{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","Description":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"3166c81e-e3e1-499d-ab5e-33fb0f15ff94","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2016-07-15","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1920-01-22","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xledgreen\/items\/1.0306091\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \/'.\n'To*iam\n*ci$1\nlib?\n*ry\"y.\n!\ufffd\ufffd^l^Bf\nTHE  OLDEST   MIHIMG  CAMP  NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nVol,   \ufffd\ufffdXVI.\nGREENWOOD, B-.-'Ci THURSDAY, JANUARY 22.  1920.\nCosy Homes\nMake your home cosy and attractive by filling it with some\nof pur choice and elegant Furniture. Carpets and Pictures.\n\"Use our Crockery. Granite and Tinware in your kitchens\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ana dining rooms     ..\nOils for machines of all kinds, coupled with a large stock of\nwell-assorted Hardware\nTM. GULLEY & CO.\nPHONE 28.\nGREENWOOD. B.C.\n''STORE OF QUALITY''\nWe carry a'large line of\nMEiy'S FURNISHINGS\n-GROCERIES\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   AND ':-.-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHARDWARE ,\nJ. G. McMynn,  Midway\nNo. 28\n^rf!?nyfTH?f??t?T?Hf??m??Mn??i??Tn!mft??nH?TfTmff?nr htthss:\nJust Arrived\n.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ..'   - - \" '     ..      o\nKippered Herrings, Smoked'Salmon, Smoked Haddie,\nSable Fish, Salt Cod\nLayer   Figs,   Dates,   Peels,   Currants,   Raisins   and\nall   kinds   of   Nuts\nPhone 46      LEB & BRYAN\nI BUYJANt) SELL ANY MINING\nOR INDUSTRIAL STOCK LISTED ON ANY EXCHANGE.\nI   WILL   BUY  ANY   AMOUNT\nOF ANY   ISSUE OF   THE   DO:\nMINION   OF     CANADA   WAR\nLOAN\nD. ST. DENIS\nP.p. Box 1102      :    . Nelson.^B.C\n\\  - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n&^oooooooooooooooooooooc<h>ooo<k>ooooooooooooooooooo<\nt\nIndependent Meat Market\nGREENWOOD, BC.\nBEEF, VEAL, PORK, POULTRY and FISH\nHAM\/BACON, ETC.\nPhone 5 MEYER & WILLIAMS, Proprietors.\n\ufffd\ufffdOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOC oooooooooooooooooooooooooo <!\nBest prices paid for raw furs\nG. GLASER\n_ Manufacturing Furrier\n_...' Guaranteed High Class Furs    '\"-\nNice selection kept in stock and made to\norder from selected skins\nCustomer's furs made up.   Remodeled\nand repaired\nSkins'dressed and mounted,'at\n' reasonable prices\n416 Ward Street Nelson, B.C.\nLaco Tungsten Lamps\n15 to 60 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50c each.\n100 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$125 each.\nNITROGEN\nLAMPS\n60 Watts\n100    -\n200   \ufffd\ufffd..\n\ufffd\ufffd   *   $1,25 each\n-    -   2.00 \ufffd\ufffd\n3.50 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n*   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\nBatteries Charged Repaired and Stored for Winter\nGreenwood City Waterworks Co.\nJ, P. MORGAN\nDealer in\" Second-hand Furniture\nand Clothes, Metals, Sacks,\nHorses,  Cattle,  Etc.\nBAKER STREET.     -    NELSON\nJONH   DUNLOP   CO.\nINVESTMENT SECURITIES .\n421 Baker Street\n.- ^-.^ NELSONyB-. Oy-y^-\nStocks, Bonds, Notes and Debentures,\nWHEN IN NELSON CALL AT\nMEAGHER &  Co., 511 Baker St.\nFor High Class Dry Goods, and Ladies Ready to\nWears-and Millinery\nWe  Always  Show  The   Newest  First\nMAIL  ORDERS A  SPECIALTY\nCUT-GLASS   SILVERWARE\nand JEWELLERY\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd In Great Variety\nSuitable For Presents\nApprobation parcels of any line of my\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd goodsisent upon request\nWatch repairing attended to in a prompt\n- and efficient manner. \" _\nTIMBERLAKE,  SON & CO.\n.  GRAND PORKS B.C.    \\\n> OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOo\nRISK'S HMFt\nMIDWAY. B. C;   '.iyyx\nTasty meals and comfortable rooms.    Meals served afe~any time.  <\nSample rooms for drummers.. Soft drinks, cigars and cigarettes.  '\n. Pool ball in connection.\nW. D. RUSK\nPROPRIETOR\no .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -        ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.'. ..'-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"--..-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd>oooooooooooooopoooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooopo *\n..Regular saving -will soon show.ahand-\n;: .some.balance in the .depositor's - account.\nIt may^ be difficult for.you to come to tb?\nbank always when you: want to deposit.\n: Send in deposits by mail\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-tbey will, be; as'\ncarefully handled as tbougli you Handed\nthem over the counter. ;   ..   nA ,   ''\nPAID-UP CAPITAL   :xZ: x-xXX^ --y; ;$l 5,000,000\n...RESERVE -FUND >;-';;:I;.y_y.^.iy $\\5,000.000.\nGREE.WOOD BRANCH,;!;. &Brawders,^Manager?:\nStock Ranches Wanted\nI have enquiries for Stock Ranches\nfrom buyers in the East, call and List\ny.ourpropertieswithnre.-- -----,\nCHARLES KING.\nReal Estate & Insurance.\nGreenwood, B.C-\nWANTS, ETC.\nFoe Sale.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLud.wig Piano, in\ngood condition, apply to M. C.\nBiner, Phoenix.:\nFor . SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMason & ..Risch\nPiano, in good condition;, may be\nseen at F. Werner's rausic.studioV\nGrand Forks.   ...\nFor \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sai,k. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Willys-Knight\nFour. 1916 Touring Car, also\nOverland 1914 :m'odel. Enquire\nDan Biner,' Phoenix, B.C.  ;.\nFor'; Eisnt.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Christina., take\nDancing Pavilion and .80 acres of\nLake shore land. Acreage rented\n'separatelyqr together, '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Apply to\nBox 142, Phoenix; :B;C. \",'\nA Presbyterian phufch will be\nbuilt in Princeton.;\n.  Jap Oranges 75 cents a box at\nRendell's store.      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     '\".'''.\"'\nBillDoncelly arrived in town\nlast week from the~ prairie.\nMr. aud Mrs. Ed. Stanaway\nhave left Phoenix for Spokane.\nMrs. J. P. Flood is visiting\nrelatives at Alexander, Missouri.\nAbout 15 men will be kept doing\ndevelopment work \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd at the Rock\nCandy mine on the North Fork.\nW. H. Kent, of the relieving\nstaff of tbe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\", left for;' Kamloops on\nFriday last.\nj     Finnan Haddie,  Smoked Sable\nJ Fish and Golden Fillets at  Rendell's store, Greenwood.\nMr. and Mrs. C. ;M. Campbell\nand family, . of Phoenix, left on\nMonday morning for a two\nweeks'visit in Vancouver.\nNew stock of Mitts,. Gloves,\nSocks, Woolen Underwear Fla-\nnelet.tes, etc.    G, A.Rendell.\nMr. Emery, government electrical inspector, is in town testing all. the watt meters of the\nGreenwood City Waterworks.\nE. I\/. Steeves, is in the Grand\nForks hospital, suffering from an\ninjury that he received while at\nwork on the Main Kettle river.\nA full supply of: Royal Household flour, wheat, shorts, bran,\noats, etc., on hand. G. A. Rendell.\nS. R.   Smith,, who   has   been\nemployed    at   the i Rock   Candy\nmill, for some month's past,   was]\nin Greenwood on. Friday and Sac-\nurday~'\"   ;\"\" '\"\"\"\"\"\"\"'^;'-~''-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:----\nFor that hasty cough get a\nbottle of Rexall's Syrup of White\nPine and Tar at Goodeve's Drug\nStore.\nOwing to the danpe and hockey\nmatch on Friday night the regular meeting of the G. W. V. A.\nwill be held on Thursday, January 22nd.\nThe latest, styles' of Signet\nRings in solid 14k gold ;for\nMisses, Ladies or Gentlemen at\nMcElmon's. .\nMiss Ruth Swanson,. left. for\nPullman, .this week, where she\nwill take, an advanced course in\nstenography at the Washington\nS ta te col lege._: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDr. G. H. Acres-was elected\nmayor in Grand Forks last week,\ndefeating H.; A. Sheads by a\nmajority of 57. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ,\n. H. Q. Lucas, manager of the\nPrinceton branch of the Canadian\nBank of Commerce, is in Toronto\nattending- the annual meeting of\nthe directors of, that  institution..\n. The 20th Annual Convention\nof the Associated Boards of Trade\nof Eastern British;Columbia: will\nbe held in. the City ;of Trail on;\nTuesday\/the 3rd day of February,\n,1920;:. :\"''-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd x '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"\nEUROPEAN INVESTMENTS offer ex-\nceptionai;opportunities for investors, just\nnow, on account; of. the. low value.of\nEuropean currency and .the fact that .the\nCanadian dollar is at a premium, in most\nEuropean countries. British\", French,\nBelgiam and \"Italian.- Government ..War\nLoans\"can be bought with iS.per cent, tp\n105 per. cent better opportunity bf return\nby Canadians, than by the investors Jn\nthe countries mentioned.. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,Confidential\ncircular-in .this regard mailed. upon 'request '.'Ask to be' placed on onr mailing\nlist for monthly, financial .review Which\ndeals with eyery phase of the investment\nsituation. Xatest infonnation-.'regarding\nstandingvprices;-' yields! etc. ,6f any bond\nor security supplied free upon applicatton.\nVancouver and. Victoria's pleading financial housed Burdick.Bros. & Brett Limited\nHotel Vancouver-Bldg.,:yancptiyer, B.C.\n'. The road between. Greenwood\nand Grand Forks', is. still, open.\nOn Tuesday evening- the hockey\nplayers were taken to ihe Forks\nby D.'. ;McPhersoh - and W. H.\nDocksteader in their autos.  ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-.-.\n.Oa Friday evening, Jan.' 23,\nthe Boundary G. W. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd V.. A. will\nhold^ a . Dance in the- Masonic\nHall. * Good music. Supper will\nbe , served ,' iri.t.he. banquet! halL\nAdmission, Gentlemen $1, Ladies\n50c. Daricing to commence after\nthe hockey niatch,'-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. -\n; J.-\"Senator\" McAuley well-\nknown in tbe Boundary ' was in\nPrinceton last week; :. \"Senator\"\nwas a resident of Phoenix.during\nthe early dajs of the camp.\nLately lie : has; been, engaged in\nfarmiog in Manitoba, .where, lie\nsold out .his interest a short time\n^o-yZfyy^ Xiy'iiyixiZ ?XixiXX ii-'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdy For > Sale:,;:^ .Thoroughbred\nwhite! leghorn :- cockerels. $Z00\neach.: Apply '.to .Wm.. Jenks,'\nGreenwood.. -.'->-.. ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-.  v.V -.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\",\"-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nBoundary Hockey\nGreenwood leads in the race for\nthe  Boundary  hockey   honors  by\nwinning in the local rink last  Friday evening by 5-2, and in Grand\nForks on  Tuesday evening by 1-0.\nThis makes the League standing as\nfollows:    Grand Forks won  1, lost\n2;   Greenwood won 2 and lost 1.\nA good  s!zed crowded attended\nthe second scheduled game in the\nlocal\" rink  last   Friday   evening,\nwhen Grand Forks were the local\nboys opponents.    From  the face-\noff fche   home boys showed   better\nform  than  in  the previous game\nand a few minutes after the start\nthe score was 1-0 in their favor.\nThe visitors then made an effort and\nwere successful in- tieing the score.\nDuring the remaining part of the\ngame the Greenwood boys were the\naggressors,   their   back    checking\nfeatured the play   and. with accurate   shooting   they   were  able to\nscore four more goals.   A few minutes before the end of the last periods the Forks scored  making the\nfinal count   5-2  in   Greenwood's\nfavor.\nA. J. Morrison refereed the\ngame in a most impartial manner,\nand as. the play was clean he did\nnot have to send a player to the\npenalty box. The line-up follows:\nGrand Forks:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGoal, L. F.\nTepoorten; point, Eric Atwood;\ncover point, Clinton Atwood; rover\nLudy Frankovitch; centre, W. J.\nReynolds; right wing, \"Cy\" Pen-\nnoyer (capt.); left wing, Ralph\nCook. Spares, E. Mcllwaine and\nV. Siddall.\nGreenwoods\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGoal, Dick Taylor;\npoint, Bob Murray (capt.); cover,\nCarl Carlson; rover, Ed. Stanaway;\ncentre, W. Almstrom; right wing,\nGeorge Clerf; left wing, Jim Hallett. Spares, Ross Wood and Pete\nDocksteader.\nOn Tuesday the Greenwood team\njourneyed to Grand Forks and\ndecided the third scheduled game,\nwhen, the Forks went down to defeat by 1:0. So far this'proved to\nbe the fastest match of the season,\nwith Greenwood having the edge\nof the play over their opponents.\nA change was made in the Greenwood line:up, Ed. Stanaway having left the Boundary, Suds Smith\nreplaced him,_who__ scored, the.only\ngoal, of the game.   .\nThe fourth match will be played\nin the local rink on Friday evening. The Greenwood boy3 are\nshowing ..the . best of form and as\nthe games have been of the best, a\nlively contest -will be expected\non that nighfe with the. Foi ks team.\nAfter the play the G. W. V. A.\nare.holding a dance in fehe Masonic\nHall. ',\"--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\":\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWestern Float I\nS3\nAllenby boasts  of   a   first-class\nskating rink.\n'The yellow peril may be driven\nout of the Okanagan.\nToronto will again have daylight saving this year.\nThe Fireman of Grand Forks\nwant a fire auto truck.\nFake prescription forms for\nliquor are being used in Calgary.\nMrs. W. Garland Foster is the\nfirst woman councillor of Nelson.\nIt was 63 below zero during a\ncold snftp last month at Black Hills\nin the Yukon.\nThe aera of the Dominion of\nCanada is nearly an large as tbat\nof the whole of Europe.'\nDawson people will make the\nexperiment of raising goats in the\nYukon the coming season.\nJ. C. Hopkins, a widely known\nglobe trotter, died recently in\nDuncan, at the age'of 8i.\nMining News\nThe 600 ton test mill which is to\ntreat the zinc ore from the Sullivan\nmine, was completed in Trail last\nweek.\nOre carrying between 15 and 20\nper cent, copper was struck recently, in the Castledale mine, near\nGolden.\nThe old winze on the Evening\nStar mine, Dayton creek, will be\nunwatered, with a view to having\nit undergo a thorough examination.\nThe Hedley Gold Mining company received 818,000 during the\ncurrent year for the arsenic contained in the ore that was shipped\nto the Tacoma smelter.\nThe British Columbia Department of Education has placed\nmusic officially on the school cur-\nsiculum.\nArizona leads the Western States\nin metal production with the value\nof the mineral produced afe $108.-\n707.000 during 1919. This is\nnearly a 50 per cent, decline over\n1918.\n:Sea-sick\n.; \"Where is Dead; sea' Tommy?\"\nasked the teacher. -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>;.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''Don'b.know, ma'am,\"; was the\ncandid reply.   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\",'.'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-';..-\".-\n: \"Don't know where the D<?ad\nsea is?\" There was' scorn in the\nteacher's voice. .. ;\n'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdXNo, ma'am,\"Vcame the reply.\n?'I didn't even know any of them\nwas sick.\" ':-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'.~ .-\nIfe is expected that the Kam-\nloops-Okanagan branch of the\nC. N.R. will be completed and in\noperation next fall.\nThe Shands roadhouse at the\nmouth of the Stewarfe river,\nYukon, was recently destroyed by\nfire.    It was a landmark of '98.\nHenry ETordhof, a pioneer of the\nYukon, was burned to death when\nhis cabin was destroyed by fire,\nlasfe month.    He went north in '98.\nMartin Anderson, an old-timer\nof the Slocan district, who had resided in the vicinity\" of South\nSlocan', for fehe past 20 years, died\non January 17.\nNewfoundland * now boasts of\nfifteen feet of snow, tbe heaviest\nin the history of tbat Dominion.\nMight let this section have some of\nit, as ife would help ont the loggers\nand other forest workers.\nThe Great Northern -.-will make\nextensive improvements afc Caw-\nsfeon. This railway will build a\nloading platform, freight shed,\npassenger shelter and platform, and\n150 feet of spar track at thafe point.\nThe Canadian Raider, one of the\nnew ships being bnilt at Vancouver for Canada's national merchant\nmarine,- has beeu-\"\"charfeered to\ncarry 2,500,000 feefe of B. C. lumber to Australia on her maiden\nvoyage.\nIt is reported that Greenwood\nis due for a good mining boom in\nthe near future. That town is entitled to something different than\nit bas had for many years past,\nand if a mining boom is coming\nfehat will prove a benefit to tbe\ntown and the people ife can't come\nanytoo soon.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKamloops Standard\nSentinel.\nA four mile spur will be built to\nthe colliery afe Coalmont fehis year,\nwhen fehat mine will become an\nimportant producer. At present\nfche coal is being hauled from the\nmine by four auto trucks.\nThe recent snow fall in fehe Slocan has helped the ore shippers in\nfehat camp. Four-horse teams are\nhauling ore from the Ottawa to\nSlocan Cifey; the Republic mine, on\nLemon creek, has started to rawhide its high-grade silver-lead ore\ndown to Slocan City.\nShippersl of ore feo the Trail\nsmelter have made,a good start\nthis year. For the two firsfe weeks\nof the year, a grand total of 12,214\ntons has been received afe this\nsmelter. - During, that period the\nBell, Beaverdell, shipped 74 tons,\nand the Emma, Coltern, 1228 tons\nThe Sunloch Copper properties\nwithin fewo miles of the power\nstation of tbe British Columbia\nElectric afe Jordan river, and about\n43 miles from Victoria, have been\ntaken over by the Consolidated\nMining '& Smelting company, of\nTrail, according to a Victoria report. Extensive development; work\nwill be commenced on the property\nafc once, as the low grade ore showing is mosfe promising.\nPenticton Development Co. is\nagain_showing signs of. activity and\nthe first meeting of the directors\nfor a number of months past was\nheld on Saturday, Jan. 3, afe which\ntime it was determined to go\nahead and put in a concentrator at\nthe property owned by the company, known as the Torpedo group,\nsays the Northwest Mining Truth\nof Spokane. The ground is located\nclose to Okanagan lake, B.C., and\nwas worked from 1907 to 1910 by a\nVancouver company. A car shipped last summer gave satisfactory\nreturns.\nOrchids and Mignonette\nA woman lived in a garden o'sice,\n. On a quiet village street:\n.Where the grass was  green ..with   the\n. tender fains   --V .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnd shaded by elms from the heat:\nWhere primrose'and daisy and mignonette\nGrew riotously at.her-feet.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBut'the woman-who\" beard of the jungle\nWhere strange young orchids grow.\n(Why jvomen will do these foolish things,\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Only Cod in his wisdom can know.)\nBtit-r-she left her-garden  and took the\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- ;'trail-\n-'-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd That leads\"where the wise don't go.\nOh,. yes, she found the orchids,\n.-. But women don't ever forget.\nAnd she dreams in the heat of the jungle\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. Of a garden with clean rain wet,\nAnd over the scentless orchids\n1 -\". Drifts the odor of mignonette!\nGreenwood   Theatre\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 29th\nCOMMENCING AT 8:15 P. Ai.\nDON'T  FAIL  TO  SEE\nCarveth Wells\nTHE  JUNGLE  EXPLORER\nAND  HIS\nReal Jungle Pictures\nMade from nis owa photos and in Natural Colors\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   also GORGEOUS   COSTUMES\nTWO   HOURS   SPLENDID   SHOW   BY ' THIS\nW\ufffd\ufffdII-known Lyceum asi Cftautaneua Entertainer\nNow on his way back to the Tangle where he lived for shc years\nExploring for the British Government\nPirates. Peacocks, Huge Saakes, Aces, Tteers. Crocodiles,\njungle Dwarfs, and Elephant Cafcftfn?\nBRING YOUR CHILDREN.     Front seats are specially Reserved for them\n'     '   Admission:     ' Adults, 55c, Children, 25c\nYoa as soto tbe Movies any day\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtats is NOT A MOVIE.\nIt Is EBCfe tetter\ny0\ufffd\ufffd\ny^u.-pi\n*gy%i4\nmm\nxmL\nZX$X\ufffd\ufffd.\n^*2\ufffd\ufffd*n*'i>^^\n^aups Q\nTHE    TiEDOTC     ni? RF.vwnrvn     \"R     n\ntbat old sore or 6kin disease ol\nyours breaks out again? It's because the remedies you have been\nUBln? do not get to the root of the\ndisease, but jefliiln on the surface.\nTry Zam-Buk! It penetrates to the\nunderlying tissues, destroys all\ngerms and cures from the \"root\"\nup. Hence ITim-Buk cures are\nlasHnc.   All dealers. SOc. box.\n1 was not bad, but that much of it will\nprove to have been good. On the\nother hand, mankind also hopes that\nbecause of the  sacrifices   made,    the KaslJy and Uu,ckiy tured wlti\nsufferings  borne, the patriotism   and      pPYPTlAlV   i IN1MPNT\nheroism displayed, there will emerge ,. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,,\n. , . ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,      , Koi  bale by  All  Dealers\na  nobler conception  01  mans  duty  to j UourUs  &  V.O..   lJrop'rs. Napanee.  Ont\nhis  fellowmen, a higher standard   in! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nreligion, in intellectual attainment, in  M Ap-r PU tural\nsocial   relations,   in   community   lifc  iueans AglVLU-lUldl\nand service.\nIn this new peace era,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin this\ndawning in the twentieth century of\na changed period in thc world's history,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe people of all nations should\nturn their backs on the past, and, for-\nEdmonton Stackyards\nHave A Good Year\nProrperity\nin\nNovember Was the Heaviest Month\nIn Cattle Receipts.\nLivestock to the value of $5,559,599\nwas handled at Edmonton, Alberta, in\n1919. Of this amount $3,913,472 represents cattle and $824,430 hogs.\nThe receipts at the yards show a\nheavy advance over preceding years.\nThe total cars received in 1919 numbered ,816, as compared with 3,147\ncars in*iyi8 and 2,086 in 1917. November was the heaviest month in respect\nPeace and Its Obligations\nWith the formal exchange of ratifications of thc Peace Treaty of Versailles    by    Germany   and   the   great\nOne    person   in   Every   Twelve\nSaskatchewan Owns an Auto.\nWhen a province with a popu'ation\nof about 750,000   has    almost    59,000\ngetting thosc things which are behind,  automobiles in usc, or an average ofn\ufffd\ufffdC*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffde reCClptS and JlinUary m hog\npress  onward with  faces alight   ami  one to every twelve persons, it is fair-  rc^flp S-\neager hands to grasp thc more glori-1 ly obvious  that that province is  en-       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   lc'e\nous things that lie ahead.    The    old .joying a reasonable amount of pros- \"css   nl     .\nignominious strife   in   party politics,  pcrity.   This, in a community where  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdml!eu being S.Obo\nthe cruelty and oppression and ruth-jthe majority of its population is dc-\nlcssncss in business competition, be-] pendent on the products of the land,\ntween Capital and Labor, between the'means agricultural prosperity,\nclasses and  thc   masses,    should    bej     More than 58,820 automobile licen-\nsupcrceded  by   a   new   spirit   and   a  ses wcrc taken out in the province of\nready  willingness  to   co-operate   the j Saskatchewan, or approximately 8,00J|\npowers,   with   the   exception   of    the I\nUnited Statcs, and many of thc lesser\npowers,   the  Great  War  came  to  an\none with thc other for thc good of all. j in excess of thc   number    issued\nWc have undergone all the suffer-] 1918, according to figures compiled\nings, the horrors, thc losses of the; by the motor license department of\nGreat   War.   Wc havc borne  up and! the Saskatchewan government.\nofficial and  legal  end    on    Saturday,  workcd together with a national de-j \t\nJanuary 10, 1920, and peace in an in-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd termination to achieve victory for the!     It's a poor rule that isn't good for\nternational  sense once more  prevails  right    Wc  ,iavc  accepted  our iosscs j morc than onc kick.\nin a wold distracted by war for over in a Spicnd;j spjriti   NoW| in thc jn.| \t\nfive years. I terests of all  and   of\nwas also an  increased busi-\nhorscs,   the   total   number\ns compared with\n!380 in 1917.   Their   value   is   put   at\n\ufffd\ufffd564,525.'\nShipments to thc United States for\nthe ycar totalled 11,150 cattle and 43S\ncalves. Country points in Canada\ntook 44,856 cattle, 3,291 calves, 3,945\nI hogs, and 14,405 sheep. Canadian\npackers, including local butchers, for\nthe first eight months   of   the    vear.\nTake\nUse Bovril in your\ncooking. 11 flavours, en -\nriches, nourishes more.\nThe Bodv-buildng Power ol Ro-\"$lha  been\nproved by inae tn en  sc-'ntift: \ufffd\ufffd<\"ir\ufffd\ufffdmems\nto be from JO lo 20 tima tke umoim.  o\/\nJloiril m.'.en.\nCo-Operative W(H\nM rke.ing\nour    common\nThis exchange of ratiticalrns,   andjcountry which by our cfforls wc have\nthe official promulgation of peace,\nmight have been accomplish- d much\nsooner but for the dastardl} act of thc\nGermans in sinking their surrendered\nfleet at Scapa Flow during the progress of the peace negotiations. As\na result of that outrage, the Allies insisted upon a protocol to the Peace\nTreaty, and this protocol Germany\nwas compelled to sign on-January 10,\nbefore thc exchange of ratifications\ntook place.\nPeace is now an accomplished fact,\nand with the coming into effect of\nthe Treaty of Versailles the League\nof Nations also becomes an estabish-\ned organization. It is no longer mere-\nsaved from enemy despoliation, let us\nremain united, united morc firmly\nthan ever, in cordial co-operation to\nbring out of the Great Sorrow thc\nmaximum of blessing to all.\nARE YOU WEAK\nAND RUN DOWN?\nMinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\nIn   This   Condition   Only   a   Tonic\nMedicine   Can   Renew   Your\nHealth.\nThe condition of b\"ing \"run down\"\nis one that doctors do not recognize\ntook 13,101 catiic, 2,496 calves. 20.0-12, German Prisoners on Farms\nhogs, and 3,381 sheep.\nBritish Farmers Were Well Satisfied\nWith Their Work.\nGerman  prisoners of war are now\nbeing repatriated.   Over   200   oi.. the\nOver Two Million Pounds Was Contributed By the West.\nThe Canadian Wool Growers, Limited, a farmers' co-operative organization which handles the sale of most\nof the wool produced in Canada, has\nnow 1,923 shareholders. Of these,\neight hundred arc in. the West; 254 in\nManitoba, '313 in Saskatchewan arid\n233 in Alberta.\nThe total amount of wool handled\nthis year was 3,811,366 pounds, of\nwhich 2,803,443 had been contributed.!\nby the West. All the western wool\nhas been sold excepting 225,000\npounds, which.it was decided, to buy-\n. from the shippers at what thcy ex-\n' pressed would be the market price\nand close up the business for the year.\nThe close of the war killed the\ndemand for coarser wool fabrics arid\nmade slow sales, but a better demand\nis to be expected as .soon as a depletion of the flocks in Australia, Ncw\nZealand and thc Argentine is reported.\nCanadian Army\nhacK in\nLife\nagricultural  camps  have  been  closed, kox>   3qc\nand thc German contribution to Rrit\nish farm labor may be considered at\nan end.   War prisoners wcrc first cm-\nOver Three Hundred Thousand Into\nCivilian Occupations Since\nthe War\nSince the armistice, 272,537 officers\nand men have been repatriated   from,Ployc.d in  agricultural work early   in\noverseas.  .Prior to thc armistice, 65,-11917, the allocation of their labor be-\n600 officers and men had been rctur-i-!mg in  the hands of the  county  war\ncd to Canada and demobilized.    This .agricultural   committees.    Thc    total\nTo Prevent Influenza\nColds cause Grip and Influenza\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove\nthe cause. There is only one \"Bromo\nQuinine.\"    E. W. GROVE'S signature on\nis a disease.  The physician   of  today  is a total of 333000 members of the number of prisoners allotted to agri-\nAlberta's   Dairy  Production, who gets Ins training   ma   Jospital: d   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd diti .    {orcc       ho  cuitura!   work   varied   slightly   from\nwhere onlv severe disorders are   en- .... ',    ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,     T mm\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ; countered knows little about it.   But! bave  been   turned  back  into   civilian | time to time.   In January,   1919,   over\nProv:ncial Department of Agriculture those who are   run   down   in   health\nknow that it is not a fancied affliction,\nThe expression \"run down,\" applied\nto health means a condition in which\nHas Given R?al Aid to the\nCreamery Business.\nDuring   1918  sAlberta    stood    third a]] the bodily functions arc enfeebled\namong the provinces of the Dominion Appetite fai's,    thc   digestion   is   im-\niii    the   amount   of   creamery   butter Paired,  the nerves  arc  impoverished,\nr    t       ,       . ,   .   ,    ,lr, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd thc complexion becomes pale or waxy,\nly a paper organization, a document; manufactured and marketed.     For   atherc    ,g    nQ   animationi   but   rather\nacll.|baby western province to have achiev- Worry and mental depression. Fatigue\ni ed this enviable rc.ord in so short a is a constant symptom.   No particular\nfor   congratulation,\" organ  being affected, you  must  look-\nSteaming Water That Would Be Sufficient to Heat Every Building\nin Large Town\nPeople    in    the    western    part    of\nAmerica,   who   have   to buy coal and\nt    , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    .   . ',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\/, ,       1 -   1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i tt.   : oil for heating at   constantly   higher\noccupations,    lt does not include the 30 000 men were employed and at the I    . , X\n.       ' . , .,,   ,  ,     .    .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      c c    .     ,. , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,--   .prices, naturally look som what long-\nlarge force of men who were enrolled beginning of September, when the re-1. '        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ..    J --.-.-   .    ...\n0 ... mgly at the great hot springs in thc.r\nUsing the Earth's\nHot Water\nof principles, outlining certain  m\ninery for the preservation of the peace\nnow proclaimed.  It is a body officially  timc\nis   cause\nrecognized bv most of the nations of  sajs\nthc \"Alberta Farmer\" editorially.\nfor reiicf to the blood. As it circulates\nthrough every part of the body,   any\nOne special reason for thc fine show- improvement in  thc condition of  the\nthe world, an  organizatioi.  in  which. _\nthe nations have membership, <md to . \"^ we arc-making lies m thc fact that   blood is quickly felt   throughout   the\nthe carrying out of whose aims and' dimati-ally, wc are specially favored entire system.\nfor this particu'ar business.   There\nin\nAs   a   restorer of the\ncarrying out ot  wnose aims ana   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd --; -\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \"'iXJ~~~~'JT~CpZ   :tt blood and builder of weak nerves Dr.\nobjects thev nre pledged. | \ufffd\ufffdr \ufffd\ufffd^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd U\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ^   \" ^^ , io Williams' Pink Pills stand at the bead , and laking care of lhc slcad    strcam\n^or  'he  timc being  Germany   and n0 Pr0^'mce   m   tl,c wnoi.e uomimon 0f alj tomc ,ncci,cmes.   nvcry dose of\nthe  other nations which were in  al-, where natural dairying advantages are these pills helps to enrich the blood\nfiance  with  Gcrmanv  in  the war are!so  numerous,  or where   thc business and strengthen  the  nerves,  and  thus\nnance iv lh  Oeimanj   in  tie war aic .       ,    d.. d   f     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  j. the various organs regain  their tone\nnot admitted to membership   in ' the  otters sucn spenum lewaras ior mini body recovers its full vigor\nLeague.   Thcy must first prove their\nsincerity and honesty of purpose   in\nin the army and did not get overseas\nprevious to armistice day.      ''\nOf the 338,000 returned officers and\nmen, 44,278 have applied to the Soldier Settlement Board for qualification certificates, to enable them to\ntake up land and secure the benefits\nof .the soldier settlement act. The prisoners and during the harvest of\nnumber of applications approved    at the passing year their help did much\ntb meet difficulties that'had arisen.in'\nmany counties owing to the withdrawal of thc men in agricultural\ncamps.\nover 25,000. Farmers did not welcome\nthe newcomers- at first, but as timc\nwent on, they were well satisfied with\nthcir work. Land; drainage and the\nclearing of rivers engaged the attention   of   a   considerable   number   01\nthe close of the year was 33.49^5.\nThc district offices' of the board,\nespecially in the western provinces,\nhavc been    busy answering enquiries\ncarrying    out\nLeague.   Then\nthe    objects    of    the 1\nand   only    then    will:\nmum effort.of an intelligent sort.        J Ample proof of this is given   in   the\nFor what wc have already achieved statement   of   Mr.    William Devine,\n\"credit is to a considerable extent due Gerard   street    east,    Toronto,    who\nthey be admitted to full membership.\nThe United-States'is not a\" member\nas'yct,-because,:owing--to -political differences in-that country, which \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,arc\nacute - because- .of . the .' approaching,\npresidential election, the senate has.\nnot yet ratified the Peace Treaty with\nits League of Nations covenant.   It is\nto thc provincial department of agri- .says: \"Two years ago while employed\n, -   . .   , . ....     as a conductor on the Toronto Street\nculture, whicn  has given  real _ aid  to.iRaihvay>  1  became  much  run   down.\nthe, creamery  business,   and   is- still  \\   consulted, a-.doctor  who   gave   me\ncontinuing that aid.  Last ycar we ob\"- medicine, but it proved fruitless as T\ntaincd more than   four'millions   for'was constantly growing weaker.   My\n,   ... , -  .    t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.4i\"     appetite completely failed  and  I  fell\nour creamery butter product. With a -^ [n- wcl-g',lt :illljrti, j only wcighcd\ncontinuance 01.intelligent-dairying and 125 pounds. I was sometimes taker,\ntlie\" accessions to the' ranks of our with fain ting; spells, and finally felt\ndairvmen  that wc have  right  to ex- compelled-to'resign-my position.  ,'l\ntried what I thought was lighter work,\nof ex-service men who are looking for\nsuitable land and making the necessary preparations to apply for loans.\nA great rush is expected in the early\nspring, when several Indian-and forest reserves will be opened for entry.\nJvabie\/Wcvcr, that the Unit-^, U..hould not be long beYore this K^ilh  rioTeS.JctuiS.    I-\nincome is doubled and trebled. There\nis.prrtCtically:no limit to the possibilities'of \"the business'iii Alberta, when\nthc export trad? \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - taken -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd into,\naccount.\"-      ' -     -  '\" - .\nThe   nian.-who-  doesn't   have   the\nrvici\nence, may,live to. a green .old age.\n.inconcei\ned States will, refuse -to ratify ihe\nTreaty of Versailles and join the\nLeague. _ 'Such a'\"\"refusal would be'a\ndenial, of-'everything, for .which .the\nAmerican people went to war:    '    .\nIncluded'in .the -covenant  -of   ihc\nLcaguc:-6f Nation's is the new inter-'    -T\"c   man   .\nnational    labor\"   organization,  -which' services'of that.grcat .teacher, experi\naims at the establishment of. a new\nand better ord.er.-of. things for industrial -workers . throughout the world.\nNot only, is thc League, aji cstab'islied\nfact, but it has already; held its'first\nmeeting at Paris and..takrn steps for\nthe\" efficient---', administration \"of. tli?\nmany complex; problems- entrusted to\nits care, and in .the-solution of'vyhich\nalone will be found \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda ''guarantee of\n' permanent^ peace.'^;.\"'; '-.-,- ;:-'\n: .'But'- while  international --peace\", has\ngrowing weaker and-weaker. One dav\na chum urged ine to try Dr..Williams\"\nPink Pills,- but by this time 1 vis\nheartily tired of medicine, as nothing\nWatching Immigrants\nFederal Authorities Scrutinizing Entries for Poss ble Reds.\n' Immigration authorities at ..Ottawa,\n.while admitting ' that the hunted\n,veds\" of,the' United States will en-\ndciivor.to secure sanctuary'in Canada,\npoint out that .the .immigration laws\nof Canada are very strictly opposed\nto the entrance of undesirables, that\nimmigration oflicers all along the border \"arc-on .the alert'to keep them out\nI had taken did ine any good;   Kinjlly |d\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-d th\"at in\" addition thc mounted po-\nhe bought mc a box ot the pills, and',..- ,       . .   .   .        . .'-\nI \"couldno longer refuse to\"   rv rW   \ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd  cordon  is now spread from   thc\n\"  \"    \"   \" Pacific through, the prairie provinces\ndown  toward- Rainy-\" river and Thun\nAfter a time I felt \"they, wre helping\nmc and then a gladly .continued their\nuse;\nenabl\nwith-the result tliat I was .inally.ider bay.-As\" a matter of fact, several\nled to go Dack-to.-my oldj.iljvi, intcnding cn'trants al,cady- bave becil\nNo man was ever blamed \"for being'splendid  condition   to-Dr.\" William j1- harrcd back on suspicion; others may\na  g.cntlerhan,  but\/ many   arc  accused\nof it.';.\".''-- ';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"\"-.\"'\"    \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . '-'-.-.\"- - X\nfully restored to health,\nsplendid condition to.I\n'Pink- Pills, and can  strongly - reco'm-\n>- Misfortune.is the filter that separr-\n'ates'- the. true.-friends from thc counterfeit. ' -. .    .-'-.'.       '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ., ;   ,'\nOhio. .City    of  Toledo.\" Lucaa\n' State-.: of\nCounty\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-ss..         \t\n. Frniik, J.   Cliensy . mnkcK' oath -that ' hc   13\n, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ,.-,  .... .        ..   . =omor. partnet   ot -the firm  ot   F: J.   Cheney\nbeen   again; \"established, '--a- .giganhc.&.Co.-j-doinK.baFiiiess m the City'.01  Toledo,\ntT\ufffd\ufffdV c>;il   rn'n'rrintQ  ^11  i-atinii\";  iii^  flip -Wunty   ahd ': State' aloresaid,' and 'that   said\ntask still con.ronts. an nations in tne  (inn- wj\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^-thesum .ol- ONE humjrKij\nbringing -about 'of, domestic .pea'Ci\" and'-DOl.I.ARS for  any case of, Catar'rlr that, can\n-'       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '    ' '\"        'riot \"be .etiied-- by.-the.' use  oi   \" *\nmend then'i lo any one suffering as, 1\ndid\".\". .\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 , .\n' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can bo. obtained through-any medicine dealer,\nor.-may-be had; by nia'il, post'paid, at\n50'ccrits abbx.br six boxes fo'--$2.50\nfrOm The'Dr; Williams'-Medicine Co.,\nBrockviile, Ont. *   '..\nwholehearted- co-operation among rhe\npeoples'of their respective.' -conn tlic*.\nThe Great ..War created ;such aworid\n.upheaval,'   and' resulted'  in~ such' ..'a\n.-.loosening.- and. breaking - away-,  f i oi'u\n' the\"..foundations; and - accepted, co'ndi;\n\"tions  of the fpa'lt,- largely  di'stroyintf\n-' old political 'tics, .and\" changing .economic: conditions .'everywhere, that.mcn\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"today- are. more or less unsettled   i:i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtheir .ideas. 'It is a time -when,great\nleader's, men of conviction and .courtage, are needed, arid .when air people\n;;require to. exercise a-'la'rgc' degree'of\n..patience   ' and-   a\", liigli.\" .and    lofty\n.patriotism;  '.;  -    -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\".'    '\".',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   '.- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n-\"' -Th; the  turm6.)l,;-sufferthg and. sorrows   :of   the - Great;''War-' niankinl\nliopcs'lhat.many .'of. the old abuscs'and\n.-', cyilcof, the past Jiavc bSrn. destroyed:\n. that al! the.destruction that took place\nHALL'S .CA-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlARKtl.'MKUlClNE.    \"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-;-.';FKANK- J. CHENEY -\n-\" Sworn-.-Io.. before- ..me - and- subscribed in\nniy .presence, this 6th-day ol December,. A.D.,\n1886: -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      '   ' -v ' ,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '.   .- -,.--\/\"-  i    -.'-'-\n,\"   iSeal). .A.' W. -Gteasbn,'  Notary Tublia   :\n--   IJAI.I.'S   CATARItit, MKUIClNK-is  tak-\nen  internaUy.rand, acts- through- the,  Dtqod  on i - r . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi >\ufffd\ufffd,-\nthe   Mucous   Surfaces  ot   the   System. '      -' - * ' \"\n. !)ruEgists: .-The.   i'Ter.timoniali -tree.\nF.   J.  Cheney;., ft. V.oi,  Toledo.  Ohio.\n7\".;: \"T^Hadlt In \"Mind.\"   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\".. \"'\n-.-Papa-(from the'next.room): \"Ethel,\naren't'you'ready \"to. \"light thc gas   in\nthere?\",\/,':-.  '.'-;:-   \"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--...\"-:.'\/   . \"- :   '\nV Ethel: .\"Yes,\"--papa;   we- arc   just\nbc held pending investigation, and a\nclcaiv bill is being demanded ' of- all\nwould-be 'immigrants, -   '-\nWHEN YOU SUFFER\nFROM RHEUMATISM\nvicinities. These hot springs appear\nin a broad path that stretches diagonally across several statcs, from such\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdplaces as the meadows above the\nYosemite, through Nevada, and taking\nin the Yellowstone Park in Wyoming.\nThe great Gomstock mines at Virginia\nCity, Nevada, have always been very\nhot, and even today the lower levels\narc filled with steaming water that\nwould be sufficient to heat every building in a town.of conside able size,\nif engineering ingenuity could devise\nthe way to carry it to the near-by\ntowns. Water boilingj bubbling, and\nbursting to the surface, in miniature\ncraters.-'and-'geysers, is one of-the\ncuriosities of the western \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd statcs.\nEven today\" a number of farmhouses\nhavc running hot water; and some few\nare heated, from this underground\nsupply.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChristian Science Monitor. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCould Not Sleep Eruption\n\"I noticed a little pimple on my\nbaby's face. I thought': it was from\nthe sun but it kept getting worse and\nthe skin was red and very hot. He\ncould, not sleep or rest the' eruption\nitched and burned so, and it caused\nhim to scratch. I wa3 quite discouraged.\n\"I saw an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and ient for\na free sample. . i I bought more and';'\nafter using two cakes of Cuticura Soap.\nand two and a half boxes of Cuticura\nOintment he was healed.\" (Signed)\nMrs. S. D. McGuire. Clarksburg,\nOnt., Dec. 18,1918.\nUm Cuticura Soap, Ointment and\nTalcum for every-day toilet purposes.\nFor free sample each of CotJenra Soaii, OInt>\nmcnt and Talcum \ufffd\ufffdddre\ufffd\ufffda pott^mrd: \"CoUeva.\nDcpt.A, Borton.D. B. A.\"   Sold ererywhoro.\nControl of\nNatural Resources\nPlea for Development of Saskatchewan's Resources Is Made By-\nProvincial Member.\nThe impossibility of adequate development of natural resources taking\nplace as long as they wcrc controlled\nby a central government, so far remote as Ottawa, was stressed by J. G.\nGardiner (North Qu'Appcllc) in the\nSaskatchewan legislature. He also advanced the plea that the\" university\nwas thc logical place to conduct rc-'\nsearch work if only the province were\niu a position to make use of it for\nthat purpose.\nAn indication that thc resolution is\nlikely to receive the unanimous support of all parties in the assembly\nwas given in the few remarks by W.\nO. Fraser, Conservative member for\nSouris, who supported the principle\nof thc resolution.\nCensus o\ufffd\ufffd Dairy Industry. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAccording to an official census   of\nthe dairy industry taken in  1917, thc\ntotal number of creameries   and   factories in-operation in Canada is 3,418,\nAlmost, any  roan  will  tell  you\nthat    Sloan's    Liniment\nmeans relief\nFor practically every man has iti^d\nit who has suffered from rueumalic\naches, soreness of muscles, stillness\nof joints, thc results jf weather exposure. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   y''\nWomen, too, \"by the hundreds of\nthousands, use it for relieving neuritis, lame backs,.neuralgia, sick headache. .   Clean,    refreshing,    soothing,\neconomical,    quickly    effective.     Say ' factories, 549 cosribined factories pro- 'brine\n'Sloan's Liniment\" to your druggist,  -   - - -- s\nAnother Epidemic\nOF THE\nSPANISH INFLUENZA\nA great many authorities have predicted a return of that terrible plague\nwhich swept Canada from one end to\nthe other not long ago and left so\nmany deaths in its wake, and those\nwho did survive were left in \"a great\nmany cases1 with some serious aftereffect, such as weak heart, shattered\nnerves, impoverished blood and a\ngeneral weakened and exhausted condition of thc system.\nIf you are run down, heart not just\nright, nerves a little-shakv, take a\nfew boxes of Milburn's Heart. arid\nNerve Pills and fortify the system,\nagainst  this  terrible  plague.\nIf vou  had  the  \"Flu\"  before and\nGet it today. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 35c,\" 70c, $1.40.    Made\nin Canada, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe Servile State\nMinard's  Liniment Cures  Garget in\nCows.\nSunny Victoria\nspeaking of\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-rr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstriking-a match.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! ^jry belt cjaiins -w\nPearson's Weekly.^.--' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;;.   ; v-    .\".;..   nirdjatcly' links sui\nLooking  ,to   British    Columbia \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':' '-\".  .-'.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Lumber..- ;\n.With- Washington -and. Qrcjjon. mills\nreported; to be booked .up to capacity,\neastcrn'.-A'mcrican  timber buyers': arc\nnow'looking to Canada.   .-   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;       ,;-'.'\nA'.-.l.Iv\" Purcell,-'of New-York,'rcpre-\n.. Chances are she-has; corns-.that ache\nlike' fury.   Buy her a, bottle \" of. - Piitr\nnam's -Corn.\"Extfactor..-'It - acls'-pain-'\nlessly, -gives - instant \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd relief,-,, and ' euros\nevery-kitid b.fcdrn.; -Insist :6ii getting\n.  .    - ,.      .-  ,      -,     ,. onlv -Putham-S:' Extractor, 25c- \"at- ail\nscntatiyc'., of .a big..timber brokerage dealers\"-\nfirm, has-been iii-,.Va'ncoiiver. for:the\nAlKerta. Has Another Rival to Coii-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',--;- tend With.    '- X , '\nIt savors ..'almost of-\".rubbing it\" iii'-'-\nto emphasize Victoria's' sunshine during the1 year.just.closed.- She has nd\nitli whicli   one   im-\nsunshinc records. Nor\ndo her people have, to face .extremes\nwhicli.demand arctic apparel.-.in. w.in-\nter\"-;and-, filmy,  draperies:in sumnier.-\nThcy- - are- natiiral'y proud,- - therefore,\nthat \"the  sim  shone:brightly -in- Vic:\ntbria fdr-2,258 \"hours -during .191.9 and\nIs Your Wife Bad Tempered V- tb'at;.slie was by';no means.-niinus- all\nthe' other attributes, which \"igiyc .her\n\"Which - has\" the Jiarderl life,   coffee'\n:-'.''Tea;   :for. while, coffee   can'.settle\ndown'tea,:is-;compeilcd-,'to' draw.\" \".\" ;\npast, tvyo -or' three weeks, for that purpose,.and .is understood'to have.placed, or to .be about! to place, several\nlarge orders; -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTea dr Coffee\np\ufffd\ufffdten disagrees %vitK\nsome one in tKe family.   An easy tvay to\ndet aw^ay from such\narinqyance is to drink\nNSTANT\nSTUM\nItagrees ;witjft everyone in\nthe family; Nosleepless\nni^its. cfeturbeddigestion:\nor irritated nerves foUoyri\nits vse\"7h&h&aiReaisari'yi^i\n-,\npossc'ssioh'not' only of a. sunshine, record\" for the province,.but. o'iici-bf- the\nliiost .'cq'uUbic climates' in \"the world. \\;\nElephants; Good Workers\nDrivers     Have     Special _.:' Language\n'   Which the Animals. Understand. '\n:l'llcphants- do   their, best   v.;6rk.;in\ndriving  timber,. working  it': with   the\ncurrent, releasing logs from jams'.aud.\"|\nrolling the stranded logs back, into the ,\nwater.   The'\".elephant-' drivers .have. a.;\nspecial \"elephant\" language which the-\nanimals-  understand \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a   special  \"elephant vocabulary with such terms  as\n\"Push sideways,\"   \"Roll,\"  ''Pull out,\n\"Stop,\" \"Lift your'chains.\"-  They are.\nmagnificent   swimmers'.    When   they\nswim from bank to bank,\" herding tlic\nlogs that require thcir special aticn-j\ntion, you see nothing of ihctn except\nthe tips of their trunks through which j\nthey;breathe, and   the   mahouts,-- or|\ndrivers.,  who are- generally ,in .water\nup ;to. their waists:\/-If.a big st3fk. or\njam-- breaks,- suddenly\" 'where', elephant?\nare: working, thcy. know-\".the danger, pi.-.\nbeing \"overtaken..- They  trumpet  and'\nclear'.'\".off, to\"- either.;-b'ank.  or.-  swim,,\n.downstream-.as,fast as thcy-'can,go,\nHeading. Kim, Off. ''-.'.   :;.  ...\n\"Now, Kollq,  I'll tell'you    a', nice\nfairy.story.  ..Once there was.a wood-.\ncliop'pc'r-V\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"',\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..'- ' *.;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"':   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   .\n\"- ;-\"A'w,' cut-it out.- 1'iri-tired of hearr\n.ing- . about\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:;-the-: Kaiser.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLouisville\n'Cduricr-'Journa!. --...  ;'. .-       '.-  '.'\nBolshevism Developing a State Which\nHas No Precedent in History\nBolshevism is steadily developing\na new kind of organized .slate, \"which\nhas.no precedent- in\" history,\" and\n.which shows evidence of \"brains and\nefficiency.\" It is a development- toward a \"servile state,\" which will have\nabsolute.-control-of--industry -as-well\nas of government,.laying down a rigid\nand\nWestminster GaEeltc remarks that\nthe. Bolsheviks of Russia do a great'\nmany things' \"which ought-to- warm\nthe. hearts, of.'old Tories\"- in Great\nBritain:.; Thcy forbid strikes; they require a minimum output from  .every\nincluding 949 creameries, 1,900 cheese lUf' y,ouHwitl* ^i  vd af p-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeff\"ii\nb -   ' Mi burn s Heart and Nerve Pills will\nyou    back    to    health    and\ndiicing both butter and cheese, and 23.btrength. . t\ncondensed milk .factories. The total\nnumber of patrons is 248,683. The\nprovince of-Quebec led in creameries\nand was a close second to Ontario m\ncheese factories.\" .      -   .\n. Last ycar the'vessels built In-Canada had'. a .tonnage of. 53,912 tons.\nDuring the year the tonnage of vessels entered inward and\" outward at\nCanadian ports, sca-gqing and inland,\nbut not including coasting vessels, had\na tonnage of 66 802,488 .tons. The toiir\nnage of vessels engaged in the coasting trade . was 61,462,600, making a\n.total of-128,265,088 tons.'\nGone Stale.\n-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Remcmber~-hbw-'the  menrviii\"\"thc\nthcatre used.to. rush out for a breath\nulhlcss code for both alike. The of fresh air?\"\n\"Yep.   What of it?\"     '-.'-  ..    -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.\"The-fresh-air is still there,, isn't\nit?\"  .\"'-     -.C;   .'        '.-'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Idunno.\":Why?\" .  ''.! \"- \"' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ';\n\"It doesn't.seem-worth goirig aftcr\nany \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' more.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLouisville :Courier-Jour-\nworkcr on  pain .of- starvation;'   thcy |laj,\nprescribe;. the  hours, of  work, . and I     \"\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; ' ;.\n.lengthen, them -or \"curtail', thcm     at j -Occasionally, when a man attempts\ntheir plca'sure;..they exacf.compulsory j to ;stand ' on  yis .dignify \" some, \"one\nmilitary-- service:   and   organize, it. joh 'Sp0ils it by sitting on it\nindustrial .'lines.\" .'- Thus)\/-Bolshevism,\nwhatever, it was in theory, hasacquir-\nd\nMrs. C. C. Palmer, Keppel, Sask.,\nwrites: \"1 wish to inform vou of the\ngreat good Milburn's Heart . and\nNerve Pills did for me. After a bad\nattack of the Spanish influenza my\nheart and_ nerves were left in a verv\nbad condition. I got two boxes of\nyour pills and must say they are the\nbest I ever us\"d, and-T have -taken\na great many different .kitu's. 1 will\n.always keep Heart and Nerve Pills\nin the house.\"\nPrice SOc a box at all dealers or\nmailed direct on receipt of price by\nThe T. Milburn- Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. --   .\nWould Suit Him.\n\"Do you.want a smart boy, sir?\"\n. \"No, I do\/all the work, myself.\".\n\"That's just the kind of place I'd\nlike,_sir.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBos.ton_Transcript._,^j?_i,_\nColumbus had faith; what he discovered was not what, he dreamed;\nbut if he had not dreamed he-would\nhave discovered nothing..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Lowes\nDickinson. ' ' -;\n1\nCupid is a great court favorite.\n-cd.a-control' over, thc pc'oplb which g;vc.som'c 6thei:'pcoplc':the shake.\"\".',\ni.s \"beyond the -power of any govern^ - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :.    -.' :''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.- -   I\nOo   not   suffer\nft no th or dav wiih\nItching, Bleed.\nin?, or  Protrud.\nhie  Vlles.   No\nan rgteal  opcr<\nation ' rsfiuticd.\nDr. Chostj'e Ointment will r jllevo you al once -\nand as certainly cure you   tinea dox, all\nShake'the hands of some.peoplc and  d<aterH. or Kdiimiigon, Bates ft Co...Limited,\n- Toronio.  Samplo box free if-ynn ruoniion llile\npaper or* \ufffd\ufffdBc!ose iio. stamp to pay poHttsce\n-power ot any gov\nmen!, despotic, or \".democratic,- in..'any\nother part\" of ' llic. world.\"-^Froin\"\" the\nToronto\"Xjl'obcY       '\"'_ ..,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\n:. Good   things-' may ; be.-\/cheap,\n'clieap..things are\" seldom good*.-\"\n.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..'-.-The Jutland Battle: -'\" '\n.\".- Surgco-u Rcar-A'dhiiraL Sir Robert\nHill has given,, for the first \"time, .statistics\" \"of-thc casualties at,,Jutland.\nThese- amounted.- to ,6.014 killed'and\n|nIt;674;.wounded. 'The' total strength -of\n\ufffd\ufffd.,-. -Ithc Grand Fleet he giyiis\"as-60,Q.00i so\n-, - 'that-the casualties' amount.to 11 per\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd |.cent.: and \".the killed to' 10 per .'cent _\nThc.vast preponderance-of'killed over\nwounded gives-us some ..idea of-the.\nj utter deslnic.tiycnessj'bf. inotlcrn.-iiaval\n'warfare.'' It.!s:n'ot entirely due to the\nloss' . Of \"practically ' the whole of; a\n; sliip's .complement \"if that \"vessel is\nsunk.- The Lion; whicli was heavily\nj engaged, but not sunk, had:ninety-five\nkilled and fifty-one wounded\/ Nearly\n'every injury would be-sustained, from\nthe most colossal, projsctilcs yet devised by man,\n0N(;V;'TABlI|S:;ttARKED'.\nkm mi ASPIRIN\nit\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-W.'- .N.\/   Ui\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyii&Xy:<yy\\:\nxmMWz&s^\n,\/T-ie. rria.ee,.! now an emblem-of sovereignty \"'or' liutho'rity,' was originall'v\na'.cliib- armed . v\/ith iron,^ and used in\nwar.-l Bothf\/-sword -and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mace i are'.'.en,-\n'[signs!-.of 1-digrist-.':' suited tq\":?he'times'\niwh'cn-incr,-w; :--.-v>.bout Jn armour, and\ni  '   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd y - '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\" \" ...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,- ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,':-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-    , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,     :;---.    .\n! sovereigns, r-oiIfd champions, to vin-\ni dicatc. t':'\", ir \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i's;.-hts.'' - \\. '\"X\\- XX-- \\- -. \\.-.''\nNot; Aspirin at All without, the \"Bayer Cross\"\n'.-'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .f~\nimtiufu\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj\\\nThe  name \"Bayer\" . Identifies -tae [ eoataui3 proper directions fcr: Colds\nonly- gei; nine! -A'spinn,--tbc -\"Aspirin ( He&daciie,-Toothache;. Earsvchc, Neu.-\n:. prescrib^T by physicians fof bvcrr.iEC-  raljia, Lothbago, Ttheureatismi-Neu\"-;--\n;>tecn y^a'r\".i.S.nd now'jride'ia Canada,  ti'3^ Joint Paiiis, and Fain, generallj-.\n- ?.....Always\" buy an unbroken packn.\ufffd\ufffdre\n.:. of \"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin . wtich\nTin -VoTea cf  12 tablets co\ufffd\ufffdt hair-\na few cents.   Larger \"Baver\" paitka^esl'^'\n-\\. There -ix. only oa\ufffd\ufffd As^lriss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"D ayes'*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTTon srtist say ^Saycr\"\n,-'- AiplHn ts tke tra<,<s'maTk-<re!:Ist\ufffd\ufffd'*d. tn Cactdal oi \"Bst-!- M?nofac;_rs ri mcjj*-\n'ric'licacite-rltr of Sflttc lieaclVl.    WTil> St 1\ufffd\ufffd w\ufffd\ufffdri  kno-B-n shat Aspirin  \ufffd\ufffdnri> a Bay*P :-\n. Bia.ntif*ct<iTe, to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'st t\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd pnh>!c asa'^n Imftatlons, th* Tabli\ufffd\ufffdt\ufffd\ufffd of B\ufffd\ufffd\/e^ Company\nsrili t* naaip^awlUt \\htir general trade msri, tb* \"TJ*j-\ufffd\ufffdr ew\ufffd\ufffd\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaf'aWBJM'IM trnpty*^\nw^^$$^^$m^w^?>\n'yyyy^yh;\n:xxm0jmM\nTHE     LEWTC.     G RETWWOOn.     R     C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^$|i\nAppendicitis Prevented\nLife Lengthened\nHealth Maintained\nThousands   \" Finding-    Wonderful\nBenerit, in   a = Simple Home\nPemedy That Costs But a\n\" Quarter.\nguess,\" he added a little wistfully;\ntheii hastened to say: \"I've got no\nkick coming, though. It was worth\n'it.\"\n\"What was worth it?\" asked Ruth,\nand dropped into a chair facing him.\n\"Why \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd everything that happened\nafterwards \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and a whole lot that had\nCity Markets and\nThe Cost of Living\nDoctor's say if people kept lhcir\nbowels in proper \"order there would\nbc no such \"disease on record as appendicitis.- .It is due solely to neglect,\nand is therefore preventable.\nIf yo,\".haveconstipation, bad-breath\nor headache you need medicine right\naway.\nThe moment you ' suspect your\nbowels arc clogged you should take\nDr. Hamilton's Pills, thc smoothest\n\"regulator of them all. -They move the\nbowels a'ud cleanse 'the liver so\nsmoothly you scarcely notice\neffect. But you can ge't the action\njust the same. Taken at night you\nwake, up next morning, clear-headed,\nhungry, rested, energetic, feeling like\na different man.\nCuts   Down  Cost  of  Handling  and\nEliminates Middlemen.\nThe; operation of city produce mar-\nhappen cd before.  We did some pretty ] kets is regarded as  having   a; close\ngood work out there.   That is,;Pembroke did \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and I helped.\"\n\"Who is Pembroke?    Ruth,   asked.\nNumerous Incorporations\nIn British Columbia\n\"You spoke .of him downstairs as\n'Lord Pembroke.' How did you get\nto know him?\"\n\"Well, it was like, this,\" said Ruggles; \"after I left you that day, I\nwent home and tound a letter'from\nthe European general manager saying\nthat the company had decided to givej\nthc managership of the Vienna store '\nto another man \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a fellow 'named\nLorenz, who had been in the..shoe\n.business, in Vienna and knew the\n. I trade Maybe hc was a better man\nfor the job than I was, but I felt awful sore about it, because I felt that\nthe'company had as good-as. promised\nit to\" mc.\"\n\"I   don't  blame   you,\"    said    Ruth,\nwho, by certain subtle methods of her\nWhy don't you spend a quarter to\n(lay and try Dr. Hamilton's Pills.'own, had sifted the affair quite to the\nThey..work so easy, just as nature bottom and knew almost as much\nwould .order, never gripe or- cause about it as Rugglcs himself. But shc\nheadache. Finest thing for folks that wanted'to hear his version and, drop-\narc out of sorts, depressed, lacking in ,P'nS her chin in  her hand, she fixed\ncolor and spirits.\n- j Iicr thoughtful sapphire eyes   on   his\nyear.\nFolks tl-at usc Dr. Hamilton's Pills j^ce and encouraged liim to talk,\nare never sick, never an ache or a pain , Coming just as it did,' said Rug-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfeel good all the lime simply be-'S'cs, made mc sick, clear through,\ncause their system is clean, regulated J ,Y\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd see, it sort of put me in a bad\nand hea'.tby. This you can easily I'<ght with people who thought that\nprove yourself. ' II was trying to bluff them about my\n-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '        I real position  with  thc ' company., So\n11 made up my m.ind to q* it the coiu-\nIpaiiy then and there, but before I lcit\nI\nFilling His\ns&\nli'\n^11   wanted to tell  that lying Durand\nthc manager of the Paris store,   just\nwhat   I    thought   of   him, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd aml'l\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwanted to tell Lorenz, too.   Both   of\nI thcm    had    pretended    to    be    good\ni friends of mine, and   all    the    while\nthey'd been working behind my back\n' to do mc out \"of the job.   So I went\n.into the store and told them.    All   I\n.intended  to do was just that.   I had.\ni no   more   idea  of  starting  anything\nI than  I  would have-of getting into a\nfight here in thc office of this hotel.\nI thought too much of thc company\n....for that.\"\nJ))\\    \"Who began thc row?\" Ruth asked,\n___\ufffd\ufffd>   I never taking her eyes from Ruggles's\nface;\n\"Lorenz did.   He. couldn't stand for\nwhat I said to him and grabbed  me\nOwn Shoes\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BV \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHENRY G. ROWLAND\nCopyrighted. -Printed by special\nirrangement  with  Thos. Allen,\nToronto.\n^J ., =\n(Continued.)\nIn the urgency of his own immediate affairs, Ruggles made no attempt by the arm and tried to throw me\nto see Darthea or Miss Cha'land, but out. Then suddenly 1 saw red, ancl\na great fjurprise from another quarter, when Durand and 'Wagner\" and I\nwas in store for him.    Hc had comc | don't know who else    butted    in,    T\ninto the hotel rather tired from an\nafternoon's shopping, and was leaning\non his stick1 waiting for the lift, when\na quiet, low-pitched voice at liis.elbow said:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"How do you do, Mr.. Rugglcs?\"\nRugglcs started so violently that his\nstout walking stick slipped    on    the\nguess I just .ran 'amuck, and started\nlo clean out the place. I don't seem\nlo remember just what did happen.\nBut there was a man in the store: that\nI'd met- that morning on the Avenue\ndu Bois, ancl he got me out of the\nplace andtook mc to the Madrid for\nlunch.    Well,  it   turned  out   that   he\nDuring the Year no-Fewer Than (614\nNew Incorporations Have Been\nRegistered\n,. Figures Tabulated by the Registrar\nbearing on. the cost of living in the i 0f Joint Stock Companies for the pro-\ntowns and cities.'With a view evid-'vincc of British Columbia disclose the\nently of bringing out the best systems fact that during, the year which has\nof conducting city markets The Agri- just passed no fewer than 614 new in-\ncultural Gazette pf Canada,-published, corporations have been registered,\nby the department fof agriculture at This number constitutes the. largest\nOttawa,, has brought together, in the | number in any'one year since 1912.\nDecember number, the systems by j The figures .also show a very large\nwhich markets are handled in eighteen Jncrca.se over the business    of    1918,\nj of the larger cities, in ^Canada. The when the number of; new concerns in-\nstatements provided by city mayors, corporated did hot exceed 347.\ncity clerks, and superintendents of; December, 1919, also constitutes a\nmarkets show clearly that there does j record in that the total of incorpora-\nnot exist in Canada any uniform sys- tions is thc largest registered in any!\ntern of city market administration, one month since March, 1913. Sixty-\nEach city .has its own special rules nine incorporations were registered\nand regulations.   In   some   instances  during this month.\njthe market is sublet to a sort of pub-|     In the matter of registration    fees\njlican who buys from the city thc j collected for the present ycar the ani-\nprivilege to collect tolls or fees from ount is approximately $70,0Q0. thc\nthosc who bring produce to the mar- largest since the year 1913, or $14 OO'J\nkct. In other cases, as in Regina, we j[n excess of the amount collected last\nfind a women's organization efficiently conducting the city market on a\nbusiness basis, while many public\nmarkets are directly managed by a\ncommittee appointed by the city\ncouncil. The Hamilton board of trade\nhas established a wholesome relationship between its urban ancl rural\npeoples by creating a- fanners' section\nof-the board. The friendly co-operation and exchange of views between\nthe two Sections result in ' a better\nunderstanding of conditions, consequently., the Hamilton market is highly esteemed by growers and buyers.\nIt serves the interest of bcth. Special\nfeatures adopted by various market\nadministrations are giving excellent\nresults, for example, thc system\nadopted as at Port Arthur .for thc\nselling of consignments of-produce by\nthe market manager on a commission\nbasis.,, Besides securing to the\" .purchasers fresh supplies of food at a\ncost, usually below the prices charged\nin the stores, these markets bring to\nthc    producer    considerably     higher\nI prices than if the produce were compelled to pass through several hands\neach taking their necessary toll.\nAuto Tour Through\nThe Canadian Rockies\nSUMAY SCHOOL LESSON\nLESSON FOR JANUARY 25.\n\"SYRUP OF FIGS\"\nCHILD'S LAXATIVE\npolished parquet, and his injured an-'was \"Lord Pembroke, an English\nkle, being as yet unable to support I surgeon, on his way out to Turkev\nthe sudden strain thus thrown upon it, j to work with the Red Cross. I man-\ngave under him and he fell. An-at-;aged to persuade him to take me on\ntendant sprang to his assistance, and!as his orderly \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and I've   been   out!\nCanada's Rich Hinterland\nLook at tongue!  Remove poi*\nsons from little stomach,\nliver and bowels\nPETER STANDS UP FOR TRUTH\nAND HONESTY.\nIn this lesson we see the new community now called \"the church\" (v.\n11) vindicated. In the boldness of\nPeter and John wc see that the break\nwith Judaism has come\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe authority\nof.the Sanhedrin is repudiated with\nthc determination on the part of the\ndisciples tobc led by thc Holy Spirit;!\nTo Awaken a Greater Interest in the\nGood Roads Movement.\n'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA big automobile - tour through\nWestern Canada is being planned to\nstart from Winnipeg, Manitoba, the\nfirst Monday in June. It will include\ncars from different parts of Canada\nand the Central States and is to be\nknown as the Canadian-American\nFirst Annual Tour to':.the Canadian\nRockies.  -.'.'..\"'.\nThe    object   of   this    tour   is    to\nawaken   in   tbe   western   country \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a\ngreater interest in  the    Good  Roads\nMovement and to induce motor tourists to visit the beauties of the Can-1\nadian West and spend the summer in\nthe mountains.   This automobile run\nwill, be made from-Winnipeg through\nBrandon, Regina, Moose Jaw,   Swift\nCurrent,   Medicine   Hat,   Lethbridge,\nCalgary and end at Lake Louise.   In-j\nvitations arc being sent out to all tliei\nauto clubs and other motor \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdorganix.-i-j\ntions in the States ancl from informa-'\ntion   already   received  by  thosc  pro-\\\nmoling the big tour, there will be..i!\nlarifc  representation  from  acr\"\"-';  <1|.' '\nV AM\nxxxM0m\nt    . . . ,        .,       ,     ,   > line.\nIt is for this reason   that   the.   body j\nnow  gels  the  name   \"church.\"   Since,\nthe break lias comc it must h: shown \\ Non-iLXJSient   Al'CtlC  Lllllu\nto be a holysbody; it must have re-1 \"\t\ncognition as being sacred.   The sane\n'as hc struggled to his feet with a face\npale from shock and the sudden\ntwinge of pain in the wounded ankle,\nhe looked into thc violet eyes of Ruth,\nwho was watching him with a curious\nstartled expression, surnrised at the\neffect of her quiet greeting and a tri-\n-flc vexed at his apparent awkwardness.\nThc blood rushed back into Ruggles\nface as he took the small gloved hand\nwhich she gravely offered him.\nthere ever since.\"\n\"Arc you his \"orderly still?\" Ruth\nasked.\nRuggles smiled. \"No,\" said hc. \"I\nmight be, .though, if it hadn't been for\none of those things that can only happen, in war, 1 guess. Pembroke had\nrigged up-a field \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd hospital, scarcely\nmore than a dressing-station, out on\nthe Tschatalclscha lines, and wc were\nThc Barren Lands of the North Are\nMade Produc.ive. Accept \"California\" Syrup  of   Figs\nFresh  proof of the farming possi- o\ufffd\ufffdly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlook for the name California on\nK#i:t.;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. ~c *u~ u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i \/*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      .'the package,   then you are sure vour\nbhties of thc Peace River and Great cW\ufffd\ufffd is h\ufffd\ufffdv{ng \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the   b\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsl   aml    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1(lst\nSlave districts is afforded by travellers harmless laxative  or physic   for   the\n| who have recently returned,     lu    the little     stomach,     liver   and    bowels.\nPeace'and Grand\" Prairie territory   a Children love its delicious fruity taste.\nFull   directions   for   child's   dose   on '\neach bottler.   Give it without fear.\nMother! You ....ust say \"California.\"\ntity of the tabernacle is transferred to\nthe new body, which is God's dwei'ing\nplace (Eph. 2:19-22). The church itself, as well as the people about, did\nnot know this Until God's judgment\nburst forth:\nI. Char?cteristics of the Piimitive\nChurch (4:31-35).\n1. Jtwas-a praying church (v. 31).\nFor every want and every need ihey\nbetook themselves to God in prayer.\n2. It was a Spirit-filled church (v.\n31). .A praying church is a Spirit-\nfilled church. The Spirit is given in\nanswer to1 prayer (Luke-11:13).\n3. It was a church which had great\nboldness in preaching the Word of\nGod (v. 31). The minister in a Spirit-\nfilled church will not offer an apology\nfor the Bible, but will fearlessly\npreach  it.\n4.\" It was a united church (v. 32).\nThey were \"of onc heart and one\nsoul.\"\n5. It was a charitable and generous\nchurch (v. 32). As needs arose supplies   were   given   from   a   common\n\"My Back\nIs So Bad\"\npAINS in the  small  of lhe\nback,    lumbago,    rheumatism, pains hi the limbs all tell\nof defective kidneys.\nPoisons are being left In the,\nblood which cause pains and aches.\nThe kidneys, liver and bowel*\nmust be aroused to action by such\ntreatment as Dr. Chase's Kidney-\nLiver Pills.\nThere Js no time for delay when\ntho kidneys go wrong, for such developments as hardening of the arteries and Bright's disease are the\nnatural result.\nOne pill a dose, 25 cents a box, sll\ndealers, or Edmausoa, Bates & Co., Ltd.,\nToronto.\nKidflaniiyeRpills\nStorkcrsen's Journey Proves Whakrr. i\nWere Deceived By Mirage.\nA-change, must be   made   on   the-j\nmaps of the arctic regions, for on the -\nreport of Storlccr Storkerscn, second\nin. command of Stefansson's arctic expedition for the Canadian government.\nKcc'nan Land has no-actual existence.\nOver  the place  where   Kcenan   Land\nhas been supposed to   be    for   about\nhalf a century Storkerscn and his te'-,\nlow explorers  drifted  on an ice floe,!\nmaking '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsoundings-    that   reached   aj\ndepth \"of 3,000 meters without touching bottom.   The explorers floated on\ntheir ice island,  which  was some fifteen  miles  long by seven, wide,   for\neight months bcfoic  the ocean  froze\nand the new ice gave llK-m a chance\nto escape lo thc mainland; but the floe;\nserved the purposes cf the expedition;\njand on this strange craft,   driven   by\n| shifting winds, the explorers continuity.! thv.ir observations   and   added   to J volcanoes as generating   stations   for\n'their  knowledge  of  the  region   thcy j supplying energy to the neighboring\nxa.minc. Keenan Land, i towns. The Larderello Natural Steam\nwhich iias.so long held a'place on the i\nHarnessing Volcanoes\nItalians Using Them for GeneratinJ\nStations.\nAll the forces of nature arc being\nbrought into subjection for- the use\nof man, and the \"kingdom of mankind\" is ever broadening its dominion.\nIn Italy, they are now employing the\nhad set out to\nii.as_sp long\nArctic map, was supposed to have been\ndis'-overtd by whalers,    but   Storker-\nPpwer Plant, situated at Larderello,\nin thc province of Pisa, has erected\nthree units, developing 2,500 kw. earh.\nhard at work therc onc night   when\nthe colonel in command, ^ a   fine   old.of.tbe praiiks to the south.\n\"How do\"you do, Miss Downing?\" JTurk\"name'd\"kamVd Pasiia,\"scnrword\nconsiderable settlement has been\nmade and enough land was under cultivation last season to yield-5,000,003\nbushels-of-grain. Beyond this there\nstretches the valley of the Mackenzie\nRiver with soil as fertile, indeed practically the same as the alluvial loam\nWheat\nfund. ,\n6. Its ministers had a ' powerful!\"\" s J0\"1\"^' on' his ice floe proves-The works were begun in 1914. but\ntcstimonv (v. 33) lllat l'lc w!:il't:rs wsrc deceived by a. thcy wcrc delayed by thc  European\n7. It was a church whose member- miragc- In lhe samc wa-v Crocker j war. Thc first unit was started in\nship exhibited unblemished characters Lan(i' whlch ]'cary 1>-J\ufffd\ufffdvcd hc had. 1916, and lhc power station was com-\n(v. 33).   For \"Teat grace was  upon  s'Shtcd and which for a while had it^'pleted in the same year.  There is an-\nhe answered, in some confusion. \"I did\nnot now that you wcrc in Paris.\"\n\"My aunt and I havc just got here\nfrom London,\" she answered. \"We\nare only over for a few days to do\nsome shopping. And how have you\nbeen since we last met?\"\n\"Oh--pretty well, thank you,\" Ruggles replied, a little vaguely. _ \"I'm\njust back from Turkey.\"\n\"From Turkey,\" she echoed, slightly raising her eyebrows.\n\"Yes,\" Rugglcs answered. \"I went\nout there the day aftcr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdafter I saw;\nthat he was just starting out to make\nhis rounds and thought Pembroke\nmight like to go with him. But Pembroke was mighty btiS3', so he senl-\nmc along to see if there were many\nwounded that hadn't been brought in.\nWell, wc were inspecting one of the\noutposts when a bunch of Bulgarians\nrushed it.   Most of our horses  were\nAlberta Hogs Make Good\nCanadian Bred Swine Found Superior\nto Imported Stock.\nThe high merit of the class of livestock   being   produced   in    Western\nkilled at  the  first\nvolley,\nhi\nand    the\nripens    at    Fort   Providence,   above ^__    _ _\t\nGreat Slave Lake and barley at Fort] Canada todaj is evidenced by the fo!\nNorman in latitude 65. it is not claim- |owjng- incident related by Mr. Wiled that these grains wili ever be\nthem all.\" I place on the\nII. The Sin of Ananias and Sap-Ib>' Donald AlacMi'.lan's later investi-\nphira (vv   1-11). jfcrat,cm to have l-cc\" i-cm-cxistcnt, an-\n1. Its occasion (vv. 1, 2). This was:\ufffd\ufffd'J,cr example of the illusion of thc\nthcir hypocritical imitation of the gen--'Far Norlh tl1a'- has so. often misled\ncrous act of Barnabas (4:36, 37).   Bc-\\oh*ervcrs \"no a finn conviction  that\n'and had been sighted.\ncause of the peculiar distress of the\nearly church when the open rupture\nwas made with Judaism, the members for a time had a \"community of1\ngoods.\"   This was not universal \"no;-: biS shipment of arms and ammunition\n, ex- Ham Gilbert, of Stony P'ain, a small permanent; some continued to own !l0 Mexico was escorted by a Japanese\ntensivcly grown at such high latitudes, town situated in the centre of the rich their own homes, as for example John i crluser havc ^e\"\ufffd\ufffd scat to San An-\nWhen il is considered, however, thai n,jXC(i f.lrming districts of Central Mark's mother, who used her home; loni\ufffd\ufffd for tllc information of the\npotatoes   and   other   ..getables   will [Alberta. , fin    which     to    entertain    Christians.  sCnate    committee    investigating   the\nalso thrive thc chances   for   farming\nAlberta.\nTwo ycars\nago Mr. Gilbert sold a\narctic map, was proved;other station at Lago, where a \"notable quantity of natural \"steam is\navailable.\"\n\"The steam finds its way through\ncrevices in. the,soil, and sometimes\nissues at the -bottom of small craters\nfilled with water,\" says Engineering,\n\"but more often in jets of steam or\nboiling water direct from the earrh.\"\nThe steam is piped fiom deep wells\nand purified before passing into the\nturbines. Four overhead lines at\n36.000 volts distribute the current to\nSiena, Leghorn, Piombino and Massa\nJapan Sends Arms to Mexico.\nGovernment   reports   that a  recent\nyou here,  with a doctor-in\nCross\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLord Pembroke.\" . i\n\"Rea'ly?\"    Her eyes examined Hm;a\nwith a sudden intense interest.   \"Did\naie encouraging,   'lhe population that\ncolonel's fell on top of him     I   hap-! will be attiacttd by the discovery   ofjin Saskatchewan.   Thc brother of this\npence! to sec it and  got to him   and   minerals and by the timber will create  fanncr   a   large  swine  raiser in   Ne\ndragged him out from under it.   Wc I    ,      .  . ,     .      ,      _    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., ,i\ufffd\ufffdnmcr,  a   i.iifet.  swmi.  raisci   m   i\\e\nhad  some prcttv touch hand-to-hand :a 'o^al demand for loods.uffs.   lhe so-, braska,   visiting   him   shortly   aftcr\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\nanias    kept    back   a   part   of   the\nsenate    committee\nMexican  situation.\nThat Mexico had\nyearling Berkshire boar to a farmer j money   received   for   his   land   while received war supplies from Japan and\n\"Father, v\/ho was Shylock?\"\n\"Goodness boy!    You   attend\nthe\ntlie  Kc<-!figihi:,g for a few minutes, and then | called barren lands lying further east\ngang    of    our   infantry    made    a I arc   desribed\nbayonet charge   and   drove the Bul  '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<V'y\ngarians back.   I didn't know anything\n!'grouiids;^;:forv\nas   promising   pasture\nthousands  of  reindeer.\nyou serve with the Red i. ross\n\"Yes.\" Rugglcs answered ; \"that is.\nuntil I got wounded.    I got shot m     c ...       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nthe ankle on the Tschatalclscha lines\".\"\/   a   ,nll.c-   tT i\nRuth   glanced   down   instinctively.;''1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^!1  tn<? bod5'' Rml\nand.as_she saw_the mannpr_in_which \"f      e smas\nRuggles  was supDOrting himself, her: bayonet stuck through\nface softened lonc or two ot'ier wounds,   and   was\n\"Oh, I'm so sorry!? she said,   and j al!,iTn^'\nraised her eyes to his-face.   \"I   must\nThe returns per acre from live\nwards, saw the boar and was so impressed  vi itli  him  that  he  was very\n[anxious to purchase him to head his\nThis    he\npretending to havc brought it all. His lhat offic,al a,ld \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdffi\ufffd\ufffdal Mexico has finest school m the district, and don t\nwife was a partner in it. They wanted i !a'cl>' been entertaining with a show know who Shylock was!\" cried his\nthe honor of generosity without pay-lot much \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA\ufffd\ufffdsiasm officers and men father, with a look of surprise and\n\" p- tli   nricc jfrom a Japanese warship was known, horror. \"Go   and   read   your   Bible,\n'\"a The judgment (vv. 3-10). Ananias !bl,t UI\\tH nOW aEont? \ufffd\ufffd'ho arc gather- _ sir!\"\nabout that part of it, as    I'd   got    a! * \"e \";lll\ufffd\ufffd'ns> Per acre irom live stock 0wn  large American herd     ....\ncrack .across thc head with  the .butt I or grain cannot compare with what is succeeded in  doing,    and after using1\n'   p    -.fl,     Th.   colonel   was   shot; obtainable .further south    where    the\" the boar for two ycars he now writes\ntnd settle-, Mr.    Gilbert   ordering   forty   young\nold notion {sows as~the~dcmand~fdr \"th<T progeny\nlhj ru\ufffd\ufffdi ^d^i^r ?' rrh isJongcr s\nuck through-my _a\"riri\" aiid I IR.01u\"'vVl11 bellow.-Vet ihec\nhoar, all about it. Can't you comc up\nfor a few minutes? My aunt is resting, and we can have a little chat before tea time. Or have you come to\ncal! on somebody\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?\"\n\"Oh, .no.\" Rugglcs answered. \"I'm\nstopping here.\"\nRuth did not show the surprise that\nthis announcement gave her. She reflected quickly that somc considerable\nvice of some Ottoman official, as on\nchange must havc occurred in Ruggles's affpirs, to enable him to afford\nthe Carlton. 'Then it occurred to her\nthat he might possibly be iu thc scr-\nher arrival at the hotel she had noticed a Turkish man-servant in \"a* f\ufffd\ufffdv\nsitting beside thc chauffeur of a wailing motor-car.\nnaturalness and his generally clean\nand wholesome type, and hc had impressed her with those three cardinal\nqualities which pcihaps of all others\nmake their greatest appeal to a woman when shc finds thcm in a man.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nkindness, constancy,' and courage.  So,\nI should think that you might have\nbeen!\" said Ruth. Her tone was dry,\nbut her eyes were glowing and her\nbreath coming quickly. \"And what\nthen?\"-\nr (To bc continued.)\nA \"Hide-and-Seek\" Sea\nof-barren northern   wastes\nallowed satan to fill his heart and lied\nto the Holy Ghost in keeping back a\npart of the price of the land. It was\nmost likely an acted lie. They were\nnot under obligation to sell_thcir_land.\nor having sold it, to bring any of thc\ning information to bc studied by thc\ncommittee had not learned of any\ndirect connection between thc two.\nIn proportion  to its sjzt a b_ee.\nthirty times as strong as a horse.\nis\nmust    m: ot  Ins  Gilbert-bred boar is so   great, ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,.,,  __j  -],,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  :f  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     ,f,^\ntune  be  modified  as  the  natural  re-! that  he is unable to  fill half of his' *   '       P \"\"  '*  '\"  ^  COmm0n\nsources    are    developed.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMontreal, orders\nIt is easy to expect others to set\na good example.\n__ A__conccitcd_man\nhimself.\nrevolves\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaround\nFamily Herald.\nWonderful Persian Shawl.\n| fund.   Peter declared that they were\nWhilc_ Mr.  Gilbert  imported j absolutely free to do as they pleased\nhis  two  herd boars   from  the  States\nand   is    impelling\ntimc to time hc finds that\nc  btates | v>.jt[j  ;t.   Love   of   praise   is  causing\nother stock from j inany today to make the same drcad-\nthe    first [ {\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi mistake.   People are   wa'king   in\nllie   way   of \"Ananias   and   Sapphira\nwhen  they make a profession of re-\nThe Metropolitan Museum of New'cross   on    the    Canadian   bred   sows\nVork has a rare Persian shawl, said  gives swine even superior l0 thc im-\nto bc IGo years old.   The shawl is II  ported orocmito'-s   exocrine- them in C \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      , .      .\nft. by 4 ft.,  worked  in !ong flowing \\l\ufffd\ufffd,^^ ^^s^\"0\" '\" tCmP\ufffd\ufffd,al *\"\" ^ ^\"^\ndesigns   of   the   palm leaf . and    the also   in    the   size   of   litters.    Swine\nKivcr ot Life with the stories of the,breeders recognize these as very im-\nMosques.   Ihc   predominating   colors' portaut points.\nOne of Wonders of Imperial Valley\nin California\nAn inland, sea which, according toi arc mellowed garnets and brown,\"with\ngeologists, has changed from sea to .alternating sheens of steel grey - and\ndesert, and back again to sea, at least j rusty browii. An expert, to whom the\n50 times since\" its inception, is, osu of'shawl  was  shown,  said  its   make-up !D    ' ...      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. ,   Z7\nthe wonders of the Imperial ValL-y i.i'probably  represented the H >!i-i-  of|BrcedmS Hl&h Cla\ufffd\ufffds Ca\ufffd\ufffdlc Pays and\nCalifornia.    At  the present lime  thc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- -' - '\"       I'     Is General* More Economical.\nImproving- the Herds\nNotable Further Progress of\nThe Union Eank of Canada\nAssets Built Up To \ufffd\ufffd175,000,030 and $2,000,000 Added To Reserve Fund \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBank's Position Strongest In Its History.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1425 New Shareholders.\nor c\\cii preaching scimons not   their,    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..,, t    .   ... , ,  ,  ,     ,\n,, .. , With  assets built up to a total  of\nown.    l-rcqucntly    men .preach    lhe|$17S QOO.OOO   and   $2000.000   added to\nsermons    of   Moody   and    Spurgeon the  Reserve, biirging that fund to a\nwithout giving credit.   Physical death \\ total of $5 600,000, thc 55th annual rc\nvisited upon  Ananias . r\nwas\nphira for lhcir sins.\nIII.   The Effect (vv.\nSap-\n11-16).\nport   of   the   Union  Bank of Canadi!\ndiscloses   that   thc  Bank   is   in    the\nstrongest\"   position     iu    its    history.\nSignificant      extensions      throughout\njthe weavers.\n'Salton Sea, which is 160 feet below\nthe,ocean's level, is receding from its\nbanks al the rate of' approximately a\nmile a year. Toda3r the sea is IS\nmiles long and nine miles wide at its\nwidest- point.    In thc heat of the tor-\nin   its\n23 \"dc-\nhadVikcd 'Srccs c0\ufffd\ufffdlc1' than thai of thc surroun\nJ>ANDER1NE\" PUTS\nBEAUTY IN HAIR\nRuth, hewever,  was no snob,   and\nwhether  Ruggles was in some form j rid   season ' the   temperature\nof menia! service or not made not the  ncizhborhood  is   from   io   to\ns ightcst difference.   He had interest\ncd her from the first   Shc had. likec.,\nand   admired   him    for   his   absolute ' ding country aud outdoor dances arc,\nicgardlcss   of   what' anybody   might  held  on  onc of  thc  abandoned  fish-'\nchoose to think, she repeated her in-  p;crs- !cft higil and clry by the rcccd.\nvitation and thcy went up together in '. .. ,,--,     c .        ..\nthe lift and into .the samc little private- wfc'-watcrs.    lhc Salton Sea is siti.a.-\nsalon ir  the suite that was reserved  \"ed in thc very-heart of the principal,\n-for members of the Downing family  date-producing    region   -of Au'erica.\nwho found themselves in Paris.        ' j The land left Bare bv the retreating\nSit right down and put your foot -      . , , ,. , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\non this thing,\" said Ruth, having an waUrs ls eaSerI>' fUKil b-v 3f icu!\"\narntchair from-its corner and pushing' tunsts, who stake thcir.clanns far out\nan ottoman in front of it. Ruggles's! ftito the water in anticipation of fur-\nlimping  gait   had   not  escaped' her. t'thcr recessions.    The soi! is of salt\nDirls!    A mass of long,\nthick, gleamy tresses\n\"Did you wrench   your   ankle   when\n\"your cane slipped?\"\n'-'Oh, no,\"-said Rugglcs. \"If just\nwent out from under me. Pembroke\nsays that I'll limp for the rest of iriy\nlifc.   No more bicycling   for   me,    I\n^kJF >\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* Wfeataeae, Cleinsfej,\nW gillW Reiresbiag cad Sealing\n- M.  *jrm\ufffd\ufffdji   LbJIm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMurine for Redness, Soreness, Granula-\nt tion, Itchsngand Burning\n_ of the Eyes or Eyelids;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdy Drops\" After tfce Me-rfei. Motoring or Goll\nriS \ufffd\ufffd7is rocr coaSiesce. AA Yovr VragsM\nSir Wa-rfse whea y-ar Era K\ufffd\ufffdd Care. M-iS\nMgurljx* \ufffd\ufffd_y\ufffd\ufffd Remedy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&!e\ufffd\ufffdSS\nEyes!\nincrustcd adobe clay and very fertile.\nMud volcanoes, miniature geysers,\nand bubbling \"paintpots\" attract\nmany tourists^ to the spot. The quality of the colored pigment thrown up\nby the volcanic \"paintpots\" is declared to'iivat the, best European sienna\nand umber. Utilisation of tin's newfound color supply may soon render\nthe continuation of European imports j\nof such pigment unncccss-ary. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd _'\n1.  Great fuir came upon the church! Canada and abroad,   aimed   to assri^t\nnd upon  all   who   heard    of    these '\ufffd\ufffd   t!ic   fullest   possible   development\nof    growing    Western    Conimunifie*\nthrough    the    enlargement    of   thcir\n1 he cl\nlhings( v. 11).   Irreverence is an oi\nHereford breeders in Alberta have\nbrought their herds up to such a de-'standing bin of this \"age.    i lie church banking accommodation arc .innounc\ngree  of  quality now   that  when  dis-\"; should bc  recognised as  holy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lhe icd.\nThe. Union Bank of Canada's impressive figures arc all tl.e more\ngratifying liming full'regard for the\nths reconstruction\nwhich   the   country\ncriminating   purchasers    arc    looking'very dwelling place of the Most High\naround for high class animals tlicy do '.God.\nnot have to go outside of the province 2. Multitudes of men and women. ... .\nto get them. The Willow Springs were added to the Lord (v. 14). ,This;pcrjod through\nRanch at Carstair?. Abcrta, has boen caused the fame of'Peter to.be spread!has been passing,\nsupplying farmers in Western Canada far and wide, so that the people wcrcj Thc total deposits have icached\nwith a number of well bred herd'\"anxious to ctiinc under his shadow. ,$135,500,000- Of this amount, interest-\nleaders latc!v. ', - . | Were tltc holiness of the -bbdv of bcanng deposits _ w.Iiich_ actually rc-\nrs c X \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd j ' -i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i ,i X, , I present the savings or the nation,\n.One of the most admired youngr.Uinst recognized, there Vnld bc^how a satisfactory increase of $15.-\nanintals on the ranch was sold a few| many coming for pardon and salv.--'900.000 in the ycar.   This substantial\n1 tion\ndays ago, to a farmer at Mirror, Al\nhcrta, for $3,500. Another was pur-| 3. Thc hypocrilts did not dare to\nchased-by E. W. Reynolds, who farms'join (v. 13). It is interesting to no'e\nat Give,' Alberta, for S1.000. Morc and, that  this  vindication ,of the  ho'incss\ngain was '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdecorded in spite of heavy\nwithdrawals for puli'ic participation\nin   ihc   Victor}- Loan  of  1919. -  Sub\n.      MR. H. B. SHAW,\nscriptions pissing through the .Union !General  Manager, who returned  thc\nmore iarmcrs sn this province arc\nsecuring pure bred animals for the\npurpose of improving their herds.\nTwo yearlings and a two ycar old\nheifer sent to F. Martin of Rainton,\nSaskatchewan, vvtrc also   among   thcjsih.\nrecent    purchasers     at   ihc    Willow]    \"II\nof thc church did not deter\nlupocrites  from  joining it.\nany but\n'Rufus. aren't you feeling well?\"\n'No, Sah, I'se not fcelin' very well\nkve you consulted  your  doctor.\nLet \"Danderine*' save yoar hair and ! _\ndouble its beauty.-You can have lots .Springs- Ranch.   Breeding high  class! Rufus?\"\nof Jong, thick, strong, 'lustrous, hair. I cattle pays in   Alberta   as   anvwherc]    \"Xo   -=ah ' 1 ah't don' d--   \ufffd\ufffd=a'i \"\nDont let ,t stay liftless, lhm,: scrap-} else, and is gon. ial .v more'e,-oii'onv.c?l'i    \"Wh> * Arui'i you wi!\"ng to 't\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5'\nback its  color,\ngiy or fading. ' Bnn\n\\igor and -vitaJitv,\n' Gel a 35-cei.t -bottle   of   delightful\n\"Danderine-' at any druz store or\nj toilet, counter to freshen your scalp;\njchrck dandruff and falling hair.   Your\nW.\nU.      1299\njhair needs this stimulating tonic; then\nits life, color, brightness ?.nd abuhd\nai:Ce will return\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHurry!\nhere,\nA i\nisn't\nij..'.n -wiio sits dov,;:\nneccssirih  h'rillianl.\nyour doctor,ri>uni^:''\n\"Oh. yes, s?.h.  But dc liubb'e i= he'?\nnu 1 rcn.'el-lnor fo ?.It'gethi.r wuU-'   to tru=\" m<\\\nRank oi C?nad?- amcunted to $2S.-\n500,000, a great proportion of which\nwas directly v ithdrawn from deposits.\n\"Cunont loansin Canada total SP6.-\n500,000. compared with S74.000.000. a\ngain of $12,500,000 or 1C.89 pcr cent.\nThis substantia! \ufffd\ufffd.um will indicate that\nthe Union  Bank of Canada is doing\nStrongest report in the Union\nBank of Canada's H.story.\nthe Bank again. Each of these returned otneers has been re-instated at an\nincreased salary.\n1   T'.ic President, Mr. John Gall, and\nGercral- Manager,    Mr. K. B. Shaw,\nmade a strong plea for national and\nits part-toward meeting increased de-j individual thrift based upon thc coun-\nmapd-for   loans   from  ;he Canadian j try's   necessity   of   liquidating   huice\npublic.\" 'war d'bts.   \"Trade '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonditiens in Can-\nDiiririg' 1919  lli.\" branch  bank sys-'ada are :joon.\" sr.id Mr. GaR \"We are\ntern, v.a-.   :\\pandeJ  to a  total  of 390 . gett:r;g high p-iccs  for our products.\nbrand\" t;, ?.9. being opened ir. the ycar. jit i. a time, however, when we'should\nI\n!\n-.I..\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYor.k._\n-s  St<itesir.?n.\ns:is git on ?\nmind and worry him to death.\nmail\nIt takc\ufffd\ufffd the erass widow *d c.\nie \"hayseed bnchdor.\"  .\nj~ Everv endeavor has bc;n put for-!put forth cvery effort to increase pro\nj s* ard to make comfortable the rc- di:ct:on and build up rescr^cf. against\niest?l)Iishment of thc returned SG'dier. Jlca- years that are sure to rorac. The\n!93(> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. nbers of tl.e staff enlistee! for|v.-a\" is not paid for. Pa-1* of ;.ie price\nice. 123 psid the supreme jwill .be hard lim^s, though thcy may\nS luive -lot repotted for not \\-ct be in s:p;rit. le we are wiie.\nhave hi cm absorbed into I we wi'.l prepare for thesji.\"\nc-\n. O J\n#^3SIj_! fiiiirri \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.iriiii\ufffd\ufffdwi nii.nwi rficimi m\\\n***a-a!j!se.<*Mti]Mari\\Zta\nit\nTHE LEDGE\nIs $2 a year strictly in advance, or $2.50\nwhen not paid for three months.   If not\npaid for until the end of the year it is $3\nIt is always $2.50 a year to the United\nStates in advance.\nR. T. LOWERY.\nEditor and Financier.\nTHE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nADVERTISING RATES\nDelinquent Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nCoal and Oil Notices     7.00\nEstray Notices 3.00\nCards of Thanks    1.00\nCertificate'\ufffd\ufffd f Improvement  12.50\n(Where more than one claim appears ir> notice, $5.00 for each additional claim.)\nAll other legal'advertising, i2'cents a\nline first insertion, and 8 cents a line for\neach subsequent insertion, nonpariel\nmeasurement.\nBusiness locals i2^c. a line each insertion.\nThe blue cross means that\nyour subscription is due, and\nthat the editor would be pleased\nto have more money.\nTrying to Get a Sawmill\nFor some time fehe G. W. V. A.\nhave been working quietly, yet\npersistently, towards getting a sawmill started In Greenwood, meeting all obstacles with the same\ntenacity of purpose as wag shown\nin France and Flanders, overcoming snags and snares with courage\nand vim, so that the Government\nis at laefc sitting up and taking\nnotice. They have written to the\nBoundary Branch of the G. W.\nV. A. stating that the scheme appears feasible and that they will\ninvestigate the matter and if there\nis tbe amount of timber in the district as stated they will advance\nsufficients capital to buy a plant\nand erect the mill. If erected the\nmill will employ 12 to 15 men the\nyear round. As far as possible\nonly returned men will be employed and it is to be known as. the\nVeterans Sawmill Co.. .    .\nThe Storage of lee\nThe Bfeorage of a few block of ice\nfor summer use; is a very simple\nmatter where the . ice is readily\navailable. Any unoccupied corner\nof a shed will serve for the purpose.\nA rough board enclosure 10 feet\nsquare and 8 feet high .will hold\nenough ice to provide.60 pounds\nper day for i30 days, after allow:\ning for a_ reasonable amount of\nwastage.' The smaller, the quantity stored, the larger is the proportion of waste.\nThe bottom of the enclosure\nshould be covered with about one\nfoot ofsawdost. If the soil urider-\n-neativis impervious clay -it will be\nall . the\\ better if there is a few.\ninches of gravel under the sawdust!\nIn putting in the ice the ; boards\ncan be taken away from' one side\nand replaced after the ice is in\nposition. A space'ofl foot should\nbe left between the ice and. the\nZ boards, to. be filled.-, with . sawdust,\nand the ice should be covered, with\nabout the 'same .thickness.:; It. iB\nthe sawdust which keeps iha-ice\nfrom melting;. The drier.Jhe saw-,\ndustiis the better the ice will keep,\nand it is a good plan,-, as the ice is\nremoved during ;the^ summer, to\nthrow, out; from time to .time; the\n\/driest of the sawdust whereit '.will\nbe undercover and to .continue to\ndry. oat. and; thus be\" in better . coh\ufffd\ufffd.\ndifeion to be used again the follow-\ningyeaf. -The ice should be cut\nin blocksof uniform.size.and pack-\n. ed 8B closely together as possible.\nO. V.  MEGGITT\nXgRAND FORKS. B.C.\nDealer in Farm Produce, Railroad Ties\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cedar Poles, and Fence Posts, Farm and\nFruit Lands For Sale.   List your lands\nwith me,- iHave a,buyer for good ranch\nzmmmmsm\nyXZ'Xyy - yjj&^Tk&nFXXxyyyft\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdXyx.y-XXXr^VxXy^x.x:XMXXXyi\n;: All::theZ-Uiikstito&totii;.ih\/vlhliMliss;\n. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. XX <&Mi&.:bem&X:!&'^;$M&\nXX. yxXxyyxy yXx i.yyy,.yym.XX\n\"xijyx;imQxmMMB0xxm$\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   y - Xfyy y,y' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd yyyy.yx' - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,-. -.yyyyyyg\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;yi&ia& :mm^'sMa^Bk^mm-\nymmmyimx:mM\nA Noted Jungle Explorer\nAttention i3 called to the advertisement of the Jungle Pictures to\nbe shown in the Greenwood\nTheatre on Thursday, Jan. 29, by\nCarveth Wells, the well known\nChautauqua entertainer and Jungle\nexplorer. In Vernon, Kelowna,\nPenticton and Salmon Arm, where\nthe explorer spoke both in churches\nand schools, the entertainment\ndrew such large crowds that it had\nto be repeated.\nGreenwood is fortunate in securing this noted explorer, whose pictures, made from bis own photos\nin the jungle, have been shown in\nover 300 Canadian towns with\nChautauqua during the last 12\nmouths.\nMrs. Carveth Wells, who for\nover four years lived in the depths\nof the jungle with her husband,\ngracefully demonstrates the Malay\nmethods of dressing, exhibiting\nmany gorgeous Oriental costumes.\nTogether they give a two hours\nentertainment which in the words\nof the Salmon Arm Observer, was\n\"The most interesting ancl enter-\ntaing ever given in the city.\"\nWATER NOTICE\n(Diversion and Use.)\nTAKE NOTICE that John Port 111 an 11 and\nJosephine Portmann whose address is Greenwood, U. C, will apply for a licence to take\nand use 2 miner's inulies of water out ol a small\nun-r:amed stream runulng- through Lot 312 S\nwhich Hows southeasterly and disappears into\nthe ground South of tho South line ot said Lot\n312 S.\nTlie water will be diverted from the stream\nat a point,about 100 feet South and 400 feet East\nof the North-West corner of said Lot 312 S, aud\nwillbe used for irrigation purposes upon the\nlaud described as Lot 312 S in tho Similkameen Division of Yale District.\nThis notice was posted on Tlie ground ou\nthe 31st day of December, 11)19.\nA copy of this notice and an application pursuant thereto and to the \"Water Act, 1914\" will\nbe filed in tlle oflice of the Water .Recorder at\nGrand Fortes, B. C.\nObjections to the application may he filed\nwith the said Water Recorder or with the\nComptroller of Water Rights, Parliament\nBuilding, Victoria, B. C, within t'uirtv days\nafter the lirst appearance of this notice in a\nlocal newspaper.\nThe date of the first publication of this notice\nis December 31st, 1919.\nJOHN PORTMANN.\nJOSEPHINE PORTMANN,\nApplicants.\niiapjs of -- .= ^ .{?\nland f\\o\\ I.fflgndmsnls\n- -Minimum price of first-class land\nreduced to $5 an acre; second-class to\n$2.50 an acre.        .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPre-emption .now confined to surveyed lands only.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -\n- Records will be granted covering only'\n' land suitable for agricultural purposes\n- ind which is non-timber land.\n. Partnership pre-emptions abolished,\n- but parties of not more than four'may\narrange- for    adjacent    pre-emptions\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith joint residence, but each'making\n. necessary improvements on- respective \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd claims. % - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   Pre-emptora must occupy claims for;\n' five years and' make improvements to '\nvalue of $10 per' acre, including clearing andcultivation of-at least 5 acres,'\nbefore receiving Crown' Grant.\nWhero pre-emptor in-occupation not\nless than 3 years, and has -made- pro- -'\n- portionate improvements, he may; be-\n- cause of ill-health, or other cause, be.\ngranted intermediate certificate of Improvement and'transfer his-claim.\nRecords   without   permanent   residence may be issued, provided appli-'\ncantmakes improvements'to extent of-\n$300 per annum and records same each '\n.year. Failure to-make improvements-\nor record same' will operate-as forfeiture.---Title \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cannot\" be \"obtained .\"in\"\n(ess.than 5 years, and improvements\nof $10.00. per acre. ,including--.5 acres.,\ncleared and cultivated, and residence\n-of at least 2 years\" are required.   .. -\n\"- -Pre-emptor holding' Crown- grant-\nmay record another pre-emption, if he\n'requires land in.conjunction with his \"\n\"farm, .without actual occupation,' pro-.'\n-' vided statutory - improvements . made\nand   residence  maintained- on. Crown'.\n. granted land. m\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. . Unsurveyed areas, not\/exceeding\" 20,\nr acres, - may. be  leased  as   homesites;';\ntitle, tobe'obtained.after fulfilling resi-..\ndential.and improvement conditions'.   -'_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n; For grazing \"and Industrial-purposes\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdareas- exceeding ,.'640   acres. may'\\be. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.leased by. one, person or.company.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mill,:'factory- or -industrial sites :6n-\n- timber .-land.-, not-, exceeding 40 acres-\nmay be ..purchased; conditions include\n..payment of 'stumpage.,-.    \",-    '.:. *'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Natural   hay \"meadows ' inaccessible\nu by; existing:roads may be\" purchased ..\n\"condltional-upon construction of a.road\nto them. -.Rebate of one-half of-cost'of -.-\n' road.'-not. exceeding -half* of purchase -:\n\"price. Is. made.V'-'. -      .. \",-,-'   :-' --'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPREiEMPTORS'. . FREE\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GRANTS\n9      ,- '.:,-'.-\".. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.ACT.;,;.-.-\n.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .The .scope of- thla-Act is enlarged-to\"\ninclude all persons Joining and serv-.'\n- ing with. His. Majesty's'-Forces.. .;The--\ntime within which the heirs or.devisfees;\nof a\" deceased pre-emptor may.- apply .--\n.for  title  under  this Act. is' extended\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd from for one.year froni the- death of\nsuch -person, -.as   formerly,'until   one.\n-year after the-'conclusion of the present .\n'war.-- This privilege, is also made, re-:'\n-troactlve.   .. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. .-'-,-  . -.\"--..\n';--Jjo fees relatlng'to pre-emptions are\ndue or payable' by soldiers* on .'preemptions recorded after,June 26, 191S .'\nTaxes are .remitted\" for. five years.\n- Provision for return of moneys' accrued,'due and been paid since August\n*, 1914,- on account of payments, feel-\nor.taxes on soldiers' pre-emptions.'\nInterest on agreements to purchase\ntown or city lots-held by members of\nAllied Forces,- or dependents, acquired\ndirect or Indirect, remitted from enlistment to March 31, 1920.\nSUB-PURCHASERS  OF  CROWN  ft\nLANDS.\nProvision    made    for    Issuance    of\nCrown  grants  to  sub-purchasers    of\nCrown  Lands,   acquiring rights  from\n' purchasers who failed   to    complete\npurchase, involving forfeiture, on fulfillment of conditions of purchase, in*\nterest and taxes.   Where sub-purchasers do not claim whole of original parcel, purchase price due ahd taxes may\n-, be -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd distributed   proportionately   over\n;-. whole, area. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-' Applications   must   be -\nmade by .-May\"l...l920...\n-4 -- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ' '\"\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '\"' \ufffd\ufffdRAZING:.' \" -' '\" .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n:-- Grazing-- Act:-11919, for., -systematic'\ndevelopment of livestock Industry'pro-.,\n'vides'.'for grazing districts, and -range.\"\n-administration - under.-\"Commissioner:;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnnual .'grazing-permits\":issued' based .:\nion numbers ranged; priority\" forestab-; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nliFhed --owners. .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'Stock-owners.- nia> -\nforia\";Associations for; range manage-,-:\nnvent. - Free, or-partially. free,-perroit\ufffd\ufffd-'.\n.for settlers,\"-campers .or travellers,.-up: ;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to'tea-faead. .-y '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   '-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\noooooooooooooooowoooooooo\nT.    THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSED AND REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\nOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO\nCulameeti Rofel\nPRINCETON, BX.\nOne of the largest hotels in\nthe city.   Beautiful location,\nfine rooms and tasty meals.\nJOHNSON & EKLOF\nProprietors\nTREM0NT HOTEL\nNELSON. B.C.\nNicely furnished rooms, by the\nday, week or month\nNilson & Nilson\nProprietors\nE. W. BEATTY, K, C, President of the C. P. R., who left Montreal\non January 13th, for a trip through Western Canada.\nSheet Music\nLatest Popular Song Hits\n10 for $1.50 postpaid\nL,argest   line   sheet   music   in'..'interior\nofB. C.\nWRITE   US\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWHAT  YOU   WANT\nWE'LL DO THE^REST\nSINGER\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMUSIC STORE\nGRAND FORKS\n0   WE DYE CLOTHES\nGOOD WORK       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       PRICES RIGHT\nWrite for Prices\nModern Cleaners & Dyers\nP. 0. Box 152 GRAND FORKS\nNOTICE\nNotice is liereby givei! that an application\nwill be made to,the Legislative Assembly of\nthe.Province of British Columbia, at the next\nsession oa behalf of tbe. Association . of Professional Engineers of British' Columbia for a\nPrivate Bill to incorporate, the said Association, the said'Bill to be known as THE BRITISH' COLUMBIA ENGINEERING. PRO:\nITESSIQN ACT for the purpose of governing-\nand regulating- the pracice of Civil, Mining,\nMetalurgica], Mechanical,. Electrical and,\nChemical Engineering in thc Province of Brit-\nish'Columbia, and the qualification, exatuina-'\ntion and registration' of intending' practitioners, the discipline of its members and for the\nacquiring of real and, personal property and\nUte disposal of the same and'for the general\nmanagement'of the Association.\n\"     DATED at the   City of   Vancouver.  B.C.,\nthisSth'day of'Decembcr, A. D. 1919.\".    \".\n'    '\"    ' \"      ' H.- S. TOBIN, \",'' -   ''\n'-.'\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"    of'the firtitof Pattullb.& Tobiti,\n- Solicitors -for tlie Applicants.\nLAND NOTICE\nIn the Similkameen Land District, Recording\nDistrict of Fairview; and situate East of\nand adjoining Lot 1028.\n\" ' TAKE NOTICE tliat I, Charles Graser,'\nof Boundary falls in said'District, occupation,\nRancher, intend to aoplyfor permission to\npurchase the following described lands: -\nCommencing at a post \"planted at the\nSouth-East corner of Lot 1028; thence }\ufffd\ufffdorth 20\nchains: thence East 20 chains; tlience-South 20\ncbaihs; aud thence West 20 chains, aud containing 40 acres more or less, the same 10 b:\nutilized for grazlng-purposes. -     '   :\nDated at Boundary Falls, B.Cr, November\n17th,-l919. - -.-'.-        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -y'x    ;.'        '   ', CHARLES GRASER. - '\nASSAYER\n. E.' W.; WIDDOWSON, Assayer aud\nChemist, - Box Brio8, -Nelson,; B. C.\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Copper,\n{reach- Gold-Silver $1.50. Silver-Lead\njSr.oo ^5ilver-Lead-Ziric &5.00. Charges\nfor othec'aietals, etc., on application!   ,.\nH. McKEE\nGREENWOOD\nDealer in\nWOOD\nOrders Promptly Filled\nMATTHEWS   BROS.\nGRAND   FORKS\nAgents for Chevrolet, Dodge, Hudson,\nChalmers, Cadillac cars, and Republic\ntruck motors . Garage iti connection.\nMONUMENTS\nKOOTENAY GRANITE AND\nMONUMENTAL CO,, LTD.\nFRONT ST.,      NELSONS    BOX 865\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\n. (Expert Optician)\nGRADUATE\nOPTICIAN AND OPTOMETRIST\nK. W. C- Block        -     --     Nelson\nDR. L. F. TEP00RTEN\nDENTIST\nAll Work Guaranteed\n,P. 0. BOX 148, TELEPHONE 92\nMorrison Block. GRAND FORKS, B.C.\nNEW  GRAND   HOTTL\n616 Vernon St., Nelson\nIlrick building and finely furnished rooms\nJOHN BLOMBERG\nProprietor\nGet your job printing at lhe\nLedge, before the paper is all\ngone.\n4*+i4,4i,l1'4,4,4,4,4,+-il\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfr\n*\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nFloat\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\ngt, C LOAT is not a periodic- j,\nr   al.    It iB a  book con- Jf\n^k taining 86 illustrations all \"**\nj\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd told,  and  is   filled    with fr\nT sketches   and    stories   of \ufffd\ufffdg\ufffd\ufffd\n*\ufffd\ufffd western life.    It tells how \ufffd\ufffdg\ufffd\ufffd\nfr a gambler cashed in after ^\nfr the flush days of Sandon ; T\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ* how it rained in New Den- fr\njj ver long after  Noah was fr\nT dead; how a parson took a fr\n\"** drink   at. Bear   Lake   in \ufffd\ufffdj\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd early days; how justice j,\nfr was dealt in Easlo in 93; T\n\ufffd\ufffd{\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd how the saloon man out- fr\nju prayed the women in Kala- fr\n. mazob, and graphically de- fr\nJ* picts the   roamings    of a \ufffd\ufffdf\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd western editor, among the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\n\ufffd\ufffdJ\ufffd\ufffd tender-feet in the cent belt. T\nJjft It contains the.early history ***\nj, of Nelson and a   romance fr\n. of the Silver King mine, fr\nV In   ife are   printed    three \ufffd\ufffd$\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nju \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd western poems, and dozens ju\nj. cf articles   too   numerous. T\n\"** to mention.     Send for one fr\nfr before it is too late.    The fr.\nfr price   is .60   cents,  post- fr\n\ufffd\ufffdj\ufffd\ufffd paid to any part, of   the <^>\njp world.     Address J all   let- ^\nT. ters to X\nfr R.T< Lowery fr\nfr fr\nfr GREENWOOD, B. C.  ; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfr X                                     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd fr\niSt ^^U kM* &^U *^U* A^Ka lM* aM*  kftl   - ^ -    - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -   k^K*    JiZr\nP, Burns & Gd\ufffd\ufffd Ltd.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' ^   -.'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-'.' ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ; '. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *      :x      , '    x\n. ;- Horhe of;. Shamrock 'Bacon,-, Ham  a,nd' Lard,  I .\n..Eggsi'. Cheese;.and ,Pish .of-,:all r Varieties': -,:\nWHOLES ALE OFFICE, NELSON, BX,\nix'-xXiy' .iyyXJQEtip QF i5ECEMBER^10i7fVv:     ''[yXXy: '''i-\n. .Has produced;Minerals.valued as follows:   Placer Gold, $75,116,103; .Lode -\".. 'y'yi\n, \"GQ]d,;S93,717,974;:8iiYeri'-$43^\/761 jfieaiS- $39,366,144; Copper^ $130,597,620;:;,\n;:- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Other  Metals,fZinc,:.Ir6n,; etc.),'\"$10,933,466; ;C9al and Coke,   $174,313,658\/.-'. iX'\\'H'\nBuilding Stones  Brick.  Cement, etc;,. 827^902,381; making ;ife\ufffd\ufffd| Mineral _Produc-:   .\ntion to the end of 1917.-show.-an '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ...v .' .   . .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\";\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\". \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;. .\"\nAggregate Yaitt k^S^llil^^x^^^^^^Zyiy\nProduction for Year Ending becember, 1917, $37,010,392\nThe   Mining   Laws of this Province are more liberal and. the fees lower\n.   than those of any other Province in the Dominion,  or any colony-in the British\nEmpire,\nMineral locations are granted to discoverers for nominal fees.\nAbsolute  Titles are  obtained   by developing such properties1, the security\nof which is guaranteed by Crown Grants.\n-     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-. Fall information, together with mining Eeports and Maps, may be obtained        y\nXi v'^g^3*'!3 by alddressing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.'-''V^'',;;';\\ XX-ZX'' .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Xy:,- v ZyZr. Xy'Z X-XyXyy i-'\" ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iXi'yy.Xy ;\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\".\".'\".\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co,\nof Canada, Limited  ;_\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA .\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\n3B1\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nProducers    of   Gold,    Silver,   Copper,   Bluestone,   Pig   Lead   and Zinc\n\"TADANAC\" BRANiD\n(KKX)00000000<K>V1\ufffd\ufffdXK>60000000;0000<^^\nWINDSOR  HOT EL\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\nThe WINDSOR HOTEt\/ is heated with steam\nand electricity. Fine sample rooms. A comfortable home for tourists and travellers.' Touch the\nwire   if you   wau:   rooms reserved.     The buffet is\n6 replete   with   cigars,   cigarettes,  cooling beverages,\n\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd s^ buttermilk and ice-cream.\n0 . o\n000000<>OCKK>0000000<>0<>0(>0<X>0<>00<><><><X^\nCOURTESY  TO  THE  CALLER\nWhen you answer the telephone, you are courteous in\nyour answer. If you are answering a business telephone,\nhowever, it would be more courteous'if instead of saying\n\"Hello,\" you aunouncod the name of the firm or department.\nOne greets another on the street with \"Hello,\" but then one\nsees the other is no need to annouce the person speaking. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Oa\nthe telephone-it is different. You anticipate what a person,\nwants to know when you reply to a call, \"This is Hoe &\nCompany, Mr, Blank speaking.\"\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY-\nst fr fr fr fr fr fr fr fr fr fr fr fr.\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nCbe fiume fiotel\nHel$ont BX.\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\n+\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfr\nfr\nfr\nThe only up^to\/date Hotel in the-interior,\nm every respect,\nFirst-class\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nHot\ufffd\ufffdand Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\neach room.\nROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THE BEST\nFirst Class Cafe and Barber Shop\n15   SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated;  Electric Lighted.\nRATES 51.00 per day and up; European,Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats.\nfr fr fr fr fr fr fr frfr fr fr fr K\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\nfr\n\ufffd\ufffd^^^44,f,f',lB\ufffd\ufffd**,f*tf'*^,l',l*    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf'^'fr'frfrfrfrfrfrft\nMl\nf\nII\nft\n:tf\n^.tffttfftfttffvtfftfetvisf** tistfifffttistifta \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\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A     iB\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEconomy and Satisfaction\ncombined with Promptness\nare the features which go to\nmake lip the Service we give\nour customers. Are you\none of them?\n1 WE PRINT\n:3-' h\nm\nW\nm\nm\ni, Noteheads,\n(Ruled or Plain)   .'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.;\" '   y\\y   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n;s, Billheads,\n(All Sizes) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\npxXfi0yixx ^^^^^^i00^^^^^l\ngs;.:7:;(i^N^dp;v-V^\n^iiuuiUiUiUiuaaiauiii aiiiuuiiuuiuiniii iuiuiuuuaui^\n:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iy,\nADVERTISE IN THE LEDGE\nill","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1920_01_22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0306091","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.088333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.676389","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Greenwood, B.C. : R.T. Lowery","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1920-01-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-01-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Ledge","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0306091"}