{"@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":"1920-10-28","@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\/1.0306252\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" t\nV\nll\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd --- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^XyXXQ'H-:\n.  ..-*\nA\nV.\n\/.. q\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^SHji.-\nProvincial \"Library\nTHE  OLDEST   MINING  CAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\n\"*\\\nX7Z\nTS'\nVol. , XXVII.\nGREENWOOD, B. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1920.\nNo. 16\nCosy Homes\nMake your home cosy and attractive by filling it with some\nof our choice and elegant Furniture. Carpets and Pictures-\nUse our Crockery, Granite and Tinware in your kitchens\nand dining rooms\nOils for machines ofall kinds, coupled with a large stock of\n. well-assorted Hardware\nT. M. GULLEY & CO.\nPRONE 28-\nGREENWOOD. B.C.\n^ ..    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"   -. ..,  ., tss\n5=1 Apples, Pears, **\nCranberries, Grapes, &c.\nFresh Fish every Thursday\nBEST STOCK BEST SERVICE\nTL\nPhone 46       LEE & BRYAN\nmimmiuiuummmimmiimttumumu uuuuummu??\nLaco Tungsten Lamps\n25 to50 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50c each.\n100 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$1,25 each.\nNITROGEN\nLAMPS\n60 Watts   -   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *   $1.25 each\n100    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -    -    2,00 \"\n200   \ufffd\ufffd     \/   ^ -,    3.50 \ufffd\ufffd\nGreenwood City Waterworks Co.\n\"STORE OF QUALITY\"\nWe carry a large Hue of\nMEN'S FURNISHINGS\nGROCERIES\nAND\nHARDWARE\nJ. G. McMynn,  Midway\nt W. Ebon 8 Co |\nX   Greenwood, B. C.   X\nPublic Auction\nWe carry a full line of\nGroceries, Flour and Feed\nYour Patronage Solicited\nTaylor & Jenkin\nPhone 17 Greenwood\nG.'Slucki of Midway,will hold a Public\nAuction at his\nRANCH on KERR CREEK\nON\nOctober 30, 1920, at 10 a.m.\nThe following to he auctioned:\n320 acre Ranch. 26 Cattle.\n6 Horses. Hay. Machinery: &\nImplements. Household Articles\nM. A, DAGGY    -    Auctioner.\n\ufffd\ufffd00^>0\ufffd\ufffd000<KK>0\ufffd\ufffdKK\ufffd\ufffd0<>0<>00000\ufffd\ufffd0000000<>0^\nWINDSOR HOTEL  I\nEt. o\ufffd\ufffd. -\nThe WINDSOR HOTEL- is heated with steam\nand electricity. ,Fine sample rooms. K comfortable home for tourists and travellers. - -Touch the\nwire if yoii wane rooms reserved. The buffet is\nreplete .with cigars, cigarettes, cooling beverages,\n'   .-  buttermilk and ice-cream.\n;0<WJO<H>000<>0<>0<K><>0<KH>0<><>^^\nKodaks, full line of Films\nand Supplies at\nGoodeve Drug Store\nI ,    \\     -,\nj        Shamrock Brands\n^   ~ HAM, - BACON   and   LARD\nCarnation Compound Butter and Cheese\nHANDLED BY ALL LEADING GROCERS   ~ -   %\nR Burns & Co,   Ltd,   Nelson? B, C\nwants; etc.\nMEN \"WANTED\nWonderful future\nLEARN AUTO AND TRACTOR BUSINESS\nThe coming year will be theblfrffeit in Hie auto\nindustry.   Everywhere there will be a demand\nfor trained men.\nOUR SCHOOLS SUCCESSFULLY TEACH\nby practical experience every phase of the\nAiUomo'bile! Tractor. Stationary ami Marine\nEiigtihc, Tire Vulcanising and Repaiiinir,\nWelding- aud.'TJrn\/.iiiff, every branch of Battery\nand Electric work,\nONIiY_jriSW   WEEKS   REQUIRED,    OUR\nGRADUATES GIVEN  PREFERENCE\neverywhere;\nUNLIMITED   OPPORTUNITIES\nLEADING AUTOMOBILE   ASSOCIATIONS\nendorse otir school.   The thoroughness of our\nmethods and the completeness of oureuiiipment\ntiie Biggest automobile concerns\nj send their mechanics to our school for special\nelectrical training. These automobile concerns\nare constantly callinjr on tis for agraduates, because lliev Uiiow the tipp of men we turn out.\nDAY AND EVENING CLASSES NOW RUN-\nNINO. Call or write TODAY for FREE illustrated catalogue which tells the complete story\nENROLL NOW aiid iave money.\nJoin the *\nLARGEST AND BEST EQUIPPED\nmotor training school in Canada.   The school\nthat lias been selected by the Dominion Gov-\nR. men,\nTRACTOR\nSCHOOLS\n*  VANCOUVER SCHOOL\nCorner Granville ami Fifteenth Avenue West\nTake Shaug-hneesy Heiirhts car at  Postoffice\nVICTORIA SCHOOL\n'Corner of Blanchard aad Fisg-ard Streets\nTree transfers to our Fifteen Branches In Cauada and U. S. A.\nBoard and Room al loweit rates.\nI Around Home\ni\nSECURITY       |\nA Savings Bank Account not-\nonly provides an assurance for the\npresent, but guarantees you security\nin the future. \"...\nTo save is to succeed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nPAID-UP CAPITAL      -       -        $15,000,000\nRESERVE FUND -        -  -  ; $15,000,000\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   GREENWOOD BRANCH, \ufffd\ufffd. E. Brawders, Manager.       -\neminent for the training!-of S. C.\nHEMPHILL'S AUTO   AND\nBRANCH OFFICE-23 HASTING ST.   E.,\nOpposite !i. C. Electric, Vancouver,\nFor Sale\n\"Mrs. Charles Buckless, - of\nPrinceton, arrivedm the city on\nFriday last.\nMrs.'M. Beattie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd returned last\nweek from visiting- hi Vancouver\nand Merritt.\nStop that cough with Syrup of\"\nWhite Pine. Goodeve's Drug\nStore.\nThere is hardly enough\nbetween elections to get\nsecond wind.\ntime\nour\nGreenwood's Exhibit.\nThe Presbyterian Church and\nManse in Phoenix. Apply Rev.\nHillis Wright, Grand Porks, B.C.\nFor Sale.\nA 1913 model Ford car, in first\nclass condition. A godti bargain.\nApply to J. H. Bush, Midway.\nDown Hill\n^\nTbe old peer was on his deathbed talking to his old coachman.\n\"Yes, James, I'm off ooa longer\njourney than yon ever drove me.\"\n\"Shure sir,, bufe 7,never mind,\nit'll be down hill all the way.\"\nMiss Marie Anderson, of Victoria, is visiting her mother, Mrs.\nJ. P. Anderson.\nMartin. Anderson returned\nhome on Saturday from a holiday\nin Wenatchee, Wash.\nMrs. C. J. McArthur is spending a few days in town, prior to\nmaking her home in Trail.\nJohn Mulligan, formerly of\nPhoenix has been appointed postmaster at Copper Mountain. -\nL. W. Mayer, president of the\nCanada Copper Corporation, is\nexpected in Allenby this week.\nD. R. McElmou,' Watchmaker\nand Jeweller.  Greenwood,   B.   C.\n.M.-.W. Ludlow of; Coltern, was\nin town on Wednesday. He reports business good in the mining\ntown.\nMrs. E. L. Steves and daughter,\nEdith, of Westbridge, -were the\nguests of Mrs. \"Frank Buckless\nthis week.\nThe city clerk warns all taxpayers that 10% will be added to\nall unpaid tases on the first day\nof November,\nH. J. Cole, of Spokane, was m\ntown tbis -week, and examined\n'Some-oKinitsg-r-pro^ci-y- in- -the\nLong Lake camp.\nMajor A. W.' Davis, ?nd\" P.\nSalvus, contractors, of Vancouver, were on a business trip to\nthis city on Tuesday.\nMrs.. L. E. Brawders aud family, returned on Thursday last\nfrom a several weeks visit, with\nrelatives in Vancouver.\nTheyouug men of Greenwood\nintend making application to the\nCity Council-for use\" of the Star\nTheatre for basket ball games.\nE. B. McDermid, managing\ndirector of the Royal Financial\nCorporation, Vancouver, was ou\na business trip to Green wood last\nweek.\nGeo. H. Stevenson, of Seattle,\nwas looking over some mining\nproperty near the Skylark camp,\nin which he is interested, \"this\nweek. , ,\nMrs. P. H, McCurrach and\nthree children arrived fsom Halifax, N.S., on Friday,- were they\nspent the summer months with\nrelatives.   -\nGrand Forks Returned'Soldiers\nwill support Col. C. E. -Edgett,\nthe soldier-farmer candidate in\nthe Yale by-election, to be held\non Nov. 22nd.\n- The Rebekah Lodge will hold\na Hallowe'en Dance on Oct. 29,\nin the I. O. O. F. Hall. Good\nmusic. Gents 75c,, Ladies 50c,\nsupper included.\"    -\nD. R. McElmou has received\nthe appointment of registrar, for\ncompiling the voters' list, in the\nGreenwood polling diyisioar for\ntbe Yale by-election.\nPersons who are qualified to\nget on the Provincial voters' list\nbut failed to do so, can now have\ntheir names added to the list for\nthe Dominion by-election.\nJ. H. Goodeve, the local druggist, has already had several\nlarge . shipments of Christmas\ngoods to arrive, and will have a\ntremendous assortment\" by the\ntime the festive season .opens.\nLast year-Mr. Goodeve was unable to supply the demand, owing\nto the fact that freight deliveries were slow^'and Xmas goods\nshipped in plenty of time, did\nnot reach .\"Greenwood until the\nseasoa'was over. -\n- Wm. Thomlinson, of New Denver,\"1 was iu town on Monday and\nTuesday. He was here for the\npurpose of collecting minerals for\nexhibition purposes in New York\nand other points in 1921 to be arranged by the Department of Mines,\nOttawa. He is looking for large\ntypical samples of ore -from, the\nvarious camps, also all useful non-\nmetallic minerals, especially the'\nkind that can be used by chemists\nand manufacturers.\nThe Department wishes to encourage prospectors to take more\ninterest in non- metallic minerals.\nWhile here Mr. Thomlinson gave\nfreo determination on unknown\nminerals and non-metallic substances. He was alBO able to get\n10- different specimens from this\ndistrict which have been sent\nto Ottawa for determination.\nGreenwood haB a particularly\ngood collection of ores at Ottawa\nfor exposition purposes and will be\nsent to various cities throughout\nEurope for exhibition. This collection consists of -82 very fine\nspecimens as follows; 9 gold-silver,\n9 gold ores,. 16 gold and copper\nores, 22 copper ores, 8 silver-lead,\nJ1 silver-lead zinc, and 7 silver-lead\ngold. Tliis collection was one of\nthe main miueral attractions at the\nPanama-Pacific Exposition California a few years ago.\nProspectors or lessees who have\nsamples can secure shipping and\ninformation tags from P. H. McCurrach. All shipping charges are\npaid by the government.\nThis is an advertising campaign\nand property holders should avail\nthemselves of the opportunity to\ngive \"information a bo u t their\nclaims and mines.\n:^\ufffd\ufffd5^S?*5\ufffd\ufffd^5a?5a*5S*w\ufffd\ufffd5&W3$SaWS=>\nProvincial Election\nOn December 1st.\nOn Saturday, Oct. 23 the Provincial Legislature was dissolved\nand arrangements were made to\nhold a general election on December 1. Nomination day is set for\n.November 10.\nMacMillan-Langille\nAt the home of the bride's\nparents, Fairview. Nelson, on the\nafternoon of Monday, October\n25th, at five o'clock, the marriage\nwas solemnized between Arthur\nWilson MacMillan, of Trail, formerly of Greenwood, and Mrs.\nMargaret Langille, elder daughter of Mr.-and-Mrs. John Notman.\nThe Rev. A. M. O'Donnell, B.B.,\nof Trail officiated. The witnesses\nwere William N.. MacMillan and\nMiss Charlotte Notman. After\nthe ceremony the friends, of the\nyoung couple sat down to a sumptuous wedding supper. The remainder of the evening was spent\nmostpleasantly in songs, games\nand dancing. _ Many beautiful\naud useful gifts testify to the\nesteem in which the young couple\nare held by a large circle of\nfriends. After their honeymoon\nwhich will he spent in a short\ntrip along the i Kootenay, lake,\nMr. and Mrs. - MacMillan will\ntake up their residence on Bay\navenue, Trail.\nWestern Float I\nF\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd W. McLaine, manager of\nthe casualty, automobile insurance, and bond departments .of\nCeperley, Rounsefell & Co., Vancouver, who spent a few days in\ntown last week, left for Grand\nForks on Friday. . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nH. McCutcheon; Collector ot\nCustoms has returned from Ross-\nlaud where he has been for over\nthree months, relieving Collector\nSteyens who was on sick leave.\nWhen asked about how business\nwas in Rossland he said: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Business in Rossland is improying\nand will continue to do.so. I expect to see her a flourishing city\nwithin the next two years, once\nthe concentrator gets into operation, the mines will be worked to\nfull capacity. There is not a\npessimist in. the town. Everybody is optimistic as to the\nfuture. Rossland has an upto-\ndate public school with twelve\nteachers and an attendance of\nover four hundred pupils, and a\nhigh school with three teachers\nand' an' - attendance of about\nseventy. One thing that struck\nme forcibly was the well develop-\nedand healthy appearance of the\npupils attending . the schools.\nYes I think Rossland has a bright\nfuture ahead of her.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdii\nf\nThe British museum has 40 miles\nof bookshelves.\nThe payroll tributary to Kaslo\nis estimated at 830,000.\nAll bicycles riders in Penticton\nmust equip their machines with\nheadlights.\nPheasants are fairly plentiful\naround Duncan. The season opened on Oct. 16.\nAbout 65 acres in the Okanagan\nwere planted in tobacco this season,\nand the crop is a very good one.\nSunflowers were grown at Kus-\nkanook this year that stood 16\nfeet, and had eight heads of flowers.\nIn Vancouver during the first\nnine months of this year there has\nbeen 118 more boy than girl babies\nborn.\nDuring the latter part of September 70 cars of fruit left Vernon\nin a day. This is the. record for\nthe season.\nPolice court fines collected in\nCranbrook for the first nine month3\nof the year were oyer $6000\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmore\nthau double tlTose of 1919.\nWitnesses summoned to give\nevidence before the assizes are to\nreceive $3.50 a day instead of $2\nas formerly, and professional witnesses, tendering expert testimony,\nare to be paid on the scale of $7\ndaily instead of S4. This change\nin the scale of fees is announced\nfrom the attorney-general's department. '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAn effort is being made in Chilliwack to extend, the mid-day interval at the public school to one and\none-half hours in order to enable\nmore.of tjae^children attending the\ncity schools to gefe hom a for a hot\nmeal at noon during the winter\nmonths. For many years past\nthe schools of Greenwood has had\nthe one and one-half interval at\nnoon.\nWhile engaged in removing a\nlarge rock on the road between\nArmstrong and Vernon, recently,\nthe road gang set of some heavy\nblasting charges, One of the men\nhad occasion togo,back from the\nroadway for 100 yards, when he\nwas surprised to find a full grown\nbear lying dead with a piece of\nrock a little larger than a man's\nfist lying beside it. The carcase\nwas still, _warm _when discovered,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand the animal evidently met\ndeath from the flying piece of\nstone. N\n. Signs of real declines of essentials\nappeared in -Winnipeg last week.\nElectric fixtures and devices have\nbeen generally reduced from one to\ntwo dollars each; linseed' oil has\ncome down twenty percent.; paints\nare off twenty per cent.: while\nhousehold furniture has' dropped\neven more. Textiles are up, however, for next*1 spring delivery. 30\nper cent, with no -buyers, because\nthe impression is general that declines will occur before that time.\nBritish Columbia lumber i? showing some improvement and demand\nfor Okanagan fruit has improved.\nIf the sugar prices decline the demand for Ontario and B. C. fruit\nwill increase enormously, says a\nWinnipeg report.\nMining News\nThe Northwest Mining Convention will be held in Spokane,\nWash., February 28th to March\n5th, 1921.\nPoplar creek ores were recently\ntested at the smelter in Tacoma,\nWash., aud the returns gave 624\npounds of arsenic to the ton. This\nore will pay to mine for the arsenic\nalone, without taking into consideration the gold values. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA. Sandon report says: \"The\nSilversmith mines has several carloads of lead-silver concentrates in\ntransit and eight ready for shipment. The last carload shipped\nbrings the total up to 83. The\nmill which is'being operated steadily, is producing close to 300tons\nof lead-silver concentrates and 200\ntons of zinc concentrates monthly.\nThe value of tbe lead-silver concentrates iB about 81315 bo the ton.\"\nArrangement have been made\nfor the opening up of the Payne\nmine at Sandon, under option to\nthe Pacific Mines Development Co.\nFor the present, development will\nbe confined to drifting both-ways\non the vein as the -1500 foot level\nand the installation of an air blast\nto provide ventilation. Later, a\nlarge force will be engaged. The\nPacific Development Co: also operates the Charleston group, near\nWhitewater.\nThe Mansfield Mining company\noperating in the Lardeau district,\nnear Trout Lake, has struck a\nseven-foot ledge of silver-lead ore\non the company's property, according to a statement made by M. R.\nLeahy, manager. The ore was\nencountered-at a depth of 350 feefe,\nand is low grade, assay returns going ^812 a^ton. \/The .strike .-was\nmade near the main lead of the\nmine where the silver-lead ore runs\n$150 a ton. It is the intention of\nthe management to erect a concentrator in the spring.\nAwaiting the season\" for rawhid-,\ning,   the   oldest   shipper   on- fehe\nArrow  Lakes,   fehe    Millie   Mack\nmine afe  Burton,   is piling  up ore\nfor shipment to the smelfeer, according to a1 Nakusp  report.    H.   E.\nFoster, who is working the prop-,\nerty, _has about 50  tons' of   high\ngrade   ore ready  to be sent out.\nTho Millie Mack was located over\n20 years ago by George McDonald,\nand ife-changed -hands during the-\nboom  days of  Kootenay mining.\nIt is a silver-gold proposition, with\nthe silver running high.\nWar Relief Fund\nThe Canadian Red Cross Society\nis making an ajjpeal to the people\nof Canada on behalf of the British Empire War Relief Fund,\nwhich is for the purpose of fighting the terrible conditions ,-of\ndisease and distress, in the war-\nstricken ,areas of Europe and\nAsia. For various reasons it has\nbeen found necessary to postpone\nthe appeal a short .time. Instead\nof being held during Armistice\nweek, as previously. announced,\nthe appeal in British- Columbia\nwill -be made during the week\nNovember 22fld to 2Sth. The\nappeal iii the other provinces will\ntake ^ place -during Anriistice\nweek. -\nThe Granby Consolidated Mining, Smelting and Power company\nproduced 2.239,17-i pounds pf copper in September, according to a\nNew York report in fehe Spokesman Review. This is comparable\nwith 2,471,200 pounds in August\nand 2,400,000 in July. A table\nissued in New York shows thafe the\nproduction in every month but one\nof the\" current year was in exicesa\nof 2,000,000 pounds, while six\nmonths of 1919 wore below the\n2,000,000, although one inonth was\nabove 3,000,000. The report received states that - a nefe profit of\n8432,586 was obtained after the\ndeduction of charges, but nofe of\ntax, in the six monthB ended on\nJune 30 last. ' Iu the six months\nended on December 31, 1919, tlie\ngross profit3 were S399,3S7, the\ntaxes, interest and so forth $539,-\n4S9 and the net profit $59,900, according to a report.- From an\nofficial source it is learned that the\ncompany has considered the in- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nstallafeionat Anyox, of a concentrating plant having a capacity of\n2000 daily. ltd costs is estimated\nafe \ufffd\ufffd1,000,000. . For a yoar and a\nhalf an experimental mill of 100\ntons daily capacity has been in service. Ife is reported to liave demonstrated the re?ponsivenes3 of\nGranby ore to concentration. The\ninstallation of the 200-ton planfe\nwill reduce the coat of producing\ncopper and make available a large\nquantity of ore tint does not reach\n(the smelter, it is pointed out.\nMS#I\n:.<s& Till;;   - LJvJX,\ufffd\ufffd:      <JLikL]s\\yvOD?\n'\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd. -\n*->'\nu.\nr\nWillow,\nThe Wisp\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BY \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nARCHIE P. McKISHNlE\nPrinted    by    Sprcial    Arrange\nmerits   with   Thos.   Allen,\n,. Toronto, Ont. .\n% -_ #\n^Continued)\n\"Uncle dear,\" she cried reproachfully, \"you are overdoing it. Your\nface, is positively haggard ' from\nfatigue. And your hands arc hot,\"\nshe eluded, as sh.: stroked them t nd-\nerl)\\ \"Come, you must, sit here on\ntliis mossy knoll and rest a bit before\nfinishing the chmb to thc house.\"\nShc drew hini over to the tiny\nglade, and lie sank wearily down beside her on tlic sward. \"Edna, my\ndear child,\" lie said, speaking with\n^\"difficulty, \"I have had a distinct\nshock; thc reaction has left me w.ak.\"\nHe inserted a bluc-vdncd, trembling hand into the pocket of liis\ncoat und drew out a si'k handkerchief. He wiped his brow gently\nand, raising thc handkerc! icf to his\neyes, held it so. She saw a shiver\nrun down his frail form, and her codI\nhands lightened in sympathy upon\nhis.\n\"Timberley is here,  Edna,\" he said\nin   a  whisper.       \"1   met   him\nthc\nThcro are as snaay different varieties of iea as\nof roses\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbul  only  ONE\nRed Rose Tea.\nRed Rose is a blend\nof about a dozen van- -,\neties of teas, chiefly\nhill-grown ASSAMS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the richest and\nstrongest teas grown.\nThe skilful blending of\nthese'1 teas produces the\ndelightful and-distinctive\nRed Rose flavor.\nThc rich, strong ASSAM leaves, in the Red\nRose package are so full\nof tea essence that three\ntcaspoonfuls go as far as-\nfivc of ordinary tea.\ntrail, this afternoon.\"\nThe girl gave a gasp. The color\nfkd from her face. \"Are j'ou sure?\"\nshc asked in a straiped voice. \"Oh,\nsurely he is not so vile as to follow\nmc up here with his persecutions. He\nis contemptible enough, God knows,\nbut\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" Her voice trailed off in a\nquaver and shc hid her face, in her\nhands. I\n\"T too gave him credit for possess-1\ning a little manhood,\" sighed Mr. j\nDayton. \"Jn a measure, at least, 11\n-. looked for him to respect our wishes, j\nFor him to follow us here, when wc i\ncame solely, you might say, to get;\naway  from   him,  is   cowardly.\"\n\"Yes,\" shc agreed, \"it is cowardly.\nDid you speak to him, Uncle?\"\n\"I would-have passed hini by without recognition, if that had been possible,\" he answered, \"but hc planted j\nhimself directly in my path. 1 will!\nnot repeat the things he1 said to me,\nEdna. Thcy were anything but\npleasant.\"\n\"Oh!\" shc cried. \"For him to dare\nto abuse you!\" Shc lifted her head,\nher deep eyes flashing.\nAgain her guardian shivered.\n\"Edna, dear,\" hc said' brokenly. \"Hc\ndid morc^han abuse me in words. He\nstruck me.\"\nShe .was silent. But he felt her\nform grow tense. .,\n\"It was not a heavy blow,\" he said\nquickly.       \"It   hurt   me    very    little.\nEven now, Edna, I bear him no ma-i\nlice,   and  would, willingly  forget  and,,\nforgive, for your sake, knowing lha\ufffd\ufffd\nyou  o.nce  loved:, him,,, and,    perhaps.,,\n7st.ilI'.-'clicrisliMi'iQfe;-.'.than-' ia^paSsiugrrYe-.\n.7ga'rd^fpi7,Himi7;!jsd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl7ie7n.o:t- by^iifi-ftjqrds^,\n^arid\/actions^oVday^itf^\n;7yond-'; a>\" dbub't.7. thatvbc:: ,is. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd as;7'gi:eit- a j\n; knave: 'as .i'Tsusjiected:'^^ ;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd}\n: ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" Xt'lyyi rs It;'- it e y Vtrytf Xs be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :ti a ii:;\"A-gji j iv}'', j.\ni whispered;.;chip, jgtri\";. .\"a-iiik\/tff \ufffd\ufffdhiii'k7-14\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" IpyCd^inni.:-^^\n7.:a}iU \"-'dcSpfsev E'i:m^\n7.clibkb(l 7 th rpwi.fi si}} Xyyuyisr. irtbptf t-Jti S7:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv.iVeei-^;7\"'%'pw\/7gpp37:'ypu: 7iwyfe7.b.eifi77itQ'7\n-in ei y\\n d-', 7oli.; X eat,- ''.sh'e\/Spbb e \"d:-,\".:''.' tli ink-'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyp f.'. th c \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: 'n iis;' cfy'Ty pTtnr yiki'feh'cb7^nd;7fbvb\nVlvavb7sJSybd\/ Hib -troni^'::.y:XyX. :'7;;: - -.\nXX. \"T^Krey-tlieiyo\/'i lie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^p:tJi\ufffd\ufffdlv7his-'P^Hi-,\n'\"''.VDiCc\/^us'^ bf-''\n.v7t-liat;.7^irlifi:7^:7:T:liJivIv.'0\n7'fe p;pine s s.- mi dl bom f q rt-- yPii 7! 1 afe> iXZy ny\nv.t-'p'^c--;th\ufffd\ufffd^\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' Ednay^ 7; X. I;7wbu.l d, -7in cfcidyVJ-JJ-a^c^H'fi\/.\nxyxtfiaiirpyyiXiXiXf QiXiXXyiXXiXtiXX^X&xiXiyX\n: X c ridbj:'XX (XisX 7 jmy>b.s cdiyiXiXXXZ&ylXhiii\n\"i n:iec c 7;0.E~7thb:ib:ra\n7 :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* ,:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Xlyi c 1XXI &:'s SW XX ^cXXXXXXyiXy^XZiXX.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'wasiiTHtJ;:fri7S,^\n'7;'up'7'.inV'tIVi.S;;:^g^\n'vCti cl 67;:\ufffd\ufffdTajfl':p&;3vKf!;;; XXyX^XiX:Xr:X^yX X-\nxxiiiXyXtiiXyiitfwxyxyJyiXyyyyyyy\nxXyX0isx00MX^\nXXiiXyZfXiiijXtyyXXXy\n.i;Tb 1? K;-ih bift7h7yj: s J^tji^gi 1 g-i't 'f If- X 7tg.j|sJz i kg]'\n7;M^feyKJ?LQ\n:iytGimt^7'o;frtJvS>pi\/a^\no^lan'S?SS asr-n'-cjf *'Xy11iie\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"%V^i'-tbferilAs.7\nj\/itiv liases Tvt&l d;^C^ws77;l^efei\\c ^77 v o^1 S7; :ii 'tcltf K\n7hatt%i;ivK e r i teft^-all-^ft'M^af\/^fbJi fehldW^'i\nSaskatchewan Butter j\nBrings Highest Price\nTopped Market When Put On Auction in Montreal.\nEvidence of the place which Saskatchewan butter now holds in thc\nbest markets of Eastern Canada is\nfound in the following item appearing in the October Sth issue of \"The\nTrade Bulletin\" of Montreal.\n\"A feature in last Friday's auction\nsale held at the United Dairyman's\nCo-operative Limited was thc sale\nfor the first time of a lot of 450 packages of finest Saskatchewan July-\nAugust creamery butter, which sold\nat -l-4c pcr pound oyer Quebec finest\ncreamery butter marketed here on the\nsamc day.\"\n.Previous to thebaic above reported Saskatchewan butter had never appeared on -^llic Montreal auction\nboards and though sales were often\nmade at top prices, Quebec butter\nwas thc generally accepted standard.\nThat lhe first car of Saskatchewan\ngoods offered at auction ...should have\ntopped the market is a most emphatic expression of th.e esteem in which\nour butler is held by tlie best trade in\nthe east.\nRed Rose Coffee is as\ngenerously good as\nRed Rose Tea\ncould havc been no more to me than\nyou have, Uncle.\"\n\"I havc tried to protect you and\nyour interests-to thebest of my poor\nability,\" he munrrtfred. \"Thc fortune left you by your Uncle Gray-\ndon, and whieh I was to invest fof\nyou as  1   thought best-^\"\nShe caught his hand and pressed it.\n\"Uncle, dear,\" she begged. \"You\nremember, you promised ine not to\nmention  that again.      I  am  satisfied,\nProtection of Bird Life\nWant    Co-operation    of    Sportsmen\nWith Authorities to Protect Wild\nGame.\nThe treaty between Canada and thc\nUnited Slates to protect migratory\nbirds from ruthless slaughter by\nsome gunmen should commend itself\nto most sportsmen, as well as tp the\ngeneral'public. Onc of thc commissioners from the United Statcs, at the\nconvention of lhc international association in Ottawa, scenied. to be-dis-\ncouraged. He declared that alleged\nsportsmen of thej two countries were\nMen, Men!\nTry It To-night-\nFeel Fine Tomorrow\nSimple    Way    to - Get \"Pep,\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd To Be Put Right On\nYour Feet.\nHandling* Soil\nWhen a man has lost ambition to\"\n\"dig in\"- and stay at things\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhen hc\ncomplains of headache, fullness in the\nright side, pains in thc shoulder lilade\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit's purcly a case of \"Liver.\"\nThesc symptoms invariably indicate a clogged, inactive liver. The\nbody can't get rid of its wastes, and\nthe whole system is half p'aralyzcd.\nDr. Hamilton's' Pills stimulate the\nliver into activity in one night. Being\na mild vegetable laxative Ihey produce results in a few hours. Thc bilious headache and constipation are\ncured, spirits rise, complexion clears,\nanimation returns. Noticing in\" thc\ncalendar so efficient for tliat tired,\nlazy feeling as Dr. Hamilton's Pills.\nVery mild, don't interfere with work,\ninvariabjy do lots-of good. Try a 25c\nbox-, all dealers.\nTo   Save Potato   Situation\nPrincipal of Manitoba College Says\nCo-operation is Necessary.\nCo-operative effort is the only hope\nfor thc present unsatisfactory potato\nmarketing situation in Saskatchewan,\naccording to Principal John Bracken,\nof the .Manitoba College of Agriculture, formerly professor of field husbandry in the University of Saskatchewan.\n\"Thc fact that, every spring consumers pay7 very high prices for potatoes is in\"-itself convincing evidence\nlhat storage facilities either on thc\nfarm, at the railway siding or in\nthe town \"and xity, should be provided, and that closer relations be established between the grower and the\nproduce merchant.\n''At present it is-c'asier for the latter --to   buy a carload of potatoes in\nnot plaving- thc sjsmc, and urged that ...\n.,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\",     11 1   '     r        1     -l.i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I the east, and sometimes cheaper, than\nthe law should be enforced with more \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\nmore   than   satisfied,  with  what   vou I     ,r,        , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,- -    - t\nhave done with mv money. Believe fhc duci &amc commissioner of\nme, I do not care to know what it is. 1 lhc United States took a more hope-\nSome day you ,may tell me, if you 1 ful view of thc.situation. Hc cx-\nwish; but now, now-- wc havc each j p-\/csscd confidence in the sportsmen,\nother,\" shc cried  chokingly, \"and \\vci-T,    .    1    ,   ,7 ^  ,1    1  i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt.^..\n,    .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,    -, 1     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<-i 11      -.t    there  had been  a great.deal  better\nhave this wondcnul wild world, with &\nits scents, colors and,silcnce. Let j la\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd observance than law cuforcc-\nus enjoy it all, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Uncle! Let us for-[ment, he declared. A small percent-\nget that\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat man.      He  can  do tis   agc   0f  offenders   should   not   be   al-\nn0i.vlinl'      j; ,i       11 -ii lowed    to    bring .discredit upon  the\nYes, ves,    the old man sighcdpas- -      .    . . .\nshe  placed  her  hand  tinder   his  arm : 5rc;u. majority, who really    tried    to\nmaintain .the best traditions of\ufffd\ufffdsport.\naud assisted him to rise. \"We will\nfoigc.t Timberley, gir'.ie. As you\nsay, hc can do us no harm. But he\nwill try, Edna; no doub.t of that.\" '7\nThe mellow call of a woman's voice\ncam.e--frpi.n-the-7glade..;ab.ove:,,-- v -ry,-:;.;;-.\n\"\/7'';Tha.t's :;Ma7:^Vaslibirth '':ca.Uingais\",t'o.\n$upper;;7Uncle^7 'i-.'Cb'iiie-.\"^'-,'-\"--;-''.:\/!!'   XX.:\nThc American commissioners paid\nspeciSl tribute to the excellence of the\nwork done in Canada by the Domin-\n.ip.n,:Parks^&i:ancli;,7;iCan\"ada;:.;isvdrap-\n1$ ft;77able ;to'-.' main'l ai'n? spm c 7' vai:ic ties\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThc;,giri;s;^\nher;.tirm.::.Sv-j?n\ufffd\ufffd'-.abo.ut,her.;iinci:<i's-iia:r-.;sariCtiiarie\ufffd\ufffd\".a,s.-wellyias;.titersfric}opb>:\nrW-shouJclcj;^\ndiiviii^-talile^IitMiiia-iMcecIae \ufffd\ufffditfSC ^^v^ iM'.' 'COtD lie rations f-ail ;.tru:e:\nMr;r4Wa-&Iitohi.-^\nca;mc^sigbt;7::>^\nit is to buy ,onc in\" Saskatchewan.,.-\nThc producer, by co-operative effort,\nmust make it as easy for the merchant in our cities to buy his potatoes in Saskatchewan as hc can now\nin times of scarcity buy them elsewhere. Otherwise thc Saskatchewan\ncity market may-not be supplied with\nhome-grown tubers.\"\n\"Unless we can' co-operate to .secure our local markets, there'Would\nseem to be littic usc at present of\nattempting to get outside ones. Itl\nseems apparent that only by \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cooperation in shipping and marketing\nwill., this ..condition be corrected.\".   .\n.cre;^iftcc\ufffd\ufffd:<!lt!clceiT'won't lasttioii'giwlfcii\nXkr tyX^XXyx^'yA-X^i^xZxXXrXXXyy xX:X;y;.;\n.- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- .'\"I've \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jjest-JV^d;;an7\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaw7f\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdU7i:7tim:e7.^e^'i;n.',\n;.lh\"aC;hung){y-::iuan7.fi-& settiii-'aft.' ancl'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^.tirv'vVT^af6Ve'V; n'Cni;7-vcpj5ic-;''.7fii;ifix!-;;jfa:-\nZVfJ- asjrb ivhi\"; :ry^~P.i's '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- -m 0 ?'-\"iys- 7Arc:7ge:fc\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtBi'.iiwPfse^\/tlii-ptigitvimng^\n\ufffd\ufffdiill-::cK^l\ufffd\ufffdjtli'^ \t\njs-i\\;af7bcing:S\\skeel;iih,:^iiu^FypOT\n0ttf\ufffd\ufffdWa;7Ci'fizehi:,7'-7-.'::-:-:-..;7::-: '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :v;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd vv'XXyX.\nmg\n-S-:\nSh:S\"^U5:yM;\ufffd\ufffd;Jilipu;t;^\neli;u ty. iiXf ft; K' sfe' iu;gval KflAn'tVii^pfagcrbtf\nifltiti gS.7pn\"MliS7i:ru'44'^^^\ny\"h. \ufffd\ufffd.sa ypxy\/XX j 1 c rXX: m iai;7the7'\ufffd\ufffd:iSHt7:pf\nyX^yyt^^y^^^^p^^yyyy\nmzmxmmimmeBSigiSSim.\n!:i;;t5<\nyrXfiy\ntp^ify\nyr:\n;7.-7Gct6pefating;! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEp'r.-^SaskaU'HeWah; ,77\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; ''Co ripp e r at i;on -'^iii i gh few ell-hc-^tlie-.\n;m P;t;tp\\ Xoi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \/Sa's K a tel i ii\\y iii XZ. X Thcosamc;\ns.pieifditl, .\/spirit-, wlitchv7\\ya^7disp:Myed\n;iri.7tli(3; -nijSiJ-vfii'B^\n.-'th.e :\"'evties}^J5>.\"S'fi:oirgIy\"7iii, ,cvide^7e'':^i'i\n7the7pr^sieht7cainphigii.!fpi-;ihe.;'s^\n{Sa'ifca't'c'jrejyaU^\n':iuyesZXyZX:yy..y:y 'y:y:.y.y xy -XyX:':;;;\n.\/'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;T1V^75;Gf.afn Xy G'rpw trs^;;;ifesbcKiL'fip:lV\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlvft >;StiSk^ tclj'e wail Miviric i'pi&Z A's'sp ci a*\n\"ti:pn,7;the:>&'.skat\ufffd\ufffd|fewalr7{R\n;-'c|i\ufffd\ufffdihts^^^ssbciati'ori,'! ;:!arc.'';<i:l L^ctlvel^\nsuppbrljjig-. the^iupy^cinefl t \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.7tp7-.vsec;u!!C;\n'f j-o i)V 7y ::\ufffd\ufffd itiS\ufffd\ufffdn\ufffd\ufffd7'v7o f7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sa\ufffd\ufffd ^^\n;;fuii ds\\;:fc7s&ianci;-ih\n7$aSliivfyTe'wsiiT'^.:;ia:te^t'7^\nDepth of Furrow Should be Changed\nEach Year.\nit has \"been abundatjtly proved that\nit is not good to plough a field the\nsame depth from year to year. By\nploughing shallow or at a uniform\ndepth, the soil cannot become mixed\nwell-and ailmTd bed is formed at the\nbottom of the furrow, which neither\nair, water, nor thc roots of plants will\npenetrate readily. A little subsoil\nturned to the surface occasionally allows the elements to act upon it freely, thus liberating food as it mingles\nwith thc .surface soil and vegetable\nmatter. In this way morc valuable\nplant food and greater depth' of soil\nis furnished lhe plants which grow\nupon it. v\nFor deep, rich soil, deep ploughing-,\nsay from six to nine inches, is best in\nthe fall of the ycar. The depth\nshould bo. increased by one-half inch\neach succeeding year until lhc required depth is reached. Then return to\nthe normal by gradually diminishing'\nlhe depth from year to year. Light\nworking soils, those miming into\nsandy loam aud sand, it fs -safer to\nplough shallow. For thin, clay soils,\nand equally light subsoil, plough from\nfive to seven inches; for small grains\nit is .perhaps, better than very deep'\nploughing, becirtise it does nol turn\nthe compact clay to thc surface and it\nloosens the soil'to a, good depth. Of\ncourse, where root.crops are intended\nto bc raised, iHs profitable to occasionally, subsoil and plow deeper.\nSomc farmers practice ploughing a\nlittic deeper - each year for several\nyears in succession and- then for one\nseason- plow at about half the depth\nof'thc deepest in a scries of \\rcars. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n\/ .\nPrince to Visit S. and E. Africa.\nThc Prince of Wales has announced that hc hopes, before long, to visit\nSouth and East Africa. -\nS\"#-^ may be as dangerous\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.*P>'-' as too little\"\nWhen tlie skin is salloW or yellow, the   v\neyes dull, the.head aches or sleep^broken :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand unrefreshing, the back aches, or there\nis a pain under the right shoulder blade~ifc\nis an indication that the body is being poi- '\nsbned by poorly digested and imperfectly eliminated food-waste.   It is a\" wise thing to take \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- :-m\nto relieve these symptoms by\nhelping to remove the causes\n3el<t<WTttiti\ufffd\ufffduiC\ufffd\ufffdBfil>,   In torn, 25c, 50c.   ^\nCanada Loses Order\nBelgium Buys Her Kailway 'Cars'\na From Germany.\nCanada lias lost thc order, for 2,400\nsteel railway cars which the Belgian\nCovcrntuciU, through the Canadian\ntrade commission, 7 sought ,to place\nwith manufacturers in this country.\nInstead of \"Made in Canada\" cars\nthe Belgians will ride in coaches of\nthc \"Madc in'G'erntany\" variety when\ntho-ordcr is filled. Advices to-the\ntrade commission are to thc effect\nthat \"Belgium has placed., f he order\nwith Germans, and will jjjiy.for- thc\nrailway material w+th foodstuffs\nwhich arc to b,e supplied to Germany.\nBeetles .Which Eat Lead.\nA sensation was caused some time\nago by the discovery of a beetle that\nlikes\" eating lead,\" .-Considerable\ndamage was being done to sonrc-1ead-\ncovercd cables, and it was found that\nthe damage was caused by a beetle\nwhich bored into the lead . casing.\nSpecimens of thc beetle had. been\nfound in lead-foil packets of tea, an4\nnaturalists have concluded that life\ninsects wcrc coming\/from ' India jmd\nChiua.      .7 ~ -.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .\nReal Handy. r\n'\"How docs the breakfast suit you,\nJack?\" inquired the young bride, anx-_\nioiiHly.7 -'\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n- \"It's jiist right, dearest,\" declared\nJack. \"I'm awfully fond of calves\nliver for breakfast.\" '    \/'\" .\n\"So   am   I,   dear,\" she responded,\nwith enthusiasm, adding: \"Oh, Jack,^\ndon't   you   think   it would pay us to.\nkeep a calf?     Then we   could   havc\nliver cvery morning for breakfast.\"..\nMake your\nlight food\nnourishing\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPut a spoonful bi^Bov-\nril -into your soups,\nstews and pies. It will\n\ufffd\ufffdgivc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd them a delicious\nnew, savouriness, and\nyou will be able to get\nall- the\" nourishment\nybu require ^without\nmaking a heavy meal.  7\nXZXXZXy^^^^iiDpc&ntiiZlyXXyX\n7 7;5Kiy.l-?^!;::thc^\n>^j\/jfeji7;7aiT'fys^*at7'-S.p.ui;!K\n>t^fi'i:a^.d>]|;;;;tife:'7j\n;: tfie7i:ty t ;3;:7tiKi'i; ltetin; t\n^vli-ehJ^-G'puir\n'Ar\ufffd\ufffdnp^7$tt;a;0ie r7'VS C:te\niy>yy.yy*yy,ftyyvyyiy;Xi\\y\ufffd\ufffdyy^:ffyy:-Xyryyy.yr-%y:yf-yiyyyyy:.y. \ufffd\ufffd:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.b\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.:,;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.- h.pei-.....Qt;f t:!ie.:>:.c-i.p\\yVOt- the-otramp-:was\n:\\rMmaEy<Mn.yy2ks-syihriM&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\nxxdxxmim<XiyXfzZ}X^\nrm evft:^'i1^W:a.y a;':::1k^\njpl^ ih':&:7fti^id fl ^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?:W;S-!-jiwg:#i:-t^s;^\n;^Pr^t7:^Jiigvixi^iSd-';:g\n.inj^e^ijiteii^thtse^iptt\n^?i f l^i|^yj.^;b^;7aGyii ^; J77 7 Pii;!!l5 ^^-y:^]:?! istti?] V5'C)s!vs^>^;^:\n''eobRic^tttat-'^'tfoi^^\n.. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._. ...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._... .,  -^Kv^fe\";^\n;^ Ki^faii^i-^'i^vl^\nlrei;i:iuitfii^d7l<;7tv;7^-.'7':-^,:^\n7!j;rots7; <>f \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdflM^'^tftu r^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi(a tXfiyy;. Xti X<yXfy\\\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .-'.Jf:\nrfxyy,.\n7:pn';j:y';Syi^vypfc!^\n;,.up^iaVliity?l^p^t!i.^\nyyoXXXXX. ri. Xx xxrryyyyyy y-; yy y\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f. 'XX v tt p7ty iffiti?;^:\ufffd\ufffd(SJ^'jtOSjfitg'ttTOv^'af'l\n;7;ff:;%^a-H;st^''h;ii'dj^i7t;v5b\n^i&ui\/t hZ^Xi'Xy: nil g)U7 n yy yyX&iyiy; :lie^'-\n;7fo-|fe'\\7i:ca-ylu'g\";':h;e;. .vinnCtxii^f ;Wi7s:-Vvji.l!\"ffrtct'-\nyjy u'u^;uiW'4f;u';i \ufffd\ufffdli&D;\"bf!!'t;te^tl:vi-ee^3T'j\n*7^A^5feR'C-?t)'!^y .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Sfii'S \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIteiy.n.ijj '-telf&Vff.-f-\n7:d;n,;M3# -svlF^js-'-'cjaje.; -; Thai- -liliifc .gri'II\n;7Nv-77S;yp;if,-.Ji(k*xb-.; -.-'lifflt: >yc-f iX^Xixyi fe-s7[\nr^Lbll^avhTe i irt ny yilXXi^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdysiiy&yG'fXtiXiy-y\n:yi&}Wy\\ZX^^fXxXyyi^-.yy 'i-^hyu-w .trh-it\nK7tte'ljtS7l>tt^K|;i|:l.ier7rtii(r Xo: .pwil\nXi gyyysysyyXiXXyXii] \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.\"\" 0ou'f a:f udt-s\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^;'\" -XXr I\nXihyiy^i^yyXciM.'.iyAiyfXfXpXri :t'n*7iiiVTs.i\n.y0yiXiXX'XyX:\\X.ywy IXte'Xir li-i-Kf.J. Hyyi\nZy&XS^diiXd-ZXfiX :imS^rHiMy vfi<X)X ' y\nxXXZ^.o;,XXX<iXX:XXi<y -ii^Xyiiiyi&iX- - '^\"^flsi\nXi XmXim '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhK'yV;;^i:s^\nr.f>\"-!l5:fie7'fii3n#^fe;;.ts-,^\ufffd\ufffd-i^^\n:l LSSH&^y^JJK4S^^i SijUu i)!^Kf7^li,eiS t7\nPatU^bl^taiiv^-^'\"^\nl^ynriUPftis^p^llteSnitiiv'^\n^re|e5C:.\\tii|Jtifth;e;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;y!?.35e:l.s7:;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtt^e.ffS:vllft^\n^iijfl^jai&f\/^iSKdiag\n^ a;7vag p imril^ytts i\"K; ? \"^El^fl ^.1 C;:4 r c^t^b^;; tli |2\n[?n|.aiift!By7 vrXXe|ess -Jiistnitetip n77fai-^fbiiii:;\nKl riy Sy'^JIchoife^-a5 \\ iic;[^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlltefctt^tp\/i-cTepve:!^\nSftpO-'teH't %:!'    '    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- \t\n.. &,:,ifeiAWyn -i^tnep'n \\at 'ii-isv'trmi.|\n^S;%vil-?i;s;!i:f#fwni:' itti apiSfidfeK !<?'-&.' I\n. H ^'B\ufffd\ufffdvt> tfea- % :lia\\-ij \ufffd\ufffd\ufffds-am:e,T-iiff.t^i\ni-fta^v, yinZk -%M\\-'ipm-;:AXnbZXXy.:.\n'fetiS^hLivui .j!a.rt-a-.ii;hi'vte- -tfs\" -vtoi '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?\ufffd\ufffd% :k{\nimi^-dxm,.Sykmxyyysm-, r I\n.fejHi:o:;tti% 'Wftiiamm: -w^ \ufffd\ufffd.!!.-:y\\\n. .X'iXxlK;y&Xv<y;:iv6Zt It t}?-pi^iMir-\ufffd\ufffdi!--t\ny^^mm^mwi^mmm\n0.1*-; tjiuc,:;:y:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.:yy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd yyyyy.ryyy-y y y.y\nliitfffllliiijIiBliiijl\n73;; :-Tbe: paT&Xieins-ihg, ^puri^ing;;a\ufffd\ufffdia:\njStOTii^inl^rop^rti^\/'olthi^wp^\n7^3^\ufffd\ufffdj^d7|$cSp3l>fe|^\n!iti^'hac^.w^?h;it:'^cfe^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf^^;*i^ths7Ebo^n^^ri3^?^Un^\n7 'ptopa?y^;x$:itttii^^\n.xMpe^.lXi^X^.Shnp^i^apiesiini;\n.iiion. to Xhgsi'yv&f.; u^|^^|fei;;i|ii|B7\nfi!&.:tiiui^f'iy^vyyyy ^W;&sj|j7i3\ufffd\ufffdfi\n.S^.'^.;''-Ointo^iS:^'--i^-;Sb\ufffd\ufffd*SfoM.:.-\nLy^^-Iiiaik^,.-St,-:P*ul'3t;, M<M\ufffd\ufffdtre!\ufffd\ufffdL7fc\nC\ufffd\ufffdtjcnr\ufffd\ufffd Eoap jJia-re* vrrtinyot mo.\ufffd\ufffd.7\np-ilwli- . -. <75\\:ji\ufffd\ufffdlJ7h-i7 <-\ufffd\ufffdu.eciSi:flo'\n.ei3jfi:s;rf;i.H. ifte. ^oet :ysXt ' X:hM\n-nfjgia.T'n;#!v'rf'7.\n'' XZ\\xo &\ufffd\ufffd c\ufffd\ufffdn\\iitui&d)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdslim yrr. po- -\\ihy&, 'tsyyry Way\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"; 'XXXyXX& X^X\\Xy^y^yXX:\\y^yZ\\\nyttiXrA yXi ymA af five- .l.tg:h\ufffd\ufffd;h:p.ts$;iii;.f\n.ilte-'ri.-ifict-fei-MCiA Xym y:%l:MX&^iXXifi\nijwp -tyu :ubjmj-tjfcyxteythey wesixt;\nMelt \"\ufffd\ufffds XhXiSis furd ihe XrXii-yk. XiytXtdi\ny-xXiXitzi: yyd. \\aduv> im:%^iyu^\\yi\nco\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK\ufffd\ufffdti.fW!J^l;, vThe ymr'A<yXXXii^itrXiyyi,\nw-ijfi -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nD7vi-'i;%. xtiXim tw^>rt ivmyy imZ\\W;ZX>yK\nXX .U,,riy^Ai^bunXwy-'iZtXtm. u'i^i&m^i\n' ''prices, *iivs----^r;^-^6til4';^^l3t:'\nifafscd to. 2(30. Ife; for:.afsfey'^Hc!:.\\tni:^\nyier-:' The 'gl;:u:afiaii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Av0trld,- 'he W^&X\nBadly Stiing.. ' . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd X\\iX- rinprovedi if fnimc^ paid strict^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi$Mi-&yi:WrS.!Xi. -feak a. -saKp\ufffd\ufffd*n;y| st-ientbii to.'th(y wvigiife o:f-,iiogs- of\ntAcfebt wm Xs{ii.c.i&v .-n \"pwiv-Ei-ftd^ra.p. t hmH-. foi-.' &3y md 'e.n$&\\xoi&dnS'kt'\n&. w-otr \"\"il,'' , Was-.'fie.pfca-M'rf' \ufffd\ufffdt-hk\\Xs- possible-i&. Aiadcbt'iu^tratgli^c*ti;i7\n::-::;'Sicki^'s-;4^^s^o^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdffOQi ioziyipyy.' .'ii.&i ii-'tiif?\n'.-'f; Wfeii:. ^lib:   ptiny\n*f^ig)ft-7;..t;p:;7iren,, yjkiz-. !;5:U\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyey\nsta3nirj77:-'s.tiH sa:id.o.'r^;- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'''';;'\nyXllXiiity.fi' Xh<i :wlipK7'7 &uX.\nXiXiW} iX'XX'iMsXy?ZpiXXyXr,yX\nii\ufffd\ufffdxzyyiWiyXi.\n'i&ryiX iots.^Live Stoclc7Gfimriu=sibti(Jr;\nitfrf: :tnu>.  \\v\\:f^;t\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 j-\nFyM&^X&^^XXfesses'iii ,j;\ufffd\ufffdp:cny\n]:i:avb.7rei'Cii(i'&'e<:I. pracHeii-ily yi-iic.' sainc\n9C -,SC-9- yXinry ... 7' '\nf*efh:ap^\/\" M&teaiHi'v\niw<ail lo Xfya\niijv'Ur:-1us'|i^i',.4^?^V-^-^1^ t-frb'\n7*egHhp.J-*7\nft hfc^^iifiip XyXX iXfvXa h*I >id.\n;Kis^fjijjkj '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd% y. 'yxyXyXXX]\nyXtXoyqiZis,..sirhix-g-Xy;'fh:a;n7:|iafe7 aiid. ftii'\n:mXonyjs:::XiX&i*&X;yiXWnZ0vii\ufffd\ufffdXy-:..  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"- y.y\ny^iyyyyyyy&yyyyy\ni.\ny;yXgX^XS0^X^^y^\ufffd\ufffdXX^Xo^yXXX\nXyXXiZXZXZZSXXxXXXZXyx^^\niJt^vfliHSr\nGraded\nEye?' in\n..Toronto, Ont.-^''I suffered greatly\nfrom--\\vbakness,_socri-ied'ato bk; tired all\n the time,.and had ho-\nambition to do any-\nthin g'or go <iny pla ce.\nMy nerves were in\nbad sh^pe, I cpul'i\nnot sleep at. riigtif';\nand - therf- ca~rr.e a.\nbreukdown.\" I read\nof Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound in the\nnewspapers and several' of- my friends\nadvised me to use.ifc,\nand it surely.put riewlife into me. Now\nI am quite able to do all my own work,;\nand I would strongly advise every'suf-.\nfering WGir.an to -giye.-]-iydia7E.---Pink-<-\nham'a -Vegetable- Compounid-a'trial.' \"y;\nMrs-XliXuLES- W-akelin,- -S72 Christie\nSt.*-Toronto,.Ont;.!;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;;X'X''''-.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-iXX'-ZX -X.i\nv'-;-The-,makers bf :'L^dia'E.'*?'Pinkham's\n:\ufffd\ufffd infiamed - by erpq- I-Vegetable C'wnfjound have-thousands oi\n...I tc.SaB, DbsJ and ft'Iai:; .'such letters as that above\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthey, tell the\nv'quickly relieved hy Mcrfea 7- truth, else thej^could not have .been ob-\ng \ufffd\ufffdjrcS2H8(Iy.'NoSmar^i%--';-tained;ior.Ioveprinoney.,.-Thi3\n..-']ajt Eye -CojnfoftJ.-' At   is.ho strangerrrit'has stood the test'fqr\nrne&s':\ufffd\ufffd45i|5^jg7^\n-: ham ?riedidne;Cp.-(coiifiiJential),^?!!!!,\n[ii&MWWMiMM&W.\nski \t\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>S*o*. '~Sy.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nWm\nTHE     LEDGE, - GREENWOOD.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd B,     (J.\n5V\nf\ufffd\ufffd43im.^^^op^^^^^^^^^^^^:t^~A3^J^ .-A-.w\ufffd\ufffdJ.:^~. ^\n'By-\":.<h(B\\use;'C^f.:..Gfllott,sy''--t#ye. hous.e cleaning Is\nmade* apleasure instead\" of a drudgery. It softens^\n'-the.-^^ter' 7 and\"-; cleans- ^thoroughly., whether the\"\nidirt is visible or invisible..\";\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - Destroys, all -foacsiesia-\n'and infectious gernis. reoioyesi\ufffd\ufffdbsimctions from\ndrain pipes.-closets.'sinks, .etc.,^ Refrigerators: are\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmade delightfully fresh' and clean' by7 using one\n..teaspoonful of' -Gil|ett-'s . L\ufffd\ufffdy@'-\" dissolved: in - two\ngallons of water, v \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.''\".'''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' X \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\/'..'..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\" ^\nMade in. Canada.\nmMEMmwmmmmM\ni Iceland Warmer\n':\/-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThan England\nAdvocates Dehorning Cattle\nEdmonton. Livestock Exchange Ad-\n.   vbcated Policy followed, in U.S.\n'That all. thc cattle-in Alberta may\nsoon belong to thc Ifornlcss variety is\na possibility disclosed during a recent\n, quarterly meeting bf the Edmonton\nLivestock Exchange. -A campaign\nis shortly to bc put- on throughout\ntheju-ovince to get all the farmers\nto dehorn their battle.' It is claimed that the animals feed, sell and\nship \"better when dehorned. The\npractise has been extensively follow-;\ned in the United Statcs.\nShip (rinding Device\nFruit in ..Saskatchewan.^\n.\"'Another proof .\/that Saskatchewan\ncan grow .successful apples was-given\nduring the week when sthe provincial\nMinister of Agriculture received some\nsplendid Wolf River appjes\" from a\nfarm at Indian Head. Crab apples\nhavc been grown in thc province with\nsuccess for several ycars.\nVancouver Leather Factory. ''\nPlans are being made for establishment of a tannery on a site near Mac-\nKay-Creek, North Vancouver, by the\nCanadian Electro Leather Industries\nat a cost of approximately $30,000.\nThe plant will, when completed, bc\ncapable of handling 500 hides per\nweek.   -.\nu&ijaa,\nThe Beauty\nof The Lily\ncan be yours. Its\nwonderfully pure,\nsoft, pearly white appearance, free from all ).-\nblem ishes, will be comparable to the perfect\nbeauty of your skin and },\ncomplexion if you will use;\"\nMONEY ORDERS\nTne sale way to send money  by mail is by\nDoiniMon   Express  M.oncyv_Order.\nGoitre Removed\nBY ABSORPTION METHOB\\\nDr. W-. J. Hughson's'Famous Goitre Remedy,\nrcmoTs Goitre safely and permanent y, so\n-that it will never return. For free booklet\ncontaining particulars of this excellent rem-,\nedy,-write S. W. Hugtison, Dept. W.N., 69\nBorden St.. Toronto, Out.   '\nHOOK   ON\nDOG    DISEASES\nar.d   II ow   lo j'\"\ufffd\ufffdu\n.-(.nice     K.-re    to    ,\\:'y\nAdil:e<;-.   ov   ihs   .\n~~ Ammo*\nV    CT. \\v     i-l f)\\'U!?\nCl\") .   .-vc.\nAraenci's ?:r.neer ! i is     Wcm     \" !-i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-:-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:'.\nDo\ufffd\ufffd_J!sra:die3    | \ufffd\ufffd.. ,_\\-o-!., J'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdc \\\nw\ufffd\ufffdtwCBT*Tni.***ic^ir:Ejir'^znf->MM--i<ac\ufffd\ufffd'<w\ufffd\ufffdstg\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv^-,^-w e .*\ufffd\ufffd-J\nLuminous Cables to be Installed in\n:   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. French Ports.   .... -   -\nTests of a luminous cable by which\nsteamers may enter and leave port\nduring-'heayy fogs are r.cportc3 to\nhave been entirely sijcccssful.\n-It has'been decided to.instal these\ncables iri the principal French ports,\nand thc Matin says, the placing' of\nonc across the English Channel is\nbeing considered. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\/  '\n^Settlers for the''West. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\n.... During August, -2,344 settlers from\nthe United States\" arrived in Western\nCanada at points be.twech Port\nArthur, Ontario* and Kingsgate, British Columbia. Of these, 1,970 were\nborn irrthc.United States;,',and 374-in\nother countries. Of the total emigration, 1,229 went to Alberta, 522 to\nManitoba, and 468 to Saskatchewan.\nThey possessed cash.and effects to\nthe extent bf'$600,000.\nMinard's Liniment For Burns, Etc.\n- Ask Wage. Increase.\nEmployees . of thc Canadian Express Company arc asking an increase\nin'wages similar to that recently received by\ufffd\ufffdthe railway employees. It\nis estimated .that all companies\nbe asked for the increase.\nwill\nYou aro not\nexperiment-\n1 n b w li e n\nyou ii^o Dr.\nChase's Ointment for Eczema and Skin Irritations. It relieves at once nnd ri adu-\nally heals' tlie skin. Sample box Dr.\nChase's Ointment freo if you mention this\npapi-r and send 2e. stamp forpost;ige. coe. a\nbox; sill dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co.,\nLimited, Toronto.\nTHir.   PeEW   FRENCH   REMEDY.\n10.:\nTHERAPION Na3   nn,mw mT w\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNo 1 forEUddarCat-arts    No 2 for Mood-&      DkAWsW!.    flN    Willi?\nSklnDlsoasi\"   No 3forOhrontotVa.ikiiess38. ^'1\/iVfi jf IviXl    \\3l\\     iUUil\njOi.DnYtEjC'iv&nirjii'-ivpi'ior in fN<-.i.ANi>,3\ufffd\ufffd.\nDR LeCI.1 RCMcil Co..lI.iverscoelcRi) .N W.S.I omioa.\nSte. THADK   MARKEO   WORD   'IHFRAPION      IS   OS\n8RIT GOV!   STAMC Ar?IXFl>TOGhNUINEFACKBT3.\nPromote Research  Studies\nH.\nB.NCo..to.Establish Fellowship for\nthe University of Manitoba.\nAnnouncement is' inadc of Jthe decision of the governor of the Hudsonjs\nBay Company and thc Canadian Advisory Committee to establish in connection with thc University' of-Manitoba a Scientific Research Fellowship\nfor which the.sum,of $1,500, beginning this year, will.be allocated for\nten years.   ''\"\n-T.he foundation is consequent upon\nrepresentations made to' Sir Robert i conditions.\n.Kindersley, governor of?the company,\nduring his visit to Winnipeg in April\nlast by the Scientific Club of Winnipeg. _ The chief purpose of the club\nis' the stimulation of research in all\nbranches of science, pure and ap\nplied.\nWeather During Past Summer Has I\n.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Been.Unusual. -\"\",\n.. Chie of the current 'topics of conversation 'in England is the weather\nof the past summer. England never\nknew anything- quite. like it. Show\nfell i'n Durham during July. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Frost\nwas twice reported in Oxfordshire\nduring. August. On the last day ^of\nAugust, in Manchester, a screened\nthermometer four feet. above the\nground.recorded a tempcratuee-- only\nthree degrees above the freezing\npoint. -It-, now appears that while\nEngland was shivering the summer\nthrough, Iceland- ;was enjoying the\nkind of-weather that England  waiU-\n1 ed and did not get. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd On a day when\nthe_mcrcury recorded a temperature\nof fifty-three degrees in London, it\nwas seventy-two in Northern Iceland\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdentirely inappropriate to an island\nof that name.\nOf course, therc,is an explanation.\nIt is' pointed out that during the\nsummer;~\\vhile 'England was swept by\nicy blasts from thc Arctic, Iceland\nwas favored by pleasant breezes from\nthc Western Atlantic. VThc experience of the two islands serves to illustrate the\/extent to' which the weather\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwill sometimes depart from normal'\nIt will -doubtless set\npeophTin England and Iceland to gossiping abbilt'the change in the climate.--      But   the . climate   does    not\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi-chanjre within theTifcthne of a'man.\nIceland and England will in the main,\nhaye the same kind of weather ;thcy\nhad for centuries.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDust Causes Asthma. Even a little \"speck too small to see will lead to\nagonies which no words can describe.\nThe walls of the breathing tubes contract and it seems as if the very life\nmust pass. From this condition ^Dr.\n\"J.\" D. Kcllogg's Asthma Remedy\nbrings thc user to rest and health. It\nrelieves the passages and\" normal\nbreathing is established'again.\nMolly-Coddles Had Umbrellas. s\nHe was a brave man who would\ncarry an umbrella a hundred and fifty\nycars ago. , When Jonas Hanway appeared in thc streets dining a,shower\nwith an umbrella ovcr his head, he\nwas laughed at as a molly-coddle.\nThat was in 1750, Hauway being the\nfirst man to cany an umbrella in London. It is said lhat he carried- an\numbrella for thirty ycars before its\nadoption by'men became nt all common, although women' had carried\numbrellas in London-Tor many ycars\nbefore.\n\\\n, Out of lOOjOOO words in the English\nlanguage, 60,000-are of German origin,\n30,000-from\"the Greek and Latin and\n10,000 from.other sources- *\ufffd\ufffd\nCASCARETS\n\"Tbey- Work while you Sleeps\nRESERVE STRENGTH\nSINCE jj 1870\n4\nOi\/ STOPS\nSTAMMERING\nand Defective \"Speech quickly nnd permanently cured. Private individual instruction and\ntraining. Terms moderate\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtoo larjre advance\npa> ments necessary. . Write for free information, .-y.    1\nMACHON VOCAL INSTITUTE\n353  Broadway\"     ' -       Winnipeff\n-^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi nn*t, s.'T\\ryy.~ ',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd', -'IrliTl )\nW.t'.'K.i''^,    I' ' 1 i.i   i .r^-j ,'.z.\nc-f'^JJ   rif    i..-i*t. .ill ^-.*Ci. - 1     T  ' '-\nTXXiXi'iy'Z'.'i, ^XXXiyXioV.\nSold by all rirerc'tt-. ci ;- \"i\nnrcptid oa n-cci;)! ot rrsco,\nFreo ,  pamphlet.       Address |\n. tke coo:< fiirr&mip^E coH\nI0S0JJTO, 0HT.  <r?m'.'>'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj\n\/\nStop grdwling around like a cross\nbull -pup. You arc constipated, bilious, and what yotunced is Cascarets\ntonight sure for your liver and\nbowe!s._ Then you will wake up\nwondering what became of your nervousness, dizziness, sick headache,\nbad cold, or' upset,- gassy stomach.\nNo griping\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdno inconvenience. Chil-\nren .love-Cascarets, too. ^ 10, 25, SO\ncents.-\nBUY \"DIAMOND DYES'-'\n' DON'T RISK MATERIAL\nEach package of \"Diamond Dyes'' contains   direction:!   so   simple'   tliat   any\n. wo:r>ari   can  dye  any in.i4eri.il  without\nstr&iking, fading or running.    Druggist\nhas color cjurd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTake no other djcl\nSend for, list of inventions wanted\nby Manufacturers. Fortunes have\nbee\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn made from simple ideas.\n\"Patent Protection'* booklet and\n\"Proof of Conception\" on request.\nt-JAROLD C. SHSPMAN & CO.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\n20  S\ufffd\ufffdI?MAM  CH-tMRruO\nOTTAWA. CAMAOA\nSo Loafih\nWhere Your'Money Has Full Value.\n:\nMake your dreams come true.      S^end your winter amii\noic surroundings that surpass those of Japan's Inland sea or\nftvviiS. Alps.      At   Vactona you can .motor llirouch  chanr.- -\ninp paioramas.      \\ou can rest jn a deligrht\/ully. milC and brac-\nw-nt^\".\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,Cl f.CrC J\"?U \"a l0rSct the r,so\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ol th\ufffd\ufffd  P^\"'\n>oursch *ith views of snow-capped mountain Spend \"the\nrC Z\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^1=tor!a and look around with thaj. iihoii bdtoresrou\nI ?,r . f sometlnle.s *>** oi srmi-retwement in * delimit-\nJul climate where on a lew acres of rich land in Victoria's sur.\nJnco^2 y\ufffd\ufffd\"  \"a  a\"Ure  y0,uscif of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>mfonab\ufffd\ufffd\nFor Descriptive Literature Apply to Coraraissioner\nVictoria and Island Dr -e?opmeBty\nAssociation,. Victoria, B.C.\ntW^-^\n'*.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' i\nWhere  the Hcsei j\nBloom ia December   and   Natsra\n%=^i\n*.J\ufffd\ufffd\nThis is What \"Thousands of People\nThroughout the Country\nAre Doing.\nThousands of Canadian housewives\nare working from day to day on' their\nnerve.     Thcy arc daily drawing mote\nand  more  on   their  reserve  strength,\nknowing full well that thcy are using\nup    that    vital . force    which'  often\nmeans life or death  in   the crisis  of\ndisease.      They are the victims of a\nfcehng  of  hopeless   exhaustion  aftcr\nthe   performance   of   even thc small\ntasks   which   w.cre  once  the  simplest\nand easiest parts  o'f the  day's  work.'I\nThey  find   the appetite  failing,  sleep!\nis    disturbed   ,and unrcfreshing; Iheyj\nlose    -i\\ eight,    and    always feel  tired i\nat.'l (Icjiicsscd.  ' In th.s   condition    a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nlilo.Ki-biil '!in\ufffd\ufffd   tonis is  \"\"icd'tl   to re-'\nh-O^-'-ilC'IM   atVi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Vliv^-,     nurj \"  1'o-'.j\nthis iJii.-posc 'Or.  U\"i:ii,;r.i=;' 1'inl; P:ll\ufffd\ufffd'\nare unsurpassed.      Often  the trouble!\nwill havc progressed to a point which I\nmakes    full    recovery    slow, but  the\ntreatment should bc persisted in and\n-renewed health and activity   will   be\n, thg result.\nThe case of Ifrs. W. Schoolcv, R.\nR. No'. 2, Tilsouburg, Ont., well 'i'lus-\ntratcs the value of Dr. Williams' Pink-\nPills in case of health breakdown,\nthrough weak, watery blood. Mrs.\nSchoolcy says: \"For upwards of'\nfive years, \"I felt-my strength  dccliti-j\njng, until at last I could not do light!\nchores, around    thc place. -  Then a'\ndoctor was called in, 'and after doctoring about a month he   teaid    that\nonly an operation would help mc.      I\ndid not  feel like going through  this,\nand    decided    that    in    auy  event  I\nwould wail a uhiie.      I had no appc-j\nthe,   pften    had    headaches    accompanied by dix\/y spc'ls; several  times'\nI had fainting spell.-.,   and    my-   legs!\nwould swell, and I    could    not    <vcn>\nsweep a lloor without resting several\ntime;. -  -Again a doctor was called In\nand hc  said  the  trouble was genera!\ndebility jjnd nerious breakdown. T!ie>\ntreatment, however, did not help mc.\nand then \"one evening as my husband\nwas   reading   the' paper,    he    carnc\nacross a case in many respects similar to\" mine, cured through the usc of\nDr.   Williams' Pink Pills.     Thc next I\nday he got mc a supply of the Pills, I\nand to Ihcif-continucd    faithful    usc'\n'for several months, I owe my pre-1\nsent splendid health;' I may say thati\nsoon ,after beginning thc usc of thc j\nForeigners Learn English.\nAccording to ' a- Slav missionary,\nthere are 65,000 Slavic people- in Saskatchewan.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd He states that owin^t'o\nthc energetic campaign of the Department' -of\" Education,- tlie greater\nportion\" speak nothing, hut the . English' language, a striking cont\"ra;st to\nthc situation -which' existed a few\nyears ago., -     -\",- :\n7 An Oil -For.'All -Men.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe sailor,\nthe soldier, the fisherman, thc lumberman, the out-door laborer and all who\nare exposed.to. injury and -the elements will find in .Dr. Thomas'- Eclec-\ntricOil a trjje and faithful friend.-' To\nease-pain; relieve colds, dress wounds,'\nsubdue- lumbago .and overcome rht^u-.\ni!iajism, _'it i_s_.:c_;ci;l!Itnt. '.'. \"ther_emr.c,\nii   should  have-.a  place, in   a-l- home\nmedicines,\njourney.\"   .\nand    those   .-taken    on' ,a\n-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .A Potato. Record.. ,\n. .Saskatchewan '. is ., famous\" --for- its\nwheat growing, but listen- tb .this\nstory - about potatoes. --- Sixty.-foiir\npounds ;oi \"potatoes ' were produced\nfrom-\"one potato this.-year*, on . the\nfarm-of\" Cbmniission'cv Hawkes of \"the\nSaskatchewan.,,-^iquor .., Commission.\nThcy are all we'll sized..  ,-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       '-.\"''\nWarming relief fot\nsrheumatic aches.\nHE'S just used Sloan's-\nLiniment and the quick\n\" comfort had brought a smile\nof- pleasure  to  his face.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Good -, for  aches resulting -\n....-'-.,  from  weather 'exposure,\n-_.     sprains, strains, lame back,\n>rn\\    overworked musclesr Pene-\n- 70$    Irates without rubbing.    All\n$140   druggists have it.\n(Made in Canada)\nLiniinent(s\ufffd\ufffd9\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGood Surface Coal\nFound in Alberta\nStripping Process Now Being Followed With Good Success.\nCoal mining by the stripping process is being ma_de a success in mines\nwest of Edmonton, Alberta, according\nto one of the owners of the mine,\nwho is now arranging a shipment of\nmachinery, including steam shovels\nto the mines. Though the coal is so\nnear the surface that it can'be mined\neasily by the stripping process, the\ngrade is good and is being used on\nthe railways for steam purposes.\nSaskatchewan's\nDairy Produce\nHuge Amount Handled by ..Go-operative Creameries, Ltd,\nOver 3,250^000 pounds of butter,\n1,750,000 quarts, of i milk, 508,000\ncjuarts of ice cream, 170,000,-guarts of.\ntable cream,-and several carloads of\neggs and~:dressed poultry'were marketed \"for Saskatchewan farnters- by\nthe Saskatchewan Co-operative\nCreameries, Ltd., during its 'last\nfinancial year, which ended on October 31, 1919, according to thc. annual\nreport pf J. F. Booth, co-operation\nand markets commissioner.       , \"^ .    -\n\"The combined values of these various products exceed $2,500,000,\" says\nMr. Booth. \"At the time of purchase the approximate market value\nwas paid for each product and after\nthe close of the yca!r a final payment\nof 2 cents per pound of buttcrfat wa\ufffd\ufffd'\npaid to all cream shippers.- Final i\npayments were also made to-fanners\nmarketing poultry arid eggs.\"\nMinard's Liniment For Dandruff.\n-   Germany Must Pay.\nThe   entire   policy of the French\nGovernment towards Germany is inspired-by only one thought.     Loyal\nexecution of the solemn pact.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwliich\nWomen of Canada\nTestify\nDaereTOnfeJ\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I flm mor* than pleaaed\nwith Dr. Pierce'a Favorite Prescription. I,\nwaa ruD-down and\nso nervous thai I\ncould not even et\ufffd\ufffdy\nin the bouse aloes\nin the day-time-aad\ntried ereiy kind of\nmedicine I heard rol\nbut got no result.\nOne of my frienda\nadvised me to tak*\n'Favorite Prescription.' said that a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwould cure me, a&d\nit did. Alter takina\nfour bottles I felt\nlike a new woman\nand ft is nl*o tb* very best medicine for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwoman bringing up a family.' I will rocojo-\nmend 'Favorite-Prescription' to any one\nsuffering like I did.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMBS. JOSEPH\nBEAUDBY, R. ft. 3.\nWEAK AND NERVOUS\nTiUsoiiburs. Ont\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I found Dr. Pierca'i\nFavorite Prescription an ezoellent medicin*\nfor the ailment* of women. I had become\nvery weak and nenrous. I was just miserable when I began taking the 'Favorite\nProscription' and it prorod rooet beneficial.\nIt so completely restored me to health that\nI have never had any return of this ailment.\nI do &d-rise the use of 'Favorite Prescription'\nby women who suffer \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlh womanly troub-\nle.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMRS. GEO. WALKEB, P. O. Boj\n490.\nDr. Pierce'* Favorite Prescription ii\nmade of lady's slipper root, black oohoeh\nroot, unicorn root, bine cohosh root and\nOregon grape rtoot. Dr. Pieroe knew,\nwhen ho first made this standard medicine,\nthat wliiskoy and morphine werejnjurious, \/\nnnd bo he bas always kept them out of bit\nput an end to the war   is   the   sole\nmeans of solving practically the grave ! rem\ufffd\ufffd*ioa-   Women who take this standard\ndifficulties \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- that    still exist ^ between\nSmoke in Chicago\nIs Causing, Many Deatlis \"According\n'to Health Commissioner.\n\"A baby born- in Chicago has a\nblack^lung in three weeks,\" Health\nCommissioner Robertson said in an\naddress on the smoke evil before the\nconvention oi the Smoke Prevention\nAssociation.;    ...\n\"We arc created, a perfect smokeless engine,\" he said. \"We burn fuel\njust as a factory does. .Our food is\nbur fuel, and our nose is our chimney.\nThe intake is.the oxygen which sets\nfire to-thc fuel. The smoke, or carbon, is colorless when it leaves the\nnose.\" '\nAccording to Dr. Robertson \"pneumonia is still captain of .the fleet of\ndeath.\" Every year-130,000 persons\ndie of pneumonia in America, Inhaling large' quantities of smoke, or in\nother words carbon, is a predisposing\ncause of death* in evcry case, Dr.\nRobertson-said. -    -\nthe two countries. Germany's \"loyal\nexecution\" lies in paying up. But\nGermany openly talks repudiation. It\nis to the advantage of France, and\ncertainly to the joy of'the rest of the\nworld, that the French republic now\nhas :a head who. is capable of laying\ndown a severe law and an inflexible\nrequirement under the terms    of\nremedy know that in Dr. Pierce's Favorite\nPrescription they are gotting a safe woman'*\ntonic eo good tliat druggists everywhere sell\nit, in liquid or tablet form.\ni am\"*    '    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nRain by Request -\npolite   acknowledgment.\nTranscript.-     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBoston\nThe -population of Russia is estimated to have decreased by 35,000,000\nsince 19H(, .owing-to the war'famine\nand disease, -. ' . -'\nA Separation Granted\n- N^t by process of law, but by-the\nsilent-7 working of \"Putnam!s\" \"are\n\"corns separated from aching toes.\nAny\" corn . or ,wart--that \"Putnam's\"\n\"won't cure hasn't been discovered yet.\nInsist- on Putnam's Corn Extractor\nonly, 25c at all dealers:\nDANDERINE\" PUTS\nBEAUTY IN HAIH\npirls!    rA mass of lonfa\nthick, \ufffd\ufffdlearn\ufffd\ufffd .tressS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAirmen's  Idea to  Supply  Rain  for\nAgricultural Districts.\nAn aerial irrigation company is being planned by A. E. Cole, and hia\nson, Captain Homer Cole, formerly\nof the Royal Air Force. Their\nselfeme is to cause rain by spraying\nliquid air from an airplaije, thus'\ncausing the moisture in the atmosphere to condense.\nMf. Cole claims the idea will\nsupply rain for agricultural districts\nwhqre .nature has failed and also\nserve to^quench forest fires.\n\"Pape's Diapepsin\" for\nc , Stomach\n'Tape's Diapepsin\" is tlic quickest, surest\nrelief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatulence,\nHeartburn, Sourness, Fermentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity A few tablets give almost imm^hate stomach relief and\nshortly the &tosaach is corrected so you can\neat favorite foods without fear Laige case\ncosts only 60 cents at drug store. Absolutely\nharmless and pleasant. Millions helped annually\". Largest seUing stomach conector\nin  world.\nFiume Becomes Independent.\nLet \"Danderine\" :save your hair andf Ia connection witli the procalma-\ndouble its beauty. You can have lots tion of D'Annunzio as Dictator of\nof long thick, strong, lustrous .hair. Fiume, a-ncw postage stamp for the\nJJon't let it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      j .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       . t.    ,i     r.  r\nor fading.   Bring back its color, vifori?\ufffd\ufffd.   ha* bfen d\ufffd\ufffdigned by the Italian^\nand vitality..      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      . j artist, Guido Massung, and is now bc\ufffd\ufffd\nGet. a  35-cent bottle of _delightful; ing printed in Rome.\n'Danderine\" at-.any   drug    or    toilet!\ncounter to freshen your scalp; check\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Buried at Fort Yukon.\n..Dawson News .special, from Fort\nYukon - says\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lhe rcriiaihs of. Archdeacon . ITudsan Stuck, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd noted . pioneer\nAlaskan missionary; viho _dicd\";a few\n,day.s-:i?o,--w-!:re-i:it erred-on ---.October\n11-in a hiunble Indian ' cemetery at\nFort .Yukon,'beside tlie bodies of na\"-'\n.tives anicing- whom he had spent his\nlife. -He\" was .buried thus-at'his own\nrequest. . .'.The services of. the Episcopal Church, were conducted by Dr.-\nGr'affton \" Burke. .'The. pallbearers\n\"were- members of the .'native council,\nwho bore .-the body.-a quarter of a mile\nto.the grave, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.--'.-\"'_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    '-.-7;\nCariboo-Plentiful' in-' Dawson District.-\n.'.Cariboo, arc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdy.s.oy plentiful Jh\" the'\nvicinity \"of- Dawson '.that .large .herds..\nare' roaming- witliiri. \"the-, outskirts of\nthe cst-y.on-both sides of .the -Yukon'\nRiver.-. There -are tens.:of thousands,\nwithin'-a-  radius.of. 20 miles.,   ;As\ndandruff and falling hair. \"Your hair\nneeds this, stimulating tonic, then its\nlife, color, brightness and abundance\nwill return\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHurry! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-_.,\nGreek Harbor Rising From the Sea.\nThe . remarkable , tilting of Crete\nwithin historical-times has been lately described by Professor J. L. Myres\nin a Royal Geographical Society.-discussion. The eastern' half.' of the\nisland has sunk and the western'has\nrisen, and as a consequence. the ancient quays and ' harbor \"works at\nHierapctras are\" siibmcrged^jvyhile :at\nth\"\"c_wcsrtn\"d\"b7-th^\\rsland'The'.Gfeek\nharbor of .Phalasa'rna has been entirely-lifted but of the-water, making it\npossible to walk on .the dry\" floor of\nthe'ancient sea inlet.\n\"COLE) IN THE HEAD\"\nis -an. acute attack' of. Nasal -Catarrh.-.- Persons, who are'subject-Jo fre<lncnt.\"colds in\nthe iicau'Vwili .(iHci'thsitThc use of'. HALL'S\nCATARRH .MEUJCIXK,-.will   build-up   the,       - .   .   ,\nSystem,   cicansc. the-Blood, ?nd   render .them j everybody,  is \"Stocked; . Up    . for-    the\nJess   liable   to; colds.      'Repeated   attacks   of |\"\nActite- Catarrli .may:'lead  to' Clironic  Catarrh. I\n\"- HALL'S CATARRH -.MEDICINE- :s tak-\nen, internally^aud acts.'tiuouffli the. Blood oa\nthe Mucous.Surfaces of the System.\n\"All  Druggist*  oc.    -\"Testimonials' free.-  ,: '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-S100,00 \"  for   -any-    case '^ 'of   catarrli   tliat\nHALL'S, CATAItRII   AlEDJClNli ,wil!\"not\ncure.\"'-     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':'.-     -'.-'-      .-     --    .'\"-',.\n. I\". J. -Cheney- &\" Co.,; Toledo,-.Ohio.' \"v -\nwinter, there'is little killing-proceeding .now rind.\"the.animals arc\"'-running\natJla'r'ge likc^.cattle.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'.  ',\"      -,-,-..-'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt a gr.uiua! improvement in\nilioiu my appetite \"improved,\npills I felt r\nmy conditio,,v\n1 began to feel tested after a night'.-\nsleep aud I gained ib weight\". \" My\nfriends wcrc continually expressing\nsurprise at my improved condition,\nas it -,u=; generally believed I had become _ a chronic invalid., I always\ntake \"a\" delight in telling them ,that\nDr Williams' Pink Pills arc responsible for my present good health, and\nas they havc_bcen a,real blessing to\nme I shall always continue to praise\nthem,'*\nIf you are suffering from any condition due to poor, val cry blood, or\nweak nerves, begin taking Dr. .Williams' Pbk Pills now, and note'how\nyour strength - and' health- will improve. \" You can get these \" pills\nthrough any dealer in medicine,\" or\nihey will be sent by mail, post paid,\n-at 50 * cents a box or six boxes for\nS2I0 by The-Dr. Y\\\"iIIiams' iltdicinc\nCo,,. Brockviile, Ont.\n.'Royalty Economizing.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd King Gcprgc'.lias s.et-an example to\nthe -., householders - throughout-.7-.the\ncountry in.tlic saving-of coal'.by ord--\ncrihg thaf'nres iii the royal-palaces!\nshall- be lighted only, when'-absdlut'cly\nnecessary. Even\"thcn:-t!iey arc to be\nkept, as., small-rts possible.   '-\nM-Known Fort: v\n;   William Droggist\nw. - n. u. imx\ni. '' Trumpet\" Swans in. Canada. *\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA colony- of-between 50 and 100\nTrumpet Swans'has been located in\nCanada but the-federal department of-\ninte'rior is keeping their,'whereabouts\na.secret. -..As soon as the birds were\n.discovered _a- guardian ,\\yas -appointed\nto. protect them. .\"The. trumpeft swan,\n-one of the most \"beautiful and stately\nof :bird.s,\\yas liitHcrto believed to, have\nbecome'-extinct.'. It, is-understood\nthat, the colony, is located somewhere\nin.British Columbia. .' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\".' -' :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ----;-'' ;\nMany mothers have reason to hjess\nMother Grave's Worm Exterminator,\nbecause it has relieved the littic ones\nof suffering and made them healthy.x\nAugmenting  Ranks of R.C.M.P.\nThe ranks of the Rojral Canadian\nMounted Police, Regina, are being\naugmented, and 100 men who have\ncome from England and paid their\nfares lo enlist with the-Scarlet Riders\nof the Plains arrived here recently.\nA\nCity Men Buy Land.*\n-New Yorlr svndicate\" have\" filed\non. 250,000 acres of land in Alberta.\nThe moon resembles a marriage\ncertificate, because' it has something\nto do with the tide.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'An Important Discovery. ,j\n,0 \"The length-of a\" bee's'sting,'-'\" says !\nTit 'Hits;;.\"is only one thirty-second of '\nan inch.\" y We- are. grateful for', this.!,\ninformation\/because when wcarc be-.'\ning s.tung'wc. are. always too busy to j\nmeasiire \"-for-^ourselves.\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^.London\n'Punch.  .-' ''.-'- . -.   X'.-   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"   '--yX .;. y\nash Day and\n;'-.     \"\"'Ruth Fractures-'.Wrist.,'.   ,..\"--'\n' \"Babe\" :Ruth .^sustained ;.a  fracture\n'oi his .left wrist while-playing.\" a; game\nof  baseball 'in,'  Birigham'pt'on;'  ..-New\nYork, recently.   \"   -  -\n-\"Marlatt's   Specific\". Removes 7'Gall\n.y    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Stones. ' .;._-.-- i - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n- --'   '   .    ' .,\" \"Tort William,'Ont.   .\nKW._Marlair\\&:.-Co.:--\":       - ;'    \"-..'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDear Sirs-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI ..thought I would write'\n-arfd K-t you know .the great relief and\ncure. I received- by taking one\" treaW\nnieut .bf.;\"MARtA:tT'S SPECIFIC\"\nfor Gail Stotics and Appendicitis. -'. I;\n\\yas. taking, different-kinds of indigestion cures to' relieve stomach trouble\nfor the: past two years, 'and got only\ntemporary relief.   -1- heard such great\nreports from customers about \"MAR-\n.-LAT\/TS SPECIFIC:'.,curing,.stomac.h\ntrouble,,I.,decided to';try;..it,;-.aiiii:U.' rc-\n-inoved-.bvcf .200 Ga 11.'-Sto.nestranging\n''in;-sizc5-\"fr.oin a'-snrall bean, to a-large\nmarble,' aiid .1 feel like a ncw:.ni.in..-My\n-stpmach'trouble .'disappearc'd, almost\n.imm.ediatdy^Sv It-is a-great ;'tncdieitiLei.\nan d.7>%ri| j^crta&tl jLrem 6 Vc? Gall ^Sfbnxss-\n;bgMy3bo^l^|Toubie^\n.^succes'^7Kamv*!Yoiiiis'5triil vpsfiSS * -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nW0-12^tat t j^tS p. 'coyfy^yX ;s7: Jp y sXlcX by)\ni^r^Jbv^^^d^'g^^iin^\n.inj^'u^'Tb^ri'iiiAggis^liap^ 'XX{?y-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;--^i\"^-;'i y^x y-y^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:...pyr :._ . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n;ii^it^it^|lsM^te;^^^tfe\ni^y^piXXii^pktpXQ^^Xi^xX'X\nxX^Q^M^ftcoi&^^^isriXpidX.\nMiller's \"Worm'Powders act'jnildlv\nand -without injury \"to th^. child, and\nthere can be.no doubt\" of-'tlicir dcadly\neffect upon \"worms'.' They have been\nin successful use for a Icing tiriie. and\narc -recognized as a leading- pre^ara-\nj tion .for ' the -purpose. ,-7,'r Thcy\" have\nproved., their--, power: iii numberless\n.cases;;'ah'd\";havc given relief \"to many\nchildren, who, Tjutfor thc gopd omces-\ncf. this\" .rompotrnd, would' have continued \"weak-and enfeebled. '-   ' - - 7 ;\n'fiffn\ufffd\ufffd!;\nb'fteii\nleighicerE-i'y\nisis\n6ibZ\ni'hi.s-\nmttMZyXx\nXXX\nyXxyyyyy\nXy\nyyy\nXXmii^xy\n\"d'idj\nyiiou->svcnd\nTthe,\nres\nixpi\ny-QU'r-ti'trte\n-^-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--y-y\nMilxfii\nXX\nyyy |.aiai.enai :.a'pd-7|!s:c'il .mike-^a -gp.od.ifiu's.-.\n;i-Uanlkput.91:it.\" \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n^y*ASH day is the least wel-\n. :come day of the>'eek in',\nmost homes, though sweeping\nday is not much better. Both\ndays are mt>stx trying on the\nback!   .. , . ,\n7\" Tha. strain of washing. Ironing: and\nsweeping frequently deranges th*\nkldnsyB. The system . Is poisoned\nan5 backaches, rheumatism, pains ia\n'.th* Hrnbs result.  ' '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKidney action must he aroused\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nths -liver awakened.to action and th\ufffd\ufffd\nbowels regulated^by-such treatment\nas Dr. Chase's - kidhey-I.trsr Pills,\nThis favorite prescfiptlon ot the well.\nknown Kc-ceipt Book.author will nol\nfall yoa In the ;hour ot need.\nOne pia a ao\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, \ufffd\ufffd5\ufffd\ufffd a box st all deai.ra,\n\ufffd\ufffdr Edmpsca, Bate* .&-Co., ltd., Torcita,-'\n.JSi^6BlHiSi: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <\nTHE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nTHE LEDGE     I Final Referendum Result\nIs 32.50 a year strictly in advance, or $3\nwhen not paid for three months or more\nhave passed. To Great Britain aud the\nUnited States $3., always in advance.\nG. W. A. SMITH\nLessee\nADVERTISING RATES\nDelinquent Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nCoal and Oil Notices...-.    7.00\nEstray Notices 3.00\nCards of Thanks ,    1.00\nCertificaie of Improvement  12.50\n(Where more than one claim appears in notice, $5.00 for each additional claim.)\nAll other legal advertising, 12 cents a\nline first insertion, and 8 cents a Hue for\neach subsequent insertion, nonpariel\nmeasurement.\nTranscient display advertising 50 certts\nan inch each insertion.\nBusiness locals I2j\ufffd\ufffdc. a line each in-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdertion.\nCity Council\nA. regular meeting of the City\nCouncil was held on Monday evening. Mayor Gulley, Aldermen,\nKerr, Morrison, McOreath and\nKing, were present.\nIt was decided that the Fire,\nLight and Water committee, undertake to organize a club for the\nboys who frequent the gymnasium\nin the Fire Hall.\nA report was received through\nDr. J. M. Burnett, from Dr. Mullen, director of the Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital Laboratories,\nstating that the water now flowing\nin Twin, Lind, and Providence\ncreeks is free from bacteria that\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwould cause disease, but that two\nmore examinations of Twin creek\nwater should be made before\nMay, so that the Council could be\nreasonably certain before next\nsummer whether this supply is fit\nor unfit for drinking purposes afe\nthat time.\nThe accounts were presented and\nordered paid.-\nThe Street committee reported\nprogress on work now  being done.\nThe next meeting of the Council\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwill be held o\"n Nov. Sth.\nPhoenix War Memorial\nPhoenix paid tribute to its fallen\nheroes in the. Great War, when a\nmonument of grey granite, standing Si- \"feet .high and weighing Nitons, was erected, lasfe week, near\nthe former C. P. R. station in thafe\ntown at an elevation of 4,700 feet.\nThe front of the monument bears\nthe.following inscription: - \"To the\nglory, of God this monument is\nerected., in honor of the Phoenix\ninen who paid the supreme sacrifice\nin the Great7Warjl914-i918,\"     -\nThe opposite side of the monument contains the following, names\nof .those who gave their lives:\n\"James Cochrane; Jos. Fleming,\nElino.E.. Geddes, Oscar Gustafson,\nSidney Jennings, Anton Johnson,\nJ. .0.7 Kempstoii, John Lindsay,\nRoy. A.X McDonald,1 Dudley McMillan, Thomas. Monohan, -John\nAr. Parry,- D. -M. Pifetendrigh;. jas.\nI'itpladdy, Fred'Wilkinson;\nSuccessful Dance\nThe final result of the Liquor\nPlebiscite in the Greenwood Riding\nwas given out by William Lake-\nland-oti Wednesday. The vote in\neach polling division is as follows:\nProhibition Govt. Control\nBeaverdell-       16 14\nB'd'y Falls 3 27\nBrideeville 2 31\nCarmi .7 S\nChristian Va'y    0 S\nDenoro     . .       1 6\nEholt 1 22\nGreenwood        71 137\nMidway 37 60\nRiverside 20 54\nRock Creek        14 41\nSidley S 14\nWestbridge 0 9\nAbsentee vot's 29 66\nTotal 209 497\nThere were two spoiled ballots afe\nChristian Valley.\nMidway News\nA squash weighing 54 pounds is\non display in the window of McMynn's store. It was grown by J.\nS. Harrison who has been very\nsuccessful in growing vegetables in\nthe valley.     \t\nThe United Farmers store is\nopen for business on Wednesday\nafternoon and all day Saturday of\neach week. The opening days will\nbe increased as soon as more stock\narrives.    Wm. Tippie  is manager.\nK. G. Steele, a brakeman on\nthe Kettle Valley passenger train,\nwho left here on Friday last, met\nwith a painful accident near Penticton, when lie fell from the step\nof a coach and in doing so, his leg\ncame in contact with awheel, crushing it above the ankle. He was\nrushed to the Penticton hospital\nwhere ife was found necessary to\namputate the injured limb above\nthe knee.\nTIMBER SALE X 1552\nADVERTISEMENT\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -:-.SealetV'teuderS-'-will. b'e received bytlle'-Minister of.Lancls \"at.Victoria, .not-later tl\ufffd\ufffda<i noon\non\".the:.-IStli' -dajb'of .7Noy'e'mber,7i?20,-;'for--the\nftwrciiase; of\/Iiiceiic67\nand Tamafafe'-.-'Pies.'a'Viil ;500.'Cord* ctf.Cordwood,\nod...a'ri.'area;.sUiialetIJ'iioa^\nineeu'Distrjct;. '7777' :xiyX:y .'yXZi X'i'-yrXrXy ri\n'.:'.-T.\\yo7!2).'yearsw.ill-te\n'6i:ti^eiX':yX:-;fX::X:-y:;yy;x:     yi xyixy:\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.--^Further.paVU.culars-.of-''tlie'.Cji'ief. jpre.ster.7\ny.icto\"riay-,-B. C,,'7pr. District7 Forester,'Nelsdtii\nNEW,; HARNESS - SHOP.\n\" I have.opeiied-a new harness shop and\nam prepared to; make-harness to7order\nand to do all kinds of repair work. Shop\nequipped \"with - modern - machinery 1 --All\nwork guaranteed. '  ' ; .     ,,  . '\nC. A. CRAWFORD.     GRAND FORKS\n.--NEW  GRAND  HOTEL\n616 Vernon St; Nelson -X -\nBrick-buildiug'ancl finely furnished rooms\nJOHN BLOMBERg; ,-   .-  Proprietor\n'.' i':'::'.. .\/A^SONj '^CXiiXx.ii '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.  Nicely, lurnished rooms, by the -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n_-..\",_.\".--. day, week or'month \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\"- '.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\nF. .Niisbir    -        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'-\"\"' Proprietor\nThe.G. - -W., V.  A.. have\" every\n;-reason toib'e'proud ;of .the. success\nof the; Dance: last-'Friday  nighfe,\nwhich was largely attended, many\ncorning from Grand Forks, '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Eholfe,\nMidway and .'Kefefele'- Valley.; -The\n; ladies were in. the majority, and the\nineii were kept busy.    There was\nno hanging' around the  door  or\nsittingout dances as all Beemed in-\n' tent on having a good feime.,\/ Werner's orchestra furnished fche ninsic\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich was par excellence and  the\n; floor.was :in fine shape.  The ladies\nof Greenwood    supplied  ihe  i-e-\nfreshnienfes;and was enjoyed by all.\n;.=  The G: W; V. A..; will celebrate\nthe second anniversary of armistice,\n-by holding's Masquerade Ball on\n\"Friday; Nov;- 12bh; . Get your cos-\n- tnmes ready for. this great. annual\neyenfc.1 - --\"\"; ;  '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,\\ -\" -    :   ~.     ~~  '\nTrail Or$ Receipts\n\\Ore receipts at the Trail smelter\nfor fehe period Oct. 7 feo 21 are\nas follows:\nBluebell, Ribndel -    ,71\nGranby Con., Grand Forks       107\nHewitt,.Silverton -   ,';.\\\": 20\nJosie, Eossland - . .754\nLanark, Laririer -  -       .-32\n: Mbble Five, Sandon        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' -'    .   39\nWorfeh Star, Kimberley     '-;. :, -305\n! OfefeawraSIocan,Cifey. .     ...-'...   ^ 30\nProvidencCj Greenwood: ^ -  7, \"42\n[Silver Standard,IfewJI&zeVai; -38\nKambler-.Cariboa, Eambler   ..-    43\n. Ruth, Ainsworth\".ZyX.iXX-i. .-..^li.S\n-; Skyline\/- A inswofth .;'\"-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' XX;V .'-XyoS\nVenijs\/ Carcross, Yukon-C ->   ;: 54\nWellington, Beaverdell '. ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-,y'-'-' 8Q\nVxO;;'-,MQNUMENTS^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;';;;-\nKOOTENAY GRANITE AND   - .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd->;< \":-  '.MONUMENTAL';\"CO\/,'-LTD.\"\nFRONrSt..' 7..NELSON.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BOX'865\nMATTHEWS  BROS.\n. GRAND   FORKS\nAgents for' Chevrolet,  Podge, -Hudson,\nChalmers.  Cadillac\" cars,   -   Garage   in\nconnection. ; '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nC. V, MEGGltT\"\nGRAND FQRKSy B.C,\nDealer in \"Farm Produce\", Railroad \".Ties.\nCedar;Pole's,-and Feiicc-Posts, \"Farm and\nFruit Lands For'-Sale. List your, lands\nwith me,    Have a buyer'for  good ranch\nJOHN GRASSICK\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\nGRAND FORKS\nMail your watch for Repair and I wii*\nmail it-back.   Charges are moderate.\nPHONE   13\nAuto    and   Morse   Stages\nLeave    Greenwood    Twice\nDaily to Meet Spokane and\nOroville Trains\nAutos for hire. The.finest\nTurnouts in the Boundary;\nand lieavy Dray in g\n? Company Mines\nX 15,353\nSpspsia of\nhad Act\" Imandmenfs\n\ufffd\ufffd\nMinlmum^price .of flrst-class Ia.nd\nreduced to $5 an acre; second-class to\n$2.60 an acre.\nPre-emption now confined to surveyed lands only.\ntfecords will be granted covering only\nland suitable for agricultural purposes\nmd which is non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties of not more than four may\narrange for adjacent pre-emptions\nwith Joint residence, but each making\nnecessary improvements on respective\nclaims. : \ufffd\ufffd-\nPre-emptors'must occupy claims for\nAve years and make improvements to\nvalue of $10 per acre, including clearing and cultivation oi at least 5 acres,\nbefore receiving Crown Grant.\nWhere pre-emptor in occupation not\nless than 3 years, and has made proportionate improvements, he may, because of ill-health, or other cause, be\ngranted intermediate certificate of improvement and transfer his claim.\nRecords without permanent residence may be issued, provided applicant makes improvements to extent of\n$300 per annum and records same each\nyear. Failure to make Improvements\nor record same- will operate as for-\nlelture. Title cannot be obtained in\n\/ess than 5 years, and Improvements\nof $10.00 per acre, including-6 acres\ncleared and cultivated, and residence\nof at least 2 years are required.\nPre-emptor holding Crown grant\nmay record another pr^-emptlon, if he\nrequires land in conjunction with his\nfarm, without actual occupation, provided statutory Improvements made\nand residence maintained on Crown\ngranted land. \ufffd\ufffd}\nTJnsUrveyed areas, not exceeding io\nacres, may be leased as homes!tea;\ntitle to be obtained after fulfilling residential and Improvement conditions.\nFor grazing and Industrial purposes\nareas exceeding 640 acres may be\nleased by one person or company.\nMill, factory or industrial sites on\ntimber land not exceeding 40 acres\nmay be purchased; conditions include\npayment of stumpage.\nNatural hay meadows lnaccosslble\nby existing roads may be purchased\nconditional upon construction of a road\nto them. Rebate of one-half of cost of\nroad, not exceeding half of purchase\nprice, is made. ,'\" y\nPRE-EMPTORS' FREE GRANTS\n1> ACT.\nThe scope of this Aot is enlarged to\ninclude all persons Joining and serving with His -Majesty's Forces. The\ntime within which the heirs or devls'ees\nof a deceased pre-emptor may apply\nfor title under this Act ls extended\nfrom for one year from the death of\nsuch person, as formerly, until one\npear after the conclusion of the present\nwar. This privilege is also made retroactive.\nNo fees relating to pre-emptions are\ndue or payable by soldiers on pre-\nemptlsns recorded after June 26, 1918.\nTaxes are remitted for five years.\nProvision for return of moneys accrued, due and been paid since August\n4, 1914, on account of payments, fees\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 ou-\nflstinent\" to March' 81\ufffd\ufffd\"l920.\n\ufffd\ufffd\nSUB-PURCHASERS OF^ROWN\nLANDS.\n..Provision made for issuance of\nCrown grants to sub-purchasers of\nCrown Lands acquiring rights from\npurchasers who failed to compote\npurchase, involving forfeiture, on fui-\nillment of conditions of purchase, interest and taxes. Where sub-purchas-\ners do not claims-hole of origniu parcel, Purchwj price due and taxes may\nbo =\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd distributed   proportionately   over\n*'hSl0 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ADP\ufffd\ufffdcationa must be\nmad\ufffd\ufffd by May 1( 1jjo uc\"   \ufffd\ufffd*\nr ... ORAZINQ.   i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-Grazing  Act    1910,  for    systematic\ndevelopment o{ livestock industry provides for grazing districts and raiure\nadmm stratlon - under   Commission!-\nAnnual grazing permits Issued based \"\non-numbers rang-ed; priority for estab- '\nllsned    owners.-     Stock-owners -may\nform-Associations for range-manage-\n-went.    Free, or partially rree, permits -\n. for settlers   campers or tracers, up\nto ten head. \" '^       '   .\"-\nDR. J. M, BURNETT\nPhysician and Surgeon\nAnnounces\nThat he has located &t GreenwoodT-\nOffice    -   Guess Block.\n'\"Residence'.''\"tv Dr. MacLean's House\nOffice Phone go.       Residence Phone 69\nC. AE. SHAW\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   BRITISH      .\nCOLUMBIA LAND  SURVEYOR\nCawston\n-      -     B.C.\ncKEE\nGREENWOOD\nDealer in\nWOOD\nOrders Promptly Filled\nJ, P. MORGAN\nDealer in Second-hand Eufniture-\nand Clothes, Metals, Sacks,\nHorses,   Cattle,  Etc.'\nBAKER STREET.\nNELSON\nA. MGGINBOTHAM\n(Expert Optician)\n.  GRADUATE\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd j   OPTICIAN AND OPTOMETRIST\nK. W. C. Block        -      -     Nelson\nLAND ACT'\nNOTICE   OF   INTENTION   TO   APPLY   TO\nPURCHASE LAND\nSimilkameen Land District. Recording District\nor Similkameen, and situate to the Nortli-\nEast of Long Lake, Greenwood Electoral\nDistrict, and adjoining tlie Nortii-East side\nof Emerald Mineral Claim L8?,2, and Gem\n- . Mineral Claim 1.823.    .\n-TAKE NOTICE that I, William J.\nPrendcrjrast, of Graiiil ForK-s, B.C., occupation\nsteam enyiiicer, intend to apply for permission\nto purchase Uie rolloiriuir cis-'scribeii lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at~the\nSouLli-East corner of Emerald Mineral Claim\nLol'S22, llieiice, Korllicrly 40 chains; thence 40\nchains in an Easterly * direction; tlience. 40\nchains in- 'a Snui'licrly^direction; ther.ee -40\nchains in a Westerly direction to point of commencement, containing 1G0 acres more Or less.\nWILLIAM J. PRENDERGAST,,\n7 Sept. 3rd, 10j0 .        .'    ' .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'Applicant.\nWhen the Mistake is Yours, Help Correct It.\nSometimes, as soon' as you give tlie operator- a telephone num-\nher\/rom.memory, you realize you have called lhe wrong number.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe:first impulse is to- haug.up\/the -receiver,' but,'\"you should wait\nand say lo the .other party,  '!Beg pardou for .calling the. wrong\n.'number,\"   Theu everybody feets-all right,about it. '-.   .\n7. If yoii. hang up tlie receiver without, acknowledging your error,\nthe opeiator.gets-the\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdblame vvheu she tells .the .other party that\n\"there's no .one on'the Hue.\"  . -, -   . -        ;'   ., '    -.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..--.\nBRITISH CO LUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY.\nWMMXyixXXxxWiXM^^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^i^'Sii'^\n:v'-;^y-^-.-.i:.W^\niXXyXSXXXZiXxiXXXyyyt^\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\n.Producers    ol    Gold, . Silver,; Copper, \"Bluestone,. Pijj   Lead .,and ,Zinc;\n':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTADANAC'j: BR AND\n4\ufffd\ufffd\n%i^^i&X^^M^X^z^X\n4i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf.\nifl*-.'\n'#\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\n#\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n4x\ni&:\nm\n'M\n W\nThe only up\/to^date Hotel in the interior,\nin every respect,\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nFirst-class   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n..'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;:-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'v*\n-     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -r-- - -^-,\" - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' >:        .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 4\ufffd\ufffd\nHot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in -4\ufffd\ufffd\neach room.\nROOMS^WITH PRIVATE BATHS, y\n:i;^^.;':CgISI^;:AN])\/^Imc;E THik3BEST\nix 'First tia.\ufffd\ufffds Cafe and Barber;Shiop\n-XyxJXlS.\nXSAMRLE ROOMS\nvSteam Heated;.Electric Lighted.      .; -\nRossland Assessment District\n- u\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE that, on Monday, the 15th day. of November, 1920, at the hour of 16 o'clock in the forenoon at the Court House, Rossland, I shall offer for sale at Public Auction the Mineral Claims in the list hereinafter set\nout of the persons in the said list hereinafter set out tor delinquent taxes unpaid' by said persons on the 30th day of June\n1926, and for interest, costs and expenses, if the total amount due is not sooner paid.\nThe Collector will be pleased to receive any information respecting the following list where the owner is a member.of\nthe Allied Forces and entitled to the benefits of Section 29of the \"Taxation Act Amendment Act, 1918\" and amendments\"\nthereto. -^ , ~\" ^. -\nDated at Rossland, B.C., this 2nd day of October,\" 1920.\"\n- _     ~~ H. R. TOWNSEND, ' _ ,. -       -\nCollector for the Rossland Assessment District.\nUST ABOVE MENTIONED\nName of Owner\nName of Claim\nLot No.     ; Taxes Costs ~To{al\nTRAIL CREEK MINING DIVISION\nHomer F. I,lbl>y aud Val C. Simmons\t\nNeibergall Albert  ...\nKosslnml Kuutcu.iy Miuint,' Company\t\nKosslancI Kootenay Mining Company\t\nJ. VoKt'l Estate\t\nClement Mrs. Elsie L .'.\t\nMiller  Robert\t\nNeibcrurall Albert\t\nRosslatul Kootenay Mining Company\t\nKosslancI Kootenay Mining' Company......\t\nPeterson Norman\t\nNeibergall Albert...,.'.': \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMiller  Robert\t\nRed Mountain Ida May Gold Mining Co. Ltd.,\nNeibortralI Albert\t\nInland Empire M. & M. Company, Ltd\t\nNelberairll,  Albert\t\nRossland Kootenay Mining Company,...,\nRossland Kootenay Mining Company..,..\nRossland Kootenay Mining Company..,.\nJordan Ben IT 1\t\nRossland Kootenay Mining Company\nNeibergall Albert r.\t\nInland Empire M & Mlg. Co\t\nRossland Kootenay Mining Company Ltd\t\nCostello W. E\t\nCameron T. A. and McCrea W. S\t\nNeibergall Albert ;.\t\n..Alice I,...:\t\n..Berlin\t\n..Columbia\t\n..Copper Jack ,\n...Curlew ...,.,\n..Canada\t\n..Dandy No 2\t\n..Glendale .-..,\n...Golden Chariot\t\n..Great Western\t\n..Hattie  Brown\t\n..Hidden Hand\t\n.High Ore No 2\t\n..Ida May rr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.7..,..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\n..Independent\t\n..Inland  Empire\t\n.Inland Fraction\t\n..Kootenay\t\n..Kootenay   Fraction..\n..Nickel  Plate \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\n..Ontario\t\n,.Ore-or-no-go .'.\n.Saginaw\t\n..Saginaw Fraction\t\n..Tip-Top.\t\n..Trnby.f.\t\n.Viking '.....'.\"\n.Washington\t\n,.;.,. ......4331'\n 11157\n 694\n, 1185\n 1230 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n 4358\n 2496\n ......11137\n..............691\n 692\n 1047\n .11139\n .- 2945\n 1940\n; U136\n ..3880\n T.....11156\n 697\n 1198\n 537\n ;...1057\n '. 696\n .7 3879\n .3881\n 798\n 1626\n 4916\n 11138\nGRAND FORKS MINING DIVISION\n 2230\n 3174\n  1204\n ;..m1325S\n '. 1334S\n :....1335S\nCarraher Eva M ,  Acorn\t\nNortliup Henry Hall... ..-. ...Alpha \",\nMcLaren Henry Albert ...'....Alpha...;; '.....',\".\". '.'.\nPrendergast AV.  J. Boyce J,  S.  aud Reeves\nC W ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Atltelstan\t\nKerman, H. C, Kerman, Maggie M., and Shannon, David ,  ...Big Cub  :\t\nKerman, H. C, & M. M., Shannon D Black Bear\t\nDcnzler  Robert,  Crane   G.   Li   Oppenheimer,\nM. Feldman, P Hahn, Gertie Walker CarrleButte.. ...'. .'.1067\nByrnes, T. J Holm, Jno r:.7\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Caledonia .   .\".     973 .\nStewart, William H .-. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd... ........Canyon ...;. 2390S\nPaulson, T.  H ;. Caroline ;.......; .2483\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Stewart, William H ;.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' .Dominion '. 2386S\nPrendergast, .W. J., Boyce John S. and Reeves,\nC. H ...:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.... ...Eganvllle  ;........\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ...,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 1016S\nKerman, Maggie M., aud Cannon, Hugh B Glouster Fraction.'. ....'. 145S\nKerman, H. C ; Golden Age _._.:..........  967S\nColdwell, G. R    Golden Crown - \ufffd\ufffdX)-\nHumming Bird B. C.  Gold  Mining  Co., Julia   '\nO'Connor, Delsheimer, S., .Williams, J. C,\nInternational Railway Co..  Humming Bird ......:.\ufffd\ufffd.. _..  .1369\nColby,  Z 7.  Humphrey,  Davy ;....:......3232_\nNewby, James....:  Ida:..: ........~_  :. ....575S\nKnight, Bertha J .;.:: :C.....Iron Bell Fraction ......93S\nKerman, Maggie M Iron Cap 929S\nRumberger, G. W : _  Iron Clad ; 1489\nKerman, Herbert C, Kerman, Maggie M. and   .    _\nShaimon, David Little Cub Fraction :  1333S\nKerman, H  C, Kerman Maggie M, Shannon,\nDavid and Wotlin, Henry Lucky Jack _ 1026S\nOliver, W T audWalsh, Thomas Lucy      ^ 1427\nByrne,  Patrick J .Maine Fraction :..... 430S\nStewart, William H Mammoth ..:;;  ...:__...;_ 2385S\nReeves, C. H. and Prendergast W. J.... Nellie.... ;  _  1017S\nStewart, William H .-.... Pan..........  -. 2387S\nGraf, Fred : St. Elmo ;.-.:\". -..- 2229\nKerman, H. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Kerman, M. M. Wotlin Henry,\n, Shannon, David White Bear 1025S\nGREENWOOD MINING DIVISION\n$10.25     . \"\":\n$3.75\n$14.00\n12.00.\n3.75\n15.75'\n4.00\n3.75\n7.75\n5.25\n3.75\n9.00\n8.75 ',\n3.75\n_     12.50\n64.75\n3.75\n68.50\n11.75\n3.75\n15.50\"\n6.25    \"\n3.75\n10.00\n. 11.50\n3.75\n..     15;2S\n'3.25\n3.75\n7.00\n8.75\n3.75\n.      12.50\n.9.00,7\n3.75\n12.75\n11.00\n3.75''\n'   -   14.75\n5.75\n3.75 v\n7 9.50\n12.75\n3.75\n16.50\n13.00\n3.75\n16.75-\n.50\n3.75\n4.25\n5.25     ,\n3.75\n9.00\n.25\n3.75\n4.00\n4.75\n3.75\n8.50\n12.50\n3.75   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n16.25\n.50       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n3.75\n4.25\n.13.00\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   3.75\n16.75\n3.50           -r\n3.75\n7.25\n-9.OO   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n3.75\n12.75\n12.00\n3.75     '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 15.75\n11.75\n3.75\n15.50\n13.00\n3.75.\n16.75\n10.25\n3.75\n14.00-\n11.00\n3.75\n14.75\n9.25        .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n3.75\n13.00\n1O.0O v\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \"\n3.75\n13.75\n11:50\n\" 3.75\n.15.25\n-8.25 '\n3.75\n12.00\n13.00\n3.75\n16.75\n10.00\n3.75\n13.75\n12.50\n\"     3.75\n16.25\n13.00\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3.75 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n16.75\n(;13.00\n3.75\n16.75\n-6.00\n3.75\n9.75\n9.75\n3.75\n^ . 13.50\n6.75\n3.75\n-   10.60\n13.00-\n3.75\n16.75-\n8.50\n3.75\n12.25\n. 7.25    -     .\n3.75\n11.00\n11.50\n3.75    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n15.25\n7.00-\n-  3.75\n10.75\n12.00\n'     3.75\n15.75\n13.00\n3.75\n16.75\n13.00\n3.75\n16.75\n11.25         0 -\n- 3.75   '\n' 15.00\n13.00\n3.75\n.     16.75\n2.00,\n3.75\n- 5.75\n4.00\n3.75\n'-.   7.75\n13.00\n3.75\n16.75\n6.00\n3.75\n9.75\n12.50\n-'3.75 *\n16.25\nn\nHemmerle, Thomas and McKee,  Hugh ......Admiral\t\nRtimberger, G. W. Dermody, P. J. ana Garrison\nT. B ;1  _.. Apex\t\nJackson, Eric E. and Grove3, F W Apex Fraction _\t\nJackson, Erlc-E and Groves,-F W  :. Battle Axe Fraction...\nJackson, E. E :..'. .Belmont Fraction.....\n. Rumberger, G. W..7. .-: : Cimeron...............\t\nRoderick, Thos.. McNulty,-~James,  Marshall, \\\nTames, Bresnahan, Dan .: Dexter Fraction.:,.....;\nPrendergast, William J .-....; : Emerald ....'\t\nRumberger, G. W., Daniel, R. T. Stack, Thos.\naud McDonell, Chris\n'Tate, Edward-L ....'.  ...\nHolbrook, Mary A \".. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd......\".......\nRumberger, G. W, and Garrison, T. B...\nHunter, W. T. 1 ....:\t\nBauk of Montreal, Rossland,- Glass, V.\npinwall, Phil\t\nMcNulty,  J., Clark, T., Bresnahan,\n, Bresnahan, J 1: .-.  ..,\n, McNulty,  J.,   Clark,  T.,. Bresnahan\nBresnahan, J :....'.   ...\nRumberger, G. W. Marshall, Jas. Farney, Wm.\nStrachan, A., MacAuley, J. B -..'. Magnolia.\nMcNulty,- J. Bresnahan, J., Bresnahan,   D\nClark, Thos :.\nMcNulty,  J., -Bresnahan, J. Bresnahan,\n-  Clark, Thos :\"......'...' 1 , '.\nMcintosh,. Alex. .A     .'..:\t\nHemmerle, Thos. and McKee, Hugh\t\nMortimer, E.'-H., Beasley, R. J.,- Brown, C.\nGraham, M. A., Parry, E........\t\nRoderick, Thos. and Marshall, James..:... .:.\nRoderick, T. Marshall, J. McNulty. J. Bresnahan, D....'. '. ....._^_. \". Pilot-Fraction....\nKeffer, F., Anderson, J. .P., Beaulieu, T .....Pluto...........\t\nLee; R,,Gillis, Jas., Campbell, J, M., Kay Mark,   '\nBryant, Lewis \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .: Princess Louise\nLee: R. Gillis, Jas:, Campbell J. ]\ufffd\ufffd., Kay, Mark,\n...Garfield\t\n Hercules _\n Hill Fractional\t\n .Joker\t\n .....Lancashire Fraction....\nD. As-\n.....;- .-.Last Chance ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nD. and      -\n .....Little Annie..;.. _\t\nD.  and\n.Little Brown\t\n. Marshall\t\nD.     .\n.... Marshall. Fraction..:...,\n... McKinley...-....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\t\n.....Ottawa Fraction \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nH.     .\n...'.-Peacock..:. ,\t\nPilot :.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\t\n..>,..:...\nBryant, Lewis..\t\n, Hallett, Ellen.......Jv..-...-.\nRumberger, G.W., Marshall, J.,  McAuley, J.\n.   B., Farney, Wm, Strachan Alexander.: Stertingham.\nSmith, W. S. ....   ........: - ~   '\nRumberger, G. W....-:..'..,\nRumberger, G. W,\t\nPrince oi Wales....\nSsaraet.T.;.-.^-.\".:.\".T.r.r.\n. Twin ...\n..Williamena- Fraction.......\n..Yukon Fraction .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ...\n... 2379\n....1696\n... 563S '\n....2308 \"\n..1422S\n 980\n.....3298'\n....822S  .\n....1264\n 926\n 294S\n... 1690\n....3255\n,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . 660\n 2389..\n....2390^\n....'.2980\n....2388.\n.. 2404 .\n....168S\n.....3503 -\n.....1243\n.....3297\n 3306\n.... 2393\n.....3680 ;\n.... 3681\n::.:.2663_\n.....29S3 -\n 819\n.....1693\n.....1193\n-13.00\n7.75\n.7.00\n11.00\n11.50\n.25\n12,25\n11.75\n13.00\n.   10.75\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    5.75\n13.00\n2.00\n2.25\nS.00\n7.00\n712.50\n.13.00\n12.50\n1.25\n33.75'\n\" 71.75\n12,25\n11.00\n1    r. '\n-   10.50\n8.25\n13i00\n11.25\n-*\"-\" 9.75\"'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd12.00,\n13.00\n2.00\n10.00\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3.75\n3.75\n\"16-.75\n11.50\n3.75. \"      '\n3.75  ,-:\n3.75  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n3.75\n3.75\n; 10.75\n14.75\n15.25\n4.(10\n16.00\n3.75      -\n3.75 .'- '\n15.50\n16.75\n3.75\n3.75\n3.75   '\n3.75-\n3.75\n14.50\n9.50\n16.75\n5.75\n6.00\n3.75\n3.75~\"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"8.75-\n' 10.75\n3.75\n16 25\n3,75\n16.75\n3.75\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   16.25\n3.75 \" X X\n3.75\n3.75\n5.00\n37.50\n75.50\n3.75       :\n3.75\n..  16.00\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  14.75\n3.75\n3.75\n14.25\n12.00\n.3.75   .\"       '\n16.75\n3.75 '\n-  15,00.\n3.75 .\n.13.50\n3.75  '\"'\n3.75\n3.75\n3,75 _\n15.75\n16.75\n5.75\n33.75\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSOK, Assayer and\nChemist, Box biio8, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges:-^jold, Silver, Copper or. Lead\n$i,2S each. Gold-Silver $1.75. Gold-\nSilver with Copper or Lead fo.oo. Silver-Lead $2.00. Silver-Lead-Zinc $3.00.\nCharges for other metals,: etc.,\" on application... ., ...'.-\noooooooo<K>ooo6oo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoooo<>o<>po\nTV   THOMAS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".,:.     CLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSBD AMD REf AIRED] '.':\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\noooooooooooooooooooooooooo\nCulameen Botcl\n;    PRINCETON, B.C.\nOne of the largest hotels in\nthe city.. Beantifnl location,\nfine rooins and tasty meals.\nA. 0. JOHNSON\nProDfletor\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi X\/f-\nfr\n; The Mineral Proyince of Western Canada  \ufffd\ufffd\n^   Has prodeced Minerals valued ss follows:   Placer Gold, $75,722,603; Lode\nGold, \ufffd\ufffd100,272,431: SiWer, $50,^864; Lead $43,821,106; Copper, 8153,680,965i\n:QSher Metels (Zinc, Irop, eto.), $16,818,487; Coal and Coke,   $199,123,323;\nBailding Stone, Brick. Cement, etc.,  $29,991,757; Miscellaneous Minerals, etc.,\n:\"     $785,918; making it\ufffd\ufffd ] Mineral Production to the end of 1919 show an :       7 :\n;iXxi  Agg^te Val^e of M7Q&\ufffd\ufffd$4x\nProduction ifor Year EmJing ^enfte^ 1919^ $33,?96,3l3\n..\",.   The  Mining laws of this Province are more liberal and the fees lower,\nthan those of any other Province is the Dominion, pr any colony in the British\n\" Empire. Xy ;V>*--V.. _--..--.   \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\nMineral locations are granted to disooverera for nomioai fees.\nAbaslute Titles are  obtained  by-developing such properties, the security\n, of which is guaranteed by Crown Gr&ate.\nFall information, together with niialng Reports sud Maps, may be obtained\n'\"gratis by addressing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd [\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   X--yy. -''X'X\n:XX\"XX:.: the : mn. the mikistes ' of mm\n:''XXx^Xixxxi:x VICT0IUA, Brftish CWnniMa..'.'.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1920_10_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0306252","@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. : G. W. A. Smith","@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":"1920-10-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-10-28 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\/1.0306252"}