagons, regular price, $4.00; SALE PRICE .-...: j JHpraejPultivators, regular price,$12.50; SALE PRICE 55������������������������������������: 49:00 J4.00 3:00 Blacksmith's Forges, regular price, $13.00; SALE PRICE ., Blacksmith's Drills, reg/ price, $20.00; SALE PRICE * 1 _ Planet Junior Cultivators, reg. price, $8.00; SALE PRICE Planet Junior Cultivators, reg. price, $7.25; SALE PRICE 9.50 15.oo 5.50 5.00 Sherwin- Williams Paints at $2.40 per Gallon Floor Paint Varnish Buggy and Wagon Paint 20 p.c. off 19 different buggies to choose from-all the latest and best-to be sold at LESS THAN COST Frost-Wood Mowers, reg. price $71.00; SALE PRICE $53.50 Frost-Wood Rakes, /eg. price, $42.00; SALE PRICE 31.50 Disc Harrows, reg. price, $10.25; SALE PRICE ! .\" 31.50 Diamond Harrows, reg. price, $10.25; SALE PRICE 8.00 Paroid Roofing, reg. price, $3.75; SALE PRICE, (100 sq. ft 2.75' Seed Drills, reg. price $13.25; SALE PRICE 9.00 Lawn Chairs, reg. price $2.00; SALE PRICE 1.40 Lawn Chairs, reg. $2.35; SALE PRICE 1.75 Bissell's Carpet Sweepers, reg. price, $4.00; SALE PRICE 3.00 Lawn Mowers, reg. price, $8.50; SALE PRICE 6.50 Lawn Mowers, reg. price, $9.50; SALE PRICE 7.50 Lawn Mowers, reg. price, $9.00; SALE PRICE \" 6.75 Every Article in this #25,000.00 stock ii on sale at Bargain Prices. Come early and secure the goods you want. The prices will be the same on the first day as on the last. Fulton Hardware Company, Limited Enderby, B. C. I-, '-.-/..��������������������������� * --t.\\z'Z: - ri-jtZrf ���������������������������������������������;' 7 iV-v,**-\";, ?yj'm . J-.���������������������������J i\".Zuf Z77.-77 ~< Jy.':'//;} -ii, 0- r>-:!.-i.������������������nta ...'I.-.������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������-���������������������������-.- ENDKRIiV PRESS A'\\rD WALKER'S WEEKLY DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? IF YOU HAVE BLADDER OR URINARY TROUBLES AND WEAKNESS OF THE KIDNEYS- READ BELOW Your back aches and fairly .groans with, the distress of kidney trouble. You're discouraged, but you mustn't give up.*���������������������������..\". The battle can be ciuickly won when Dr. Hamilton's Pills get lo work. These kidney specialists I.riris new health and vitality to young and old alike. Even one box proves their marvelous power.,. Continue this great healer, and your 'kidneys will become as strong, as vigorous, as able to work as new ones. Remember this: Dr. Hamilton's Pills are purely vegetable; ihey do cure liver, bladder and kidney trouble. They will cure you, or your money back. Mrs. ~\\V. U. Rossi ter, wife of a well- known merchant in Kensington, writes as follows: ��������������������������� \"Ten yoars ago my kidney trouble started, I suffered dreadful pains in my spine and around my waist, my back feeling as if hot irons were running tf.rough. I. couldn't sleep, had no appetuo, was pale, thin and very nervous. Cruel headaches, and despondency added to iny burdsn. Not until I had used Dr. Hamilton's Pills did I get any relief. They proved capital and helped me immediately. Eight boxes mads me well, and now I clo my own housework, feel and look the picture-'of health.\" Your complete restoration to health is certain wilh Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. Refuse substitutes.- 25c. per box, _ or five boxes for ������������������1.00. at all dealers or the Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. . HEALTH BY-* HAMMERING -A doctor,-or-a healer, in Paris has a hammer for curing rheumatism, and seems to be making a fortune with it. The rush of patients to get hammered by him is stupendous. The house in which he has his consulting flat is .completely blocked, and the queue often stretches downstairs \"right out into the -street. The blind, the lame, and the halt, children in arms, invalids on' stretchers, the aged and infirm walking wilh crutches, fill the house all day.' All come to have thgir \"rheumatics\" hammered out of them. The \"doctor taps the ailing part gently with his instrument. \"Jones and hi.s wife haven't a taste In common.\" \"Oh, 1 don't know; they're both fond of tho same book.\" \"Then I'll bet it's a pocketbook.' \"One o' de mus' curiosest things about a fool,\" said Uncle ISben, * is de way he'll holler and git mad if you don't let him show off his misfortune.\" - * * * \"Why, man, you have no sense of humor. \"When 1 lirsl heard thai jolu- 1 laughed till my sides ached.\" \"So did 1.\" _. .. * .. * *. Maude: I've something to tell you. I'm engaged to Jack. liihel: 1 am not surprised. Jf'.ck never could say \"No.\" * * * Mr. Bullion: Can't, you wait a >ear before you marry my daughter? Prospective son-in-law: I'll consult with my creditors, sir. * ������������������ * Wife: That Mrs. Gabblefgh Is such a talker. 1 couldn't get a word in edgewise. Hub: You must have allowed her to get the first start. * * ������������������ Doctor: 1 allowed you only one drink a day. Are you following my advice? Gayboy: Yes, and the advice of live other doctors who each allowed me the same. * * * Post: Thinks he's the whole thing, does he? Parker: Well, I'd hardly go as far as lhat, but he certainly considers himself a quorum. * ������������������ ������������������ \"You will be the victim of a fatal accident.\" \"Good gracious!\" \"Calm yourself. It won't happen till the end of your life.\" * * * Wife: Look, I bought this fur coat to-day. They tell me we are going to have very cold weather soon. Husband: Who told you so? Wife: The furrier. * * * Passerby '(to stout party that has fallen): Too bad, sir.! Was it a piece of ice you slipped on? Stout Party: No. ycu fool! It was a sheet of sandpaper. * * * Festive Individual: Is thish inquiry oifisch? Clerk: Yes, sir. Festive Individual: Well, ish my hat on straight? * * * ' \"I\"was going to give Jones a little friendly advice- this morning.\" \"And didn't you?\" \"No; he started to tell me how to 'run my affairs, and that's something 1 tolerate from no man.\" \" Robbed: I do pray to you to give me my things back. My wife will kill me if I go home without them. Robber: Sorry, I'm married myself, but what do you suppose my wife will do if I go home without anything? * * *. Sergeant: Why do you think this do? was stolen from a lady? Policeman: Because as I walkpd down the street wilh it, it stopped in front of all the department store windows. * * ������������������ The First Burglar (contemplating Father's invention): Wot abaht thc bloomin' burglar alarm? The Second Burglar: May as well put it in the bag; we can get somethin\" for the bells, p'raps. \"J wonder if your sister\" realizes, Johnny, that during the last three months 1 have spent many dollars in sweets on her?\" ������������������ \"I'm sure she does, Mr. Sweetly: that's._why_sh_els_._not_l_etting_ on she's A GOOD CORN SHELLER Roots out any kind of a corn, hard, soft or hlei-ding; cures it without pain, nets at night while you sleep���������������������������its name is Puinain's Painless Corn Extractor, the only painless remedy that acts in twenty-four hours. Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor is sure and safe, price 2\". cents. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegetabli ���������������������������act ture!; gently on tl met. Cur Biliouineu, Headache, Dizzi. and Indigestion. They di their duty. Sm*n Pill, Small Data, Small Price Genuine mut bear Signature fMMV engaged to Mr. Bigger.\" Corporal (to soldier reporting sick): What's the matter wilh you? Tommy: Pain in my abdomen. Corporal: Abdomen! Abdomen, indeed! You don't 'ave no abdomen; you 'ave a stomick. It's only officers what 'as abdomens. Is this an artist? Yes, that is what he., calls, himself. j Is his studio beautiful? It is. Where did he get the money with which lo buy beautiful things? From a rich uncle who died. Does the artist hold lovely afternoon receptions? He does, What i.s he painting? A picture. How long has he been painting the picture? About seven years. Will he ever finish it? NO! * * * \"Fifty dollars!\" cried Batkins, .ifter the judge had named the fine. \"Why. Judge, that's an outrage. I admit 1 was going too fast, but fifty dollars -' \"Them's the riggers,\" said the judge, coldly. \"All right, I'll pay,\" said Batkins. \"but I'll tell you right now I'll neve: come through this town again.\" \"That so?\" said the judge. \"W.-i-al. by Gorry, I'm sorry. Ye've b������������������?f>n ������������������ mighty good customer. \"Bill,\" he added, turning to the sheriff, \"hang crop**.- on the court-haousc, will ye? Thif here gentleman's about to pass on forever.\" So popular is Bickle's Anti-Consumptive Syrup as a medicine Mn the treatment of colds and coughs or ailments of the throat, due to exposure, to draughts, or sudden changes of temperature, that druggists and all dealers in patent medicines keep supplies on hand to meet the demand. It is pleasant to take, and the use of it guarantees freedom from throat and lung diseases. A .NOV������������������L-\"CATARRH -REMEDY CURES WITHOUT DUIGS THE HEALING VAPOR OF CATARRHOZONE LOOSENS THE COUGH, STOPS ALL DISCHARGES, PREVENTS SNEEZING. The real danger of Catarrh lies in putting off treatment. You may have catarrh yourself, but you may not know it. Before the disease spreads from your nose to lhe stomach, lungs, or bronchial tubes, root it out���������������������������cure it with \"Catarrhozone.\" ^ Look over the following symptoms���������������������������then examine yourself: Bad Breath Stuffy Nostrils Frequent Sneezing Ears Buzzing Watery Eyes Hacking Cough Bad Taste Droppings Raising Phlegm Difficult Breathing Don't continue to burden your system for another day with the germs of such a filthy, loathsome disease as Catarrh. Get Catarrhozone to-day- inhale its soothing vapor, fill youi breathing organs with its balsamic essences, and all trace of Catarrh will forever depart. Read what Elwood S. Lee, of Sydenham, Ont., says of his cure wilh Catarrhozone: \"I was a chronic sufferer from continuous colds in the throat and nose, and for many years have constantly had Catarrh. I was recommended to try Catarrhozone, and find \"that by using the Inhaler on the first touch of a cold or la grippe J am able to stay it in a few hours. I have been able to breathe through my nose freely since using Catarrhozone; in Jact, I am completely cured. (Signed: ELWOOD S. LEE.)\" Once you try Catarrhozone you'll realize how indispensable it is���������������������������the large dollar size contains an indestructible hard rubber inhaler and sufficient medication to last two months. Beware of the substitutor and imitators of, Catarrhozone���������������������������use the genuine and you'll get cured. By mail from the Catarrhozone Company, Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Ont. The attorney for thedefence arose to address the jury. \"Gentlemen,\" he said, \"in all this testimony lo which you have listened so patiently there is not one \" Then he paused, and the jurors braced themselves. They knew what was coming. Or they thought they knew. e The attorney for the defence resumed: \"There is not one particle of evidence against my client!\" Then thc jurors breathed more freely' and looked at one another wilh a glad smile. He had not said \"scintilla.\" the mistake of: breeding to defective stallions, but far more are guilty ot the fault of breeding too few mares, and these often of a very faulty type. Why is this so? Mainly because they feel that the risk of keeping the mares for which a high price has been offered is too great. \"She might die,\" is the common comment, \"and see what I would lose.\" If kept, there are fifty chances to one that she will live, if she is healthy and well cared for. This being so, wherein is the gain from selling? A brood mare in foal and a good breeder is a developed gold mine to a farm. The young filly which gives promise of becoming a satisfactory breeder is an exploited mine of wealth which it will pay the owner to develop. Do not sell the good fillies, and be equally tardy about breeding the undesirable mares. * * ������������������ If you have never tried feeding a few roots to thc idle horses, do so now. A good turnip, mangel or a few carrots will be greatly relished. There is nothing like a variety of foods to keep the horse's appetite keen, and there is nothing like a good appetite to aid in keeping the animal in condition. It is difficult to fatten a horse that will not eat. Remember that horses which are being highly fed and fitted for sale are more susceptible to thrush than those on a more scanty diet. It is necessary to take greater precaution in keeping the animals' feet clean and dry. 'In exercising the horses during the winter months, it must be remembered that an amount sufficient for one animal will not always be the correct amount for another. Study the animal's needs in this matter as you do their feed requirements. According to the Oregon Experiment' Station, a horse which receives, a larger quantity of hay that he needs cannot do as much work as one receiving just the required amount, because an over-distended stomach imposes greater work' upon the respiratory system, and indigestion in some of its many Count less-have been the cures worked by Holloway's Corn Cure. It has a power of its own not found in other preparations. Cured in Beamsville, Out. \"After a long experience with different pain remedies, 1 am convinced that none are equal to Nerviline. I was taken with av cold': in my chest, which later developed inlo a sort of chronic bronchitis. Every time I coughed it seemed to rack and tear my whole chest. I was also subject to a great stiffness in my joints, especially about the knees and shoulders, and experienced much pain in my muscles. To cure my chest troubles I first rubbed on 'Nerviline' copiously ^.ir two days, and then put a Nerviline Porous Plaster over the sore region. 1 got quick relief. Rubbing the sore muscles and aching joints with Nerviline did mora than all other treatments combined. By the aid of Nerviline and those wonderful Nerviline Porous Plasters almost any ache.and certainly any kind of inflammatory cold can be cured. (Signed) \"Mrs. W. J. Sharpe. \"Beamsville.\" All druggists sell Nerviline in 25c and r>0c bottles. Get it today. forms is also likely to follow. Fifteen pounds is given as a better feed for a 1,000-pound horse than twenty pounds, and it is said that a horse of this weight fed five pounds in the morning and ten pounds at night, -will be able to do more work than one which has a manger of hay before him at all times. For a fifteen to eighteen hundred-pound horse, twenty pounds of hay is given as enough roughage, and the remainder of the ration-should be grain. Gillet���������������������������\"Randolph is furious every time he hears of a man running oft with another man's wife,\" perry���������������������������\"Yes, it makes him wild because no one elopes with his.\" Sores Heal Quickly.���������������������������Have you a persistent sore that refuses to heal? Then try Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil.in the dressing, it will stop sloughing, carry away the proud flesh, \"draw out the pus and prepare a clean way for thc new skin. It is the recognized healer among oils and myriads of people can certify that it healed whero othor oils failed\" utterly.. t Whenever you feel a headache coming on take NA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers They stop headaches promptly and surely. Do not contain opium.' morphine, plicnacctin, acctanilid or other dangerous drugs. 25c. a box at your Druggist's. '125 NATIONAL DRUG ANO CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA. LIMITED. With the Horses COLT DISTEMPER^ Can lit- li.-iiuHi-il vit.v fnsily The sick nre ciireil.'aiiil :tll olliVrs i\" s.-iiin- si.-iuir. in, niiilliT luiw '\"r\\|.-i>������������������i-il.\" ke|U lr dn/en, of dnij;j;isi_ and h.-iriichS (li-ali-rs. Cut show., how lo pmiliii'i' llimats. Our free Imoktet gives even-tliine. I.iii'jti'si sell'.iiK linvse remedy i\" exisient-.i��������������������������� li'ii-n y-iirs. DISTRIBUTORS: All Wholesale Drug Houses. SPOHN MEOlCti CO., Chemists and Bacterlollglsts. GOSHEK, IHO., U. S.������������������ Horse-breeders are, as years go by, putting forth extra efforts to improve the class of horses in the country. No amount of money, is spared in the purchasing of good sires, and considerable is also spent in bringing good fillies j into the country, but it is quite nolice- ible in most show-rings, as well as in travelling throughout the country, that- the stallions are of a higher order than the fillies; that is. proportionately, there are more \"top-notchers\" amongst the males than amongst the females in our heavy-horse breeds. True, there is an improvement noticeable in the, quality of some of the best Allies ex-', hibited, but many are somewhat plain. It is not so apparent, perhaps, in the ^lrow*^ihg~rs~ on^the^ come and offer a seemingly large price for the good young filly, and, after hesitating a short time, she is sold, and a few nondescript cross-breds or \"scrubs\" kepi for breeding purposes, and the owner wonders why he doesn't get a prizewinning colt from mating this class of mare with the champion stallion of our largest shows. The stallion will do his part, but he is not the only- Influence .exerted .upon .the colt. The maternal influence cannot but be great, and it matters not how prepotent tho sire is in transmitting his desirable quality and conformation to his offspring, eleven months sp-ml in the foetal stage, together with all thc inherent qualities of the dam's ancestors passed down through the ovum to the foal, must have their effect, and a very noticeable effect it i.s. It is just about as impossible to get the best colt from a good sire and a poor dam as it is to get a good machine from an expert mechanic and defective material. To attain lhe highest possible level in our horse-breeding, the fillies which are being raised for breeding purposes must receive the attention they merit. Select the mares as scrupulously as stallions are selected in thc districts where the best of our drafters are bred, and see how quickly an improvement will be noticed. The remedy is in the hands of the farmers and horse- breeders. The time is approaching when buyers will be scouring the country for horses. They will offer good prices, but turn a deaf ear when they insist upon purchasing your brood mares or good fillies. Keep them. They are valuable in your horse business. Too many make Sfif/WsGwv -ctadc rnnpuc HKALSTHE LUNGS STOPS COUGHS price, as etuis WHEAT, BARLEY OATS, FLAX Owing to so much unfavorable weather, many farmers over Western Canada have gathered at least part of their crop touched by frost or otherwise water damaged. However, through the large shortage in corn, oats, barley, fodder, potatoes and vegetables, by the unusual heat - and drought of last summer in the United Slates, Eastern Canada and Western Europe, there is going to be a steady demand at good prices for all the grain Western Canada has raised, no matter what ils quality,, be.= =H=ma-y So much variety in quality makes it Imposs'Me for those l������������������;������������������s experienced to judge the full value that should lie obtained for suvti uram. .,i>'- uiini mure in iu-������������������*<1 of tlie st'i'viri'S of liie experienced and reliable grain commission mnn to act for him. in the looking after selling of his grain, than lu- iloi-s thi ssi-ason. Farmers, you will therefore do well for yourselves not to aei-ppt street or track prices, but to ship your grain by carload direct to Fort William or Port Arthur, to be handled by us in a way that will get for you all there is in. it. We make liberal advances when desired, on receipt of shipping bills for cars shipped. We never buy your grain on our own account, J.) in act as your agents in selling it to the best advantage for your account, \"and we \"do so on a fixed commission of'lc. per~\" bushel. We have made a specialty of (his work Tor many years, and are well known over Western Canada for our experience in the grain trade, reliability, careful intention to our customers' Interests, and promptness in makng settlements. ��������������������������� We Invite farmers who have not yet employed tis to write to us for shipping instructions and market information, ami in regard to our standing in the Winnipeg Grain Trade, mid our llnmieliil position, we beg to refer you to the Union Hank of Canada, arid any of Ils branches, also to the commercial agencies of liradslreets and it. G. Dun A Co. THOMPSON SONS & CO. GRAIN COMMISSION MERCHANTS 703 Y Grain Exchange Winnipeg y \\ v t ( ) &������������������ *.^*b l -1 u WALL PLASTER -Plaster' Board takes the place ofLath,and is fireproof The \"Empire\"'brands of Wood fiber and Ilardwall Plaster for good construct ion SHALL WE SEND YOU PLASTER LITERATURE The Manitoba Gypsum Co., Ltd. WINNIPEG, MAN, 130 I 9 W fl I I-' II' It I K.YDRttBY PRESS AND AVALKKR'S WKKKLY Back to The Soil (.By Margaret Burrous Martin) |-< _ Li: ,&v Stephen Randall swung on to the last platform of the train as if he were twenty instead of more than twice that happy age. Fellow-travellers on the \"Polly ti\"���������������������������the same crowd, more or less, lhat usually rode to the Loop with him���������������������������noted his radiant face in surprise. \"What's struck Randall?\" asked one of thc younger men. \"Looks like he was just ready to pass the cigars and tell us, 'lie weighs ten pounds.' Y never saw him look so chipper.\" , \"I guess Randall likes this weather.\" another daily sufferer on the Metropolitan Elevated answered idly. \"He still counts himself from the country.\" lt was spring. Everywhere life was wakening. Some of the suburbanites at one .end of the car were comparing notes,-on shrub and seed orders. But the really warm days, wilh their depressing lassitude, were yet to come. Spring hats and furs still alternated in favor with the women shoppers. One of these shoppers occupied a seat with the unusually cheerful-looking Mr. Stephen Randall. \"Oh, Mr. Randall,*' she gushed, \"isn't this a delicious morning? And I'm going to spend it down at your place. I want to get the first chance at that sale on the fourth floor. . '. . You don't know anything about it? Oh, really now! . . . Oh. you are going on a vacation tomorrow? Dear me! I supposed everybody took vacations in July or August No, 1 suppose they couldn't all get off at once. Mr. Mulligan!\"���������������������������this to a man across the aisle���������������������������\"did you know Mr. Randall is going off on a vacation tomorrow? In Lent, too.\" With an inquiring glance at Stephen Randall, Mr. Mulligan, thus appealed to, folded his paper as they entered the Loop district and stood in the aisle close to his vivacious questioner. ' \"So, Randall, you've made it, eh? - Grabbed'both fists full when the grabbing was good and now it's you for a nice little corner of your own to enjoy it. Well, well! I'm glad for,you, mighty glad; that's what we are all trying to do���������������������������some of us not succeed- ' ing very well; but we're all trying to get, get, and then 'git.* \"Back to the soil for you, eh? \" \"Well, I'll have to keep grubbing along here. After all, it's not such a bad old burg. It's all that\"���������������������������with a sweep of the hand .toward-the crowded- buildings bordering- the \"L\" line���������������������������\"and this\"������������������������������������������������������ f with'a whimsical dab,at the soot on '\"'his nose���������������������������\"that fills the \"fist of those ��������������������������� 'that arc lucky.\" - f;r������������������;Stephen7-Randall^ stepped .-\"from; the ^car platform-with lessened -buoyancy. \"-.Perhaps \"the' feather\"of his seatmate, , threatening his'eyes, .was responsible,' perhaps the usual\" crowd, perhaps the , thoughts Mr. Mulligan had arouse~d. . - - \"Alf\" of that���������������������������and this���������������������������that fills,, the fists.\" ; \\ ��������������������������� ' - Well.-.he had filled\" his honestly��������������������������� shrewdly, perhaps, but honestly, little by'little; and now he' was- off~for a quiet corner. ** How Bertha would enjoy it all! 7 Away from Chicago for- - ever! Sixteen years now she had stood it with him���������������������������merrily at first, especially while the' hope \"of Stephen, Jr., ' was ', ever ahead of them; then,.when it was known that hope was never to be realized, she had still lived patiently the apartment life that her village-bred heart rebelled against. Doggedly they had set the goal: When they had saved enough they -would\" leave it all. ��������������������������� The noise,' the crowds, the hurry, the dirt, the misery, the* poverty lhat thrust itself before one's aching eyes, the vanity, the competition, thc vice, all, all of it would be a faded memory and they would find a little house and big rounds, p==with=the=sca=near-enough=to-smellrithe mountains near enough to see. And now, thank God! the goal was ln sight. How her eyes had sparkled an they looked into his when he kissed her good-lly at the inner vestibule door. \"The very- last time,\" she had laughed. \"The very last time you will go to town in a rush for the nasty old If ft T W I w r ii ���������������������������I QUEBEC FARMER TELLS GOOD NEWS FOUND COMPLETE CURE FOR 'CRAMPS AND KIDNEY DISEASE ���������������������������Suffered for Six Years, but Found Health and New Life in Dodd's Kidney Pills���������������������������Warm Praise for Old Reliable Remedy. ;���������������������������*- Mario East, Bonaventure- Co., Quebec (Special).���������������������������Mr. Peter Bernard, a prosperous young farmer living near hear, is spreading the good news that he has found a complete cure for his # kidney troubles. \"I suffered for six years from cramps 7*in the muscles and kidney disease,\" '\"Mr. Bernard says, \"but Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me completely. Yes, I am ���������������������������feeling so well that I want other sufferers to know just how easy it is to be cured.\" It is a good old saying that it is easy to do anything if you jjust know how. And Mr. Bernard and hundreds of others are telling you just how to cure kidney disease. Dodd's Kidney Pills always cure it. And as kidney disease ia the direct cause of rheumatism, lumbago, Bright's disease, heart disease, pain in the back and urinary troubles Dodd's Kidney Pills cure them by removing the cause. If you haven't used Dodd's Kidney Pills yourself ask your neighbors about them. 'Polly L,* leaving me here with my make-believe beam ceilings, my make- believe fireplace, my rubber-tread, smelly vestibule, my���������������������������oh, the whole of it! I'll pack hard today, and tomorrow wo will go to find our dream house. Oh, Stephen, it seems too good* to be true!\" It was this unusually long, unusually happy farewell that made it necessary for him to rush like the youth he wasn't and the enthusiast he was, to catch that last platform. And now he took the last two steps of the \"L\" stairs as one. Oh, it. was good to be alive, and to be done���������������������������almost done��������������������������� with the city! He had told them at the store a month ago that he expected to resign at his vacation time, ancl they had urged him to reconsider. \"Think it over for the month. \" We won't take your, word as final until then; and please don't-let the possibility of a change get out yet. \"'It is upsetting to the department. We hope you will reconsider your decision.\" \"*Reconsider!\" He smiled now at the thought. Why, the thing was settled years ago. Reconsider staying in the department store���������������������������in the department he had made such a states-wide success? No, he was done with it forever. But he would avoid any possibility of discussion by holding his formal resignation until closing time. Entering the building, he gave his morning paper to the elevator boy with the usual question, \"How's the mother this morning, Will?\" \"Belter, thank you. She slept fine last night. Your idea about the milk ancl crackers works like a charm; and, Mr. Randall, she wanted I should tell you how glad she is you've got Harry in your department. She don't worry about him any more like she did.\" In the office'Randall found aN\" very- old friend, Mr. Reigand, with whom he had first dared the city. He smiled reminiscently now as he took off his gloves after greeting the man. That little place and this! Still, he had learned the foundations of his business in that. little place, and it, too, had grown. Reigand & Co. had the largest store now in their thickly populated district. Many of the _ people there never-came into the State Street shopping centre. ' - - \"��������������������������� ,j . \" Reigand was explaining\" his \"unusual visit.'- \"I am* up against it, Randall. I need help ate once to tide me over.-- I can_give'you.securities that you,-know- ing~mej can trust.- . The Tbank-won't touch, them in .time to \"help.-\"-'I must have fifty thousand,by tomorrow noon. You* have plenty,of gilt-edge security. Will /you help me,out, fori\"-'say, ;until January.next?\" . -. . ' - - - Stephen Randall remembered with a twinge Mulligan's reference to his \"having both fists full.\"-''* - If he acceded to this request in the Quixotic fashion Reigand seemed to think possible, one of those fists would be pretty empty for a year, and���������������������������why, it'would mean postponing- their exodus to the promised land! -.-- ' ���������������������������_ , ' -**��������������������������� - ��������������������������� .Almost without his 'will-he found himself answering: \"I am sorry, very sorry indeed, Mr. Reigand, but the fact is, I have made plans, that \"will make it impossible for me to change any of my capital. \"I- am leaving here for goocl tonight. I am. sorry. : I would like.to.see my way clear to help you out, but I can't.\" ,-As Reigand closed the ground-glass door behind him, Stephen Randall lifted his head with a quick, impatient gesture that was characteristic. \"Why, the man looks old, almost feeble,\" he thought, \"and he can't be near the Children Cry for Fletcher's ������������������������������������������������������Wot?. Wfflw mi ALCOHOL 3 PER CKNtT AVcdclablePrcparalioiiforAs-1 sirnilaliiitJiiieFooclantfRcgula- i/ng (its Sioumclts aiidBowelsof mmm Promotes Digcs(ion,CIieerFu!-l ness and Rest.CoiUamsncillier Opium.Morphi.ic nor MuEral. Not Narcotic. MectpeofOiiDirSMtimriiaim 31| li| * Furnjikm Seed\" isMM sf/x.Sama * J.hMfeMs- JiiiiscSttd * ftppammt- . BiCariomiSm* UkmSeed- - CtatitM'Sujof' liii/cyiten Flam Apcrfecf Remedy forConsflpa- lion, Sour Storach.Diarriioea Worms,Convulsions.Feveris!i ness andLoss of Sleep. ]ficSuni(e SignanireoP NEW'YORK. __4^ old J5BOSIS-35CEMS : Guaranteed under th Exact Copy of Wrapper. The Kind You Have Always Bought, aud wliich has been in use for over 30 years, has borne thc signature of and has been wade under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and \"Just-as-grood\" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health ol Infants and Children���������������������������Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic 7 substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Ecvcrishness. It ernes Diarrhoea and Wind ' Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tlie Pood, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea���������������������������The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years : < - f.I a- CKNTAun eoMMNy, Nio'roiiK citv. Isixtynfne\"^yeE He was a young man when he gave me my first job, and what a hustler he was, and how kind to me and all the fellows! ] suppose he has been too easy with some one and that's why he's in a hole. I wish I could see my way to help the old scout. He looked almost weepy when I told him how things were. It's all part of this beastly life here. Thank tho Lord I'm clone with it!\" . ���������������������������As-the-morning-wore on, the radiant look faded, as radiant looks are apt to in the stress of down-town life. Details that had on other days passer! unnoticed brought today the, quick gesture of impatience, and Randall's friendly greetings to his salespeople seemed automatic. Half unconsciously he asked one of his younger salesmen: \"Well, Phil, how went the lesson last night?\" But the boy's quick response failed to bring the usual appreciative smile. \"I knew you'd bo after asking me that this morning, so when some of the fellows asked me to go set in at a game with them over Mike's Cafe, I turned them down so I could tell you I finished thc series. Trust you, sir, not to forget to keep at a chap! but I'm sure I'm glad you do. I don't seem to have the nerve to stick at the lessons sometimes, and then I think you'll sure ask, and you're Johnny-on- the-spot every time. I'll bring you the new drawings in the morning if I may, sir.\" As Mr. Randall passed on without answering this suggestion, he heard thc boy say to another who had overheard: \"Now what's eating him? Sure, though, he'll be all right soon. There's' only- one like him about this place, and that's himself. Me for him and lhe advertising course! I'm bound to make good if just because he keeps at me.\" Later in the morning the secretary of a social settlement centre called up Randall, asking for an appointment to talk over with him some low-rent apartment-houses in\"their crowded district. , --.*���������������������������--���������������������������, \"We are trying,\" he said, \"to persuade the owner,to remodel'-his buildings. They .are wretchedly, insani-, tary, though they escape the law, but he says you have heavy.mortgages on the places and would not consent to alterations that_ might .decrease the income.. I wish you would* go-with me some time _. this ...\"week, and .see--the places' as/we'~-do.-���������������������������' I'am \"sure' that \"you are' not aware of the 'menace\"-they- are to. healthy especially the health of the many little children who live there.\" ' As .Randall hung upjthe receiver at the close of that talk,-the last glimmer of the radiant1- look' was\" gone. ' .He frowned\"- impatiently at r a pretty little blonde girl'\\yho was waiting an iriter-T .view with him. She' was \"one of the salesgirls, \\who was \"rapidly making good in-the department, placed, as she was, under the'guidance of an acid, shrill-voiced veteran-with quick hands and thin hair-who, looking at the glint of the sun-lighted braids and vainly trying to \"make her own dark tresses conceal the escaping rats, would-confess: \"I'm just dippy about that kid. She's too sweet and cute for anything, and that hair ain't any hand-me-down. It's rooted, every blonde bit. of it...in her own head.\" ' - The pretty little blonde met Mr. Randall's frown with tear-filled-eyes. \"Oh, Mr. Randall! \"Is it so you are going away, and Mr. Kumber from Caffort's is coming to take your place? You know I began there, and���������������������������well\"���������������������������and here.jthe_pink_and_white_cheeksjj_u r n___ ed Tose���������������������������\"it was on account of him I quit. If he comes here, I'll have to be���������������������������different, or else give up my job; and with father at tho hospital and my brother running with the-crowd he does���������������������������oh, it just seems like it's no use trying!\" And the rounded, girlish form shook with sobs.. Mr. Stephen Randall had spent little time considering who would take his place. Somehow ho had taken it for granted that\" Marvin-Kirhy\" would _b~c~ promole'd. J-le deserved il, and the advance would lie especially opportune, for Kirby's wifo had recently undergone a most serious operation ancl wns even now but slowly recuperating, at a most expensive sanitarium. Kirby was a splendid fellow and know tho department thoroughly. They had worked most successfully together. There wns not one inefficient person in the whole force, and, so far as they knew, not an indecent one. Tf the little girl was justified in her fear; if the firm was planning to bring over Mr. Kumber���������������������������well, as far as business ability was concerned, the company could find no ,better man. But, once established here, he would install his brother-in-law, Wittaker, and, oh' Lord! Marvin would have to go, and then Lena, and John, and Mrs. Roberts, and Miss Snediker. Mentally Randall reviewed a list of his best', most faithful workers.\" Kumber and Wittaker would change the whole combination. With a frown that outclassed the one which had greeted the little salesgirl, he walked slowly through his department, studying the salespeople in his charge. His face did not lighten as he overhead a customer, a little woman in black, say to a sales girl: \"It's a great Worms in children, if they-be not attended to, cause convulsions, and often death.. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator will protect the children from these distressing afflictions. comfort to us mothers to have our girls in a department- like this.\" Randall paused to catch the girl's reply as she leaned over toward the customer. But when she said, \"Oh, but that's all to be changed now\"���������������������������he hurried on, impatiently. - / 7- ; * .,.'-,'��������������������������� . As he returned,to, his office,'.the telephone rang again. \" ' A girl suspected of shop-lifting had been searched, the voice- 'reported,.-and,\" goods'-, apparently from , his department, had been found. Rather.a sorry case���������������������������the girl, was just eighteen and \"about to\" be married.\" She had stolen the'lace,-about-a dollar's worth of_ cheap stuff, to trim her'wedding clothes. .Now\" she was ,scared nearly to ^deathf. She-was too; old. for the Juvenile Court, but perhaps Randall- would come to the court tomorrow and \"there refuse to testify'against the girl or identify the lace. The,fellow was \"anxious \"to marry herat once, and it really 'seemed a mistake to send her over.\" ._,...-_ Stephen Randall hung up the'receiver with a bang. ���������������������������'��������������������������� Damn it! This life was maddening. Plow had he. stood it so long? A man had no chance here to live his own life cleanly. He looked out over, the busy street. The traffic officer, 'with his shrill-whistle and white-gloved hands, stayed and advanced'the countless throngs hurrying, hurrying, with.never a-greeting to passersby. He remembered how. that had impressed him when - he first came to Chicago. No one ever seemed to meet any one ho knew on' the crowded streets. Each -for himself. lTo\\\\^selfisl*i=the3^all^Wr������������������!\"=Ti;acTr:try- ing to snatch his fists full of the harvest of all the labor in this city field ancl then, with no return, growing fat on the threshed grain. Stephen Randall, to whose lips oaths had come but epochally, stood at the great windows on this, his last day, and swore repeatedly under his breath. When at last the day was over and his interview with the firm at an end, ���������������������������he-walked-slowly-to-his \"Polly\"L\"~sta-\" tion. Gone was every vestige of the radiant look hc had worn as he entered lhe car that morning. Weary, preoccupied, apprehensive, he listlessly opened his paper and turned to thc pink sheet. At the third stop a shabby old scullery maid came and stood in the crush by his seat. She glanced wearily at the man who had always promptly yielded her his place; now hc stared, unseeing, at lhe sporting sheet. \"Thankee, sir,\" she muttered, when at last he rose guiltily to his feet. Then she added, speaking more than a \"thank you\" for the first time in their long months' little byplay, over the seat: \"I don't know, somo nights, what I would do if it wasn't for ye, sir, always having a seat for me. My feet do be so tired, and supper and things to do for the childer when\"! gets home.\" For the first time' since morning Stephen Randall's face lighted with a smile. \"I'm always very glad to be able to give you a seat, madam,\" he answered cheerily. When he reached his station, hc walked heavily down thc long steps, and heavily he climbed tho steps to his second-floor apartment. At the door, Bertha flung herself into his arms, sobbing hysterically: \"Oh, Steve, Steve, I dread to tell you! I have Jane Hemmel's twins here In our flat. She was so good to me, you know, when we first came, and now her mother, is dying. It will be a long, awful death���������������������������weeks, maybe months��������������������������� and the children can't be there, and there is no one else to take them, : The Best Liver Pill.���������������������������The action of the liver is'easily disarranged. A sudden chill,- undue-.exposure*.to the*ele-' ments,\" over-indulgence in some'favor-, ite food, excess.in drinking, are\"a few of-the \"causes\" -But'whatever may' 6e the\" cause,- Parmelee's--Vegetable' Pills' can~.be relied upon\" as:the._best'corrective that can be taken.\" Tney arei,ihe/-f\\ leading -\"liver pills-' and they;, have _ no'77j superiors among .such -preparatioh's.V^\"-**--\"'\" and .she-can \"come'.'here to,'see-'them.\" ���������������������������And 'oh, - Steve,--1, just; had -to-have lhem.y'~I could not go-off.and leave\" her.in\" suc.h -trouble.1 \"-��������������������������� And\".then- later this-afternoon,\" she'continued,' almost incoherentl5v' \"I promised to take' the chairmanship of that committee^ ,-Mrs.' Jackson has worked\"so'har\"d'at'\"'it,\"and now \"she, has broken, down and the thought- of _no one ?_to carry ,it _on..is keeping \"her from \"'gaining, and _ her; daughter begged me to .take it-for\"_a' while. ..Those 'young girls,-you know,\" not. living .at home���������������������������the -: department-' store girls. Oh, I'm afraid you.will, not'understand, \"Steve! **- All.our. beau'-'5 tiful plan spoiled; but I could-not-go' away-when I had no much to do here.\"- Oh,-Steve!\" , .\" - ,--.7 > \"Gently,\" \"tenderly, Stephen Randall lifted the wet, face, from his shoulder.' \"Little \"woman',!' -,h'e\"' said,-' while\" the' eyes that were so radiant in the \"morn-., ing slowed with a deeper light, \"Ltold ; the firm ' .tonight\" I would-stay with, them.. \"And now, * dear, I must* get \"old Dan Reigand on tho 'phone _as_soon_ :asr=I==emi7=irncl���������������������������thon we Will'see what we can do to make the children happy.\" As they passed into their little sitting-room, he drew her closer in,his, arms and said: \"I never thought of it unlil today, but we'used to say back home on the farm that the man that never fed'the soil,\" but took and took from it, and then left it, was a robber. And it is just the same here.\" ' , i- *K fl ->' F > ; ���������������������������*\" 'v v.V; ���������������������������-\"��������������������������� -t...������������������>.v-r: \"������������������-\\ '/J-Gi V-* ' 1 -, - V -' - t \"^ * T ^w- -K.~r< _ -. - -*\"*\"' *���������������������������\"=\", V^j -.^s; \"���������������������������'-i* Ar*??r ���������������������������'j������������������\\ :., Av^ v ���������������������������* - ��������������������������� ~; ';/% ** 'X7 VrsV'^7^ 3*������������������ '_-^���������������������������^ -������������������������������������������������������_���������������������������-������������������ w. ���������������������������v*-* _ 4 \"- \"U . j*- i r t--- t, ,- ���������������������������? **��������������������������� -1 iZ- ��������������������������� ~'-\"^\"i '\" -r-~''t-''Z? ���������������������������y-J/-M\\ ��������������������������� v Vfe| \"'is/. 7\\ ���������������������������-'���������������������������o ���������������������������_,\"-.-\" - sr.y~~ /��������������������������� r.*a LONELIEST PLACE. ON EARTH - When Napoleon was sent to St. Helena, it was thought that the loneliest place on earth had been assigned to him as a prison. But St. Helena is fourteen hundrod miles nearer a continent than is Tristan d'Ac una. Many hundreds of miles of ocean lie between this island and its nearest neighbor. Tristan, in short, is a tiny oasis in a boundless wilderness of waters, go from it in which direction you will. It is a rocky ancl cliff-girt little isle with a solitary mountain a thousand feet high rearing itself from the midst. Yet on this lonely speck of rock and earth there lives a community seemingly quite happy in its isolation from all the rest of the world. Thoy are farmers, cattle-raisers, and shepherds. In the valleys of thc island are fertile fields where potatoes mainly arc grown. Thc food of the people consists, for the most part, of beef, mutton, fowls, potatoes, nnd fish. Tristan used formerly lo produco many fruits ancl vegetables which can no longer be grown there. The reason of this is that the island for a long time was overrun by rats, which escaped from a ship that anchored thero and which the people have been unable, it is said, ever entirely to exterminate. ShilohsGure STOPS COUGHS JHf^J^S?! 1* I ft'ay :,u:yvt;A%in:*> r-1 *****������������������*: Kft-,^ iw iS������������������ ^- * 2 / THE ENDERBY PRESS AND WALKER'S WEEKLY Thursday, May 2, 1912 SEC We have Just Received and Placed in Stock A Carload of Fine Furniture IN MISSION DULL MAHOGANY, FUMED OAK, SATIN WALNUT AND GOLDEN OAK, IN DINING ROOM AND BED ROOM SUIT ES, TABLES AND WRITING DESKS, BUFFETS AND CH1FFONEERS, FOR CUSTOMERS WHO LIKE THE * BEST, AND You will find our prices a little better than elsewhere FARMERS' INSTITUTES Wm. E. Scott, provincial superintendent of Institutes, has adopted a plan which he; believes will have a tendency to improve and build up the membership of the local institutes. He proposes to award a set of-books dealing with agriculture for the best results in each''of the' following: 1. For the most complete set of reports, statement of accounts, and membership lists sent in during the year by any Institute. 2. For the largest number of new members secured during 1912. 3. For the best essay dealing with the subject of crops hy any member of an Institute at any of the meetings of said Institute. . Thc desire is to create more enthusiasm among members, and to get them to apply themselves more keenly to the work of their Institutes, by assisting in writing essays,, ancl personally reading same at meetings of the Institute from time to time. The books will form a nucleus of a library for each Institute, and arrangements will have to be made by the executive committees of the successful Institutes as to having the books placed on file so that they may be available for the perusal of the members at any time they may so desire. MOVING PICTURE WONDER IF YOU FILL YOUR CURTAIN WANTS HERE YOU WILL SAVE MONEY. Madrass at 25c yd up White Frilled Muslin, very dainty, for Bedroom, 20c yd to 35c. New Casement Material, Preston Twill: *a nice, -soft draping material with a soft twill in tan, green, wine ancl Cream; 40-in wide at 50cyd English and American Cretons���������������������������A choice range of - patterns for every purpose. The Poison Mercantile Go. Fish with the Phone to > Maundrell's It will take but a minute to catch a bunch almost as fresh as if you were at the waters A. E. Maundrell ^vTthe^new^stand^ OF CANADA Paid-np Capital, Rest CQ f O J Q7A and Undivided Profits 909M.OM.9OIU Total Assets (Over) $58,000,000 Thrifty CMMren The lesson of thrift, **' so necessary to the future welfare of your children, is perhaps best taught by opening for each a vSavings Bank Account, and encouraging them to deposit regu- larly a portion of their spending We went to see the Big Smoke put a pall over Jim Jeffries the other night. We are not advocating prizefighting, therefore we feel that we can recommend anyone to see the moving picture of the * Jeffries- Johnson mix-up. The pictures are a marvel. The scenes in and about the ring and on the streets of the Nevada town and the headquarters of the big fighters, show the unlimited possibilities of the moving picture machine. In a few minutes one learns more by seeing these moving, living scenes of excitement, and :s given a better understanding of the conditions prevailing there than the reading of all the reports printed, could give. It is an education * in itself. - As for the ''brutal fight\"., which we hear 7 so much about from people who did not see it and would not pay to look at the pictures.of it, we have seen many scrappier things in the old Y.M.C.A\". gymnasium. The pictures show the colored man to be in every way the superior of Jefieries, and were it not that the moving-, picture company were guaranteed a ten-round fight, Jeff could have been put to sleep in four rounds as easily as in fourteen. ATKINSON'S NEW BOOK Our old friend, William Walker Atkinson, has written a new book, in which he tells about \"Your Mind and How to Use It.\" Like all of Mr. Atkinson's books, he gets down to the practical, analytical side of his subject, and gathers meat for thought ami education. . William Walker is a wordy writer. He can string his subject out longer than anyone we ever Headquarters for Bee Supplies We have just received a carload of Bee..Supplies from._thc_ East and__are prepared to supply iny ancl all requirements for thc Beekeeper. Also have a large assortment of Bedding Out Plants of all descriptions. TJTTATT} V Scedhouse & XlljlN JA* X Nurseries' Vancouver, B. C. A. R. MACDOUGALL, Prop. Fred. H. Barnes BUILDER & CONTRACTOR Plans and estimates furnished Dealer in Windows, Doors, Turnings and all factory work. Rubberoid Roofiing, Screen Doors and Windows. Glass cut to any size. We represent S. C. Smith Co,, of Vernon. Enderby. money. Though they may not accumulate very much money, they will learn its value and how to save it. We welcome Children's Savings Accounts. Enderby Branch, S. W. HARDY, Manager CJ 'I'Urcailnecdtc St., E.C. F. W. ASHE. - - Masiajjcr. G. M. C. IIAKT SMITH, Assistant Mjjr. If you have land to sell List it with me in time for my new booklet, soon to be issued. If you want to buy land see me. Chas. W. Little Eldernell Orchard,Mara,B.C. knew, bul: he cont;inues~to say some- thing worth while all the time. The feelings, emotions and passions come in for careful attention in this book. Mr. Atkinson's great object in life is to make a fellow know himself better ancl through this knowledge gain inspiration to put that knowledge to practical use in all departments of life - - Thc -book���������������������������is -published 'by-The Elizabeth Towne Co., Holyoke, Mass. an'd thc price $1.00 WILL BRADLEY MARRIED The Chase Tribune says: \"A quiet ancl very pretty wedding took place at the Presbyterian manse in Kamloops on April 11th, the principals being Miss Jessie'May Trice and Wm. W. Bradley, both of Chase. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Mr. Wylie. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss D. Price, while the groom was accompanied by his brother Ernest. The happy young couple departed on the evening train for their bridal tour through the Okanagan valley. \"When the newly-weds returned to Chase Monday night they were met by their many friends and the Chase band. They were serenaded to a farc- thee-well and made to feel heartily welcome in the town where they have elected to make their home. The bride is the daughter of Mr. ami Mrs. W. Price, now of New Westminster listen! Those you urect judge you first by thc CLOTHES yon veso: sen������������������*~r The one most necessary thing a man must do is dress veil. When you goto get a position, if you are not veil dressed, the man you approach for vork vill say: Tm sorry, but ve really haven't a place open for you.\" If you have a position, and vant to get a raise in salary, raise the standard of your appearance. You ove it to your employer to \"look prosperous.\" It helps him prosper and vill help you prosper. Remember, ve sell \"up-right\" quality clothing for \"dovn-right\" lov prices. Sole������������������ agents for, Semi-Ready Clothing���������������������������the, Clothing which is sold from coast to coast at the same price. Look for priceVlarjel: in the inside pocket of coat. \"7.7' X *\"-.\" i'- Enderby Trading Co., Ltd. MjQEEETS \"���������������������������ffl mml COLUMBIA FLOURING MILLS CO. Limited LOANS Applications received for Loans on improved Farming and City property. Apply to- l: G. A. HANKEY & CO., Ltd. VERNON, B.C. ���������������������������mi and formerly of Chase. She is one of the most popular young ladies in the community. Mr. Bradley is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Bradley of Chase; He is an enterprising and dependable young man.\" Por Sale���������������������������Property on Hubert street, consisting of 12 full-sized city lots, facing three streets, with good residence and outbuildings. Or will sell six lots, facing three streets, without buildings, containing good bearing orchard. Price under market value. Apply, James Mowat.Bell blk. B. BRUNDISH! Enderby, B. C. 7 _....��������������������������� '**i '$m I have purchased the old Farm^i ers' Exchange building, on\"\\the|| railway, and am placing*.iii! railway, and am placing* stock a full line of *1 Brick*, Lime, Hard Wall Plaster and Cement \"Hi d.i V **\" lff_H"@en, "Titled Walker’s Weekly from 1908-04-023 to 1909-02-25.

Titled Enderby Press and Walker’s Weekly from 1909-03-04 to 1918-03-28.

Titled Okanagan Commoner from 1918-04-04 to 1921-12-29.

Print Run: 1908-1921

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