@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "2de7f950-1ee2-495c-8764-2777bc0e6f6b"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2016-06-23"@en, "1905-06-17"@en ; dcterms:description "Published in the interest of the people of Moyie and East Kootenay."@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xmoyie/items/1.0183670/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ iiMAJytoiXiAj^ Ax(>%.a.;v^ 'm i u* {> l-i. V. 4j JUW201905 ^*v _r- - __, - __���>__�� ____ ��6J4-. *. =2_. J mi J_*��_. "5*-vlA_ -^vr?^ I70L. 8, NO, 10. MOYIE, B. C. JUNE 17.1905. ^2 A V FAR V' i ,* \\__'V ����� ��Se����| ��=_fg>^*3. THE XJEADING STORE. *^^-_--N-_.*<��_..-5^SS?*^:-5r^p Jsijk See our goods and ask" our. prices, before you let j;our , moiipy gQi-.- - ' ������" * '' ?��� New r olatoes ��� this week. will arrive he' ���he Lth rs, HIV 8 'Everyone"'V'ants4he best' butter,'and when ��� .. ,',Ay ,,._.-;.<���*���_ , ^prompt attention. ,- ��. :.��.,^-(, fc "v * L. -' r> -�� pl ' *������', '< ,j-A'' i -i .- M ? - ,., ' - ,. v r , . oi-! 0 ��� . ^,~' "V T"^ + , ^,V'A( ^ h* ^X^ �����*���,') "'-tli n. A MB a n "T^ �� ' I ' i ^?*-.ass*:,:.,;:,;Ad :^-'^:;?:^-.r*MOTIEr.BrC.'.|'r 'CKAXBBOOK ���>vv 7o' 10 50 ^^^_S?S2__S��___IS��^^9S^^^^^^? -A."' TryJ'AiPew Gans of/ ' ^ "Old Homestead Brand" ���* . v l ���* " ' Vegetables and Fruits at i_TO . their meeting "Wednesday evening the- following prQgratn was agreed upon :��� a ' ' A rnoGUAjr.' , , r ''a v- i ,.. .. "j*-. 2nd, 4(l_Cbildren's Sports .A $20 ' $, $ ' 2"���100 yard foot" race.'....,... 7 3 ,3��� Broad.jump....'.t. A..... 5 , .2 4���Sack race A 5 2 5���Fat man's race,. .100 vV. B, cigars 6��� Putting stone.- '��� ��� ��� ��� 3 2 . 7���Potato race d. .A, 5 " .0 8���Ilose reel race.... ... .Haryiecup 9���Logrolling contest,... w4.. A15 ' 5 10���Tie making.conleBt ���. ,15 10 11���Chopping contest.. A.. ^,"7 3^ 12���Shooting contest... /. .Silver Cup 13���Driling contest* '**'������.. 75'*- 25 14���Boat race ' " 15���Tug" of war 7..... * The sports,will begin as, soon', after lunch as possible., A special train will be arranged to run, from Cranbrook in the" morning and return late' in the evening/ bo that the ~visitors may be able to .spencUall day.-lwre. - ���-'Manager Cronin of the-St"'Eugene will close down'the mine and' mill'-o" \\bat d_.yjf'the majority of ���the'inen are in favor of it/and management, of tho Moyie Lumber conpany will likely * do the same thing. ,s " " Q . ��� The b.tnd boys will give a dunce ,iu tlie1 evening in E.igle hall. Tickets f 1 including supper. - Those wbo come to Moyie on tb'at day aro assured of having a good time. The program will be interesting and it is the intention of the committee to not have -a dull -moment. There will be good hotel accommodations, and plenty of boats for those who wish to go on the lake, So come and enjoy yourselves. Sixty lads, ranging in age from 11 LkwU. & ��� Eureka, California',' a.distance of about 400 miles. A, - - .i ; - Calgary .is'having j'.a trouble with tho Chinese:' .Tlio1 Orientals'refuse to obey the health by-laws,' and coolly, tell the authorities that they will do as tliey.'pleaseA, - ' , , ��� It will'be interesting to Canadians to learn .that' the1 chief scout" in the Mikado's grand army in Manchuria' is^ a Toronto ' man,. Lieutenant Tom Casey Calla*ghan. Something-'went wrong with the, ...ifo of the Bank of Nova Scotia in the town ofi S-fatlicona; and it took 'a month for a man with an assistant to drill the lock to open it.' , . , ' A. P. .Stephenson, who has leased the mill of the Movie Lumber Co, and'has purchased the logs in the i bo.m, will commence operations, next j Monday. There are up wared of two million fcet'of logs to be cut and it will take six wecVs or two months to complete the. jib. The c-pi.i'-y of tlje ��� mill -i's about 50,000 per day. Between 20 and 30 men will be given employment.'' Andrew Norton will,be sawyer, C; W. Cheney filer, and .Dan McKay millwright All threue are olJ employees of the company and are in every ��� way familiar '��� with tlie . mill. The Lumber will be loaded ,aud shipped to' .ho'.lLulbury planing mill at El)*o just'as it comes'from the saw. Providing mor.-. logs can be procured the,mill will bts kept ,ruriniug until the end of tli'e year. There are several parties already figuring on such a con' tract. The lesumplion of operations of thi3 mill''means much to Moyie, ant! Mr.Stephenson certainly .has 4the best wishes of every one. ��� _ rawoerries. The local 'Strawberries are now on the market, and we haye nilade arrangements for daily shipments from Oreston - a,nd Kootenay Lake points, We are now taking* orders for preserving,,so le.t us know as'soon,as possible'how many crates you will require < I and we will procure the choicest -berries, I for-you. ' ' , : . j We have just received ,a large supply , j of fruit jars, in pints, quarts and half ��� gallons, ,* ' , ' ��� ' ' ' ' achern i i . BfflPi-__Bw^.Bmwwai^^ ^-^iM^asw^BPgaa^ P ! ;' , METAL MARKET.** New ,York���Bar silver, 58j} cents" Lead, $4.50. 'Zinc (spelter. 50.00. '* '" London-���Lend, ��13. - ���Why pay more for your Ins'urance 'than it is worth.? We.can.givc you lowest rates with adequate piotection. ARNOLD & ROBERTS. CRANBROOK. MOYIE. HATS. STESTSON" HATS. We carry the bost range of hats in town. See our union ' made 'Tkidk of the Wsb-p." They're beauties. ILL & CO. THE MEN'S FURNISHERS 1 1 f ii fr Imperial Bank of Canada. savings Department. Deposits of $1.00 or upwards received. There is no, better investment than a .Savings , . A Bank deposit. 'V d -; Once opened it grows whether added to or not. A ; A d Interest allowed at. current rates and com- A'pour.ded twice a year.';'. .... CRANBKOOK BKANOH. id J. F. M P1NKHAM, Manac,e\\ -1 Three thousand Odd. Fellows of Oregon and AYashington .p traded in celebration r'of.' Odd Fellows' day at tlie Lewis ' ��� % . ��� ,. The St. Eugene, the greatest of-alt ' _. the paying mines in the Knotenays will declare a dividend of $70,000 or .- ' twocants a share on July 1st. ' Siucn , ��� _he beginning of the present vear, j-lhe- -.t.'.E'ugene has netted the' following. , profitp^ , January, '$ 13,000; February,- $42,000*'; March, $70,000; April 1 -4 ri I v ' i ��� 'enables the taking of'pictures at nigh "as* well as by, day, "Th'is is, tlio first lamp., of its kind used in '..British Columbia. Y ��� - >* r ' , The Baiid." \\ Changes of Location. . ?vfi Several of tb9x Craubroqlc bu ne'ss v-'firms are ( changing ' their A, location's in that town.' Tlie^ImpcriiiL-.-'"'" Bank of Canada bus moved to the old ... postbfiice stand, where it ban larger q'uarteryaud has been fixe J up ,^vith' eluborate' and expensive., iixturus.- > I , . ! ,_"-b-. ,'" . i,'A rl, ���! ,- ** ������*' r'd,ji?',.* isi-. ' A> ��� AJ- {*"-v��,ji ��� t:i A'--. . ���. ,'���' i t -c- . lat.-'*'-.'^^ A'A &iA^ Lb v ,s._ j/. .. The band is hard at work practicing an'd "is 'making excellent" * progress. The people are.treated " every evening to a street parade and�� good music. The band so far i3 made up of: Prof. Scheier, leader; J, Trembath, cornet; C, A. Foote, cornet- Wm, Lucas, cornet; Webster Burton,- baritone ; Wm. Hamilton and Alex McLeau' teubr-*; Ruben Scott, alto; A. L. Franklin, snare drum, Robt. Campbell, bass drum. expensive Beale tfc.Elwt._l will occupy the build-*" iugvformerly occupied by> the -bmk, arid the ofiice they will vacate will- b_ rented by Messrs. Arnold & Roberts,- School * "Election. ^yJr^^i^''^ ��� ��� > i {v: ���--- ' - 'IA ,.i, > ���;;_ ^d^ft!"1 The annual school election for tho *.. Moyie district will be held next Saturday,"'June 24th, to fill the vacancy- caused by F., J. Smyth, whose tcini . expires. tr> '.��� po A t or or a baking family': between a good and a powder would not amount supply to one dollar a year. The poor powder would cause doctors' bills many times this. b^f"f P & IP^ ���---^__L___.-_!-_-_-S>��'--^ _2_i ���<-_-? ��___��__ ~ !�������Wil��r^��vri_'g-itf*T��i ^wwi j Ja����-.--.w-��r_ninrii mnntii-riiifmiiiHii .1 inn m i i -�� **f '���li I.' ���'it >!s not Master Brandon who should sue for pardon." responded the princess. "It is I^who was wrong. I blush for what I did and said. Forgive me, sir, and let us sunt anew." At this she stepped up to Brandon arid off-red him her hand, which Iip, dropping to his knee, kissed most gallantly. ' "Your highness, you can v. ell afford to offend when you have so sweet and gracious a talent for making amends. 'A wrong acknowledged,' ns .some one < .*> * "' tt j? ,. - ll 1 , ' - P'J - * - is*" ,��� ii : ,,rt .�� t-Li.} , *'l'_'-- P- , ���'<��� VV'JI' ' ��� - It "' i *. <* >* w. -���' '.. ?3 lit it' _ w;_.,��j| .' / i,_ * ��� * A '���I'.rs' *-. y "--rs ' - _ _ s j- *_�� t. , *, ,' 'li || ^*- ',d . '- ���'*%-< �� "v.- *��� ��� ��� ---a*'- * �� Ir . '-..i't, ' ' * W. Or, Tbe Lore Story of Charles Brandon and Mary Tudor, the King's Sister, and Happening In the Reign of His August Majesty King Henry the Eighth Rewritten ��_iu- K-endcrt-l Inlo Modem English From Sir Edwin C��.��ko-len*s Memoir By EDWIN CASKODEN [CHARLES MAJOR] ComriehL, 1SX and KOI, by Ota Bowen-ilerrOl Company - - :*r ���* -������ fore 1 can apply any 'rule or even realize what is coming." And again she shook her head, with n bewitching little look of trouble. "Pardon me, your highness, but there is no bad in you. It has been put on you by others aud is nil on the outside. There is none of it in your heart at all. That evil which you think comes out of you simply falls from you. Your heart.is all right or I have greatly misjudged you." He was treating her almost ns if she were a child. "I fear, Muster Brandon,' you are the most adroit flatterer of all," said Mary, (shaking her head and looking up at him with a side glance. "People have deluged me with all kinds of flattery��� I have different sorts listed and labeled ���but no one has ever gone to the extravagant length of calling me good. Perhaps they think I do not care for that, but I like it best I don't like tlio >thers nt all. If I am beautiful or not, *t is as God made me, and I have nothing to do with it and desire no credit, but If I could only be good it might be my own doing perhaps, and I ought to linve praise. I wonder if there is really and truly 'any good in .me and if you havo read mo aright." , Then. looking up at,him with a*touch of consternation, "Or are you laughing nt tne?" Brandon wisely lot the'last Eiigges- Uon pass unnoticed. "I am sure, that I am' right. You 'have glorious-capacities for good, but, alas, corresponding ' possibilities for ��� evil'.' It will eventually all depend upon the man you marry. He can make out of you a perfect ���woman or the reverse." Agftln there 'was tlio surprised expression In Mary's face, but Brandon's serious look disarmed her.' , ,. �� "I fear you aro right, as to the reverse at any rate, and''tho worst ,of it is I shall never be,able to choose'a man to help me, but shall sooner or. later be compelled to marry the creature who will pay the greatest price." ' ���'."God forbid!" said .Brandon reverently. ' o ��� . I They were growing rather serious, so Mary 'turned the conversation again into the laughing mood and said, with a half sig|i: "Oil, I hope you are right about the possibilities for good, (but you do'not know.'Walt until you'have seen more of me." "I certainly hope I shall not havo long to wait." , , Tho ' surprised eyes again glanced quickly upj to tlie serious race, but the answer came: "That you shall not.' But here Is the queen, and I suppose we must have the'benediction." 'Brandon understood her hint, that the preaching' was over, and, taking it for his dismiss-' al, playfully lifted, his hands in- imitation of the old bishop" "of'Canterbury, and murmured the first line of the Latin benediction. Then they both laughed and courtesicd;'and Brandon walked away. ' ,' A; '. i*-- J . ) . i t-l.l'S-A ri|| - fe.'-eiii'ii rtep'Ar��*lap&- ' I j-'-r AH. a "Your liighncss, you can well afford to , ' ' - <* " offend." lias said, -becomes an 'obligation.'" Ho looked straight Into the girl's eyes as he said this, and his gaze was altoge.th- er too strong for her, so the lashes fell. She flushed and said, with a'smile that bro'ugbt'ttie dimples: .' "I thank you. A-That is a real coinpll- ,nient" /.Then laughingly: "Much better , than extravagant comments on one's skin and eyes and hair.. We aro going to the'queen at >-the marble landing. Will you walk with us, sir?" And thoy - strolled away together, while the other 'girls 'followed in a whispering, laughing group. Was there ever so glorious a calm after such a storm? ,, "Then those 'mythological compii- iments," continued Mary. "Don't you dislike them?" 1 "I can't say that I have ever received maQy, none that I recalls-replied Brandon,'with a perfectly straight face, but with a' smile trying its best to break out., "Oh, you have not? Well, how would you like to havo somebody always telling you that [Apollo was humpbacked * and ' misshapen compared ' with you; ' that Endymlon would have covered his face had he but seen yours, and so' on ?" "I don't know, but I think I should like it from some persons," he replied, looking ever so innocent. ������ This savored of familiarity after so brief an' acquaintance1 anil caused the princess to,glance up in slight surprise, but only for the instant, for his innocent look disarmed hor. "I have a 'mind to see," sho returned, laughing and 'throwing her head back as she looked up at hhn.out of tlio corner of her lustrous oyfs. "Hut I will pay you a better compliment. I positively thank you for the rebuke. I do many things like that, for which I am always sorry. Oh, you don't know how difficult it is" to he a good princess!'' And she shook her head villi a gathering of little trouble wrinkles in her forehead, as much ns to say, "There is no getting away from it, though." Then bhc breathed a soft little sigh of tribulation ns they walked on. "I know it must be a tusk to he good when everybody flatters c\\en one's shortcomings," said Binndon and then coutinued in n way that, I nm free to confess, was something priggish: "It is almost impossible for us to see our own faults oven when otheis are kind enough to point them out, for they aro right ugly things and unpleasant to look upon. But, lacking those outside monitors, one must all the more cultivate the habit of constant mlooking and self examination. If we are only brave enough to confiont our faults nnd look them in the face, ugly ns they are, we shall bo sure to ovei come the ���worst of them. A striving toward good will achieve at least a part of It." "Oh!" returned the princess. "But -what is good nnd what is wrong? So often we cannot tell them apart until we look hack at what we have done, nnd then it is nil too lute. I truly wish to be good more than I desire anything else in the world. I am so ignorant and helpless nnd havo such sttong inclinations to do wrong that sometimes I seem to be almost nil -.wong. The priests sny so nhich, but toll us so little. They talk about St. Peter nml St. I'ntil and a lio-^t of other Siiinii. mid holy fa- tiiers and what nots, hut l.nl to toll us what we need every moment of our lives; that is, how to know the right when we see it, and how to do it; and how to know tho wrong and how to avoid it. Thoy ask us to believe so much and insKt that faith is the sum of virtue and tlie lack of it the sum of sin, that to faith nil things mv added, but we might believe every, syllable of tlieir whole disturbing creed and then spoil it all through blind ignorance of, .what Is right and what is wrong." "As to knowing right and wrong," replied Brandon, "I think I can give you a ruie .which, although it may riot cover the whole ground, is excellent for everyday use. It is this, Whatever makes others unhappy is wrong, whatever makes the world happier is good.. As to how we are always to do this I cannot tell you. One has to learn that by trying. Wo can but try, mid if wo fail altogether there is still virtue in every futile effort toward the right." Mary bent her head as she walked along in thought., "What you:have said is the only approach to a rule for knowing and doing tlio'right I have ever heard. Now what do you think of me as a flatterer? ' Hut it will do no good. The bad is in ;��ne too strong. It always does itself be- CnABTER IV. J " A LESSON IN b__-*Cl-.0. LAUGHED heartily when Jane told me of the tilt between Brandon and Princess Mary," the latter of.whom was in tho habit of saying unkind .things and being thanked for them. " Brandon was the'wrong man to say them to, ns Mary learned. He was not hot tempered���In fac(, just the reverse ���but he was thcvlast man to brook an affront nnd the quickest to resent in a cool" headed, dangerous way an intentional oiTense. <��� He respected himself and made others do the same, or seem to do so nt least. He had no vanity, which is .but nn inordinate desire for those ^qualities that bring self respect and often the ic- sult of conscious demerit, but ho know himself nnd knew that he wns entitled to his own good opinion. Ho wns every inch a man, strong, intelligent and brave to temerity, with a reckless disregard of consequences, which might have been dangerous had it not been teuipered by a dash of prudence and caution that gave him ballast. I was not surprised when I heard of the encounter, for r know enough.of him to be sine that Mary's high handedness would meet its counterpart in my cool friend Brandon. It was, however, an unfortunate victory, and what,nil Mary's beauty and brightness would have failed to do her honest, open acknowledgment of wrong, following so quickly upon the heels of her fault, accomplished easily. It drew him within the circle of her' fatal attractions, aud when Jane told mo of It I knew his fate was sealed nnd that sooner or later his untouched heart and cool head would fall victim to the shafts tha,t so surely winged nil others. It might and probably would be "hiter,"Lsiiif-e, as Brandon had said, ho wns not one of those who wear tho Tnt-i-o was tnts oitrerenco Derwaon Brandon,nnd most others^he would bo slow to love, but'when love should one/; fairly take root in his intense nature be would not do to trifle with. The night after the meeting Mary cuddled up to Jane, -who slept with her, and whispered, half bashfully: "Tell me ull about Brandon. I am interested in him. I believe if I knew more persons like him I should be a better girl, notwithstanding he is one of the boldest men I ever knew. Ho says anything' he wishes and, with all his modest manner, is as cool with me1 as if I were a burgher's daughter. 'His modesty is ail on the outside, but it is pretty,.,and pretty things must be on the outside to be useful. I wonder if Judson thought him modest." Jane talked of i Brandon to Mary, *who was in an excellent humor, until the girls fell asleep. When Jane told me of this, I became frightened, for the surest way to any woman's heart is to convince her that yon make her better and arouse In her breast purer impulses and higher aspirations. It would be bad enough should Brandon fall in love with the princess,* whicli was' almost sure to happen, but for them to fail In love with each other meant Brandon's head upon the block and Mary's heart bruised, broken and empty for life. Her strong nature, .filled to the brim with latent passion, was the stuff of which love makes ,n conflagration that' burns; to .destruction, and bhould she learn to love Brandon she would move heaven and earth to possess him. She whoso 'every desire' from childhood up had boon gratified, whose every whim seemed to her a para-, mount necessity, would stop at nothing when the dearest wish a woman's heart can coin was to be gained or,lost. Brandon's element of prudence might help 4 lilini and might .forestall any ef-, fort on his part to win her, but Mary, had never heard, of, prudence,, and man's caution avails but little when set against woman's daring. In "case thoy both should Olove they woro sure to try'for each other and in trying were equally sure to, find ruin and desolation. ' .' " d ' ��'' A few evenings after-this I met the princess In the queen's drawing room. She beckoned me to hor and, resting lier elbows on tho top'o'f a'cabinet, her c-hln.iu her hand..,'said:'"I met 3'our friend, Captain Brandon,' a any or twu ago. 'Did he tell yo'u?" "No," ' I answered. "Jane told me,, but he has not mentioned'it." It'was true' Brandon had not said a word of the matter, and I had not spoken of it either. I wanted to'see ,how*long he would remain-silent con-/ cerning("nn adventure that would have set most men of the*x:ourt boasting at a great rate. To have a tilt' with the ever victorious Maryand to come oB victor ,was enough, I think, rto loosen any tongue less given to bragging than Brandon's. ��� ��� ", " ' *'So," , continued-' Mnryj evidently, somewhat piqued, "ho did not, think his ' presentation to me a thing,worth men-" tloning? ,We had, "a little' passage at arms, and, to tell you the truth, I came off second best and had to-acknowledge it too. Now,' what do you think of this new'friend of'yours? 'And he did not boast about having the better^ of' me. After all, there is more virtue in his silence than I at first thought." And she threw back hoc. bend and-"clapped her 'bauds and( laughed with tho most contagious lit'tle ripple you ever heard. She sec'ined not' to grieve over her defeat, but dimpled as though it "wore*a huge joke, the thought of which rather pleased hero than otherwise.' Victory had grown stale for. her, 'although1 so young. ' j "What do I think of my new friend?" I repeated after hor,-and that gaveAne a theme upon .which I could enlarge eloquently. I told her���of his learning, notwithstanding the fact that he had .been in the continental wars ever since lie was a boy. I repeated to her stories of his daring and bravery that had been told to me bjr his uncle, the mas- ter'of the horso, .nnd others, and then I added what I knew Lady Jane had already1-said. I had expected to be brief, but to my sutprise found a*close and interested listener, even to the twice told parts, and drew my story out a little,'to the liking of us both. "Your friend has an earnest advocate in you, Sir Edwin," said the princess. "That he has," I replied. "There is nothing too good to say of him." I knew that Mary, "with her better, clearer brain, held the king almost in the palm of her hand, so I thought to advance Brandon's fortune by a timely word. | A Made-to- I Order-Scoop I By | Robert J. C. Stead, Sj Cat-wright, Man. ' i The November day had been dull and uneventful, and the office of the Telegraph as much a-drowse as the home of a modern daily may be. Not an item-in the despatches would warrant a double-column head, and the telegraph editor opined that the boys ot the Associated Press had got "reli-r gion." Copy that had been side-tracked weeks ago' was,, leaded out1 under heavy tops, and the locals were padding their 'dish-water stories shamelessly. The ad-man had run in a full- page "quack" off-date on' his own responsibility, arid wvas willing to take chances on a kick. It was a dull'day. Aleck McLean, editor, and'principal owner of the Daily Telegraph, buttoned his overcoat snugly at the--first rumble of tho prfess, pocketed a copy at the mailing counter,-and"stepped into the street, -well content with the prospect i of a long evening at home. But he had not gone a dozen paces ere the sixth sense of his newspaper ltf- stinct became aware that there was something afoot in tho mental atmosphere. Little knots of - men stood about^ conversing excitedly, or studying an evening paper. Those wh'o walked, walked briskly, as if agitated by thejmport of something unusual. Suddenly a number of boys from the office of the,Evening News scattered through tho street, shouting lustily, "Special! Extra! All about th' great murder- Evenin' News! Only paper has it! Ex-tr-a-a! Ex-tr-a-a!" McLean seized a copy from, the nearest boy and spread it out, before him. Ignoring in his excitement the urchin's vigorous demands,for payment. Plastered over its front page, with a seven- column1 heading, his rival sheet bore tlie,information of the newsiest crime the city'had afforded in half a dozen years. And just as, he held the paper at arm's length'the rival editor came up, smiled knowingly, and passed on. Crumpling 'the sheet in his hand, McLean rushed for the office of 'the Daily, Telegraph, nor pause'd for breath or counsel until he burst into^ the quarters of the. astonished reporters. "Gentlemen,"*said he, with a calmness of speech "that was in remarkable contrast-with his agitated appearance, "I rjust dropped- in .to remark ,that if any of you are.interested in the events of-the city you had better ,buy, a,copy of the Evening News before going .to prayer-meeting to-night. Read that!" he blazed 'suddenly, slapping a,paper onto, the table. ./'I'm going down to the' kindergarten to engage a few reporters." *��� ' "Well, I'll be agitated!" exclaimed Charlie HughesJ1 after the irate editor had withdrawn," and a glance had taken in the gist of the headlines. ' "You certainly W-n,,if Dad feels no better in 'the- morning," said Denny Morrison. Heigho! and' I intended to unsoak my fur coat this month." "'Did you ever hear ' about Horace Greeley," said. Harry . Temple,"' the story-teller-of the gang, '.'and,the^���" ' "Certainly,, we' all".> know 'the Jnci- dent," interrupted Hughes.- >- Just "-then Uki telephone* bell-rang, and 'the Evening News inquired 'ten^ derly if they were awake yet.' A,,, "Just i had-a -nightmare,"' replied Morrison. "Who,1 pumped you full'of that'fake? They tried to work.it on us too;1 but ' " "-' *l , "Fake be' Ci���^���' 'was the reply. "That yarn is meat to the heals. ,By ought to do eem6ihlMg for you, Vottta say that you are a miser, tnat your .tick is lined with bills, but I don't believe a word of It I'm going to help you to visit your brother this Christmas." Basil iooked about him in a frightened sort of a way and muttered-incoherently. The thought of departure seemed to fill him with a strange kind of dread, and the livid blotches of his face had given way to dull pallor. Charlie ventured, "Of course, -.1 would see that your place was properly looked after. I haven't much money but I could get you a ticket and provide a bit to, spend. And Chicago's the finest place in the world for a man with the dough." "Ah've hearn different'' from that," said the old man dubiously.' , "Well, at any rate it's the -worst place in tlie world for a man without the dough." laughed Charlie, "and,that amounts to the same thing." It was not until after much argument, in which Charlie-rWho never and being there���pictured the attractions of Chicago in the most glowing terms, and explained, how ea'sy it would be, with the help of the city- directory, for Basil to find his brother, that the old man finally agreed to the proposal. The'night was far spent before every,detail had been arranged,' hut when at length Charlie arose to go he said, "Well then, that's all settled. I'll meet you here at ten tomorrow night with twenty dollars. You can jump tho midnight, lreight going south, and buy' a ticket when they put you off. It's no use paying a railway company any more than you have to���It's a simple waste of money. When you get to Chicago hire a lock box at the postofllce'and wire me the number,'nothing more, nothing less��� no name, mind you���and call for your mail once a day., Follow my directions and you'll wear diamonds, and I'll split'a, pot of money with you when you get back." ���,- ' .; ' "Seems a mighty quaro way, tb'visit me brother," 'said Basil, still' not wholly decided. "It is,that," admitted Charlie, ."but folks have strange' ' customs , now-a- days._ I'm paying the money, and I words until every, e��ags brlntlfid. Eagerly bf��* trained eye devoured the context, and when a acore of pages were scanned he turned to Hughes. ' "Is this absolutely straight?" "Absolutely," said Hughes, without flinching. "I'll just call the police department" said the editor, as he reached for the telephone. ��� , "Sh-h, don't wake 'em" interrupted Charlie. "Let *em read it in the Telegraph. You remember how they used us last time?" "Very well," replied the editor. "Is the News onto this?" "Not a whisper." "Then, If they don't get on there'll be a cheque for you in1 the morning. You may take theNday off; you must have worked, all night." ' Not a word of the great sensation leaked onto the street, and the Telegraph edition was purposely delayed until tho News was on sale. ��� But as soon as a copy of the rival'Sheet had been obtained and, found,to contain nothing but commonplace, the press was set in motion, and the Evening Telegraph literally flooded,onto the streets. ' '. It was the greatest scoop ever achieved in the city. It scooped not only the rival paper, but, everybody else, for not an 'inkling of the crime had got afloat until the .Telegraph laid it bare in plot, and execution,, painted in all the luridness of sensational journalism. 4 * >" / "Hello! Hello! 'Is that'the Telegraph? This is the police station. .Can you put' us onto any tiling more than was in this evening's paper?" "Well, I hardly know. You see, the reporter who furnished the story is but." . ' , - , /'Where Is he? 1WI10 is he?" "Hughes, but don't know where he" Is. Got the day,(Off." . . A couple of policemen went to the scene of the crime, and others set out in search of Hughes. They found him at his boarding house. - , , ' ' ' * ."You honor me, gentlemen," he-re- nyirked, as thetroflicers .were' shown Into his quarters. What is the charge?" ���"Oh���er,' you misunderstand. You see, we are working oa this murder, want,you to be up to the times. You land we thought perhaps you could, put will be niy guest, in a sense, and you I us onto something." ��� , ,, must travel in style.'' ' l-.%~*^. .!-_���_���;___ -=_^Ss-eaB;=ioo.,' I can put' you onto the entei-dd into a leagihj- exi.iai_._i-.,.. the chemical compokltion ���� bit'?* 1 illustrated his remarks with ^flQd charts and,plates. He had exarS some of the blood found on the*S ot the tragedy, and unhesitating���r pronounced it to be that of a hS being advanced in years. mdn Basil, who had no lawyer, was ��,_,,, asked as to whether he had anytSn* to say ln his own defense. rcrr�� griped at the old man's heart, and hi swayed where he stood, but fear nr death put words In his mouth, and hi told his story simply, eagerly, ana JZ desperate earnestness, while tho court passed through every stage of inbreclui ity, wonder, and amasement. "What Ah say is the truth." he repeated "Ah maself am Basil Murdach, not de^i but alive. If Ah could find ma youn__ friend h,e -would prove you that im' save an old man's life. Indeed if \\h had knowed his name Ah could haV~ sent ma telegram,1 and he would u'ivp saved me." He ended with a gasp- then, looking up, his eye scaned the hushed throng around him. , Row after row, tier after tier, they passed imder his scrutiny of wild hope and dispalr Gallery aftor gallery, section' after section, ho fairly blistered with that liaun ted look, down to the'magistrate the policemen, the lawyers, the men at the reporter's table. Then suddenly -with' a great cry , of joy, he stretched liis arms'towards Charlie Hughes. "That's him, O! that's'him!"' he. cried He can tell you all." , AH eyes w.ere turned to the reporter whose face was the color o�� death, and in a momnt tlie magistrate said,'"Air Hughes, will you tell the court what you know of this case?" *> Charlie rose to his feet, holding fast to the table.;' In' a moment his composure came back. "What the prisoner says is- true,'* ho said. "Ho is Basil Murdach!" Then .briefly, but fully he laid tho whoje plot bare. "1 know 1 should'nt have done It," he concluded, apologetically, "'but we had to scoop the News/ and the roar of laughter that swept through the court-room drowned, the' voice- of- the magistrate as he cried,, "The prisoner is discharged!". , r- " r "I met your friend. Did he tell you?" heart upon the sleeve. Then he had that strong vein of.prudence and caution which; in view of Mary's unattiiln- ablencss, would probably come to his help. But never was man's heart strong enough to resist Mary Tudor's smile for long. THE SPORTSMAN'S PARADISE. That piece of country, lying between \\varroad on the main lino of the .Canadian Northern Railway, might justly be designated as the "Sportsman's Paradise," the woods abounding with moose, otter, lynx, whilst the streams, which are many, are filled with flsh of all kinds, sturgeon, trout, etc., and pelican and grouse are plen- tilul., It is probably one of the most picturesque and resourceful forest regions of North America, the Central Lake Park Region of the Continent. Down amongst the pine tiees one hears nothing but the glad voice of nature; and tho odour of the pine tiees, the sweetness of the air, re-invigorate the man of business who has been run down. On June 4th this country will be re-opened by the Canadian Northern, when a superb, solid vestihiilod train will be placed in operation, carrying the finest equipment, sleepers, diners and in fact everything that goes to make up a comfortable journey. During the sumi- mer months special tourist rates will bo in effect for those wishing to visit the resorts along this lino, and application should'.ie made to any'of their agents for full .particulars: the way, McLean says he'is going to tire his whole caboose. .When do you intend to'-move?" ��� "Every man skins his own skunk," said 'Mirrison,as he hung up his receiver. " 'Next morning the assignment book contained the following notice: "Family prayers in Mr. McLean's office at 10 a. m." " - The reporters, openly defiant or indifferent, but inwardly much concerned, fyled into Uie chief's office at the appointed time. -.xcLean was grave, but dispassionate. He explained how keenly ho felt the disgrace of yesterday'and pictured vividly the gloating of the ��� News." Never before had he suffered such .ignominy; never again must it occur. He had intended to revise his whole staff, but had reconsidered it���for the present. He had a new idea. He would pay one hundred dollars cash to the reporter furnishing the next local murder story,���provided uaey scooped the News. That was all. Weeks went by,' and anything that could suggest a suspicion to the most fantastic imagination ,was fully investigated. Morrison spent his substance in refreshing -the police force, In exchange or a guarantee of a straight tip on the next murderous event. Temple mado moonlight sorties far into the country. Graham cultivated the acquaintance. of the tough characters of the city.' Barker bribed the reportorial force of the News to keep mum on the next scrape. But the city was disgracefully law abiding, and nothing worse than the usual routine of drunks and vagrants disturbed the solemn atmosphere of the police court. But most remarkable of all had been the actions of Charlie Hughes. Shortly after the interview with the chief he had made the acquaintance of one Basil Muidoch, an old man of doubtful nationality, and reported to be a miser. Basil existed in a very disreputable den in the midst of tne toughest part of the city, and night after night ho and Hughes rendered the air discordant with their drunken caterwaulings. In those orgies the reporter was merely an actor, as ho had too much head to surrender it to alcohol; but Basil drank best on Charlie's encouragement,, and Basil drank only at Charlie's expense,���and what was a roistering, song or two if it made happy the heart of an old man? One night after their acquaintance had ripened sufficiently Charlie approached his purpose; "You say you are hard up, Uncle?" he ventured. . ���'��� - ��� . "Aye, hard It is, boy," was the reply. "Afore, ye took pity 6' line many the ,day Ah sat with neither!1 bite nor sup. And what's an old man in this world? Well would it be rid o'me." "Have you no friends anywhere?" ; "Well; now, as Ah riiight say, Ah have a brother in Sheecago. Him __h haven't seen for years, beln' without the price o' travel, 'jjeed, and it's a hard world, at all. Pass the bottle." When Basil had refreshed himself Charlie again spoke. "I've been thinking of your lonely life ever since I met you, and it grew upon me that I Hughes had to do a Christian ���]En deavor'/convention next, day, and the leaden hours dragged through in dull monotony. 'But night-foundt him alert and active. , A number of'visit3 had. to be made'to different parts ,of'the' city before,his plans were complete, and the last, of these'found him at a poultry dealer's. Here", v somewhat to the surprise of the .shopman, he bought two live roosters, '/which lie thrust" into an empty bran, sack, and departed. , It was snowing a little as he wended his way to Basil's hut. , "A line night for my plan, and a 1 fine "plan for, any night,1", he congratulated ' himself as he walked. ���' "Byr George, but I'll set ten thpusan'd 'ears tingling before" this time to-morrow, night! < Heigho! won't this take the bulge out of the "News? And the police department! Oh my! my!' the police t department!" he repeated in'a paroxysm of mirth. "Our telephone 'will ��� be hot to-morrow. But mum's the word. -Charlie, mum's the word.i* , ' '" ���' ��� . 4. ',- , ', , Tho-roosters wero left ,to nourish tlieir forebodings at the rear,'of-Basil's hut, and when Charlie entered .'he ���found the'old man,waitlng. ' With little ado he produced "a suit of second-hand clothes, infinitely better than -those Basil wore, -and flnally> succeeded J.n fitting them on the old man's form. A razor was'then produced,'-and B'asll informed that he was to be treated to a, shave. To this- he, strenuously objected, button being'-'convinced that everybody' in' Chicago would take him for a miser If he" wore'a beard, he submitted' to "the operation., His long hair was then-sheared'and his figure generally "slicked" up, and while his appearance could not yet be described as ��� respectable, it was much less disreputable" than before. " Charlie then took him to the freight yards, trundled him into an empty box-car, tipped a! brakeman a dollar, and hastened back. Basil's door was locked, but the reporter battered it in with a cordwood stick. Bringing in the captive' roost- ers,_he threw back the sheets of the bedA laid the sack upon it, and with some difficulty beheaded the unfortunate inmates. As he.did so one of them escaped from the sack and caromed about the room, spattering the floor and.walls with -lood, while the red liquid from the other saturated the bed of Bisii'Murdach. .With his knife Charlie then ripped open the tick, ransacking the straw and littering it about the room; later he 'explored every nook and cranny in the building leaving everything hr a state of confusion. At length, returning the escaped rooster to the sack, he filled in.also a quantity of coal and Basil's axe, and set forth to drag it to the river. The task was no easy one, as he avoided the open thoroughfares and made his way by 'deserted lanes and tortuous alleys, but at length the white ice of the river spread out before him like a miglity sheet. To hack a hole through the -ice was the work of a few minutes, and axe, sack, and contents were swept down Into the sucking blackness. "Now to thy lair, O murderer!" exclaimed Hughes, and sped for home. "I want the whole front page," said Hughes to tho chief the following morning, as ho flung a roll of copy on the desk. "So did Peruna, but they didn't get it," quietly answered McLean. "Why man, what's tho matter with you?" "Read that," answered tho reporter as ho indicated his copy with an air of Important mystory. McLean glanced indifferently at the scrawl, but ho hadn't read a dozen fact that you sold tlie,last murder to tho News, and' left the Telegraph, tb eat, mud.'. Now, grovel!" ��� . "Well, ah���er, that's hardly fair, you know. "Besides; we'll, be decent -with' you." ' , ; ', ' ' ' ****-'-;;* , At*other times Charlledwould have taken.the hint quickly enough, but he* was lord,of the situation; and,he enjoyed it. 4 a' , "Gentlemen," he said,' with ponderous" "dignity, "I' am .not^a 'man,to, ,be bribed. Neither ami a'policeman. I am a reporter.! Good evening.'.*--* -- The officers, _' thus ,-��� summarily dismissed, strode angrily, into' the street, secrotlydentertaining the belief that a man' who knew'so*" much''' about the crime, and would say'so little,"was'not above suspicion. ��� . * ' E" , ' A ,: A But the first'thing now was the,re-' covery of'the" body, and-a gang, of laborers'were-"set to cut the-ice and drag the river. . Several' arrests 'wore made, ��but, in'each case nothing of weight'could tie advanced ��� against the suspect, "and he���was" released. 'Days woro into weeks,1 "the 'river-dragging was given* up, as a failure,"and-the public were beginning to I forget" the event, when suddenly'Interest'was revived by_ a despatch in.th'e News that a man suspected of the murder had been arreste'd in Chicago.,," Great credit" was glvenjlhe'police forfthe manner, in which the.-- had. followed "up a'very, slender ;.clue".'" It seemed ���that a-"railway-brakeman'*had' admitted ''"giving ajlft"' to an-ather, tough-looking," ind!." vidual.onthe nightof,the murder..' .In the mornlngj-he'had been put-off; the f reigh t,' and had bought * a - ticket'-for Chicago at a country station. The police had"thus' traced him to the1 great city, where they at length succeeded in Iocating'-himd and jwere'now- bringing their prisoner back: to stand his trial. ,- ; , The effect of, this ./despatch' upon Charlie Hughes Is for my reader, to imagine. Ho had fancied that every tl .velopment could be provided for, b_t Basil's inexplicable failure to, wire his box number had compelled him to leave everything to fate. And fate was turning its stormy side to Hughes. The day of the preliminary trial came on, and public interest in the matter, insidiously fanned by the newspapers, ran high. Very maturally the - :WEAK>IUN,(_S. MADE. SOUND, AND STRONG BY. '_ , DR. WILLIAMS PINK, PILLS , < If your, blood is weak,'If It,Is poor and "wateiv," a- touch Jof, cold or Inilii- enza'-will*settle; in your^lungs and the apparently harmless cough, ot to-day will become '-the . racking consumptive's, ''"cougli'jl of to-morrow.' Weak blood is an open invitation for gon-. sumption to lay,upon you"the hand ot death. -The 'only way,to,,avoid con- . sumption' and toi,strengtheh and draco the wholcsystem is byi enriching your blood, and Tstrengthenlng your lungs with 1. Dr.. Williams'JPlnk Pills. They, make jew, -rich,' warm , blood. ,They ad'd''resisting^. power -tot-the , lungs. They ^ "have, saved scoi.es . from a ��� consumptive's,, grave���not ��� after the lungs-are'-hopelessly diseased, Un. .where taken when the cough first atr tacks 4-he 'enfeebled system. Here is ( positive proof. Mrs. Harry Stead, St. d Catherines, Ont.',..says: "A* few yeare ago'l was attacked twith lung trouble, and' the, doctor) after treating mo for a'^time, thoughtv I was going into consumption.' ~-I grew pale and emaciate'd. had .no appetite., was troubled twith a hackng-cough, and I felt'that 1 was fast* gong-towards the grave. Neither,, the 'doctor's .medicine* nor other"* medicine? that d * took' seemed^to help mc., .Then .a goodf.frlend^urged me to take Dr.'.Williams''PirikJPills; By lhe time I 'had used ''-"four boxes^ It was plain,'that*"they; were,', helping 'me. I began to recover, my appetite, and in other ways, felt better. I took six boxes mqre,iand was as well as ever, and'hadTgained in weight. I believe Dr. Williams' Pink "Pills .saved' mo from a consumptives grave, v and I feel very grateful." -' * "Now Dr.''Williams' Pink Pills build up tho strength in'just one .way��� they actually make new blood." That is all'they do, but they do it welL They don't bother with mene symptoms. ** They won't cure any.dlsea.se that isn't caused by bad blood. But then, nearly all common disease., spring from that one cause���anaemia, lndigeston, biliou,tncss, headaches, sldeaches, backaches, kidney trouble, lumbago, rheumatism, sciatica, iu*nv , ���ralgla, nervousness^ general weakness and ' the special secret ailments | that growing girls -and women do not Telegraph manager had selected h"lUS^ i��. I?por,t thf ��MSe' and> Wheni nit<-> to,talkdabout even to their doc n^itVTew 6 f,"^ tUe c?ul;Vr0om | tors.- But-you must get tho genuine ?���b��AA. A1?.?.���^ bl? way to .^e re-' with the,full name,' "Drv Williams- Pink Pill's for Pale People," on the porters' table with a face-as white as if it had been to the prisoner's dock, and awaited the ordeal. Tlie magistrate and tho lawyers were already In their places, and presently a hush fell over the assemblage. A lock clattered sullenly, a heavy door creaked open, and Basil Murdach*was led into the dock. All eyes were turned on the old man as he tottered unsteadily to his place, and a whispered comment ran through the building. . The witnesses for the proseoution were then called. Policemen testified to details with which the reader Is already familiar;tho murder in the hut, the track to the river, he hole in the ice, tho slender clues by, which the prisoner was locatod In Chicago, and his final arrest. Neighbors of tho unfortunate man were called, who testifiod that he was reputed to bo a miser. Some heard "sounds" on the night of ,tho tragedy, and ono particularly accommodating witness heard shooting, shrieks, and oaths. ���. Professor Dickson then took the stand to dissipate all doubts as to a murder having been committed. He wrapper around each box. If (in ���doubt send the price���50 cents a box or $2.50 for six boxes, to the Dr. Williams' Medcne Co., Brockvlle, .Ont, p.nd get the pill by mail postpaid. Pittsburg, Pa.���The Carnegie hero .founcj commission disbursed $12,20(1 , as follows: ��� Ernestine F. Atwooil, aged 17, a student of Melrose, Mass,_ for saving Harry M. Smith, _(i years of age���.of Quincy, Mass., from drowning on August 22, 1904. Alexander Cameron, a painter, aged 27, of Lindsay, Victoria county, Ont, Canada, was awarded a silver medal for rescuing George H. ^ryans, an eight-ye*'" old school boy from drowning on April 24, 1904. Gideon King Marshall, aged 39, a carpenten lost hits life at jB.iJrlngdale, Allegheny cou'nty, Fn-. on May 25, 1904, whllo attempting to rescue Arthur Truby and Ferdinand PHette, who wero overcome bj^ gas in a well. Marshall lort a widow and three children. The commltto awarded Mrs. Marshall a silver medal and $500 for, the liquidation of a mortg.��E8 on her homo, Use SUNLIGHT -SOAP and SAVE THE COUPONS. The Coupons are the same as cash because they can be exchanged for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pay out money every week. A Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUIi SOAPS can Fer their TOILET SOAPS for nothing. ' A - .'A. :'.'.'���'.v "* " ������ ���,'���]. AA Ask your grocer for paiticulars or write us for Premium List. A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have no use for. In exchange for Sunlight Soap Coupons you can get something you need and use every day. -" "��� too. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED. TORONTO. CANADA. ftOVIE LEADER >«•• .♦**■•■ fWestern canadwn editors merles of articles desc.ibtag their lives, their aims -nd their Influence. 4- No. 35. f 0. SHOEMAKER. _-_^_».<»&oa«Ma«. • 0, SHOEMAKER.'- " * A [editor and Proprietor of the Alberta , ' Advocate. ' , t -' The contribution of Ontario to,Western Canada, in men, brains and money, will be an ever,abiding-debt.' 'The West will be under obligation" toi the premier province in' this' regard for all time. The obligation Is ,.recognized universally and honored;' gracefully. Sometimes, it is true,-the'amount'of the debt is overstated by. overzealous Ontarlons, and this leads) not to resentment, but to, correction: ■" Tho - men ulio'do ,'this arc usually ■ politicians, anxious to win a little cheap local ".or provincial popularity by lauding'to the sUC3 the accomplishments -'of ' their own people, even atthe expense.,'of truth, flut Ihough 'Ontario, has'not done for'the West'all that is sometimes clalmedfil has undoubtedly_donb much, and "Westerners would '-* be ..* the last people to belittle the, work, by which Manitoba and the .Territories, has so grpatly benefited.'Ontario ' farmers were'the pioneer tillers "of th'e "present generation 'of .Western tillers of the Ml! Ontario commercial 'houses ,es- Ubliihed western branches," and the ViEjest ot,enterprises,now flourishing fettle west, 'were founded by Ontar- jto In every department *of effort .__ activity the same, is true, and In, department is Western obligation to the older province,'more * distinctly asserted than" in. newspaper work; fo^ !nueh more than half the editors'and publishers of Manitoba and;,the Territories 'are of' Ontario' -blrth.fand training. In new, unpalntedA prairie' towtis, built to await th§ coming of !---___?.-U____d,'si-_.niiuing villages in'the iiaopntains, as well as in"the older"and: ore populous centres, I_A_s„much [better than even'betting that' the editor ot the' local paper Us '"ot; Onario' rlgln, and the "odds are that helearn- d, the case and stuck" type .on'a"'six' r eight page weekly somewhere on' e back concessions-;*down east.",. Among* the Ontario newspapermen5" bow firmly and finally settled in'the West is Mr. Shoemaker, one of1 the editors and proprietors" of "the Alberta jjVdvocate, published at Red Deer. 'Mr. jKhoemaker is a Port Elgin boy, and, |ike many another future Journalist, ashed rollers and devilled, and learn- N his business right from the' bottom. pt was in the office of the Port Elgin ptafs, one of the most respected and pliable of eastern local papers, that Plf. Shoemaker learned tho mechani- pl department of the publishing business. He worked , his way upward |intil he knew, practically all that was F be learned iu a small newspaper pee, and, still desiring to improve, Pe turned his eyes .to,a bigger,centre. ■paturally, Toronto was the centre of ■-'traction, and there Mr. Shoemaker /Pent some time, improving his, tech- Pirai knowledge, and widening his experience. When ho ,relt , himself BJMcicntly equipped, his desire to still pi'tnr broaden his knowledgeAof. the ■prmting craft took him still further "a 'eld. u0 went west. - His first stop-' ws place -yas, Chicago, in which city oe received valuable training in metropolitan Journalism. From the Windy A?, -y1"- Shoemaker went further west £n» he got to'the-;PacStic slope. He forked In gome of the best offices in j-ancouvor and then headed east 5?pln- -topping for a time at Pernle, _hh=_. eo years aB° he located in VZ G:!"adifm West in June, and last -w. in partnership with Mr. D. A. ■"JCLeaa, ho purchased the Alberta p'hocalc. nab W'in thUS bG seen that Mr- shoe* tho a 1nan oi wide experience in ii™ i lanlcal worR °r newspaper I'rociuction. He has worked in offices it. X S from such as thoso prevailing he has fully-approved his ability, «<. has tlie "nose for news." Ha has clearly defined Ideas as to the field that a country paper should cover, and in which .field it should be supreme, and his constant endeavor Is to emr body those ideas In his ,own newspaper. The concensus of , opinion among his fellow workers is that be has succeeded well in this endeavor. The Advocate is a fine example of what brai»s, energy and taste can do In the production of a newspaper in a town so'small that nowhere , else than in -Western Canada' would it be dreamt that it was possible for it mainU> in 'a successful , paper. But it does, and doe3 It well. The editor does his part —he gets the news, writes it up, always understandably, and sometimes with grace and humor. He expresses without prejudice, his opinions on public questons as they effect local Interests, and'his editorial remarks soon become crystallized into the prevailing local judgment.' And the merchants "and the farmers do their share to ■ maintain and prosper the enterprise. The latter all subscribe, and the former finance the proposition by 'their liberal advertising support. The printer-editor sees that the makeup is tasteful and tlie presswork good, and thus by,tbe hearty co-operation of all concerned, a" paper is 'produced that is a weekly wonder to any easterner knowing the sparseness of Western population, , but unaware of the triumphs accomplished,by Western enthusiasm. ■ " 1 The Advocate is in many respects a 'sample, of the product of Western conditions. Hitherto' It has been a success. < The prospects ,are it wili continue to ho ono, and greater as the continued Inrush of .immigration and the increase of population ,ipe- culiar equipment for its ■ purpose. Every man is born to do a certain work Iu an original way. If he tries lb copy some, other man or to do some other man's1 work he will be an abortion, a'misfit,.a failure, -i Do not Imitate even your heroes. Scores of young clergymen attempted to make their ropu'lation..''by imitating Bee.liei. They copied his voice and conversation 'and .imitated his^ges- Jstures and habits, but,they fell as far short of the great man's'power as the chromb falls short of the ,'masterplece. Where are those hundreds of linita- ■ tors now? Not'one of them has ever made , any stir in the world.—Orison Swett Harden'in Success-Magazine. T.t.bta'-' Flfc ccr. for EpUcpir asd -_n-U-_.lfec-l.s_ 1. U.on_r S-Ce-SMfu] raw «_»_. br tt. taat l-oapfwls fi, Ihmm It Is c_rr£fc__.____!_• _ly r_i-_-dT, ud li _raw •_•_. Ir tt. but pb.ikMM m4 laaslwl. I* Ihmm end Aasrle*. . ._ r*-erara«ade4 to tli. -ffllcUA It r«* _u_T_r _rott Epilepsy, Fits, St.Vltui' Danoo, or fear, children or r»l«Uy«i ____ doH.orU<*_ frtowl Out It. It will bo K,,t bj- mill ,—. _ _ ___ ___ _"' *M"L-' *;t»r_-l>".T-_iii^,rjrt.t_. ' ' IheLlcblKCo., 17$ King St. W.„T*r«aU. wlur_ ar_rj.bt_fel_.___i _«__"_. „ V*-h.n wrltluf ImMtloa thi. pi»p«., m4 clr* rull A SOOTHING OIL—To throw oil upon the troubled waterjj means to subdue to calmness the most boisterous sea. To apply Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil to the trpubled body when it is racked with pain means speedy subjugation of the most refractory elements. It cures pain, heals bruises, takes the fire from burns, and as a general household medicine Is useful in many ailments. It is worth much. There are Scores of Ways in Which Every Family Finds Use For DR. CHASE'S OINTMENT. Dr. Chase's Ointment is so pure and clean, so remarkably soothing and healing and leaves the -skin so soft. Ringworms and pinworms. Old sores and bed sores. Especially where there is small chil- - Quebec, P. Q., May 29—(Special).— John'Ball, a-bricklayer, residing at 57 Little Champlain,street, this city, has added' his statement to the great mass of proof that lumbago is caused by disordered Kidneys,, and consequently easily cured by'Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr.' Ball says: .-',', , . , , *,"!' was .troubled 'with Lumbago for two'years. Il could -net-work. I . had to*get".up.at night to urinate so often that'm.. nest was broken.' I read of curesby Dodd's'Kidney Pills and mader up my "mind ,to'try them.' After tlie first boxtI could feei arid see a change. '.Three' boxes' cured me' completely." -' Lumbago, like Rheumatism, is caused by uric acid'in the blood. "Uric acid ''cannot stay in the blood .if the Kidneys are working right. Dodd;s Kidney Pills make-.the Kidneys work'right. A "A mother was trying to impress her young,son witlJ the grief his^naughti- ness caused .her,"and said: "George, you'know it'hurts' me -'terribly w'hen you'-do- wrong, and "if I were ever- to be tak6n away from you-it would make you Jleel sorry' to look 'back 'and. think how'.you. had grieved me." Boys do lose; their mothers*.' sometimes, you know. '.Tommyfrown's mother d,ied last-year.'" "Xes, but he got-another rlghL\\ aw_.y,". said, George, and his mother ^wished she had chosen a different* example to point her moral. • Why. Arctio Water* Are Yellow. Arctic explorers never tire of telling ,how beautifully yellow the waters of the northern sea appear. ■ To those who' live on ,the seashore in temperate and tropical countries' the,, stories' of ■ travelers'concerning, the yellow-'waters^ of Greenland and Iceland are taken with the proverbial "grain of salt," but scientists,,have, declared that" the arctic, seas are yellow, and it was Scores-' by.who first explained the cause of its peculiar color. Perceiving that the waters i,wore,of an unusual color, he had some drawn up"and examined it with his microscope. To his surprise, he found that 'the color was due to the' presence „of minute animalcules, each. "so .inconceivably small that a" single drop of the; water,contained upward of 20,000 of the little,creatures. At that rate a-pint of,the water would show .170,000,000, each'sporting about in his place without disturbing,or crowding "his neighbor. v i,. d ' ,- ," • 'A within gunshot of her, it did look as tliough-there was something more'in it. \\'13y 'ii' by ho asked if some man wouldn't comb" up on the platform. Our Ruth nudged her father, and said, 'You go/ and Ezry wont.v Tho man took yards an dyards of ribbon out if Ezry's pockets, and more handkerchiefs from round his neck than there ever was at one time in the store at the Corners. Ezry- never , turned , a ,hair. $ You'd have supposed that he gi«w crops of handkerchiefs under his coat collar regular. I guess it' kind o' nettled the man to see'him take it as calm as old Tilly, and pretty soon he just put on steam' and took'three rabbitts and a. hen .out of ' Ezry's beard/one after another. /'Folks'just hollered, and, for-a minute I thought Ezry was going to pieces.' But4 he didn't, as I told you. '"Well, well/.he said, looking at the' rabbits and. the hen. 'I've kind o' suspected they was there for some time-back.'" The proprietors of two rival livery- stables, situated aloigslde each other In'a busy street, have been having a lively advertising,duel lately. The other week one of them stuck up on his office window a long strip of paper/ bearing the words:—"Our horses need no whip to make them go." This bit 'of' sarcasm naturally caused some amusement at the expense of the rival proprietor, but in less than an hour he • turjied the tables by pasting the following retort on his own window: ".True. Tho wind blows them along!" (ENGLISH. SPAVIN.LINIMENT. ' ' Jleuoves all hard,' soft of calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curb's, apllnts, ringbone Sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, co-ighs, etc.. tfave $50 .by use of one botle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Curs ever known. „ .. . , - 4 ,, o -~" *-.oA4^4\\4«^,ij, nuc.t. men. 13 5LU-UJ UIIII- smooth and clear that it soon becomes dren scarcely a week passes in which a &,fasuue,10 US.e ,Dr- base's Ointment would not prove Ihough best known because of its useful ■ extraordinary control of the most tor- j Mrs." F. Clark, Belmont, Man., writes: turing itching skin diseases, such as1—.My baby had, eczema on her ear. eczema salt rheum, psoriasis and tet- The. sore was very bad and nothing ter, it should not.be forgotten piat Dr.'seemed to do her much good. Heai- Chase s Ointment will not injure the ing of the wonderful cure Dr. Chase's '.lost oohoate skin, but is in reality a. Ointment was makintr.- wo Kf-nt rnr i , I s Ointment was making,- we sent for ,,, . /-., - < .. , I some, and after the third application - h ^°.w5.!Iil"Te-n.t.-ilused witl1 th<-sore began to heal. ., I am glad- to s*_ir beautifi-T of great value. splendid results''as a cure for Chilblains, and frostbites.', ~, 'Chapped hands-and face. Sore and inflamed eyelids. Poisoned skin. >' Scald head and'Jjatiy eczema, Sore feet and toes. - Pimples and blackheads. Rough, red skin. ' Hives and insect bites. ' Barber's itch. " Scalds and burns. Itching peculiar to women. say that it Is quite well now. and we give the credit to Dr. Chase's Oint-' ment. We cannot recommend this preparation too highly."' By noting the cures reported from time to time ,in this paper you will find that Dr. Chase's Ointment Is one of the greatest healing preparations known to science, frequently curing' eczema and psoriasis when all other means have failed. Sixty cents a box at'all dealers, or Edmanson,. Bates &' Co.. Toronto. humorist. "Well," no\\v," said the dominie, "you come to hear',me preach every Sunday and you say you believe what I read out of the Bible is true; If I could .frove to you from the Bible that you ought to walk with me would you go?"' "YesAof course," said Mr. Twain, "but it isn't in there." "Kcs, It'ls," said the minister, "for the BIblo says, 'And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain., and Mark went. '■ "Give you a nickel?" said Miss De Style. "Oh, no! I never dispense prd*- miscuous alms.. Why do'you not obtain .employment?;' "Please, mum," was th'e timid reply./'I have a small baby and people -won't be bothered by a woman with" a child.'; "Then, ,you absurd 'creature, ,- why not'-leave the child at home with Its nurse?" Minard's Liniment Lumberman'sFriend MESSRS. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. o , ' Gents,—I have used your MINARD'S LINIMENT in my family and also iij. my stables for years and consider it tho best medicine obtainable. Yours truly i- ALFRED ROCHAV, Propretor Roxton Pond Hotel and Livery Stables. Roxton-Pond, July 4, 1901. til ii .mn'l0rIt>r of western centres up InnM blgeost papers published on the gc.nti_.cnt. On .ho news writing side Thomas „Edison tho groat 'inventor, Is very fond of children. Whiio 'on a visit to ew York recently he' was endeavoipcig to amuse tlie six-year-old son of his host,..when the youngster asked .him to draw tan engine for him. Mr. Edison, promptly set to work, and, thinking it would please tho child,to havo an elaborate design, he added a couple of extra smokestacks and several imaginary parts. When the plan was complete the boy took it and eyed it critically, tlien he turned to the inventor with disapproval n every feature. "You don't know much about engnes, do you?" he said with' infantine frankness. "Engines may have been that way in your "time, but they've changed a whole lot since then." Been n» BureTlm-n. . , L .. Alt appears , that the monarchies , of bees, well governed as they seem to be, are'alllicted^ nevertheless'by organized ' criminal, classes—sneak thieves and"1 highway .robbers., Some of these robber, bees'go. In strung bands'to pillage, and are able to storm and sack a hive.' After the slaughter they.carry all the pro- 'visions"' liome. Some colonies of bees never work; they live entirely by robbery and murder.- ^ . ' ' , 'There are also'thieves who creep-un- ■ perceived into strange hives to steal honey. If successful they return afterward with hordes of burglar bees, break open tlie honey safes and carry away the contents. But the most curious fact is that these .bees can be artificially produced, according to Buch- ncr, by feeding the larvae upon honey mixed with brandy.—London Tit-Bits. _-_------_-_--_-----_----—--. " Mrs. Gwilliams (of the flat above)— Your children woke me up at 5 o'clock this morning with their noise, and I didn't go to sleep again. Mrs. Sliint— Did they? The darlings! They are sq full of life! AN END TO,BILIOUS HEADACHE. —Biliousness, which'is caused'by excessive bile in the stomach, has. a marked effect upon the nerves, and often , manifests itself by'severe headache. , This is the most,' distressing headache one can have.,''There -are headaches from.cold,4from'fever, and from other causes, buf'the most ex- cnuciating of all is the bilious- headache. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills will cure it-^-cure it almost ' immediately. It. will'disappear as'1 soon as the1 Pills operate. There,is nothing surer in the treatment of'bilious headache. Rural Adorer (bashfully)—You did not-go "to. Millie Meadow's party. Don't you like kissln* games? Pretty Maid—No, I, don't.- /Rural Adorer' (weakly)—Why don't you? Pretty Maid (encouragingly)—'Cause there's so many-lookln' on.' ' FREE for ,. Mrs. Farmer—I, suppose Vou , have worked, awfully hard trying ' to find work? ,'Tramp—Not-very—only about as hard as I'd work If I should find work,'ma'am. ., „;,/r/', r '"- ' - - -~— — i, \\t , „ "What?'* Fell1 down .stairs! ' How did 'it happen?",, '"Why, 'you see, I started to go down, and myiWlfe°sald:' 'Be'careful,. John;.. And.I'm not the man to be dictated to by any .woman, so down I went.'" ' , * . KIDNEY EXPERIMENT.-Ther.'a no time for experimenting whon rou'v* discovered that you are a victim ot fiome one form or another ot kldnr*r dlaeaae. Lay' bold of the treatment that t__ou-_nd_ have pinned thelr.faf-h to and has oared qalcklyand permanently. ,South American Kidney Oure standi pro-eminent in the world of modlcino as the kidney sufferer's trno-t friend.-^62 L. • "Uncle Reuben," she said, " kindly patting him on the shoulder^ after the guests had gone, "I hope you won't feel hurt or think I'm stuck up, just because I live in the city, but—but won't you please not, luck your napkin, in under your chin'again-the way you, did this evening—at least not when we have guests at dinner?" "My gracious," Lizzie," he replied, "lj don't "see nothin' wrong about that. A feller has to .save"his snirt an'd collar some way, andJthat-blamed,barber, you got me to go,"to this mornin' trimmed my, whiskers'so close they don;, ketch'a thing.'; Coupons Child's Set . "■ -Really i neefal. besides being attractive. Silver-plat-* vod Steel Knife. Vlotorii. * ■liver Fork* and Spoon, in " , „ fancy-llned box. Sont pofitpald for &cont Stamp and 30 Bine Klbbon ' Coupons, or for 1 5 Coupons ' V and 15 cents. Sc df _*•*•• r.Ye and address for free Premium .List,' with 4 pages ..*''' selected Recipes.' y, *-■ •; • " ■; \\ ' .BLUE RIBBON,, Dept. R; Winnipeg! If it is a _ Questiorrlrf Warmth use •.A:"a'-B; EDDY'S.•':•.. BUILDING bipER "->' ■ ..' 'A > ■ •" * '* i A. ,b y. - ° . It. Retains Heat and. Keeps Out^CoId. , ,! >-,-■, .i - «,. • - ' ?-'>A--'-' •I Af; ',,.*T* A'--C'^' l ■»** A '■ •*•. ■"■-- i TEES .-i< v A ' Write for Samples and' Prices & , PERSSE, Limited, 'Age.nits£ Winnipeg. -w r_> ^ <■ ( p. ' "■ , V. '■ t s> Vf**V**;'- «1'( DR. ACNEW'S OINTMENT CURES PILE8 —Itchiaff, ^BleedinK* and Blind Piles. Comfort in ono application. It cure* In throe to nix nichtw. It cured all akin dit-oasc^ in young and old. A remedy bojond compare, and it never failu. 35 cents.—63 t A CASKET OF PEARLS.-Dr. Von Stan** FInoAppIe TablotH would prove n groat eolnce to the disheartened djspeptic if he would-hut tc«t tli-Mi potonov. * The>*ro-voritnble Koma in protonting the Moating of atomach ditmrd^i-K, by nldlug and «Llmu latlng dlROMtion—GO of theeo health "pearl-.*' in n box, and they conl X centM. Kooomciendud by uiwl eminent ph)iti<*Ia:it*. W. You can hardly find a home without its Ayer's Cherry pectoral. Parents know what "does for children: breaks Cherry ~ectoral "Pa cold in a single night, wards off bronchitis, prevents Pneumonia, a Physicians ad- «se parents to keep iton hand. f "■"am?'.'*'??!..'""''* moaiolne money "ureanotlilnieoDVd joutbly bebettur." ^•"•"•Md , nan buy 8 coughs of otstbly be beHnr." BOLL, Saratoga, led. 3.0. J.TBK eo. jLofrell, Hui. ^ for «fcasJi_S_. Throat, Lungs p**tor»i1^c£oatl_'_a,d th» Cherry Nat Oshornc, said Henry II. Rogers, the Standard Oil magnate and copper king, used to blow tho organ in tlie brick church. He had quite an idea of his own Importance, and was always proud of his job, I asked him once: "How much salary do you get, Mr. Osborne, for your work?" Nat looked up, solemnly, and said with dignity: "Twelve hundred dollars." "What!" said I, "'fl.200'1" "Yes," said Nat. •■jLuafs big pay," said I. ' "Pretty lair," said Nat, "but tliat's for 100 years." Keep Minard's Liniment in the house. "Pa," said Jiltle Willie, who had boon reading a treatise on phrenology, "what is a bump of destruclivenoss?' "*SVliy—cr—a railroad collision. I suppose.'' THEY AltE NOT VIOLENT IN ACTION.—Some persons, when they wish to cleanse the stomach, resort to Epsom and other purgative salts. These are speedy in their* action, but serve no permanent good. Their use pro- dues incipient cliiils.and if persisted in they injure the stomach. . Nor do they act upon tho intestines In a Ucno- iicial way. Parmelee's Vegetable Pins answer' all purposes in this respect, and havo no superior. Ask for Minard's and take no other. Safety for Children Mothers should never * give their little ones a medcine that they do not know to be absolutely safe and harmless. All so-called soothing hiedicines contain poisonous opiates that'stupefy the helpless little one without cur-' ing its ailments. Baby's Own-Tablets is tbe only medicine for Infants and young children that gives the mother a positive guarantee that It contains no opiate or harmful drug. Milton L. Hersey, S.Sc, (McQlll University), has analyzed these Tablets and says: "I hereby certify that I have made a careful analysis of Baby's Own Tablets, which I personally purchased ln a drug store in Montreal, and said analysis has failed to detect tho presence of any opiate ,or narcotic ln them." This means tliat mothers can give their little ones these Tablets with an assurance that,they will do good—that they cannot possibly do harm. -The' Tablets cure indigestion, colic, constipation, diarrhoea, simple fever, toothing troublos and all minor ailments. Sold by druggists everywhere or sent by mail at 25 cents a box by writing tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont Several doctors were talking about insomnia and its various treatments. Captain Evan P. Howell of Atlanta, Ga., used to tell a stor, said ..one' of the. medical meu, about a friend of his, a Judge Black, who had an infallible euro for insomnia. Captain Howell ,used to quote the Judge about in this fashion: "Whenevah I go to bed and 4can't sleep. suh,I simply get up and take a- drink of-whiskey: Then I go back to bed, suh, and , aftah a while, if I am still wakeful, I get up and take anoahah drink of whiskey. If that doesn't have the desired effect, suh, I .get up once,more and take anothah di^nk of whiskey. I keep repeating this- treatment at intervals, suh, and after I've had six or seven I don't give a continental wheth- ah I get to sleep or not." ' . "Some persons have periodical attacks of Canadian cholera; dysentery or, diarrhoea, and have to use > great precautions' to avoid the disease. Change of water, cooking, and green fruit, is sure to bring on the attacks. To sucliApersons we would rpcommend Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial as being the best medicine In the market for all summer complaints. If a few drops are taken in water ' when the symptoms are noticed no further trouble will be experienced. Nicholas Longworth, of O.nclnatti, while a student at Harvard College, was on a certain occasion introduced to the poet Longfellow. Grasping Mr. L,ongwor_h by the hand Mr. Longfellow, immediately said: "Here is an instance where 'worth makes the man'; the want of it the fellow.'" . Western Canada's Great Industrial Exhibition WINNIPEO JULY 20==:28, 1905 ■ft J"' 'l' "vir*^ ] .AAApfA . _ y_p$%i .' • « - ..,*'.!>'ii _■ ... V &*--**[ . „ 11',,. -i -"V I '•* ' •' /?,} ■!"*'.! I „ /' IV "■ s** , -A -«-« _„'*"* I . '« vA.»;am j, . t, „tt^ *;t_N *■, ■ - ■ <*-■*-* ■"& 1 -''?,-*■. ' * ■ ." v K^mjf _ ,, A .•>?.■£&£ v • a; rir?; t. . ■'■*•.'1 ""■ ~s 1 . ,_*> 1 1- Arr.sT* <���>, j ^ i ' 'V.- ,; 'If I o ' ' 'I.i. ' 'jy y-w-'At , ' ' ' -- ff A ^ K'"'" .t*?H>' l f.. . >_���! } ��� . ,' fr -��������"; ' aK 'CHE MOYIE LEADER. Published ia the interest of the people of Moyie and East Kootenay. F, J. SMYTH St. CO., - - - 1'abIUners. BATES OF SUB3CR1FIICH. One Tear.. $2.00 SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1905. The late Bight Hon. W. E. Gladstone once said: "Nothing except the mint can make money without advertising." -.This is why Gladstone is remembered as the Grand Old Mail --������-^-m i.tgover the lax rolls a few days ago J didn't see where you had turned in any part of any $7000 you had saved by not smoking." With the building of the Spokane & Kootenay railway and the Kootenay Central, the St Eugene working full torce and paying big dividends, the Sullivan mine ,and smelter in full operation, the resumption of work at the North Star, and the prospects brighter than eyer for the lumberman, is is easily to see that South East jKootenuy is going ahead by leaps and .bounds.... ��� , And c_-i.HI another divid.ud for the Jucky ehm hold' rs in the St. Eugene. The man who is, his worst enemy never flops until he di-feats himself. The Japs have lately made important addi-ions to their navy.���Boun- dary Creek Times. r . ��� < I Many men are like machinery; they I've _o fast and use their gear so hard - tliat a hot finish is their sure end.' The biulding of the Koolenny Central , ia now assured, and great Ihingi. are in ptore for the people living along Ihe proposed line. Cranbrook will close up on Domin fori Day, and her citizens will come; to enjoy themselves. Now' it is up to the'people of Moyie to make ,the. day ,Bp'pJcaj.aut*for them as possible. ��� Every 'Once in a while a baseless rumor gets', in to circulation in;- Movie. The last 'was that the St. Eugene would be closed down tight on the 1 \\ . 13th,of June. * It is time.that the fool killer was getting in hiswork.. ' - Tt is stated by the London Express that a well.educated Parisian named George Teyron earns a comfortable livelihood by figuiing as the l-ith guest at dinutrs which otherwise would be attended only by 13 persons. # Collier'-i, History appToiTohes- the close of the Crimean war' with the Awoids, "Crippled both- on i ' J ; l " " ji ( r t ' Fresh and Cured Meats, Fresh . i *. ,/ ' ' Fish, Game ana Poultry. ^Ve .' supply only the best, Yoi_r( I * i * c ' trade solicited. . ,- t\\ * * MARKETS ' A., , ,��� , ���(,',. ' , r , In ,all the , Principal ' ' ' - o Cities,,and ' Towns in : British Columbia :: ,CMSBTlOpKl-rB/C_ Kkadquar"_��� -roc. East'Ko'otk.V.vy *MltLl ASSAT-BJK, I-cekiu's 9 in ProspectorV liou'!. (,i_i o__rding and Day School conduct- {ed I>y the Sislers of St. Joseph, Nelson , B. C. Commercial and business | courses a specialty. Excellence and ; swift progress cliaractenize each de- g p.irtmont. Parents should write for I particulars. One mouth assures the ' public of the thoroughness of the ! Sisters' methods of teaching. Terms commence January, April and Sept. Pupils are admitted duriae term W, R.-BEATTY Embalmer and Undertaker, Phono S9. . CRANBItOOK. (WMITED) \\A\\-NCOUVER, ��� B. C. NELSON,' 15. C Keg Beer, Bottled Beer a.nc_ Porter always on Hand. JOSEPH NIEDERSTADT, Propr. CHRIS. NIELSEN, (MOYIE.) General agent in British ^Columbia for: LIQUID __T_EGTR1CITY, MAGNETIC .COMBS, ASBESTOS LAMP "WICKS. For further, particulars regarding the_e goods cull on or wiite, PREST PHOTO CO. Ckanbrook and Moyie. O. F. DESAULNIER DEAIER IN PROMPT DELIVERY. aueens'A^e. MOYIE cranbrook; b. c 'r i "l,'' r ' " \\ + 'JU ^ FIRST CLASS. WORE. < ' We Neither Patronize or '��� ' Employ Chinete.. ' ''..''" Leave Work with , - * \\ '" A. B. STEWART & CO. * ,,Wholeisale Wine ; ,' and. Spirit Mer- ' ( chant. ���",.,*���'' Agent for Calgary Brewing Co.'s . " Beer, Ale and Porter.�� 1 '-���'*��� . ' J~ 'A T. Label <& Co.'s ��� , . >' , , ' * . , "' ��� Hay and Grain. Schlifz and Calgary ' ���_ - > ������ , ^ Foreign-arid Domestic Wines; Iiquors -''. aud Cigars. . " (. /' '''(JRANBROOK ''��� .. ���:E.G...GW.YNNE;. " Cigars", ��� Tobaccos, .Confectionery, * A , .i-v.'Fruit-j Etc. . "A . r I, < f- * , FARRELL BLOCK, _ ���' 'Victoria St. Barber Shop; And Bath Rooms. . In STONE" Building. �� \\ First Class Work. - ~B Uhs open every da}'. A, L. FRANKLIN IF YOU HAVE A LOT TOSEL L, A HOUSE TO RENT, MINING STOCK TO SELL- Or if you wish to invest iu any of these consult FARRELL *- SMYTH. THE TIME. BY "UfclNQ TAYLOR & DAVIS, CKANBKOOK. Bricklayers and brick manufacturers. They' intend putting a carload ol brick in Moyie /for immediate use. Anyone requiring chimneys can communicate direct or leave orders at this otfice. Fifcacb ranges a specialty A. GRENIER, Awnings Made to Order, and Upholstering Done in First Class Stylo. ' Cranbrbbk, B, C. TO Seattle, Tacoma AND ALL Pacific Coast Points St, Paul,"[Chicago> New York q AND ALL POINTS EAST Palace and TOurist Sleepers, Buffet, Library care^Modern Day coaches "Dining cars.-..'- Meals a La Carte. A Best Meals on Wheels Fast Overland TRAINS DAILY For Tickets, Rates, Folders and Full information, call on or ad- . dress any Great Northern Agent . or write S. G. YERKES, Hi BRANDT, A. Q. P. A. C. P. & T. A. Seattle, 701 W. Riverside Ave Sjj��kane, Waehinglon. I. O.O. F. rVft^'Ts'ggSy 3 Wlldey Lodge No. 44. Meets every. Tuesday evening in their hall' on Victoria street. Sojourning Odd Fellows cordially invited. A. G. Monkhouse, F. J. Smyth, Noble Grand. Secr'y. Moyie Miners' Union No. 71 W. F. of M. Meets in McGregor hall every Saturday evening. Sojourning members are cordially invited to attend.' < < \\' ]). Habebboscu, Thos. E. Kelly, President. ' . Secretary MOYIE AERTE NO. 865 Meets Every \\V*edue_"d-iy at 8 P. M. E-'A. HILL, , j/ H. HAWKE, - Worthy Pres. ���.' ' Worthy Secr'y. Harvey & . McCarter, i . _���" Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, Etc. ��� Cranbrook, - - ,B. C. W. F. -GURD, BARKISTElt, SOLICITOR, ETC. CRANBROOK. , tr- �� B. 0 DR. F..B.; MILES, X>____3_INr,_I_"IST_ Cranbrook, . ' B, C., George Hi Thompson, o ���j .*��� ' . u . ft -ft '���__��� A, 'BAn__ISTKi.,,S0L_CTTOK, No- ��� ( ,,'y ' tary Punr_ic,'i5.c.' ' [ *-' ' ' . .* '** -." CRANBROOK, British Columbia. ok is 'it *k MOYIE UNION MADE Clothing a Specialty. ^ Wolsey, Unshrinkable Underwear | . and W. L. Douglass' Shoes. | NONE BETTER ON THE MARKET. $ Trunks,, Valises, Suit Cases, Hats, Etc, ^ I* MOYIE^HOTEL. A p] F. JOHNSIOHv I'ThiB Hotel is New and well Furnished. The * % Tables are Supplied with, the Best the | Market affords. The Bar is Filled with 4 the Best Brands of Liquors and Cigars. %��� HEADQUARTERS FOR ..COMMERCIAL I r a, AND MINING MEK '< " ^ . * ~ ' ��� I �� MOYIE ��� ��� ��� r --' , L��� lliKlTISnr coluaiuia' . -B6<=���&cce*S���������-e��������'S���e���������i6e3a33s��::eei_.-.-��-.6���ee6e���s -w^��-_*.a TvsriSrVwwiaiamsxtt&jaaz j BUY YOUR ���TI?c>Tdo,o-oc_>si, from,..; _ , t ��� c A. B. Stewart 8c Co., alace ������a- Bakery. , ,'" " Bread," Pics, Cakes, Etc.. ��� . ' . Twelve Loaves $1. a ** ,i .,.,-. . h. ��� - , R. T. HOWARD, Prop. ' - j"* n ' _ * _, FOR ' FINE", TAILORING GO" ''TO G.AaFOOTE MERCHANT TAILOR . Asd'Gent.1' Furnisher, 1 .��� i-�� goods that money cab buy! ,--,--' . \\ '' ' ���-' AA .It.means that ourAMen's Wear ^ ' * - " ���* must be --perfect ���< fitters andAgood wearers';'A-*: "**''* ,y CA ") ' * . A '* ^ * - . ' ' , "'' ��� -It'mean's that the best material "and ��� ' . , skilled' workmen ;ure employed.*'''- -r. rt 5 - *_ "' -"��� ��4-_.j.., ., -'} ��� A " -. "It means LOW PRICES, because iii ' . handling good goods "weodo.- not',have' . , ', to'charge extra to maii'e up'for-losses. ~' It^meaiis"tli'ttt .YOU' ARE > PRO- .,' TECTED, 'IN;'EVERY; WAX .be- ', causeyou1 can get your money back if you are not satisfied. . o%, '��� . "'" '",'" It means that' we'liave the ��� con A- '��� i * - ,dence of 75 per cent", of ,th'e working, ' -nien,of this'disiric), and we aro after ��� ���' 'the other 25 per ccnt.A \\ ' . ' < '*--,. L- , A ' - ��� ,'--- " p ' ', ' . . .- ', ,' "<- . i' r��� -. '��� ��� ft ���" cr 'y * , ;-- .;-; '-'^-v., a ��� , -> -�� * - *.. * * ������-���*' ' u . '- ' I ' , , ,, . , ���--,", �� V V J.-I, v- HOTEL T. V. LOWNEY, iProp. MINERS' HEADQUARTERS. ' This hotel is 'closo to the mines, and * every Convenience for Working Men. South Victoria St. M0YI1 A. L. Wholesale Wines, Liquors ��� and Cigars. * CRANBROOK, British Columbij We handle everything in the Hardware linj Also Cumberland blacksmith's coal, powdef fuse and caps, oil, paints and glass, at flM' hu: Hi ORAMBR-OOKl. MARGONI-l I have persuaded Messrs. Munroe & Munij of New York to allow me a block of the stocM the-Marconi Wireless ^Telegraph Company j Canada Ltd.,,whichA;;w:as^'-���intjBIlded,'for.���'ofN towns. I can sell this at $5 a share, whilej lastsv in East Kootenay from Crow's Nest \\ Kootenay landing. Apply to \\: SA jilQi jute CRANBROOK. FARRELL ' & 8AIYTH, JJ01'I| \\0K ���.'^StXftr"""@en, "Frequency: Weekly

Titled \"The Moyie City Leader\" from 1898-04-23 to 1898-12-31. Titled \"The Moyie Leader\" from 1899-03-04 to 1911-04-28."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Moyie (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "The_Moyie_Leader_1905-06-17"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0183670"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.3000000"@en ; geo:long "-115.8333000"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Moyie, B.C. : Smythe and Musgrave"@en ; dcterms:rights "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "The Moyie Leader"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .