{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"2f75e3b7-144c-42c0-9382-219ca45980f0","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":"2016-07-14","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":"1918-10-17","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\/1.0308501\/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":" ym\nA\n*o,\n'\ufffd\ufffdCJ\n*\/\nva\n**.\n'*\nTHE\nLEDQE\nTHE  OLDEST   MINING  CAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nVol.   XXV.\nGREENWOOD, B. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17,  1918.        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\n\/\nNo. 14\nMANY   NEW   LINES\nCome In And See Our\nLarge And Well Assorted Stock Of\nCarpets,   Furniture,   Pictures,\nCrockery,   Etc.   Etc.\nMany   kinds of Oil,  Tinware\nand  Hardware\nT. M. GULLEY & CO.\nPHONE 28        X       GREENWOOD, B. C.\n|    GREENWOOD  GROCERY    |\nSr Canada Food Board License No. 8-6251 . ~5--\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The   Food   Board   Asks   You   to   Save 3\n| THE\" FLOUR |\ng We carry a most complete stock of other Cereals =3\n% We specialize in TEA and COFFEE in pkge or bulk |j\n% AT REASONABLE PRICES |f\nI     LEE A BRYAN     1\nPiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiaiaiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^\nInsurance\nLife,  Fire, Health and\nAccident\nReal Estate, Ranches and\nMining Broker\nAUCTIONEER\nCharles King\nGREENWOOD;        - B. C.\n'STORE OF QUALITY\"\nA  FINE   LINE  OF\nGloves, Mitts, Socks,\nBoots, Shoes and\nClothing\nAT\nJ. G. McMYNN\nMIDWAY      -      -      B. C.\na^S^3^^5S^S\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd^^^SiJ^^5^5S;\nAround Home\nI\nGIVE TELEPHONE NUMBERS PLAINLY\nNothing is more#difficult to understand over a telephone\nwire than a number containing three or four digits. \"5\"\nsounds*like\"\"9\" and \"2\" is often mistaken for l,3'9i transposing\nnumerals isV frequent'error.\nThat's why the telephone'^operator must have your numbers slowly, one digit at a time. She' must; be sure and ydu\nalone can help. It's that kind of Jhelp that makes for satis-\n^ractory telephone_service.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY,  Ltd-\nis in charge of\n.the Mill Camp\nthat P. McWha\nPhoenix are\nNelson in Five Minutes\nMazda Tungsten Lamps\n15 to 40 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50c each,\n1 60 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd75c each.\n'100 WattfLamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$1.25 each,\nHaving purchased tlie Clear\nStore from R. J. MUIR. I will\nbe pleased to furnish the public, at reasonable prices, with\nTobacco. Cigarettes, Cigars,\nFruit. Confectionery. Etc\nR. H. GUISE\nChristian Science service will be held\nin the MELLGR BLOCK on Sunday at n\na. m. All welcome. Every Wednesday\nat 8 p.m., testimonial meetings will be\nheld in the same block. Sunday School\nevery Sunday morning.\nWANTS. ETC\nNITROGEN\nLAMPS\n60 Watts '- \" > ' *   $1.25 each\n{00    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-... *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -   2.00 \"\n200   \"    '*   *'   o    3.50 \"\nGreenwood CityS Waterworks Co.\nEVERYTHING ELECTRICAL\ncigars    at    Dad\nProvince  Hotel,\nAutos for hire, at the Palace\nLivery.\nReal    good\nO'Dell's  at the\nGrand Forks.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFor Sai^.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA portable sawmill with a capacity of 10,000\nfeet daily. Also a gasoline\nlaunch, 20feet in length, Roberts\nmarine engine. Apply to Charles\nOliver, Greenwood.\nThe Consolidated Mining k Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOflices, Smelting and Refining Department\ni    TRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nGREENWOOD HOSPITAL\nVISITING   HOURS   2  to   4\nAt other hours by arrangement\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\nTADANAC BRAND PIG LEAD, BLUESTONE, COPPER AND SPELTER\n8\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\nis\nTHE GANADIANBANK\nOFCOMMERCE\nSR EDMUND WALKER.\nCV.O.. LLD.. D.CL. President\nSIR JOHN AIRD. General Man*ger \"\nH. V. F. JONES. Aw't Gent Mrnager\nCawtalPaid Up. $15,000,000 T Reserve Fund, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd $13,500,000\nEvery effort is made to provide the banfo\nxx'i' x in\ufffd\ufffd service ^qulre^ by miners^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   xiix'_;:,.. current; ao^Durit tecilita\n^\ufffd\ufffd^;$^bandiin^;.- of busing i^:\n;';-;;-;;^-:^\n;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\n$10,000\nPublic Auction\nMr. S. T. Larsen of Rock\nCreek, B.C., having sold his\nRanch, ha* given instructions\nto sell by Public Auction on\nThurs.. October 31\n1918     Commencing at 10 a.m.\nAT HIS  RANCH 2-1-2 MILES\nWEST OF ROCK CREEK\nAH bis Stock, Machinery and Implements, consisting ofiiXX\n50 Head of Horses, some bred from\niX'x. Registered Percheron Sire.yx\n6 0 Head of Cattle; some Reg istered\n\"..yxX'\"'X-x\"Xi- Shorthorns\n35 Head of Hogs. Brood Sows! Boar.\nSpring and Young Pigs.  Air variety\nof Farm Implements \/and Wtacftineiry;\n40 tons of Grain Hay, and all and\neverything needed on a Farm;;;XX\nFor   further  particulars, conditions;of\nXx; Sale See Bills:'':;-:;;7\nG.. B.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.; .,Clerk\nCharles King,\nAuctioneer\nThe Hon. J. D. Macl\/eau was\nin town last Friday.\nRexall Liver Salts just in at\nGoodeve's Drug Store.\nMrs! Griffln of Kaslo is .visiting\nher mother iu Midway.  *\nIt is reported that there is some\nSpanish Floo in Phoenix.\nSeed wheat and seed rye lor\nsale at Brown's, Midway.\nThe smelter has considerable\ntrouble with inferior coke.\nR. J. Muir has sold his cigar\nstore to Robert Guise of \"Midway.\nThe Nickle Plate mine and\nmill at Hedley employs  181 men.\nA Soldiers friend is Dad O'Dell\nat the Province Hotel, Grand\nForks.\nG._ A. Rendell sells many kind\nof pickles, including sweet pickles in bulk.\n' This winter many railway ties\nwill be cut in the hills around\nGreenwood.\nBorn.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn October 4, to Mr.\naud Mrs. Andy Johnson of Rock\nCreek,'a son.\nHugh McKee was out $350 last\nweek through the death of one\nof his horses.\nOf course they all go to Dad\nO'Dell at the Province Hotel,\nGrand Forks.\nMae Lawson\nthe postoffice, at\nnear Princeton.\nIt is reported\nand E. E. Barnes of\ndead in France.\nThe Forest mill at Cascade bas\nenough of logs to feed its saws\nuntil December.\nOwing to a lack of feed, many\ncattle from the prairie will be\nwintered in BC.\nMrs. Norris of Grand Forks,\nwas visiting her husband, Charles\nNorris this week.\nIn France on October 3, J. D.\nMcCreath received a gunshot\nwound in the leg.\nCharles King has been appointed official administrator, in the\nGreenwood district.    \".\nEvening service at St. Jude's\nchurch, Sundav, October 20th,\nwill be at 7:30 o'clock.\nD. R. McEimon, Greenwood.\nWatchmaker and Jeweler, Goggles and auto glasses on hand.\nC. C. Tilley died in Oroville\nlast week, aged 64 vears. He\nwas well-known in Greenwood'.\nJust in. Bulk vinegar $1,50 a\ngallon. Sour mixed pickles $1.75\ngallon glass iar.    G.A. Rendell.\nA few drops of Eucalyptus on\nyour handkerchief will help to\nkeep away the Spanish influenza.\nBorn.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt the Greenwood\nHospital, on October 11, to Mr.\nand Mrs. P. H. McCurrach, a\ndaughter.\nThe Ladies Aid of Midway,\nwill have a social evening Friday, in that town in aid of the\nRed Cross.\nDudley McMillan has been\nkilled at the front. He was a\nformer resident of Phoenix and\nGreenwood.\nCharles Holton died in -Revel-\nstoke this week. He came to\nthat town 33 years ago. He did\nmuch mining in the Lardeau.\nC. E. Stamper went to Spokane\non Saturday to; move his family\nto Greenwood. He expects to\nmove bis garage to the brick\nbuilding formerly occupied by the\nHunter-Kendrick Co.\nIt will soon be time to send\nChrisimas presents to the boys\nin France; A copy of Float\nmakes a present that is always\nwelcome anywhere. Copies can\nhe obtained at The  Ledge office.\nL. E. Brawders of Fernie, is\nthe new manager of the Bank of\nCommerce, H. C. Lucas having\nbeen transferred to Princeton.\nMrs. Brawders and two children\nwill arrive in Greenwoon early\nnext month.\nAt the residence of her parents\nih Victoria, Miss Lilian May\nComber, formerly of Greenwood,\nwas married to W. P. R. Arnold\nlast week. Miss Mariorie Comber\nwas bridesmaid, and Gus Brown\nacted as best man. Mrs. Guy\nWright of Nelson, and her two\ndaughters, wereX among the\nguests at the wedding. ixyyXyyyx.\nThe -following citizens were\nelected as the executive for the\nVictory Loan drive: Mayor T.\nM. Gulley, .chairman; ; P.; E.\nCrarue, ^ vice-chairman;;:7;G. ;;R.\nTaylor, secretary; G. S. -Walters,-\nCharlesKing;;F\\ H.;Asam,;R:.;-T.\nLowery and P. Hi; McCurrach.;\nThe Green wood district includes:\nGreenwood, Anaconda,; Ehplti\nColtern \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: Boundary Falls. Mother\nLode, Emma and Jewel mines.\nBilly Thurman is still hanging\non to his moustache, in spite of the\nwar and hard times.\n\"Who is that lady who never puts\nany powder on her face, in order\nto help win the war?\nD. J. Robertson will tell you all\nabout the pleasure, derived from\nsleeping on  a   Marshall Sanitary\nMattress.\nOld prospectors say that booze is\ngettiog scarce in Nelson. Jimmy\nGrant fays a little float is found\nnow and theD, but none in place.\nSome of these days Fred Starkey\nexpects to have a million dollars.\nHe deserves it for the way that he\nhas worked to boost Nelson and\nthe district from which its trade is\ndrawn.\nJim Gilker is one of the best\nhome men iu town. He has-been\nhere since 1889, and has not had\ntime to visit Kaslo or Rossland.\nIt is reported that he once got as\nfar away from home as the C.P.R.\ndepot. ,\nJohn Ayton Gibson, the genial\npostmaster of Nelson paid a visit\nto Trail this month, his first in 22\nyears. John seldom ventures far\nfrom Nelson for fear of being lost.\nBesides he has not much time since\nhe learned to wheel a baby carriage.\nThere are a lot of people in town\nwho are standing'still, and waiting\nfor somebody to come along and\nhand them something. Yon cannot build up Nelson by emulating\nMicawber, or by knocking those\nwho are trying to do something for\nthe benefit -Of- the city. Nelson\nneeds more men of vim and enthusiasm. Its business men have fallen\ninto the rut of mediocrity, and the\nboosting, generous spirit of the\nearly days has forsaken them.\nPatriotic Fund\nThe local Treasurer of the Canadian Patriotic Fund wiehes to acknowledge receipt of the following\nsubscriptions from August 28th to\nOctober 7th, 1918:\nA J Morrison.....   700\nH B I>rsen...  7 op\nJ H Treglown  3 i5\nG. Grosvenor ................\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...._  3 65\nP. Mytton  365\nJ Keady  3 65\nA Legault  4 35\nH. BolingDroke .'.  3 io\nB A Yandall  4 00\nC Jory  285\nJ.A Frank  265\nA. L Price  375\nA L McPherson..,.;...........  3 15\nWFCarmichael  380\nM McLeod  380\nJ McArdle .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  3 60\nW G. Younkin  380\nR McLeod.............  i 05\nW. R. Dewdney  5.00\nP. H, McCurrach........  3.70\nBoundary Police  iq 00\nGreig & Morrison ;  io 00\nHon. J. D. MacLean  2000\nG B Taylor  3 00\nP W George  500\nP Mytton  365\nJ Keady  3 65\nA. Legault  4 35\nH Bolingbroke  335\nB A Yandall........  400\nW E Younkin  400\nW T Carmichael  4 00\nM.McLeod  375\nA L McPherson\nT Kinsman -,'\t\nJ. V. Mills..\t\nJ A Frank\t\nF D Wilkins ;.:\t\nClyde Jory\t\nM J.Dunn .......^..i...\t\nGeo Winters.........\t\nJE Tollard\t\nJ D YeaUnan.......\t\nA L Price........ ; v.............\nRbry McLeod.........\t\nHER Bedford\t\nCanada Copper Co-..\t\nJ Moraii\t\nJ C Boltz ...... ,_............._............\nH E Larsen...?.. ........;....\nA J Morrison........\t\nW. R. Dewdney ..-.'\t\nP..II. McCurrach\t\nBoundary Police\t\nJ-S Storer\t\nHon. J. D. MacLean -....;\nJ L and,A Portinann\t\nB W Bubar.........\t\nCharles King\t\nD Mcintosh\t\nP W George\t\nG.-Wi A. Smith...........\t\nP. H. McCURRACH.\nHon. Treasurer.\nCanadian Patriotic Fund.\n3 60\n2 So\nS 00\n285\n380\n280\n3 70\n2 40\n280\n265\n255\n.  I 65\n95\nloo 00\n2 00\n4 00\n700\n7 00\n5 00\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3 7o\n1300\n500\n20 00\nIO.OO\n500\n3 00\n5 00\n5 00\n2.00\nA potato buyer was effering\n$19 to $20 a ton for spuds this\nweek around Midway. There is\na; heavy crop this year, but growers will likely want more than\n$20 a ton,\nThere are three cases of Spanish Influenza at Sidley. Chesaw\nand Molson are closed tight, and\ntowns io the Boundary should\nbegin to take : precautions,to prevent the; flu vfrotn becoming too\nsociable. Isolate yourself as\nmuch as -possible;, keep : away\nfrom crowds, and; always \"sneeze\nor cough;in;your handkerchief;;;>\nMATTHEWS   BROS:\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     GRAND  FORKS :xXix'\nAgeritsV fori.Chevrolet^ Dodge,; Hudson;\nChalmers. .Cadillac cars, and?;Republic\ntruck .motors.:     .\"''. Garage in connection.\nWestern Float I\nWooden ships may soon be built\nat Rupe.\nSend your job printing to\nThe Ledge.\nGood tin ore fies been found\nnear Spokane,\nDig blited potatoes when the\nweather is fine.\nThe club will be re-opened in\nVernon in December,\nSo far this year B.C. boats have\ncaptured 1000 whales.\nKeep away from crowds and\navoid the Spanish floo.\nHelp yourself and your country\nby buying a war bond.\nThere are 1347 patients in the\nmental hospitals of B. C.\nAfe Trail, Albert Lea was fined\n#50 for jumping a board bill.\nThe government is closing the\ninternment camp at Morrissey.\nNext year Canada must double\nits production of food supplies.\nOtto Neison was killed near\nAtlin by a clay slide in his mine.\nAt Keremeos this summer Harry\nTidy raised 2000 tons of tomafcoes.\nThe Premier Hotel at New\nWestminster has been re-opened.\nNick Shingles was fined $50 at\nChilliwack for stealing a bicycle.\nNew Denver, formerly Eldorado\nCity will be 27 years old in December,\nThis month five divorce cases\nwill be tried before fehe court in\nRupe.\nThere were 3 deaths and 10\nbirths in North Vancouver last\nmonth,\nAt Waldo, Big Mouth Paul was\nfined $40 for changing the brand\non a cow.\nJohn Cross died in Chilliwack\nlasE month. He had lived there\n38 years.\nFrom Matsqui 1000 gallons of\nmilk are shipped daily to the\nUnited States.\nA firm at Prince George was\nfined $250 for employing an unregistered man.\nA farmer afe Alvinston, Ontorio,\nhas just sold 40 hogs, six months\nold, for $1,800.\nThere is a frost proof warehouse\nat Vernon thafe will hold 25fr carloads of apples.\nThe Whalen paper mills are now\nin operation at Port Allen on\nQuatsino Sound.\nFred Day and Harry Thorson,\nwere drowned in the Yukon near\nDawson this month.\nThere was one hotel in Three\nForks 25 years ago. At present\nthere is none in that ghost city,\nClinton is sometimes called the\nSalts Lake City, owing to the\nEpsom salt works being near that,\ntown.\nJames Duncan died at Sarnia,\nOntario, aged 85 years. For more\nthan 40 years he taught school at\nWindsor. -\nThere is a threshing machine\noperating at Princeton that Isaac\nKipp brought to Chilliwack, 52\nyears ago.\nConductor A. Oakes fell between\ntwo freight cars near Endako, and\nhad his left leg cut off. He died\nin the Hazelton hospital.\nIt is 15 years since the boom\nbroke oufe in Poplar Creek, aad\nseven hotels were built before its\nfame died away to a knifeblade\nwhisper.\nGeorge Anderson of Swan Lake\nrecently received a little over\n$6,000 for 152 hogs. The price\nwas 18^ cents a pound live weight\nat Vernon.\nThere is a movement on foot in\nCanada to compel all merchants to\nbecome citizens. If a country is\ngood enough to live in, it is good\nenough to vote in.\nAfe Vernon a letter has been received from India, asking about\n6000 acres of land. Some 70 soldiers now in India wish to eettle in\nthe Okanagan when the war is\nover.\nLast month a carload of hydrated\nvegetables was shipped from Chilliwack for the use of the soldiers\ngoing to Siberia. It is the first\nshipment of the kind ever made\nfrom Canada.\n;. Parkhill, Ontario, is becoming\nthe center of the;flax industry, and\nlinen mills may soon . be erected in\nthat town. How about raising\nflaxs; inV\/B. x C.?: \\ This province\nshould have; a few linen mills.\n^The TraiI'News'is;23 lyears old,\nand has always been printed in the\nsame building.; ..Afe one time it was\nthe worst looking fag in America,\nbat sinceVthat:bustling; veteran,\nBeach ;:WiIlcox,:rtook;the lookout\nchair ithss; become a typographical\nideal, and a credit to;the community inv which ife earns its bacon,\nbeans and ..macaroni.iyXXx:\nB. C. Mining News\nSome opals have been found nofe\nfar from Greenwood.\nThe Burton copper mine at Elko\nhas resumed operations.\nThe Kaslo' manganese mine is\nshipping its ore to Carnegie, Pa.\nThe smelter investigation committee will meet in Nelson, Octooer\n31.\nOperations are being resumed at\nthe Favorite group near Night-\nhawk, Wash.\nNew York men are prospecting\nfor gold and platinum along the\nSimilkameen river, near Princeton.\nThe Echo at Silverton bas leased\nthe Standard mill. The Echo and\nStandard trams bave been connected.\nThe Star says that it is reported,\nthat a Chink recently made $60, in\nless than a day placering for gold\nnear Princeton.\nAt the Whitewater mine in the\nSlocan five sets of leasers are working. Some ore recently shipped\nby them averaged about 40 per\ncent. lead, and 125 ounces in\nsilver.\nLarge quantities of limonite iron\nore will ba shipped from Mons, on\nthe P. G. & E., to the smelter at\nIrondale, Wash. There is enough\niron ore in B. C. to keep many\nplants in operation, when it is\ndeveloped>\nIn the Slocan, the new 150 ton\nmill at\" Alamo, one mile from\nThree Forks will be in operation\nby December. It is being built by\nClarence Cunningham, the latest\nmining king of the Slocan. This\nmill will treat the ores of the\nQueen Bess, Idaho, Alamo., Wonderful and Sovereign. The equipment includes two 8-foot Hardinge\nmills, Wilfley tables and flotation\nplant.\nIn the Slocan the Whitewater\ntailings, ponds and dumps are\nunder lease to M. S, Davys. It is\nestimated that they contain aboufe\n100,000 tons of workable material,\naveraging 10 ounces in silver, and\nconsiderable also in lead and zinc.\nThe 0. P. will haul the material feo\nthe Kaslo concentrator for $1.25 a\nton. A royalty of 15 per cent,\nwill be paid upon lead recoveries,\nand 10 per cent on zinc. Mr.\nStreet of Seattle has an interest\nwith Mr. Davys in the enterprise.\nIfe is expected that milling will begin this month.\nCure for Influenza\nSir,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfollowing is a remedy for\ninfluenza which should prove x\ufffd\ufffdf\ninterest just at this time:\nIngredients\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPure phenol, Calvert's No. 1 (prepared for internal\nuse,) 24 drops in an 8 oz. bottle\nof water, well mixed.\nDose\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTwo tablespoonfuls in a\nwine glass of water three times in\n24 hours. Children, half the dose.\nOne dose will be enough to prevent; three doses to cure. The\ndose to prevent should not be\ntaken till the symptoms of influenza, (cold, chill, pains, etc ) show\nthemselves; then one dose will prevent it in less than half an hour.\nThis receipt came originally from\na physician in the West Indies,\nwho used it as a.remedy in malarial and other fevers. It came into\nmy possession from the Rev. A.\nQ-. Edwards, vicar of St. Stephen's\nNurbury, W. Croydon, England.\nTo my knowledge it .has been used\nin scores of cases of influenza,\nwithout a single failure.\nMRS. S. H. BRAKE.\n485 Boleskine Road,   Victoria,\nB. G, Oct. 5, 1918.\nSix Blokes\nThe Fernie Free Prees wants to\nknow: \"Wby some of those outsiders are continually harping\nabout the Austrians stirring up\nstrike trouble at Fernie. The\nalien enemies who are employed\nhere are almost as tame as any old\ncow. The real trouble-makars are\nabout six old country Englishmen,\nwho, if they created the same\namount of trouble in the TJ. S.,\nwould be serving about 20 years in\nthe pen.'7 .:yX 'V\nR. L. DOUGLAS\nROOM l&.KxW. di BLOCK\nNELSON .B.C.\nOptonaetrist aad Graduate Optician, certified by Provincial Board of Examiners.\nFor Sale, Cash $6500\nRanch 320 acres, 55 acres under\ncultivation, 30 being fruit trees,\n8 head of horses. 16 head of cattle, cows,  calves and yearlings.\n2 pigs, SO chickens. All kinds of\nmachinery,  tools,   and   harness.\n3 tons of seed wheat, 5 tons of\nspuds. Enough feed to winter\nstock. Tbis property is known\nas the Casselman Ranch I mile\nfrom Boundary Falls, B. C. Apply to A. Boltz, Boundary Falls.\n-A-l imE    LEDGE.     GREENWOOD,    B.   CL\n .-  ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE\nK.   A.\n: ..ei:   \\vi;h   t!.e  Unncrsity   of   Toronto\nKiopiri:    Hi     !'!;>-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!.,>.    li.c    !-l    ol    I )\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. to'm -.\n\\ .    Ave. t'oru!::* ,\nCalenuar   on   Application.\nA.   GRANGE,  V.S..   M.S..   PRINCIPAL.\n350 Airplanes Every Month;\ni Board  Has Placed Contract for Lat- i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd est Type of Engines i\n\\     Tin.-  number of      Canadians      who j\n'have joined the Royal Air Force,^ and |\n! its  predecessors,   the    Royal     Naval j\n| Air  Service  and   the    Royal     Flying;\nj Corps, since the outbreak of the wain's   not  available   for   publication   ow-\nj ing   to   military   reasons.     The_ same\nI secrecy,  however, is  not    applied   to\njthe other activities in Canada in con-\njnection   with   the     development    and\nj maintenance  of  the  allies'    air     ser-\n'. vice.\nj In January of last ycar, the im-\nipi-rial munitions board, through Canadian Airplanes, Ltd., commenced the\n'construction of airplanes for training\n; purposes   in   Canada   :X.   the   national\nMagnificent Cup Offered\nFor the Best Wheat\ni\nIs\nThe Jap as a Golfer\nPupil\n'; Farmers Will Be Eager for the Dis-\nj tinci        of Win  ' *.g This\ni Cup\nj    The    department      of    colonization\ni and development    of    the    Canadian\nan  Exceptionally    Apt    Pupil    in : Facitic Railway announces that: it will\n,,,    . o ,,. .award   a   silver   cup   valued   at      five\nWestern Sport 'hundred   dollars   for   the   best  bushel\n'lhe war has brought a considerable ; 0f ]i:lrf[ spring wheat exhibited at the\nnumber of Japanese to London, and . Imernationnl Soil-Products Kxposi-\nthev have discovered another \"good J t;0ll at Kansas Citv, Mo, October 16-\nthing\" of the West\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthc game of. 26, 1918. All fanners in Western\ngolf. Harry Vardon, the world s i Canada who have good hard spring\nchampion, who has been teaching sev- i wheat should be interested in this\neral of the Japanese, says tliat thcy | announcement and it is hoped that\narc exceptionally apt pupils, and im-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd among them will be found thc stic-\nproving-rapidly. When they havc , ccsstiil competitor.\n; lactorv, where the output 'of flying j been instructed how to swing the j Wheat has become a vital factor in\n! machines lias now grown to a sub- club they do not proceed, like the | tlie conduct of the war and the rail-\n: stantial total. The present capacity\njof   the   plant   is   300     machines      per\nl^<^S*i^iiaa^lWNN^\ufffd\ufffdl\nmmwMmmmmmmm\nWood, Weiller & McCarthy were est ablished   1904,   and   have   direct   rep.\nscntatives on the Chicago and St. Paul  Markets,  and  offices  at  Edmonton,  Alta.,  Stock Yards.\nTribute  to Railway Troops\nCanadian  Railway  Troops Can Fight\nas Well as Build Railways\nSingular testimony how Canadian railway troops can light as well\nfi build railways, is shown in the\nstory regarding the conferment of a\nbar of the Distinguished Service Urd-\njr on Lt.-Col. Frederick Firldhouse\nClarke of Toronto.\n\"Jn an attack lasting four days he\norganized sixteen Lewis gun teams\nirom his battalion, making all arrangements for thc ammunition to be\nbrought on our lorries,\" says the Ga-\nzctttc. This unit was entirely self-\ncontained. \"The promptness and\nalacrity with which they responded\nfor volunteers, thc splendid manner\nin which the defence was organized,\nand the coolness and enthusiasm displayed by all rank were largely due\nto thc courage, inspiring example and\nfine, leadership of their commanding\nofficer.'1\nHealth cannot be looked for iu the\nchild that is subject to worms, because worms destroy health by creating internal disturbances that retard\ndevelopment and catisc serious weakness. Miller's Worm Powders expel worms and arc so beneficial in\ntheir action that the systems of the\nlittle sufferers arc restored to health-\nfulness, all thc discomforts and dangers of worm infection are removed,\nand  satisfactory growth is assured.\nsur-\nWestern Flax Overlooked\nj month, which, with the spares turn-\nled  out is  equivalent  to 350  machines ( all    that    they    hav\nmonthly.\ni     The     total     number   of     machines\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmanufactured to the end of last May,\ntogether witli  the   spares,    was   two\nthousand.\nj The number of employees engag-\n' ed at this factory is 2,150, and re-\nicenlly the plant has been engaged in\n: conM hum ing a number of bombing\ni planet for the United States navy.\nI showing how closely the two allied\nj countries of North America are co-\n; operating in their effort lo beat the\n;Hun.\nj The imperial munitions hoard has\n! placed .i contract for tlie coustruc-\n1 tion   of  au   important   number  of   thc\naverage Englishman, to make an im- | way company hopes in this way to\nmediate swipe at the ball. They j encourage production of the best var-\nwalk to one side, think over carefully j iclics. At the same time it is hoped\nbeen told, and! this competition will focus attention\npractise the swing two or three j upon the immense food-producing\ntimes, to make sure that they have [ possibilities of Western Canada. Can-\nabsorbed the right idea before at- adian farmers have been winners of\ntempting to hit the ball. Willi their J many competitions of the Jnterna-\nwonderful agility and keen eyes, the , lional Soil-Products Exposition and\nJapanese will be great golfers some | the winning of this cup by one of\nday. | lhcir  number  would  be  an appropri\nate climax to a series of triumphs.\nIt is, expected that boards of trade,\nagricultural societies, farmers' organizations and other public bodies\nthroughout Western Canada will in-\ni teres! themselves in seeing that thc\nvery best bushel of wheal in each of\nBABY'S GREAT DANGER\nDURING HOT WEATHER!\n.More little ones die during thc hot i\nweather than at any other time of!\nthe year.    Diarrhoea, dysentry, eliol-\nlatest   improved   ivpcs  of high-power  era  infantum   and  stomach     troubles\n  ! airplane engines lo be used in equip- 'colllc  without  warning,  and  when   a\nLocating   Linen   Factory   in   Ontario . ping  lighting    planes   fir  service\nInstead   of  in  the  West : me\nn -      , i \ufffd\ufffd        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        I pri:\n\/lax  expert  or   tlie     Dominion \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nsays\n<;   mix   expert  or\nExperimental   Farm  at   Ottawa\nit i.s the intention  of  th\nlo bring some fifty flax spinners and\nfrom   Ireland  this   fall.\nfighting    planes   < ir  service    at\nfront.     This  is  a  somewhat  sur-\nng development for a country so\nyoung  as     Canada    in   thc    airplane\ns   this    particular\nUH\"\ufffd\ufffd\"     s'l^i making  industrv,     a\nc gpvernmen    dcsi    \" of        ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<. re.\ntheir  lamihes\nThey intend to usc these to start up j\nthe   manufacture  of  flax  products   in\nOntario.    A  linen   factory  lias    been\nestablished at  Guelph.        The    Irish\nspinners   are  likely   to     be       located |\nthere.     Many women     and     children !\narc pulling Max in Ontario fields now\nfor the  purpose.    Ontario  has  18,000\nacres  of flax under    cultivation    and\nthirty-eight mills havc been established.    Thcy talk of 70,000 acres of Ontario being put to flax next year\nI est\nmedicine is not at hand to give\npromptly the short delay too frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets should always L*o kept in homes\nSine represents thc high-! where there arc young children. An\nclass   of  workmanship    attained   occasional dose  of the  Tablets     will\ntheir respective districts is entered\nin this competition. Individual farmers will also, no doubt, bc eager for\nthe distinction of winning this cup.\nParticulars as to thc exhibit may be\nhad hy addressing Robert J. C. Stead,\nPublicity Agent, Department of Colonization and Development, C.P.R.;\nCalgary.\nof\nhis  nature  yet\nm    any    machine\nproduced.\nNo engines are manufactured at\nthe national plant, but arc supplied\nfrom various outside sources and\nassembled and mounted there. The\nprincipal materials entering into the\nconstruction of the machines\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdapart\nfrom the engines\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdarc spruce, fir\nand high-grade linen, all of which\narc used in fabricating the wings. A\nlarge number of women are employed at thc plant in this capacity.  Thc\n.... ,,1 11 c r~\\     .        ' ...v.     |\/ii.iil    ii.     iiiia    \\_njvn^ii\\.      i ui.\nWhy  all  lhc   talk  is    of     Ontario , bodics of t])c ]llacIlincs aro composed\nseems a mystery. Between 1911 am;\n1915 the average flax production acreage of the three prairie provinces\nwas 1.215,000 acres, producing about\n12,903,000 bushels a ycar. That was\nproduced for seed and the straw\npractically went to waste, as usual. Is\nOntario to develop a paltry 70,000\nacres to serve the government purposes and the western fields to be\nneglected? It assuredly looks as if it\nprevent stomach and bowel troubles,\nor if these troubles come suddenly\nthe prompt use of the Tablets will\ncure the baby. The Tablets are sold\nby medicine dealers or by mail at 25\ncents a box from The Dr. Williams'\nMedicine Co., Brockviile, Ont.\nor the wooden    frame covered\ncanvas.      Thc seating space is\nwith\nprotected by an aluminum frame, and\nthe propellers arc made of mahogany.\nIn connection with the training of\nCanadians as airmen, the imperial\nmunitions board lias secured\ngrounds, creeled buildings and furnished equipment necessary for thc\ncarrying on of the work of thc Royal\nwould bc a better paying investment   Air \"Force  at its  various  flying cen\nto locate thc manufacturers    in     the\nWest.\nThere is a growing need of increased production of flax to meet\nwar needs, as linen is required for\nairplane wings, machine gun -webbing, ambulance covers and linen\nshoe thread.    The Dominion flax ex-\nLiterary  Veterans\nQuite   recently   the  world   was\nprised  to  hear of  the  death  of\nhusband    of    Charlotte  Bronte,   ...... _...,,, ...      ...   . ....\nShortly afterwards  of the: widow r^\nrwVnthoVy:;Trollppe.: :;7These    survivals  Ln'J'ciW .'Myself: in   thcr:big  fields -of\nIres, including Camp Borden, Armour\nHeights; Lcaside, Camp-Mohawk and\nBeamsville.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.\nWhat We Have Gained\nthe! pert has ycars of experience in grow-\nand J jng flax and some, in .its manufacture, ..^0, Hundred^and   Fifty   Thousand\n.sceni  remarkable, : thcy; are  nothing\n; out ;'of rthc ordinary when, cijie; coincs\nto ;investigate ;\/ such .\/inatters.\/;'\"\"-.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The\n; widOwhpQd pf The\" Countess pf  Des-;\njnondj; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\\viip.',-'di'e4.:'l9te1y;\\;e'^tepd.ed'-ito-';\n: 70 years;\/\/; Agnes ;^\n; .i^v.I|4^\ufffd\ufffd>\"->-'ia;tL'ri:he:'.^a.ge:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ':*>C'-^:119^' ^i;s:;.;..;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^aixi\n:;:iorVh:i\\;^rr-'-siirvjy-e$'^iferr: \/ husband ; 9-i\n'i.yXa.tsXiX .'A much; ri^rer'rrec^nt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a;nd:\n,; better\/raiuhenticated, r^\n: lengthy \\vidpwhpod :Pf; Jean CpiintCss\nXioi ; Roxb.iirghe, iiiwhb'\/; died; .Vmi-.T\/aS,\nthe \"third,:f!arl,;:'having;;!p;st; his wile\n7 \ufffd\ufffdni' the    Gloucester   ' frigate, \/wixcked\nxU:i6miXxyXX;;;;y^\n::rrr;;;';r;}:..:PpStC^\n:i .\/Postcards; '!w,tfe;jfiTStrr.u:Se(Vrai'i:.'f:A:it'S^'\nflax: in\/the West? Is our strtiw not\n.suitable\/?:iiCould we. not make it;-so;?\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRegina Leader.    :\ni'y Corns, cripple7 the  feet \/iiid   i,make\nwalkirig ;arlprture,:;:yef; stfre ^relief Vin\n'tiie:ifSlia'i>:e:\/?pf'\",.:,H611p\\V\ni g \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'aV'i tl i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiit ';'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rea c li' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''of. .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n;; Germans; Rendered Harmless    : :\nrrAfterthc-Jast-r splendid';  advance\npf; tlie;; allied   TorqcsC- Jifr ;:fi;pnt : of\nAmiens, yve :heardr'ra; man:: aslc rvvhat\n\\sJas .the:: gain of \"taking: these;  rshpi;-\ntbrn.r hehircts;:tp. liini ;thcy were, biit\nheaps: 6f: ruins ;sur.roii'nde'd.i:bj\"^aryd.cii\n.ya's'ta'ledr'xoim^\ni:h6r'c7.are;''nqt,\"^\nin ;otir liiidst-^-niOst of the ybuiig pp-\ntimists; are fighting:;   .brave;   : faith ful\nsou\\ii.;xHat:;\\]ycy::Aryl;Xi-'i:-i}'ix;XXyx'.\"\nX'xIf;7wc;rwere wasting: precious lives\nat' the' age: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;::7i-years;; her :^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \"\" ' ''!\"'\" *   \"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- '  \" -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- xyy..,::.;x::x,^i'.-:.-,:' .x x.:x.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.x... ., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. r ;   > r 'rsourees: tor iliCr:    Mfrch:  ironor   :pf::\n:;:::::;-7^\n: ;.iC6nvictiony:i.y;y.::y:y y::X 0fr ^Vrcc\";ed  ;:viUagcs,V;tlicii,;:; indeed,.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;::;7ln.,,Th.e;::eyfcs'\"Ofrtfie::^\nthose btvthe;7:eivemv,.;Ai;;;G\nhas UktonE,lire: Ihcahiationi 6T::'\"t\nii:iiiiiOi?t:iil: ;spirit:pf-FfauceV:'7 :The:^>\nFrance andXM< Clemenceau\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr.tTia^'TK'e.y\/.b'e.ca^   Jr..,.,w..,. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-...., ~....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.....r-~..-.,-...   ....   - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ...\nl-tr#.s?pWS'ta^\nrCQStrlci^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:;%Jve;Viirst_?::^ere^\n.'iTiipy^Nyerir.;:^\n''.'ycaf ;jat'e^\n:;is:vsaid:;'tP7;;:havc bccriiseniriirrFugalnd:\nXnXXtyXXXxXXxiXlXxXXxXXXiXiXXiiXXxilXXiXi\nXX\nrirS-o His: Tdpritific^\n;i]XXli]yXl7X7.yxiXXiXi:Xi'iX:iiXX.i\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiXXxixiXXXXXxXxiiXixXXXxix^\niXiXiXiiX.Xov:XiXyiXXysft\\XX:X-XXXiixiX:\nyXXXK)iX$Xi.XXX'^00XXXXsXM^XxXii\n.'7;\".::'T':r::kn6\\v{:^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr.;-i '^  _'\"h 'xy -^x; ylyX'_^^_^ ,^_^L -~\"^\nX: xXi X iim 6 NE'YrrORDERS7-:: XX\n: :A: rDbminibn;  Express: rMriney .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''fivc'.r'aolI'ars^rcgstsr.thr.ct'iCents,''::;;.,5\nOrdej:  : for\nGd'^jii'.'aiv.i'pff^\niiigjif::,: au'drrhexfa'day\nfatr:\ufffd\ufffdtvbl.ii:^\n'iiip.$t.;5:ac:tiyc^^^\nJirou ght; :ba c ky: it; is7;? said,;; aii-; \"excel I en t\"\ni'in'p.rp.ssi'^\n.;i i ii-s t:: '-.'ii ii Ay e-!-:' -iii'sCtl c; '.'a'jirv'';! <i xo.c.li'^:ri-.t:;.\\;i'i-ii p res'-;''\n:sio;u:7:pn;;th'e;:,Ti;P\n$.rtf:.\ufffd\ufffdfltt;:th#Hajft^\n'Vuteraivr-pT^\na n l; pic; \"trqg tis'rral J i [; iiHi\ufffd\ufffdxhaXX>XXcypiXsX..\nieivs'e^rp^ihc.\/vjdangC'rr-rwificli^\nl-ran.c.t'. y '?!$. \\XXy^X>XxX'py^iXi':iX&^(yXX;.\nfli;it.7r.;l:iii rjias; ;::hniunic:rable:::,dccisib;ns;:\n;tbt::gl\\\"e.|w:hi:dfrr.;may.::;;'b(r;r;7bf:'\n:seqiiei|ce.;.7fTJie:r;:\\vh:blc:rb^\nerilinpnt^fftrjpn'iliis ;. sir pti 1 tl e r^^. wi tl i ; :;,l h Q\nG e rinmii::; imtr ;^\nJie\/rJnisjyn^^\n;Ca!Vnp!t:.ipardb;rr;the;;';:b.y:gp^\nthe. ;vfib'rccvrpl:d.\ufffd\ufffd;&ti^er^::;v\nclan's \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Avlipo'fe\nlul?.fcserycs;:;i^\nflitiiicrraiidrStticIrr giv.es; wa>^rn: r'rbr-iCr\ncptiiplish This;:bur incn- scare!ir3ih.csc\nyiiiiyed;L:'li^\nwhercr74h;e?>:rericf uy dilplvS^r :Jiicttlcfi r:. ifi:\ntrenchv::;;ve;e;li:^^\nabundatVtly;:;if|rmslie;d^\n:guii;s,;r.i^bispnr'gaSrHahdrfl<<iiiC7y\n:and'rhi.re::'ptir:lads;;incc;t\";1ii'>V lijiiicj;:tp;\ni!XiiX^Xi-XXxiXXiXXXi0xiXXXXXXXX'iXXXX\n.l\\r';Dtiyiir'g:':tlA:C.ri..'ips;t:r:ireC\nfhc(r\\v'ti&terii:::';::Jrpni7i;th\n'^apridredVat-r-iea^fviif\n i;t\\:b :; kilie^l  vcjtrtM\nXjjX;G^M:xWAi^\n:;^^r:cartr:;.;make:it;;'lnr;ypur:;cp^\nbur fast: sellirtg;Combination Cboker;\n; One: salesman djanks; $388.55: the:; firsts\n':jiipntlv6:;;Anpthc7r.::ra'fecntr;:selb\n?rt:\\vb:;:hbtvrs;.:;;:r^:th'ersv;<;li^ningVi.U;:::$l(i \ufffd\ufffdv,,.,.. + .\n- .'^fi:rl-^'i; :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; ^p^'::caj^it^:l';::iiiipq^s\ufffd\ufffdat:^i:;. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.: ^0.o^^i:-s-trnijt:;r: s^'grt-^-a-' '*;':i>;eac e;^b^V :ii irii \ufffd\ufffdii^ t ^fx^H i.i ^'^\nr\ufffd\ufffdli'iRpcd;:.i.p:.;i;e'^aWe^ dtecildcrs^of iXol-\nTifb.rryr.gpirijtj-..fast;. 'W.r!.te,-.;.fti.U,,C--fc;. t^s.S^ j $lj.E-vj:ki.siij-' ..tf-ftd\/.-riQ.i rtharchy-^ail' ilieSe,\nlemy :.;.yp,u;r >fni\\<\\x.,..; Cprti^Mtionf Pro-; ably-; siippof ted hvGenimfi: ageiifs:, are\ntheyrr'rjnits't.\nin any ''in b re,;: 'Jrwhil efr'jitdgiiig.rby rtlve;\n'cxp'erieiice::7-p.f'';:r;past{:;:r7!^ncp.u\n.wou:i'Ul'ildir;'':uiio.tiii;t;rlp:':^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(ie'ach; XXiXXX VwX^xXi^X^iX^Xx^Xi1'\n'gz\\f$.'iX($Xrttf^\n:7reitdcre(l.,h;vniiless:;7hy^\n;s;p:.;:'sn.pces;s:ftiUy:r7;'.;;:rc'p!i'clu^te:d:^\nwhiit; lias.rrhecn:: nclilevbd:rliy;:';tlie-rttik^\nRigid  Economy  Necessary\nOnly by Elimination of Waste    Can\nTransportation  of   Necessities\nBe Effected\nThe following cable has been\ntransmitted to Canada from the food\ncontrollers'  conference in  London:\n''Resolved that while the increased\nproduction of the United Slates and\nCanada rendered it possible to relax some of the restrictions which\nhave borne with peculiar hardships\nupon all our people, yet it is absolutely necessary that rigid economy\nand elimination of waste in the consumption and handling of all food\nstuffs, as well as increased production, should be maintained throughout thc European allied countries\n-and in North America; that it is only\nby such economy and elimination of\nwaste that the transportation of thc\nnecessary men and supplies from\nNorth America to the European front\ncan be:accomplished, and stocks of\nfoodstuffs can; be built tip In North\nAmerica as\" an -insurance against .the\never: present .danger of harvest; fail-\niirc; and7: the possible:'.; necessity.'.r. if or\nlarge ; emergencyi; drafts7;to Europe;,\n;and<:turlher, that';:\\vc?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcannot;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdadtfiinisr.\nter: the fppd iprpblem pii tlie 'basis of\none iyear's \\\\var;: and tliati'iwe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.. inust\nprepare for its: lp\ufffd\ufffdg;;:continuance .IF\nwc are: tp assure absolute victory.\".\nTlie conference: was heldiipn: July\n22iid arid tire food \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd controllers of\nGreat Britain, UnUed iiStates, i Fra.nce\nand;;TtaJy wererrprcsent. : ;:Mbst \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rep-,\ncpuragingi was the ireporTias. to' ;the\nsiiccessi that: lias been acliicved by the\nefforts;: of i Canada rand irthei,.United;\n'Statiis'tdi-tide^\nical:;periiodi:which isCj: in ratirritltCi bc->\nginning ofi ;thc;rpresientri:i'&?Xi':x}>ij'';'\nrHbbver's-rspcechrlias licartened;;; iia^\n;!ie;d::;Europe;;ahd;sho\\yhii;Ge:rmaiifc\nlibpelessr prospect site lias\" of ^starv^\niiiigi; Great: Britain: and.her; allies; ,sby\nlicrrsubniariiie;7 if rightfulness.;:: Q-vving\nito the; success:of tlie ihoff preidtictioh\nfcia:i|i lp:i i-g'i'i. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd o i.\"i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. tl i i ii-'x'^c o:iit i ii;<; iii t i ,-r\"? '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. i:3*--'\ufffd\ufffdil \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n'cc\ufffd\ufffdrip:hi.}v'l6f::'tH:^\ntheiiiuise '0f ibacon iincl all porkr;:?pro-\ndiictSriirCaiiadar ihayi:noXxrelax,:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd't'Ji'c jri-.ti.ii.i'ic.'.. -:'.'l jei.ti ^fi,i^:: t-h c':c'; r'e giving i'.p ii s': .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^.\/\"\".\n: f: e'.p t|:i i:g;;:;:; -ptilsi i'fe\/.-.'c a ti ii'g1'. .:pA.il P c s'_.-. t*^-;; .Syli-I.c li\npbrkAvas; cpnscryed:;;fpir7:ic>ipbrt;;i;::^lie;\niCana:da:ii:fbb;d;;boar(lr;;Jiaviei:iian:npiii^\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdth^t.r'ais;i:'.a:.i:i:yiiitil't;;;.pf7;:t;h;e;7f\\yp;^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.prQditp.Hpii^\nHadn't Exceeded  Speed Limit\nAt   the  evening  meal   Willie      was\ndisposing of his soup with speed and\nnoise.\n\"Willie!\" said his mother in a reprimanding tone.\nWillie knew immediately what his\nmother meant and, assuming an injured air, replied: \"Aw, I wasn't going half as fast as I could.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLadies'\nHome  Tournal.\nr4&* '\n*%   \\-l\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<*&8$X\nUSB\nA Picture\nwith Each Purchase\nEach time you buy a package\nof Ingram's Toilet aids or Perfume your druggist will give you,\nwithout charge, a large portrait\nof a world-famed motion picture\nactress. Each time you get a\ndifferent portrait so you make a\ncollection for your home. Ask\nyour druggist.\nF. F. Ingram Co., Windsor, Ontario\nIngt&m's\nfSouvcrdint\nFace. Powdery\nThe daintiness of a complexion always\nfree from oiliness and shininess is the\ndesire of every woman. Best of all p'ow-\nSers is Ingram's Velveola Souveraine\nFace Powder. It keeps the skin smooth\nand attractive. Hides minor blemishes,\nthe little wrinkles, and blends so mar-\nvelously with the complexion that it is\nscarcely visible. It adheres even tho\nthe skin be warm and moist, and it has\na refined and gentle fragrance, 50c.\nFor the sake of youthful charm, use Ingram's Milkweed Cream. Its daily use\nenables you to retain the charm and\ncolor of girlhood. It is curative and\nhealthful for the skin tissues. Two sizes,\n50c and $1.00. Your druggist has a complete line of Ingram's toilet products\nincluding Zodenta for the teeth, 25c.\n(%)\nBear Island,  Aug. 26,  1903.\nMinard's   Liniment  Co.,  Limited.\nDear Sirs,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYour traveler is here\ntoday and we are getting a large\nquantity of your MINARD'S LINIMENT. We find it the best Liniment on the market, making no exception. Wc havc been in business\n13 years and have handled all kinds,\nbut have dropped them- all but yours;\nthat sells itself; the others have to\nbe pushed to get rid of.\nAV. A.  HA GERMAN.\nVision\nA Battlefield Meeting\nNew  York Woman Taking  Care   of\nWounded Son\nA New York woman attached to\nthe American Red Cross happened to\nbe in Paris and volunteered to help\nin taking care of the wounded coming\nin from thc battlefield. Shc was\nworking busily when startled by a\nloud cry  of \"Mother!\"\nTurning, she saw her son, a young\nlieutenant in thc United States army.\nHe had been wounded in the leg by\nshrapnel. The iirst news she had\nhad that her son was engaged in thc\nbattle was when she heard his cry.\nShe obtained permission to accompany him to a hospital. After seeing\nthat he was attended lo she wewi\nback to the station to cheer, as she'\nsaid, the boys who had no hope of\nfinding a mother to welcome  them.\nThe mother is a prominent social\nworker in Ncw York and has been\ndoing Red Cross relief work among\nthe refugees in France. Her w-ork\nusually keeps her in the south of\nFrance.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\".'>'.,.. x. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <xxx:--x.y..;x.:x..:. .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.;..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd w..:; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :.:: in cj c> f ; tli b rife vr ii 1 ti 't^il ;1 iii i;;i 1 e i. ri\n:lhe.v.Ta!;tufcs'^ \"'   \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    --\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" -\nithi;fci;w.fn^\nsell:r:;:fei-ancci;'Tpr:^\n:be::ii;esilbi-e(l,rtp'i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrXVy.ti'mp.'Pg Free.\nducts Co., 100 Thoirias Bldg... Foster;\n'''Q&ii '\"'\ni :i^OU;'.:;:'if5^l ^^^':!\ufffd\ufffdl^^^^[.\nbring back health, appetite\nand strerigth-^talce\nKtgor for Iris \"Overthrown  ;J:li; kiioivs\nit '.wc'llj. 'bitvt sirrong \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd in:; ithc  faith;     of\nFraTi:c:e; jvjifo'h lie prc^clieis1 with btirii\ning: cpiVVjfctioh ip     ili;cr :   ;siohs:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddai^lf^\ndeiicp tliat the patipii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.ih.bld* it in of\nilppsrriiriiijy: than he, lie ha;s biit one\n:ca'rc;r';a'ud;'-rs^es'i,rb.titr:r.biiie-:: 'iairii; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ilX\nuiarcJif-s'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'riglit'otij; with; his icyes fiix,c<J\nupon tjie goal: The' spirit :pf Firaiice\nii-iifli-ntfe's. liiiii^thc intrepid: spirit\n\\chicli has ever reiidcred hs'r invin-\nrildc\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwlicit she vvas true to iierscl,f.\niJ'lnr prime\/iniuiste* of Felice in thiis-\ns'tip-r* me-.-vfay of hXv tiial shares the.\n[dory iyy tiicJifroc;s who have died for\nIrtrr.' }!c.: too. \"hasrhiadc French -jri'-s-\njory. -grt'tft.\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Fipiii the' London\nTiitHs.  .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :;::: '\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\niXnrgptt Sftle of apT Mediciae 5ri the, World\nSold etezrwherv.   In boleSiZSc,\nar'vvar-weairv:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFfes:,ri:.'7\"i:;ii,Sii\niexpQirtsi:;:fipitfirfhic;r:ipc>hiih\n:vtairi;pas'se(i,;,r:;iiavci:ihcieiV^\ni25'POO,f(00>::\ufffd\ufffdounds,;-rpf::;|;?l7 iipcrir^ciit;;\nov'ier'iariifiveri^eari'\/\nt:;r7rTJiat;i;rthcs;c:;i;ehtPU>a:gi\"'^\npa;sfr;enoirt;s:;idQ,:nptii;niic'ai;rAlii\n.geri;:i;Si;7i-f' tifpycihra ji Xi th a tirieyeryrrii'c.ccs-'\njrsityjif^f'i^\n. ;^rr::^.:iv'j:;scit]fi':iRi:lhc^v;eve^\n\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd irinoiiientv;.;!ofgo:tte7rii ;:;;.;^igid;rre:cphpiny\n^nrld:;i--yXnX:cliinihat:i0iiri:of:*wrastr iiix all jifopd\nx \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'i'iirjstiiifts:'iriuist;.:j)c;7:;cion:iiuiir\n    ih'sCrlrar\nBusiness  Man Who   Looks   Further\nThan the Simple Commercial\nTransaction\nWhenever yoii meet ai really successful, business man, rnd have an\nopportunity, for conversation with\nliim, you can have an example of\nwhat 1 mean when 1 use the word\nyisionas the heading for this.. The.\nbusiness man who makes solid success always looks further \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd than the\nisiiii'pleir'.'iicpm-iiiierci.aV'. traiisactipn.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;':;i\"'-y.;'i:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n; Suppose ;-a man; is; ini fhcrhusiness\nof litakihg nails. ;If he buys so much\niron and pays ; sd much wages; for\nthat iroiitp be wrbught into shapes\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwitli-:-flat.-.:'heads,: and^ ish'^rp points.at\na defiiiedi i distaihee ; between each\nother,; and. .then sells ;ii them; as iiails.\nat a price wdiich allows iiini a :marr\ngiii after payirig all his costs, lie\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.ni.afces arprdfit,;:but hcTs -notia'rc-al\n.;-b.iis,|rie-ss;:'::f i;iaii;';., .;*.\n; rilt iis mcccSSary, and it iis: expected\nrilia-trariiail-makerrsllpuld; dp' more\nt.jjan-;;'';iliisV;''Hi_!-::':shb'u\npackedrihrthc;,'-,ngh;t.'.i kitid; pf ;bags:;pr\nboxps :rifpr; rtriihsipbrtatioh, r sd-.rt\nllieyvwrll arrive i;iu; respectable; cbn-\nditiPii. lie- should see;ri;those i:;:vcry::\n-hails; 'driven , into '.'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpieces of wood in\narbtiildingirandrrihe should, see.','\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-t-hpse;,\nsa:nie; iiailsTpfmiiigi\"'.'a small; but:-,yital--^\nly, imppi-tant-Spartrriri: hdldihgi that\nbhildiiigiitpgcthe;^ -riniponi :;\\vliich rcpn-;\nditionf itlici;'safcit:yii:Pf;inany.; human:: fee-\nings i and ;-the::;prqservatibn:rof ::i. much,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds\"61i'\ufffd\ufffdi-'.: -value v;:iii'';-i,,'(;.cp n ii.ii'6<l itis.'s \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;' -,.i-:':.-iri'igh t;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;easilyi.:;d.cpc;n,d:.iCii:;:;r:::',i::i:ii;r Xi- >r. .-'-rv\n.Vi-i'Jif'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdih^;.\"-.'^ees.i:;:?v;$'p'.;^\nlifctter;;;i.y:aluc;i:r\ufffd\ufffdind-::ii gctiirliifi.lie!r.\"r:prices\n: ancl iniprci:: prpfit.; ;r;Iiv' a :7\\vprd,;; better,\n;bliSiiTes^;;;;;He;7:\\vill:;iecasCr:tpirhei\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Giiaiv-.j^ai'virtedi'iiiiiy.^\n'shapeiiiQf'iiliar Trbfiv Irt: ricttirnrior :;l?ib>'\n;arcr'si:pay77i::;and;:rwi!i::lie\ni,ii.'ess:j';iii:an;'v;?4yha.!;'^\n.lTspb'iisibiliticsriin ;,thc ;i;;wbrld;i; rcceiiv:-\niing: rcoiiipetisatibri :X ^ecprdtiig; to    his\n.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdli.piv;e'r~p::-;iv.i^\\'l\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''Nfiitct-a-z.i-n '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.-.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'. IXXii'x-XXiXxXXXXlx.iiii'XlXir\nRelieves Asthma at Little Expense.\nThousands of dollars have been vainly spent upon remedies for asthma\nand seldom, if-ever, with any reiicf.\nDr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy,\ndespite its assurance of benefit, costs\nso little that it is within the reach of\nall. It is the national remedy for\nasthma, far removed from the class\nof doubtful and experimental preparations.    Youri dealer can supply it.\ni      The .Kaiser's Dream\nThe kaiser, speaking to Dr. Arthur\nDavis, his American dentist, as qiiot-1 the rifles spoke and jiejell dead.\nthe New York-\nOnly Given Two Hours\nPathetic  Story  of the End    of    U\nEx-czar\nGiven two hours in which to prepare for the end, Nicholas Romanoff,\nformer Russian emperor, was taken\nout by his executioners in a state of\nsuch collapse that it was necessary\nto prop him against a post, says the\nLokal Anzciger, of Berlin, which-\nclaims to liavc received from a high\nRussian personage an account of the\nemperor's last hours.\nNicholas was awakened at 5 o'clock\non the morning of thc day of his execution by a patrol of a non-cimmis-\nsioned officer and six men. He was\ntold to dress and was then taken to\na room where the decision of the\nSocict council was communicated _ to\nhim. He was informed the execution\nwould bc carried out in two hours.\nThe former emperor, it is added,\nreceived the announcement of the\nsentence of death with great calmness. He returned to his bedroom\nand collapsed in a chair. After a\nfew minutes hc asked for a priest,\nwith whom he was allowed to remain unattended. Subsequently fie\nwrote several letters.\nWhen the escort arrived to take\nhim to the place of execution, Nicholas attempted to rise from his chair,\nbut was not able. The priest and\na soldier were obliged to help hiin\nget to his feet. The condemned man\ndescended the stairs with difficulty\nand once he fcH down.\nAs lie.was unable to stand without\nsupport when the place of execution\nwas reached he was propped against\na post. He raised his hands and\nseemed   to    be   trying to speak, btit\ned by the latter    in\n'World:xXXXyi.;XXXXX:ix-'XX:i''XxXXyxiXX\n\"From my ichildhoodr r I_ have been\nunder:: the r; influence of five ; men\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf\nAlexander, Julius Caesar, Theodoric\nII., Napoleon iahdii Frederick the\nGreat. These fiveiiiieh dreamed Uieir\ndream of a world empire; thCy failed;\n;;:; ;\"I; am dreaming iny: i dream of a\nworld empire, but I shall succeed I\"\n; \"Here; Iahi, nearly 60 years of age,\nand7 ; must i rebuild ;;the -;whple;i::; of\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEurope-!\"- ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\n:.\". ''Gernianrr'Efficien'cy'^\n. The -i ''-ies lilT7:' of:, Hinder rfoiiriihiiieht''\namong ; tli fi  tier n i aii   civil i;in-r popular\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlion   -is;\/'sitojyMX; jjy. iir sciitun<?ti; iii an;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda-ru\ufffd\ufffd'l-e\/ii:v..'M\n;articl;eY;X\\;l^\n\" aiit!:! <':*>r>;\" iioils;bf tlje: f-bst of nipvihgiiv're-i\n;.0njl_|'f:ers   io:  iiliii cplbsSal 'prices:, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcharged;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi:i.p;r-;'xv;ngri;^\n:| ers .:A\\iigi;s.,:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'{t iCibiitiiiiieS; :' '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTp.ritliis\n! iiijist 1k' adtii-d t;ie iaicf tliat itliP ivprik*\nryyy., owing \/to tlie \\%;\\y. nourishment,\njiierodiij\/lisit.r33;:;:. to ?X per :r;eiiif, less\n\\y-hfk in   a  diiy  thah: nbrnially.''\".\nX. i'ir'W'here {''He.; ''Got'; the:'i:;pther;;:;:V'i.;\"i;ii'\n-: A; Boer,who ;foi!ght\/i:with7:the; Brit-i\nish forces; in the East Africanivicsiriir'\npaign ivas r recently operated iih fori\nextractibn of bullet Shortly vafterwards an English stirgeph remarked\ntb;iljirri^.\"By thp'-by, \/iyc;.;itpok;,'%o .-bui-7\nlets put of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.-yoii-. ;Did ;you; know there\nwere two?\" \"Oh* yes;\" replied ihe\nBber:; \"one ;i;g;pt;frpni the;i Germans\n.and'\/.the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdipthcr^-frpin: iypu; beggsirs- ;-;>at\n;!Colenso.\"; IxXyxi  Xyxxyxi        i:XX;XX;.x: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/'.\nCatarrhal Deafness Cannot be Cured\nby local applications as tlicy cannot reach\nthe diseased portion of the ear. There is\nonly one way to cure catarrhal deafness, and\nthat is by a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal\nDeafness is caused by an inflamed condition\nof the:mucous lining ol the Eustachian Tube.\nWhen this tube is infiamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when\nit is entirely closed, Deafness is tae result\nUnless the ..inflammation', can he reduced aud\nthis tuber restored to its normal condition,\nhearing will be destroyed forever. Many\ncases \ufffd\ufffdof deafness are caused by eatarrh,\nwhich: is an inflamed condition of tiie mucous\nsurfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts through\nthe blood on the mucous surfaces oi the \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ntem.\nWewill give One Hundred Dollars for any\ncase of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot bl\ncured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circular!\nfree.     AU Druggists,  7Sc    :\n;    F. J. CHENEY & CO.; Toledo. OW*\nrdliecl ;p\ufffd\ufffdtintrios;:io';gii:ttd:';nRa;M1^, ,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ..: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . .,. .,.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .    ,,.. .. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdx::x-.::ry:i..-x-'- n-^x ..-x.-.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1iavifife::iprj:ferd;:'.a\n:frtt'nv:\"'^meri^a:^t:p:.;i%iTbp\n:fPbd;;::i):ri)ihirtipiiV;;:iind:;;;i;i;rpiis^r\na tf'- still; v'i t;vl-i to tlif> rsiie:r;(:'s;s fiil\/\/ pro.sf:-, | -;^ '.?;\/.'-;::y^'-?.':l' ^ -^ i' r'L.v: ;;':'::i;ii;';: iii-iij2_ii:-.\/A- >i:-\":^-'>':-?':r;': i': ^:':i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" -v;':j?^ t;,^\ni:iiUpm'.b:j: ;!h\ufffd\ufffdi:i^\nIntioiVp^\n:ej6iT'fe;wiFV'\/%OT\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiikXfpM. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi)baid;';ii;i.i;;\/^it;t:';iAVf(..;'.iiniiifeitir\nfiv1;l:y'77;:p:tit.(':S\/'r\n,:ri''''::vrrrErilliant.\"i;\n\/viMrs^ i-r Spaiiksi; i(ticjccted:lyi);-;^\/-Oiir\ncpplcriis: going; ibrleavejiiFi-aiik.rrSlie\nyayS;i:ir;the5\/.::rk;itchcnette.::;7''\".is'U:'t:;;:\/r!a'rg^\nchough tp i;turii:;\/a;roiihd'\/' in.':;.:';\/;\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n;.; Mr.;;Sparlcs7TT*By;\/Gebrgel\/jr\/vvondr\ner' if  she'll  stay if i^^i\niti^^XXiXXXXXkXXxXxX;:xxXXi;.;;XXyXX\nCanada's War Bread \\i\nGanada's ivar bread is made: from\n90 per cent, wheat flour and 10 pet\ncent, substitutes, This; makes ith\ufffd\ufffd\nIpai ia little darker but \"it; is just as\npalatable as ever, if ipropcrly; made,\nand just as intitritious\/: The Canada\nfpbd-; Dbard warped; bakers ;not to\niise artificial lncans of whitening war\n.bread;--\"::\/;;;.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.r'Similatity';7';7:;;^\nSign  in   a isaiopn-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Dp not    treat\nthe harteiidcr; it is like paying    tht\n.cohductoir'sr;fa.re.'''ir:;;::;':r;\nOut of\/\/'thei\/ilsiahdsi:.;;\/7'' XXX\nihivr;:vyar:;<lisp!:;iy e<J-1\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlo-sii;c:;ri:p7'\/;i;:v;x;tcnd\nWn.r.\nenlist^\ncoo^s; eOTIOKx-ROOT^ COMPOUND;\n;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:_;.;. ;,Glevef iRtise '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\n:.-;'H^ liiid-be'rir'jiiarrif\/ii iiWiii; iii -yVsr i\nrriid hadMiifccii .to;-Vj,cntting \"his XtiXni-'i\n. ..,'':-'-]'&'s' ('^Vf!,-vl9:\"'.H'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\\V-i't;!v:t-'1*'\":-}>oy?.-::.\ufffd\ufffd)'n-e;\ufffd\ufffd\n'r-'A Iwfeyiidiablt \/itvlaii\/ig ^i-.\\Muh\\X\\i\\sXc<in^'Xi>'ii\\tX.XarrXd' fiini-inui \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ncint. \"SQld-'i'tf. three.dtBrte\ufffd\ufffd<X:::i,v.::.:,vr yx.y .. . y--y   -   ,    ,v,...:.\/ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',;   ;..--.:-.: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;..:\n.Jtreneth. - Xo. l.,'*l 1 No. 2, *3i i !^--Il W-W\\X J^W W'-d \/plioiic. hi-s^^yne\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo. 3. -:|5pe* box.   Sold by all y.'.'.in :;u^l\/li(i\\- tqxi'ouie: (!o\\s 'n- and-' meet\n<Jrtft,Sistfr;or j^rt'newl*;.!\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: l.iiiV'-a\n.ptaiij pacJcaae-ron  receipt-rot v .;.-:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd y,--::. -.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd... -.: -:,.xxXx >.!.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'yf, \"X,x yx-\npiice.:iFreeparophteir*4dria\ufffd\ufffd:-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJf^;^'!;';:1 CXX^ym':iXyiiXyXi^XiXXyyxyy\nTHHi:7:CGbK: J5XBDiciNE:;;C071% X: ^XXXXXi^iiXXXXX-gnXiXXyxSyXif,}^\n .j^^-^^^i'i'-p^-lfflsH^s^^\n1 aii 11\":; ii:.-i c ei; \"y i;rc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''*ii 5f;i;i T i.e:.: cj;i-;i f;. 11::- \/^,\\:r pv| li\"^ Ji itA:c;\n:!;i fe-..:oil: (ii'-ii-'iiV.'S, XXXl'liXXXXxlX^XXiXX\n!;; iXX;XX: i'fVl'd-.: yp;i;biit;iAid; :sii\\cn r \/.'i i;! i t-:\ni.yiyirX&'\"iXiiiXiiXPXWf\\XX^\nA War Victim\n.''AX'hat's iiecoihe Pf Biggins?\n\"!&':> laid -up,,: a yicii'n butli.\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' didii't  evtMi. kiioiv Ire iiad\nied,'' \" ..',    -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.'..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     '   '.. .;..''\n\"iie ha?hi:.:  ''i-l'!.fe>-s--i\ufffd\ufffd.r,aiH;(.vd li-iis'ijvrynx\niielling how...filings otiglit:tci-hi-. (lone.\"\n;*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Boston Traiiseript. -\nI'-.-\n.   ;\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" The\/-Mart's' .:L,ast \"VV;qrd\/:::i..;ii.;;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ilii ;i:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%.<(iidpii -h'vis'' * iii;tin 'iii: (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdivili.iii;\ngath !i:'p:sC\/.ii.i!.d';'..PiTi,r\"e.d his _><'iif to ..'-ii,\n'WOiniiii-.''  .\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"''. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.       :;.'..'7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'.\n\"I lie Ver iic-virpi   fitvb.i'Ji   f roiu, vl;i\ufffd\ufffd:k-\ni'i's,\" she :srti(l vvtilii'ringli::\n\"JiaiUiMiy\" lix;-..replied , blaiiilly,\n\\Va'$ all through \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdG'.tllj'pbli, ipid: if;;>v'(;'d::i\n;:; \/rViiisiraiiiirlitii)!;^\nput;;\/! hiC'\/r-'Vi igii'tcsiti... >., ....,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,............,.,_.. _.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl.ir'i'-.-' ti\/iiiit'bi'y; ,-;iin'7r\/,;t,lii'.;'':.i 'iiiriiiir^v\/'^riltcti;'\nvviir\/i-aiiHi'slic \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. lip re i iit'r rslnirc- 'r\/inj\nic.i rl\\i:J:n ii. 'i^V.iic- i--i i i.iii'.-ti ;>:-\"-.''-\ufffd\ufffd. * \\ V't-^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;':'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!' c>;f... ',t j' tt*\".-vi.s;l ;v ii t? Si\/\niiiid; :*iii!: i> 'sXi-Qiigly ppppsedrio ilie;\nriiririi; <)i fliat dairgi-rpiisi Jindi'treacli-;\n.c*:p.ii,_>:.^\niiigiius; to i^iluit\/i\/ii-Iianges ilii;:,  idistjiifit.\nr 1 fiitiire;ri.iia\\'spr6(hic;o, it iiiay ;be t-pnfi-\n1 iiitiy ;issj;i':t':'<l i tiluit ;during ilie lives7\nhad \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffds miicli .PQ'Sv'd.t'.r- as:'yptii iniye;; biir;\nyoiir faCtri M\/c'd: lravi-ljot Up (i\/ortsfan^l\nai.ii'bpl'e    iii    no    titiic\nii\/iazcttc, ,;;\not;\nany\n:;(iiiild>(\/n of \/Biit Is li   race avIiP.\narc' iiP>v; bid   <>nptighir: t'b:; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd uiiderjvtahtl\nTcwrte.Qnli- tfimiriiiW'WlmJ ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\/ \/ (THK NKW FRENCH REMEDY. H.y.H.1 NAX\nm^ME^AmoNi^m^i\nrest juccMf.'Cf KtS-ciirovic wiir.NESS. ufsr 'vi.oob:.;\nVIM, KIDIlSV;''-BLAS'Dcr-'.-OlSBKSCS.'-'-il.tOOEP r.FClSo*\n-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-'V rnrES.-^iTHEK\/KO.DJiVGSES-.SCT'MAlr. {L.p.osr 4-CTjrr\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'::':: roi;6a'\ufffd\ufffdACb..>0, re.skmas ST.NEw-vO!>.i<orLifM**.En(H.i\n   mOMTij,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvKi-tiia* FREE bcck'to JJn\/'XerCLtKOrr\n\ufffd\ufffdD.CO. H\ufffd\ufffdVKKSTOCX RD..'-HAKPSTEAb. t-OMbOM.-RKU:.\n.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\"' Wv:HE.'.V.DItA6:EK\ufffd\ufffdfASTE:i,F;S):?.p'.f>M.Ql- :EA'SY:f6'.TAJt\ufffd\ufffd I\ni^wiiBmA^mmmmxui\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&''7i**r-iW>\ufffd\ufffd MABSEO\/WORO: 'THZflAPiCiS-il ot\n' j'\/prr worr-nAHP kt'nimo. io au. oxm.umi r ACieia\n;:;W;;\n\"XXixxm\n12Z5X\n\/\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-f-lj\nlXxxd'XXXXycl XiXiix. '-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjbin':'\/':' i;o.u;\n].<;;&:':\nlyiXpiyiXrxXtiXyX xyJXX \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. \\\\\/J\ufffd\ufffdyi_iGt\n<\"0'H>.'\nvy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdijii-xi 'jfv'---.i::i-ri-Mv.-vv.--'j.'fi\"d'.- :v:i:t! Xiiif:\nXXXf:\ny-^cXxixxy.<Xxyyxxx x.x.-...]:-'x-x\nCXx:\n];q . .y.(>';;:!i^r'-]{iY--b-Jfr!;yi\ufffd\ufffd^'.i  'ivjli'Viir.''\" 'X.\nxxxx\nXy Xpx.xixy::Xiy,x< xy;miy.y ^Ixyxi.l'XX\ni!;&wv.\n'AXX>\nXXy \".vi'f^7 iyxxxy.-X:''huX?\ufffd\ufffd . x^y}^\n\\?eziXomyv''''M:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtiyrx:-\n\"i   Filial Anxiety\nl^itilcr iloeturiii.g i'ivikl mn)X~\ufffd\ufffd\\ip- j\npost'' 1 Should Ire taken avviiy .siltldvii- (\nly, .\\ylirtt w-btild -become of yOp? i\n\" Sim^Oli.,. I'd be here, guvnor!\ni-jii(>.sti.o'n;i^,_ivliat. would-\/become\nyrp-ii'i^il^b^iQji:  Iranttfript\/\/;.:\/:;;:':; ;..':\n\\\\'<:~tiuinstcriAyl,'lt ^lfe ^vivr\/iirirans, '^eriiraiiyr\/Wili:\nliievKr l\/\ufffd\ufffd! iffi'ste'd agaui:,.:'and tier   \/al)--\n.(i^Pli:Ce: fioiii   the  ivatftrS. cpntigLipVi.s  tp\n';;\\its!ri}li;t' \\\\i 11 always i);e preferred; io\nj'Jiw ptirseiic* tl'tc're...   VV.*;' dp libt seek\nin- obtairt TOM'trr-d \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of     iiew    fi-rrlfor}-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsii'\ufffd\ufffdip'l;-.\\\" U) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdh.ifre\/ii.S's:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-p.jir Jiplding\/s, . biit\nwe s*'f-k it t\ufffd\ufffdi piistirfr Pur sifety. This\nis tlie: rI'Sil_ rx'-ii\/^'oiv.^-^^I oil><\/)t;':,;ni- ^rriii\n<^Pg0\ncma\n i^0^x\/m^:<^u.\t\n WMii^Mx\nWtiM&\nOk\nTlie\nv. Pi\ns;.\/;i:^:;;::.:r:;-;K\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^_;Sp:.GprisiderB^\nX I'Sifi e*rrWlia;t: \";'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;. pari;; of. .\/the'.\/city:;;,; shall\n>V-e'&lw'e-;.\/iivVvHi'Pt-:':'';-^p'^\n'feifilXXxyXXyXiXyXXXiXXXXiXXXXXiXxxX\nX y itvpcbyn XXhh X r -.!\ufffd\ufffd- Pitt yo iff; father\nibe\/i pfifendieti; if ihe thinks'; we;xi- don't\ncbrijider \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiisiihpfpe-'gpodr enbiigii -iip'r\nV5yiXixXxXyX:Xi'ixii:XX:Xx.X.:X''iiX:XX-.Xy,x-\ni';''\/'r:\/.:r''AlP:iAg;re;eti .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \/,C^piisciiciitipiiSZ\/Ohjcgtc-p\"--y ;Slfqqting:\n.'ati:_:;thp.ie:';itaigiei^:;;^ake^   '        ''\" '\n.hp.w;';awriil:\/=W.ai:ri^';ilt':rti'er\nif o riei I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd d \/kill i ai \/thah!\nOfficer \/{(-wh'pJ.-'-Ii^'r,;:.' ^atehed.:\nshbbt)^Ybu:-:Certainlyr ;wotiid;\nViXxij'X'i-;xixxxiXxXi.i.xiix '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"'\";\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n: Apaclie;Scouts Npv\/in\/Frapcei\/i:\/;':\n:CThci;'\/ipac\/|:fe\/;sr;pirts:fin^e \/vvitli:\n:cfedityby-7; GeneriXiXiPer'sbingi.  ;beciiiusi\npAtliicirrrgbbd Wprk' hn the\/ ^Jfairrieirarc\n;by\" iio ^neap's' -'.gir'eeii\/; in,.rilier\/btiisihcss.::\nHhcy ;are, tp ;betiiir:w5tli;::.descend^iits:\nbt .ctoiits'-, Wlipi;tipbk?;pa:rt;in\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdXiyXiXimX\npaign:;i:agaiust':\/tlietfaniipu?;r:Chite^\nhimb,;;\/iii;%liie;hifthcii;,pte7sent\nde-ri-in^ciiiicfrribf\/ir^tiieiii^Api\npe'^itipii&ryzzFprc^\n;cPndilieii;te;tiant,\\\/Sa'%\\vTsi5^\nJhriine^s^cohd^pfa'ee^fithey^\nnrc., ;\/realize.:.rp4riiairirainiii'g;: in;-ihe7,huntrior;; Villi.\nI'd\/;-diei be-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,{'indiihies\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ?gtheiiralXcliasing:;pf\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyil^xieah:\ngiieTi\\&Xwiil9l6xX Gen.^raKi;;Eers'hihgi\n'-.liiijii.'i'j.;'it; i:srifieeidl;^SS:r;tp '..isa'yti'dpesjhpt^ipierxtjii.\n'Suiiif feisi :r^pacihe9:i::itb*.'ridesc^nd;;tict:^\n}ni{biXdXXX;v&TjXytX.iiXXiX-X'X x.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&' j'-. XjjXX.>f:\nimfmje.\nixx '''Axx:xxx^-x.f-;i^x'll.x-x\ufffd\ufffdx.\n:0$07jc0^y,^Wm\nMl\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd j& X*\n>i'~ '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiXXiy'i'xXiXXr\n:Si;;H[i|Estabmo|cs^^^\nx'i-'x'xXXXiXXijwrrttXyiyX\nrSfc: Jokty^iXXotontoi. XJPfiiuiiiytg:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdX.iCmlg.mrf.i\n\/.C*n^di\ufffd\ufffdn\"Fo^iGsntrol IScvnac No. 6-276::-\/;\/;;\nReJfxRost Cojjftt is a$ g^^ro>s*^u'; a<*>4_;\nXXxxieixRetl' Rose 'XFtqXXxX XiX-'XXii\n|\nrs\n. ^aM.lrfgg'\"*.**'^ f\nI\nrs\nTHE    ItfiLDGB.    iiiUiU^WOOD.    &  &\nThc German Crown Prince'\nDescribed  as a  Ridiculous  Character\nBy One  Who  Knew  Him\nThe   crown~prir.ce     of  Germany  is\nianuisiiig  and    pleasant     and    not  s<>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstern  as   iiis   father,   but   a   really   dc-\nilieious  character iu  many   ways.     He\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is a logical development of his birth\njand environment.  Hc  is well  cducal-\nicd and can talk well, but often docs\n' so foolishly.    He is vain.    He thinks\nhe looks like his ancestor,  Frederick\nthe Great, and in  point of fact there\nis a  marked  resemblance  about    the\nface of the crown prince lo  the picture   of the    great     Frederick.       Ue\njpos.es with  his hands  on his hips, in\nthe  attitude  so often  depicted  in  liie\npictures  and  statues  of his  ancestor,\ni Hc is athletic.    His fair game of ven-\n|nis   is   spoiled  by    inattention     while\nj watching the onlookers to sec if they\nihavc noted a good stroke.\n,    i     'Before the war he  frequently  l.ilk-\nt\"ejed about it in a way to show that he\nj would  force it on surrounding coui:-\nCures\nWorms,\nStomach &\nTeething\nFOR BABiES AND SMALL CHILDREN  Troubles\nThe Old Girl is Game\nFORMERLY    WENIMECJUINS\nCoutiiii'  no iKiiniir.I\nboxes   by   mail\ndrugs.     25c\non   receipt\nper box  cr 5\nof   $1.00.\nChina Cleaning House\nComplete   Expulsion     Reduces\nGerman Organization\nIt is  announced  that  the    Chinese j }.\"\ufffd\ufffd jf allowed.    Among thc    things\n,    .,   , , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   that   I   heard  in  those  days,      which\ngovernment has decided to deport all|nKulc 110 great jn,prcssjon on me be-\nGcrinans.   This, decision   affects     bc-j cause 1 suppose it was impossible for\ntween 7,000 and 10,00 persons; the dc-   mc to believe that the Germans were\nportees are to be interned in Austra- , setting  the stage  for  this great  war\nIia  until  the     end   of  thc   war,    and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd v'as a\ntransportation is to begin nt thc earliest possible  moment. A  Tokio   cor-\nDouglas & Co., Napanee, Ont.\nA Deed of Mercy\nThe Savage  Darkness in Which  Out-\nDays are  Plunged\nAs Hindenburg and the kaiser camc'lls t:oaI ,ast\ndown, as we read, from Mont d'Hiver,\nduring the recent offensive, lliey saw\non the edge of a crater two wounded\nBritisii soldiers. The kaiser ordered\nthat thcy should be cared for; their\nwounds were hound up and they were\ngiven'      brandy,        and brought\nround from unconsciousness. That is\nthc German account of it, and it maybe true.    It was a kindly act.\nProbably  had it nol  been  for  this,\nthe two men would havc died amoin\nthose desolate craters; no one would\nhave known and no one could have\nbeen blamed for it.\n. , The contrast of this spark of im-\nconversation out at the  tennis j nf,.inl  ki,ul)U.ss>    against    Uie  gloom\nbackground\n! Britain Has Been a Good  Neighbor\nj to the United States\nWe owe Kngland a cheer for this.\nThe old girl is game. She has, in\nthe nautical phrase of one of her own\nfavorite sons\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand ours\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlaid a poi.it\ncloser to the wind for us than a man\ncould expect of his own married\nwife. She has stood by at every\ncrisis from the start. Her destroyer\nili-CL tuok the sea before ours was\nready and battled the submarine nt a\ntime when it seemed that monster\nmiglit dispute our passage. She sent\n:oal last winter when thousands\nof tons of ships were tied up in our\nown harbors for want of fuel. Let's\nnot forget it. England's been a good\nneighbor and a good ally right\nthrough the time when most of- tlie-\nflowers we were sending down to\nthc footlight were marked for her\nco-star, La Belle France. Let's not\nforget that she never failed to join\nher voice to ours in acclaiming that\nwonderful people\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand kept right on\ndoing hard, practical, handy jobs for\nus.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKansas Oitv Star.\nI\n|club  where  wc    spent    many    alter\n! noons.     The  crown  prince,  who  had\nrespondent states \"that this is thc se-\nTerest blow ever dealt at German\ncommerce. .The bulk of the deportees arc business men. Many of\nthem are prominent merchants who\nfor years past, with the aid of subsidized steamship lines and state\nbanks, havc frequently deprived British merchants of contracts which\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhotild have been theirs on the merits of the case. The present complete\nexpulsion reduces the German organization in China to ruins, ancl, in the\nonly possible way, puis an end lo the\nGerman propaganda, which, since\n1914, has never ceased to poison ihe\nOrient against the allies.\nbeen  playing  tennis   with   a   man   of\nthe   F.nglish   embassy,   came    up     to\nwhere  1   was standing talking  to  the\nwife of the man he had been  playing\nwilh, and in  the course of conversation  he said that he  was going ovcrjj)is c\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj(.Si  v-\\n  remember  it\nto  Dantzic    on     a  visit,  and      when | who  knows but  that    when\nasked  what  took liim   there  lie  said:.) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeC{]s it hjs reward for it will bc giv\nOh, 1 must look over iny Russian i cn   |,;m.     j.-or   ru(las>   lhcy   sa      011CC\nneighbors, for I am going to war with I gavc l,js cloak'iii  his youth, but    of\ncompassion, to a    shivering    beggar,\nwho_ sat  shaken   with  ague,   in   rags,\nol tlic_ background of the war that\nthc kaiser made, is a pleasant thing\nlo see, even though it illuminates for\nonly\" a moment the savage darkness\nin which our days are plunged. It\nwas a kindness that probably will be\nlong remembered to him.    liven   wc,\nAnd\nnows but  that    when most  hc\nTHEFIRST LINE OF DEFENSE\nHeroes Ail\non\nWork of British\nMystery Ships\nCraft\nPure blood is the body's first line\nof defense against disease. Strong,\nhealthy blood neutralizes thc poisons\nof invading germs, or destroy lhe\ngerms themselves. That is why\nmany people exposed to disease do\nnot contract it. Those whose blood I\nis weak and watery and therefore |\nlacking ,in  defensive power are\nThe Heroic Men    Below    Deck\nMerchant  Ships\nWould the Zecbrnggc victory have\nI been what it was had her stokehold\n(not been filled with heroes? An old\nship with old boilers but needing,\nabove all things else, speed, especially on the home run, she was at the\nmercy of her stokers and engineers.\nA bump told them the Vindictive had\ngained the Mole. Not much else was\nknown about the fortunes of the day\nuntil  home was reached.\nIt is said that when the engineer\ncommander entered the boiler room\nand asked the artificer engineer what\nhe had to say about his men the reply was what every one of them\nmust have rejoiced to hear: \"I am\nnot going lo say anything for or\nagainst them; but if I was going to\nhell tomorrow night 1 would have\nthe same men with me.\"\nAdmiral Sir David Bcalty knows\nwhere to find heroes and he says\nthat high up on the roll of British\nheroes must be placed the. names of\nthe engineers and their staffs on\nboard ships of war. .Equally heroic\narc lhc men below deck on merchant\nships. Willi almost no chance of escape and with almost absolute certainty of being hit when  the dastard-\nA  Lesson  in Americanese\nThe Explanation of   an    Expressive\nBit  of Americanism\nIn  London   one  night  toward    the\nthem soon, and want to know    what\nthey are doing.\"\nAt another time, not long before Ji',',\"\"bitter need. And the years went\ntins, he said to a friend of mine when j by and Hulas forgot his deed. And\nshe asked him why hc didn t go to hong aflcr in Hej, Jlulas tlic sav\nTans: Oh, I shall go to Pans, but was given one dav's respite at the\n1   can  only- go in   one  way.       ,. {cn(l of CV(.rv. Vl-ar i,'ccausC! o[ this one\nWhen she asked him what he | kindness he had done so long since\nmeant   he   said:      At   the  head  of  a!jn   his   youth.     And   \ufffd\ufffdcry     year   hc\na  day  and  cools\n,, t   ,  -,- ,      ,.,-,.       i -\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    \ufffd\ufffd'in\"'ii     i\ufffd\ufffdc    Arctic    bergs;\nthen, but ol course he did, and  lhcy;oncc every year for    century     aftcr\n,.^.,in_  in;   \ufffd\ufffd,..u.       m   mc   ncau   oi   a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd m   |,ls   youth.     And\nvictorious army, but I-shall bc there |jr0C<.    t]\"e     s.lv   for\n| before long.;    It didn't seem possible ! himself    among    th\nwere the  thoughts  uppermost  in   his\nmind at all  times.\nI   have   seen   hiin     at    the     tennis\nevery year for    century\ncentury.\nPerhaps some sailor on watch on>t\nmisty evening, blown far out of his\ncourse away lo the north, i-aw something  ghostly    once    on  an    iceberg\nend  of  February,     Don   Martin,      of j courts,  where  the  diplomatic     corps\nthc   Ncw   York   Herald,   and   1   were jand  a  certain   number    of    Germans\nwS6  illcl|SlrandIab\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Trafalgar j were apt  to  congregate  every after- \\ i'loalins bv, or heard  sonic voice   in\nbquaie.    In lie murk of the unhglit-| noon in good weather, playing tennis   the  dimness   that    seemed    like     lhc\neel street wc bumped into a group otjwith  a  couple of  English  diplomats,\nfour   uniformed    figures. Looking I and the finest tennis players in  Gcr-\nclose wc made out that one was\nau\nAmerican soldier, that one was a\nlanky Scot in kills, slightly under the\ninfluence of something even more\nexhilarating than the skirl of the\npipes, and that the remaining two\nwere English privates. We gathered right away that an international\ndiscussion of some sort was under\nway. At the moment of our approach   reason  to suppose lhat hc will make\nthc American, a little dark fellow\nwho spoke with an accent that betrayed his Italian nativity, had the\nPoor, or rather hc had the sidewalk:\nWc halted in lhe half-darkness to\nlisten.\n\"Its lika theos,\" expounded the\nYanko-ltalian, \"w'en I say T should\nworry' it mean\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit mean\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhy, it\nmean I shouldna not worry. You\ngetta mc, huh?\"\nHc glanced about him, plainly\npleased with thc very clear and comprehensive explanation of this expressive bit of Americanism, which\nhad come to''liim in a sudden burst\nof inspiration\nmany, stop a game three-quarters of\nan hour while hc talked to some girls\non the side lines. Etiquette demanded that these men should stand and\nwait for him. He seems quite crazy\nabout petticoats, and always appears\nto long to attract attention. Hc certainly has not made a namc for himself in  this  war  and  I\ncan  sec\nno\na good emperor.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy Neville Taylor\nGhcrardi, wife of the former United\nStates Naval Attache to the Em-\noassy in Berlin, in thc Saturday\nEvening Post\nMinard's   Liniment for  Sale   Everywhere.\nParrots as Air Sentinels\nBehavior of Certain Animals   Under\nWar Conditions\nAn  English writer has made sonic\ninteresting  studies  of    the    bchavior\n_,,   -     , ,        ,.,,,,    iot certain animals under war  condi-\nThc others stared at him blankly. ' tions. From him we learn\" that par-\nIt was one of .the Englishmen who I rots were employed as sentinels at\nbroke the siknce. , the Eiffel'Tower    in    Paris.      They\nYou   avc   notlun   to     worry    ha- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd could  be  relied upon   to  give   warn-!\nbout hat all, aud so you say that you  ing of  an  approaching    aircraft     at\nhare worryin'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhis that hit?\" he in-j least twenty minutes before it could P.vi11 ca.rc to bc at sen that day, and\nquired. The American nodded.. be seen by thc naked eye. These \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlew w*\" r's^ being driven by stress\n\"Well,  then,  hall  Hi can say  his  hit   birds,   however,  grew   \"bored\"     after'0\/ weather  on  thc  kaiser's   night   to\nvoice of man, and came home with\nthis weird story. And perhaps as\nthe story passed from lip to lip men\nfound enough justice in it to believe\nit true. So it came down the centuries.\nWill seafarers ages hence, on' dim\nOctober evenings, or ou nights when\nthc moon is ominous through mist,\n, red and huge and uncanny, see a\nlonely figure sometimes on the loneliest part of the sea, far north of\nwhere the Lusitania sank, gathering\nall the cold it can? Will thcy sec :t\nhugging a crag of an iceberg as itself, helmet, cuirass and ice-pale-blue\nthrough the mist, and will thcy .pies-\ntion it, meeting on those bleak seas3\nWill it answer, or will the north\nwind howl like voices? >Vil] the cry\nof_ the seals bc heard, and ice floes\ngrinding, and strange, birds lost noon\nthc wind that night, or will it speak\nto them in those distant years and\ntell them how it sinned, betraying\nmen?\nIt will be a grim, dark story in\nthat_ lonely part of thc sea, when hc\nconfesses to sailors, blown too far to\nthc north, the dreadful things he plot-\ntedagainst men. ^Tlic dale on which\nhe is seen will be told from sailor to\nsailor. Queer taverns of distant harbors will know it well.    Not    many\nire less liable to\nthe grippe, than pale, bloodless people. It is the bloodless people who\ntire easily, who arc short of breath\nat slight exertion, who have poor appetites, and who wake up in the\nmorning as lircd as when they went\nto bed. While women and girls\nchiefly suffer from bloodlessncss the\ntrouble also affects both boys and\nmen. Il simply affects girls and women lo a greater extent because there\nis a greater demand upon their blood\nsupply.\nTo renew and 'i.tiild up the blood\nthere is no remedy can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.' They tone up Ihe\nentire system, make thc blood rich\nand red, feed and strengthen starving nerves, increase the appetite, put\ncolor in the cheeks, give rcfreshii.sr\nsleep aud  drive away  that unnatural\n]10Sl l Captain Gordon Campbell, have been\nliable to infection. Evervbodv mav | decorated for their services on these\nobserve that bealthv, \"red-blooded ! vessels. Details now can be made\npeople are less liable   to  colds     and j >,,,,,llc- ;!s Hie Ocrinans arc becoming\naware  through bitter  experience     of\nthe methods used against them.\nHow a \"woman and a baby\" accounted for a U-boat is told by thc\ncorrespondent. The submarine ordered a vessel to surrender and lircd\na few shells into her. The boats\ni then left the ship, leaving on board\na woman, who ran up and down the\ndeck with a baby in her arms as if\nmad. The U-boat came alongside\nthe vcsssel and the woman hurled the\n\"baby\" into the open hatch. Thc\n''baby'' exploded and blew out the\nbottom of thc rubmarinc. Thc \"woman'' was decorated v, ith thc Victoria  Cross.\nHaystack on   Ancient-looking\nGives Huns a Surprise\nInteresting revelations regarding\nthe work of British mystery ships,\nwhich have played an important part\nin anti-submarine warfare, arc made\nby the naval correspondent of The\nLondon  Times.     Thcy     show       how\nBritisii seamen have met German j ly U-boat gets iu its work, these men\ncraft and cunning with craft and j nevertheless, engage lo transport\ncunning. troops    and    wounded,    food    stuffs,\nUntil reccnlly the public has known merchandise, munitions \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd everything\nnothing about the mystery ships, j needed lo carry on this war. Do wc\nknown in the navy as the \"Q\" ships, j give ihem sufficient credit? Have we,\nalthough    several    officers,      notably) up to  this  time, given them even    a\nThin Endy Hair\norThickandHealthy?\nA scalp cared for by Cuticura usually\nmeans thick, glossy hair. Frequent\nshampoos with Cuticura Soap are excellent. Precede shampoos by touches\nof Cuticura Ointment to spots of dandruff, itching and irritation of the\nscalp. Nothing better for the complexion, hair or skin.\nSample Each Free by Mail. Address postcard: ''Cuticura, Depl. N, Bo.ton. V. S. A.\"\nSold by dealers throughout the world.\nthought. Not until the war is over\nshall we know how many of these\nheroes have been sacrificed that their\ncause, and ours might triumph.\nIt  i.s peculiarly fitting    lhat_  these\nmen  should    be   remembered  by  the\nIn the Sailor's Cap\nIngenious Pocket That Serves Needs\nof the Jackies\nA young sailor was evidently explaining things in the navy to liis\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sweetheart, because as an illustration\n| he removed hi. cap and turning it\nj over disclosed inside a muslin lining\nI drawn together by an elastic band.\n| Then he demonstrated how a cap\n| may bc used as a pocket.\nHe inserted his hand and drew out\nKing    He  has  given   Ins  approval  to ,  ,     fo,,owing articlcs: A few lettcrSi\na  badge  which   speaks   columns,     it packaecS of cigarette papers,    a\nis  in   the  form  of a  torpedo  to      be j       k> ^       ., f\ufffd\ufffd    f       ^      '    a\nw.oi-11  on lhc left sleeve and is  lo  be   ^^ p|loto^.aphs    .;nd    a bia?cll 'of\ncigarette coupons.\nIt might be supposed his cap would\nbe bulky and ill fitting with all th^se\nthings in it, but it was not. Thc elastic band tightly drew the lining to-\n'.jgelher so that on taking off the hat\n' j nothing fell out. It seemed comfortable  on  thc  sailor's head  and  hc ap-\ngiven \"to officers and seamen who\nhave been on the articles of any\nBritisii merchant or fishing vessel\nsunk or damaged during the present\nwar by torpedo or mine and who\nhave afterwards completed a further\nvoyage on the articles of a Brili\nvesse' \"\nThe correspondent says that the\nfirst mention of a mystery *hip was\niu the case of the Baralong, which\non August  19,  1915,  sank    a  U-boat\nYankee     non-\nsounds like    barmy\nsense to mc.\"\n\"Lustcii  here,   laddie,   to   me,\"  put\nin the Scotchman.   \"If you've naught\na while  and  ceased  to    bc    depend- jtlic 1'auntcd part of the-sea.\nAnd yet for all the primness of the\npale-blue phantom, with amass and\nhelmet and eyes shimmering on dead-\nable. Pheasants, too, were wont to\ngive warning at night when an air-\ni plane approached, screaming and\nto worry about, why speak of it at | chattering noisily. It is also stated\nall? That's whut 1 would be pleased j that hares, partridges and pheas-\nto know.\" I ants  were    often  observed   near  the ,\n\"Hob, never mind,\"  spoke  up  thejiront line trenches in search of food !and :l\" [)\\c k'0'\"\"1 ships gone, yet will\nsecond   Englishman;  \"let's    go      get;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich      thcy got if the rat.; didn't | |J1C horrified mariners meeting his\nanother drink  at  the pub.\" ' ' \"\" 'l \"*  '   '\"\"\n(;_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'i c~ i-          i>i     . \"    r        v   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd          i alter the torpedoing ot  the    British\ntired feeling.    Plenty of sunlig it and l;,,.,.   ^ ,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.-       ,,.     mi i                  i        i\n,,.,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  br      ,     ..i   ,    ,,      \" liner Arabic.    It \ufffd\ufffdi bc  remembered\nwholesome lood will do the rest.\nYou ran get Dr. Williams' Pink\nPills through any dealer in m-jdicine,\nor by mail at 50 cents a box or six\nboxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,  Brockviile, Out.\nihe says, that the German govcrn-\nj ment protested i\". at there was noth-\nling to indicate the Baralong's warlike character. The Baralong case was\nj probably not the first in which a ruse\nj was used, and since then the dis-\n| guising of armed vessels as innocent\n: merchantmen for dealing with sub-\n| marine, has attained considerable di-\n' mensions.\n0l    . r  _.     ,       r  ^    . ,     \"Howls  and  moans,\" adds  the  na-\nStones  of Deeds  of Daring , vai correspondent,  \"went up in  Ger-\nEach subsequent experience will be\nshown by a bar. ft is high time that\nthe rest of us take a thought for the\nnon-combatants alike.\nipeared highly satisfied.\nStruck by Lightning\nCORNS PEEL OFF,\nSHRIVEL RIGHT UP\nHun Name for U. S. Troops\nGerman  War    Correspondent    Tells I\n\"Salans\" is the pet name for American soldiers among the men of thc\nGerman army, according to a letter\nwritten by Lieutenant Ranke, who\nas \"officer war correspondent,\" wrilcs\nfor German papers stories of individual deeds of bravery by Germans\nwhose names, addresses and occupations arc given as tcni'iig to encourage local patriotism.\nIn  a    letter    lo    The\nup\ninany about the treachery of British seamen, but the German allegations curiously ceased at the beginning of 1916. These allegations afforded a typical example of German\nmentality, for thcy ignored the fact\nlhat in every case lhe U-boat was\nan actual or potential assailant, and\nany ruse of war is considered legitimate by them except when emplovcd\nDusseldorf against Germany.\nNachrichten he tells of a skirmish . Il should not be forgotten, he con-\nbetween a patrol of men from that i tinned, that thc Germans design\ncity with au American patrol, who | uiystery ships for commerce des-\nby tlicir \"impudent audacity\" had ! truction. The British commanders\nbeen giving the Germans much | showed ingenuity in devising plans\ntrouble. Both parties were hidden ; J<M; 1 rapping submarines,\nin shell craters, he says, and stalked1. _n.addition to the \"woman and\neach other for nineteen hours,\nthc result, according to thc\nthat\" three wounded American\nans\" were brought in. Eor\nwork their captors received\nCrosses.\n^ '; American Knowledge of What   War\nj Means Has Been Academic\nMargaret Deland has-an article in\nthe June Woman's Home Companion\nwhich vividly pictures France toda.\\.\n\" i She particular^' stresses the fact that\nIt's a corker the wav Putnam's j the United States, until she had en-\nExtractor goes aflcr the\" kernel of altered the war, did not glimpse its\nsore corn. Vou simply paint on aji'talily. Indeed, she says:\nfew drops of Putnam's and reiicf I \"As 1 look back on those plcasaincomes at once. Thc pain all goes, *>' excited days from my bleak uphi.l\nthc corn shrivels up, and soon drops road toward knowledge, it seems to\noff. Wonderful\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyou bet it is. No >\"e that in our relation to the war\nother com remedy can touch the.v\/e were all of us, very much aware\nquick, sure action you get with Put-;\ufffd\ufffd' ourselves. We were entirely sra-\nnam's Painless Com Extractor. When .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, but we were self-conscious   J he\ncure like . v.'iir was not rcal.    lhat comes home\na quarter buys a dead-sure\nPutnam's, why pay more?    Get Put\nnam's   today.\nto one when one sees reality over\nhere\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhere there arc no dinner parties at which gorgeous stain bags can\npresent the dramatic contrasts of\ngrey sweaters and clicking needles\nT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd flio TTai* lSTnrth I b'ing on silken  laps.    One  faces re-\nintne rar noriii|ality at cvery Frcnch tablc at whjch\n\"~\"~\"\" | one sits  down\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwithout      any      gay\nDominion       Government       Presents ; warning   to   expect  only  'war  food'!\nYoung Eskimo Interpreter i For  there  is   no   other  sort  of  food\nInteresting Ceremony\nWith Gold Watch\nly icebergs, and  yet  for all  tlic  sorrow of the wrong he did against man, !\nlhc women drowned and the children!\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc.\nU. S. Stripping Off Fat\n\"You're, too late,'' stated his countryman in lachrymose tones. \"While\nwe've been chin-chinnin' 'ere thc\nbloomin' pub 'as closed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdits arftcr\nhours for a drink.\"\nBut    the   canny   Scot   already   was\n'feeling about with a huge paw in tlic\nback folds  of his kilt.     From  some,      ...\nmvsteriotis   recess   he    slowly     drew ! u> '\ufffd\ufffdlors io      the      exhibitions      m\nforth -x flat flask i u estcrn Canada havc been struck by\n\"Lads,\"'he 'stated happily, \"in thc |l,,c remarkably^ high and uniform\nlanguage of our American friend , ^\"darcl of butter made m the three\nhere, we should worry, because as it if\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"c Provinces. At Calgary, A -\nhappens, thanks to mc own fore-Ibcrl'1-, lhc dairy products exhibit\nthought, we h;.' na need to concern \ufffd\ufffdus=d ,u\ufffd\ufffdc.li favorable comment, an\nourselves wi' worrying' at all, d'ye I \ufffd\ufffd<=elicit display having been made,\nken? Ha' the fiirst nip, Yank.\"- j \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdh\ufffd\ufffd ^I\\lb!ls.at Edmonton, Alberta,\nIvan Cobb in the Saturday Evening\nPost.\nsec it first.    It would  seem  thai  war i l!,c inist  grudge  liim   no  moment  of\nhas had no effect on them. 'thc f!:1-v  lu'  ll;iS  earned,  of  thc  cool-\n  ncss he gains from the bergs, because\n^^i   r*      j      t\ufffd\ufffd   .. .of the kindness he did to the: wound-\ngh Grade   j5Utter jed-men.    For  .he mariners in    their\n  i hearts  are  kindly  men,  and  what    a\nHigh Standard   of   Dairy    Products   qcnil &'\\n=. from kindness will seem to\nShown at-Western Exhibitions        thc,n  vJ1  ,1\ufffd\ufffdtrv,li\nI Less Adipose Tissue in  Bodies\nHead-Pieces\nA   health  expert out on the   Pacific\ncoast  furnishes  the  interesting     estimate   lhal  the   \\merican  people    are\nu-ithjbaby\"  case  the  correspondent    men-\nstory, i liom?(l tlie story of a retired admiral\n\"Sat- ' serving as a captain,    who placed    a\ntheir ; haystack on board an ancient-looking\nIron   n'art- When the U-boat ordered    hcr\n! to surrender, the  Germans  were   as-\n; tonished to receive a broadside from\nthc haystack.\nOu another occasion a sea-worn\ntramp steamer was crossing the\nNorth Sea when a submarine ordered\nthe crew to abandon lhe ship. So sure Cauada\nwas the German of his prey that thc\nbombs  with   which   he    intended      to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for anyone, anywhere. As for scar-\njcity in this or that, it is no longer.\nA presentation that broke all rec- , interesting- as a topic of conversation,\nords, geographical or historical, was because it is a commonplace, like the\nmade a few weeks ago at Fort Mc- I weather. Looking back at thc United\nPherson, Peel river, according to in- j States from this silent, untalkatire\nformation that has just reached Ed- j reality, it seems as if during thess\nmontou with thc return of thc Arctic j ^,1-ce'ycars American knowledge of\nmail carriers from the summer trip , what war mcans had been academic,\nto thc Arctics. At McPherson, on j 'fhe difference is thc difference bc-\nJuly 10, Ilavinck, the native interprc- j tween studying thc laws of elcctric-\nter, who accompanied the Eskimo jjiy an(j being struck by lightning,\nmurderers   to   Edmonton    last    ycar   France has been struck by lightning.\nand  served  as  an   intermediary     be- |\t\ntween them and the courts of justice, j     por Asthma and Catarrh.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt is one\nand\nwas presented wilh a gold watch and I 0f |],c ci,;cf recommendations of Dr.\nchain, thc gift of thc government of i Thomas' Eclcctric Oil that it can be\nThc ceremony, which    was|USe(j internally with as much success\nimpressive despite ils simplicity, was ; ;is jj can outwardly.    Sufferers  from\n       ._   made   by  the   light  of     the  all-night j asthma and catarrh will find that  the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sink the vessel were brought on deck! sun at 2 a.m., ;   d Inspector Phillips, j Oil when used according    to    dircc-\naround the conning tower. The commander of the tramp steamer by careful   manoeuvering  brought   the     snb-\nof  the  Hcrschel   Inland   detachment, J tions will give immediate reiicf. Many\nmade  the  presentation. i sufferers   from   these  ailments    havs\nThc watch, a handsome solid gold I found relief in the Oil and havc scut\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..*>.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.................................\ndragging around 200,000,00(1 pounds of j marine within range of his ronccaled [ timepiece, bore the R.X.W.M.P. mon-' testimonials,\nsuperfluous fa I with them. The expert ! armament, so that it required only a.ograni on the outer case, and was in\nhas probably underestimated the facts ' :''l\ufffd\ufffd\"  or  two  to    explode   the  bombs   scribed inside with  the following\nthe    U-boat  out of    the\nis a real-factor\nin ihe present\npublic service\nprogram.\nThere's NoWaste,\nit Saves Fuel and\nSugar, and it is\nalways ready\nNot least, it is\nDelioiouis,\nHeeilth-ful,\nw* and it\nSaL-tis^ies.\nTry\nWith the Fingers!\nSays Corns Lift Out\nI      ...M.wMfc Any Pain\n*.\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>.*\ufffd\ufffd *..f.\ufffd\ufffd.'\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd.^..\ufffd\ufffd..fa<.\ufffd\ufffd..a..a..*..\ufffd\ufffd..0.i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.l\ufffd\ufffd.*\nSore corns, hard corns, soft corns\nor any kind of a corn can shortly be\nlifted'right out with the fingers if\nyou will apply on the corn a few\ndrops of freezone, says a Cincinnati\nauthority.\nAt Jittlc cost one can get    a small. nuprc mmvc\nand Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, were\nequally as good. At Edmonton much\n; interest was shown in the interpro-\n: i yincinl competition, in which butter\nfrom Alberta, Saskatchewan and\nManitoba creameries competed. The\namazing uniformity of the ln'iilcr produced in these three prairie provinces\nwas especially noticeable here, the\njudge having a difficult problem to\nsolve in making the award. Of the\neight prize-winning samples, only\none point separated the score of the\nfirst from that of lhe last.   The judge j\ni,; said to have rcmraked that after I pol,.ld anJ <irics fa moincnl it ;3\ne.it.miatiiig thc iirst Jen samples an- plk,j ami .c]ocs not ;llll:ill,c or ,.V(.n\nother class could be made of the , ilrit:Uc lilc s\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn-ount]jn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,issue. 1-st\nsecond ten and all of them would ' tl,ink, Vou ^ ,;,-,, ojT-VOilr conls\nhave ranked as first das* commercial ' ai!fi cai]t!s(;S \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdov; without' a bit of\nbutter.\nThe uniform grade which has been\nreached in the butter produced in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba is\nthe result of the efficient system of\ngrading employed in these provinces,\nunder the \"supervision of the respective departments of agriculture. The\nquality is due lo the country\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdits excellent climate, its nutritious grains\nand grasses, its pure water, making if\nan ideal country for dairy cuttle. Xo\nwonder the output of butter of Western Canada, ever iner<-nsing as il js, , tran>pi>n\ncan   scarci ly   keep  pace   with   lhe   iV-. that   \"die\nas thcy applied before the war.  It is : alu^    blow\n.highly probable  that before   we    en- , water,\nj tercd  thc  war the  American    people;\nwere carrying around with them more ! Costiveness and Its Cures.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhen\nI than 200,000,000 pounds of unncccs- : the excretory organs rcfiir-e to pcr-\njsary adipose  tissue. | form their functions properlv thc in-\nI     Hut a remarkable change has comc ' jestincs become    clogged.     \"This    is\nI since we entered the war! The Amer- , known as costiveness and if neglect-( Uie _ Big King.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iean  people have been  getting rid of ; c.cl K1VCS nsc  u> dangerou- compliea-\nI their fat.    Thev have been  stripping \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtI0ns-       Pannelee s     \\ egetablo   Pills\nllunisclves for' action. They havci\\vl11 effect a speedy cure. At the\n!bcen thinking harder than ever. Thev , lir>;t intimation oi this ailment the\n| have  been  adjusting  their  point     of I sutlerer should procure a  packet    ot\nview,  their  habits of  life,   their   e*li-ltIlc  Pi\"^ .and   put   hmiseh     under    a\nI mate   of  values,   to   lhe    stern     ta-k   rourse   ot   treatment.     ihe   good   cf-\n! which  thcy have   undertaken.                  , i'1'1\":  l\"   the  pills  will   cc  .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdli.m.t  mi-\nI     .,-,    ,          ,.     .         .     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd                      ,,     'mcdinteiv Ciident.\nI      lhat  readjustment    i<  one  ol     I lit- ( -\t\nfacts  iii  our  national  life\n\"Presented by thc Canadian government to Ilavinck for services rendered Fort Norman patrol for murderers of Father* Kouvier and Lc-\nroux, 1915-1917.\"\nInspector    Phillips     told    llavinek\nthat \"Mr. Government,\" iu behalf of : for\" {\\~e further progress of humanity,'\nRig C'hiet.'' was vcrv [ __>[.-   Asquith.\nglad to recognize his Sri-Nice's in  this I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nway,  and  the dusky recipient of the\nnation's (hanks was manifestly proud\nThe Only Possible Peace\nThc only peace-worth the making\nor the taking is one which will open\na new road free oi toll lo all peoples, whether great or small, safeguarded by the common will, and,\nif   need   be,   by   the   common   power.\nof the nice-looking ticking machine.\nAlong with other remarks went >ounnecessary information ;i^ to how to\nuse it. The gueMs at the pi-cm nation were Sergt. flay. Constables\nDoak and Cook, and A.  E. Sank- and\nTry Drying Vegetables\nDehydrated (dewatered) vegetables\nand fruits retain the flavor of fresh\nproducts, you need no sugar to preserve them. Try drying your vege-\n'..'-'t'!'. >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ; ,.1i!  fi'.iili- this- summer.-\nbottle of freezone at any\" drug store,\" .Jt \ufffd\ufffd'H contribute an important chap-!\nv hich  will positively rid one's feet of i ter tn the hisior>   of lhe worhh   Our\ncvery corn or callus without pain or \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd enemies, seiing that   \\\\r Mere f.it  _<>f\nsoreness  or thc danger of  infection. ; body, made  the   mi-iake  of  U!it\\ii,g\nThis   new   drug   is  an  ether coin-': lll:>1   'i'0   '\"at  had   gone   to  ,,-ar  lnad-.\nOi  that |j;o->. mi-ciM!C',p;iciii   ue li.ne\nA Cautious Witness\nCeorgc    A.    Slalir.\nTrading company.\noi\nthe   North'\nI (uu'eriimi;\nwork   at    the\nteiU a good\nhe   ,isk(.d   Ui\nthe\nh.!r,\n-tiiry\ni.:i\\ e\nlighter   X\\Xic  of   his |\nSir   M_ai shall   Hall ]\nof a \\\\ itii' ss  w li om\na   di inn!ion   ni   \\i\\). '.\nS(\nnow   v\npain  ot  soi-rues.    If    your    druggist\nlin\ufffd\ufffdn't freefone lie can easily    get    a\nsmall bottle for you  from\nsale drug house.\nIi\ufffd\ufffdnl>'.tsi d\nr.    \\\\ e\ndisillu-\nM:-il.\nye;\nof\nfield\nim:\n:hi iii  p.iiiitcilh\n..ii e rou'.inuipg\n^loninn   Hi,\nFrance.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nin   tlie   p.i-i\nthe pi-ore-,\nvs   th,'  h.utlr-\nit immli ones\n\"Well.\"  said\nI     should     s.iv\nMothers   c.'.n     (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ntheir   chihh en   are\nworms, and lluv ]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI lying  lhc   best   of\nilv\nTilUV\niron!,1< d\nno  mm\n;ii<dics~  M\nw i.en\nv.th\nin  ap-\n< i,\nwilt'- -s\nthought\n,1\n. i-   r.\\\n,i;'_(\nlook\n-tl'.:!    a\nI       hit his\nwtioie-\n! Vegetarian Logic\nj     A vigtl.ui.iU  whose  family  \\\\,.s  i\n{of  town  w (ui   to  brtakfast  in   ,i  r\n] taurnnt  a\ufffd\ufffdd     took  a   s(,a   next   to\nt is prob.ihlv not generallv  known ' stranger.       The  m getarian   took\nthat    Bui\/il   is     nking   more   than   a . I\"1\"10',1  u> 'UK<rlw  his  u-.cd by\nnominal   pail   in   thc   war.     Her  iiavvi.\"\ufffd\ufffd'   ,,H'   -\"'anger   lhal   all   nu.il\n'!,.   .eas  and   co-one rat- , injurious,     -md     mat   lhe  human\nI'.iiitioiislv,\nnan        who\nwatch     al\nsome   aint   look   ti   i.ui   i.i   his   pen k< t\nto   sec   if   he   h.id   time   to   go   home\nand   tret   it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf   should   -ay   that     lhat\n' eli.ip   was   a   little     abseiit-eiiiwlrd.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I'monti.ii   Hulh tin.\n(oaves'   \\\\'(\ninn\n\\h rmiiial'-\nKaiser's Gift to T- R.\nSmashed bv Sailor\nA Woman's Burdens\nBrazil's Fine  Effort\nprobably \"not  generally\ntcll-\nl\"h<\ntlivers Flowing  North\n; m.iiiN  ii\\irs (low  north ,.s south.!     A   life   <ivc   porn\nlargest     liver    in   Canada.      the I William,   preseutui\nOyster Bay  Citizens   Want  No    Ho-\nhenzollem  Picture   in   Their\nNeighborhood\n:t      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd if      1- nip; io:\nI.v     him   !o   Col-\n; is patrolling\ning\n! thos\n,ith\n'o-operat-\neas ,mt!\nour own war \\es-sels and,\nvjre.it Hriiaiu in comoyingi\n;. while the .-J (ierin.in ship- ,\nseized   in   iier     harbor-   are.\nu'iind.\nno'\n' is\nA Tale of Two Cities\n'   Manic  defeat.\"  .-ays   :t   r.enw\"\niper, \"has  .produced-   unspt.discerns   of  despair       in-     I\ufffd\ufffdc rlin.\noutbreaks of ulttr    discourage-,\n\"Th\nne \\\\sp\nattle\nSucI\nment and downlicartedncs's never be\nfore were witnessed.\"\nContrast  this    with    thc    courage,\ncheerfulness and    unwavering    confi\ndtnee exhibited by   Paris, which    has\npractically  been   under   the     German 'Ior\n,\\   v. orkuu\nr  -xJi'M-tl\".'-\nli <   .ilh' s\n;;iu;:   I1, r\n:ig:.tn-.t   Cic riii.my.     SI\n\/ri .n   'inani iii' s  of  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-' il  -\\ !:ih' ;>.s  \\ i *.   -ji c\nlo\n:u.p\ni)C,(\nha-\ni n\n,     .uul\nshould he  strietiv vegi tari.in.\n\"But,\"  r( pii: <l   ihe  sn-,i1)ol,-,\nlorn   e.d  meat.\"\n\"Vou J'.isi   iiuw   ordered   \ufffd\ufffd. ^l:\n;lii   \\\ufffd\ufffd .;i lari.ui.    \".\\_'i - eir is j,\nv   liit.ii,   liecil'-, ' <:      i ','( imii::1\nbird \"\ni:!<i   i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . '_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nil-,\"   -,,;,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.-ihi.:\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\nind  oi'  ( '_<..\ns.alK\n\"J\nw.i> j Macki n\/ie.   ha\ndie! i terior     of     the\ni manv  himdrids\nM'!- . jntu  the .Arctic\ntri'iMilarii -   or\ns   ns   source  ir\neiii\nii 1\n:,1-\n\/U. h:i\\ e\nse'-.ih and\na rt ,i'    -;i-i .\nthtir\n:h.v.\ni omitry.\n\\>i   miles\n< ie. .ni.\ni'i.     Aui.-i\nsolllC\"\nl?o\ntne   in-\n\\\\ s  north\nonel\nt\nvear\nI hcotiore\nago.   iMiin\naii'l  empties ' Partj,   ot  eitiyem-\n.Must   ol    ]\nl\\Ul Isl    \\   I   {j\nto   ci ii f\n\\is;i.d   ilii.\n-e\\ era\n\\\\ hen      ;\nhome <\",\n'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHit\/,   .:\nin   Hi-.i-\n_to  tho\nin   th..:\nconn\na\ni\nii-\n\"-l-.'U.n.\nW I:.it  !-.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Pi-iiui\n!l ,i!lL\"T.\nl:o\n(i\n1 I\nThe\nii'iiii\nguns for four terrible  years and you I\nwill have an illuminating insight into\nthe characters of thtse two peoj '< s\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jn\nKansas Citv Star. '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nyou c\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it X'V\nCan  Vegetables\ngreen vegetables arc your best\nvr \\isj:<rs.\"    Can or dry them       Tlie  area  \"of   ti\nxt winter whenever more than   has  been  estimated\n.ii v-( pre ripe and ready. Keep j lion  square miles,\nuntil the frost comes. ',\"6it will I the    equator,   when,\n-.hem   .ill.    - \"\nThe Pacific Ocean\nPacific\n>out\nr,l,,\n111     tl.e\n'-?ecan\n7(1  ndl-\nW.     N.     U, - 1225\nJust in Time\n\"I  see  they are trying to limit  de- !\nbate  in   thc  senate-\" ;\n\"Yes,  just  as  th'     women      show !\nsitrns     of    breakir-g    in.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLouistillc j\nICouri-.r-Journal, .jj\n;^^0iifeVTtlCKi6lFrT^\nmKl\n.euf; c0><vF*sEiFpR;:;:p.i pe,;wsE:\nt is broadest at\nit measures 10.-\nj 000 miles from f;!-i to west. Its err.it-\njesl lrngth :\"rr>ni uoit'i to south, is 7.-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 350 3iiik=. 1:* i1'-?'!\"!. i-> greater *'i.m\nI that cf the -Atlantic, lhe :.vrrr.ee being\n'about 2.?3Q fa tho- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-- '15,ISO foet.) rh-'\n'deepest places t' i;s fr-.r d:scov'\"rrd i'\ni Ufa- Mindanao, one ot the l-'hiiip-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pines, the soundi-isTs- <\"io\" ing .'. d-pt'i\n: there oi 32\/',iv'14 f-'t. or more in..- s's\nmiles.     .\nXiPWL&xiM\nKiBMtX\nits   possi csor.   M rs    i\n' (^vstei   Hav  ieetnlh.\ni     \"-ri \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .\" i     i \"i\n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd been  m\\.i :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  to\n'iv   the   colonel.\nl'after  i'i.    si- kilt\n\\ hen   i:  v., s  rr h \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nre\npublic   library\nhung  there  lint\n'he   i.'-siipiua\n\\\".\nio  the  pillar.     Mis.\" i'c.Jh'.\/  offereil  S5\n.for  il'e  j'ainting   to   th*    ;a-su   . ..:-.(i\nI\" cant   its  ow ;n i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoi-^i ii11 ii   ur.iil   l!'i\n. .\"u   l.J'i. :iii-i   Roo.s'\nj vill.igers  re called it\nI a  parly   Sund.iy   an\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnil\n! home   ef   Mrs.   J'oiiu.\nI pictui'i.\nI Mr. rolii'7 w.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut Mis. Polht\/\n; in cm hers oi \"'if\n! struccli\ni- nl\nI.i'    ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,-\n;in ii ih.\nTi;f>   oru.-ni\/.i d\niroing  - to     the\ndcif.'.ndfu  thc\n1  ,1 (1    to\n-,\\.:nti d\np.ir'y   s.\nnvr   it   up.\nto   AOcp   it,\n.id.     \"\nruccli   cn   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nsion, -;lio  pur:-\nlaci rs  tatin rr\nor p-'-unj'th-   j\n! roj-\nil\n'O:   !t =\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdincrg\nIn   tl:\nposse s-\ntl'.t   vil-\nt   ns\n.<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  sti\nfeet\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr:.  A\nih:o- c\nnrc lightened when she turns to tbo right\nmciiicine. If her existence is raada\n\"gleoiny by the chronie wp'aknes=c', deli-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ale (leraTigeincntg, and painful d.sorder*\nthat ailiict v.uinaukipd she will find relief\nand  emancipation  from hct troubles In\n1 Pr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.. lit\nFhe's o\\envorke_d, nervcas. or - \"random u,\"' she finds new life and p're:igth\ufffd\ufffd\nIt's a powerful, invigorating tcr.ie and\nnervine v>liich -vas u^o-'vered ai.d nsed\nby an c-niincr.t piiyritian for many yearg,\nin   his   large -niodiMl   pTaetico   among\n' TTninen. - i\"or ,\\\"i.i':,' girls just \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i.reringt\n\".oii'iiiilioo.i: fur '.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.uiicii in niitii.'e liffff\nthe \"i\":.tiT- te Pirsci. p! ion '' ;'s 'X'.C Only\nii.. .ii. :i-' ;>uf up v.ithont aleobol. .uul can\nbe h:id in tiibiet as well as liquid form-\nTt's -.nit a \ufffd\ufffd'i ret preseriptior. f.>r its in-\nu'i ; -\".'.is :.','\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;iiirt.-il ah wrnrr1'-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'send\nJi!i- i'.ji- n .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. ] :. - ._\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> I>r. '.. - i. Pierce,\ni Invalids' Hotel, t..';.:..'.! T-j.s-.it'ito, Buffalo. X. Y., or branch in BridgcVurp, Out*\nHamilton,    Ont.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''When    yasaictf\ni through middle life, as in most oases at\nthis kind, I began to fail in health.   I\nj had eevere pains in my head, dizzy rpell_r, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n, my back ached arid I had pain<= ia mft\nI fiJe.    I becaiiiO very weak aud i.erTonr.\n' I   took   meili.-'irio   ruthm;*-    'entice  relief\nXV\n\/.I .\nI:  :t.\n\" j until I tO'ik Dr. Ticri'e's i'avonic Pre-\nription and this medicit* l.uiP, c.e up\n) n health an<l str?agth fln-d T rsrco through\n-    Our Language ' tk;a   cr.tioal   jc-iiod  in   a  good   rrfalthy\n\"\\\\\"b?t  =-^rt of a ira-i  is  Kic.s'-fi-t.\"\" i state.    Moroni    will   End   T>r.    Vier<\"t>'t\n\"Weil, he's rather     tight      except, Favorite Prescription. tw;  btlpfal dur-\n;-p\nI\nIc i s'fr-i ' iisg   this   trying   time.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMas.   SXU.M\n. Catss. 1C6 Kcbia* Av\ufffd\ufffd\nx*4 FEE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\n\\y\ni - ,' .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i year strictly iu   advance,   or ^2.50\n-a !:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!! 'not paid for three months.    If not\n\\.'X.x. Xor until the end oi\" the year it is \ufffd\ufffd3\n7l 1\ufffd\ufffd :>.hvays \ufffd\ufffd2.50 a  year to  the  United\nSlates iu advance.\nR. T. LOYVERY.\nEditor and Financier-\nADVERTISING RATES\n:\">?_iii<!uent Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nC~:il and Oil  Notices     7 00\nI;V.ray Notices 3.00\nCar.iB of Thanks     1.00\nCertificate of Improvement  12.50\n('.Vh-r-re more than oue claim appears in notice, J5.00 for each additional claim.)\nAll oilier legal advertising, 12 cents a\nline first insertion, and 8 cents a line for\nj'ich subsequent1 insertion, nonpariel\nru.'.isureinent.\nAs a rule, a fat woman objects to\nthe hobble skirt.\nOnk dillarin vour baud is worth\ntwo in tho j tckpob.\nDo not got too close to your idol.\nYou alight kcr the (laws.\nI 1 is now Hiiid that  the   Spanish\nllu was .-proud by the Germs.\nVilla is again dead. He is now\nabout live  laps ahead   of Hinden-\nbuvy.\nSome girls can play the piano\nworse than they can make a Mulligan stew.\nIm order to stop the llu, wear a\nfrout line gas mask and keep away\nfrom everybody.\nXeveu take your ad out of the\npaper. It is luckier than a horseshoe over your door.\nThere is no doubt but what\nCorraany can easy make peace\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'xvm?. with Bulgaria, Turkey and\nAustria.\nWe notice that Jim Ball, George\nCannon, Napoleon Bonaparte aud\nAmble Hehvard have enlisted in\nshe Yankee army.\nTitEuu has beeu a  big ball game\nhi Franco, many of the Germs try-\n:ig  to  make   home  runs.    Many\nave    died  at  the    bases,   while\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonsands have gone out on flies.\nThere is a  man  in North Van-\niiT.-tr who is 104  years  old.    He\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd :iofe get.married   until  he was\nXi yoars of .age.    Perhaps that has\n.-ori'iothing to do with his longevity.\nTiiEHE is considerable kick in\n-_ .\".titrio, because the Government\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:riits a. newspaper to be printed\nin German afe Kitchener, formerly\nXoilin. Somebody probably pan-\ndaring to the German  vote iu that\nTheke is a sky pilot in B. C.\nwho thinks that it is infra dig to\nvide in the same carriage to a funeral with the .undertaker. He also\nViec.ome's offended when asked to\npay his bills. Pulpit pounders of\nthiB kind have little power to save\nsouls.;- ' x x\nIf you .wish to ruin your\n. stomach eat plenty of hot cakes,\nfiried potatoes ahd pork: chops for\nyour breakfast, and take no exercise. There are ..other. methods\nthat will bring ^bout the same result,, but this is one of the best that\nwe can.recommend at present.\nThe big men in the war are all\nreligious said a preacher in Victoria.. No doubt the preachers in\n-Germany are .' saying the same\nthing about their big war men.\nHowever if all people were equally\nmoral their would be no wars,, even\nif religion was unknown in the\nworld.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Resot-uces is the name of a new\nand \"beautiful monthly published at\nPrince Ji'upert. under the manage-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of \\Ve.utori Coyney.. He is a noted\nwriter, and at one time was on tlie\nPtnfT of the New York Herald and\n\"World: He was connected with\nthe Notv Denver Ledge in 1S97,\nand left that paper to write up the\nKlondike for the. New York Her-\nTild. Maybe have, plenty of pros-'\njrerity is the wish of many friends*\nA Letter From Hades\niii\nin\n\"Alt GoLOXKI.,\nrplie ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.tcrl-.yO''. is welcome in the\nJ-s:ian fields. Anlisthenes, iny Cynic\nr-ief, reads your, caustic paragraphs\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI trusty, .spine' day, to Welcome you to\nX family rcirele. - life is a. hater pf shah:s\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 110 snobs stay long \"in his CQihpany.\n.iJosophy, alas, has ;been on,the doWn\n.de since Prussia took thedead: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd';. Uiuler\nr i^pecioX's uaiiie-Pf^lniperiarisni, the\n'.. isi-q.ii \"jj.itig h.u'elippiied their talehts\n:ijiev-p'rrve.rsir>!rr'of-rIfistbry\/'-and;rthe.\nr _ :c ratio h. of Boundaries.- Be it known:'\nr-heevOAIAn, that wewere the friends\n;'-i':i. it-i 'ifailoji's' \"Slid- sturdy 'cities,.'\"..--'lias.'.\n;ted-. Gerinaiiy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd produeedvOiiesinan to\nViii^vith. the sages^pf ;:Elearaiid.;Ioha\/:\n[ii'vplato.aiiid Sor'rates,|w3thHhe.r;heroe^\niti'h;qjis--';a^\n-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAX?.;, tiran, .>STeih.i3'fK'S?-:--:jiieir, great'irieh;v:\nXXlisiyiiXXV'a^yycr lived hefbre'thefei-7\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -^vrir.arudr.werer tlieiuselves... the treat*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi'JXiX'Xiv'XiX- 'conPn\ufffd\ufffdti:ities;;---r;iet:7,rthe\nrA-'SSfjirr, ice'-hewiire; :':'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- y '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'. r- '\"XXX: X\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,, XX e 35 ct- i li; ti Xi Cj-ii ic, ,:?v[a f 1c :,T.\\Vain -liris.\n:-r'7'!,..cu.?;'rin Tteeiit:?years.r;7.'.'''IIe'te:lls:^inuS-i\niS^t^&Sii'ob\ni'ud*^ii1osophicjr exursiwhs-\niiiy7Xn^XXTlAoXtyX\\X^X^.:\n5iU\/:eIe'iiVe,rifa)\"y--';k''now^\nMioyvsthat ':thp.-'tertiir.-'existence' if\n.-ctii.ree.'-'^\ntrihed IQiCtydalonS ;(2)-R-e3atiye*\nXX'XXtlh -is' -thfe':giit' pf-G^p-taI\nil\nS|r\nMi\nBecause Canada has put her hand\nto the plow and will not turn back:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdour country is in the war on the\nside of liberty and justice and will stay\nin it till complete victory is won and\nthe unspeakable Hun is smashed and\nbeaten to the ground;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda nation at war must make tre-?\nmendous. expenditures in- cash to keep\nup her armies and supply them with\nmunitions, food and clothing;   \\\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCanada must finance many millions-of dollars of export trade in food,\nmunitions and supplies which Britain\nand our allies must have on credit;\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfor these purposes Canada must\nmus<\ncarry on\nborrow   hundreds   of   millions   of\ndollars\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnd, this money must be borrowed\nfrom the people of Canada:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTherefore, Canada will presently\ncome to her people for a new Victory\nLoan to carry on.\n'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..'+'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd+\"       + \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCanadians will loan the money by\nagain buying Victory Bonds.\nThe national safety, the national\nhonor' and the national well-being\nrequire that each and every Canadian\nshall do his duty by lending to the\nnation every cent he can spare for this\npurpose.\ne\n:^^IlSilltll0::'r:0M!l;:\nvy MiTO|sgn in 1\ncomes to see your\nwar\nm\nIssued by Canada's Victory Loan Committee\nin co-operation with the Minister of Finance\nof the Dominion of Canada   .\n106\n:;.9ii\n; efeStiqii; ahcl-rfsy vThvperii^\ne...g; delusions;  .Ivveti & lie .exists, tlihiigh\n.?t-j.ie,'j,io.ii:^x|3-te.'i.i(j'q;;.pf\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'i&j'tl,St.^\neoiiinioiijilace : axioms oX piiijpsapiiy ;iire\n:igii6red:r:i)y':Slr^:';:lvdd:y \\vitli rill the ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'facility:: pf selfcqiii])!iiee.ii;t: : jgilpuiirce,'\n-far the rijeiialty yXx 3giiqraiice: is to he\nrignpraiit of. ignorance, jt 'is: :uot to he\nirwohdefed 'atrthal Ktark: Tiviiiii's hook oil\n'Ghitist^au .>S.pie.iici',' was plaeed:piir ,the\niiiflex, if this is 'Christian' Scii-nce:* \\ye\n:prefer 'Ffvjitheh WeietiCe.'-.:: Rtitrriieiiher\niiiaslers, J'ythagPrasr -ii.or ;C!irist', ivotihl\ntolerate -siich a rearieattire-of a eOiiiinqiir\nrsensersuhject.r';''.''.:'\nEpicurus is very interested inrthe;&lJoli\nlion of tlie saloqii, and asks facetiously if\nCongress ]3rqpOses to abolish hhuiaii\nnature, Jeaii Jacijnes is anxious; to- rev\npudiate the aiiijrcliist, exFeriiiieiits: Of\nRo'slieVist \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd B ussia-. - We cjpiisider them\nthe logical outcoiiie ctf h's- pvt'u teaching\nIn his diseoursfc 'Sur 1' inegalite', he:said,\n_t,et its begin, hy putliug aside all facts,\nfor they have nothing to do ^itli the\nquestion.- But - Christian civilization,\nlike our Own Pagan system, is .fotiilded\non facts \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: We hold \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith Br,.; jolitison, .-\nthat facts, are stHbhorilr.things;, and Jean\njfa'eqij'C$ must walk. t!ie.:,.plaiik,'.---'AS philosophers we do not forget [hat ;hc- caiied\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjis::-cli'airi^ta'iijS.\/. 'aii\ufffd\ufffdl'iycii,'.rasr^t,,jqi.irn;ilisi'\n\\vill.iiot' fdrge't that IierGaHedr'rtlie iuyeiir\nlion of'printing a hiislortii'iie:, Xy:. X ''jbXXlyi\n'..,,; Shakespeare.'is.ViWriting-::Sonii:et\ufffd\ufffdr.;in:a;\nCorn etcand->I-haye;tin;:;.eij:g;i^:aiiie!i:t:; with::\nl'ythagqWi;vrwhp::iSr;$t:in\\w6rkyig:.^\naiisolyedrprohleni fiyiilieyHejiirtlir-luXXXXy\nsibii,;ft-rr:.aiii satisSeid-^yith^therdii-henriiqtKvP\noimyiyXSXXV(xi}yt6T^Aii^\n.CuSsingrthqught^t.rM-isfererice:;:55^^\n.tiqids'-tllat'^\npoker fiends:. ':^:Iatk Tiv^iir jqins .'i;i.^...'%tiiEl-'-|;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdasks,-,.'r-th-0ii-.i.-.Xo-.-.'e^}?hl|^\nji_e'cticut.'.-a'!i'd-.;4.'''i'ri'e:h.^\nuiarly^rorid; esCirsther'^,- thongiits.:ncross- r\n^h:fi.;eo.ii't.iii:e.i.it,r;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" Caesfir is \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'hriiigJtig':.XX\"Xl\nlia-if tonic;-aiid jiiii; tiitl-is; constriida';,iy.I\nNotice To  Delinquent  Cp-Owners\nTo \\V. D. Slartin and T. R.\" Tii'riifcr; Or\ntu aiiy person or persons to uhom they\nni.'iy have transferred their interests in\nllu- Cray Rock, 'Lucky Jim, Little Giant,\nlllaek Bear, Ilulgu'r and Tip Top mineral.\nclaims, situated along the Kettle Valley\nRailway, in Arlington Camp, Greenwood\nMining Livision.\nVou are hereliy not;fied that I have expended the sum of Six Hundred Dollars,\nijftoo.), for labor and iiiiinovcinents upon\ntlie abuve mentioned mineral claims in\norder to hold said mineral claim; tinder\nlhe provisions of tlje Mineral Act, and if\nwithin ninety days alter the date of this\nnotice you fail or lefuse to contribute\nyour proportion of such expenditure, to-\ngellier with all cost of advertising, your\ninterest in such claims will become the\nproperty of the subscriber under section\nfour af an act entitled, \"An Act to Amend\nthe Mineral Act, 190 .\"\n; J. A. BRADLEY,\nBeaverdeil, B.C.\nX Dated this :17th day of October, 19I8.\nan eleetrierail wav-\nSityx-;:,:.-_;, ''x-'-.X\"'\"'.\nio\nPeiie^erhie; dear Colonel;.::\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ny:.\/ ..VqlirS-rCyiiibailyv-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' :DiOG-Kr^:KS:;\ni Si Monuments.\nKOOTENAY   GRANITE   and\nI^MpENTAL CO.. LTD.\nFront St. Next to City Hall. NELSON\nP. 0. BOX 865\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nEstimates   Given   on  all  Kinds   of\nGranite and Marble Work\nASSAYER\nE. YV. WIDDOWSON, Assayer mid\nCheinis', liox niio8, Ne'.son, Ii: : C.\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Cojtper\nJi 'each. OohhSilyei, (single as_3ay)\n\ufffd\ufffd100. Goid-Silver (duplicate assay)\nM.50. Silver-Lead J1.50 Silver-Lead-\nZine \ufffd\ufffd3.00. Charges for other metals etc\non application.\nCbe Centra! Sctel\nPHOENIX.\nOne of the largest hotels In\nthe city.   Beautiful location,\nfine rooms aud tasty meals.. .\nA. O. JOHNSON\nPROP.\njg^4.^.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&4\"&4*4\ufffd\ufffd4,4\"4v'i* ^4-4*4*4*4'*^4*4*4*^*^31\nCbe Bumc Rotel\nnelson, B*&\nThe only up^o^date Hotel in the interior,\nin every respect,\nFirst-class\nf Hot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\n%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '' each room.\nJa ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\ni CUISINE AND SERVICE THE BEST\nFirst Class Cafe and Barber Shop\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5\ufffd\ufffd\n15   SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated;   Electric  Lighted.\nRATES 31.00 pcr day and up; European Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats.\ns** ***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdfr4\"f**f\"f\"f\"f*4\"fr 4.4.^4*4\"?\"l\"f\ufffd\ufffd*l\ufffd\ufffdss\n4*\n*\nWe've   Got   Him   Throttled   At   Last.\nWho? Old man High Cost of Living. Bound and gagged, kicked\nhim clear of the premises. He just naturally couldn't stand our low\nprices. Too bad for him but come over and let us tell you all about it.\nAnother big shipment of woolens at prices that will make you\nthrow the old catalog in the stove will reach you this week and more\non the road. Follow the crowd don't lose out-on all the good bargains. We believe that low prices and quick turnovers will keep our\nstock fresh and high prices will glue the stuff to the shelves an 1 as we\nare not running a cold storage plant we are selling 'em afld selling.\n'em fast. Get in while the getting is good, that spare change you\nsave in buying of us will help buy another war loan bond.\nPlace your order quick  for grain sacks at 30c each.\nBr'ng your eggs, we pay more than any else in the district for\nreal fresh ones.     Save the rotten ones for Mr. Hohenzollern.\nC'mon over and see us, we're real sociable.\nThe Myncaster Mercantile Company\nHotel Building\nMynca8ter,-B.C.\nI P. BURNS & CO.\n4 CANADA FOOD BOARD LICENSE NO. 113\n;| Dealers in Fresh and Salt Meats, Fish\nI and Poultry.     Shops in nearly all the\nI towns of the Boundary and Kootenay.\nj COPPER STREET, GREENWOOD, B. C.\nJSC\nWindsor Hotel\nGreenwood, B.C.\nThe Windsor Hotel is one of the\noldest and most_comfortable hotels in the\nred metal metropolis. It is located in the\nheart of the city, and convenient' to all\nbusiness houses, Heated with steam and\nelectricity, Fine sample rooms, Many\nof the bedrooms contain electric heaters.\nThe bar is replete with modern beverages. Hot coffee, sandwiches, and light\nlunches always ready. Touch the wire\nif you want rooms reserved.\nX\nX\n0000<KX>0<>0<K><><K>0000000000<>\nGreenwood Garage\nTires, Oils, Gasoline, and\nall Accessories for\nMotor Cars\nRepairs of any kind, and\nall work guaranteed\nC. E. STAMPER\ng  Phone 27 MANAGER\n0<>0<X><KH>0<>0<>0000<>0<>0000006\nBritish Columbia has been\nhere a long time so has\nthe R C, Cigar. Absolutely Guaranteed. Clear\nHavana Filled, The Cigar\nthat never varies.    .    .    ,\nHave you tried one lately **\nWILBERG & W0LTZ\nB. C. CIGAR FACTORY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C\nPHONE   13\nAuto    and   Horse   Stages\nLeave    Greenwood    Twice\nDaily to Meet Spokane and\nOroville Trains\nH. McKEE\nGREENWOOD\nCOAL AND WOOD\nAGENT FOR\nLETHBRIDGE COAL\nAutos Fop Mire.   The Finest\nTurnouts in the Boundary.\nLight and Heavy Draying\nPalace   Livery  And  Stage\nGREENW000D, B.C.\nW.   H.   DOCKSTEADER, Ppop.\noooooooooooooooocooooooooc\nT.    THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSED AND REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\noooooooooooooooooooooooooo\nj SYNOPSIS OF\nLAND ACT AMENDMENT\"'\nPre-emption, now confined to surveyed\nlands only.   \/\nRecords will be granted covering only\nland suitable for agricultural purposes\nand which is non-timber land. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties of not more than four may\narrange for adjacent pre-emptions, with\nJoint residence, but each malting necessary, improvements on respective claims..\nPre-emptors must occupy claims for\nfive years and make Improvements to\nvalue of $10 per acre, including clearing\nand cultivation of at least 5 acres, before receiving Crown Grant.\nWhere pre-emptor in occupation not\nless than 3 years, and has made proportionate improvements, he may, because\nof ill-health or other cause, be granted\nintermediate certificate of improvement\nand transfer his claim.\nRecords without permanent residence\nmay be issued provided applicant makes\nimprovements to extent of $300 per annum and records same each year. Failure to make Improvements or record\nsame will operate as forfeiture. Title\ncannot be, obtained on these claims In\nless than 5 years, with improvements of\n110 per acre, including 6 acres cleared\nand cultivated, and residence of at\nleast 2 years.\nPre-emptor holding Crown Grant may\nrecord another pre-emption, lf he requires land In conjunction with his\nfarm, without actual occupation, provided statutory improvements made and\nresidence maintained on Crown granted\nland.\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20\nacres, may be leased as homesltes;\ntitle to be obtained after fulfilling residential and improvement conditions.\nFor grazing and Industrial purposes,\nareas exceeding 640 acres may be leased\nby one person or company.\nPRE-EMPTORS' FREE GRANTS ACT.\nThe scope of this Act is enlarged to\ninclude all persons joining and serving\nwith His Majesty's Forces. The time\nwithin which the heirs or devisees of a\ndeceased pre-emptor may apply for\ntitle under this Act Is extended from\none year from the death of such person,\nas formerly, until one year after the\nconclusion of the present war. This\nprivilege ts also -made retroactive.   -\nTOWNSITE PROPERTY ALLOTMENT\nACT.\nProvision Is made for the grant to\npersons holding uncompleted Agreements to Purchase from the Crown of\nN such proportion of the land, lf divisible,\nas the payments already made will\ncover In proportion to the sale price of\nthe whole parcel.- Two or more persons\nholding such Agreements may group\ntheir interests and apply for a proportionate allotment Jointly. If it is not\nconsidered advisable to divide tbe land\ncovered by an application for a proportionate allotment, an allotment of land\nof equal value selected from available\nCrown lands in the locality may be\nmade. These allotments are conditional\nupon payment of all taxes due the\nCrown or to any municipality.' The\nrights of persons to whom the purchaser from the Crown has agreed to\nsell are also protected. The decision of\nthe Minister of Lands In respect to the\nadjustment of a proportionate allotment\nis final. The time for making application for these allotments is limited to\nthe 1st day of May, 1919. Any application made after this date will not be\nconsidered. These allotments apply to\ntown lots and lands of the Crown sold\nat public auction.\nFor Information apply to any Provincial Government Agent or to\nO. H. NADHN.\nDeputy Kialatw of Lands,    '\nVteterU,Th. a\nil\nI\n-0\nsi\nin\ni\n1\n15\nii","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. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1918_10_17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0308501","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.088333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-118.676389","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Published as The Ledge from 1906-05-10 to 1926-07-29; Published as The Greenwood Ledge from 1926-08-05 to 1929-05-23.<br><br>Frequency: Weekly","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"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."}],"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. : R.T. Lowery","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. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1918-10-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/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]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1918-10-17 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 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":""}]}