{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"caaf7170-14fc-4cba-9f30-a30c872d9144","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2016-07-15","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1927-07-07","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"Description":[{"label":"Description","value":"The oldest mining camp newspaper in British Columbia. ; The Ledge was published in Greenwood, in the Kootenay Boundary region of southern British Columbia. The Ledge was published by James W. Grier until 1907, and was subsequently published by R. T. Lowery (1907-1920) and G. W. A. Smith (1920-1929). The paper's longest-serving editor was R. T. Lowery (1906-1926), a prolific newspaper publisher, editor, and printer who was also widely acclaimed for his skill as a writer. The Ledge absorbed the Boundary Creek Times in April 1911, and was published under a variant title, the Greenwood Ledge, from August 1926 to May 1929.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:description"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An account of the resource.; Description may include but is not limited to: an abstract, a table of contents, a graphical representation, or a free-text account of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xledgreen\/items\/1.0306267\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" a-v\niPro^ncial LibiX^y\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdts>:\nVOIv.   1\nGREENWOOD,- B.C:,' THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1927\nNo. 49\nWe Carry a Large Line of\nHardware\nincluding'\nMcLary's Enamel, Galvanized and Tinware\nMcLary's Heaters\ninspect our Stock\nT. M. GULLEY & CO.\nKXKKKKX^MKXKK\nK    Ladies and Men's\n\ufffd\ufffd furnishings\nBoots, Shoes and\nCanvas Shoes\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for Men and Children\nINic Specials\nP. & N. Veal and Tongue, Loaf, per tin....25c\nAylmer Boned\" Chicken, per  tin    50c\nKing   Oscar   Sardines, per  tin    15c\nBoiled Ham, per tb sliced    60c\nRelish    Spread,   per   jar    40c\nMayonaise, per jar   40c\nC.&E. Sweet Chutney .pic-nic size, per jar. 15c\nC.&B.  Onions,  pic-nic size, per jar 15c\nLemonade  Powder,  per tin   25c\nFor' quolity and yalue order from\nPhone 46\nGREENWOOD GROCERY\n0        Ladies Dresses 53\n^  and  j\ufffd\ufffd\nM . Millinery 5^\nH Ellen Trounson's Store ^\nOf Local Interest\nThos. Rowe of Trail, is visiting in\ntown.\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Christian and\nfamily of Christian Valley, were visit-\nbrs' in town on Friday.\nJ. B. Desrosier, of Osoyoos, was- a\nvisitor to town on Sunday.\nDr. W. H. Wood returned on Monday afternoon from a visit to Spokane.\nMurray Walters, of Vancouver, is\nvisiting his. grandmother, Mrs. Wm.\nWalters.\nMr. and Mrs. Chas. Nichols and\nchildren were visitors to Grand Forks\non \"Monday.\nPublic Auction\nPlace your Orders for\nPreserving Strawberries\nwith\nus\nTAYLOR & SON\nPhone .17\nWftM.,U.<.1\ufffd\ufffdl....iL..\ufffd\ufffd..MgTrm-111OT\nEAT MARKET\nTel. 2.\nGREENWOOD'^ B. C\nBeef, Veal,\nand\nSpring Lamb\nBox 391\nBoiled Ham and Cooked Tongue in Slices\nMr. H. L;T., MARTIN\nhas given instructions to sell by\nAuction all his'\nHORSES  and FARM IMPLEMENTS,\nWAGONS,  SLEIGHS,\nand  various  articles 'at\nG. B. M. GANE'S STORE\nKettle Valley, B.C.\n. at 2 p.m. on\nSaturday, July 16th,   1927\nFor full particulars see Bills\n.Miss Laura Hibbard, R.N., of Hanna,\nAlta., has joined the -staff of the District Hospital.\nGeorge Marshall, auditor, paid an\nofficial visit to the local Court House\non Wednesday.\n.Francis and Tim Jenkin, of Trail,\nare guests of Lewis Keir at the Cedar\nGlen Fur Farm.\nCharles King   -    -   Auctioneer\nUnder New Management\nPACIFIC HOTEL\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\nFirst-Class Dining Room in Connection\nJ. H. Goodeve\nProprietor\nDOUGLAS  FAIRBANKS\nin\nDon Q Son of Zorro\nA Lightning Streak\nIs no faster than the movement'\nin this greatest of all Fairbanks\npictures that marks his return to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda super-melodramatic role.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ... Hi8'h.Speod..AdYenturej:;:..,..__._(f_.\nCuts through plot, counterplot, \"\nmystery   and   intrigue,   as   the\nlash of Don 'Q's whip cuts his\nenemies down and saves his-followers. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\nRomance and Comedy\nA tender and sweetly romantic\nstory flows swiftly and surely but\nis coupled with humor that\nneither'youth nor age can resist.\nThe greatest stunt picture that Fairbanks has ever offered\nMr. and Mrs. F. L. Peterson spent\nthe', week-end holiday with friends\nat Christina Lake.\nW. P. Miller, of California, was renewing acquaintances in town during the week-end.    ,. -.\nAlec Purkis left on Sunday for\nBeaverdell, where he has a position at\ntho-Wellington mine.\nMr. and Mrs. F. A. Johnson were in\nNelson for the Jubilee holiday, being\nmotored over by Mr. Nordman.\nMiss Ruth Axam left on Wednesday\nmorning to spend' a holiday with\nfriends in Vancouver and Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. Wm. Mclntominey and\ntwo- children, were guests at the\nPacific Hotel during the week-end.\nMis Carter, RN., who has been asist-\ning-at the District Hospital, left for\nher (home in Grand Forks on Monday.\nJ. EteLisle, of Bridesville,\" attended\nthe Dance in Greenwood on-Friday.\nOn the'returntriphe was accompanied\nby Mr. and Mrs. Emery DeLisle of\nMidway.\nGreenwcTodlheatre\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nJuly 8th and 9th\nCommencing at 8:i5 p.m. each evening\nAdults 50c.      Children 25c\nDance\" after the Show on the 8th\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd- nBm*e**amm*wm*um*r.ri*rrimmwi\ufffd\ufffdm ___J_i______i\nMcMYNN'S STORE, Midway, B.C.\nEnsign Brand Jelly Powders any flavor ': 4 packets-25c\nPineapple   2's  sliced. _ 2 cans 45c   4 cans 85c\n5 lb Pails 4 X Coffee, ground ....._. @   $2.75\n10 tb Pails 4 X Coffee, ground ..@   $5.40\nSpecial Karda .Bulk Tea 60c per. lb\nWe carry a complete stock of\nDunlop and Goodrich Tires and Tubes\nThey are reasonably priced and you are guaranteed satisfaction when\n. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd you buy them from us\nalso Union Ethyl Gasoline     A trial will convince you its better\nIf you are having trouble with your\niTatch, just bring it to us and we;will\n|.ut it right;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * W.,-   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOur long   experience   in   repairing\nPatches has made us experts along\nlhat .line, and we guarantee you satis^j\n{.action^ or there is no charge.^    <\/\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Let   iis   have   your   repairs,   either\nPatches, Clocks or Jewelry..\nWe   make   over   old   Jewelry   and\nnanufacture Brooches or Pins out of\nJiative silver and they are quite a novelty.\nA. A. WHITE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\nF. J. WHITE,\nMgr.\nFOR SALE\n1926  Ford,   Sport   Model   Roadster\nequipped with front and, rear bumbers,\nspeedometer, rear-view mirror, etc., 5\nballoon tires.   Price $500.00.   Apply\nW The Greenwood Ledge.\nFOR SALE\nI A   Bicycle   very   cheap.   Apply   at\nThe Greenwood Ledge office.\n'.LOST\" ':'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   !;';*\nA purse containing a sum of money\nat the Dance last Friday. Finder will\nbe rewarded by returning same to The\nGreenwood Ledge office.\n,      LOST\nA  wrist, Watch  between   Anaconda\nand the Keir Ranch. -Watch was a\nkeep-sake.   Reward.   Return to The\nGreenwood Ledge office.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA\nCOMING!     COMING!\nSaturday, July 16th\nJackie Coogan\nin\n\"Old Clothes\"\nTwo mining men\" from Seattle,\nWash., have examined.the Vendella\nmine and everything looks very favorable to them.\nGreenwood is having its share of\nthe tourist traffic. Last week there\nwere cars in town from Quebec and\nMassachusetts. .\nReggie and Kenneth Skilton, Joe\nPrice, and Frank Campolieto motored\nto town from South Slocan for the\nJubilee holidays.\nThe three Morrison brothers, Allan,\nNeil, and George, left for Boston on\nMonday, where they will visit then-\nsisters and brother\nCouncil Has Busy Sessions\nA special'meeting of the City Council  was  held  on  Thursday  evening,\nJune  30th,  Mayor  Gulley,  Aldermen\nMorrison, Forshaw and Taylor being\nin attendance to consider an application for rental of power lines to the\nProvidence mine.   After consideration\nof the effect this would have regarding\nthe proposed alterations to the lighting   system authorized   at   the   last\nmeeting it was agreed to postpone a\ndecision until the regular meeting on\nJuly 5th.   At this meeting with Aid.\nKing  also  present,  a  comprehensive\nscheme    was   outlined   by   Mr.    A.\nLegault, of the West Kootenay Power\nCo., whereby three sections of streets\nnow carrying high tension lines could\nbe placed on the ordinary lighting lines\nboth for supplying the City needs and\ncarrying power to the Providence could\nbe carried on one main line.   It was\ndecided that this work be done and\nMr. Legau'lt's  offer to commence  at\nonce on    the extension between the\ntwo   ends   of   Government   St.   was\nreadily accepted.   This will eliminate\nthe   high tension lines   now running\nalong Kimberley Avenue and enable\npower to  be  furnished for pumping\noperations in a very short time.  The\nbalance of the alterations will be proceeded with at a later date.\nA check will be made on consumers\non the flat rate following the report\nof certain householders exceeding then-\nallowance of lights and consumers in\narrears of payment, either for water\nor light, will Have service discontinued\nafter due notice.\nThe Water, committee recommended\nthe purchase of a number of high\npressure wooden sleeves for use on some\nof the wooden main joints which are\nconstantly leaking. The City Clerk\nsubmitted a comparison of the cost of\nthese sleeves and their increased\nefficiency with the cost and doubtful\nutility of the clamps hitherto used\nfor this purpose. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',   ^\nAt the request bf Aid. Forshaw a\ncopy of the Traders' Licenses Bylaw\nin effect at Grand Forks was obtained\nthrough courtesy of that City's officials.\n. The Greenwood City bylaw is almost\nsimiliar. and instructions were given\nfor licenses to be collected from all\ntranscient traders\" covered in the bylaw.\nA decision was made to hold in reserve for a future industrial site,-the\nCity lots lying between the C.P.R.\nline and Boundary Creek- on the\nstretch -between the Greenwood St.\nand Deadwood St. bridges.\nDiamond Jubilee Celebration\n-^JVfrs;^Dan-.MoI^iid,_,:5n_ri__.anti;(_iai!sh<-\nter, Roddy and Marion, motored over\nfrom Trail and spent the week-end\nwith Mrs. Geo. Clerf.\nMrs. J. W. MacDougall and son\nFrancis, of Grand Forks, and Mrs. RoV\nConner, ^f Wenatchee, are visiting\nMrs. W. B. Stewart for a few days.\nWm. Rusch and John Puz, of Midway, are patients in the District Hospital, recovering from the effects of a\nmotorcycle accident on the Midway\nroad a few days ago.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEd-^McGrade\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof- Stave\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFalls,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwas\nvisting his sister, Mrs. Wm. Madden,\nduring the week-end. Mr. McGrade\nleft on Sunday for his home accompanied by his daughter, Rose.\n;\nMr. and Mrs. S. B. Hamilton and\nson, Ronald, returned on Sunday evening from spending the first, second\nand third in 'Penticton.\nWANTED AT ONCE\nParty to Contract load' logs on cars\nat C.P.R. Siding, Greenwood.   Apply\nJ.   ROYLANCE.\nMrs. H. T. Newmarch and two\nchildren. Oliver and Cicley, left on\nFriday morning to spend a holiday\nwith Mrs. Newmarch's mother in\nVancouver. Mr. Newmarch motored\nthem as far as Princeton, returning by\nway of Penticton, arriving home Sunday'evening.\nCASH SPECIALS\nSaturday and Next Week\n.Save Money on Dishes\nu\nPlates in Clover Leaf Pattern at about half regular prices\nTea Plates ,     -        15c each.   $1.75 per doz.\nSoup Plates and medium Dinner Plates\n20c each. $2.25 per doz.\nExtra Large Dinner Plates 25e each. $2.75 doz.\nWhite Enamel Wash Basins\nPriced to sell at 49c and 59c each\n\" Sun Visors, new assortment, big saving 35c each\nOh-Boy Hand Cleaner        - 2 for 25 cents\nAmerica, One Day Alarm 'Clocks      -      $1.50,\nLadies Silk Hose       -.     Special 2 pair for 95c\n\"Sugar   'X-X;   -    x.   100 lbs $8.15. 201bs $1.65\nLots of Fresh Strawberries Saturday      Priced right\nBROWN'S STORES\nMidway and Rock Creek\nGoodyear Tires and Tubes\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Wilson returned\nto Rossland last week, Mr. Wilson was\nhere relieving at the South Kootenay\nPower station during the absence of\nCharles Nichols on his holiday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Rouiser and daughter, Juilette, of Kalispell, Mont., have\narrived in town and expect to remain\nhere. It is ten years v since the\nRouiser family left Greenwood.\nMr. and and Mrs. G. H. Bawtinheimer left for their home in Armstrong on Monday morning after a few\ndays visit with their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bryan.\n 5\"\nJuan  Puddy returned Friday last\nfrom a three  days business trip to\nSpokane.   Mrs. N. L. Hingley and two\nchildren, Alice and George, and Mrs.\nM. Maloney returned with Mr. Puddy.\nMrs. J. Mallalue, Mrs. H. S. Wilson,\nMiss Margaret Wilson and Master\nBobbie Mallalue, of Vancouver, are\nspending the holidays with their\ncousin, W. C. Wilson. These people\nclaim that all the joys of living are not\nconfined to the Coast City. Riding\nhorseback and climbing mountains in\nthe Boundary certainly have their\nthrills. -   '\nRichard Thomas Alty, father of Mrs.\nWm. Walmsley, died from natural\ncauses at noon on Tuesday while taking lunch at the home of his son, T.\nE. Aulty, with whom he lived in Trail.\nHe.was 65 years old, and a native of\nLancaster, England. He is survived\nby his widow, one daughter, Mrs. Wm.\nWalmsley of Greenwood, and by his\nson. The sympathy of a large circle\nof friends in this district goes out to\nthem in their great loss. .\nThe decorations on the various\nbuildings, in town, for the Diamond\nJubilee, were very good and certainly\nmade our little town look \"all dressed\nup\" for 4his wonderful occasion. The\nCourt House was possibly the gayest\nlooking of the lot although both the\nPost .Office and Hospital were almost\nequally as good. Quite a number of\nlocal cars were also decorated for this\noccasion, but Mr. and Mrs. Geo. S.\nWalters' car deserves special mention\nas its \"holiday attire\" was not only a\npleasant sight but showed, that great\ntrouble had been taken to make it so\nvery festive looking.\nCanada's  Sixtieth Anniversary was\nmemorably   observed \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd on   the   Kettle\nValley Hockey Grounds near Ingram\nBridge, on Friday, July 1st, when thc\nresidents of this district gathered to\ncelebrate this great event. The weather  was  ideal,   tho   crowd\" large  and\nenthusiastic.   On all sides the highest\ncommendation    was    heard,    as    no\nefforts were spared, by the committee\nto carry out the minutest details.   The\ngrounds were in good shape for all\nevents, and the program was carried\nout in regular order.   Children's sports\noccupied the forenoon and- at 1 p.m.\nthose present gathered around the flag\npole flying the Union Jack, to heaifthe\naddress of the day delivered by Mr. H.\nBruce, a pioneer of this 'district and a\nnative of Canada.' Mr. Bruce referred'\nto the early history of Canada; also\ncompared the methods of harvesting\nthe crops when he was a boy and at\nthe present time when modern machinery has lightened the farmers work.\nThe speaker closed with a few remarks\nto the children after which the Confederation Medals were presented to-\nthe school children.\nIn looking over the crowd many Old-\nTimers were noticed, among them\nbeing James Copland, a resident of the\nBridesville Road, who first set his foot\nat Rock Creek over 67 years -ago.\nJimmy, as he is familiary known, was\nin a reminiscent mood and the stories\nof the early days were very interesting.\nD. R. McElmon, another Old-Timer,\ncame down from Beaverdell to take\npart in the Celebration. \"D. R has\nvoted ever since Confederation.\nAfter the Medals were presented, a\nfew more events were called,' including\na pillow fight on a bar. This undoubtedly was one of the best small events\nof the day, as the crowd seemed to get -\nconsiderable enjoyment out of each\nfight. s-\n' The Baseball game between Republic and Midway \"was won by the former'\nby a score of 6 to 2. In the first in- '\nning Republic got one run, while Mid- '\nway made two runs the total for the\ngame. In the second the American\nteam added three more; also getting\none in the 5th and one in the 8th.\nFrom the start of the 3rd to the last\nout in the 9th, the crowd was treated\nto one of the best games played in\nthis section this year.. Eveleth pitched good ball for Midway and had good\nsupport from his team-mates. Bowman was on the mound for- Republic\nand had fairly\" good control, although\nhe walked several men.      ' , .\nGeo. Gray of Greenwood, and Mr.\nPickering of -Chesaw,  were  the umpires. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-',,. -\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -vBoys' and'.- aYi'd^ih^.\",-5..,<_,,.'_ \"Wfl   \".;,.\nand under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Alice Riley.       \" - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':'\n*- Girls  Racd,   8  years  and  under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Alice Riley.\nBoys Race, 8 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st,\n..^pb Evans; 2nd, Cecil Maletta.\n\"^jirls Race, 10 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Mary Riley; 2nd, Virginia Riley. -\nBoys Race, 10 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Cecil Hamilton; 2nd, Fred Tippie.\nGirls Race, 12 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Virginia \"Riley; 2nd, Mary Riley.\nBoys Race,  12  years and  under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\n1st, Jim Riley; 2nd, Cecil Hamilton.\nGirls Race, 14 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st,    Rosalie    Brown;    2nd,    Virginia\nRiley.       ._       .   ..    . ....     .\nBoys Race, 14 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Charles Riley; 2nd, Jim Riley.\nGirls Race, 16 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Kathleen Salmon; 2nd, Rosalie\nBrown.\nBoys Race, 16 years and under.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st, Edward Johnson; 2nd, Charles\nRiley.\nMen's Race, 100 yards'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Frank\nRichter; 2nd, Edward Johnson.\nGirls Race, 100 yards.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Kathleen\nSalmon; 2nd, May Sharp.\nMen's Race, % mile.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Edward\nJohnson; 2nd, Albert Mitchell; 3rd,\nPat Kemptson.\nGirls Race, M. mile, open.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st,\nKathleen Salmon; 2nd, Joy Sharp.\nPotato Race, boys, 16 years and\nunder.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Jim Riley; 2nd, Eric Whiting; 3rd Cecil Hamilton.\nPotato Race, Girls, 16 \"years and\nunder.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Kathleen Salmon; 2nd,\nDoreen Hamilton; 3rd, Joy. Sharp.\n3-Legged Race, 16 years and under,\nopen.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, J. Noren and M. Petterson;\n2nd, Geo. Bryan and E. Whiting.\nNail Driving Contest, ladies.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st,\nMiss Nora Jackson; 2nd, Mrs. Howard\nSmith.\nPillow Fight on Bar, men.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st Pat\nKempston.\nPillow Fight on Bar, boys.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st,\nRobert Forshaw.,\nBaseball Throwing, men.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Geo.\nWiltz;  2nd, Howard Smith. c\nVi Mile Horse Race.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Miss C.\nBrew; 2nd, Eric Whiting.\nStake Race.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1st, Frank Bubar; 2nd,\nWm. Bruce.\nThe day was broughtsto a close by\na Dance in the Masonic Hall, Greenwood, in the evening. It was largely\nattended, and everyone had a real\ngood time. Bush's Orchestra excelled\nitself and as in the past they were\nvery liberal with their encores. <\nThe day was also a financial success, a greater amount being raised\nthan was expected and in this case\nthe District Hospital will greatly benefit, as the surplus will go to this institution.\n' The Celebration committee will publish a Balance Sheet in the next issue.\n' .^K ti,.\nSome people find money in \"Old\nClothes,\" others can see nothing but\nmoths and shreds in \"Old Clothes.\"\nCome to the Greenwood Theatre., on\nSaturday, July 16th and we will show\nyou fun and happiness in \"Old\nClothes\" because Jackie Coogan is in\n'em.\nEn route from Princeton to Merritt,\na car driven by H. Lambert overturned\nwhile rounding a curve, smashing both\nhind wheels and otherwise damaging\nthe car. The occupants,\" Mrs. J. L.\nColes, her mother and daughter -and\nMiss Fee all of Princeton, miraculously\nescaped uninjured.\n1 f&g   OKEPTWOOI)   LEDGE\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for,\nColds     Headache      Neuritis Lumbago\nPain       Neuralgia\nToothache     Rheumatism\nn_MVMH**BW\nj DC\nDOES NOT, AFFECT THE HEART\nAccept  only  \"Bayer\"  package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy   \"Bayer\"  boxes of   12   tablets\nAlao ljottlea of 24 and 100\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDruggists.\nAflplrln Is the trade mark (roclsterccl ln Canada) ot Bayer Manufacture of Mononcetlc-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdclilcstor or Salleyllcacld (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, \"A. S. A.\"). While It 13 well known\nCliat Aspirin means Ilayer ___a.iu_acU.re, to assist the public against Imitations, tbe.Tablets\nat _J*ier OWBtfW will be cU.bij>__. with tbeir general trade mark, tba \"Bayes Cross.'*\nPrince Favors Playgrounds\nGlad to   See   Movement   to   Provide\nPlace for. Poorer Children\nTlio British National Playing Fields'\nAssociation, which has issued an appeal for'\"\ufffd\ufffd.1,000,000 ami many acres,\"\nstates that thero are in England. ,4,-\n000,000 boys and girls who are -without such facilities   and    that   many\ngreat cities hare not a single football\nfield or cricket pitch for the uso.-of\ntho poorer youths.   Thc King on his\nbirthday placed U'a of iho Royal paddocks n(  Hampton Court, containing\nabout six acres, at tho disposal of the\nAssociation, In Lho absence   o'f   tho\nDuke of York, who is president, the\nPrince of AVulcs on Ids return from\nthe 'Derby visltod a broadcasting station and gave a wireless talk in support, of tlio movement.\nAs a lover of games himself, the\nPrince said \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd that he was really glad\nto sob on foot a movement to provide\nproper playing fields for these .,000,-\n000 boys and girls and that he hoped\nsoon to see the day when. not. one'.of\nthem could say, \"I have nowhere' to\nplay.\"\nUrge Vaccination to\nPrevent Tuberculosis\nClean to handle.   Sold by all\nDruggists, Grocers and\nGeneral Stores fc\nManless Plow Is Simple\nOutd\noo rs\nplace\nion, faith, hope, love, and\nand seek -wind and\nThc editor of this-columr \"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\"<*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <i=m\ufffd\ufffd i.___,. \ufffd\ufffd,_<_\ufffd\ufffd. .v, _,.Iv.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  to the\n\"'following \"Four Minute Essay\" by Dr. Frame crane, uuu u> w.u..i..v..-.. ... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nall readers as well worthy of adoption:\n: A good dose, of Outdoors would cure almost anything.\nQuit wearing a hat and lot your hair Outdoors, for that bald spot.\nGo barefoot, and your,feet will slip back ten years. .\nTake off your clothes and lie on the sand in the sun, acquire a rich tan,\nand you will become healthy.as a savage. '\nGo Outdoors and find a appetite.   It's out there somewhere.\nGo Outdoors and get rid of Nerves.   They live iu the house.\nOther'rats and mice that infest houses are Dyspepsia, Constipation,\nLiver Complaint, Peplessnoss and Insomnia.\nNot only Bodily Ailments, but all other kinds of plagues and nuisances\naro house creatures. y\nCreeds were all made in stuffy rooms.   Reli\ncourage-inhabit the woods and meadows, sail ihe seas,\nJesus taught Outdoors. Ecclesiastical Councils arc held behind closed\ndoors. Tho decline of. religion is traceable from, the Sermon on the Mount\nm the asphyxiating Mecting-House. ;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'. 7\n.Education ought to be Outdoors.   My favorite dreaan is the University or\nOutdoors, where'pupils go shoeless and hatlcss and learn under the stars. '\nThis University would teach the child how to be as healthy as a* panther.\nAnd healthy bodies, would obviate most'neurasthenic intellectual vagaries.\nWhere bul Outdoors can you learn llotany, Geology, Astronomy, and the\nlike.   Real Science lives1 Outdoors, as much as Leap-Prog.\nPlay Outside.   Prisoner's Base is better .'than Whist.    ; .    - 7\nEven kissing is better Outdoors.   Copenhagen is much better for your\ngeneral system than twosing on Lho parlor sofa.   When you chase, a \"'girl halt\n-   \ufffd\ufffd mile to kiss her you realize what real Kissing is. '-\nEating is better'Outdoors.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A horse is healthier-than a man because\na horso has to walk after every bile of grass he gets.\nOllldnnr-?  is. tt'**1 .\ufffd\ufffdpliitfniv'.'Q.E.rtho..TJyisoU:\/Pi\"o^\nmeans from the destruction to the reconstruction of tlie human waste-heap. -\nInsane patients who'; are  violent  when   locked   up   become   peaceable\n; Outdoors. ,*V\nChildren thrive Outdoors and pine in the house.\nOutdoors is cheap and plenty.\nGod mado Outdoors; man made Indoors.\nAnd God lives Outdoors;\nDrives Out Rheumatism\nSubdues Lumbago\nBrings\nEase   and\nSufferer\nComfort\nat Once\nto    the\nNERVILINE\nA King Over Pain\nThose who seek permanent relief\nfrom the grinding pain of Rheumatism and Lumbago should read tho\nletter of F. li. Normand, from Georgetown, who writes:\n\"I was fairly crippled with aching\njoinis and Rheumatism. Nerviline\nmust have been what I needed, because it. cleared up mv trouble'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(illicitly.\"\n\"If you need n reliable, strong,\npenetrating pain remedy, one you can\ndepend on. goi a ?>5c. bottle of Nerviline loday; it Avil] make you well\nquickly.\nArrangements\nFor\nDairy Convention\nHeld\nin man-made edifices\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIdols.\nNew Device for Motor Cars\nElectric Brake Will Use Less Current\nThan Horn\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThc near future uiay see thc adoption of an electric,brake system on j\nOwns Pig With Two Mouths\nAlberta Farmer Says Animal is Otherwise Normal\nC. E. Tlonninger, a farmer, la  fhe\nproud owner of a freak member of the\npassenger car^tlTar^vill=re(iuireH;he.H\nleast, energy on the part of the driver\nto stop Lhe heaviest type of machine\nwithin  a short distance.\nThis type o'f brake is being manufactured for uso on heavy trucks\nand trailers, aud is being found more\npracticable than the mechanical type.\nThe apparatus requires less electricity to operate all four brakes on\na heavy passenger car than-is needed lo run one headlight or to blov\nhorn once, it. is said.\nthe\nWhether the corn be. of old or iioav\ngrowth, it must yield to Itolloway's\nCorn Remover.\nwheel,\nswine\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfamily The_pig_ iii____]uosuon_\nwas born with two mouths, has two\nsets of teeth and two1'tongues, but\ndoes not require double the amount\nof fodder. One of tho mouths is stationary but bolh tongues move in unison. Tho creature appears to be normal iu all other respects.\nOn one day the Henningor .Farm\nsaw an increase, of thirty-nine animals within throe hours. In all 2S\npigs, a colt and ten chicks were born\nwithin that time.\n\"If   every   rancher  had  a similar\nincrease, the couutry would be soon\ni overstocked,\" Mr. Henningor humorously*'observed.*\nInter-proyincial Meeting Will Be\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' in Regina Next February\nA convention In which the dairy\ninterests of Uie four Weslern provinces will participate will*be held in\nRegina at llie Hotel Saskatchewan.\nFebruary 7-10, 19'_S. This was decided by lhe board of directors of the\nSaskuicIiC'-ivaii Dairy\" Association- al u\nrecent meeting. The Saskatchewan\norganization will he hosLs to the in-\nlerprovincial gathering. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA general convention committee\nwas appointed nt the directors' meeting aud convention arrangements\nare already under way. A feature oi\nLhe gathering will be the number\nof outside speakers who will address\nthe members and practical'educational demonstrations.\nA new idea is being introduced at\nthe 1928 convention when prizes will\nbc offered for the best judging by\n-teams_of_tlir.e.e_boy_s_or.girls .in an\ninlcrprovlncial. competition in which\nall four western provinces will\" be\nrepresented. At one session addres-\nes will be made to the convention by\nboys and girls under the age of 10.\nAutomatic Machine Hailed as Revolution in Farming World\nApparently,   the   automatic   plow,\nthe   tractor   that   works   itself,   is\nquite simple,   much   moro . so   than\npreliminary  notices  said  of  il.      A\nmoro detailed report says it is constructed of three pieces of -wood,- u\nfew bolts,  a spring, a piece  of aluminum- shaped liko a huge spoon. It\nwas hailed at   the   Nebraska   Agricultural College as a potential revolution iu the farming world.    It will\nenable tho tiller of the soil to go to\nthc cinema or drink cider or sleep,\nwhile his fields   are   being   plowed.\nIt will soon bo put on tho market at\na cost if  a few  dollars.    IL is  tho\nInvention of F.  L. Zybach of' Grand\nIsland  Neb.\nTo use this device, a fanner .must\nfirst altach a plow Lo his tractor ancl\ncut a furrow around the outer rim of\n\\uH field, making the corners rounded\nInstead of square. Then he fastens\nZybaeh's invention to the steering\nwheel of tho tractor, pulling the\nspoon-end in the furrow. He starts the\ntractor, climbs out. The' tractor,\nguided along the furro'w by Zybaeh's\ninvention, continues to make shorter\nand shorter trips around the field,\nuntiri*\\ corneil to a stop in the.middle.\nTests of tho device, it is declared,\nproduced plowing like clockwork.- But\nwhen Zybaeh was first experimenting\nwith a crude model, his neighbors\nwarned liini not Lo lot tho tractor get\nloose and destroy any of their property. Once he set tho machine to plow,\nall night. The neighbors came over\nat midnight and implored him to stop\nit.\nFrench   Doctors   Would   Have   New\nVaccine Given to All Children\nThe success obtained by the use\nof the antituberculosis vaccine developed by Dr. Albert .Calmetle of the\nPasteur Institute has led to a movement among French medical authorities In favor of the universal vaccination of, children.\nResults just tabulated up to tho\npresent year show that from 21 000\ncases of vaccination with tho Calmetle vaccine, which is known as\n\"BCG,\" there have occurred only 1\nper cent, of deaths from tuberculosis,\nwhile the tubercular mortality among\nunvaccinated children Is--shown by\nmedical statistics to reach 28 per\ncent.\nProfessor Calmetto explains that\nhis vaccino does not inoculate the\npatient with thc disease, but \"suggests\" the disease and rouses anti-\ntubercular bacilli to activity. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd', This\nlias been done through use of vaccine\nobtained-through-reducing the virulence of the tuberculosis bacilli by\nthe inbreeding of weakened bacilli\nuntil an innocuous vaccine is evolved\nwhich is only strong enough to suggest tuberculosis in tho system.'\nEarly experiments were made with\nlaboratory animals, and then with\nmonkeys, over a period of thirteen\nyears before the scientists of Pasteur\nInstitute felt sure enough of the\nharmlessness of the vaccine, to test\ntho effect upon man. Thc vaccino\nneed not be injected, but may be administered in foQd.\nDespite the apparent success, of this\nvaccine, French doctors report a general hostility upon the part of the\npublic to anti-tubercular vaccination,\nthe same objections being advanced\nas those opposing vaccination for\nsmallpox and typhoid. But an increasing ni&uber of physicians are becoming interested and the use of the\nvaccine has. already spread to all\ncountries of Europe..\n\"Swat the fly]\nA teaspoonful of\nGillett's Lye sprinkled\nin the Garbage Can\nprevents flies breeding\nUse Gillett's Lye for all\nCleaning and Disinfecting\nCosts little\nbut always\neffective\nFirst Yokeless Egg-\nAdolph Goldberg is au egg candler;\nhe has been one foi 30 years, Rut not\nuntil the other day did he ever see\nan egg without a yolk. He took it to\nthe Museum of Natural History, New\nYork, where oflicials 'agreed that It\nwas the first on record.\n, Boosting Poultry Congress\nWEAK, LISTLESS GIRLS\nNeed Such a Tonic as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to Restore\nHealth\nWhen a girl in her teens becomes\npale and sallow, especially if at tho\nsame time she shows inclination to\nlire easily, a llstlossnoss and inallcn-\ntlon to her work or studies, she- needs\nDr. '\"Williams' Pink Pills, a tonic\nwhich directly and- specifically -corrects the condition from which she\nIs suffering. A chemical analysis of\nthc blood of such a girl would show it.\nto bc deficient in just' the elements\nDr. Williams' Pink Pills can supply.\nBui. an analysis of the blood is not\nneeded\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe_physical_signs_aro^plajn._\nAmong these  signs  aro a pallor\nof\nA button on the    steering\nrswith which headlights   can   be   dim\nmod. is'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdciiid   to  lessen  ihe  risk\naccident.'\nof\nAn electric shoe-polishing machine\nthat shines both shoes automatically\nand in only three minutes, lias been\ndeveloped.\nFor Both House and. Stable. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThere Is a good deal of similarity,\nphvsically speaking, between human\nbeings and tho lower animals. Doth\nare subject to many ailments arising\nfrom inflammation and to all manner\nof cuts and bruises. Dr. Thomas'\nEclectric Oil is au entirely reliable\nremedy for such ailments and mishaps\nin both human beings and the lower\norders Of animals. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe First Economy\nA young man proposed to a girl\nand was accepted. After their first\ntender transports wero over they fell\ninto serious talk.\n\"Now that we arc engaged,\" said\nthe girl, \"wo must begin to economize. Promise mo, darling, that you\nwon't do anything you can't afford.\"\nThe young man laughed grimly.\n\"]f I promised you that,\" he said\n\"I'd have to' break off our engagement.\"\nyou'd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . v \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd > i\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r rr-\nEA\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHJE 1EANB\nCONDENSED MILK.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis simply pure cow's milk\nfrom selected herds, preserved with granulated\nsugar after part of the\nnatural water content of\nthe milk lias been taken\naway.\nPlan to Shorten Voyage\nMabel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYou  know    George,,\nmake a wonderful fireman. *>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGeorgo. .(surprised)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy ?\nMabel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBecause you've always got\nvour eyes on the hoso.\nin\nWrite\nThe Borden Co.\nLtd.,   Montreal,\nfor valuable Baby\nWelfare Book.\nV.1621\nPassengers\" Will   Be   Catapulted\nSeaplanes  From  French  Liner     <\nPassengers will soon be catapulted\nin seaplanes from the deck of the He\nUe France, latest addition to the\nFrench* Line fleet to cut short the voyage; across'the Atlantic ocean, it is announced in a cable to the French Line.\nThe cable came from the He De\nFrance, whicli was en route to the\nUnited States on her maiden voyage.\nThe'plans'call \"for the seaplanes being' shot from the liner off the Grand\nBanks whence they, will carry passengers to seaboard cities of the United\nStates and Canada. ; , X\nThe, seaplanes  will  not be added\n! until- the liner has, made several trips.\nDYSENTERY\nWAS SO BAD\nBECAME ALARMED\n. Mrs. Wallace- Fcpper, It.Tc. No. 6,\nSimcoe, Onfci, vyrites:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Last Bummer I\nwas very bad with dysentery. I lost my\nappetite, and had such severe pains, in\nmy abdomen they made me very faint.\nI passed blood which greatly alarmed me,\nbo I hurried to the doctor. Ho told me\nthe quickest way to get rid of it.would\nbc to tako\nthe cheeks and lips, dark circles under the eyes   easily tired and breathless after- slight exertion. Poor appetite, headaches,. aud 'sometimes fainting spells follow; often the patient is\nnervous and is startled i at the least\nnoise.   In   all   run-down'   con'dlilons\nthere is no' other tonic will build you\nup so quickly and so surely as Dr.\nWilliams' Pink Pills.     The statement\nof Miss Dorothy  LumbHn,  Dusli  Island, N.S.,  will bring hope to-other\n-weak girls.   She says:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" [ wish from\nmy heart I could persuade every per'\nson who is in a run-down condition\nto give Dr. Williams'   Pink   Pills   a\ntrial.   About a year ago r was a weak\ngirl    suffering     from    impoverished\nblood\"-and\"--a run-down system,.with\nma'ny of'the attendant symptoms.   I\nhad often read of Dr. Williams' Pink\nPills and 'deckled to lake them, and\nafter using six bo'xes l feel as well\nand-strong as  ever.    Dr.   Williams'\nPink Pills will be my standby in the\nfuture it ever my blood needs build-\nlug up again, and I shall always find\npleasure In recommending   Ihcm   to\nothers.'.'\nYou can Ret these pills from your\ndruggist, or by'mall at 50 cents a. box\nfrom The Dr. \"Williams' Medicino Co.,\nBrockville. Ont.\nOfficial in U.S.. Department of Agriculture is Native-born Canadian\nA \"native-born Canadian, who, offered a wider opportunity for servico in\nhis chosen field than his own country was able to' place before him, and\nwho has made good, is Dr. Morley A.\n.lull, poultry husbandman ln the United States department of agriculture.\nIt was with gratification that Canadian oflicials, who are carrying out the\nwork or organizing the World's Poultry congress of 1927, learned Dr. Jull\nhad been chosen chairman of Lhe\nUnited States national- committee, for\nthey knew both Dr. Jull and his accomplishments. As head of this important committee, Dr. Jull has been\ncarrying on a splendid work, and his\nenthusiasm has already brought assurance cc over two thousand oflicial\ndelegates from the United States, in\naddition to: whom there, will be .several thousand..other members and associate members of congress.\nDrrjuiris\"a=lfativb~oft15urfordrOnt^\nwhere he was born on- August 2C,\nIS85. lie- is a graduate of Ontario\nAgricultural College,' 1908 (B.S.A.);\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdot McGill.university in :l0LO (M.Sc);\nDust Causes Asthma. Even a little speck too' sniall to see will lead to\nagonies which no words can describe.\nThe walls of the breathing' tubes contract and it seems as if the very life\nmust pass. From this condition Dr.\nJ. D. Kellogg's Asthrta Remedy brings\nthe user to perfect rest. It .relieves\nthe passages.and normal breathing is.-\nfirmly eslablished again. Hundreds of\ntestimonials received annually provo\nits effectiveness. ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGreatest Menace to Motorists\nThe two greatest menaces to tho '\nsafety of .motorists are - the speed\nmania and the level crossing.\nWhen it is properly appreciated\nthat roads are ..not race tracks and\nthat level crossings are a species of\ndeath trap, the number of fatal accidents caused by the automobile will\nbecome practically negligible, at\nleasL in comparison with what has\nbeen tho case thc last few years.\nUNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA\n\/  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    WINNIPEG      \\\nOtters, among   others,   the   following\nCourses: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThroiiBh its FACULTY OV AP.TS\nAND SCnSNCR courses, loading to the\nd.egree.1 of 7!.A. and M.A.; and 1J.Sc.,\nIncluding B.Sc.,. (Phm.), nnd M.Sc.\nThrough its FACULTY OF 1SNGIN-\nKEKTNO AND AIICIIITECTURE\ncourses lending lo the decrees of C.Sc.\n(C.R.). 35.Sc. (E.E.), M.Sc, and\nB.Areh,\"\"\n.Through .its FACULTY OF MEDICINE-courses loading to the. degrees\nof M. D. and CM.\nThrough    Ks   FACULTY   OF   AGRI-'\nCULTUHF.    AND    HOME    ECOXO-\nM1CS 'courses  leading to tho degrees\not IJ.S.A. and U.Rc.  (H.E.)\nThroufih MANITOBA LAW SCHOOL.-\nan    afllllated    InsUUillon.    u    course\n'irmdhv,'  io  the degree of LL.B.\nFor   terms   of   admission,   details   of\ncourses  and other information,  aiU'ly'\nto\n,-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^W\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJi-SPENCE,-Reglstrar.-=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^.\n\\Universlty of Manitoba, Winnipeg \/\nand of University of Wisconsin.in 1022\n(Ph.D.).   In 1908-00 ho was connected with   West   Virginia   experiment\nstation, and during the next Lwo years\nwas with the British Columbia Agriculture department. '   From   1912   to\n1923 ho was head of the poultry department of Macdonald college, when,\nal the, request of   the. secretary   of\nagriculture for the United Stales-ho\nentered the service of that country\nlie Is an official delegate fcpm the\nUnited States to Lho World's-. Poultry\nCongress to be held in Ottawa from\n.Tuly 27 to August '1.\nOn 30 Bays'Trial\nAt a depth of 6G feet the waler of\nthe Dead Sea is twice as salt as it is.\non the surface, and at 1,000 feet three\ntimes as salt.\nKeep Minard's Liniment near at hand\nSelling Deer Antlers\nReindeer have shed, their antlers\nand native herdsmen at Nome, Alaska are busily gathering and transporting them to the coast for shipment to the south. .The bone-material\nis valuable for many articles of manufacture.   '\n\"I took only part of a bottle and was\ncompletely relieved. I feel'I cannot-\nrecommend it too highly. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThis wonderful bowel complaint remedy has been on the market for the past\n80 years: put up only by The T. Mil-\nbum Co., Limited, Toronto. Ontr   '\nJapan's department of education\nsanctioned a plan to' solicit fifty\ncents .from each school child for tho\npurchase of dolls to bc sent to American children in return for their doU\ngifts to the Japanese.\nRussia Building Airplanes   ,\nEquipment   of  Soviets   Increased   by\nSixty  New  Machines   .\nAn increase, of more than sixty\naeroplanes in the aerial forces of the\nSoviet-union is announced as the result of a country-wide campaign\nconducted under the watchword,\n\"Our answer to.. Chamberlain.\"\n(This refers to the breaking off of\ndiplomatic relations with Russia by\nGreat Britain).\nReports from 23 - provincial cities\npublished at Moscow announced the\nintention of. the various unions in\nthose places to construct from one to\ntwelve aeroplanes each.\nLeningrad loads in the building\nprogram.\nNon-Breakable\nClear Vision\nWil! \ufffd\ufffdlvc yon a 'younger'niul .t\ufffd\ufffdiI more\ndistinguished nppcaruncc. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nUnlit for Strength. Oomlort, ' Beaut}.:\nLight os a teath.T. with smcotli, nand-'\npolished nose ' btidno \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd nnd grace.ully\ncurved temple oows that cannot'cut the\nmost tender nose or cars. A work ol\nbenutj   and   a  delight  for   the  wearer\nSend .No   Money \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Perfect\nSatisfaction Guaranleit\nLet me send:you on Si) Dajs' Trial my\nfamous \"Crov\/n\" Spectacles. Will unable\n.you to read the smallest print, thread\nthe an est needle, set (ar or near. It yo.i\narc not amazed and delighted, it you do\nnot think my spectacles, at only $:_.!)\ufffd\ufffd,\nequal to*'those sold elsewhere, at $15.00,\nsend them bnclc. You won't lose a cent\nYou are to be the sole JudRC. Hundred?\nof thousands now in use everywhere.\nBeautiful case Included PREE. Just send\nyour name, address and age.on the coupon below. I will nl\ufffd\ufffdii trll. \ufffd\ufffdoii'h\\w fr.\n;ct a pair tor yourself without cost. Cut\nAND   MAIL  COUPON   iODAV.\nCrown Spectacle..Co., Dept: 105\nCO Front St. W., Toronto, Out.\nI want to try you.  spectacles lor   30\ndays. ,!Thls placi-? me under, no nhHt;:i-\ntlori. Also pliiase tell r.ie how. to get a\npair for myself FREE._ .   _.    : _\nName   \t\nAgo   \t\nStreet and\nBos No. _\ncity\t\nNo.\nR.F.D\t\n.Prov\nAgenta Wanted.\nGreat Britain, Canada: France and\nItaly have paid bonuses to their world\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwar veterans.\nAre' you acquainted with any man\nwho flatters his wife?\nMany; mothers have -reason to bless\nMother Xlraves' Worm Exterminator,\nbecause it has relieved the littlo ones\nof suffering and made them healthy.\nEnglish scientists arc experimenting with an electric machine designed to eliminate the dense fogs whirh\nvisit London. -'        ,\nKEEP QUIET!)\nThat's good advice if you have\nDiarrhoea. Then for quick relief take a dose or two of      -   '\nChamberlain's Colic &]\nDiarrhoea Remeds\nIf a man is out of his head hc is\napt to put his foot in it\nMinard's Liniment for warto and Pimples.\nTHB \ufffd\ufffdBW FRENCH REMEDV. N0.\ufffd\ufffd\nXTHERAPlONKeS\nMo. 1 for Bladdar Catarrh. Mo. a (or Blooii ft\nEeU _r l.i-lnf Cksui*.!, er r-turn mall Items I\nSHE   GREENWOOD   LEDGB\n_\/\nAC\nr\nHuge Task\nbe\nLighthouses  and   Buoys   Have  to\nInspected and Cared for\nEvery Year\nEvery    good    housekeeper    knows\n. what spring house cleaning means, \"it\nis something every well ilomcsticat-\n' ed woman regards almost as a religious rlto.   Very few people, however,\never think that there is also a most\nimportant  \"Spring  Cleaning\"-or  the\nsea necessary.\nBuoys, lighthouses, lightships and a\nhundred accessories have to be thoroughly overhauled, painted and\notherwise cared for, under the capable\nsupervision of Trinity House Corporation, which has'had charge of such\nmatters since tlie year 1514. Every\nyear from March until the end 01\nJune, Trinity House tenders are very\nbusy indeed.\nRepainting  tho buoys  is not such\na simple job as it .sounds, for these\n. are the signposts of the sea roads, and\nupon their accurate colors and markings anil shapes, depends tho safety of\nsea-going vessels, conveying as they\ndo many and varied meanings to the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    mariner.    Though buoys    are    long-\n' lived, a    certain   number-' have,    of\ncourse,  lo   be  renewed   each   spring\nfrom ' tho    storeroom     of     Trinity\n_ House,- at TJ.iacl.wall, in London.\nHere may be seen hundreds of\nspare buoys of all sorts and sizes \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ngas, whistling and_ball buoj-s, conical\nand spherical buoys, and a host of\nother shapes and lypes. each destined\nto serve a specific purpose in thc \"service of narigat ion.\n- The inspection of lighthouses made\nduring each spring is another tremendous task, ior, though they are\nfixed structures, thy constant, buffeting of the breakers and tlio .never-\nceasing erosion of thc - atmosphere\nnaturally- mako ' inroads upon the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,.* masonry.\nIn tho care of a1 lighthouse built on\na promontory, thc work of rest oral ion\nis not a difllculc propositions; bul on\nan isolated rock such as IheTBishop's\n- Rock Light off the Seilly Isles, or ihc\nFaslnel Lighl off Cape Clear in Ireland, Ihc work usually occupies many\n_^_tv_ceks~or eveu-=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmonths\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthc\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlast-\nnamed lighthouse being very appropriately known as .the \"Out-post i of\nEurope.\"\nRepairing, renovating and repainting (he exterior of lighthouses con-\nslHutcs ono of lhe most dangerous\n'\" tasks thai the workmen of the sea\nare called upon to perform. Thcy :ire\nforced to toil on narrow, swinging\nplat forms at a height from fifly to a\nhundred and fifty feet- above sea\nlevel, their crazy supports being fre\nquently buffeted by sudden gusts of\nwind, when the slightest carelessness\nin the manipulator! of lifelines or\nsimilar tackle may easily send {lie\nmon crashing to death on the rocks\nbelow.\nThen (hero is Ihe danger of a sudden storm arising, making a hazardous adventure of the effort to roach\na place of safety, as lhc me.n swing\nprecariously at-thc mercy of.the elements.    *\nl'el the work must go orr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a work\nlittle.understood by the landsmen,\nand hardly to bo appreciated except\nby those who, going clown to thesca\nin ships, rely upon the efficiency of\nboth the lighthouses and their keepers.\n. Peopling the West\nCanadian Colonization Association\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Locate Over Two Thousand\nFamilies in Past Two\nYears\n\"Through the activities of Lhe Canada Colonization Association, during\nthe past two years 2,012 families have\nbeen established on farms, totalling\n4SS.092 -acres, in Western Canada,\nadding a rural population canal lo the\ncity of Lethbridge,\" said Colonel J. S.\nDennis; of Montreal, President of the\nAssociation, at the opening of its new\n\"quarters in tho Itoyai Bank JJuilding\nat AVinnipeg. \"From tho beginning\nof'the present year io the end of\nMay,\" said Col. Donuis, \"301 families\nhave beqi placed on 85,205 acres\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd122\nin Manitoba, 125 in Saskatchewan and\n10. in Alberta. The large percentage\nof the farms have bacn sold equipped\nand their \"value is approximately\n$20,000,000.\nExaminations.Reveal Ignorance\nAnswers Given By Scholars Are\n- 'Sometimes Amusing\nThe following schoolboy ' howlers\nare really worth publishing as studies\nof thb psychology of Iheir. .authors.\nFor' instance', fi boy who declared thai\na fugue \"is what you get iu a room\nfull of people when all the windows\nand doors are shut\" .moved on the\nsame menial piano as lhe other-who\ndenned \"mosquilo\" as \"tho child ol\nblack and while paronta\"\n\"A Soviet,\" It appears \"is a cloth\nused by waiters in hotels\"; \"Fallacy\nis another name for suicide\"; \"a polygon is sl dead parrot\"; \"Philosophy\nincreases thirty-two fcct per second,\"\narc other good examples of Ihis kind\nSometimes tho culprit hits by accident on a profound truth. \"Genius\nis-* an infinite capacity for picking\nbrains,\" for example.\nMore subtly entertaining aro the\ninventions, evasions and delicacies\nof (he moro .advancsd, who have perforce accepted the burden' of concealing thoir ignorance raiher Ihan\ndisplaying their knowledge.. This\nclass Is naturally less numerous.\n_ The best known specimen is the\nanswer to the question: \"What do you\nknow about Elijah?\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"We do not\nknow much about. Liiis -holy man, but\nwe, do know Lhat he once went for a\ncruise with a widow.\nA short examination essay on a certain Shakespearian play-closed with\nthe astounding statement \"Thai thc\n.King \"went on ironing his trousers,\"\nand this was ultimately traced to a\nsentence in the. summary of the plot,\nwhich told the studenc that (ho-King\n\"continued Lo press hi. suit.\"\nRed Rose Tea, now packed\nih the bright, clean' Aluminum package, is completely\nguaranteed. You can try it\nwithout any risk. Order a\npackage tfrom your grocer.\nUse any portion of _it and if\nyou are not entirely pleased\nreturn it and no charge will\nbe made* d\nOdoscope is Newest Invent\nion\nAll WooIjStocks Sold\nCanadian Co-operative Wool Growers\nDispose of 1026 Clip\n\"All wool stocks accumulated \"in\n192C have been sold,\" announces G.\nJJ. O'Brien, general manager of tho\nCanadian Co-oporalive AVool Growers.\nDespite unfavorable market conditions Ihe L92C c'ip has becn placed\nand the*decks  cleared  for  the 1927\n.wool Amoug-the-shiL-pers^xo'tlrerCo\"\"\noperative aie the Prince o'f Wales, a\nneighbor the-Earl of Minto, Ur. F. S.\nTolmie, former Federal Minister of\nAgriculture, Hon. John S. Martin,\nOntario' Minister of Agriculture, Hon.\nI.. D. Barrow, British Columbia Minister of Agriculture) the Dominion\nExperimental-Farms, (he Agricultural\nUniversities. Colleges, Schools- and\nProvincial Institutions, as well as the\nCanadian Pacific Railway Demonstration Farms. .\nExperiments Yield\n: Remarkable Results\nFamous Surgeon Sees Hope of Immun-\n. ity From Cancer'\n\"I am-in hopes that means o'f immunizing people against cancer will\nbe . discovered,\" said. Dr. William J.\nMayo, American surgeon, in an interview at London. Ho is visiting this\ncountry to exchange views .with loading surgeons and  physicians.\nHe cited tlio extraordinary results\nof ihe experiments carried oui by Dr.\nMaud Slye, Chicago woman doctor,\nwho is able, he said,\" by selective\nbreeding, tu 'breed mice whicli will in\nno -circumstances develop cancer\ndespiie all efforts to introduce It into\nthem. On the other hand, she is.able\nho declared, to'hreeiV.inice-which will\ninevitably be born with cancer.\n\"These experiments,\" said Dr.\n.Mayo, \"with lho others conducted\nhy Dr. Gyc and Professor Blair Dell\nlead logically to the Idea of cancel-\nprevention as well as the discovery\nof the cause. Medical science has\nmassive evidence to prove that tho\nrelict' of all sources of chronic irritation does much to , prevent cancer\nand that early operatiDns effect\ncures.\"\nAmazing Medical Apparatus Made by\nGerman Scicntis';'\n' An amazing medical \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd apparatus\nwhicli automatically signals whether\none Is in good health.' or not has\nreached London, and is being used\nwith remarkable success by a West\n.End specialist.\nNamed th0 Odoscope, it. is the invention of a German scientist, aud\nin certain circumstances enables ordinary, diagnosis to be entirely dispensed witli,\nA pressure of the finger on a tiny\nhole and the instrument instantly\nrecords with unerring accuracy the\nstate of the patient's health.\nAn interested enquirer who tested\nU found that ho was deficient in three\nimportant salts. Not only that, but\nthe apparatus actually traced out1 in\nalphabetic character tho {lash or sign\nof tlio salt in question.\nThe'miracle machine, is tho result\nof a long scries of experiments\nbased upon the discovery that in the\nsun, air and earlh and in the protoplasmic organization of man,, the\ncreation and death of all life is dependent upon 111 different rays.\nIn tlio Odoscope there are 111 tiny\nholes, each ono   of  which   tells   by\\\nvibrations whicli bioclic salts are deficient in tlie blood of the individual'\nsignalling, and  so denotes thc state\nof the health.\n-For Rheumatic Pains. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Tho pn ins\nWoman Suffered Nearly a Year.\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound Brought Her Health -\nGrowth of Import Trade\nMoose Jaw, Sask.--\"I am going fc>\ntry to tell you~what Lydia K l'ink-\nliam's Vegetable Compound has done\nfor mc.   I suffered very badly with\nbragging-down pains and infiamma-\n' tion,,also pains in my right sidepver\nmy hip and down my whole side into\nmy leg.   I had it nearly a year when\nI went to  a doctor and he said I\nwould have to have an operation. But\nmy mother said to take Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable.Compound as it\nsaved her life years before.   I took\ntwo bottles and I found I was better,\nso I kept ori taking it and also used\nLvdia K Pinkham's Sanative Wash.\nI nave had two more children since\nthen and am perfectly well.   I used\nto have to lie down two or three\ntimes a day,- and now I do all my\nhousework without trouble.    I al-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdways keep the Vegetable Compound\nin the house as I find a dose now and\ntiicn helps me.   I am willing for you\nto use this letter any way you see fit\nand I will answer letters. If I can help\nany other woman I'd be only too glad\nto try.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs. Estheu Houghton,\n414 Morse Square, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound is a dependable medicino\ntor all women\/\n.Forsale by druggists everywhere. O\nCanada's Exports Are IncreaGing at a\nRapid Rate\n\"One- of the most notable developments in Canadian industry - is    tho\nsteady growth of export trade ancl,\nwllh liiis progress, improved shipping\nand  banking  facilities,   increased interest in overseas exhibitions, a more\nintensive study of   foreign   markets,,\nexport procedure and  export costs,\"\naccording to the report of the com-\nmorciaHinlelligenco committee of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' Association,\npresented  at the annual convention.\nStatistics  wore  given  to  show that\nCanada's exports have   increased   in\nvaluo from $168,92-7,301   in 71900   to\n?1,27-1.362,US iii 1926\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda gain\" of 670\nper cenl. During the same time exports of manufactured goods increased 2,92G per cent.\nand aches of Sciatica and Rheumatism\nshould be treated with Dr. Thomas'\nEclectric Oil. The soothing and healing properties of thi.-. famous remedy\nhave been \"demonstrated for fifty\nyears. ' Uso It also for inflammatory\npains, cuts, scratches, bruises and\nsprains, either In human beings oi\nthe lower animals.\nAn Enviable Position\nPractically   no   Tuberculosis   Among\nDairy Cattle in Fraser Valley\nDr. W. II. McKenzie, superintendent\nof  the  Dominion  health  of animals\nbranch, in Uritish    Columbia,   is   ot\nopinion that tuberculosis among dairy,\ncattle in the Fraser Valley, B.C., will\nbe practically   eradicated   within    a\nyoar.   Last year almost   S   per   cent,\nwere infected on test;  this year's inspection showed a reduction of infection to  1.11 per cent.   Next year he\nexpects  the   reactors   will  be  lower\nthan- one-hali of ono per cent, in this\narea.    That is the rate oMcially regarded as T.E. free.   Testing of herds\nfro(u Hope to North Betid has been\ndone,  and of tho  -12,500  tested  this!\nyear only 430 were condemned. Last\nyoar 1,388 out of 4(5,98!) reacted.   This\nyear lie says, farmers in the Fraser\nValley, realizing the valuo of healthy\nherds   welcomed    tho   veterinarians\nwho conducted tho test.\nThe Emden in the Pictures\nGerman   War   Film   Being   Shown  in\nLondon\nEvidence that feeling engendered\nby the War is dying down is forthcoming from the fact that a German\nfilm illustrating the exploits of the\nEmden is being shown in London\nby an English firm who are best\nknown as the distributors of the\nBritish war .films \"Ypres\" and\n\"Mons.\" Somo peoplo consider that\nIhey have taken a bold step In\nbooking his wholly German war\npicture, but the film is so good and\nso impartial lhat there is n0 reason\nwhy British audiences should not\nwelcome it on its merits.\nTlie story begins with tho Em-\nden's departure from Tsinglau at the\noutbreak of war, and winds up witli\na remarkably vivid portrayal of her\nfinal, battle witli H.M.S. Sydney, oil\nCocos'Island. It is as restrained and\nas fair as any of tho British war films,\nand has a stronger narrative force\nthan any except that of Zcebrugge.\nwithout any unnecessary exaggeration\nof the glory or of Lhe horrors of actual\nfighting, the AVar Is sliown from lhe\nangle. of lho crew of the German\nraider, and particularly from that of\none young officer, a reservist in business at Tsinglau, who meets his own\nwife as a passenger on one of the\ncaptured British steamers, is put in\ncommand of. the captured British\ncrews, and eventually dies during llie\nbombardment by the Sydney.\nEnough glimpses of her various\nexploits are shown lo give ono a\npretty good idea of her touch-and-go\ncareer, and the co-operation of the\nGorfliian admiralty has . ensured an\nauthentic .naval atmosphere. One\nepisode is omitted. That is tho interval during the Cocos Battle when\nthe Sydney; seeing the Emden hopelessly stranded, went off to capture\nher coal tender, the Buresk. before\nreturning to enforce on Captain Von\nMailer an honorable surrender. The\nBritish arc treated quite fairly;\nthere is no \"hate\" anywher in the\npicture.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-London Correspondence In\nFree  Press.\nDipped Tires\nWhen you tour on Gum-Dipped Tires\nall roads seem equally good. There is\nnothing to compare with thc smooth,\nsure performances of these big, low-\npressure tires. Jolts' and vibrations\ndisappear. Stretches of rough going\ncannot disturb you or harm the mechanism and well-built structure of your,\ncar.\nIf it is slippery and muddy underfoot,\nGum-Dipped Tires; having double the\nroad contact, cling to the road and hold\nthe car unwaveringly to a true, straight\ncourse. On grades there is extra traction; at sharp curve's, or in quick stops\nyou will havc perfect control of wheel\nand brake. Skidding is almost impossible.\nThrough the development of thc exclusive Gum-Dipping process, Firestone has tremendously increased tire\nmileage in balloon tires. This insulates\nand impregnates every fibre of every\ncord with rubber, reduces internal heat\nand friction and delivers thousands of\nextra miles with added comfort and\nsafety.\nAsk any Firestone Dealer to show you\nthe structure of Balloon Gum-Dipped\nTires and to tell you their advantages.\nHe is an authority on this type of tire\nand is in a position to serve you better\nand save you money.   See him to-day.\nFIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO.\nOF CANADA LIMITED\nHamilton, Ontario\nMOST MILES PER DOLLAR\nND.MEDKM LIKE\nW.   K.   U.   1C8S\nPlatinum Produced in Canada\nPlatinum produced in .Canada iu\n192(5 totalled 8,521 ounces, or an increase of 1,000 over the year before,\naccording to' therDomlnlon Bureau of\nStatistics.\nBritish Columbia Wants\nAgreements Revised\nSays  Those  Existing   Between   Province and Dominion Out of Date\nPrepai at ions are under, way at the\nParliament buildings, Victoria, I'or the\nintor'provincial conference to bn held\nIn Ottawa Ihis year at (he call of iho\nFederal government. Under   the   direction of lion. J. I). MacLean, acting\npremier, officials are preparing detailed informal Ion to support the views\nof this province, to.be presented by\nthe  two  members  of  the  provincial\ngov.-rument.   .This information Is designed to   show    that   the   existing\nagreements between the Province and\nthe Dominion are out of date and require alteration in several directions.\nTlie conference Is planned for early\nin November.\nHad Several Reasons\nAdminister wlio had not been long\nappointed to a church In tho South\n.oJLScolland-askcd-ono-lady-how-she\nliked his preaching.\n\"I didna like it at a',\" she answered.\n\"And,\"pray, why not,\" he asked.\n\"Wecl, ln the first place,\" she answered, '-yo rend yer sermon; an', in\nthe second.place, ye didna read it\nweel; an', in the third place, it wasn't\nworth tho readin'.''\nFor Either the Newborn Babe or\nthe Growing Child\nThere is no oilier medicine to equal\nBaby's Own Tablets for little ones -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwhether it. be for lho newborn babe\nor tho growing child the Tabids' always do good. They aro absolutely\nfree from opiates or. other harmful\ndrugs and tho .mother can always\nfeci safe in using them.    -    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nConcerning llie Tablets, Mrs. John\nArmour K. R. I. South Monaghan,\nOnt., says:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Wo have three fine,\nhealthy children, to whom, when a\nmedicine is needed, wo have given\nonly Baby's Own Tablets. The Tablets are the best medicino you can\nkeep in any home where (here are\nyoung children.\" .\nBaby's Own Tablets are a mild but\nthorough laxativc which rcgulaliutlie.\nVlomach, and^ bowels: banish constipation and indigestion; break up\ncolds and simple fever- and make\nteething easy, . Thcy are sold by\nmedicino dealers or direct by mail at\n25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out.\nFirestone Builds the Only Gurii-Dipped Tirei\nLittle Helps For This Week\n'Behold, wo count thorn happy which\nendure.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJames-v. 11.\nWell, to suffer is divine;\nPass the watchword* down the line.\nPass the countersign, \"Endure!\"\nNot to him who rashly dares,\nBut to him who nobly bears,\nIs the victor's garland sure.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn Greenleaf Whittier.\nIf. for some of us, and sometimes\nfor all of us. action cannot mean doing', (hen-remember bearing too is action,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd oftencst its hardest part.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"William Channing Gannett.\nEndure and dare, true heart;\nthrough patience, joined with boldness, come we at a crown encircled\nwiih a thousand blessings.\n,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpanish Proverb.\nMinard's.Liniment for earache.\nEspecially. Prepared for Infants\n-,     and \"Children of All Ages\nMother!    Fletcher's    Castoria   has\nbeen in use for over 30 years to relieve babies and children of Constipation, ..Flatulency,* Wind    Colic    and\nDiarrhea;'allaying Poverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating tiie\nI Stomach and Bowels, aids, the assim-\n| ilation of Food;  giving natural sleep\n'without opiates.\nTho genuine bears signature of   '\nA machine whicli produces motions\nsimilar to those of an earthquake has\nbeen invented In Japan, to test different types of construction. \"\n\"Heathens\" are dwellers upon\nheaths. Tho word heathen acquired\nits meaning from the fact that at the\nintroauctiou of Christianity into Germany the wild dwellers on the heaths\n\"longest resisted the truth.\"\nThe bark of tho holly, is almost as\nthin as paper. Trees ' have becn\nknown to die from a bruise.\nIn 200 tests recently made, the\naverage ash can was found to contain fifty per cent, of coal.\nACHING JOINTS.\nApply. Minard's a few times and\nnote the quick relief.\nImportance of Agriculture\ni\nEmploye More People in Canada Than\nOther\"'Industry\nAgriculture employs more people\nthan any other industry in Canada.\nThe latest available statistics show-\nthat 1,041,61S persons were employed\nwhen the figures were takou. Manufacturing came next with 516,657.\nThere were 3,1S3,169 persons over 10\nyears of age gainfully employed in\nthe Dominion, of which 2,GS3.0l6 were\nmen and 190,150 women. These figures\nshow that -17.5 per cent *)f the total\npopulation was engaged in some\nful bcctipatio'n. -\nConan Doyle's Early Struggles\nFirst Twelve Years of Literary Career\nWere Hard\nSir Arthur  Conan Doyle, who was\nCS years ohf recently, is fond of recalling  Ills  own  early struggles  for\nthe encouragement of-budding storytellers.   Though he had a short story\npublished in \"Chamber's Journal\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfirst oncouragor of, sor many famous\nwriters\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhen only ID, he wrote for\nthree years after that without an acceptance, and his early books brought\nbut a sniall financial return. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd During\nthe first twelvo years of his literary\ncareer, indeed, lie never made more\nthan \ufffd\ufffd:5S per annum by his pen; and\nthe   first   of   the   famous   Sherlock\nHolmes series he sold \"outright;.'after\nnumerous publishers had rejected.it,\nfor \ufffd\ufffd25*.\nExperimenting oh Dental Serum\nThat dentists soon may be injecting\nsenims-lo-prevenx~too(h_dccay_is_thTr\nprediction of a specialist in Chicago\nDr. C. N. Johnson, who is experimenting on such a preparation. Tooth decay, he says, is tlio most conimou ai>\nmeut known, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .\nMiller's Worm Powders act'midly\nand without injury to tlie child, and\nthere can be no doubt of their deadly\neffect upon worms. They havo been\nin successful use for a long time and\nare recognized as a loading preparation for Ihe purpose. They have\nproved thoir power in numberless\ncases and have given relief to many\nchildren, who. but for the good offices\nof this \"'compound, would havc continued weak and enfeebled.\nMi s.. Smith\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDid you know that\nyour further maid is with us now?\nMrs. Smythe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYou don't say so!\nMrs. Smith\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDon't be frightened I\nonly believe half what, she tells me.\n;ain-\n\"Waiting   works   wonders \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd if you\nkeep busy while waiting.\nGirls Won in Competition\nThe ono and only man in the butter-\nmaking class at thc Bath and West\nAgricultural Show took his hand at\nthe churn when he competed 'against\nover a dozen shingled and silk-\nstockinged dairymaids\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand lost. The\nman was K. J. K. Elliott, from the\nSomerset Farm Institute, Bridgwater,\nand the class waa for students who\nhad been through ,a course of instruction in buttermaking at a county\nschool.\nPity, may be akin to love, but a girl\nisn't willing to accept it as a substitute.      -7 -'.\nAmbulance Surgeon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat brought\non the fit?\nNeighbor\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-The poor fellow's new\ncar hail just been delivered, and\nwhen he came cut he saw a butterfly\ni tramping over the paiutwork.\nOne thorn of experience is worth\na dozen buds of advice.\nMinard's Liniment for insect bite*.\nSkin Became Scaly, Arms Later\nAffected. Cuticura Heals,\n\"I suffered from pimples that\nbroke out all over my face. They\nwere large and red, and itched so\nbadly' that I scratched them until\nthey would bleed. My.skin became\nscaly and started to peel off, especially around my mouth. Later my\narms became affected with pimples.\n\" I began using Cudcura Soap and\nOintment and they helped me. I\ncontinued the treatment and in about\ntwo weeks I was healed.\" (Signed)\nE. M. Bradley, 185 Queen St., Char-\nlottetown, P. E. I., Aug. 11,1926.\nUse Cuticura Soap, Ointment and\nTalcum to promote and maintain\nskin purity, skin comfort and skin\nhealth; the Soap to cleanse and\npurify; Ointment to soothe ahd heal,\nand Talcum to powder and refresh.\nSunjJt Etch Frte It Hull. Adilreis Canadian\nDepot: \"Stcnhtnuc, iti, Kentrtsl.\" Trice, Soap\nZt. r.^feient 25 and Ste. Talcum 25fl.\nCutlcort. ShVrinf Stick 25c.\n>\"\"' THB   GKEENWOOD-   LEDGE\nThe Greenwood Ledge\nPublished every Thursday at\n.Greenwood, B.C.\nG. W. A. SMITH\nEditor and Proprietor\nGreenwood Superior School Forestry Association\nLecture Tour and Show\ndivision in.\nV.. A. Kempston\nThe Canadian Forestry Association\nSubscription: In Canada and to Gt.\nBritain, $2.00 a year in advance; $2.50\nwhen not paid for three months or\nmore have passed. To the: United\nStates $2.50, always in advance.\nADVERTISING     RATES\nDelinquent Co-Owner Notices...$25.00\nCoal and Oil Notices    7.00\nEstray Notices       3.00\nCards of Thanks     1.00\nCertificate of Improvement...... 12.50\n(When more than one claim appears\nin notice, $5.00 for each additional\nclaim.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd All other legal advertising 16 cents\na line first insertion, and 12 cents a\nline for each subsequent insertion, nonpareil measurement.\nBusiness locals 12Vic a line each insertion.\nSchool Board Meets\nThe Trustees of the Greenwood\nSuperior School held a meeting in the\nCity Hall on Wednesday of last week,\nat which school affairs were discussed.\nMr. N. E. Morrison will remain as\nprincipal and Miss Vera Kempston\nwill again be in charge of the primary\nroom. Miss Ruth Axam who has been\nin charge of the Spencer School during the past term has been chosen to\npreside over Division II formerly in\n-charge of Mr, T. Crowley, who has\nresigned.\nThe Trustees decided to have some\nkalsomining done and also renovate\nthe interior of the school, the work to\nbe completed before the fall term commences.\nA Grand Benefit Dance will be held\nat Riverside Hall, Rock Creek, on\nFriday, July 22nd, 1927, commencing\nat 8:30 p.m. Sterling & Lloyd's Celebrated. Orchestra will supply the music.\nAdults $1.00, Local School Children\nunder 14 years 50c. Supper included.\nCome and help a good cause, and have\na real good time.\nMidway News\nThe Midway baseball team plays at\nWauconda on Sunday\nMrs. Harold Moll, of Kimberley, was\nover for the Jubilee holidays.\nMiss Nora Jackson .and Miss Annie\nThomet were visitors to Greenwood\ntoday. -''\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMiss Inez Erickson, of Republic, has\nbeen visiting Miss Helen Nystrom for a\nfew days..\nMr. and Mrs. James Bush and\ndaughters, Lela and Mayneen motored to Spokane on July 2nd.\nThe Ladies Aid will hold their\nmonthly meeting on Friday, July 8th,\nat 2:30 p.m., in the Old School.\nMiss Lucile Evans was the guest of\nMiss Virginia:'.' Riley, of Norwegian\nCreek, for a few days last week.\n'*>Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clark and family, of Seattle, are visiting the former.'s\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Clark.    \ufffd\ufffd\nThe Annual Public School Meeting\nwill be held on Saturday, July 9th at\n7 p.m. Kindly make it a point to be\nthere.: It is to your interest to do so.\nMidway won from Orient at Curlew\non the 4th, by a score of 4 to 0. Owing\nto rain the final game with Curlew\nwas called off. This game will be\nplayed after the league season.\nNumber on roll 28 are conducting a Lecture Tour  and\nAverage Daily Attendance ...27.86 Moving   Picture   Show   through   the\nTotal  Actual  Attendance 390 Southern Interior District during this\nPercentage of Attendance 99.5% month and will be travelling through\nprnmntimi  t ist ithis  district between July  19th  and\nPromoted   to   Grade   IV-Clarence 21st-   shows have becn  ^ranged for\nSolme   Glenn  Toney.  Ernest  Cox, <f> f\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffdwi\ufffd\ufffdS Places on Lhe dates men-\nSStt^TWr  \ufffd\ufffdlark\" EdWaVd!    \ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ta ^\nt _Sinillg    ln    Gl'ade    m-^\ufffd\ufffdUiS , TXesday, July 20th, Reck Creek in\nPromoted to Grade IIIA.-Kathleen \ufffd\ufffd* afternoon and Beaverdell in Lhe\nMadden, Burton McGiUivray, Gordon e\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"111S- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Oreenwood in\nMcGilllivray, Eric Cox, Douglas Stew- u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfterSoon ^cenwooci in\nalRMniinine in Grade IIIB -Gordon' The Forestry Association is kepi up\nJ\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       ln \ufffd\ufffdiacl\ufffd\ufffd 1UB-   U0 a\ufffd\ufffd    by public subscription ancl Shows that\nPrnmntPfl    tn    rrorlo    TTTR     Tlm-mS   ^W  Pufc  0n  al\"c   entirely   fl'CO.    There\nNateH^o^JS.Sr^iS ifnr^^\/\ufffd\ufffd!;friS0,showis lheve\nClark, Roland Skilton, Josephine Cox\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* collection after the fallow.\nJack McGrade. |\nRemaining   in   Grade    IIB.-Cet.il j    R    k Creek &nJ District\nMaletta. | \t\nPromoted to Grade IIB.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCatherine .,_,____\nStewart, Mildred Sortome, Thomas The Martin Auction will be held at\nForshaw, Frank Nichols (tie) Edna G. B. M. Gane's Store on Saturday,\nPope, Virginia Boug. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , J\"lv 16th at 2 p.m.\nPromoted   to   Grade   IA.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRoberta.' \t\nWilson, Alfred Maletta. |    Mr. ancl Mrs.H.L.T. Martin motor-\nRegularity anil Punctuality ed over from Kimberley last week and\nVirginia Boug, Alice Clark, Jack spent a few days in the district, being\nClark, Eric' Cox, Ernest Cox, Jose- the guests of Major and Mrs. R. Gray\nphine Cox, Thomas Forshaw, Edward\nLucente, Louis Lucente, Burton McGiUivray, Gordon McGiUivray, Jack\nMcGrade, Alfred Maletta, Cecil Maletta, Peter Maletta, Dorcas Mitchell,\nCicely Newmarch, Frank Nichols,\nEdna Pope, Douglas Stewart, Catherine Stewart, Glenn Toney, Roland\nSkilton, Roberta Wilson.\nAwarded MacLean Writing\nCertificates\nci Catherine Stewart,Mildred Sortome,\nAlice Clark, Josephine Cox, Roland\nSkilton, Dorcas Mitchell, Kathleen\nMadden, Burton McGiUivray, Gordon McGilivray.\nHonor Rolls\nAlice  Clark\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdProficiency.\nCicely Newmarch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Deportment.\nErnest Cox\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Regularity and Punctuality.\nDIVISION II    .\nT. Crowley\nTotal Attendance   ..... 317\nNo. ,on Roll - 28\nAverage \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* Attendance  .26.42\nPercentage of Attendance .... .94.36%\nPromotion  List\nPromoted to Grade VIII.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRobert\nForshaw Cleo Toney, Eugene McGiUivray, Thomas Walmsley, Arthur\nCox. Recommended: John Morrison, Allan \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Morrison.\nPromoted to Grade VII.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBeatrice\nMcLaren, Ruth Cox, Rosa Lucente,\nRoy Hallstrom. Oliver Newmarch, Arnold Bombini, Charles Royce.\nPromoted to Grade VI\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCelia\nKlinosky, John McGiUivray, Mark\nMadden, June Toney, David Nichols,\nLawrence Gulley, May Clark, James\nForshaw.\nPromoted to Grade V.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWalter\nNichols, George- Hingley, Ernest\nJohnson, Leonard Sortome.\nRegularity and' Punctuality\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMay\nClark,. Arthur Cox,; Lewis Clerf,\nJames \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Forshaw, Robert Forshaw,\nLaurence Gulley, Roy Hallstrom,\nGeorge Hingley, Ernest Johnson, Celia\nKlinosky, Rosa Lucente, Mark Madden,\nEugene McGiUivray, John McGillvray, Beatrice McLaren, David\nNichols, Charles Royce, Cleo Toney,\nJune Toney, Thomas Walmsley,\nDorothy Boug.\nMr. and Mrs. John Melton and family, of Bucoda, Wash., were the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs... H.'Strauss over the\nholidays. Mr. Welton is a nephew of\nMrs. Strauss.\n= \/This seasons conditionshave been\nide^rfor\"tKie_flatraltho*ugh=iirhas-been\nfamed for grasshoppers, some of the\nfinest   potatoes   are   being   harvested\n\"from the garden of Henry Strauss.\nHenry Pannell is also engaged in cutting a good crop of rye hay.\nKettle Valley Golf Notes\nIt is understood that the Penticton\n,Golf Club will play a competitive visit\nto the local Golf Club sometime in the\nfall.   ,-.'. ..     \" \" \" \"~ \"\"'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\"\nThe Oliver Golf Links is progressing\nrapidly and promises to be an excellent course. Some visitors from' there\nplayed on the Kettle Valley Links on\nJuly 3rd. Osoyoos has also got a\ncourse, but it is only in. the making\nand promises well.\nIn the Bogey Spoon competition on\nthe Kettle Valley Links, Gregory and\nLeslie tied, the final tb be played later.\nThe first four were:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH. W. Gregory\n3 down; R. O. Leslie 3 down; S. B.\nHamilton 6 down, and A. Roberts 6\ndown.\nThree Americans from Massachusetts\nplayed 18 holes on the local Golf\nCourse on July 3rd and were well\npleased with the links. More people\nare visiting this popular course than\nlast year.1 The greens have been re-\noiled and rolled and are in good condition.'    -,\";'\n- H. Douglas Hamilton met with a\npainful accident on the 3rd instant,\nwhen he had his left eyebrow cut.\nMr. Hamilton was7 playing golf on the\nKettle Valley Course, when on driving\noff at the 8th T, his ball ricochetted\nback striking him on the left eyebrow.\n1 Miss Swanson, Matron of the District\nHospital, who was on the course, rendered first aid, and later Dr. A. Francis\nput six stitches in the wound.   *7\nDr. E. J. -Bothweli,--aged 57 years,\nLiberal member of the British Columbia Legislature, for New Westminister,\nwho became suddenly ill about two\nweeks ago while motoring on a holiday trip through'the Cariboo district,\ndied in the Hospital at Quesnel on\nWednesday, June 29th.\nThe \"Confederation Special\" containing 200 delegates from United\nChurches of Eastern Cities of Canada\npassed through Greenwood at an early\nhour on Tuesday morning. They are\ntouring under the auspices of \"The\nNew Outlook,\" the official organ of the\nUnited Church of Canada.    >.\nThe Marketing Bill\na   - -\nThe United Fanners will hold their\nmonthly meeting in the Farmers' Hall,\nMidway, on Saturday, July 9th, at 2\np.m. Mr. D. McPherson, the local\nmember, will be present and will give\nan address on the marketing bill. Mr.\nPaul C. Black, of Grand Forks, dis-\ntrict=horticulturistrTWill=also=give=an=\naddress on dairying. It is hoped that\nall the farmers in the district will\nmake an effort to 'be present.\nBrief Facts About\nFairbanks' \"Don Q?\n       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.*('\nThe new Douglas Fairbanks screen\nfeature \"Don Q, Son of Zorro\" is, a\nsupreme melodrama. .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.._\nIt is a modern story, laid in Spain,\nwith - most- of * - the action taking place\nin Madrid.   .      *    '\nAction-plus, with lightning sword-\nplay, stunts, athletic achievements\nhumor and romance merge ceaselessly.\nThe scenic background is the most\nelaborate and pretentious imaginable\nfor the period. Fairbanks leaps as it\nwere from castle to castle.\nThe plot is founded on \"Don Q's\nLove Story\" by K. and Hesketh Prich-\nard, adapted for the screen by Jack\nCunningham.\nThc story positively has nothing to\ndo with the Cervantes hero, \"Don\nQuixote\" or his windmill troubles.\nMary Astor,u young, beautiful and\naccomplished, has the leading femin-1\nine role.\n\"Don Q, Son of Zorro\" comes to the\nGreenwood Theatre on Friday and\nSaturday, July 8th and 9th. 'Dance\nafter the Show on Friday.\nMr. ancl Mrs. Juan Lewis, Sr., Mr.\nand Mrs. J. A. Abraham and son, Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Juan Lewis, Jr., of\nSpokane, Wash,, and Miss Margaret\nJardine of Seattle, Wash., motored up\nfrom Spokane and spent the 4th of\nJuly with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Lord at\nRock Creek.\nIndependent\nA lawyer who advertised for a\nchauffeur, when questioning a negro\napplicant, said: \"How about you,\nGeorge; are you married?\"\n\"Naw, suh, boss; naw, suh. Ah makes\nmy own livin'.\" Ex.\nThe United Church of Canada\nREV. ANDREW WALKER, B.A.\nMinister in Charge, Greenwood.\nw       SUNDAY,   JULY  10th\nBridesville, 11.00 a.m.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.      Midway, 3:00 p.m.\nGreenwood, 7:30 p.m.\nReal Estate & Insurance\nFire, Accident & Sickness, Life,\nAutomobile, Bonds, Burglary, &c\nAuctioneer\nHouses for Rent or Sale\nCall at the Office of\nCHARLES KING\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\nNotice of Application for Beer Licence\nI'd rather be a Could Be,\nIf I,could not:be an Are,\nFor a Could Be is a Maybe -\nWith a chance of touching par..\nI'd rather be a Has Been,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Than a Might\" Have Been by far,\nFor a Might Haye Been, has never been,\nBut a Has, was once an Are.\n. .NOTICB is liercby ffivu.i that cm ilu\nSth Day of July nrxi. the iit.rii'rsisri.ucl intend\nlo aiiplv to tlio Liciuor Control iioard for a\nlicences ..-n_si)ec___o__i_n_i_..si's_.)i,i n ir_i>iii-i_cif_llio\nbuilclhiir Unciwii as the Uridesvillu Hotel, on\nMain Street. Bridusvillc. upon the lands described as Lot -WI, Osoyoi)!-. Division of Yale\nDistrict, in the Province of Urilisli Columbia,\nfor the sale of beer by the jrlass or by lhe open\nbollle for consumption on tlie premises.\n'   Dated this lOlh Day of June, A.D. ]'J*__7.\nSTAD & ROY,\nApplicants.\nMINERAL ACT\n....*.,,_ Certificate of Improvements.\nNOTICE\n4\nACME MINERAL CLAIM\nSituate in The Greenwood Mining Division of\nYale District,\nWhere located:  Near Bridesville.\nTAKE NOTUCB that 1, C. AE. Shaw, ai_-enl\nfor Joseph l'riiifile, Free Miner's Certilicale\nNo. 335D, i uluiicl, sixty days from the date\nhereof, lo apply to the Miniiijr Recorder fora\nCertilicale of Improvements, for Uie purpose of\nobtaining a Crown (Irani of the above'claim.\nAu,d furllier lake notice thai .'iciion, under\nseetic5j)^X5. must he commenced before lhe\nissuance of such Certificate of Improveiueuts.\nDated ihis -Itli day of June, l'.\"27.\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON,' Assurer aiid\nChemist, Box L1108, Nelson, B.C.\nCharges\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Copper or I^ead\nS1.00 each. Gold-Silver $1.50. Silver-\nLead $2.00. v Silver-Lead-Zinc $3.00.\nThese charges made only when cash is\nsent with sample. Charges for other\nmetals, etc., on application.\nWILLIAM II. WOOD\nPHYSICIAN andSURGEOsT\nGREBXW.OOD\nThe Consolidated Min ing & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffice, Smelting and Refining Department\n.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.;'    TRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\nProducers, of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\n:'-.'. **',,.;       v  \"TADANAC\"  BRAND  7 -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:     W\nA. E. McDOUGALL\nContractor and Builder\nForeign and Domestic Monuments\n\"Asbestos Products. Co. Roofing  -\nLamatco Wallboard\nSHOP AT GREENWOOD\nThis year it is necessary to have a permit\nfrom some Forest Officer before any camp-\nfire may be set in any forest or woodland\nBe sure to get a permit for your camp-fire\nand follow the instructions printed on the\nback of it\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\nPrevent Forest Fires\nYou Can Help\nBox 332  Grand Forks, B.C.\nSEND YOUR\nBOOTS and SHOES\nTo\nHarry Armson, Grand Forks\nThe 20th Century Shoe Repairer\nAll work and material guaranteed\nWo pay postage one way. Terms cash\nSYNOPSIS OF\nE\n\\\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt. \/\nCanadian\nPACIFI\nSummer Excursion Fares\nTO EASTERN DESTINATIONS\nON SALE DAILY, MAY 22 TO SEPT. 15-RETURN LIMiT OCT.   31\nWinnipeg  $ 7.5.(10\nToronl.o_.__ _-_ ._ 118.05\nHamilton 118.05\nLondon  118.05\nQuebec  __ 146.10\nSt. John  _ -152.20\nSt. Paul     75.K0\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Minneapolis    75.(50\nDuluth _ '75.(50\nFort William.\nNiagara Tally\nOltawa _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMontreal \t\nMoncton\t\nHalifax\t\nChicago\t\nNow York\t\nBoston\t\n....$\n\ufffd\ufffd0.\n12-1.\n132.\n187,\n152,\n157,\n90,\n151.\n157,\n0(1\n92\n25\n05\n20\nr\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nli)\nHO\n70\n70\nMANY ADDITIONAL DESTINATIONS\nASK F0RRATES FROM AND TO ANY POINT\nRoute via Main Line or via Soo Line, through Winnipeg or Portal\nLo St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. Marie, via Great Lakes;\nor via California at an additional fare; or good to go via one of, the\nabove routes, return another.\nSee Local Agent or Wtlte for Details\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\np*._**nnrM_r|__.'.___a___i_-i\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVacant unreserved, surveyed Crown\nlands may be pre-empted by British\nsubjects over 18 years of age, and by\naliens on declaring intention- to ber\ncome British subjects, conditional\nupon residence, occupation, and improvement for agricultural purposes.\n. Full information concerning relations regarding pre-emptions is given\nin Bulletin No. 1, Land -. Series, \"How\nto Pre-empt Land,\" < copies of which\ncan be obtained free of charge by addressing the Department of Lands,\ntoria, B. C, or to any Government\nAgent.\nRecords will-' be granted covering\nonly land suitable for agricultural purposes, and which. is not timberland,\ni.e., carrying over 8,000 board feet per\nacre west of the Coast Range and\n5,000 feet per acre east of that Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to\nbe addressed to the Land Commissioner of the Land Recording Division, in\nwhich the land applied for is situated,\nand are made on printed forms, copies\nof which can be obtained from the\nLand Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be occupied for\nfive years and improvements made to\nthe value of $10 per acre, including\nclearing and cultivating at least five,\nacres, before a Crown Grant can be\nreceived.\nFor more detailed information see\nthe Bulletin \"How to Pre-empt Land.\"\nPURCHASE\nApplications are received for purchase of vacant and unreserved Crown\nLands, not being timberland, for agricultural purposes; minimum price for\nfirst-class (arable) land is $5 per-\nacre. Further information regarding\npurchase or lease of Crown Lands is\ngiven in Bulletin No. 10, Land-Series,\n''Purchase and Lease of Crown Lands.\"\nMill, factory, or industrial sites  on\ntimber land, not exceeding 40 acres,\nmay be purchased or leased, the conditions including payment of. stump- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nage.\nHOMESITE LEASES\nUnsurveyed areas not exceeding 20\nacres, may be leased as homesites, conditional upon a dwelling being erected\nin the first year, title \"being obtainable\nafters-residence- and^improvement conditions are fulfilled, and land has been\nsurveyed;\nSometimes the informality\nof the spoken word\nis more' effective\nthan a letter\n\"Long Distance, please\"\nBRITISH COLOMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nLEASES\nFor grazing and industrial purposes\nareas not exceeding 640 acres may be\nleased by one person or a company.\n\/ GRAZING\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province\nis divided into grazing districts and the\nrange administered under a Grazing\nCommissioner. Annual grazing permits are issued based on* numbers\nranged, priority given to established\nowners. -Stock owners may fcym associations foi* range management. Free,.\nor partly free, permits are \"available\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfor settlers, campers and travellers, up\nto ten head.\n\/.-'\nBRITISH   COLLI.\nThe Mineral Province of Western Canada\nTO THE END OF DECEMBER, 1926\nHas produced Minerals as follows: Placer Gold, $78,018,548;   Lode   Gold,   $126,972,318:\nSilver, $80,787,003; Lead, $106,976,442; Copper, $209,967,068;   Zinc,  $50,512,557;   Coal and'\nCoke, $284,699,133; Structural Materials and Miscellaneous Minerals, $50,175,407; making\nits  mineral production to the end of 1926 show an\n,,      Aggregate Value of $988,108,470\nProduction for the year ending December, 1926, $67,188,842\nThe Mining Lawsl of this Province are more liberal and the fees lower than -thoseof any other Province in the Dominion, or any colony in the British Empire. , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\nMineral, locations are granted to discoverers for nominal fees.\nAbsolute Titles are obtained by developing such properties, the security of which is guaranteed by\nCrown grants. - .,\nFull information, together with Mining Reports and Maps, may be obtained gratis by addressing:\nTHE HON. THE MINISTER OF MINES,\nw VICTORIA, British Columbia;\nN; B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPractically all British Columbia Mineral Properties upon which development work has been\ndone are .described in some one of the'Annual Reports of the Minister  of Mines.  Those 'considering\nmining  investments should refer to such reports.   They are available without charge on application\nto the Department of Mines, Victoria, B. C.  Reports of the Geological   Survey   of   Canada,   Winch w\n.Building, Vancouver, are recommended as valuable sources,of information.\n-i:X. Reports covering each of the Six Mineral Survey Districts are published separately, and are available on application. *.. W    - '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'*;.. _","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. 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There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Greenwood, B.C. : G. W. A. Smith","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1927-07-07 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Greenwood Ledge","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}