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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\/1.0308434\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 'mrni-\n^-^'-^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * A y\n8'W*   '>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a-..\nd\n\/\/\nTHE  OLDEST   MINING  GAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nI\nIf- Vol.   XXI.\nGREENWOOD, B. C, THURSDAY, MAY 6,   1915\nNo. 43\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnt\nGreenwoods   Big   Furniture  Store\nSee pur New Spring\nLinoleums; Carpets, Squares,\nand Various Small Rugs\nSpecial Discount For Cash\nT. M. GULLEY & Co.\nOpposite Postoffice. GREENWOOD, B. C. Phone 27\n1\nWALTER   G.   KENNEDY\nGREENWOOD,   B.  C.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nJ  TOBACCOS, CIGARS, CONFECTIONERY, STATIONERY |\n|   A Full Stock of First Class Pipes.       Pipe Repairs  g\nI. a Specialty. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd __j\nV\ufffd\ufffd-Mn.MIIM-Mi-_-_H--__i\ufffd\ufffdaMHilBMMB\ufffd\ufffdW;\nThe Midway lore lor Quality Goods;\nTake home some of our tea and coffee, Back\nyour\" wagon up to our front door arid have it loaded\nwith hams, sugar, flour, and any other kind of prox\nvisions that you need at your city residence, or \/-\\\ndown on tHe ranch, Do not forget to lock at our\nDry Goods. Boots, Shoes, etc,\nJAS. G. McMYNN, MIDWAY, B. C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffde5_^swg__s=ft?g^^\n*\np, agRNs & co.\nDealers in Fresh and Salt Meats, Fish , Jj\nand Poultry!     Shops in nearly all the <j\ntowns of the Boundary and Kootenay. jj\nCOPPER STREET, GREENWOOD, B.C. I\n!'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<(\nK>\ufffd\ufffd'*0\ufffd\ufffdl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***<'<'**'^>^>'8\">*'><>^.\nII Nearly AU Our Goods Will\nj i Be Sold For Half Price For\nthe. Next Thirty Days\nI Greenwood Liquor Comp-ti^ Tmponers, 6reenwood, B. C.\nESTABLISHED 1817\nBOARD   OF   DIRECTORS:\nH. Y. MEREDITH. Ek., PrwUait.\nR.B.A_mw,Ei\ufffd\ufffd. '    .E,B.Gw\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj_-i\ufffd\ufffdl<__.E-<_,\nSirWillLinMa<_.OBtl-l. . Has. Robt. Mtckar.\nSirTloi.S_uinil1____y,K.C.V.O. C. H\/Hm-mi. Eiq.'\nA. B_u__t-rt.o, Eiq. C. B. GorIob, Ek.\nH. R. DrummanJ, Eiq. D. F>t_nh Aura., Ek.\nWm. McMuter. Ek.\nSir Frederick Wg_Uai-T\ufffd\ufffdj-W. Ce\ufffd\ufffdar\ufffd\ufffdl Muitcr.\nCapital Paid up .      -    $16,000,000.\nRest -      .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       16,000,000.\nUndivided Profit* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- 1,232,669.\nTotal A.\ufffd\ufffdeU (Oct. 1914) 259,481,663.\nSavings Department\nDeposits of $i.ooa_i& upward received\nand Interest allowed at highest current\nrates. Savings Department accounts\ngiven special attention.\nE. E. L. Dewdney, Manager, Greenwood Branch.\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nSIR EDMUND WAl-KER.C.V.O_,LL.D^ D.O-U, President\nALEXANDER LAIKD. General Manager JOHN AIRD, Ant General Manatter\nCAPITAL, $15,000,000    RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000\nFARMERS' BUSINESS\nHie Canadian Bank of Commerce extends to Fanners every\nfacility for tbe transaction of their banking business, including\nthe discount and collection of sales notes. Blank sales notes\naie supplied free of charge on application. sss\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nh, H, MAKCON, Manager.\nScreen Doors, Screen\nWire Cloth, Poultry\nNetting, and Staples.\nNails, Locks, Hinges,\nA. L. WHITE\nNew and Second Hand Store\nAlways Ready For\nORDERS\n^\nWilliam C. Arthurs\nTHE  BREAD &  CAKE  BAKER\nVienna Bakery. Greenwood.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe Latest in Ladies Misses\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and Childrens' Hats\n\ufffd\ufffd^^Si\ufffd\ufffd5^3?^^?___^aN3?5-iW^5-_^3^\nAround Home\nRibbons, Flowers and Millinery Novelties\nW.Elson&Co\n.  Copper St.\nf\n?\nx\nx\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?\nX\nX\nFirst  Class  Work  and\nPrompt Attention\nPrices. Reasonable\n| E. A. Black, Phoenix |\n| W. G. Kennedy, Agent f\n|        Greenwood f\nStar Theatre\nFriday,   May   7th\nVITAGRAPH     SPECIAL\nCOMEDY   DRAMA IN  TWO   PARTS\nFEATURING\nJohn Bunny and flora Finch\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IN A \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"BASEBALL LOVE AFFAIR\"\n'      ENTITLED\t\nHEARTS and DIAMONDS\n'fWITHIN   THE   NUSE\"\n(WESTERN)\nMILLE   LA   MODE\n(See tliis one)\n\"Greater  Love   Hath   No  Man\"\n(Japanese Tragedy)\nTHE   POISONED    CHOP\n(Comedy)\nSIX REELS IN~ ALL SIX\nDoors open 7:45. Pcrfontinncc at S sharp\nPrices     Children    15c.    Adults   25c.\nChristian Science service will\nbe held in the Oddfellows Hall on\nSunday at It a.m. All welcome.\nOn the the third Friday of each\nmonth at 8 p. m. testimonial\nmeetings will be held, in the\nsame hall. Sunday school every\nSunday morning.\nWANTS. Etc\nFor Sai_e.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew farm wagons.\n3, V\/( and 3% inch. Made in\nCanada.    At Kinneys.\nFor Sale.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFour New Mc-\nClanahan Incubators, cheap.\nBrown's, Ferry,   Wash.\nBulls For Sale,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI have five\nair six Hereford and; Shorthorns\nto dispose of, prices right. John\nR. Jackson, Midway,\nEggs For Setting, ^Barred\nRock and S. C. White Leghorn,\n$3.00 per 15 eggs. From stock\nbred for laying. A. F. H. Meyer.\nWanted.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA young man wants\nboard by the month, apply at The\nLedge office.\nWanted.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA male cook desires a situation. Competent\nbread, meat and pastry cook.\nSober and reliable. Address,\nChef. Ledge office, Greenwood,\nHugh Laing, of Princeton, has\nreturned to Greenwood'!\nService in the Presbyterian\nchurch, Sunday, tvlay 9,';at 11 a. m.\nSeveral soldier boys from Grand\nForks came to Greenwood last\nweek j\nE. E. Gibson, Supt. kootenay\nPower Co., was in Greenwood on\nFriday.\nF. Jaynes, who has been in the\nhospital for some weeks, is improving.\n. Mrs. A. L. White leaves this\nweek, to join her husband in\nPrinceton. .      *\nMrs. Marcon and her sister of\nHalifax, are visiting their father\nat Victoria.\nT. Harman, of Midway, has\nrented Col. Glossop's ranch at\nChristina lake.\nW. W. Bradley, Govt. Assessor,\nof Nelson, paid Greenwood a\nvisit on Thursday.\nThe Gun Club will give a shoot\nand dance at Rock Creek on Victoria Day, May 24th.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\nMr. and Mrs. Wm. Swain, of\nLethbridge, Alta.,. are visiting\nCapt. and Mrs. Swain.!\nLast month a marriage license\nwas issued to Harry T. Tilton\nand Morfydd Bateman.\nA marriage license has been\nissued to Eli Radack aud Johan\nKovjch both of Phoenix;.\nThe G. N. R.. has resumed its\ndaily passenger service between\nGrand Forks and Phoenix.\nN. Thompson, of Vancouver,\nagent for the Campbell Laird Co.\nwas in Greenwood on Thursday.\nC. 8. Craddock, agent tor the\nGiant Powder Co., .made a trip\nthrough the.Boundary last week.\nBig Rory McLeod was in town\nthis week, on his way to the\nSprings, to dispose of a' load of\nrheumatism.\nA. Kruegar went to Colville,\nWash., on Friday to attend the\nfuneral of his brother, who died\nou the 27th ulto.\nE. Spragget, road superintendent, and Lieut McQuarrie, of\nthe Grsnd Forks Sharpshooters,\nwere in the city on Friday.\nMessrs. W. George and W.\nJohns, who have a lease on the\nSkylark mine,; shipped a carload\nof ore to the smelter last week.\nAs will be seen in the advertising of the City Waterworks\nCo., a big .reduction has been\nmade in the price of Tungsten\nlamps.\nThe programme at the Star\nTheatre last week was a humdinger The war pictures alone\nare well worth the price of admission.\nWm. Henderson, of Victoria,\nresident architect for the Dominion government .will inspect the\nGreenwood postoffice building\nthis week.-\nThis issue of The Ledge closes\nits ninth year in Greenwood. It\nwas published in four other towns\nbefore coming to the red metal\nmetropolis.\nEnglish, Swiss and American\nwatch and clock repairing. All\nwork guaranteed. C. A. Aden-\npur, opposite Windsor Hotel\nGreenwood.\nDuncan Mcintosh has been appointed Fire Warden for the district of Greenwood, duties to\nstart immediately. The close\nseason expires Sept. IS.\nGeo. Mario and Geo. Miller, of\nthe Grand Forks Sharpshooters\nspent a few days in town this\nweek. They report that the\nGreenwood boys arc doing well\nand are anxious to go to the front.\nD. McPherson, C.P.R. agent\naccompanied by his wife, left on\nSaturday morning for St. Louis.\nMo., where Mr. McPherson will\nattend tbe convention of telegraphers. They will be away\nabout a month. C. L Jeaues, ot\nTrail is relieving here.\nThe bachelors of Boundary\nFalls gave a dance at the school\nhouse on. Friday last at which\nthere was a large crowd. The\nfarmers are beginning to be recognized as something more than\n\"hay-seeds,\" because people are\ngetting more: enlightened and\nthey see that if it Wasn't for the\nfarmer everyone else would suffer,\neven the editors.\nThe\/case of the Hindu charged\nwith stealing a registered letter,\nforgery and uttering came up before His Honor Judge Brown on\nThursday last: :.He wsis acquitted\nfor forgery bat was; sentenced to\nthree years for stealing and uttering. A. S. Black, defended and\nI. H. Hallett, prosecuted. He\nwas taken to Westminster penitentiary on Saturday by Chief\nSimpson.\nEastern capitalists have written to Al^Morrison stating that\nthey are prepared to spend a large\nsum of money on development\nwork at the Moreen mine. Dead-\nwood camp. Mr. Morrison suggested diamond drilling and is\nnow waiting a reply. He stated\npositively to The Ledge that\nthese capitalists are ready to\nmake great developments in the\nDeadwood camp.\nThe patriotic dance at the\nJewel mine last Wednesday at\nwhich Mrs. Banks .was the hostess was a decided success. The\nhall was crowded, the night fine\nand everyone was in fine spirits;\nbut then, these dances at the\nJewel are always enjoyable affairs. Quite a large crowd from\nGreenwood and Midway attended\nand all report having had a very\npleasaut evening.\nThe sad intelligence has been\nreceived iu Greenwooh of the\ndeath of John Manson, which\noccurred in Elgin .Scotland, on\nApril 13. Mr. Manson formerly,\nworked for the C.P.R. and later\nwith the B. C. Copper company.\nHe was a manly young man and:\nhad a host of friends in this district who join with The Ledge in:\nextending sympathy to the sor-!\nrowing relatives.\nA. O. Johnson and Danny\nDeane were visitors to the Argo\ntunnel, at Greenwood, on Tuesday. They were .the first auto-:\nmobile party to drive clear up to\nthe portal of the workings, which-\nnow extends for a distance of\n1,300 feet. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd According to Mr.'\nJohnson, the footwall ot the ledge1\nrecently struck has not been un-;\ncovered, and the assay returns\ncontinue to be . satisfactory.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj\nPioneer. ... j\nLast Thursday evening thev\nOddfellows entertained their\nfriends to a party iu the Lodge\nHall. The attendance was not\nquite so large as usual owing to,\nmany ot the - Brothers being\naway, but those who availed\nthemselves of the invitation, de-:\nclare that they had a right royal\ntime. The first part of the even:\ning was given up to cards in\nwhich Mrs.' ,G. Clerf ,w.pn the\nladies prize and J. L. White'the*\ngentlemens prize. Mrs. Bryant\nand B. Taylor the booby prizes.1\nSupper came next and was \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd en?\njoyed by all. The floor was\ncleared \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and a dancing session1\nstarted and to excellent music\nwas kept up until 3 a.m. These\nsocial affairs have been very popular in Greenwood and the Odd;\nfellows are to be congratulated^\non giving their friends- such an\nenjoyable time. ''  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAt her beautiful home on Fri^\nday April 30th, Mrs. W. R;\nDewdney, was the charming hosti\ness at a reception in honor of her\nsister-in-law, Mrs. E. E. Li\nDewdney. The drawing room\nlooked very pretty in purple and\nwhite lilacs and clemates, while\nthe dining room was beautifully\ndecorated with red and white\ncarnations and similex. - Little\nRuth Dicker opened the door\nwhile Mrs. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Leggatt and Mrs!\nMcCutcheon poured the tea and\ncoffee. Miss Marjorie McArthur\nand Mis_> ,Joy Cummins, serve4\nrefreshments. Among the invited guests were: Mrs. Robert\nWood, \"Mrs. C. J. Leggatt, Mrs;\nC. J. McArthur, Miss Marjorie\nMcArthur, Mrs. G. B. Taylor,\nMrs. Wm. Jenks, Mrs. IL C.\nCummins, Mrs. S. Oliver, Mrs.\nHugh McCutcheon, Miss McLean,\nMrs. P. H. McCurrach, Mrs. J. D.\nMacLean, Mrs. F. W. McLaine,\nMrs. L. A. Smith. Mrs. C. _3_.:\nShaw, the Misses Shaw, Mrs. G.\nA. Rendell, Mrs. J. L. Coles,\nMrs. J. A. Malcolm, Mrs. Duncan\nMcintosh, Mrs. E. Pot Is, Mrs. T.\nCuddeford, Mrs. W. R. Phillips,\nMiss Phillips, Mrs. John Simpson, Mrs. C. H. Tve, Mrs. J.\nHolmes, Mrs. J. H. Hobbins,\nMts. E. Foyle Smith. Mrs. E.C.\nWalters. Mrs. E. J. Dicker, Mrs.\nJ. H. Willcox.\ngf^S?5-sH5^__^SJ>\ufffd\ufffd^5_^iS^^^_^^N^\nWestern Float\nA Slow Line\nAs the new electric car reached\nthe terminus an old man with a\nlong white beard rose feebly from a\ncorner seat and tottered towards\nthe door. He was. however stopped by the conductor, who said:\n\"Yon r fare please.''\n\"I paid my fare.\"\n\"When? I don't remember it.\"\n\"Why, I paid you when I got\noa the car.\"\n\"Where did: you get on??,...',    .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'At the liapjrf&Jfr   ,\n\"That won't do. When I left\nthe Plough there was only a little\nboy on the car.\";\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Yes,\" answered the old man.\n\"I know   It.      I was  that  little\njboy.\"\nTrail has six female teachers.\nRepublic    will   try   oil   on   its\nstreets.\nThere is a little typhoid fever in\nthe Slocan.\nNavigation opens May 20 on the\nYakon river.\nKaslo will have a celebration 011\nMay 24, as usual.\nHedley will have a roller skating\nrink this summer.\nA Chink has started a kite factory in High River.\nIn April tho payroll in Rossland\nwas about 8100,000.\nThe sale of war stamps is about\n8100 a month in Kaslo.\nIn Chilliwack crushed sea shells\nare fed to the chickens.\nOwen Williams died in Lillooet\nlast month aged 81 years.\n. At Union Bay 50 coke ovens are\nbeing prepared for action.\nThere are 1,754,574 automobiles\nrunning in the United States.\nThe first Japanese wedding in\nHazelton took place last month.\nAn antelope park is to be established at China Coulee in Alberta.\nA sawmill at Nakusp has sold 25\ncarloads of white pine lumber in\nChicago.\nThe Staples Lumber Co. of Wy-\ncliffe has'put 150 men to work in\nthe bueh. \/\nAfter the war it is quite likely\nthat polygamy will be practised.in\nGermany.\nJohnny Collins, of Ashcroft\nthinks there should be a bounty on\nrattlesnakes.     .\nEggs are so plentiful in Quesnel\nthat the price have dropped to 50\ncents a dozen.\nHugh Henderson has sold the\nHotel A.inerican in Rossland to\nAdolphe\\Boileau.\nIn a montn this spring the Trail\nsmelter shipped 240,000 ounces of\nsilver to Japan and China.\nNew Denver has a new post-\noffice, and the locfe boxes are a\nsurprise-to the community,\nHomer McLean and Bert Rus-\nsel of Hedley, will spend the summer prospecting in Manitoba.\nE. F. Rahal has opened a grocery store in Blairmore. He was\nformerly in. business at Hosmer, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAy\/Watt, of North Vancouver,\nrecently \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd caught a steelhead . at\nSeymour that weighed  18 pounds.\nAt Telkwa, Henry McMeen has\nbeen committed for trial upon a\ncharge of having killed P. Duni-\ngan.\nThe highest mine in B.C. is in\nthe Slocan, although the Red Rose\nclaims' at Skeena Crossing claim\nthat distinction.\nJoe Donnelly, of Quesnel, while\ntrying to get on a running train\nnear McBride, received injuries\nfrom which he died in 20 hours.   ,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Revelstoke wants a copper -refinery and zinc smelter. That city\nonce had a smelter, one of those\nkind that did not amount to much.\nTwo Oregon inventors have\npatented a garment that includes\ncoat, hood, mittens and slippers,\nall of which are filled with electric wires supplied with current\nfrom a storage battery to warm a\nwearer.\nThe new freight schedule on the\nG.N. cuts the freight trains to two\na week, between Molson and Spokane, and two one a week west of\nMolson. The business men of\nMolson and Oroville are violently\nopposed to the new service.\nFor the first two months of this\nyear 564 carloads of shingles were\nshipped from B.C. to the United\nStates through Surnas and Blaine.\nIn addition GOO carloads were shipped to North Dakota. The total\nvalue of these shipments is 8582,-\n000.\nRecently about six miles from\nAshcroft, J. G. Collins and his son\nBert found a nest of rattlesnakes\naud killed 9G of them. A few of\nthem were captured alive and taken\nto Ashcroft to show some of the\ncitizens what snakes really look\nlike in a bottle.\nThe steady revival of the lumber-industry in the coast district is\nreflected in the returns of tbe government scaler. No less than 45,-\n895.000 feet of logs were scaled for\nroyalty in the district last month.\nThis total includes 2,270,000 feet\nof logs which were exported to\nWashington mills, principally cedar\nfor use in making shingles. Timber Inspector George D. McKay\nreports the shingle industry in the\nprovince is very brisk at present.\nSteps are being taken by some of\nthe bigger lumbermen to secure\ntonnage in order to export cargoes\nof lumber to France and Belgium\nin anticipation of the great demand\nfor lumber in Europe when the\nwar ends. ^ .\nSchool Report\nThe following honor roll, andi.list\nof those with perfect attendance\nduring the month:\nDIVISION I\nThomas Taylor, Jean Coles,\nRichard Eustis, George -Hallett,\nAdolph Krueger, Georgina. -Lee,\nJohn McArthur, Vera Parker,\nPhyllis Phillips, Ethel Royce.\nDIVISION II\nDaisy Axam, Ruth Axam, Russell\nCollins, Faith Collins, Lillian Collins, Russell Eustis, Jathes Hallett,\nMay Gibson, Francis Jordan,\nSavah Jorean, James Lane, Mary\nMcintosh, Irene Mcintosh, Gandry\nPhillipps, Bessie Cuddeford.\ndivision in\nMabel Axam, Selma Benson,\nGee Chew, Frank Chindler, Nettie\nChindler, Ruth Coles, Robert\nJenks, Gordon Jenks, Willie\" McLeod, Willie Phillips, Ena Potts,\nIvor Potts, John Sater, Myrtle\nDixon, Margaret McPhee.\nThe Lord's Bank Account\nThose who say that Christianity\nis not advancing are nninformed.\nThe Sou of Man, who found \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd no\nplace wherein to lay His head^.when\nhe walked the earth twenty centuries ago, now has a. bank, account! It was instituted by the\ngreat self-advertising \"evangelist,\"\nBilly Sunday, who announces that\nhe deposits one tenth of the '-'freewill offerings\" subscribed by j his\nadmirers, to the credit ol the Lord.\nIn Philadelphia the free-will offering is said to -have .amounted to\n8100,000, which, if true', adds\n810.000 to the Lord's -credit.\n\"Billy\" himself draws the cheques\non the account, presumably -having'\nbeen provided with a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd power of-attorney for the purpose.-.Times\nhave changed since the, moneychangers were driven from the\ntemple. We may yet live to.see\nthe Twelve Apostles rated in Brad-\nstreet's.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBecks Weekly.\nWar Incidents\nWe have just read in an English\npaper two brief narratives which'\ndisolose those deeps' of human\nbrotherhood that lie far below, the\nstorms of war's fierce passions.\nThe first illustrates well, the truth\nwe have called attention to more\nthan once, that the soldiers of the\nwarring nations are settling no\nquarrel of,their own.\nOnly a few feet separated the\nopposing trenches of the English\"\nand the Germans. Hostilities had\nceased. An Englishman, with a\ncamera in his hand, ventured to\ncall across the narrow Bpace, \"Any\nof you want your pictures taken?\"\nFive Germans appeared above the\ntrenches, \"and with smiling faces\nwere photographed. These men,\ncherishing no grudge each for the\nother, knew that when the order\ncame they must shoot across that\nintervening space to kill.\nThe other incident peems to us\nlike a rarely beautiful flowsr blossoming in a deadly marsh, An\nEnglish soldier, a successful-charge\nhaving been made, stopped < beside\na wonnded German. \"Cm I do\nanything to relieve you?\" he asked.\nBoth could speak English. \"I am\ndone for,\" said the German soldier.\n\"I am near the end. Won't you-\nstay here by me and hold my band\ntill it's over?\"\nOh, the pathos of itl Ob,-.the\ntragedy of itl Ob, the beauty and\nthe tender humanity of this divine\nsomething in the human heart!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nF. -Ei. R.\nIn B.C. 69 per cent, of the copper produced is mined within a\nfew miles of Greenwood, and 31\nper cent, at the coast. The Slocan\nproduces 98 per cent, of the provincial zinc output.\nA number of Irish \ufffd\ufffdolil_pra wpjv\nburying German dead. Suddenly\nout of the trench came a voice,\n\"I voss not dead!\" Tbp FoTdi\ufffd\ufffd-rs\nstopped shovelling and looked K\ufffd\ufffd\nIhe sergeant. \"Tez can't believe\na word those bloomin' Germans\nsay.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEx.\n*   . j.I\nf\n_*   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nTHE LEDGE\n?2 a year in Canada,   and   $2.50   in  the\nUnited States.\nR. T. LOWERY.\nEditor and Financier.\nMore Wild Cats\nADVERTISING RATES\nDelinquent  Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nCoal and Oil  Notices     6.00\nApplication Liquor Licenses    5.00\nTransfer Liquor Licenses    7.50\nI\\stray Notices 3.00\nCards of Thanks    2.00\nCertificate of Improvement  10 00\n(Where more than one claim appears iu notice, $2.50 for each additional claim )\nAll other legal advertising, 12 cents a\nline first insertion, aud 8 cents a line for\neach subsequent insertion, nonpariel\nmeasurement.\nDOING WELL\nAktei. running a paper in New\nDenver for five years, J. W. Grier\nassays tho result as follows:\n\"With this issue Tho Slocan\nRecord completes its fifth year.\nAlthough the publisher hasn't\nyet made his million, he has\nboon feeding regularly. Iu the\nfive years we havo had a very\nenjoyable time telling other\npeople how to run their business,\nand receiving advice from others,\nThe depression has not affected\nSlocan district to any extent.\nThe business here was not inflated by speculative values in\nreal estate or mining, therefore\nthe depression has not been felt\nhero as in other portions of the\nprovince Mining in the district\nis as much a business proposition\nas selling groceries. The ore\ncan bo mined at a profit and pay\nreasonable freight and treatment\ncharges. The war furnished an\nexcuse for the smelters to put an\nextra tax on the silver-lead mining industry. This caused many\nof the mines to discontinue shipments, with a consequent decrease in the working force.\nThere is likelihood of the difficulty being satisfactorily adjusted at an early date, aud all the\nmines working full force. The\noutlook in the Slocan is very\ngood, indeed.\"\nTimes are better.    The fishing\nseason opened last week.\nWak dope and   fishing   stories\nare now in active competition.\nBkoociies are being used in Germany with the words, \"Gott\nStrafe England\" (God Punish\nEngland) across the centre. Gott\nwill probably do a little work in\nGermany first.\nThe war will soon be over. The\nCanadian troops are fighting nobly\nat the front, and meeting with\nwonderful success. As fighters\nthe world produces no better gun\nand bayonet men than Canada.\nIdeas of a Plain Man\nWriting iu the Kaslo Kootenaian,\n\"Old Seeker\" has the following to\nsay:\nOn June 14th, 1S92, the writer\nin company with Dan Shoemaker,\nDenny Sullivan. Tom Jones and\nBill Thorburn, all experienced,\nstruck out from Bear Lake to see\nthe Payne. Washington, Last\nChance and Noble Five group.\nArriving at the Payne we found\nBilly Adams and Steve Bailey doing the first assessment work.\nAfter a few words with them, we\nretired to the shade of a friendly\ntree and proceeded to devour\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n(the correct word as we were ravenously hungry) our pocket lunches. While thus engaged the\nPayne and Mr. Bayley were freely\ndiscussod by tho party. At that\ntime it was understood that Mr.\nBailoy was sole owner of the Payne\nand had paid $5,000 therefor.\nMr. Shoemaker, export in the employ of Vanjandts Bros., of Butte,\nMont., sent there to acquire property, report etc., on the camp, was\nasked by the writer his opinion of\nthe Payne. To quote his verbatim:\n\"Boys, if Mr. Bailey ever gets half\nhis money out of it he will have to\nunload it on someone else to do\nso.\"\nAfter luncheon we proceeded to\nthe Washington. Hero it was the\nunanimous verdict that a fine\nbunch of ore waa to be had, a\nthousand tons at least. In our\nprogress towards the \"Five\" group\nwe ran on to the discovery post\nand showing of the Last Chance,\nbeing the first party to see it that\nyear, as the snow was barely gone\nthere. The Chance was then under option to. Bond, of Seattle,\nprice ten thousand dollars rumor\nhad it. Dan was promptly asked\nto pass on it: \"Wild cat! I\nwouldn't do an assessment on it\"\nwas the ejaculation. We next\ncame to the \"World's Fair\"show-\ning on the \"Five\"  group.    \"Dan,\n' 'Ah   boys,\nright.\"    The\nIn Mr. H, G. Wells' \"New\nMachiaveJli\" I find the phrase\n\"white passion struggling against\nthe red.\"\nA white passion, I gather, would\nbe an enthusiasm for socialism, for\ninstance; while love of woman\nwould be a red passion.\nAnd very curious is the power of\nthe white passions of the human\nheart but very real none the less,\nMen have gone mad for women,\nand have done noble deeds and\ndevilish deeds. But they have\nj^one just as crazy for a white idea.\n\"The pale martyr in his shirt of\nfire.\" was sustained by the white\npassion for holiness. The stern\ninquisitor directing the heretic torture had a white passion, too; or\nyou might call it black\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe point\nis, it was not red.\nThe French Revolution was an\norgy of white passion; men were\nmad for Liberty, Equality, Fraternity; though much red passion was\nmixed in during the upheaval.\nThere are minds that think in\nstates, hearts that feel in terms of\nsocial emotion, natures that function in propaganda.\nIn you and me are both white\nand red passions.\nA man is a curious animal, that\ncan weep for a government, take\nfire at a political idea, and go\ngladly to death for some particular\nnotion about the universe.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr.\nFrank Crane.\nwhich particularly pointed to^the\nGranby Co. as a periniciously flagrant example, even going so far as\nto dufl it \"heroic mining\" with an\nadmonition to the public to have\nnothing to do with it. Three fortunate circumstances over which\nGraves \ufffd\ufffdnd White had no control\nwhatever, enabled them to make it\na success, viz., the eagerness of the\npublic of the time to acquire mining shares, the high price of copper\nwhen they had some for sale, and\nthen the self fluxing properties of\nthe ore which made it cheaply convertible into matte. Again wild\ncatting methods, while honest\nenough no doubt, are responsible\nfor the biggest mining enterprise in\nBJC, if not in all Canada in this\nsame Granby.\nMines and Mining\nhow about this?\"\nhere's a mine all\nPayne paid as high as \ufffd\ufffd100,000 in\na single month and the Chance returns for a long time exceedad tbe\nmost optimistic dreams of its\nowner. Facts well known to many\nof your readers. These opinions\nof Mr. Shoemaker was generally\nacquiesced in by tbe entire party,\nall of whom have seen much of\nmining in the States even at that\nearly date.\nAbout 1S95  or   '96   the writer\nmade a purchase of H.  L. White,\nthen clerking for John W. Graham,\nbooks   and   stationery,   Spokane.\nMr. White being an acquaintance\nof several years,  then  confided to\nyour correspondent his intention to\ngo in mining with Jay P. Graves.\nMr. Graves had lost everything in\nthe panic that had recently swept\nover the continent.    Mr.   White,\nknowing the writer was then engaged in mining lines, and almost\nwholly ignorant   of   the business\nhimself, cautiously sought an opinion as to the advisability of such a\nmove.    He was advised promptly\nthat he would be giving up a sure\nthing for an uncertainty,   but in\nthe judgement of the writer, (then\nwell founded by observation in the\nvarious   camps   in the   Spokane\ncountry)   many   Spokane citizens\nwould   make fortunes in   mining\nand  possibly he  might be among\nthe lucky number.   Some ten days\nlater the writer was  again in the\nstore when  Mr.   White informed\nhim that they had rooted an office\nUnder the Marble Bank, and would\nbegin business at once and he insisted that his office was to be my\ndown   town   headquarters.     The\nwriter thanked him heartily, but it\nso happened that he never entered\nthat office.   They soon made some\nsort of a deal with a prospector\nowning the \"Old Iron Sides\" and\n\"Knob Hill\" claims at Phoenix,\nB.C., with two iron caps of very\nlow grade ore, organized their company and began selling shares for a\nfew cents each.  The time was propitious for their line of activity, as\nmining stocks were almost a legal\ntender   throughout  the   country.\nAfter they had done much development with no returns they succeeded in enlisting the help of a\nMr. Miner, rubber gloves manu\nfacturer of Granby, Quebec, where\nthey got their name for the present\ncompany.\nFor several years the success of\nthe enterprise was considered very\ndoubtful by the wise boys of the\nmining fraternity. The writer well\nremembers reading a two column\neditorial in a Victoria mining journal on  \"wild catting  methods,\"\nIndications of activity havo been\nnoted in the vicinity of tho Marble-\nhead quarry lately.\nAid. Speirs is planning on securing more horses for use in ore\nhauling from the Cork-Province.\nThe Chinamen who have been\nattempting to do some placering in\nthe viciuitp of Copper creek, have\nmade another attempt, this time in\nthe vicinity of Goldhill.\nOre hauling from the Utica has\nhad to be discontinued for a few\nweeks on account of the breaking\nup of the roads. It is expected\nthat wagons will be able to get\nthrough from the siding to the\nmine in the course of two or three\nweeks.\nInformation from Poplar is to\nthe effect that J. Wilson, who has\na bond on the Calumet and Hecla,\nand who has had three men at\nwork all winter, intends to increase\nthe force at those properties to\nabout twenty men in the fnture.\nThree Spokane parties were\nnorth-bound passengers on Tuesday, being en route to Goldhill,\nwhere it is said that they intend to\ndevelop some placer prospects. It\nis stated that shatts or pitts are to\nbe dug and the gravel extracted\nand sluiced.\nOswald McDougall is at work on\nhis contract at the Utica, where he\nis driving a crosscut tunnel to connect the east and west veins.\nMachine drills are being used and\non account of hard rock the first\nfew feet proved rather stiff cutting.\nThe rock has since grown softer.\nFive seperate bonds, but entered\ninto by the same buying parties,\nare pending with regard to certain\nPoplar properties. It is hoped\nthat the first payments will be\nmade during the course of the next\nfew weeks. San Francisco capital,\nworking through Spokane agents,\nis said to be behind the venture.\nA large flow of water was struck\nin the Surprise mine a few days\nago. Tbe water rushed out through\nthe tunnels leading to the outside\nwith such force as to do some damage, particularly around the entrance to the mine, where everything loose was carried down the\nhill, a large part of the dumps going down in the rushing flood.\nSome of the miners are reported to\nhave become scared and quit working, fearing a landslip or cave-ins.\nPart of the tramway system used\nat the Ferguson, is being dismantled, preparatory to its being moved\nto Sandon, having been purchased\nby the Ruth Mines. The latter\ncompany will re-erect it to provide\ntransportation from the Ruth\nNo. 5 tunnel to the Ruth mill. A\nconsiderable amount of work has\nbeen done on this portion of Ruth\nground the past lew months and\nthe erection of a tramway may be\ntaken as an encouraging indication.\nNo. 5 workings are situated up the\nSlocan Star gulch, at no great distance from the Slocan Star mill.\nImprovements to the road up\nthe South Fork of Kaslo river during the coming season will make\nore hauling from the Cork-Province\nless troublesome than, has hitherto\nbeen the case. Aa originally laid\nout tbe South Fork road had several bad \"humps\" which meant in\nsome cases an uphill pull for a\nshort distance with a load of ore,\nso that of necessity the capacity of\na wagon had to be limited; to the\namount that a four horse team\ncould handle over the worst of the\n\"humps.\" The elimination of\nthese will make larger loads on\neach down trip possible.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKaslo\nKootenaian.\nA Dilapidated Country\nOn a dilapidated narrow-gauge\nrailroad in a Southern state a\ntraveller was struck with the general air of hoplessness of the entire\ncountry. Run-down farms, fences\nfalling to pieces and houses un-\npainted and dismal were seen as\nmile after mile was reeled off.\nFinally a countryman got on, and\nthe two fell into conversation.\nCountry around here looks fear-\nfully dilapidated,\" remarked the\ntraveler. \"Yaas, but jest wait an'\nye'llsee sumpin wuss,\" replied the\ncountryman. The train ' stopped.\nThey looked out and saw a rail\nmissing ahead. The entire train\ncrew clambered out, crowbars in\nhand, proceeded leisurely to the\nrear of tbe train, and in due time\nloosened a rail and carried it forward. It was spiked into position\naud the train proceeded. \"Somebody stole a rail?\" asked the traveler. \"Yaas, about twenty yeais\nago, I reckou. Evah Biuce they\nbaiut nobody bought a new one.\nWheu tho train comes back they've\ngotter stop an' tear up a rail behind 'em. Aint that the dilapi-\ndatenest thing ye ever see, stranger?\" \t\nTwo Dead Men\nREALLY DELIGHTFUL\n-,-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  THE DAINTY\nMINT-COVERED\nCANDY-COATED\nCHEWING GUM\nMake a Corner\nCosy\nCollect the Cushion\nCover Coupons with\nevery dthitUt Package\nMADE IN CANADA\nyA4&$4^~z<*~;~z~tt<**<^^\nWindsor\nTwo men are dead in our little\ntown, and one with money was\nloaded down; and one was of the\ngood long green\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda humble cog in\nthe Big Machine. Of what avail\nare the rich mans rock's? They'll\nnail him down in a costly box: and\ngorgeous garlands tbe heirs will\nbring, and the priest will preach\nand the choir will sing, and prancing horses will haul the hearst\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe price will come from the dead\nman's purse. But not a mourner\nis really sad, the eyes may weep\nwhen the heart is glad. The dead\nman never had in his soul another\nwish than to swell his roll; he lived\nto gather the shining bones; he\npinched a dime until you heard its\ngroan. Tbe other man who has\ncrossed the line, and whom we'll\nplant in a box of pine, was ever\nready to help or cheer when old\nMiss Fortune was camping near;\nto help tbe troubled or soothe their\npains he'd go right down in his old\nblue jeans; \"to help a neighbo's a\npleasure, sure\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand that was the\nlogic that kept him poor. He's\ndead and gone and the people\ngrieve; and they shed real tears\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nnot the make believe.-Walt Mason.\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.     Best  Line of Portrait\nFrame Pictures in the Boundary.\nAgent for Ensign Cameras and Supplies\nDEVELOPING 25cts per roll |\nPRINTS 50cts a dozen\nTHOROUGHLY  RENOVATED AND SPECIALLY\nADAPTED FOR COMMERCIAL TRADE\nP.   J.\nWinnipeg Ave.,\nLAKE,\nGrand Forks\n<TOOC>00O00<-K>00OO0O0O0O000<><>\nT.   THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSED AND REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\n04*9*0000000000000000000000\nHome Together\n\"Evening brings a'   hame.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nScotch proverb.\nThe road is rough before our feet,\nThe hills are steep and high,\nAnd clouds are gathered overhead\nTo shut away the sky.\nPerhaps our paths may run apart\nIn dark and stormy weather\nBut at the nearing evening-time\nWe'll all be home together.\n0 friend of mine, I grieve to lose\nThe grasp of loving hands;\nHow much we need each other here\nEach fully understands.\nBut if oar pathways meet no more\nIn meadow land or heather\nBelieve that  when  the night has\ncome\nWe'll be at home together.\nSo here's a hand that's true my\nfriend,\nAnd steadfast come what may.\nGod grant our paths run side by\nside\nAnd part hot all the way;\nBat if it be that part we m net\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGod only kpoweth whether-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThere's comfort in the thought that\nnight.\nWill bring us home together.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEben E. Rexford.\nEstray Notice.\nCame into my premises a dark brown\nhorse, blind in right eye, and weighs\nabout 900 pounds. I have fed him all\nwinter. The owner must call for him\nwithin 30 days, or he will be sold to pay\nexpenses of feed bill and advertising.\nCarmi, B. C, April 1st, 1915.\nHUGH F. BORDEAUX.\nCOUNTY   COURT OF YALE\nA SITTING 01 -be County Court of Yale will\nbe holden at the Court House, Greenwood,\non ; Tuesday the 25.U day of May, 1915, al\n11 a.m.\nWAI\/TER DEWDNEY,\nRegistrar C. C. of Y\nAny man who can have an appreciative audience if he dniy talks\nto himself.\nDidn't Want A Lawyer\nTwo college students were arranged before the magistrate\ncharged with hurdling the low\nspots in the road in their motor\ncar. \"Have you a lawyer?' asked\nthe magistrate. \" We're not going\nto have any lawyer\/\" answered the\nelder of the students. \"We've decided to tell the truth.'7\nDirect from the Factory to the co__s_.__.cr\nBy PARCEI. POST\nat wholesale prices   to advertise onr\n. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Brands.\nEvery cigar we mike is absolutely gnat-\nanteed, filled with ^canine Havana-\nFiller\nBox of So's B.C. full weight, five\ninches long $3.50.\nBox of 50's O.S   4  inches long.\nConchas, #300.\nBox of \"Brillantes\" Clear  Havana\nWrapper, fall weight, 5 inches\nlong. 50 S $5.00.\nSend money order, or certified\ncheque. Do not send money unless registered.\nRefereac-ts:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdR. G. DUNN ft CO.\nWILBEKG ft WOLZ,\nNew tfestM-wter.-_.C.\nSEALED TENDERS addressed to the un-\n' dersigned, and' endorsed \"Tender for\nDominion. Observatory1 at. Little Saanicli\nMountain, Victoria, B.C.,\" will be received-nt\nthis office until 4.00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 18,\n1915, for tlie construction of tbe above mentioned building.\nPlans, specification and form of contract\ncan be seen and forms of tender obtained at the\noffice of Mr. Win. Henderson, resident architect\nVictoria, M.C, at the Post Office, Vancouver,\nB.C., and at this Department.\nPersons tendering- are notified that tenders\nwill not be considered unless made oa the\nprinted forms supplied, and signed with their\nactual signatures, stating their occupations and\nplaces ol residence. In the case of firms, the\nactual signature, the nature of the occupation\nand place of residence of each member of the\nfirm must be given.\nEach tender must be accompanied by an accepted cheque on a chartered bank, payable to\nthe order of the Honourable the Minister of\nPublic Works, equal to ten per cent (10 p.c.)\nof the amount of the tender, which will be forfeited If the person tendering decline to enter\ninto a contract when called uoon to do so, or\nfail to complete the work contracted for,' If the\ntender be not accepted the cheque will be returned.\nThe Department doe_> not bind Itself to accept\nthe lowest or any tender.\nBy order,\nR. C. DESROCHERS,\nSecretary.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nOttawa, April 19,1915\nNewspapers will not be paid for this adver\ntisement if they Insert it without authority\nfrom the Department.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd78627.\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 and Lit by Electricity\nCommodious sample rooms. The bar is replete with\nall modern beverages and the meals are the best. Rooms\nreserved by telegraph.\nI\ni\nX\nUr+*4#<>*<*&>&te*<*<^^\nSynopsis of Coal Mining Regulations.\nf\ufffd\ufffdOAI. mining rights of the Dominion\nV* in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territoriesand in a portion of British\nColumbia, may be leased for a term of\ntwenty-one years at an annual rental of\n$1 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 in which 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 but by the applicant himaelfc\nBach 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 fire cents per ton.\nThe person operating the \"mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns\naccounting for the foil quantity of merchantable coal mined ana pay the royalty\nthereon: If the coal mining rights are\nnot being operated, such returns should\nbe furnishea at least once a year;\nThe lease will include the coal mining\nrights only, but the leasee may be permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may be considered necessary for the working of the mine at the\nrate of $10.00 an acre.\nFor full information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDenote Minister of the Interior,\nN.B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdU-MUthorized publication of\nthis adverti-sement will.not be paid for.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n68782,\n!t 4* 4* 4*'\ufffd\ufffd*'&'''&'*$'4* *&* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4*4*4*)$\nCbe fiume Rotel\n nelson, B.C.\nThe only up'txvdate Hotel in the interior.   First-class\nin every respect,\n*\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nHot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\neach room.\nROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THEBEST\nFirst Class Bar and Barber Shop\n15 FREE SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated; Electric lighted.\nRATHJS $1.00 per day and up; European Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats.\n2*4\"f*\ufffd\ufffdfr 4*4* \ufffd\ufffdf4*4**'f 4\"f>\ufffd\ufffdM\ufffd\ufffd 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4*4* 4. j^h\nWESTERN - - HOTELS.\nHOTEL PRINCETON\nPrinceton, B.C., now completed on the\nsite of the old Great Northern. Only\nbrick hotel in Similkameen. A first\nclass house,\nSwanson & Broomfield. Props,\nTHK   KASLO    HOTKL\nKaslo, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is a comfortable\nhomo for . ali who travel to that\ncity.\nJ. W. COCKLE. Prop.\nIt RIDES VI LI. K   HOTEL.\nIS\nBridesville,   B. C.   This   hotel\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\n- by steam, and has hot and cold\nwater in all - rooms. A pleasant\nhome for all who travel.\nJAMES WILLIAMSON, Ptojrietor\nTHE SIMILKAMEEN HOTEL  ,\nPriucetoit. This liotel Is tiuw, comfortable\nwell-furnished, and is close to the railway\ndepot. Modern accommodation aad sample rooms.\nSUMMERS & WARDLE. Proprietors\nRIVERSIDE HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C. This is one of\nUie oldest hotels in the Kettle Valley. Excellent accommodation for\nall travellers.\nS.'T. LARSEN. Proprietor.\nALGOMA HOTEL\nDeadwood, B. C. This hotel is\nwithin easy distance of Greenwood\naud provides a comfortable home\nfor travellers. The bar has' tlie\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 eyefythinjr first-class\nF. J. KIRKPATRICK, Proprietor.\nQUEEN'S  HOTEL,\nPHOBMI3C     M., 0.c  ...\nThe Newest and I*arge*i Hotel in\nthe City. Everything neat, clean\nand comfortable. Steam beat and\nelectric light. Heals and drinks at\nall hoars.\nH4RTMM & WAtSH\nProps.\nTbe Knob Hill Hotel\nPHOENIX.\nOne of the largest hotels in\nthe city.   Beautiful location,\nfine rooms audi tasty meals.\nA. O. JOHNSON\nPROP.\nSMOKE....\nImperator and Kootenay Standard\nCigars.   Made bv\nJ. C THEUW & Co., NELSON\nJ. B. CAMERON,\nLeading Tailor of tile KootenavB.\nKASLO      B.  C\nBUSINESS CARDS.\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayer and\nChemist. Box Biio8, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Copper\n$1 each. Gold-Silver, or Silver-Lead,\nI.1.50, Prices for' other metals: Coal,\nCement, Fireclay analyses on application. The largest custom assay office in\nBritish Columbia.\nFRED A. STARKEY,\nNELSON, B. C.\nMINING\nBROKER\nPROSPECTS   BOUGHT   AND\nSOLD\nDr. A. MILLOY\nDENTIST\nAll   the   latest  methods   in  high-class\nDentistry.\nLOO BUILDING\nCorner Abbott & Hastings Streets.\nVANCOUVER.   -   -   -   B.C.\nPHONE   13\nAuto    and   Horse   Stages\nLeave    Greenwood    Twice\nDaily to Meet Spokane and\nOroville traih-i\nAutos for MJre,  the Fiilest\nf urnouts iii'thexiaiourielary\/\nLight and Heavy Draying t\nRflssell's lively And Stage\nGREENWOOOD, B.C\n0. Q. RUSSELL, Proprietor.\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nyour Razors Honed\nand Your Baths at\nFRAWLEY S\nGREENWOOD.\nMaMa Tungsten Lamps\nK) to 60 Watt Lamps 60c each\nIn cartons of 5. $2,50\n100 Watt Lamps, $L25 each\namtfift C.tj 1 zleiftits Cospasy","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1915_05_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0308434","@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":"1915-05-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1915-05-06 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\/1.0308434"}