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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\/1.0308351\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" THE\nLEDGE\nTHE  OLDEST   MINING  CAMP  NEWSPAPER  IN  BRITISH   COLUMB\nVol.   XXL\nGREENWOOD, B. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1914\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd-_RW_-\ufffd\ufffd55S:a\ny'''v.\/.'.;_3LAT\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV,.-\"'\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      V.\n?-**\nS&\n>\n\/r\nNo. 8\nSCHOOL   BOOKS\n-and-\nSCMOOL SUPPLIES\nJOHN  L.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BpfeStationcry, Kodaks, Wallpaper, Etc,\nsSH-__^^i^^^^JH3s*iS5^\ufffd\ufffd^\nAround Home\nI Greenwood's   Big   Furniture  Store\nWe are showing a Fine Line of\nIRON AND BRASS BEDS\nCoil Springs and Felt Mattresses\n'\nA few Refrigerators left over will go at reduced prices\nT:M. OTLLEY & Co.\nOpposite Postsffice. GREERWOOD, B. C. Pionc 27\nDO YOU NEED\nTEA and JAMS\nCOFFEE\nCOCOA\nSALT .   \" :'\nSUGAR\nPEPPER :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMUSTARD\n7\nFRUITS\nPICKLES\nCANNED GOODS\nBAKING POWDER\nCHEESE\nSOAP\nNO RUB STARCH\nIf so call or phone\nM Greenwood Grocery\n^OOOOOOQOiOOOOO^^^\nWALTER   G.   KENNEDY\nGREENWOOD,   B. C.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nTOBACCOS,CiGARS. CONFECTIONERY, STATIONERY\nA Full Stock of First Class Pipes.       Pipe Repairs\nSpecialty.\nI\nGet whit you want and get it Good.\nOur Stock is Clean, Fresh and Up\/TcvDate.\nOur Aim is to Please. Give us a Trial Order.\nAll kinds pf farm implements,\nLAKE  STUDIO\nGRAND FORKS\nUp-to-Date and Best appointed Studio\nin the Boundary\nAmateur   Finishing   Beautifully   Done,\nPostage Paid to and from Greenwood and\nOther Points.\nAgent for Ensign Cameras and Supplies\nDEVELOPING       25cts per Roll\nPRINTS...... ., 50cts a Dozen\nF  J. LAKE,\nWinnipeg Ave., Grand Forks.\nLadles Tailor-made\nGARMENTS\nMAnpio Suit You\nmv& To Satisfy You.\nof Goods you Select right here\nin your own town.\n6o0 NEW FALL STYLES\nOver 250 Samples to Choose\nFrom\nW.Elson&Co\nWANTS. Etc\nFor Sale\nYour choice of three span of mares,\nweighing from 2300 to 2750, two and a\nhalf miles from Ferry, Wash. Come\ndown and look at them.\nO. P. 0)-,SON  '\nFerry, Wash.\nFob Sale\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA block of Rock\nCreek Trading Co's stock for sale\nbelow par.  Apply at Ledge office.\nFurniture Wanted.\nSecond   hand   furniture,   range,   etc.,\nwanted.    Apply stating terms to \"B\"\nTHE LEDGE,\npor sale\nTwin Speed Minneapolis Motorcycle,\n10 horsepower De Luxe Engine, speedometer, etc. Machine has not. been run\nlooo miles and is in excellent condition.\nOwner will be pleased to demonstrate\nmachine. Call or write L. D. BURNELL,\nGreenwood.\nP. BHRNS & CO.\nDealers in Fresh and Salt Meats, Pish\nand Poultry. Shops in nearly all the\ntowns of the Boundary and Kootenay.\nCOPPER STREET. GREENWOOD, B.C.\nSunday chicken.dinners are a\nspecialty at Hanson's Hotel in\nRock Creek.\nI\ni\ni\n)\\\nBids asked for hauling ore now\non Dump at Alps Mine, North\nFork Carpenter Creek aud deliver\nsame in ore shed Three Forks,\nalso for mining ore as per mining\nregulations and hauling and delivery same at ore shed Three\nForks.    Apply\nw. j. McMillan\nCor. Beatty & Smythe Sts.\nVancouver,.B, C.\n^-^-5-Hg_H--a3^55\ufffd\ufffd35\ufffd\ufffd55\ufffd\ufffd55-\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd5\nTENDERS WANTED\nTenders wanted for putting sills on cement blocks underneath the Old Masonic Kail. Apply to Secretary. Masonic\nLodge, Greenwood,\nTake a joy ride to Rock Creek\non Sunday^ and try one of Han*\nson's famous chicken dinners.\nNothing beats it this far west.\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayef and\nChemist, Box biioS, Nelson, B. C\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Copper\n$1 each. Gold-Silver, or Silver-Lead,\n$1.50. Prices for other metals: Coal,\nCement, Fireclay analyses on application. The largest custom assay office in\nBritish Colnmbia.\nIt is interesting to note that daring Mr. Pinchbeck's recent motor\ntrip to Barkerville, be was surprised to find a couple of Chinamen\nwhom he remembered over twenty\nyears ago, still washing gold scarcely a hundred yards distant from\nthe spot he last saw them in when\nhe left that locality so long ago. It\nis twenty-seven years since Mr.\nPinchbeck's uncle and aunt left\nSheffield, England, to take up a\nhomestead about 120 miles up the\nold Cariboo road, which spot they\nreached via the States, Frisco, New\nWestminster and Yale, and during\nthat period the old folks have not\nleft the immediate neighborhood\nand in consequence have never set\neyes on the Canadian Pacific Bail-\nway.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKamloops Sentinel.\nSmijl&m\nqiieMy stops  eougfe*. cores\nt__e threat -Bid lanes*        \".\ncolds, and f-.-al-\n::        45 .fills\nDentistry\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr. Guy, of Grand\nForks, will be at the Pacific.Hptel\nGreenwood, from September 14\n%o 19, prepared to do all kinds of\ndental work.\nAlex. Robinson has returned\nfrom Victoria.\nFletn McMillan is spending the\nweek in Princeton. \\\nJames H. Dimmick left on\nTuesday for his home in Oregon.\nMrs. G. B. Garrett is in Maple\nCreek, where her mother is seriously ill.\nWork never ceases at the Argo.\nFrank White is now foreman at\nthis property.\nGeorge W. Rumberger was in\ntown on Mondav. He reports the\ncrops good at Regina.\nBack of his hotel in Eholt David Oxley has one of the finest\ngardens in the west.\nBorn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn August 27, at Cascade, to Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Cummins, a daughter.\nMiss Mae Lawson hasflgoue to\nVancouver. Mrs. J. Weir accompanied her as far as Seattle.\nIt is likely that G. B. Garrett\nwill succeed E. R. Redpath with\nthe C.P.R. in Grand Forks.\nAndrew.Hamilton died in Phoenix last week aged 66 years. He\nwas a pioneer of the Boundary.\nOn Augubt 31 a marriage license was issued to Magnus Olson\nand Leli Persa, both oi Phoenix.\nS, Dunn left on Monday for\nSaskatchewan. There will be\nquiet times in Greenwood while\nSam is away.\nJas. McMillan has joined the\nmilitia and is now in training at\nValcartier camp before going to\nthe front.\nOn August 24 a marriage license was issued to Robert Camerr\non and Mrs. Emily Bailey, both\nof Rock Creek.\nF, F, Ketchum was in town\nlast week. He accompanied Miss\nSmith, to the school at Mission,\nnear Myers Falls.\nE. R. Redpath has been appointed to fill the position in\nNelson with the C.P.R, recently\nmade vacant by the death of John\nHamilton.\nE. Watts, of Watt'sburg, and J.\nF. Morgan, ot Marcus, were in\ntown last week in connection with\nthe annual meeting of the Midway Coal Co.\nOn August 28th, before Magistrate, W. R. Dewdney, Enoch\nMoore and Chas. Lunn, both of\nEholt, were each fined $10 and\ncosts for allowing their pigs to\nrun at large.\nChristian Science service will\nlie held in the Oddfellows Hall on\nSunday at 11 a.m. All welcome.\nOn the 3rd Friday of each month\nat 8 p.m. testimonial meetings\nwill be held in the same hall.\nSunday school every Sunday\nmorning.\nM. W. Ludlow has 700 chickens\non his ranch at Denoro. If he\ndoes not sell them before winter\nthe Ledge advises him to hire a\nherder or chain the birds to the\nrafters. ~ There- are no coons\naround, but. you know, these are\nwar times, and chicken, yum,\nyum, is contraband of war.\nCharles Dunn, who ran a barber shop in Lillooet died in that\ntown last week. While taking a\njoy ride with some friends their\nauto rolled down a bank and\ncaught on fire. Dunn's clothing\ncaught fire, and he was so badly\nburned that he died next day. He\nis survived by his wife.\nThe Princeton Star says that\nPeck McSwain has discovered that\nbeer can be made from the hops\nof grasshoppers. Peck is now\nwalking from Merritt to Princeton, in order to count the number\nof grasshoppers between the two\ncities, so that he can estimate the\nsize of the brewery that will be\nnecessary to handle the amount\nof raw material at present available.\nWhen you hear a man sneering\nat the local paper because it is\nnot big, cheap and newsy as the\ncity papers, you can safely bet he\ndoes not squander any of his\nwealth in assisting to make it\nbetter and that generally fhe paper has done more for him than\nhe has for it. The man who cannot see the benefits arising from\na local newspaper is about as\nmuch value to a town as a delinquent tax list.\nA very wide-spread and distinct\ndissatisfaction has been expressed\nwith the paucity of aid and encouragement offered to those of our\ncitizens who wish to go to the\nfront. It is obvious to the most\ncasual observer that even the humblest citizen should have every\nopportunity to come to the aid of\nhis country in the hour of her\nneed.; :: Something must be done,\nand that at once, to remedy\nmost undesirable condition, of\nfairs.\nX\n?\nf\n\"f\n?\nr\n'?\nX\n?\n\\^^^^^\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd?5^3^^^^^i5^^^>\nMillinery Opening\nFRIDAY & SATURDAY\nSept. 4th and 5th.\n*W,HLSON&CO.f\n\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ... . _,_..._._._.\nv<KK~>:~SM-'MS>\ufffd\ufffd>*,5\ufffd\ufffd***<8,***0***^**\nKnight's of Pythias Social.\nA large number attended the\nsocial gathering of the local lodge\nof K. of P's held in the Pythian\nCastle Hall on Wednesday evening\nwhen manygof the brothers from\nPhoenix were present. The gathering was in the nature of a farewell\nas many of the members from both\ntowns are leaviDg for various parts.\nThe mysteries of the third degree\nwas put on after which an elaborate\nbanquet, put up by Wm. C. Arthurs\nand a splendid programme of songs,\nrecitations, music and speeches\nwere enjoyed. The chairman, Bro.\nSid Storer, in opening the program\nmade an appropriate address and\nafter welcoming the visiting brethern stated that the lodges had\ngathered to say farewell to many\nwhom they might never see again\nand he urged all the brothers to\nkeep up their membership no matter where they may roam. It was\na festive gathering and one long to\nbe remembered, but one could not\ndispel the thought that many\npresent would never mingle again\nunder the Greenwood Castle Hall.\nThe following was the programme\nand although it was of an impromptu nature every numberwas well received and many being encored:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nF. E. Elkins, speech.\nH. Parker, song.\nA. J. Morrison, speech.\nH. Knight, song.\nJ. Armstrom, Bpeech.\nJ. Hancock, song.\nJ. Clark, speech.\nW, Lakeland, song.\nE. E. Barnes, speech.\nBro. Jennings, song.\nF. Graham, speech.\nF. McMillan, song.\nBro. Thompson, speech.\nWm. Smith, bagpipes.\nA. N. Mowat, speech.\nBro. Spooner, recitation.\nAuld Lang Syne.\nGun Club Shoot-\nMuch interest is being shown\nin the Boundary in trap shooting\nand several successful inter club\nshoots have been held. This\nweek the clubs of Rock Creek,\nMidway aud Greenwood held a\nshoot at the local traps in which\nGreenwood was victorious by the\nsubstantial majority ot 19 birds.\nTwo rounds of 25 birds each were\nheld in which Greenwood got a\ntotal of 191, while Rock Creek\nand Midway got 172. The following is the individual score:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1st round 25 birds.\nRock Creek\nGreenwood\nStymett\n15\nBiner        22\nLord -\n__..__10-.\nLogan,.    -21\nO'Donnell\n19\nDr. McLean 14\nRichter\n23\nWhite       20\nMcMynn\n18\nJenks        14\n2nd Round\nStymett\n13\nBiner        19\nLord\n15\nLogan       20\nO'Donnell\n21\nDr. McLean 19\nRichter\n20\nWhite       24\nMcMynn\n18\nJenks        19\nTotal       172 191\nThere were also two sweepstakes, both of which resulted in\ntie. D. Biner won the first tie in\nthe shootoff and J. McMynn the\nsecond tie in the shoot off.\nAs a consequence of this shoot\nD. Biner wears the gold button\nfor the week and A. Logan the\nsilyer button. Although J. L.\nWhite secured the greatest number of birds for the day, it is only\nthe first round that iscounted for\nthe distintion of wearing the\nbuttons,\ni\n5S^_^_S^^_3^^\ufffd\ufffdS^^5S^5S?S?5-_\ufffd\ufffd-_l\nWestern Float\nof $10,000 the\nRossland  will\nA critical young lady was recently heard expatiating vigorously against the silly way that\nwomen have of kissing each other\nevery time they get together.\nShe said: \"If twenty women were\nto meet in the street every last\none of them would have to kiss\nthe other nineteen, and there\nwould be\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlet me see\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd380 kisses\nworse than thrown away, for probably in ten minutes the whole\nparty would separate into squads\nand go off talking about each\nother. When you see one of\nthese violent, kiss-every-tbing-iu\nsight kind of a woman,:it is * safe\nto set her down as a fraud, which\nshe generally is. If I: had my\nway, kissing should be confined\nto family uses aud for medicinel\npurposes, \\ Now, dont you put\nthis; my name to this or I will kiss\naf-1 you right on Copper street the\n! first chance I have.\"\nAt Penticton 48 men enlisted for\nthe war.\nDeer are plentiful in the Flathead valley.\nThere is some typhoid fever h\nFort George.\nThere are 17000 acres of orchards\naround Penticton.\nTomato and apple boxes are being made at Duck Creek.      ' '\nThe electric Jight service at Hosmer has been discontinued.\nThe fish catch at Prince Rupert\nin July was worth \ufffd\ufffd500,000.\nAt Chase the sawmill is running\nfour days a week.\nIt is 20 years since B. C. had\nsuch a dry summer.\nA new ferry is in operation at\nBig Bar on the Fraser river.\nSome work is being done at the\nGolden Zone near Oroville.\nA young wolf was recently shot\non the streets of Slocan City.\nDuring August the firemen in\nRossland made a dozen runs.\nNearly 600 children are going to\nthe public schools in Rossland.\nThe Ledge has lost its right wing.\nThe Kaiser better heel himself.\nA direct telegraph is now working between Kaslo and Revelstoke.\nAt au  expense\nHoffman House in\nbe rebuilt.   ,\nA newspaper called the Record\nhas been started at Peace River\nCrossing.\nA good copper prospect haB been\nlocated on the cliff, just west of\nOroville.\nThirty tons of mica were recently Bhipped from Tete Jaune Caohe\nto Montreal.\nIn Cre8ton a dollar will buy 12\nloaves of bread. It would buy 15\nin July.\nThe dry weather has put the\nCariboo wagon road in a deplorable condition.\nThe fish hatchery at Gerrard has\nbeen enlarged and now has a capacity of 15 million fry.\nThe Kaiser is the \"Mad Mullah\"\nof Europe. He should be in an\ninsane asylum instead of a palace.\nWhile running an auto from Barkerville to Quesnel, Frank Murphy\nhad 14 tire blow-outs in  60 miles.\nA few days ago Tom Buchanan\nof Peachland was killed at Penticton by falling under a railway engine.\nPat Rodgers died in Merritt from\ntoo much booze. He was found\ndead outside the back door of an\nhotel.\nDr Shaw, of Vancouver, is directing the work on the First\nThought Extension mine at Orient,\nWash.\nHalf of the surveys for the Pacific, Peace River and Athabaska\nrailroad are finished. This road\nwill cost $75,000,000 for construction. =--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA man by the name of Savage\nand his horse were drowned while\ncrossing the Blackwater river in\nthe Nasco valley.\nFall Fairs this year have been\ncancelled in New Westminister,\nKamloops, Revelstoke, Greenwood\nand other places.\nAt Hazelton a negro, Sam Morris, has been committed for trial,\ncharged with trying to 'shoot Rod\nMcDonald full of holes.\nThere is a bear at Keremeos\nwhich robs orchards of plums and\npeaches. The citizens of that town\nshould buy a gun and learn to\nshoot.\nSeven thousand men are employed building the P.G. & E. Ry from\nVancouver to Fort George, and\nwork will not be stopped until the\nroad is finished.\nThere are 300 men in the Chisana placer camp in Alaska. Only\n100 will remain over winter and\nthe cleanup in the camp will not\nbe over 8200,000.\nIn modern wars it costs $15,000\nto kill a man. In the Boer war it\ncost $40,000. It would be cheaper to keep them alive with free\nboard and lodging.\nAlong the Skeena there was a\ngood <-rop of small fruits this year.\nIf a market can be secured by the\nerection of a canning factory at\nHazelton the land along the Skeena\nwill produce $600 worth of fruit to\nthe acre.\n{\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*K><><><>\ufffd\ufffd000<>00<>\ufffd\ufffd0\ufffd\ufffd00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0<>0\ufffd\ufffd<>\nI    WAR \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNOTES    I\n<><>0\ufffd\ufffd<-K>0OOOO0<>O0<>00OO0OO<H_K>\nThe postoffice in, Canada willnoc\ndispatch any mail to Germany,\nAustria, Hungary, and Luxemburg.\n.      ; . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nW. L. Reid while, oh 'his way to\nthe war with the Grand Forks\nSharpshooters, fell off the train\nnear Creston and was killed.\n; The Princess Patricia regiment\nhas left Canada: for the war. Ife\nwas raised by R. B. Bennett, M.P.\nand Hamilton Gault, a Montreal\nmillionaire. Of the 1100 men 1000\nwear medals for previous service in\nSouth Africa, the Philippines and\nCuba chiefly. About 300 men are\nadventurers fresh . from Mexico.\nJack Munro who won fame through\ngaining a decision oyer, Jim Jeffries\nis a private in the ranks of the regiment, which is held by military\nauthorities to be one \"of the most\nefficient ever assembled.\nThe British checked (the Germans\nin a four dayr battle, and are now\nholding a new line of defence.\nOne million men are engaged in\na fierce battle on the, Austro-Rus-\nsian frontier. .The battle, line extends over lop miles. The Russians\nhave penetrated more than 20 miles\ninto Austrian territory.\nThe   Russians -are'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  marching\nthrough a district covered   by the\nbodies of Austrian soldiers. '\n:,.   - :.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-!..   * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .-. (\nThe British .have sunk 11 German warships off the coast of Helgoland.\nPanic how reign's\" in Danzig, the\npopulation of which is fleeing to\nBerlin. Everything indicates that\nRussia is on a road to a decisive\nvictory.\nLord Kitchener states that there\nwas a terrific slaughter of Germans\nin South Belgium during a four day\nfierce-and bloody struggle.     ,\nAlpa, the German stronghold in\nSamoa, is; taken\" .by;, the .'.British.\nSoldiers from New Zraland compel\nthe surrender of the KaiBer's most\nstrategic point, on. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-the Pacific.\nhi--\nHistory is being made on three\ngreat fields : of j action,: along 250\nmiles of French frontier, ,on, 200\nmiles of the Austro-Hungarian border, and through a wide, area of\neastern: Prussia. General Sir John\nFrench says that one dejeisive victory would be fatal to the. Germans,\nCITY COUNCIL\nThe council'liad-a special meeting on Monday eveiii-ig.\nAll city employees salaries were\nreduced 20 per cent.\nFinancial-committee -reported\nmeeting Mr. Hargreaves re reduction in street light rate, but that\nthey had not arrived at a final\nargeement.\nThe following- accounts were\nordered to be paid:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSing Lung,\n$8.10; R. Halcrow, $1.50; Ludlow\nValve Go., $9.24.   ;\nCouncil adjourned,\nNo Fair This Year\ny Recently some men were playing cards in a railway camp on the\nCottonwood river. A row sprang\nup and Dick Cameron withdrew\nfrom the game. He was followed\noutside by Delatine, an Italian,\nwho engaged Cameron in a tussle.\nThe Italian had his neck broken\niand died in a short time. Cameron was arrested and taken to Qnes-\ninel.\nAbout thirty subscribers were in\nattendance at the meeting of the\nGreenwood Agricultural Association which was held in the Star\nTheatre last Eriday night. The\npurpose of the meeting was to decide whether it wonld be advisable\nto hold a fall fair and exhibition\nthis year in our present circumstances. Mr. McArthur, the president called the meeting to order\nand, having explained its purpose,\ncalled for a motion. Mr. White\nlaid the situation clearly before the\nmeeting and ably, discussed it with\nall its pros and cons. He showed\nthat excellent progress had been\nmade with the collection of funds\nand, while willing, to. be governed\nby the majority, was most distinctly in favor of holding the fall fair.\nMayor McLaine admitted the validity of many of the plausible arguments advanced by Mr. White, but\npointed out that Canada in general\nwith Greenwood included too, was\non the verge of acute financial distress and every nickel would be\nneeded to save many from . actnal\nwant. On a vote it was decided to\nabandon the fair this year and a\ncommittee was appointed to collect\nsufficient fands to pay off the debt\nof abont $250. 'Nearly half this\nsum, $112, was subscribed M once.\nThe nicest thing abont a sammer\nvacation is the way yon enjoy being back from it. THE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\n.THE LEDGE\n$2 a year in Canada,   and   $2.50   in\nUnited States.\nR. T. LOWERY.\nEditor and Financier.\nthe\nThis is the open season for Kaisers in Europe.\nNone of the men who caused the\nwar in Europe are-on the firing line\nbut they are all entitled to a seat\nin hell.\nWe would rather be a bat and\nlive upon the spooks of the night,\nthan be the mad ruler of the Teutons.\nThe I. W. W.'s have not yet\nraised a hand to better the condition of the soldiers in Europe, who\nare working overtime for starvation wages.\nAll people should put themselves on war rations, and waste no\nfood. The press can render a great\nservice by giving thiB wide publicity every week.\nThere are 70 millions of people\nin Germany, chiefly fools or they\nwould no be led by the nose by a\nmadman who iB laboring under tbe\ndelusion that he ia a deluxe edition\nof Napoleon.\nWar is catching like the measles.\nWe would not be surprised to see\ncivil war breakout inGermany within 60 days. It is a sure thing that\nthe Kaiser will have to cash in before many moons.\nIn England the bishops have declared war on tight skirts, and will\nendeavor to drive them ont of\nGreat Britain. They have not yet\nsaid anything about big fat men\nwearing short pants.\nKraut, sausage and limbnrger\nare the greatest allies of Germany.\nCut them out of the firing line, and\ntheJKaiser'sJgunmen'and strippers\nof American women, would roll\ninto the sump as a white chip falls\ninto the cuspidor.\nJust now the flag waver has a\nsteady job in Canada. Yoa find\nhim in every town throwing hot\nair in large gusts at tbe Germans,\nand begging somebody to hold his\ncoat until he wades in and cleans\nup tb.9 enemy of the British flag.\nThat is as far as he goes, for when\nit comes to putting np money and\nblood in defense of the Empire he\nis non est.\nComing into  Merritt  this  week ,\nlu^mZtl^: S-^jHotpoint Electric Appliances\nties which he located right on  tin\nFoR'centnries we have been fed\nnpon the wrong kind of religious\ndope. When all the world becomes imbued with the religion of\nlove, life and troth, wars and all\nother troubles will cease. The\nwreck of matter and the crumbling\nof empires does not fizz npon the\nindividual who is touched with the\ndivine current, and rises above the\nmud. strata.\nInstead of being a partner of\n\"Gott\", we are inclined to believe\nthat the Kairer is Satin re-incarnated, doomed ior a certain time to\ncurse the earth, until Europe is\npainted red, amid the shrieks of\ndying men, the moanB of starving\nwomen, and the tears of little\nchildren. Doubly damned must\neventually be the human syphax,\nwho has bathed tbe world in\nblood and tears.\nThe warring nations in Europe\nare all Christians, and have a vast\nnumber of priests and parsons\nsteadily praying to God to let them\nwin. These same clergymen preach\nthat God is all powerful and can\ndo anything. If this is true then\nthe uncharitable will blame Him\nfor the awful war. Perhaps God\nis deaf and cannot hear the sky\npilots, or is it possible that He is\nwaiting for a wireless from His\npartner in Berlin.\nIn the Dominion a Canadian\nPatriotic Fond has been started\nfor the purpose of seeing that families do not want who have sent a\nbread winner to the war. This\nfund is not far reaching enough.\nIt is too narrow and selfish. What\nabout the thousands of people who\ncannot get work and have no\nmoney? Are they to starve because they have no bread winner\nat the front? In a few weeks many\nthousands of men, women and\nchildren in B.C. and other parts of\nCanada will be crying for bread.\nThe Patriotic Fond mast be broadened so as to take in all who need\nfood.\nThe Ruth-Hope at Sandon is\nstill running, with seventeen men\non the payroll, and will not close\ndown. Other properties being\nworked in the vicinity of Sandon\nare the Surprise, Noble Five, Payne\nand two leases on the Reco. Development is also being done on\na number of claims in a small way.\nThe Capella. Apex, and California,\nnear New Denver are working\nsmall forces, and on Four-mile the\nonly shut down is the Van-Roi.\nThe Standard, Hewitt and also a\nnumber of small outfits are working. The number of men let ont\nin tbe Slocan, owing to the war ia\nnot more than two hundred.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSlocan Record.\nline of the K.V.R. at the summit\nof the Hope Mountains, Mr. Win.\nMcNeil has been kept busy explaining to a curious public where\nthis ore came from, where the properties are located, what the rock\ncontains in metala and every other\nimaginable question that might be\nasked him.\nTo a Herald representative Mr.\nMcNeil explained that tbe property\nfrom which the samples now on\ndisplay in Mr. Radclift's office window is at the summit of the Hope\nMountain near Mr. Milkulich'sNo.\n2 camp. The ledge was cub when\ngrading on the Kettle Valley wat>\nbeing done. The ledge said Mr.\nMcNeil never cropped at the surface, but on examination of the\nground he located the ledge a little\nfarther up the hill with a little\nwork. Where the railway grade\ngoes through tbe property the ledge\nis 10 feet wide is BOlid and in\nplace.\nMr. McNeil said that he had forwarded samples of the ore to the\nGovernment minerologists at Ottawa and that he expected an assay\nreturn in a few days. Mr. McNeil\nhas purchased the two camps of\nMr. Milkulich s nnd' will move\nthem to his property where he will\nerect a cabin and blacksmith shop\nprior to starting work on the property, which Mr. McNeil intends\ndoing very shortly.\nAND\n?si\nThe   family   remedy   for   Coughs   and Colds\n\"Shiloh costs  so   little   and does   so much'\nDirect from the Factory to the consumer\nBy PARCEL, POST\nat  wholesale .prices    to advertise our\nHrands.\nEvery cigar we make is absolutely (ruar-\nfl.-i.eecl   tilled.with genuine Uavana-\n3'jller\nBox of So's B.C.   full weight,  five\ninches long $3.50.\nBox of 50's  O.S    4   inches   long,\nConchas, \ufffd\ufffd3 00.\nBox of \"Brillantes\" Clear   Havana\nWrapper, full weight, 5 inches\nlong, 50 S $5.00.\nSend money order, 'or'certified\ncheque. Do not send money unless registered.\nReferences:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdR. G, DUNN A CO.\nWILBERC & WOLZ,\nNew Westminster, B. C\nDR. A. MILLOY\nDENTIST\nAll   the   latest   methods   in   high-class\nDentistry.\nLOO BUILDING\nCorner Abbott & Hastings Streets.\nVANCOUVER,   -   -   -   B.C.\nCOUNTY COURT OF YALE\nA SITTING of the County Court of Yale will\nbe holden at the Court House, Greenwood,\non Tuesday the 8th day of September 1914, at\neleven o'clock in the forenoon.\nBy order,\nWALTER DEWDNEY,\nRegistrar C. C of Y\nitl\nyour Razors Honed\nand Your Baths at\nFRAWLEY S\nBARBER SHOP\nGREENWOOD.\nMazda Tungsten Lamps\nPRICES REASONABLE\nGreenwood City Waterworks Company\nGet A Birks' Catalogue\nWrite for one today\nWATER   NOTICTC\nDIVERSION ASD USB\nTake notice that I, David Oxley, whose\naddress is Eholt, B. C, will apply for a\nlicence to talce and use 20 inches of water\nout of Eholt Creek, which Hows southwest and drains into Boundary Creek\nabout 7 miles south-west.\nThe water will be diverted from the\nstream at a point about 300 feet from\ncorner of lot 1223 and will be used for\ndomestic purpose upon the pre-emption [\ndescribed as Number 1235. This notice '\nwas posted on the ground on this roth day\nof August, 1914. A copy of this notice\nand an application pursuant thereto and\nto the \"Water Act, 1914,\" will be filed iu\nthe office of the Water Recorder al Grand\nForks, B. C. Objections to the application may be filed with the said Water Recorder or with the Comptroller of Water\nRights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria,\nB.C., within 30 days after the first appearance of this notice in a local newspaper. The land is for farming purposes\nfor which purposes I am going to use the\nwater. The date ol the first publication\nof this notice is Aug. 13, 1614.\nD AVID OXLEY, Applicant.\nNotice to Delinauent Co-Owner.\nTo I.. A. Smith, or to any person or\npersons to whom you may have transferred your interests, take notice that I,\nthe undersigned co-owner with you in the\nButterfly mineral claim, situated on Cranberry creek, about two miles from Beaverdell in the Greenwood Mining Division\nof Yale-Cariboo District, and province of\nBritish Columbia, have done the required\nwork on the above mentioned claim for\nthe years 1913 and 1914 in order to hold\nthe same under section 24 of the mineral\nact, and if within 90 days of the publication of this notice you fail or refuse to\ncontribute your portion of such expenditure together with the costs of this advertisement, your interest in the said\nmineral claim will become the property\nof the undersigned under section 4 of the\nMineral Act Amendment Act of 1900.\nDated at Greenwood, B.C., this i7th\nday of June, 1914.\nMARK KAY,\nCo-Owner.\nIt is the most practical book of its kind in circulation in British Columbia. To study it is\nlike a visit to   our   big store   in   Vancouver.\nChoose your September Wedding Gifts from\nthe illustrations on its pages. Every description\nis correct,   Every illustration is accurate,\nIn Sterling Silver, Silver Plate, Cutlery,\nCut GlaSS and Art GOOdS we assure the most\nsatisfying qualities and utilities. Write for this\ncatalogue it is sent free.\nHENRY  BIRKS &  SONS, LIMITED\nJEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS\nGeo. E Trorcy, Mao. Din VANCOUVER, B. C,\nSMOKE\t\nImperator and Kootenav Standard\nCigars.    Made bv\nJ.  C. THELIN & Co., NELSON\nOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO\nT.    THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSED AUD REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\nooo^cw><v<%<vr>\ufffd\ufffdoo4>tv-vv-vaoo<\ufffd\ufffdfv<vvo\n-?iriP^tP_^i?'iPtPirViPiPiPV3P.P,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcj\ufffd\ufffd,iPiriJ,jr_\ufffd\ufffd,__r\ufffd\ufffdPff,i\ufffd\ufffd,i<,\ufffd\ufffd'>pjripirr\nSynopsis of.Coal Mining Regulations.\n\ufffd\ufffd\"*OAI. mining rights of the Dominion.\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^ in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territor3r, the Northwest Territories and in a portion of British\nColumbia, may be leased for a term of\ntwenty-one years at an annual rental of\n\ufffd\ufffd1 an acre. Not more than 2,560 acres\nwill be leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lease must be made\nby the applicant in person to the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of the district inwhich the\nrights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must be\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, and in unsurveyed\nterritory the tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied\nby a fee of $5 which will be refunded if\nthe rights applied for are not available;\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid on the merchantable output of the\nmine at the rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns\naccounting for the full quantity of merchantable coal mined and pay the royalty\nthereon: If the coal mining rights are\nnot being operated, such returns should\nbe furnished at least once a year.\nThe lease will include the coal mining\nrights only, but the lessee may be permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may be considered necessary for the working of the mine at the\nrate of $10.00 an acre.\nFor full information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Lauds.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnauthorized publication of this\nadvertisement will not be paid for.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd08782\nBank of Montreal\nKSTA BUSHED 1817\nCAPITAL AUTHORIZED S2S.OOO.OOO:\nCapital, paid up, $16,000,000        Rest, $16,000,000.\nUNDIVIDED PROFITS.  0I.O46.217.SO\nTotal Assets (October 1913) $242,263,219.60.\nPresident: H. V. Merbdith, Esq.\nGeneral Manager: Sir Frederick Williams-Taylor\nBranches in London, Eng, {&\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'cSSiSU} New York, Chicago\nBuy and Sell Sterling Exchange and Cable Transfers.    Grant Commercial and\nTravellers' Credits, available in any part of the world.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nBranches.\nC. SWEENEY. Supt. of B. C\nVanconver\nInterest Allowort a I\nCurrent Itateij.\nR. M. Mansfield, Manager.\nPrinceton\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nSIR EDMUND WALKER. C.V\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0,LL.D,D.CX-, President\nJUJgftWPER LAIRD, General Manager JOHN AIEP. Asa't General Manager\n&\nfc\nfc\n$6\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nSTAY AT:\nCbe Strathcona Rote!\nWHEN IN NELSON\nUnder new management, JAMES MARSHALL, Prop\nNelson's best located and mos.t popular hotel.    Rooms with\nprivate baths, steam heat in every room.\nCommercial Rates Given,        1 Best Sample Rooms in Nelson,\nBest attention  given to tourist and Family Trade,\n******************   iPiP-nPiPiPiPitPiPiPiPiPiPiP-PiPir\nHotel Brooklyn\nThe Only First Class and Up-tcDate\nHotel in Phoenix, New from cellar\nto roof. Best Sample rooms in the\nBoundary,    Opposite Great Northern\nDepot,   X\nModern Bathrooms\nSTEAM HEATED,     ELECTFIC LIGHTED\nO, D, Bush, Prop\/\nPhoenix, B, C\nTEMPERANCE I\nis all right if shorn of humbuggery.\nToo much water drinking is just\nas injurious as too much liquor or\nanything else.\nOUR PURE WINES\nAM) LIQUORS\nare medicinal if not abused. Every\nhousehold should have a moderate\nsupply of pure -wines or liquors in\nthe closet for emergency\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeither\nunexpected visitors or sudden illness, when a drop of pure liquor\nI        iiiiiiiiwiiyiiwPTOBW-   iiSST7 forestfl11 a11 necessity\n| Greenwood Liquor Company, Importers, Greenwood, B. C\nSH\nCAPITAL, $15,000,000    RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000\nSAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS\nInterest at the current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 and\nupwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accounts\nare welcomed.    Accounts may be opened and operated by mail.\nAccounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, withdrawals to be made by any on* of them or by the survivor. S21\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\n-A, H. MARCON, Manager,\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nReduced Fares\n FOR\t\nSUMMER OF 1914\nOn Sale June 1st, to  September 30th\nFinal Return Limit October 31st\nWinnipeg\nSt. Paul\nChkag-q\nToronto\n$60.00\n60.00\n72.50\n92.00\nMontreal \ufffd\ufffd\nSt. John   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHalifax\nNew York\n$105.00\n120.00\n129.35\n108.50\nCompartment Observation Gars* Electric\nLighted Standard Sleepers\n\"Canadian Pacific Service\"\nS.\" SM^ATON,, -'\/';;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,>:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/\nActing; District Passenger Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<hC\ufffd\ufffdx~><k~:k~:k.._-4x^\nWindsor\nTHOROUGHLY  RENOVATED AND SPECIALLY\nADAPTED FOR COMMERCIAL TRADE\nTHE WINDSOR HOTEL is one of the Dest furnished\nhotels in the west. It is located in the heart of Greenwood and within easy reach of all the financial and\ncommercial institutions of the Copper Metropolis.\nHeated with Steam andJLit by Electricity\nCommodious sample rooms.    Thenar, is replete with\nall modern beverages and the meals are the best. Booms\nreserved by telegraph.\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nI\n?\n?\n^^h^^h^^^x*.*;*:.^^\nCbe fiumc fiotel\nnelson, B.e.\nThe only up\/tcdate Hotel in the interior.\nin every respect,\nFirst-class\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nHot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\neach room.\nROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THE BEST\nFirst Class Bar and Barber Shop\n15 FREE SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated; Electric Lighted.\nRATES $1.00 per da3' aud up; European Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats. -,\nWester^^\nNBWMAKKKX   HOTJSI.\nIs the home for all tourists and\nmillionaires visiting.New Denver, British Columbia.\nA. JACOBSON. Proprietor.\nTHK    PBOVINOK    HOTEI.\nGrand Forks, B.C., is in the centre\nof the city, and furnishes the public\nwith every accommodation at\nreasonable rates.\nKmll T.arBeii, Proprietor,\nTHE   KASLO   HOTKL\nKaslo, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is a comfortable\nhome for ali who travel to that\ncity.\nJ. W. COCKLE, rprop.\nB1_IDKSVI!--K   UOTBI,.\nBridesville,   B. C.   This  hotel   is\nwithin easy reach of all the leading\nBoundary towns and the centre oi\na fine farming district.\nTHOMAS   DONALD,   Proprietor.\nARLINGTON HOTEL\nTrail, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThis hotel has been\nthoroughly renovated. It is heated\nby steam, and has hot and cold\nwater in all rooms. A pleasant\nhome for all who travel.\nJAMES WILLIAMSON, Proprietor\nTHE SIMILKAMEEN HOTEL\nPrinceton. This hotel Is new, comfortable\nwell-furnished, and is close to the railway\ndepot. Modern accommodation and sample rooms.\nSUMMERS & WABDLE, Proprietors\nEXCHANGE HOTEL\nSandon. The largest liotel in Satt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddon. Large and pleasant rooms\nDining room and restaurant\nWines, Liquors, and Cigars. A\ncomfortable hotel for miners and\ntravellers.\nTHOMPSON & HOLTEN, Proprietors\nQUEEN'S   HOTEL,\nPHOUINIX^\nO.\nThe Newest and Largest Hotel in\nthe City. Everything neat, clean\nand comfortable. Steam heat and\nelectric light. Meals and drinks at\nall hours.\nHARTMAtf & WALSH\nProps.\nON PARL\/E FRANCAIS\nNATIONAL HOTEL\nGREENWOOD, B. C.\nThe Really Best House\nin the Boundary.\nRecently Remodelled and\nStrictly Up-to-Date.\nRestaurant in connection\nOWEN   BOTER      -      PROP\nThe Knob Hill Hotel\nPHOENIX.\nOne of the largest hotels in\n_the city.   Beautiful-location,\nfine rooms and tasty meals.'\nA. O. JOHNSON\nPROP.\nRIVERSIDE HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C.   This is one of\nthe oldest hotels in the Kettle Val\nley.   Excellent accommodation for\nall travellers.\nS. T. LARSEN, Proprietor,\nALGOMA'HOTEL\nDeadwood, B. C. This hotel is\nwithin easy distance of Greenwood\nand provides a comfortable home\nfor travellers.     The bar has the\nbest of wines, liquors and cigars.\nJAMES HENDERSON Proprietor\nTULAMEEN HOTEL\nPrinceton, B. C . is the  headquarters  for   miners,   investors\nand railroad men.   A fine location and everything first-class\nKIRKPATRICK & COULTHARD, Proprietor*.\nROCK CREEK HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C. This hotel is\nsituated on historic ground, and\nhas tasty meals and excellent\nrooms.\nT. R. HANSON, Proprietor.\nI\nIJ. B. CAMERON,\na Leading Tailor of the Kootenays.\nKASLO      B.C\nEXCHANGE   HOTEL\nKASLO\nPlenty of first class rooms, and\na scenic balcony,   Every thing\nnew >: and cheerful about:' the\nhouse, vThedinrngrpom is in\ncharge of one of the most noted\nchefs in the Kootenay, Friends | a * wa   q>i< inr\ntourists and strangers alwaysj **** IU   a IAUE\nwelcome, * ~\nALLEN & McQWSTON\nProprietors,\n:i\nI \"COALHONf HOTEL\n\ufffd\ufffdp srrir ir r it if irrn* if it jp it u* \ufffd\ufffdp\n%   nn itiiAwm   w\ufffd\ufffd-%r_-..--.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ^j\nCOALMONT, B.C. k\nFirst-class  Accomodation fc\nfor all Guests ^\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nI\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nHotel is new and well furnished.\nNear Station-\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nExcellent cuisine and bar supplied *\nwith the best \ufffd\ufffd\nfc\n.       |j\nThe Coalmont Hotel Co,, Ltd. fc\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdp ip ip ip ip ip _r ip ip \ufffd\ufffdp _r ip ip ip *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ip ip\nBUSINESS CARDS.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**'^^^**^^^-^^\ufffd\ufffd-\"*yWN-'n_ni%-\ufffd\ufffdM*\ufffd\ufffd\nT.  0.  GUNDERS0N\nContractor and Builder\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDEAXER IN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDoors, Windows, Sash.\nAll kinds of carpenter work neatly done.\nBox 127     -     -   -     Greenwood.\nFRED A. STARKEY,\nNBI^ON.B. C.\nMINING\n-.  BROKER-- --^-i--\n4PROSPECTS   BOUGHT   AND. SOLD\nGreenwood & Midway\nLeaves Greenwood for Spokane\nat 8:20 a.m,, & for Oroville at 3:10\np. m. Leave ordera at Terhane's\nCigar Store.       Ohabues BusS-nx,\n< <\na","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1914_09_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0308351","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.088333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-118.676389","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Published as The Ledge from 1906-05-10 to 1926-07-29; Published as The Greenwood Ledge from 1926-08-05 to 1929-05-23.<br><br>Frequency: Weekly","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Greenwood, B.C. : R.T. Lowery","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1914-09-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1914-09-03 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\/1.0308351"}