f ';Pr07i?ciai Li brar W vol. 1 GREJBJNWGOD, B.C., THURSDAY, APRH, 28, 1927 No. 3$ We Carry a Large Line of Hardware including McLary's Enamel, Galvanized and Tinware McLary's Heaters inspect our Stock '\:T. .M. GULLEY & CO. gS New Spring Millinery {? A Is on Display X '��* In latest styles and colors p* '��� SC V %f Prices Reasonable C5 X - ���also��� �� X Lovely Flowers & -for- V ^^ Hat Trimmings or Ball Dresses or* When fresh Vegetables are scarce We offer the finest quality in cans New Canvas Shoes for men, boys and children .Call and inspect our goods Ellen Trounson's Store ?���/ Carrots -' - Cauliflower Brussel Sprouts Spinach Asparagus per can 40 & 45c Mushrooms' - 2 cans 95c Tomatoes - 3 cans 50c 'For quality and'value order from per can 30c per can 30c per can 30c per can 25c Phone 46 ENWOOD GROCERY a'JMM-M,W'tmn'ii'iM-,--i��m\i'\.M2j_i Real Estate a Insurance Fire, Accident & Sickness, Life, Automobile. Bonds, Burglary, &c Auctioneer Houses for Rent or Sale Call at tlie Office of CHARLES KING GREENWOOD, B.C. S____E_a__E__S_3E___E_E3 E-zscaaiKtacKBa Spring Housecleaning We have a complete stock ��� For a Suggestion Look at our Windows TAYLOR & SON For Coughs, Colds or any Bronichal Trouble use ,CREOPHOS . Give resistance against Flu HUSKIES For Sore Throat and Tickling Cough ' "" You can get them at GOODEVE'SDRUG STORE Ask for one of our - Calendars Of Local Interest . Mrs. John Skilling of Tunnel, is in the District Hospital. .Harry Royce of Allenby, is visiting his mother, Mrs. A. R. Royce. Miss Ruth Euerby of Grand Forks, was a visitor in town on Saturday. Jas. Machell of Westbridge, has been in the District Hospital for some time. ��� .Support your -Hospital! Hospital Day, Show and Dance, Friday, May 13th. Service 'will be" held in St. Jude's Church on Sunday, May 1st at 7:30 p.m. . Dolly, Buster and George Skilling have-returned home from the District Hospital. Mrs. Victor Favrin and son, Archie, of Westbridge, spent the week-end in town. Boundary Creek Fishing Opens on May 1st After having a close season for 2 years Boundary creek will be open for fishing on May 1st. Anglers are reminded that 25 fish, eight inches and over, is the limit for a day's fishing. Plan Celebration of Diamond Jubilee Mrs. J; Price and family have returned from a visit to South Slocan and Nelson. Mrs. MEAT MARKET GREENWOOD, B.C. All Meat kept on Ice a bear of a show! by ���-' Arthur Stringer with Aileen Pringle, Lowell Sherman Chester Conklin . during the hot weather . SPECIAL THIS WEEK Head Cheese 15c. Sausage 25c Home Fed Bacon, sliced, 30c to 40c per Ib also a Felix comedy ., "Felix Scoots Thro Scotland" Greenwood Theatre SATURDAY, APRIL 30th . ^Commencing at 8.15 p.m. Adults 50c. ' Children 25c. B. Lequime left on Friday for Christina Lake where Mr. Lequime is located. > ��� Dr. Lamb, government inspector of hospitals, was. a visitor in town th'e first-of-the-week. - Many Greenwoodites will attend the Concert and Dance in Midway on Friday night. > Harry Bryan, of the Greenwood Grocery, returned on Friday from a motor trip to Armstrong. Mrs. M. Anderson returned to ���town on Saturday from spending the winter in San Jose, Cal. A. C. Mesker, of Spokane, was in town today in! company with his old tillicum/.Lew-Salter.' - Miss .Irene"' Savard, ~o�� Trail> was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Legault during the week-end. '��� ��� H. E. Thain, of Nelson, district supervisor of the Monarch Life Assurance Co., was intown today. Born���To Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Riley, of Norwegian Creek, a daughter, on Monday, April 25th. Mrs. Sam Fretz had a painful accident last week, which will pre- vent her getting about .for some "time. The annual meeting of- the Kettle Valley Golf Club will be held m the, Ingram Bridge School House on Saturday, May 7th, at 2:30 p.m. ,>W. D. Smith, dentist, of Grand Forks, will be at the District Hospital on Sunday to make appointments. The warm weather has made Boundary creek rise and it is higher now than it has been for many years. .Dave Oxley of Eholt, was a visitor in town on ��� Saturday. Dave is feeling fine after his recent illness. Mr. and Mrs. W. Muir Wilson and family, of the No. 7 Road, moved into the McPhee house on Church street, today. Miss Vera Kempston and brother Pat, have returned to town from spending the Easter holidays at Bridesville. ��� Thomas Walmsley has returned from spending the Easter holidays with his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Alty in Trail. Mr. and-Mrs. Jim Drum, of Beaverdell, were in town'on Sunday, leaving on Monday morning to spend a few days in .Penticton. Chas. Brett, the well-known C. P. R. conductor, has returned to Rossland with his bride,- from their honeymoon spent in the south.- ���- tr Miss .Nora Christian has returned to her home' in Christian Valley after. ...spending ;;.the;;;Easter. holidays with friends.in Greenwood. in Coming! Saturday, May 7th Richard Barthelmess "THE AMATEUR GENTLEMAN" Fri., and SatT, May 13 and 14 Jackie Coogan in "Get Your Hair Cut Johnnie" David Spooner, of Holberg, V.I., is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. White at the Jewel mine. Alvin Olson, son of E. J. Olson, of Eholt, has recovered at- the District Hospital and returned home. The frogs have started to serenade from, their ponds near the rink, a sure sign that spring is with us. Mrs. G. R. Inglis and daughter, Irene, of Beaverdell, were the guests of Mrs. J. E. Hoy during the week-end. J. H. Goodeve, the new proprietor of the Pacific Hotel, will make considerable improvements to the building. Doc reports business good. ���Mrs. Chas. E. Nordman, of Beaverdell, was in town during the week-end to meet her aunt, Mrs. M. Anderson; who returned from the South. ^n'JUMM*r.*mnt*rm^r.-*e^KlfrVB~.^ar.m3,*a McMYNN'S STORE, Midway, B.C. W. Swan Soap ,- 5c/bar 6 bars 25c Gingersnaps - - 20c lb 3 lbs 50c Pride of B.C. Salmon l's 20c 4 tins 75c Macaroni - - - 15c lb 2 lbs 25c Ketchup - - - 25cptbtle2btle45c Prunes - - - 15c lb 4 lbs 50c Spring Cleaning . It is getting- almost time for the spring clean-up. Why not have your clock fixed up when you are putting everything else in order - ' You will find our Watch Repairing Department second to none in this Western country I Lho tragedy of husbands deserting their wives nnd children. There has been a marked increase of this cruoi conduct for some years past. Stalls- tics compiled from court records, in our own city, demonstrate- the soi- rowful fact thai, fully 23 per cent, ot the children placed in institutions 01 all kinds, and who are practically supported on charity, are "innocents" who have been deserted b> iheir fathers. And, think or it, in 24 per cent, of these desertion cases tho mother was loft ill. Here we have brutal cruelly on the pari of husband and father.1' is unexcelled for Dyeing and Tinting. Professional Dyers use thc Same Kind of i French Women Honored On To The North! . The -development of Canada is entering, in fact has already entered a new phase and oue which holds promise of adding enormously lo the population, wealth, and economic, strength of the Dominion, ln all the provinces, with tho exception of the Maritimes, tho attention or governments and people aro turned northwards. The history of Canadian growth during tlio first half cuitury of Confederation records development upon east aud west lines, beginning with the acquisition by the newly-born Dominion of the Hudson's Bay Co. lauds ot tho west and thc building of the Canadian Pacific Kail way; ihen came tlio construction or the Canadian Northern; and finally the projection of tho National Transcontinental and Grand Trunk Pacific across the continent. Practically all traflic moved east and west, aud in 1 lie.se western provinces a long roundabout journey was frequently necessary ln oj-der lo travel from one place to another only a compaialively short distance apart on a north and south liner' As a result of Ihis early and quite natural programme; of development, Canada became as a counlry, so far as settlement and trade was concerned, a narrow strip stretching all the way from the. Atlantic to tho Pacific, but consisting of fewer people than aro to he found in European countries which in area are smaller than Canadian provinces. Canada had length but it. lacked depth, a condition which made for weakness as a national unit becauso of iho great distances separating lhe people and leading 1o a too great diversity of interests, a lack of knowledge of the needs and problems of the different sections,---Maritimes, Ontario' and Quebec, the Prairie "West, i.he Pacific-slope,���a resultant sectional rather than a national viewpoint. Always there existed the possibility of Ihis thin thread snapping at some point. It is, therefore, a" matter of uatlonal satisfaction that Canada is now on the threshold of its second groat development,���a, development northwards which will give the Dominion what, it has hitherto lacked, depth as well as length. From all quarters, governmental, financial, manufacturing, comes the confident prediction thai the next two, or three decades will witness a complete transformation in this respect, and hardly a week passes that :-on_e new enterprise involving northern development is not reported. Development works, financed by Canadian, Uritish asd United States capital, and involving au investment of close upon one billion dollars, are under way iu Quebec which will result iu the establishment of great industrial plants, the employment.' of tens of thousandajoP men, the creation of now cities and towns, and an enormous expansion in the trade of the Dominion. . These arcpracllcally all to the north of present setllcd areas. In Ontario, the Provincial Government has decided to push construction or their railway through lo James Bay, while throughout both old and new mining areas of Northern Ontario unprecedented activity in prospecting aud For Aches, Pains, The Safe Home Remedy NERVILINE When sudden sickness comes, when the kiddies come in with colds, their little chests and throats sore from coughing, quick results always follow a vigorous rubbing with good old Nerviline. If it's Cramps, .Colic, Diarrhoea. Nerviline is a wonderful friend; It brings case and comfort so quickly. For young and old, lo overcome the minor ills that constantly arise In the home, nothing compares with "Nerviline."���3S cents at all dealers. Four Save wlio Hungarian Paitridges Be Stock From Alberta Will Soon Released in Manitoba Tlie first ten pairs of Hungarian partridges to arrive through the instrumentality of -tlio Brandon AVild Birds' Proteclive Association (ordered from the game sanctuary of Ben- tinck, Leduc, Alberta), arc being sent to the Peddle Farm, southeast of Douglas, to bo taken care of till lhe season opens. This was done jn tho interests of the sport-loving community of tho Prairie Provinces, it being hoped that the birds will increase greatly in numbers. A VERY RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT Who Risked Lives " to British Soldiers Receive Annuities i-V-tir heroic French women concealed British soldiers from the Germans for months' and even yeais at the risk of their own lives, have received London's tribute .of praise and gratitude at-the Mansion House. Before a big assembly of Brilisn and French Staff Officers and subscribers lo the fund raised in their behalf, the Lord Mayor presented to limes. Julie Baudhuin, Bclmont- Gobert, Angelo Lesur and Louise Cardon annuity certificates and illuminated addresses sotting forth Great Britain's acknowledgment of their devotion. It was a ceremony which vivdly recalled ihe World War, and il had "a poignant climax when an English father suddenly kneeled to kiss the shoes of Mme. Cardon who for thirteen months had concealed his son behind the Gorman lines. - After all that time the son, Corporal Hull of the Eleventh Hussars, was betrayed. Tho Germans shot him and condemned Mme. Cardon to death,-a sentence which later was commuted lo twenty years' of haru labor. , Her husband escaped only to lead an existence of great suffering until the armistice and then to' die, a victim of his courage in helping to ���harbor the young soldier. Af the closing scene, when thc Marsellaise crashed oui in honor ot tlie heroines of France, followed by tho British national anthem,' tears glistened in th.e eyes of all tour women and few iu lho audience remained unaffected. An interesting exhibit in the hall of the Mansion House was the famous oak wardrobe in which Mme. Belmont-Gobert hid Trooper Patrick Fowler of tlio Eleventh Hussars for more than throe years. A Sensitive Camera Can Photograph Objects at a Distance of 300 Miles Distant' objects invisible to' the human eye now can be photographed by a camera perfected by "the Army Air Service. The secret iies in the special film, which is sensitive to light rays that do not register on. the eye. It .Is pointed out thai in lime of' war, a plane 'equipped' with this camera could take perfect pictures of encnij positions while the plane itself would bo far out of rango and sight o'f anil- aircrari batteries. An en cany fleet could bo photographed 300 miles off shore. The device may bo used against the ruin fleet, for the posilion and name ot each ship could be caught in a single picture taking in 300 square miles. It also has been suggested for forest patrol fliers for the exact location of fires. Sold. First Matches Hundred Years Ago Invention 'of English Chemist Brought Him Modest Income ��� The centenary of the match has just been observed in England. Many newspapers printed' laudatory, editorials on tho match and its inventor, Johu Walker, a chemist of Stockton- on-Tees. It is recorded' in Walker's sales book thai he sold a box of rriction .matches to' John Ilixon 100 years, ago, Although what had been called matches, but were really, wicks, had been sold before. Walker's match, was said to liave been lhe first prac-. tical one. In two years Walker sola only 2u0 boxes of matches but after that the demand -.vas great enough to furnish hiin a modest income. Walker's box contained fifty matches and- ��� sold for a shilling. With it went a piece of sand paper. How Weak, Run-Down People Can Obtain Relief, Among the many remedies offered for the maintainance or restoration of health and strengtli, there is none can compare with Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills. Most ailments aro duo io poor, thin blood. Dr. Williams' To Visit Hudson Bay <>��� Hon. C. A. Dunning Will. Make Tour Over Northern Route in July Hon. C. A. Dunniug, Minister of Ilailways; Major Graham Bell, Deputy Minister, and Frederick Palmer, British consulting engineer, will visit Port Nelson and Fort Churchill on Ready-made Medicine. ��� You' need no physician for ordinary "ills when you have al hand a bottle of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. For coughs, colds, so're throat, bronchial troubles, it is invaluable; for scalds, bums, bruises, sprains IL is unsurpassed; while for cuts, sores and the like it is an unqueslionoblo healer. It needs no testimonial' other than llie use, and that will satisfy anyone as to its effectiveness. ' - TpHE Firestone process * of Gum-Dipping is one of the most important of ' the many Firestone contributions to more economical highway transportation. By this proces��, every- fiber of every cord is thoroughly saturated and insulated' -with rubber, minimizing friction and heat so destructive to tirs life. On the cars of hundreds of thousands .of motorists, in tha day-in and day-out service of the largest truck, bus and taxi- _^ cab fleets, in the battle of tires on race tracks, Firestone Gum- Dipped Tires, because of thcir greater stamina, are delivering longer mileage with added safety and comfort. The Firestone dealer in your locality sells and services these extra quality tires. Let him tell - you of the trouble- free service that the Gum- Dippingr process insures and' how he can., serve you better nnd save you money. See liim to-day. FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED. Hamilton, Ont. MOST MILES PER DOLLAR Britain's Air Defence Far this ebb.' development is in progress. _.. . ,,.,. . .. . , ��� , PinK Pills have a specific action on; Hudson Ttav in Tuh- nf Ihiq summer Manitoba has awakened to. the potentialities of ils vast, northern ion-1-> th(J bIoocl> making ^ Tichf ml :md w ��� " 3 l s -Aimm,ci tory and;as iu Ontario and Quebec, the eyes and energies of lhe people aro j pure. Through this richer blood the being focussed on mineral and water-power development there with all that j tissues of the body are this, must mean in industrial expansion. The business men of "Winnjpeg realize they can no longer depend for future growth upon being simply a wholesale and distributing centre for the west. Tho age-old demand of the Prairie West for an outlet on Hudson. P>ay is at last being met by aggressive action and tho. last section to bo built will, before many months, bo completed. The latest discoveries in science and in- Tho minister's party, including sov- bctlor I oral engineers, will leave the present nourished, and the functions of the. j end o'f steel on the Hudson'Bay Rail- body- better performed. Anaemic; way amj proceed by canoe lo Port Nelson. From there it is possible that sufferers, weak, languid and nervous ! peoplo speedily find now health and i ���strength through the use of this 1U���� l)aii>r mi��y fl>" norUl lo Uliurclull medicine. This ,\vas lho experience j is one of the seven passenger Fokker of Mrs. John Armour, youth Mono- 'planes avhich have been operating in glum, Out., who says:���"I am one of the many thousands who have rc- gained-health-thrcugh-lhe-usc-of-Dr.- Williams' Pink Pills, and I take this opportunity of saying a word iu praiso of this splendid medicine. Bo- fore beginning the uso of this medicine I was pale and badly run down. I found it dlilicull to do my housework and was tired and breathless at the least exertion. I had tried sev- veution are being employed to expedite, this work. Airplanes have for weeks ""IjectT"ca"iTying_m"on���anil_:HU])plies_froni^tho~cnd-oC-steol-to-=ChurchilI���other airplanes will patrol the Hudson Straits, airplanes are being employed in survey work in northern Saskatchewan as well as in northern Ontario. Important branch lines of railway are to bc built in northern Saskatchewan to connect existing railways with the road to the Bay, .while the Saskatchewan Government has appointed a commission to make expert inquiry into the whole subject of power development within the Province. Alberta has pushed railways well into thc north of that Province, and it | oral medicines without benefit, aud is now known thero exists a wealth of oil, mineral aud other resources jnl*B--'11-' ���' '���** '" ���*-������ T1" """ those northern stretches, as well as vast tracts of fertile lands suitable i'or agriculture. Investigation is now to be mado of tho most suitable route for a railway from northern Alberta through British Columbia to the Pacific .coast. Canada has long been a young man's country, a land for the hardy and venturesome prospector and homesteader. It is a land which offers rich ^reward tor the worker, tho energetic pioneer. The possibilities whicli greeted the western pioneer of the early eighties are uot wholly of the past; of the northern areas during thc next few decades Canada's present and fu- they exist in equal measure for the youth of today, and in the development ture citizens will find ample outlet f<*r their ambitions and energy, coupled with that element of romance inseparable from tho opening up of a new land. -Fo'r Canada as a whole a large field for investment and constructive enterprise awaits. Spread Over Face and Hands. Cuticura HeaU. -��� ��� -������������ ����� "My trouble began with a few pimples on my face and hands and soon spread all over them. The pimples were very hard, large and red, and festered and scaled ovei. They itched and burned so that I scratched them, which caused eruptions. My fact was disfigured, and I could not put my hands in water and could hardly do my work. "A friend advised me to try Cuti cura Soap and Ointment so. I pur. chased some, and in about two month3 I was completely healed." (Signed) Miss Jennie Ducharmc, 481 Giroux St., Norwood, Man. - Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum are all you need for every- day toilet ind njirsery purposes. Ife���!* -gtenhcnM, tt7 points, has been decided upon by the Saskatchewan Wheat PooL.it is officially announced. This will raise the number of elevators owned by the Tool lo 614. For distemper���Minard's Liniment. "Say, you don't know what real trouble is." "I don't ;i I once let it be known to a few" friends that I wanted to insure myself." Kill v/arts with Minard's Liniment. At the glorious feast of knowledge some people- never get!, any farther than the soup. W. N. U. 1C78 - When a woman Is unable to go shopping she calls'on a neighbor and ithey talk stop. - Tlio - Swiss Industries Fair, the origin of' which dates back lo tlie middle Ages, will be held at Basel this year, April 2 to 12. . An Oil of Merit. ��� Dr.. Thomas' Eclectric Oil is not- a jumble of medicinal substances thrown together and pushed by advertising, but' tho result of the careful investigation' of the healing qualities of certain oils as applied to the human body. It is a rare combination and it-.won and kept -.public favor front the first. A trial of it will carry conviction to any who doubt its power to repair and heal. -I. Spring Time is CELERY KING Time Brew a cup of this fine old vegetable tonic. It is all thc spring medicine you need. It drives out winter's poisons, improves the appetite and makes you,feel better right away. CELERY KING is good for the whole family. At druggists, 30c & 60c_. More mineral discoveries of importance have ""lately been made in thc Portland canal area, Prince Rupert district. Keep your secret from your friends and your enemies will never get next to It". Tliere is only one "Hot-Shot" and it is an. Eveready-, Columbia. Look for the name "Hot-Shot" and insure yourself' the . maximum of dependable power per' square ��� inch ol battery. AU-Metal Hot-Shot case protects your battery against damp, or accident���safeguarding your power supply "at all" times. Remember���There is only one "Hot-Shot" . and it is an Eveready-Columbia. _. Canadian National Carbon Co., Limited Montreal . Toronto Winnipeg Vancouver Tune in on CKY, Winnipeg, for Eveready Programs. Saturday March 19th, 11 p'm., Saturday March 26th, 11 p.m., Sunday April 3rd, 10 jwn., Sunday April 10th, 9 p.m. EVE&EADr << , / THE GREENWOOD LEDGE arrassing Position eri y Miss-Jeanne Ginsberg, Bronx, -N. Y., writes: "I had .become accustomed to arising each day with a heavy head, dizzy and bad taste in my mouth. My bowels were frequently clogged and coib. stipated. One day I became so sick to my'stomach I had to leavo an important job and go homo. A friend. advised mo to take CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. I feci greatly relieved since using them and whenever my stomach and head goes -bad again I'll certainly know what to do." CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are sugar coated, small, easy to swallow, purely vegetable, and relievo the bowels free from pain. They tonic the system as they are purely vegetable and do not contain Mercury, Calomel or otlier poisonous drugs. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS, 25c* and 75c. red packages. Accidents In Lcndtan Increase c* Benefactor To Human Race .Founder of Antiseptic 'Surgery Made Many Serious Operations .Posaible- Macaulay, tlie most brilliant oi 'the Victorian historians, declared that the greatest benefactor to ,thn human race was the man who grew two blades of grass where ouly ont. had grown .before. But what then is' the due meed of him who is credltcn with having.saved more human lives in the latter days of the 11111616011111 century than'were lost in tho wars of the hundred years that preceded it? That was said of Joseph,. Lord Lister, the founder of antiseptic surgery, tho ��� hundredth anniversary of whose birth was recently'celebrated. He it was wlio perceived the far- reaching implications of- Pasteur's epochal discoveries and realized that a new era iii turgery would dawn when wounds 'ceasecj to be tlie breeding place of germs." It was Sir William Osier,'the famous-Canadian surgeon, "who-summed up Lister's services to civilization'in.this arresting sentence: "Before.antiseptic stu- gery, bacteria were mo're deadly.than bullcls."-in fact, iu tlie old days over one-fourth of those wounded in 'battle died, not of lhe direct injui- , ies, but of subsequent infection. Contrary to the theory which had (prevailed Trom early Chinese and * Greek times, that the fever wliich [accompanied the septic process was (a-necessary part of natural healing," j Lister proved ito't only that suppuration was not necessary but that it [was the preventable cause of deaths following certain wounds and many serious operations. Hospital gangrene became so common it no long- fer.was possible to regard it as , a necessary evil.' Lister was put on the right track by reading a paper !by Pasteur, in which the great ! Frenchman had shown that - putrefaction was'duo to the presence or ���"minute living "germs" and not to the air itself.- As,a result of his own |experiments Lister came to tho conclusion'that the-only way to prevent festering was to keep the germs [out.-���Ono-of���his-most^dai'iug-iiino- .vafions was when he used carbolic (acid, a violent poison to prevent in- tfecton ln surgical cases. Another [great contribution to* surgory was [his substitution of ."catgut," which is [absorbed in time, to silk and other [materials, themselves-Ihe cause of [trouble, used up to then for sewing [up breaks in human tissue. Lister's [new Systran enabled surgeons to [venture on brain, chest and abdom- Authority on Agriculture r " tr Dr. Grisdale Has Intimate Knowledge of All Phases of Basic Industry Dr. J. ff. Grisdale, deputy ministci of agriculture,, who is chairman ol tho executive committee of Hie world's poultry congress lo bo heici in Ottawa this year, is recognized as the foremost authority on agriculture and agricultural conditions iu Cariada. The woik which lie,has'been called upon to undertake and the experience whicli he has gained during his 30""*y<3ars o'f government service in-the Federal department of agriculture have given him an inti- phascs of mate knowledge of all Canada's basic industry. Born al'Ste. Marthc, Que., in 187u, he received his early education at Vankleek Hill high school" 'and at Albert College, Belleville, and spent two years at Toronto University. He subsequently entered the OnLario Agricultural College at Guelph, whore ho won the gold medal for his year. lie completed his. agricultural course at tho Agricultural College, Ames, Iowa, where he gradualea with the degree of Bachelor of Agriculture. He first entered ihe service of the Government of Canada at the central experimental farm, where hc had charge of thc work in animal husbandry and .field husbandry carried on in the experimental larm system. He succeeded the" late Dr. .Wm. Saunders as director of experimental farms in 1911, and during thc period 1911-191S, when he hold that position, the experimental farms branch gained a leputation, and. its wonc gathered au imp-otus which makes it today one of the most important in- cuences in the development of Canadian agriculture. In 1918, when the department of agriculture was thorn of a number ol its branches wl ich did not pertain to agriculture, and became a' purely agricultural department, Dr. Gris- dalo became deputy minister, and the same year" he was granted the degree of D.Sc.A. by Laval University. Since his appointment as deputy head of.the department, Dr. Grisdale lias, on several c'cc^^iis,_becn_call: Figures Show Three Killed and 130 Hurt Every Dr.y One, thousand and Iwcnty persons wore killed r>iid'-47,2L3 were injured in streat aciideats Iiisl. year in. Greater London. In oilier words three people _\vere killed every day and 130 were injured. These figures are revealed in a report -by the London and sIIome Counties Traflic Advisory Committee. The number o'f fatal accidents in Greater London has Increased troiii 657 in 1920, lo 1,020 hi. 1926, while non-falal acciJents, in the samo period, have more than doubled, -from 23.02S to 17,213. The proportion of children killed, however, shows a steady decline, and this, the committee 'consider, is largely clue to "the stops takt-u by the authorities lo teach school children to avoid the risks of the streets. Comparison is made with the"figures for'the United Stales, and the committee report that the death rale in America is approximately- double that in Groat Britain. It -is estimated that there aro now 300,000 mechanically, propelled vehicles in Greater London. Crossing Lho road is lho cause.of lho'largest number of'deaths among pedestrians, but the number of fatalities in which children are most likely Lo have been involved all show, a marked diminution. ( "The lime has passed," the committee say, "when a pedestrian can step from lho pathway without first Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Constipation easily avoided and -liver aroused without calomel Cfiamberfain's Tablets ^ Never sicken or gripe���25c : } Weight of British Debt at Amount Owing to States Placed C,700 Tons of Gold Great Britain's - Germany's 3urf.an>- thing else to say to her -husband she cautions him not to eat so fast or smoke so much. Bladder Weakness Remedied by Veteran "Mountie" Dead . ���Haybtll Studio Woodstock, Ont., ��� "I found Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription excellent as a tonic and nerve medicine. I was in h rundown, weakened state of health. My tnerves were all upset, Loould not sleep and had very little tLppotitc. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and found it very helpful. It sharpened up my appetite, strengthened my nerves, and I fcould sleep. It built mc up in health and I ell better in~ every way. I tliink the 'Favorite Prescription' is the finest iedicine any woman can take." Mrs. E. Snarls, 071 Canterbury St. Any drug store, in tablets or liquid, or nd 10c to Dr. Pierce's Laboratory in ridgeburg, Ont., for trial pkg. of tab* ,eta. W. N, U- 1678 New Idea For Houses Houses should turn their back on the noisy streets, says Leandre Vail- lat, art authority of Paris. Homes should 1)0 built- to face on a central court, according to M. Vaillat, with a garden for the children and Quiet, for the family. He remarks thai facing houses away from the street is a reversion to the older tjpes, but is justified. Buffalo man recommends them for kidney and bladder trouble A soft bqd will build as much mental energy for the sleeper in six hours as a hard bed will in eight, is the conclusion reached by a noted psychologist. Speaking of fruit, the-first apple caused a. lot of trouble for the flrst pair. Gin Pills bring you quick relief from urinary and bladder troubles. THey soothe t the kidneys, and Madder and get rid ,of that burning sensation; the frequent desire to urinate is .overcome; brick dust deposits disappear. You can again enjoy comfort by day and sound sleep by night. Thousands of people are relieved of bladder and kidney troubles every year. Reac} what George F. Doetterl, Buffalo, N.Y., says of Gin Pills: "I suffered from bladder Wdaknesi and frequent urination. I had tried other kidney remedies, but got no relief. Adu'scd to take Gin Pills, I did so, and after talcing halt a box noticed much improvement. I can sincerely recommend these pills to anyone suffering, irom kidney and bladder derangement." If you have headaches, backache, uric acid,-pain in the kidneys, dizziness, frequent urination or swollen joints, Gin Pills will correct them. 50c a box at all druggists. "The National. Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto, <- Canada. - 125 John Stuttaford Member of First Contingent to Reach MacLeod- John Slultaford, S3, believed to be the last survivor of-the first contingent of Royal North West Mounted Police to reach MacLeod in JS73, died there recently after the best part of a lifetime >spent in Alberta. Mr. .Stuttaford came to MacLeod with lho famous French police expedition, the j'car before Colonel MacLeod headed his forces into thc territories. He lived in MacLeod ever, since. . Tho dead veteran was buried here with full military honors, a unique feature of the ceremonies being that six veterans of the police expedition of 1S74 acted as pall-bearers. Keep Him Well With the Aid of Baby's Own Tablets No matter how . strong and rosy your child may be he requires a laxative sometimes so that the stomach may bo kept sweet, and the system clean. Formerly the laxative medicines given to children were disagreeable ones���castor oil, senna tea, powders and so on. But now Baby's Own Tablets, easily administered jind -ploafctiitt���to-taker have" superseded" these. The children like Baby's Own Tablets. Not only as a laxative but in many other ways these Tablets arc - an ideal remedy for little ones. They quickly reduce feverishness, relieve indigestion, colic and vomiting, prevent constipation, check diarrhoeaf allay teething pains and promote healthful, natural sleep. You can get Baby's Own Tablets at any dealer in medicine or at 25 cents a box trom The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 222nd! Battalion Re-Union That all may .learn, and all may be comforted.���1 Cor. xiv. 31. . When God gives to-us the clearest sight, lie does not touch our eyes witn love, but sorrow. . ~ .���John Boyle O'Reilly. Wc must. suffer in ourselves before we cau truly love others, ana we must suffer greatly before we can love' widely. Why it is so we may not be able to' loll, unless it be tljat only thus do we gain a thorough knowledge of ourselves' There is in thc heart of man ,a secret'chain Der where God has put all humanity ancl Himself; touch the door with the hand of suffering ancl it flies open, and man finds himself one with all others, and God Himself in tha midst of them. ���Theodore T. Munger. Develop Fort McMurray Tar Sands Arrangements by the Altapave Co., of California, to instal a ?200,000_pjant_ ��t-FonT-McMurray, Alberta, for the development arid extraction ot asphal- tie deposits in the tar sands there are nearing completion. The American quick lunch, with its high stools, flipping flapjacks, odors of "ham an" nnd sly-ill .cries of waiters, has invaded Mexico City. Siestas are broken as the crowds flock to eat sandwiches at the new white fronts. Misery Cut in Half Friend: "Well how do you like be ing married? You were always lamenting when you were a bachelor." Newly-married. Friend: "Oh, it's mucli better, thanks. Before I was miserable at home and miserable when I went out, and now I am only miserable at home." Association to be Formed of Former Members of This Unit At a Re-union Dinner of the 222nd Ttattalion held in Winnipeg recently, it was decided to form an Association for the purpose of having an annual Itc-unlon, and keeping former members of the unit in touch with each other. Full particulars of the associotiou can bo obtained by communicating with Lt.- Col. Jas. Lightfoot, o'f Lightfoot's Transfer Co., Winnipeg, or Mr. Jas. Hercus, cjo Hydro Offices, King St., Winnipeg. It Is hoped to make this association a real success and all former member of the battalion aie urged to send in their names and addresses. The indications of worm aro restlessness, grinding of the teeth, picking of the nose, extreme peevishness, often convulsions. Under these conditions one of the best- remedies that can bc got is Miller's Worm Powders. Thcy will attack tho worms as soon as administered and thoy pass away in ihe evacuations. The little sufferer will be immediately eased and a return of the attack wiil not be likely. Girl students at William ancl Mary College who "do not make eighty in their studies may not have "dates" and other social privileges. Minard's Liniment soothes tired feet. Customer: "Oh, dear, no: I simply could not walk a step in shoes that pinch like that." Shoe Clerk: "I'm sorry, madam, but you've tried on all our different stylos. These thoes are the ones you were wearing when you came In." The worst, o'f some people is that they only keep quiet when you are talking so that Ihey can think of some thing to break in with. Many Radio Phone Calls Thb Postmaster-General announced that to the end ot March the number of trans-Atlantic radio telephone calls passing between England and America was 257 westward and 39S eastward. No need to suffer with corns, or to run thc risk of paring them. Ke- move them surely and painlessly with Holloway's Corn Remover. In 1S68 the first regularly equipped government fish hatchery on this continent was erected by the Dominion of Canada at Newcastle, Ontario. Going fishing���take ment. " - Minard's Lini. Was So Nervous The Least Noise Made Her Jump Mrs. W. II. Yates, Ashern,> Man.,' writes:���"I was bothered very much with my heart aud nerves/ and tho least noise would make me jump and almost stop my heart beating, I told my mother about it ono day, and she said that she had been bothered the same way and told me t�� get a box of ]'0it^tyy, \Phen I had taken the one box I felt quite a lot better and by the time I had token three boxes I got relief." . Price SOc a box at> all doalera, or - mailed direct oa receipt of price by ,The T.'Milbun Co., Limited, Taxootab Jta* i^^MSHSMrtwawwfcW****��� THE GREENWOOD LEDGE lie Greenwood Ledge Published every Thursday at Greenwood, B.C. . G. W. A. SMITH Editor and Proprietor Is $2.00 a year strictly in advance, or $2.50 when not paid for three months or more have passed. To "Sreat Britian and the United States $2.50, always iu advance. ,. ADVERTISING RATES Delinquent Co-Owner Notices. .?25.U0 Coal and Oil Notices..... 7.00 Estray Notices 3.0U Cards of Thanks. 1.00 Certificate of Improvement.... 12.50 (When more than one claim appears in notice, $5.00 for each additional claim). AU other lcg-al advertising-16 cents a line first insertion, and 12 cents a line for each subsequent insertion, 11011- pariel measurement. Transcient display advertising 50 cents an inch each insertion. . Business locals 12^c. a line each insertion. No letter to the editor will be inserted except over the proper signature ancl address of the writer. This rule admits of no exceptions. Midway News Geo. Chisholm left on Wednesday on a few days visit. The Ladies Aid will meet on Saturday, April 30th, in:.the Old School. , ��� - A practice game vof baseball will be played here on the local diamond -at 2 p.m. on May 1st, Republic vs Midway. Mrs. Harold Moll ami the Misses Inez and Joan Richtei will leave for Spokane on Saturday to visit Mrs. Joe Richter. Long winters make long faces. Come and follow the crowd to the Farmer's Hall, Midway, on Fri day, April 29th, ancl forget your troubles. There will be charming girls, lovely scenery, new songs, comic stunts, etc. Bush's melody orchestra will be there in their usual generous style! The good eats will be supplied by the Midway Women's Institute. Doors open at 8 p.m. Come early. Remember that it is on Friday of this week. Beaverdell Briefs The blue cross means that your subscription is due, ���and that the editor would be pleased to have more money. '-'Save The Forest Week" According to a perfectly reliable estimate there is twice as much hardwood in the world as there is soft wood. But the demand for soft wood is four times as great as that four hardwood. Canada is one of the greatest softwood producing areas in the world and British Columbia is by far the most important section of the Dominion's vast forest lands. This Province's timber is practically all softwood and of the largest and most valuable species that exist. , . The above facts furnish a most telling subject for public discussion during 'this week which is known as "Save the Forest- Week," April 24th-to 30th next. This period is fixed in Canada by Royal decree and in the United States by Presidental order, to be set aside for a concentrated effort of thought and action regarding one of the most important duties -of a citizen of a richly timbered country���namely, keeping fires out of their forests. Fire is the enemy���fires set by human agency which destroys far more timber than is felled by the lumberman's axe. Hardwoods grow in the sparsely inhabited and jungle areas of the tropics where losses by fire are comparatively small. Softwoods are found in the countries -where^t-he���people-are=far=mora healthily active and the forest fire menace is far more serious, both as regards frequency and the servicable value of the timber. Mahogany may fetch more than Douglas fir���but what is of the ���most-value to man? If the hard- woocL supply of the world were cut in two, few would suffer :seriously, butlthejearly..drain on our softwood resources, caused by fire represents a disturbing economic problem. There are no real subtitutes for B.C. timber! Forest fires in the unique and valuable softwood ,are occurrences which should be reduced _ by drastic public action t.o ah. irre- reducible minimum. "The Wilderness Woman" Miss Esther Nordman, of Nelson, is visiting relatives in camp this week. James Keny deputy assessor, of Penticton, was a visitor to town over the week-end. A. Richardson, of Penticton, is now employed as watchman at the Revenge property. _ Work at the Beaver' mine will begin on May 1st and R. L. Clothier will again be in charge. George Hambly of Greenwood, is in camp and will spend a couple of days looking over the claims on the hill. George Love, teacher of; ti e local school, returned from Victoria "on Sunday where he had spent the Easter holidays. .'G.-.'S. Walters and N. E. Morrison came up from Greenwood on Saturday to attend a meeting of the Wellington shareholders on Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Clegg. of the Sally mine, are. leaving the last of the week for Nelson.- Mr. Clegg's health will not permit him to < do any further work in. the mine. ..*!���*. H. B. Morley and J. D. Morgan motored over from Penticton on Monday to visit the Sally mine in which they are interested.- Mr. Morgan was also demonstrating the new Pontiac Six, for which he is agent in the Penticton district. Flourishing Immigration Prospects A.'E. McDOUGALL Contractor and Builder If Foreign and Domestic Monuments Asbestos Products Co. Roofinff Lainatco Walllboard SHOP AT GREENWOOD ti Box 332 Grand Forks, B.C. Pictures 1+ i :s 1+ i���Tj plcal examples of ju-.cnilc (j pe of immigrants to Canada. No. & shows 7 children nlio arrived alone recently, 3. Immigrants trow ding the (locKs for a iirst glimpse of Canadian shores. 3. .Sturdy settlers for the Dominion. 'he active immigration season of 1927 that has just opened will see, according to authoritative information given out by the Department of Colonization and Development of the Canadian Pacific _ Railway, the largest and most effective addition to Canadian population of any "similar period since the outbreak of the Great War. -In the-opinion of authorities it is not unreasonable for the Dominion to expect over 200,000 new citizens, or about 70,000 more thaii during the year 1926. During this year Canada received 135,984 settlers. - Several factors tend towards this promised increased, of which one of the most potent in the gradual evolution of systems and a development of new machinery that has made tho organization well nigh perfect. Further reductions in ocean and, rail rates from the British Isles have induced considerable numbers to submit to the" examinations for acceptance under the cheap passage. Applications at the rate of several a day are Jreing received, it is reported. Already '" y this year well over 3,000 settlers have been hmded in Canada by the Canadian Pacific liners plying between this country and the Motherland. It is interesting to note that about_sixty per cent of the applicants are miners and others who have some knowledge of and experience at farm work. 7 The volume of pertiheni inquiries from United States Agriculturists with regard to western Canadian farming prospects, has been much heavier this year than for some years, is the report. This is regarded as a most reliable index to the trend of the movement. A new^nd significant movement to develop however is that of tobacco growers from North and South Carolina, Virginia and other states to "Western Ontario, being attracted by the rosy prospects now facing the Canadian tobacco growing industry. -"**��� *.*. Though lana settlement conditions have drastically changed and the tendency isxto place newcomers on vacant lands within reasonable distance of the railways, it was pointed out that it was a mistake to consider that homesteadmg is,.altogether a thing of the past as. a factor of western Canadian development. During the' year 1926 homestead occupations in the west amounted to an increase of 60 per cent over the occupations for the'previous year, and accounted-for the occupation of nearly a million acres of raw land. This movement in continuing as is evident in the figures of fillings in January 1927 which were 32 per cent than those of the same month of the previous year. , The most significant factor today, it was pointed out, is the local colonization board, througli wjiich the general interest in immigration and colonization takes practical shape under the direction of. the railways. About 150 similar boards now exist in western Canada. Juvenile immigration, the impor-' tance of which is being increasingly realized in recent years, promises to be very heavy.during the year 1927, all of which is being directed towards the land. SEND YOUR BOOTS and SHOES _. To Harry Armson, Grand Forks The 20lh Century Shoe Repairer All work and material guaranteed We pay postage one way. Terms cash Jl OF HOT fi H Robert -.Kane stands sponsor for a comedy-melodrama, "The Wilderness Woman," his latest First National production, which will be presented at the Greenwood Theatre ou Saturday, April 30th. Mr. Kaiie has always seen to it that his pictures contain-. an" all-star cast, and in the present instance; he has broug-lit a: well known trio���Aileen Pringle; Lowell Sherman and Chester Conklin���tog-ether to'play the.,principal roles of the picture. "The Wilderness Woman" is by Arthur Stringer, author of such picture successes as "Womanhandled" and "Manhandled" and :it offers Miss Pringle her first character comedy role, something entirely different from anything she has attempted heretofore. In the supporting cast are Henry Vibart and .Robert Cain, while not the least important member of the cast is'a bear cub, Miss Pringle's constant companion throiigh much of the picture's amusing action. The program will commence with a Felix comedy. "-; Creepy Furniture Teacher: "Who can describe a caterpillar?" Bright Pupil: "lean." Teacher: "Well?" ^ Bright Pupil: "An upholstered worm." Tittle-Tattle Everyone is busy cleaning up their back yard. Just moving things, they put there, out of the wayrwhen-it-was-254)elow. One begins to wonder, at last, what one did with one's summer underwear or whether one has any! '.._��� ) ���__��� ��� The Show on Saturday night was excellent. Makes one wish we had more bad men as good as '^3 BadMen.'w- . --���,--* Don't forget Friday, May 13th. Bulls at Large Any person having Bulls at large before July 1st, will be prosecuted. * Greenwood Riding Stock Breeders Association NOTICE TO MEMBERS OF MIDWAY PIG CLUB . I have a number of purebred Berkshire, pigs which I ain holding for "the benefit of the above Club. All those who want pigs kindly notify me as soon as possible. Price $7.00 each. Six weeks old May 26th. ..-;':,,, J. C. CASSELMAN, * Boundary Falls. ^" W ""ftffl'WffK'.U'i I |����ui-ui!m.��jm__j_i��ujj___.i__u��iT^_f. pnm^tmifH______.��i.'-.-y| AN OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY An' admirable proposition is open to honest and ambitious men ancl women with a will to achieve and a desire to make more money. Darwin's Limited Home Service Department will furnish the reputation and capital for you to build a successful business and permanent income selling Darwin's Dresses ancl Coats at moderate prices; a new, novel and complete sales outfit will bc furnished to those whose applications to represent us are accepted; write at once and tell us about yourself; you will hear from us promptly; Darwin's merchandising ancl sales experts will train those who have not had former experience selling ladies dresses and coats; Darwin's operate a chain of large and successful, retail ready-to- wear stores aiid this is your chance to become permanently ��� connected with this vast organization which was founded more than 20 years ago. Address, =Darwin!sJimited-Dept_51_4^_�� Box 612, Montreal, Que. Sometimes the informality of tiie spoken word is more effective than a letter "Long Distance, please" BRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY "Provincial Elections Act" GRAND FORKS-GREENWOOD ELECTORAL DISTRICT 'NOTICE is hereby ���riven thai I sliall, on Monday, the 16th day of May. l')27. at llie hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, al the Court-house. Greenwood, hold a siuintr of lhe Court of Revision for tlie purpose of revising the list of votcrs..foi' the said electoral district, and of hearing and determining any aud all objections to the retention of any name on tlie said list, or to llie .registration as a voter of any applicant for registration; and for thepther purposes set forth in the "Provincial Elections Act." An adjourned Sitting of the Couit of Re vision will bc held at llie Court-house, ('.rami Forks, at 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon ou Tuesday, May 17,192". Dated at Greenwood, 15.C, this 14t1i"dav of April, 1927. S. ]{. HAMILTON, Registrar of Voters, Grand Forks-(iimenwood ��� Electoral District. ^VILIkIAM h. wood PHYSICIAN AND SUUG EON GRKKNWOOD TlrftonsflirM Mining"'&^S m el tin g Co. of Canada. Limited Office, Smelting and Refining Department TRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA SMELTERS and REFINERS Purchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores Producers, of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and. Zinc "TADANAC" BRAND PRE EMPTIONS Vacant unreserved, surveyed Ciown lands may be pre-empted by British subjects over <8 ycais of ajje, and by aliens on'declaring intention ta become British subjects, conditional upon residence, occupation, and improvement for. agricultural purposes. Full infoimation concerning; i-cgu'uLions regiiid- iiucpre-unpliotis is given in Bulletin No. 1, Land Series, "llov. to Pre-empt Land," copies 'of which can be obtained free of chaise by addressing the Derailment of Lands, Victoria, B.C., or to any Government Agent. Records will be granted covering only land suitable for agricultural purposes, and which is not timberland, i.e., carrying over 8.000 board feet per acie west of thc Coast Range and 5,000 feet per acre east of that Rango. Applications for pre-emptions are 'to be addressed to the Land Commissioner of the Land Recording Division, in which the land applied for is situated, and are made on printed forms, copies of which can be obtained from the Land Commissioner. Pre-emptions musl be occupied for five years and improvements made to the value of $10 per acre, including clearing and cultivating at least five .acres, before a Crown Grant can be received. .For more detailed information see the Bulletin "How lo Pre-empt Land." u VI PURCHASE Applications are received for purchase of vacant and unreserved Crown Lands, not being timberland, for agricultural purposes; minimum price for first-class (arable) land is S5 per acre, and second-class (grazing) land S2.50 per acre. Further information regarding purchase or lease of Crown Lands is given in Bulletin No." 10,-Land Scries, "Purchase and Lease of Crown Lands." Mill, factory, or industrial sites on timber land, not exceeding 40 acres, may be-purchased or leased, the conditions including payment of stumpage. HOMESITE LEASES Unsurveyed areas not exceeding 20 acres, may be leased as homesitcs, conditional upon a dwelling being. erected in the .first year, title being obtainable after residence and improvement conditions are fulfilled and land has been surveyed. S LEASES. For grazing and industrial purposes areas not exceeding G40 acres mr.ybe leased by one person- or a company. _ GRAZING Under the Grazing'Act-the Province is divided into grazing .districts and the range administered under ti Grazing Commissioner. Annual' grazing poimits are issued based on numbers ranged, priority given to established owner's. Stock- owners may form associations for range management. Free, or partly free, permits are available for settlers, campers and travellers, up to ten head. X Q Job Printing at The Greenwood Ledge Subscribe To The Greenwood Ledge I^SH-CJO-LUMB" The Mineral Province of Western Canada .^.'.'������r.-.TO'-.THE END OF DECEMBER, 1925 .;*.. Has. produced Minerals as follows: Placer Gold, $77,G63,045, Lode Gold 7 $122,808,459; Silver$74,111,397; Lead, $89,218,907; Copper, $197,642,047; Zinc, $39,925,947; Miscellaneous Minerals, $1,594,387; Coal and Coke,$273,- 048,953; Building Stone, Brick, Cement, etc, $44,905,886; making its.Min- ^eral production to the end of 1925, show an Aggregate Value of $920,919,628 Production for the year ending December, 1925, $61,492,242 The Mining Laws of this Province are more liberal, and the fees lower, than those of any other Province in the Dominion, or any colony in the British Empire. Mineral locations are granted to discoverers for nominal fees. ��� Absolute Titles are obtained by developing such properties, the security of which is guaranteed by Crown Grants. Full information together with Mining Reports and Maps, may be obtained gratis by addressing��� THE HON. THE MINISTER OF MINES, VICTORIA, Bntish Columbia. N.B. Practically all British Columbia Mineral Properties upon which development work has been done are described in some one of the Annual Reports of the Minister of Mines. Those considering mining investments should.refer to such reports. They are available without charge on application to the Department of Mines, Victoria, B.C. Reports covering "each of the six Mineral Survey Districts are published separately, and are available on application. Reports of the Geological Survey of Canada, Winch Building, Vancouver, are recommended as valuable sources of information.