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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\/1.0308572\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \\\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdglb\n\ufffd\ufffdas$gj\nTHE  OLDEST   MIKING  GAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nVol;   XXV.\nGREENWOOD, B.G., THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1919\n\/\nMANY   1NEW   LIINES\nCome, In And See Our\nLarge And Well Assorted Stock Of\nCarpets,   Furniture,   Pictures,\nCrockery,   Etc.   Etc.\nV\nMany   kinds of Oil,  Tinware'\nand  Hardware\nT. M. GULLEY & CO.\nPHONE 28        A;       GREENWOOD, B. C.\n\"STORE OF QUALITY!:\nA  FINE  LINE  OF\nGloves, Mitts, Socks, '>\nBoots\/Shoes and\nClothing\nAT\nJ. G. McMYNN\nMIDWAY      -      -      B. C.\nAround Home\nIN THE SOUTH\n)-^r\n|     Stock Reducing Sale of Teas     1\nH Dessia Golden Tips 80c. Liptons Choice Ceylon 80c 3\ng Deki Julia 65c u3\ng\ufffd\ufffd EMPRESS. MALKIN'S BEST, NABOB 70c or 21bs for $1.35 ~3\n\ufffd\ufffd5 BRAIDS BEST at 65c 3\n{E BLUE RIBBON 121b pkee 35c. BLUE RIBBON lib pkjre 65c 3\n\ufffd\ufffd~ BLUE RIBBON 316 tins $185. BLUE RIBBON 51b tins $3.00:.=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Choice Bulk Tea 60c ter lb.      Choice Spider Lee Tea 70c    =3\n| Phone 46       LEE & BRYAN      |\ng~ Canada \ufffd\ufffdpod Board License No. 8-6251 =2\n^iuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiaiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuaiaiaiiiiiiiiiiuil\nwent to Allenby\nwas in Grand\nMazda Tungsten Lamps\n15 to 40 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50c each,\n60 Watt Lamps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd75c each.    >\n100 Watt Lamps~$_L25 each.\nNITROGEN\nLAMPS\n60 Watts   -   \ufffd\ufffd   ,   $1.25 each\n100    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      x   .    .   2.00  \ufffd\ufffd\n200   \ufffd\ufffd     *   \/   ,    3.50 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGreenwood City Waterworks Co.\nEVERYTHING ELECTRICAL\nRMcKEE\nGREENWOOD\nDealer in\nWOOD\nOrders Promptly Filled\nChristian Science service will be held\nin the MELLOR .BI,OCK on Sunday at ii\na. m. All welcome. Every Wednesday,\nat 8 p.-m., testimonial meetings will be\n.hel.d in the same:blcdk;-*.-Gunday -'School-\nevery Sunday, morning.\nMATTHEWS  BROS.\nGRAND  FHORKS\nAgents'for Chevrolet, Dodge, Hudson,\nChalmers, Cadillac cars, and Republic\ntruck motors. Garage in connection.\nX\nX\nWindsor Hotel\nGreenwood, B.C.\nThe Windsor Hotel is one of the\noldest and most comfortable hotels in the\nred metal metropolis. It is located in the\nheart of the city, and convenient to all\nbusiness houses, Heated with steam and\nelectricity, Fine sample\"? ooms.. Many\nofthe bedrooms contain electric heaters,\nThe bar is replete with modern beverages. Hot coffee, sandwiches, and light\nlunches always ready. Touch the wire\nif you want, rooms reserved. ' i '\n<*\n2\ufffd\ufffd\nJC\nA\nBanking Servicf\nVOUR banking requirements may\nA be entrusted to this Bank with\nevery confidence that careful and\nefficient service will be rendered.\nOur facilities are entirely at your\ndisposal, YXXy:\nTHE CANADIAN BAnI\nOF COMMERCE.x II\nWANTS, ETC\nYou can get a bargain in\nenvelopes.at The Ledge office.\nGet a Float\" for 25. cents at\nThe Ledge office, and send to\nyour, friends in order to cheer\nthem during the\/dark days of\n.the ^winter,-,---- - ~--r :; -'-\"--' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdX-\nMONUMENTS   ;\nKOOTENAY GRANITE AND\nMftNUMENTAL CO., LTD\nFRONT ST., .,, NELSON,     BOX 865\nGreenwood Farmers*\nAll Members of tbe Greenwood\nFarmers' Institute can obtain Seed\nGrain, by applying to the Secretary,\nCharles Kinsr-; '\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; - '        \/        \".'...;\nPrizes for tbe Gopher KUlisgCompetition will be announced April 1st.\nX      -':-\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   CHARLES KINGVSec-\nGreenwood Branch     L, E. Brawders, M^|^5\nAllan Eustis\non Saturday.\n'F. L- Peterson\nForks this week.\nR. H.   Guise is on  a business\ntrip to Princeton.\nAt McElmon's. Waltham\nWatches.\"' Boj>- Watches.\nJames Summers of Phoenix is\noh a trip to Londou, Oat.\nG. A. Rendell returned from\nTrail on Saturday evening.\nMrs.  Grey Pond returned   on\nTuesday from a visit to\/Trail-\nLewis Bryant is in the employ\nof the Canada Copper at Allenby.\nJ. Bowps has sold the Sunset\nranch near kelowna  for $55,000.\nThe Phoenix hockey team will\nplay in Princeton on Friday\nnight.\nWe have receiyed a fresh lot\nof Christies Fancy Biscuits and\nSoda Biscuits in tins. G. A.\nRendell. ~~\\\nBorn,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo Mr. and Mrs. Robt.\nMitchell, ofoDeadwood, on March\n3rd, a daughter.\nBoRpr.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo Mr. and Mrs, J,\nSchindler, of Deadwood, on\nMarch'4th', a son.\nFull line of fresh bulk, pure\nsugar cbrocolates just in. At\nGoodeve's Drug store.\nJoe. Strutzel.Jr;, of Phoenix,\nwas the guest, of the Morrison\nboys over the week-tend.\nPte. O'Connor of the 2nd\nC.MR, arrived in \"town on. Tuesday evening from overseas.\nJust in,. a shipment of prints,\nlawns, nainsooks. White cottons\nfor underwear, etc. ' G.-A.Ren-\ndell, Greenwood.      .\".   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '\nGrand Forks   will   be district\nheadquarters-     for    the    Royal\n| Northwest Mounted Police. \"\nThe Phoenix hockey team defeated the Greenwood team by a\nscore of 4-2 in Phoenix on Wednesday evening.\nDan McGillis, of Greenwood,\nhas bought out Mrs.H. B. Larsen's interest in the lease on the\nProvidence mine.\nA telephone. was recently installed .' at the K. V. station at\nBeaverdell and the residents of.\nthat place, are'now happy.\nMake your.own. Oranges and\nleVErtiit at ~a price that reduces considerably \"the cost of\nyour marmalade., G. A. Reudell\nThe Ledge; is\nadvance. When\nthree months it\nwhen paid,at end of year.it is $3\nTwo former Greenwood boys,\nTed and -Harold Hunter were\nstars . on 'the. Empress hockey\nteam, which.won- the 1919, .Commercial League:.championsbip= in\nVancouver. . ;\nJust across the line near Calexico\nis the Mexican town of Mexicalli,\nthe mOsfe wide open town in America. Its revenue is largely obtained from those who worship at tbe\nshrineB of Bacchus, Venus and\nChance. The Owl is the great resort in that town of excitement.\nAlong the right side runs the\nbar. Double rows of gambling\ngames of all kinds extend down the\nmiddle. Every table was crowded.\nThere are Mexican officers, resplendent and haughty, inscrutable\nChinese, Japanese ranchers and\nadventurers, carefully calculating\nHindoos and a host of peons.\nWatchful-eyed Americans, whose\npale faces were otherwise as graven\nimages, were running these games.\nThere were some who besought tbe\nboys to \"roll 'em out.\" These\nwere the presiding geniuses of the\ncraps games Bufe if one wanted\nroulette there were Beveral accommodating men who were making\nthe wheels and the little balls go\nround. ^Their dexterity in sweeping the board clean of the victims'\nwagers was of the highest type.\nHard by are tables for keno and\nblack jack players. Inthe rear of\nthis temple of Atropos are Mexican\ncard games.\nThroughout the nighfe these\ngames are crowded. The devoteeB\nsurge in by the thousands and are\nso closely packed at times they\nhave to stand edgewise and the\nrear rows lay bets only by reaching\nover the others' shoulders.\nWestern News\nR. T. LOWERY.\nMarried at Vancouver\nS2 a year - in\nnotv paid . for\nis   &2.50,   and\nThe wedding took place in\nVancouver on-February 19, of\nMiss; Maiidie' Amy, 'the -'\"eldest\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. J_\nEales of Greenwood, and Bertram\nDouglas.'. Perrie. Rev. J. C.^\nSwitzer officiating. The bridegroom is well known in Vancouver, and the bride was formerly a postmistress in the local\npostoffice. : Mr. and Mrs. Perrie\nwill make their home in Vancouver. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   '\nFire at Anyox\nFor Sale\nImproved;. Ranche, 68. acres, ?5\ncleared, one mile from Greenwood\nand four from Phoenix. For particulars apply downer,. Wm. Jenks;\nBox 393, Greenwood, B.C.\n' ;Wm.; Johns receiyed \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a letter\nfrom\" Jaffa, .stating that Jack\nHadfield, formerly.of Greenwood,\nwho .was serving with the Railway Corps,, in Palestine, has died\nfrom pneumonia..\n\/ Grand. St, Patrick's.Ball under\nthe. auspices of Pythian Sister\nTempie: No., 12, in Masonic Dance\nHall, Monday, March i7.. Bush's\norchestra. Hot chicken supper to\nbe served at 10:30.\nMiss- Vera Redpath -who has\nbeen the guest of Mrs. T; Jenkin\nfor several weeks' past,, returned\nto Nelson on Monday, accompanied by her sister, Musiel, who\nhad spent the week-end here.\n. .A new shipment of white and\ncoloured , flanelettes, sheeting,\nsheets and pillow .cases.\" at\"Renders Store. y'X.   x '';'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: i-X-\nv\"-\"The Saturday. Evening Post\"\nfor less- tHan five cents 'ai copy\n$Z50 *;{a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-year.y -..\"the; Country\nGentlemen\" .for- less.'than -;four\ncents a copy $1.75\"aXyearX-Including: postage. A, ;R. Dorais,\nAutliorized Agent, .632. Broadway; Westi; Vancouver, 'B.C., ';X ;-.-.-\n. Fire at the Granby Consolidated . Mining.& Smelting Co., at\nAayoxon March 2, caused a loss\nto ore bins, . tracks'. and smelter\noffice, of $50,000. ; The Barnes\ngained great headway; in a stiff\nnorthwest, gale :and. the smelter\nplant was saved with great difficulty.; .Operations^ necessarily\nwill be suspended for several:days.\nuntil, the. damaged material can\nbe replaced. ' \" The fire . started\nfrom one of the conyerters and\nspread rapidly.\/;.. r\nyXxi-^ ';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Copper    :yy:X'i'i[\nAccording >.to ;. a ' Ifew, York\nreport all.. surplus government\ncopper., .will..; = be '.marketed, by\nthe.copper .producers' association\nfor a period... not to exceed. 15\nmonths by agreement X with . the\ndirectors of sales of the war deparfe-\n.ment| \"according to an ainnbuncie-\nment made on: March 3 by the\nassociation, which represents 90\nper cent of the copper production,\nof the conntry. The agreement, it\nis said, was tentative, and the copper would, bejsold by the producers\nat market prices for the' period\nstated - subject..;to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd business conditions.', So far as could be learned,\nno price was determined for initial\nsales,5' but, ife \"was indicated that a\n15 cent'peiv.gound ;rate would pre-\nvai 1:. in the iromediate future.\nAmerica's war  cost was estimated at 816,000,000,000.\n\/Buy War Savings Stamps and so\nhelp yourself and Canada;\nTbe post of city engineer of\nGrand Forks has been abolished.\nThree thousand tons of honey\nare stored in Australia waiting for\nexport.\nThe three prairie provinces use\nannually about 40,000,000 bushels\nof seed grain.\nCharles W. Tait a well-known\nlumberman of New Westminster,\ndied\" lasfe week.\nFriedrich Ebert, president; of\nGermany, will receive a salary of\n$236,000 a year.\n, Ben Tilled, M. P., British, labor\nleader, and \"dockers' champion\"\nwill visit Vancouver this year.\nSam McKee an old-timer of\nTrail died last week in Colling-\nwood, Ontario, afc the age of 73.\nA number of Servian residents\nof Phoenix are contemplating an\nearly return to the land of their\nfathers.\nSo far this winter twelve feet of\nsnow bas fallen in Phoenix. The\nheavy fall of snow last week was\ngeneral throughout the west.\nFour Doukhobors were fined $5\nand costs in Grand Forks last\nweek, on a charge of theffc^ of telephone wire from the B.\"\"C. Telephone Co.\nLouis Laundri, 64 years old,\nwas killed last week at Silverton\nwhen he lost his balance and fell\nfrom the lower terminal of the\ntramway at ..the Hewitt mill.\nA chain of 5, 10 and 15 cent\nstores, well known in Canada and\nthe TJ. S., had a net income in\n1918 of $7,000,000*, a decrease of\n$1,167,000 from .the previous year.\nA return shows that 12,523\nmiles of khaki cloth, flannel, etc.,\nwas issued for the Australian\ntroops. The number of horses\nsent for military purposes was\n135,000.\nWilliam Young,  comptroller of\nwater rights in .the employ of the-\nprovincial government, has tendered  his   resignation.      Ernest   A.\nCleland of Vanconver,  may be his i\nsuccessor. I\nThe Brifcish admiralty has offered\nas a gift to the Canadian naval\nforces of two submarines, now at\nBermuda, Sir Robert Borden, in\nbehalf of the Dominion has accepted the offer.\nThejestimated wheafe production\nin 1917 in Manitoba was 41,039,-\n700 bushels from 2,448,860 acres,\nas shown by 1917 Agricultural\nStatistics, sompiled by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.\nTen miles of the main channel\nwill be constructed this season on\nthe government irrigation project\nin the Osoyoos district on the land\nrecently purchased from the South-\nern.Okanagan Land company.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\nTo replace fehe lost steamer\nGaliano in the fishery patrol service on the B. C. coast the big\nsteam yahfe Stadacona will leave\nHalifax, N. S. shortly, together\nwith three steam trawlers which\nare also to be utilized in tbe fishery\nservice, bound for Esquimalt, via\nthe Panama Canal.\nMining News\nThe Nickle Plate mine at Hedley\nhas increased its working force.\nThe Leilose, of Alice Arm, made\na ten ton test shipment to the\nTrail smelter last week.\nWater shortageha9 forced O. F.\nCaldwell to somewhat curtail the\nextent of operations be has had\nunderway at the Utica mine in tho\nSlocan.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdam. U\nThe Northport smelter closed indefinitely last week. Low price\nof lead is given as the reason for\nclosing.\nOle Slaterbek and John Neyman\nare    leasing   the   Mollie   Hughea -\nclaim near New  Denver.    This i?\na=high grade property and is owned\nby    Hermann    Clever    of    New-\nDenver.\nOscar V. White has resumed his\nformer position as general superintendent of the Silversmith Mines,\nLtd. Mr. White is also looking\nafter the Wakefild, near Silverton,\nfor Clarence Cunningham.\nThe New Hazelton Gold-Cobalt\nMines, Limited, has just received\nthe returns from the government\nore testing plant in Ottawa on the\ncarload of gold-cobalt-molybdenite\nore shipped to Ottawa in August\nlast. The report shows thafe this\nvaluable. ore can be successfully\ntreated and practically . all the\nvalues saved.' Some two months\nago this company shipped to the\nsmelter at Anyox approximataly\ntwenty-eight tons, which gave a\nreturn-of 81.-090.00\" in gold or\n$53.00 to the ton net in gold alone -\nafter paying all railway and\nsmelter charges. They only pay,\nfor the gold content at Anyox as\"\nthey have no meanB of saving fehe\nother values.\t\nThe drift on the tenth\" level of\nthe Silversmith mine has- nofe -Tun\nout of the ore shoot yet, according\nto  a  report  from  Sandon.      Another carload of high\/grade  shipping-ore is ready for  movement to\nthe   smeltery     This   will   be fehe\nthirteenth \"ear shipped  since   the-'\"\nresumption of operations and  will\nbring the  net Bmelter  receipts to\n875,000 or 880,000 on  fehe 90 per\ncent preliminary settlement basis.\nThe value of the shipments   has\nranged  from  $4,000  to $7,000 nefe\nfeo the carload on the 90 per cent\nbasis, depending on the size of the\ncar and the ton valae of its content.    The crude ore contains upward of 40 per cent lead and 90\nounces of silver to tbe ton.\nWhat Dad Said\nWith an air of great importance\nthe small boy of a  Sunday School\nin Belfast imparfeed fehis happy fact\nto-his-teacher:- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''The-\"devil\" is\"\ndead,\" he said solemnly.\n\"What makes you think that?'?\nasked the startled teacher.\n\"Dad said so,\" exclaimed the\nboy. \"I was standing in 'the\nstreet with him yesterday when a\nfuneral passed, and when dad saw ife\nhe said\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Poor devil! He's dead!' \"\nWAfi-SAVIMGS STAMPS ARE SOLD\nWHEREVER YOU SEE THIS SIGN\nBuild a $50 Bond\nAPlaaFor\nInvestors\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBig and\nLittle\nGet-your job,':.prmtingv at 1__he\nLedge,  before.. the ;pa^>er,: is;. all\ngone\/?\/\/-.; -:::..\"\".' '-\";.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.': Xr:X- '\"XXyX\nIteniiiitneffeak\nClrtifkiit\nA War-Savings Certificate, provided\nfree of charge with your first\nWar-Savings Stamp, has spaces for\n10 War-Savings Stamps.\nA War-Savings Certificate with a\nW-S.S. in each space is a Dominion\nof Canada \"bond\" for the payment of\n$50 on January 1st, 1924.\nAnd you invest less than $41'\nto secure it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpa5Ting as it proves\nconvenient to you.\nWar-Savings Stamps cost $4.02\nin March, $4.03 in April and -\n$4.04 in May.\nFill up s'our THRIFT Card (16\nThrift Stamps at 25c. each). Thrift\nStamps earn no interest, but a filled\ncard represents $4 when you invest\nin a War-Savings Stamp,\n- ai\nr'AT'ALL MONEY-ORBEK POST OFFICES, BANKS, ETC.\nr'XfS--iXy-x<ii^\ufffd\ufffd&0iS3^\nI'm\nSasmsmm iMmim.  QSEjmwooik  &> a\nNo Matter Whether\nMARE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCOLT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJACK\nSPOHN'S distemper compound\nis as effective in the treatment of one as of the other for DISTEMPER, PINK EVK. TNFUJKNZA, COUGH or COLD. The\nstallion in the stud, thc horse in tlie field or on thc rond, ami\nthe baby colt are all protected from disease by au occasional dose.\nBuy from your druggist\nSPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY\nCanadian Troops Not Suffering j Heligoland Forts   }\nMust be Destroyed\nMilitary Authorities Look After Men\nin Far North\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Renters learns from thc\nlatest arrivals from the Murman coast\nGOSHEN, INDIANA, U.S.A. i that  the allied  troops of  the' north\nkusssian expeditionary force arc\nINSTANTLY   RELIEVED   WITH\nh\nOR M0HEY REFUNDED. ASK ANY DRUGC1ST\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdji wi'.t4iymi.-<-Kn3x Co., Monti-til, P.Q. PneeGOc.\nitfinriiinct thr iian.r  aa il nil^ht nol hc .fc\ufffd\ufffd   ar\ufffd\ufffdlli\nB\nest\nHelping the Soldiers\nStock    at    Lowest    Price\nReturned Men\nThe British Spirit\nFoe   Is In-\nGenerosity for    Beaten\nstinctive\n,    The British were an imperial race\nFortifications Are of Armored Con- far back ;n thdr hjstory). but never\ncrctc and Steel\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe final armistice terms\n:n I which the supreme council is consict-\ndid they manifest it so, superbly as\non November 21 of immortal mem-\n,ory.    Not even the genius of Shake-\ngood health conditions, and the mili-,crhlg win be nla(|c puLKc bcfoJc 1hc  spcarc Qr AE,chvhls  cver conccivcd\ntary authorities arc doing everything- cnd of lhc moiU])i accord;ne 1o var.\nlo alleviale the discomforts of lhc ex-1\nIrcmc cold, combined with lhe Arctic\nfor\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. j 20-hour nigln\nious  newspapers, and  lliey will     in-\nOttawa. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd An organization is being\nbrought into effect al once in connce-\njtion with the operations of lhc soldier\nThe temperature was nearly -10 degrees below i-cro Fahrenheit in January,    aiid there    were only three or\nsclikmrnl board, whereby soldier set-[four hours daylight during the month\ntiers   on   farms   will   be   sure  of   full .at Port Murmansk, which is 200 miles\nof 3. setting so vast and magnificent\nof the whole world as an unseen audi-\nclude, among the naval conditions, thc   encc, as  it were,    or    of    panoplied\ndemolition of the forts on Heligoland\nand Kiel Canal, the surrender for purposes of destruction of thc German\nwarships now interned, and thc opening of thc Kiel Canal for civil transport.   .It is staled   that Germany will\n30 DROPS-STOPS COUGHS\nI!rtLF THIS  IOR CHILDREN\nMONKY   OKUblts'\ntrainload lots, thus obtaining lhc ad-jduh.\nvantage of low prices that  could  nol\n.be secured if ilie soldiers 'A<'r<\nj b'.'y in the open market.\nSemi   a\n!Joi:::ihuii    i*..\\p. c-.\nui.ty    Urilei\nHistorical Museum Proposed\nJ'or Preservation of Alberta's Records\nand Relics\nKdmonlun, Alta. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd That a nius\/,n:n\nbe established for the preservation\nand exhibition of lhe histo-ical relics\nand records per.Uiinmg io the early\ndevelopment of Alberta, was the suggestion made at a meeting of tl.e Alberta Historical Society, which is\nabout  to  be  reorganized.    The    pro-\nvi:i<-i;il government may bc asked for (this  letter  must  prove a   message  o\nsonic assistance in the way of a grant! good  cheer.    So  many cures  similar\nwith  which   the  work can bc  financ-it0  ll,is 0,,c havc come l0\ncd.    The idea was supported by   the\nvalue for their outlay for live  stock. I within the Arctic circle.    The troops | jJC ]cft whh z'fcci^ go'eno^h for\nIn alliance with the livestock branch | arc mostly accommodated with wood\nof tlic department of agriculture, thc lined log barracks or collapsible huts\nboard wiil M-emv the best class of, fitted with sleeping bunks and Rus-\nstock al  the  lowest  price. isian  stoves.\nIt is also intended  lo    standardize |     Various    entertainments    are     fre-\nbniidings  and   r(|uipmeni   as     far    aslquontly organized and  winter sports,\nl possible, and    purchase    supplies     in ' especially skiim;,    are frequently    in-\ncd in. There arc comparatively\nfew cases of frost bile wving to lhe\nspecial  fur clothing supplied.\nThe north Russian aili<d troops\narc garris'iinng .3(10 miles from the\nMurman railway. Supplies for outposts are dispatched from the rail\nhead some times 200 miles distant, by\nreindeer   idedges,   which     arc     often\ndrive,, by the women folks.    Two ofl Passages aud ihe roads leading up to\nthe latter have received the Military'll,0,1)  ru5  a,01,\ufffd\ufffd g^cries which    are\nmight on such a vast scale. Bui\nthere was little material in the impression given by the unprecedented\nspectacle in the North sea. It was\nmainly spiritual. The soul of thc\nnavy, lhe greatest expression of thc\nsoul of Britain, dominated everything,\ndefensive purposes. j la  thc  hour of ils  long-delayed  tri-\nThe naval correspondent of_ lhc j umph its conquest over a deadly ene-\nDaily Mail, writing of the immensely , my was thrown into high reiicf by its\nstrong fortifications on lhc island of  conquest over itself.   The vanquished\nHeligoland, says:\n\"Th.e summit of the island is one\nimmense bomb-proof, and the batteries  arc  so  placed as  to  bo  invisibl\nwas brought captive to the Forth in\nsilence, lint it might be thought lhat\nsuch restraint was due lo discipline.\nThat was not  so.    For civilians    on\nlp11 iii;\nChild Had\nSt Vitus' Dance\nfrom thc sea.    '.Pin- heavy-guns there  sma11 Clafl' w]i'1^ crowded the river\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11-inch and ll'-inch weapons\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprob-!as tl,c naval procession entered, were\nably were reinforced during the war! equally restrained,\nby 15-inch guns. The guns arc mount-  1S\ncd in steel turrets of great thickness.\nAll  the    batteries    and    observation\nposts are connected by subterranean\nAnd Was Losing   Control   ol\"   Anns\nand  Legs  Because  of Exhausted\nCondition of Nerves\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDoctor\nSaid Ke Could Ho Nothing. But Con.'plct.-.\nCure    Was\nEffected\n: \\f\neda! for gallant conduct in repelling: shell\"in'oof\nCordova, Man... March A. ---- To par-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcnts wiio are anxious or worried about\n, thc health  of  their  growing children\n{enemy raids on food convoys. * ! \"Th<; K\"ns arc mounted after the\ni Murmansk is an ice free port, buM'sual German fashion so as lo give\n| thc forces at Archangel arc complete- jlllenl an immense range, probably\nMy cut off from thc outside world f0i ifroin 1cn to'twelve and a half sea\nI six months of thc year. ' Inter-com- j miles. To enable the island to stand\ninuinicalion between the two forces!lllc concussion of lhcir discharge aiid\n. commaud-d hy General Ironsides is ''\"\"ist fire directed against it, \ufffd\ufffd6,000,-\nonly possible in thc winter time      by   -)0\ufffd\ufffd is \ufffd\ufffdaicl l0 Iiavc keen sI)c\ufffd\ufffdt before\n1910, and subsequently      other largc\n?ieutenant-governor. Mr. Brett, who\npointed out the desirability of preserving the historical records of both j\nnorthern and southern parts of thc i\nprovince. Thc establishment of a society for historical research was also\nsuggested.\nAt  the    present    time  there  is  no\naeroplane.   Major Sir Ernest Shacklc-\nour ait'en-, ton is attached lo General Maynard's j sums were allotted.\n\"Thc immense   seaplane   sheds arc\nf  said to have been of the disappearing,\n,    ,,        , ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Can-dian officers    and    non.comnlu  I type, which could bc low-cred as a pro-' \"age of over $180 a head and    Mr.\ns' Dance and al   such conditions   ^\"..man  onieus    ami    noii-iommia-I -,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..,:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,., i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,r ,..,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,   >n, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nsioned  officers,  all    experienced     5\" |t\ufffd\ufffd-ttion against long laugc (ire.  Ihei<\ntion   that  we arc  forced   to  consider, headquarters  as  adviser    on    Arctic I\nDr   Chase's Nerve Food the most ei-j       ;       ,.t      , ;, . j  f f \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfee.tivc   treatment  available     for    .St. ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'       . ' .    i\nPlaying the game\nnational.       It  is  nol  sophisticated\nsense of knowing the right thing    to\ndo, but instinctive, springing from   a\ngenerous heart.   Thc German as a foe\nwallowed in deviltry, but in the hour\nof his abasement Britons, ........i    and\ncivilian, added nothing lo it lhat was\nnot absolutely necessary. Chivalry\nwas out of the question, so was pity.\ni There was nothing for generosity to\ntake refuge in but silence.\nAlberta Beef Brings Highest Price\nMannscll Brothers, of Macleod,\nsold their beef a few weeks ago, shipping their choice slccrs to the Chicago market, where Ihey obtained the\nhighest price yet received for prairie\nfed beef.   The trainload netted an av-\nComedy Well Staged\nBritain's Comment on Action of German Cabinet\nLondon.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThc report that the German cabinet had decided not to sign\nthe renewal of the armistice is the\nsubject of comment in - the London\nnewspapers. - They call Lhc action of\nthe German government a \"comedy\"\nand say it was well staged. .The newspapers say that Germany has always\nhad faith in the policy of threats and\nbold talk and that the failure of tins\nattitude in the war has not prevented\nher from continuing it in defeat. Thc\npapers declare that thc allies have\nno intention of imposing upon Germany terms comparing in severity\nwith those Germany imposed on Russia and Roumania a year ago. The\nTimes,.in an editorial, points out that\nthc Frankfort Zeilung and thc Vor-\nwaerls of Berlin last ycar rejoiced in\nthe. terms which bound Roumania to\nGermany.\nDARTING, PIERCING\n5\nGive   way   before the penetrating effects cf Sloan's\nLiniment\nSo do those rheumatic twinges and\nJhe loin-aches of lumbago, the nerve-\n'inntrmmation of neuritis, the wry neck\nlhe joint wrench, thc ligament sprain'\nthe muscle strain, and tlie throbbing\nbruise.'\nThe ease of applying, the quickness\nof   relief, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the , positive -results,, the\ncleanliness,    and    the . economy    o\ufffd\ufffd\nSloan's Liniment make-it universally,\npreferred.   Made in Canada.\nTBIS IS AN AGE\nOF WEAK NERVES\nVi!\nwhicli  result  from\nnervous    cxhaus-\nlii |\nalthough there arc several splendid\ncollections of relics of the early days,\nand of the Indian work, which is rapidly deteriorating. It was at one time\nsuggested that the old Ft. Edmonton,\nsituated on thc banks of thc Saskatchewan south of the legislative buildings, bc restore1 and utilized for this\npurpose, but in the spring of 1914 thc\nbuildings were torn down and the\nground upon which they stood leveled in accordance-with tlic scheme of\nlandscape, gardening._ being' worked\nout on the'grounds -of- the legislative,\nbuildings. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -':.'.\nt'on. ! Klondike conditions, is attached     to\nTo    children    who    arc    naturally 't])C force as histructors in Arctic life,\nnervous  tlie  strain   of school  life   is  ,,, .. ,     .      ,        , ,      ,\noften more than tlicy can bear, and lcan,s 01 Ill,sk>' do-'s llavc also bccn\nthc results arc seen in headaches, specially sent out from Canada for\neye troubles, loss of appetite and in- transport work, though the reindeer\ndigestion.      The   usc   of   Dr. Chase's  w]l5cj, ronm in ]lcrds ovcr lhe    Lapp\ncountry arc chiefly used for this pur-\nmuseum of this kind in thc province .Nerve  Food at such times soon pu's\narc store shops and repair works with\nall the usual equipment of a naval\nbase. . The fortifications presumably\nwill be blown up, but their clcsfruc-\nlion will bc no easy business.    Tlicy\nMannscll is delighted with thc result\nof his shipping to .the stock market\nin thc southern city. Thc balance was\nbought by the P. Burn's Co., and arc\nbeing shipped to the Pacific coast\nmarkets.    Mannscll Bros, are    noted\nand     restores\nMan.\npose.\n- 1918 Salmon Pack.\n.Victoria, B. C. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vancouver, B.C.,\nadvices  report-\"a' total . of    1.616,157\n.cases of salmon were; packed.by the\ncanncrs of. British Columbia, - during\nthe .season of-1918, being!;58,672 -more\n_ than' in -1917.. Twenty-one - per' cent.\nof thc \"total were sock-eyes and red\nsprings,-the \"'balance being of'a-lower grade, fish. -,.-'.'\"'--.\nI Cost of War Amazes Gercnans\nthem  on    their    feci\nhealth and vigor.\nMrs.  Wm.  Matt.    Cordova\nwrites:\n\"i\\!y little girl, ten   years old, was\nnot  very   well,   and   1   noticed  some\nrather odd ways about her. Shc . Amount. Is 161 >000,0C0000 Marks Says\nused  to act very  strangely at  times. _...\ufffd\ufffd_.\nI asked lhc doctor what could be the ' _     Minister or Finance\nmatter, and he said she had St. Vi-' Weimar. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thc German people\nHis' Dance; to keep her quiet and generally do not understand clearly\n\ufffd\ufffd\"1  \ufffd\ufffd.l S-h0\ufffd\ufffd\\    .He,said  liniments  the financial situation  in which    the\narc  of armored  concrete  and     steel,lfor their quantity and quality of the\nand a very largc quantity of explosive l>cef thcy prepare for market, and so\nwill be required.\n\"Thc fortificaiions al either entrance to tlic Kiel Canal are of immense strength and are lavisMy supplied witli the heaviest guns in steel\nturrets.\"\nThere is more Catnn-li in this section of\nthe country thnn all other diseases put together, and for years it was supposed lo be\nincurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies,\nand  by  constantly   failing- to  cure  with   local\n-Adds tp His Reputation\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd In one of the most remarkable statements madci.from' the\nGerman, side since the close..of ,'.the\nwar, the' former ;Crowri ;Prince.-slami.\nthe-- late .ds'irig. -Edward- VII .for provoking .the\"-conflict\". John T. Parker-\nson,\"- correspondent--'of thc Daily''Ex'-'\nprcss, wire's -an\"-, interview . witli i , the\nyounger;\"-Hqhcnzollcrn.'from his ;place\nof-exile','Wei-irigcn,,.Holland. .\"        \"!\n..  ren't any use for her.     Shc     ...... iir, ,    1  j  -- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>   = \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\naffected  ill     th*s     wav     for a  \"Car      I , war   ilas   'ctt   them,  and   thcy   arc   too   treatment,   pronounced   it   incurable.     Catarrh\n.thouaht something oudit to b'e done, j optimistic, declared Dr. SchifTer,   the &,\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd$ JS,S T,S\ufffd\ufffdd &\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?\ufffd\ufffd\nso  in  looking .over  Dr.  Chase's  Al-      '  \" \"  ~ ... _.....\nmanacl.   read,   several   testimonies\nfrotp    people   ..who    had'   used    Dr.\nChase's  Nerve  Food.    I  \"sent  for six\nboxes    and    started-'this    treatment\nwith rhy .daughter.     Before she    had\nfinished the 'first    box..I  could  sec a\nrrreat change iii her. and \"by. the-time\nshe had taken- thc six bo'xes she was\nhave many bidders for whatever thcy\nhavc  to  sell.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLethbridge  Herald\nMen and Women Alike Suffer From\nThis Serious Ailment\n\"No heart for anything\" is thc cry\nof thousands of men and women who\nmight bc made well and strong by lhc\nnew, -rich red blood Dr. Williams'\nPink Pills actually make.\nMisery day and night is the lot of\nhosts of men and women who arc today the victims of weak nerves. Thin,\npale, drawn faces and dejected attitude tell a sad'talc, for nervous weak-,\nness means, being tortured by morbid\nthoughts and unaccountable fits of depression. These sufferers arc painfully sensitive and easily agitated by\nsome chance remark. Sleeplessness\nrobs them of energy and strength;\ntheir eyes are sunken and their limbs\ntremble; appetite is poor and memory often fails. This nervous exhaustion is one of the most serious evils\naffecting men and women of today.\nThe only way to bring back sound,\nvigorous health is to feed the starved\nnerves, which arc clamoring-for ncw,\nrich blood. This ncw blood can be\nhad through the usc of Dr. Williams'\nPink Pills, which fact accounts for the\nthousands of cures of nervous diseases bronchi about by this powerful j\n'blood ..;' builder and nerve restorer\nThrough a fail\nmmmm&mmz\ufffd\ufffdx.i\n30c.    OUc,    $1.20\nBavaria Faced\nBy Internal Trouble\nBerlin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The Bavarian     government of Premier Eisner is faced with\na serious internal situation, according\nto   dispatches   received    here.      The.\nMunich  correspondent  of thc Anzei--\ngcr Zcitung says    tliat -the garrison!\nin  Munich  and  Nuremberg    arc   recruiting troops for llie express purpose of opposing Eisner, his Sparta-\ncan, and Independent Socialist follow-.-\ners and thc soldiers' council.\nThe same report.states . that ,the\nSparlacans- who are temporarily-.\" in\ncontrol at Nuremberg, will be thrown\nout by troops, brought .in-from\" the\noutside if necessary. A Munich dispatch to thc Vorwaerts says that ?.-\nsolution of thc . government crisis\ncannot bc delayed longer.\n'*Wireless Lighthouses\"\nFor Flying Pilots\nWill Be of Great   Value   in   Foggy\nWeather. -.       .-.- ;     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/.\nAt present, the weather is thc. great'\nnatural enemy of. aviation, but before\nlong it will be fully .conquered.   Two\nuse of this medicine I things'are needed for victory. One. is\nihous.-nds of despondent people ha.v.c4hc .]mlUipj;cat;on of meteorological\nbeen made bright, aetiv^ and strong,    ... . .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-_,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -     -\n'minister  of finance,   in   an  address  to   constitutional treatment.   Hall's Catarrh Cure,\n,-.       r* .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        ,\"'--11        v \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'\ufffd\ufffd     .manufactured by K..J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,\nllic   German   national   assembly.        Hc . Ohio, is n constitutional remedy;, is taken  in;\napparently astonished the. house when. ter\ufffd\ufffda% \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ac? *l'ru'he Blood bn the Muc-\n.    . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,-.-      .   -.' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- otis   Surfaces  oi   the   System.     One   llmnl-ed\n, lie gave the SlatlS'iCS to.show, that the   \"Hollars   reward   is  oflfc\">d   for  any  case  that\nwar had .cost 161.000.000 000 marks.\"        1\"-!,!1's'-Cat\ufffd\ufffdr?!' c\"rc tails {\ufffd\ufffd cure'  Send for\n.   Dr. SchijTer, then tasked    that    the\nassembly vote a  credit in  the    form\ncompletely cured. ' .She is real'well, of a loan\" for 25,300,000,000 marks,\nnow-, and goiter .to school everv d-'v. ] the greatest loan \"the German people\n..\"Another daughter of: mine \".'has- cyer havc bccn askcd |o ^^ Hc\nfound1 Dr. .Chases Catarrh Powder. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . - .,,-.,.- x. -, .\n.vervbeue.Rci:d..;-and we\",alwav=- keep explained, that last October the.gov-\n'the -Kidnev-Liver- Pills \"on hand as crnm'cnt-stood'on the verge of \"finan-\na   household, remedy\"    for-, backache,  cial exhaustion.    It \"asked fof a credit\nc1ia'   '\/-, -   ', \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -K-  -'   ' V- \\' -ii -   -;  ! of\" 15,000,000,000 \"fnarksV'bu't when this\n,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -Dr. -Chase's  Nerve  Food.  M cents i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.    -   ..  ,   ; .        .\na .box. a-full..treatment of 6- boxes was- mused raised it by means of\nfor %?..7S,I at\" \"all dealer's.'.'or Edmari- bank'note..issues. .The speaker was\nson,. Batcs_&- Co.; Limited, Toronto. I applauded -'whe'ri ' he\"\" remarked that\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDo'-\nsub\npoint\npirciilars   and\"-testimonial1?,\nV. J.\"CI1KNKY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sold  by   Druggists,  75c.       -   .'  .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Hall's  Family  I'ills for. constipation.\nNorthern Manitoba's\nFur Production\n;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. -Millcr's-Worm    Powders ' do', not\n' need tlic.~aftcr-.hclp .of -'castor -.oil ~-or\nany , purgative!,: to .'..'complete '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, th> if\n: \"thorough if ess.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdibecause they are- thorough, in .themselves. ..One. .dose  ;.-of\ntliem',ati'd  tlioy will\" be .found- paint-,\niddc by all ^children, 'will, end the worm\ntrouble.' by -making\" the stomach. . and\n.\"bcQi-cts untenable .-to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   thc 'parasites.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=-A't\\(1 not  only ..this, but'the-powders.\n,' v,*i'.i...l)e cer.taii'n to\"'exert mosvbenefi'cial\n. Influences, in\" the. digestive organs.   '\n.   Women. Want-Prisoners-Released\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .. Berne. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- .An     intcrraliohal     wo-\n'jiiVn'i conference, at which delegates\nfrom  the-entente, countries and    thc\n-central  powers   wcrc present,  passed\n-a resolution demanding that all    war\nprisoners.-and. interned pei;sons be released.    It\" was decided, by  thc cori-\nfcrencc to send a-delegation'to Pr'e_>-\n- ' jdc'ii.t Wilson to-promise him suppo.-t\nfor.'lus peace program,, and also    to\n.'-.request\" thc elimination of militaristic\n; -.tendencies in school teaching.\ni,   iJULv.-i  ui.-v.w.,   L.1111111-U,    .luiumu. iHnpiuuui'ii    wnen    ne    r.emaiKcu  inai\n--npt.-'be- talked-into, accepting a. :tr{nK ,arid-   opcnness ' sbbuld- bc thc\nis'itute.   , Imitations   only    dtsap- ,    .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,,-.     ... , .   -        . -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .\nn(. - .-   .   ,-;-,-'    ..-.,-. basis of all-politics'and,-finance.\nBelongs to\nSocialist Party\nIs a Source pf Considerable. Revenue.\nYearly :\nFur. production in - tlie. northerly\nparts of. thc. Prairie Provinces'is: a\nsource of considerable revenue year-\nWorms cause frctfulncss and rob\nthc infant of sleep, the great nourish-\ner. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator will clear the stomach and intestines aud restore healthfulness.\nChance for Naval Men\nOttawa. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thc department of tlic\nnaval service has obtained from the\nmarine department a decision to thc\neffect that riicii serving during the\nwar on ships of thc Canadian - navy\nwill thereby _ obtain the necessary\nqualifications for obtaining certificates\nin the mercantile marine:- Thc decision .recently given'will enable-a num-\nber'of .men - who.'havc served during\nthe war to-conic up for.examination\nand-obtain their navigation certificates. -       ''   ' : '\nimontr these is  Miss Bibianc-.-Chias\nson, South   Beach. Que., who says\nstations  so. that    aviators  may  have\nforc-khowlcdgc of the- weather condi-\n\"I am a teacher by profession, sand | tioiis thcy arc likely to meet on long\nprobablv due lo the close confinement nights. Thc second is thc use of di-\nsnid arduous nature  or  inv dull\"?     I ,       ..      r   ,: .    ,    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1 rection-nnding       wireless     appartus,\n'This apparatus is a British war product\" and  is.at present, a .secret, but\nbecame much run down and suffered\nfrom extreme nervousness. Thc least\nnois'1 would st^rMe mc.tand my heart\nwmdd be;>t violently. Indeed my condition was an unbappv one. T IismI\nof'^n   beard    of Dr.   Williams'  Pink\nFi'ls. as a cure-for ..nervous, troubles   , .   t ,    ,    , - .\nand decided to give them.a fair trial, i instruments which' indicated thedis-1.\nI am nanny to say that +lii_= rnpclirinc | laucc an(f direction  of  wireless   sta-\ncompletidvrestored mv henlUvr'and  l-i.\ufffd\ufffd -.     i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -     -->   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"   -j\ncan  conf.d-nMy recommend it  to all  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdons_on land.    Aircraft so equipped-\nsuft'erintr fr0m nervbiis troubles;\"- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    - j ca\ufffd\ufffd hx- lhcir\"posiiion. frequently, can\nwe shall soon learn all about the\nmcans by Which British inventors\ny;cre able  to provide aircraft     with\nWhen all men' arc what thcy .pretend to be- - the. millennium problem\nwill be easy.        ;.    ' .   .'    -'\nThe dairy industry in Saskalchc-\n: wan is assuming large proportions,\nwith a sum of $41-4,629 invested in\nplant and ' buildings, according lo a\nreturn brought down to the legislative assembly. Tiie estimated value\nof the co-operative plants is $115,184,\n''  The daily \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd expenditure ..during, thc\nwar, Dr. SchifTer. added, ,ra\"r.g?d from\n49.000,000 \"marks '\"in'-1914 ,to- 135 000,-\n', 000,-in 1918..\"\" The minister\", explained\n  jthiit  there'had. been ,a;.  steady-.   ,de-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,...\"   \"'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -   . \"U-.i , . ,   t-i'-i '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    crease- in \"expenditure^, since. the;;sic\"n.-\n-Wci.mar. r- tricdnch  Ebcrt, presi-j- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - - -    -\ndent- of  Gerifiany,. in his '.speech\"acr\nccpting the presidency, said:   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n--\"-1- will -administer itiy-office-, not as\nthe leader \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-of a single party, but'   I, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ....    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        ...  :,-.,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       ,\n:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -- <  -- -   -,     -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. ..    .       -   .- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"\/'desperation.\".  He said that the-- sol-\nbelong    to . .the--Socialist,partyj. and ,,..-;,-,  -,'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--',-, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.,.   -.\ncannot forget that, origin and J tram'-.\nihg...^,'- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,'...-;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ; \";;-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-;-'\". .-\"\ning. of ,t!ie\" armistice\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._Tlie.'.minister \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd condemned' the' 'waste\nthroughout'lhc .War and cliar'-'^Tiz^d\nthe war finances -as \"\"a-.'.program:. of\n. \"The. privileges., of;-birth, already\nhave .been\" eliminated\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;. :from politics\nand are \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbeing-eliminated... from,1 social\ndiers'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.and .workmen's' councils since\nthe war had'at:times -.-been*' accused\nunjustly but unfortunately \"too. many\ncouncils wcrc'not'.of advantage loathe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgovernment,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfinancially.' '\" -';-.--   ; - -*\/\" '\nlife;  : '.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -;-'.--;,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd X- . :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  yXXy    ._\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Wc shall'.'combat '.domination, by\nforce' l\"6 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  utmost,'-from---whatever i-\nTonnage Lost by France\ndirection' it .niay.cofne,\nfound bur-state only on thc-basis of\nfight .arid on our freedom  to ..shape\nour    destinies    at  homq \"aiid abroad.\nWc Wish to j 0nly,One-fifth of That   Suffered, by\nGreat Biitain' ....\nParis. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" A full list\" of tlic  French\nnaval  losses in  the  war, -whicli ' has\nHowever ^.arsli may be the. lot threat-,bcc!1 published.-includes .four\".\"ba':tle-\nening the German people, wc do not Lb^ tflc, nouve't, SufTrcn,\"' baulois\ndespair of Germany's vital forces.\"    |.ancl Daiiton; four armed, cruisers, the\nThey Soothe Excited Nerves.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNervous  affections  are  usually  attribut-\n,     . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ,     -   , ,i     r ... jable to  defective'digestion,    as    the\nly. The .value-, of .the fur production Utomach domina<es the nerve centres,\nin Manitoba, last .year amounted to A course of Parmelce's^. Vegetable'\nmore than .a-million and .'a half fdol-\"l T*ills will still all-disturbances of this\nla'rs, -which  indicates -the  iniporfance7charactcr' a\ufffd\ufffdd, hV restoring the stom-\nv 1,-.    r '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i:    -r .1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      , .'.ach to normal ac*ioiv.relieve the ner-\nof-this branch of the,.province's re-,VPS fronl lrrit:Uion. - There is no se-\nsourccs. .The. following\/table-shows; dative like them and in the. correc-\nthc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"value; \"of ;'fur'of .'the different i tion of irregularities of the digestive\nkind of animals .caught-last year.;     {Processes,.no preparation has done so\nOticr:..::;...:.:.:.:::..::..::^...:.....:..:;.$'64 880!{,ffe5lUVe work, as.can bc testified to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-         '-'         -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'            .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   XX. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-hy thousands.   '                 - \/--\nBeaver-..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...:..v...:_-:....ir.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_..^._ .-.221.100)   -Xy, .  __- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\n..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd87420-,'Piers Become Government'Property\n;-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :'38;50_;)|-   -Victd\"ria,-\"B.\".C. ~ Piers~number 2\n.\" j 11 720 j and 3, the. big concrete docks at tlic\n.'.105,400! entrance-.to .Victoria harbor have'.becn\n. 522 9.0J turned oyer to the-Canadian National\nRailways  (C.N.R;)  and have become\npart and parcel ,of the' Dominion government transcontinental    transportation system\"; ','\"-;'--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\".'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'    ,'-.-:\".''-'\"\". X--',\nDr. Williams'  Pink Pills are    sold\nby all dealers in .medicine, or .may be\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd had-by mail at 50\"cents a box-or six.\nboxes for- $2.50 from The Dr.    Williams' Medicine. Co., Brockviile, Ont.\n- A-jury recently met-to inquire into\na case\" of suicidc_ After-silting through\nthc .'evidence the twelve men retired,\nand, Ji'te'r deliberating, returned with\nthc following verdict:   , . '     - .\n\"The    jury    arc all of one mind\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ntemporarily insane 1\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJersey Journal.\nreport to their base at any moment;;\nwhere they are,'what course thcy arel\nsteering-and whether thcy:arc in any.\ndifficulty. Thus the imperial \"wireless;]\nchain\" will be an indispensable factor^\nin the organization of long-dis'tancc;;,\nflying. The direction-finding w>re-.;\nless instruments will, of course, be of-'\ngreat value to shipping in\" foggy, .\nweather or when thc clouds prevent\"\nthe steering of a cbursc'by.itlic'st'arsf',\nDespite the fact that the precipita-\nProposed   departmental    buildings t;on ;n'southern Alberta in' 1918 was.\"\n!fpr whicli plans have been   prepared !the lowest on record, - SHrjmcrfallow-f\nby the .Alberta-governmeht will not j cd^land-   produced .wheat crops'run-!\nbe proceeded with\" this-year.   . They! nhig ^    high as 35 -bushels''to' the\nacre,    while  .-20-bushel   .'crops    were\nMink-_.'......':.\"....\".:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFisher-'...!....:-!;..\nSkunk. - ......-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nMarten   .:1,1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;_...\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdR'atv:_.l-..!..-:v:.\n|-W6lf . -:.,.X..:.i.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nl'B\\:ar....'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._:::~'.-:.\nFox v-:..:....:.....-...\n?ox:i...rX...J..i..\nLyii'x, .'...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.........'.\nErmine - .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.:..::\nWolverine.\t\narc \"to -.bcerccted on the capitol\ngrounds at Edmonton at an estimated\ncost-of $250,000,\n%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMen.\", who accomplish \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd most.never\nseem in a hurry, no matter how much\nthcy-have to do.      ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        'V .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nquite common. These results were\nobtained on a precipitation through^\nout the season of ,7.37 inches, ...s'recorded\" at the Dominion experimental\nfarm at Lethbridge. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,-\n21-7,000\n- 20,280\n20,38!)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd205.570\n'. 34 420\n- 25;250\n'' 1:570\n. Only One \"BROMO QUININE\" ;\nTo cat the genuine, call (or full name I.AX-\nTIVE HROMO QUININE Tablets.. Look\n-for\" signature of E. \\V.: GROVE.\" Cures a\nCold  in  Oiio   Day:\"    30c\nMinard's  Lv i.r^ent Cures. Distsmper.\n... Manitoba Has.Revenue Surplus\n\" Winnipeg,- Man.'1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Provincial'treasurer. Hon; >Edward.Brown,, staled,, in\nthc.;legislature -that, the hooks, will ;.be\nclosed.'-.for.'-1918, with  a' revenue, sur-\n^linard's Linimtnt Cures.  Colds. *tc.\nCounter-strike   Used as  Weapon\nBerlin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Twenty .thousand   store\nemployees  in   Berlin   have gone\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; The' work laid out -by., the Alberta\nlegislature in connection with\". roads\nand\" bridges  for ..tire ..ycar^ will  takt\n$1,000000    and there is-an:.extensive\nbuilding, program bcsidi-s. ' The.' gov- i P-his of $322|867. -The' salient\" points\ncrnmeni's desire is tb pfovidc as.much ;of iiis Statement;are;- Revenue-surplus\nAdmiral Gambelta, Admiral \"Charms, .'\"employment as-possible-on .neccssary.!$'322,867;: surplus: of ;assctsyover .Iia-\"\nClcber and Dupctit Thouars, and-one ' works- and as soon as.'.'tlie estimates ;bilities, $3-1,200,000; net .debt afler.de-\nf'tsl cruiser the Chateau ' llemtiU havc bcc\" Passcd. stcPs wiH'be ;takcn<l\ufffd\ufffdciing, cash., and sinking fnnd,'.,r.$13,-\n. There  wer^  besides,  fourteen- -de^,t<? *>n:I,arc iov'a[ bl'^  \"sprin!?   'a,,(1- 00t'-00b;- - revent^bearing  dcblv'^lS,-\nand\nslr'tkc  for higher wages.     Leipzigcr-1\nOS) :tfoyers,   tiglit    torpedo-    boats-\n' fourteen   submarines   lost.    One\nwrasse, where some of thc big .stores!'1^ subinarincs. the Duiic,  was     re-\nafe  closed, is  occupied    by    troops, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n\ufffd\ufffdatfd ^ thc cncI\">'' b,u was subsc-\nsummcr.   Operation's, will' bebegu.n as 3;>(),Q00; expended\"., less than-estimated\n0f  early in  the season as weather con-j hist.year,-. $364,000.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dition'.s will permit.\nwho are maintaining order.\nSpartac.'ins arc indulging in promiscuous firing in the newspaper\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdquarter.\nqucntly recovered.    The  minor ships:!     Before  lhe war  Norway  possessed\nr    ,. ,    , ,.,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,     ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   ,    ,empire, workers   strikes arc met\nof which  tlicre  arc 19.   1 he 19 mdc-     ^K^       ...       .       ,    t ..  ^.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr.\n-.t. counter-strikes by  doctors and Other\ne1 a t -\nprofessional- classes^.\nwhich were sunk  were five auxiliary;ow     Rross    ton    of shipping per m-\nCTiiiscrs, four gunboats, 72 submarine dividual,   as    compared   wilh^  abaiit-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , , , ,    ,rhaser\ufffd\ufffd   one  -doon and seven    small '.one  ton for cvery  three    individuals\nLvcrvwhere throughout thc -.cnascrs, oin. bioop .ir.iiuui    sma\".. ..   .\n* '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - in Great Britain.-\npendent.plants have $299,44-5 in phi\nand buildings\nTyphus in Moscow\nWashington.,;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Information reach- !\nThere   arc    salt   mines    in Poland\nthat have been .worked for more than j c(]  Uic' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd state-department    from  Hel-\nsix centuries.   -,.    ' ' i .XX- '.'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i.'sinfofs that7 a'party of French, Brit-\nby  craft. .--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .   ;\nThc loss in  tonnage- was   110 000\ntons against 550 000 tons for Britain,\n76,0(30 tons for Italy and 17,500 tons\nIfor'the United..Slates. -  -      j\nakesQutaaS\nCil\nShould Submit\nTerms to People\n., London. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thc view that the terms\nof \"peace with Germany' should be\nsettled.before the .organization, of a\nsociety.;of nations is dealt, with, was\nexpressed in thc- house of-.commons\nby Horatio W.'Bottomlcy.'\n\"',\ufffd\ufffdThc .speaker declared .that the- g'pv-\n.criimcnt.;w.ould\" lose a large -part of.\nits majority if it brought to the house\nthe draft of- a\" peace treaty, wliich-.had\nto be a.cccptcd^ or rejected, without-al-.\n-tcration. -Tlie preliminary treaty,\"he\nsaid,\"- should . ;l>c. iniiialcd- and- then\nsiibiniltcd. to ahc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'people ot chcli\ncountry. .  \"' ;. -'-\"' \"-,'-.- . \". \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . -,,\n. Mr. Botlpmley saidhh was'no't-'Sure\nthat if that.%vere'. done, President Wilson would. - find that he- spoke- with\nsuch absolute authority for; the\nUnjtcd Slates.'\"-;\" \"' . \"\n:     Influenza\"in \"Paris :\"~\"     ^\nParis.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- There has becni a great\nincrease during the past week in .the\nnumber of cases of influenza report*\ned.- - In Paris' the 'number of deaths\nregistered during the p3st three weeks\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfrom the discase^_pr .maladies result^\niiig from it were re^pc\"Ctively~2at,-376.\n.and 550.'' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'' Xi-\nIn \"llic'   glorious'.feasUof-knowlcdsc'i\nish,\"Belgiari,.\"]taHa'vi -''and    American.\"\nAlberta Headquarters for Mounties .'\n.   Lethbridge, Alta...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd According   to\nadvices received here,' Lethbridge\". is\n'*omci.,.rvOp5c: ,.-\\n.veD.-R<-t;,any\nthan 111,0 .'s-jt-.i';.-1.';-\"':',\"-V.,.V'^-.;:.:\nivr-tlrcr--'-.- - .\niimmm mm helpj\n..\/\"Sp.iJikni^.upesi! 'tc-u're.bed-wettjiig.'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-,-^r-'tlie:,ir<.-ubie;is clnii !tp:jv.c;alities3;i.\nreiicf'-.'workers \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'returning- from.;^Mos-, finally fixed as  the  headquarters    of.\ncow \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tpV'St.ock-holm,!;. reported    there j the new jso\\ithern'. \"Alberta division of'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:':V;-;^ivvercXi Vthousand ncw'f'cascs. of \"typhus-j the,-Mounted,Police*-which is' to. cni-\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-., :  .-jjn Mo?cp,w.-.Weekly antl.thaVrthc.hos- | brace .-the;^pl.d,,Calgary - and-.'McLeod .-\nFI\" P' '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd V'^-M -wcVe>iiriabie\\tp\".\"care for\" the\" pa-!'districts.: v This.\\ncw, \"divisipn; will  be\nliCfit-S.\ntli\n- j known as' K7'the',.British' Columbia as.\n'-.-..   '.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'\"'    -_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; '\" '' . J'E, -jlie old -.Galgary.-title!   :and     the'\n, .Ir.c;ymes yi- t>cr.s'i-'jn;ers,a:nd .thf-ir de- j-Mfmitoba division is to- be 'known,\" as\npe'r.dcnts.'i.l.v.ing - in\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Saskatchewan,   f o-] f)f jf.p c]fi \\\\acL.eod title.    Tt, is\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd fix-\ni<-X.s' ;t!ic \"yp.cnXvpvX.. . are -conrerncd |pCc'te.d!t!iaf :llierc'.will\"hc\"-'2O0yihtn..:,p..\n...        yXittxXci rx'''-mi;t;frofii   -irinnieipal...; inf i'This'divjsibn, :'     .'\".   \"  :\"   \":\"\".' '    ' '\n.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ireat^:J':' !-cpmW;t.-.?;\"   t'hisj   iirmci^-bcmg -as; j        -    '-.   ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/ ,;\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,; --.~. .,..-   .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^sft?i.;^-a<^ts? \\rXriril-ki an A^ci'idhVcnt to ;i:c    vil- j    'It: is. said    that \" liquor,   -intprbves-\n;^trou!.)^d,-^itU;.yr^uaiy.<ii;i:i>:U;ti^ ']:,:,c. :ttu v.l'iu-h'-will\" alio-be':na'<!e to-'^it'i -ag-r. W.i .soa;sm'en.-don't care tf)\n, IP.i.]LVriWihr,%LulnX -;;WtBdser,QcU--jvt,\" .^X y;..^.^^ irii, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.- - -.^4;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..'\"'\n'.>ry-s-i;ccess-,1\n- ^fuL-IibViie'treatincntyvM '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nX Jicljjfj.il-'\"' - if'vii.d.'-s.io.'.-inoncf,' but, j\n:,-write ine;-'to-\ufffd\ufffdIajr!:'.;.\n;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'is\" Ct]ii:xUy\n'\".,?\nFrance is Grateful\nVictoria,     B.  . C, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' General\n;Paul  Pau, head of thc  French\nmission-to Canada, in an     address \"before 600 persons, at    a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Canadian'.-club; lunchcon,: told of\n..the; gratitude, of his country to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe;Dominion, for her., part in,\n\".the\"war..   He spoke in French,-\n' liis - remarks' -being- ..interpreted .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'for. '..his 'audience. - The \"'.object.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of ;his,\" mission, he', said,- was' tb\nstrengthen the.ties-of friendship\nbetwe-.n    France,, and \". Canada.'\".\nMr. Andre: Siegfried,\" a \"member\"\nof th.o. commission,   \"who...-also'\ns\"pck;:; - paid.\"a-, high  tribiitf; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\" to\nthc' prowess. '0^ tlic, soldiers' oi\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the H'-itish-rac'ei\"       .    -   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     . -.'\nHeal Two Weeks Old Baby\nOf Skin Trouble.\n\"V\/ben about two weeks old niy\nbaby turned blue, and in a couple of -\ndays broke out- in a rash.\" -\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThen   lhe   turned-   sore\nsround her eais and on   -\nthe top of her bead, and\non her arm's -and  legs. '\nThe skin was red and she\nscratched till she made it\nbleed. She could not sleep,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- \"I wrote for a free sample of Cuti- .\n.CHta. Soap and Ointment.,   It was a .\n'.'\"great relief, so' I \"bought .more, and I -:\n- -used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and  -\nthree . boxes iof = Cuticura - Ointment ;\n-when -. she  was  healed.\" \"-(Signed) -:\n. .Mrs. Alfred-' Ryan; 107A ..St. Martin;.\n'. Ct.;, Montreal, <2ue.,'August 10, 1017. -.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n. -, For every, porpose of the toilet Cuti-;J;\ncora Soap'aad Ointment,arecuprfce.\",';\nFor Free Sample Each by-Mail ad\ufffd\ufffd,\".;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  dress pbct-card: f'Cut terra, Dept. A.\n. Jlostpn,U. S. A.\" Sold everywhere.\nDeclare State of Siege\nEasel.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\A state of siege has'been\ndeclared at-.Hamburg; Germany, until\nthe people of that city have surrendered-all arms in their possession.;\n. Patrols, demanding these '.arms,'\nare faking action against those'who\nresist. . \"-\"-.\"\".\"\nGustav Xoske, .minister in charjge\nof military affairs in- thc Ebcrt cabinet, has telegraphed to thc. president of the soldiers' council at Hamburg;-^saying:; .that ; he'-\"will not\" take\nmilitary measures'agaihst that .city\nas the\" soldiers' and workmen's .council, is; restoring .order.;-.' ':- . -' ' \":  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.'\"\n~:;i\"VX,.-x\\'\\\\i% dp.-ypil' aHvays.iri'iti.^\":'. j.\nmy singing.y.-hen.Jfr.;Brinile>;\/c6riii>; j'\nhcTX?XXXXiXX.yyxyi;xi 'X X'.,XX\\.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-'-'Weill t'-'don't 1 i ke; \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd VQ\" <\"oii.ie r ,\"rigrit j\"\nont,-'and. tcll.-'-^iin-'...'lb \" 'go\/'r-Bosten j:\n; Transcript. .V, -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ..:::.. yXr XI. X; -\",., 'i.X\nEasilij\nDigested\nIf ijouf usual\nfboddoasnt\ndigest easily\nand uou wart\nfesSisfection\nof a i^adij-tb-\neat cereal dish\nwii1\nrrtent at\ncost, try\n'w-;'.';.jj;'  u.   12*' j S   ;,* <\"\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>;<]\nTHB    JLEDGSk    GBEEtfWOOD.    B.   &\nsi\/). S\nSecure  a $5,000  Protection  and  Savings Policy* \ufffd\ufffd, Gillian Strikes OTe  Political\nAge 20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS108.9C        Age 30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?13CU0 Annually =!will Be Maintained    Until   Goveni-\nAge 25\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$118.50       Age 35\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$J44.70 Annually g ment Troops are Withdrawn\nWrite for pamplet today \ufffd\ufffd      Berlin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The general strike in the\nTHE FXOISIOR LIFE INSURANCE Cl. f ^Jt'^L ITS \ufffd\ufffd,T, 1\nWINNIPEG     SASKATOON     EDMONTON     VANCOUVER   ~   ]arge o majority    of    the    miners  as\n6>'9-&9&9.t\/2G\/&S\/9'S\/&&&\ufffd\ufffd\/&S\/d<G,'&i,''y\"~\nI Rheumatic Pains I\n\ufffd\ufffd  Are relieved in a few days by \ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd) taking 30 drops of Mother Seiget's (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nC\ufffd\ufffd  Syrapr\/termenlt and on retiring. \ufffd\ufffdD\nIit dissolves the lime and acid \ufffd\ufffd\naccumulation in the muscles and (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\njoints so these deposits can be 9)\nexpelled, thus relieving pain and \ufffd\ufffd -\nsoreness.  Seigel's   Syrup, also (\ufffd\ufffd\nknown as \"Extract of Roots,\" e}\ncontainsnodopenorotherstrong ^\ndrugs to xill or mask the pain of (j,\nrheumatism or lumbago^ it re- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\")\n. moves the cause.   50c. a bottle $\nat druggists. It tf\nK<<jrfS25nervoiitii\"fU,Di, itmbi'S ucvl.im .1\nt.w*w^\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffdjn   0|j  y,;.,^    c,.r(S   J.crvoua\nVrb; il]f,T,:cnt\"l nnd lirai'i IVarr'i, J.cjjon-\ndenrn, I n\ufffd\ufffdi ef I.nirrv, 'J oT~)i.'-lion tf the\nJfto>ttI<'\"Uint Jl.Vjmn-)'. 1'ric'o Ct P'-'r bos, ti-:\nfor\ufffd\ufffd3. OnQWi'.lnl'.'CJV.iixirulruro. Uoldlyull\nuruEi;i\ufffd\ufffdts or mailed in pl.-.in pbg. on roer.-t of\nRricc. jV>ii w'viph '<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd< muHcil Irce. ~\ufffd\ufffdY.\ufffd\ufffd VVOCO\n\\Eoi~.ir-. co...TCRcriT3,ta. (:\ufffd\ufffd=>\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffdv.itiscrj\nfug HEW M5N'JH REMcDY. N.l.rt.2 N-3.\nT rt fc R A PIO tf !%&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nffi-atSlin \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. CbKUS CIIROMC WEAKNESS, lost vicos\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd VIM. KlP.VEf. BLADMt.ll. DIShASLS. BLOOD I'OliON.\nNlKS. ElTllKft NO. DltUCOISrSf M\/ULM. POST 4 CT*\nrOUGEKA CO. 91). UKI-KMAS ST M.W t Ollii or LYMAS Blmt\nronoNio. wmiti: ron FttGE iiuokio Dr. Lk Cli-.uo\nMto.Co, H*vu\ufffd\ufffd!.roi:kKi>. Hami'S-kad, London. Eng.\nTwy SKW PHAGESII AST !<1 ySCIFOHKOr    EASY 10   TAKS\nsar: ANn\nLAbi'lNC-CUXb\n'lit   THAI    I HADE   MA,<*M)   HOM   ' THtPAPION     IS u*\nbui.euvT.siAur a.tusdto all as.-uimcpAnmi*\n\"Mounties\" Coming\nVancouver, B. C. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Within a few\nweeks thc North West Mounted\nPolice will be stationed in Vancouver.\nSoon the striking and historical uniform of these \"scarlet riders of the\nplains\" will become very familiar to\nthc citizens of British Columbia, carrying with il thc traditions and thc\nhonor upheld by these men in maintaining law and justice fearlessly\nthroughout the great northwest of thc I against\nread in    spite\n~  large o majority\nshown by voles taken al many places\nopposed the movement. Coal production in the region is virtually at\na standstill.\nThe Socialist Vorwacrts and thf\nBourgcoise newspapers declare that\nthc strike is a political movement instituted by Sparlacans and independent socialist leaders.\nSpartacans from Dusscldor, gc-\ncording to reports received here,\nhave disarmed thc police of Muhlcim\nand taken away canon and mine\nthrowers from thc barracks for use\nthe    government    troops   ai\nDominion for ycais pasl. Thc Vancouver exhibition association, at a recent met\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*..-. \ufffd\ufffdjj-Mj i t'Miii vimnmi'm.aujm jihiuimbb\nmmmmSmm\nEasily and  Quickly  Cured  with\nEGYPTIAN   LINIMENT\nFor   Sale   by   Al!\nDouglas  &   Co,   Prop'rs.\nDealers\nNcipanee,  Ont.\nDorslen.     The    Spartacans at   Mui-\nhcini announce    the    strike    will  bc\ning, received  an application  maintained    until     the     government\nfrom tlic North West Mounted Police j troops are withdrawn from the Kuhr tuitions will, according to the\nfor accommodation at Hastings Park'district.     They    say lhal if food be- ibail's Paris correspondent, include in\nGermans Wanted\nTo Reject Terms\nAfter Consultation with Party Leaders, Decision Was Changed\nWeimar. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The German cabinet\nvoted to reject the allied terms for\nthe renewal of the armistice and\ntake chances of an allied military advance being ordered. After consultation with thc parly leaders, however,\nthe decision was changed, and orders\nwere issued that the armistice bc\nsigned.   \"\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thc terms of the ncw\nmilitary treaty to be imposed on Germany in lieu of thc monthly armistice,\n:ind as a part of the liual peace con-\nDaily\n'called upon    to gh'c up I hoi restores.\nThe   Spartacans    announced\nlificalions of Heligoland and the  Kiol I ,jrn iim;ls.\nin order to eslablLh their permanent  eoim-s scarce the    bourgcoise will ue j:i<I<litioii to the destruction of llic fort-\nquarters  there.    Thc application asked  for accommodation    for  150 men\nand thc tame number of horses. It intention of carrying thc sliikc from!10 l\ufffd\ufffd\"a\ufffd\ufffdic, tlic mimciiiaic &ii'\ufffd\ufffd:nl'.- 01\nwas stated that the force wished to, the Khinelaud into central C.crnnnyJ^'tain warships which have not ycl\nbc established in thc city by the first; for  a  \"final     struggle  between  labor,hvc\"   Kiv0\"   \"P. \">  required,  and   the\nSUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Australia Ofcrs Sympathy\nLESSON   FOR  MARCH 2 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THE\nREPORT OF THE SPIES\nOttawa. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The acting prime minister received   tho    following    cablegram from Hon. \\V. A. Wat!, acliug\n1.    Thc Spies Sent Out  (13:17-20).! prime  ministcr\"of Australia,  exprcs-\nLcss than two ycais have    passed  sing lhc  commonwealth's    sympalhv\nsincc    the    Israelites    were delivered  in thc death of Right lloi\\. Sir Wil-\nfrom  Egyptian  bondage.      They arc  frid Laurier: ^\nnow at Kadesh-Duinca, within sight) \"Government and people of Aus-\nof the promised land. Moses urges tralia deeply regret the death of Sir\nthem to go in and take immediate Wilfrid Laurier which has brought lo\npossession (Deut. 1:21) but the\\ fail a close a long and outstanding career\nbecause of their unbelief (Hcb. 3:19)., of eminent empire statesmanship, lu\nThere was a threefold purpose in'this vonion of His Majesty's domiu-\nsendiiig out the spies: (1) to see ions ,ie W;IS hdd 'm the \"highest es-\nwhether the land was as God had U:C1\" orl ^<m\ufffd\ufffdt: of his talents and\ntold them (v. 18); (2) lo sec wiicthcr,d!slill\ufffd\ufffduished services.   Please convey\nthe people who dwelt there were\nstrong or weak, few or many (v. 18):\n(3) to sec whether the cities were\nmade up of strongholds or tents (v.\n19). What folly! If God has spukm\nto question his word is simply unbelief.\n2.    'J lie Commission Evented   M3:\n21-25).\nto lijs widow and family an expression of our very sincere sympathy.\"\nWINTER HARD ON BABY\nseason    is    a hard one\nCapture Leader of Bolshevism\nThe winlci\non   the  baby.       lie    is  more or less  fircbrand 0f  thc   Russjan\nconfined to slufiy,     badly   -\\eiuilated\nrooms.   It is so often stormy that the\nt molher'docs not   get him out in thc\nThey    enleied    the   land from thc | fresh air as often as she .should.    He\nsomli anil    traversed it to its north-  Relics    colds    wliirli    rack his little \ufffd\ufffd\n....               ,  ,          ,        .     svsleiui'his stomach and bowels gcti,\nIhey .spent loily days iii',,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi i i,.. u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,..:,-i. ! Ih\nRadek Pleads With Guards to Sparc\nHis Life\nBerlin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Radek, at one  time  lhc\nrevolution\nand since Karl Licbkneclil's death tlie..\nsecret power behind the Bolshevist\nmenace in Germany, wept and pleaded on his knees with thc ginuds in\nMoabil  prison  to spare  his  life.\nif\".it.i  -,.,,i  ii,..   -,.*..,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,;,,,, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr .i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,..,,,-,i1  ,. . -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd----\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   - - out of order and he Incomes peevish!\ntlK.ll.;i.inal .uul  the   opening  o.   d^c.  (ai..d j lllIS ,ilVesiiR-itiiig exploration.^ t is a  and cro.-s. To guard against this lhc Since   his sensational capture by   the\nintention of carrying thc sliikc from,110 lr;l'hc, the immediate sinnm!',-    -\nof March.\nObject to Destruction of Ships\nIconversion of the status of the Ger\ni.\nTH\ufffd\ufffd:-CAPJOrt\nFarmers Need Oil\nand capital.\nThe police    and    local    mili'ia .al',nan llcct '\" l,lt' Sc:,l,a I;,cvv fr0111 lhal\nMclserikirchci! have risen against thc|of i\"tcnmient  to  surrender.\nParis. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd In  connection  with      the | Sparlacans and driven them from the'     I1 '\"!>y be taken, the    convspond-\nstatcment of. thc London Daily Mail  buildings    which    thcy'had occupied jent add*, that these surrendered ships\nthat Germany's      surrendered      ships, earlier in the week. eventually will bc destroyed, the idea\nsad  comment    upon    human    nature ' mother should keep a box oi Baby'i I Berlin police thc man whose signature\nwhen men must spend forty days   in'tJw\".   1'ilhhns    in the hoiise.      'J'hcy' condemned thousands to    deaih dur-\n,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       ...      ... -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .  ,.   .,    regulate tlie stomach and bowels and  .        .   - .,      .     .       .\nrmiling out tlie truthtulncss of Goci s  ^rc.,]{ up c\ufffd\ufffd\ufffditiS-     Thev   are    sold bv  inS '\"e tcrror m Russia, has been in\nword,   On their return from the riorll\neventually would bc destroyed,\nTemps remarks that there is no\nparent   difficulty  in  distributing\nobjections lo  such an act.\nGerman, Austro-hHingarian,     Turkish\n  -        and Bulgaiian craft   among thc    cn-\nUrge    UptJir- Government   Develog- lentc nations.\nment of Western Canada's '-The newspaper adds that tlie    dc-\nResowrces Istruclion of these units has not    yet\nSaskatoon,  Sask. - \"Whereas   tljbccn considered by thc peace confer-\nusc of petroleum products is-n-p-'dly i CIIC0 ai,d t,iat t,,crc is vcr-v    scn0,,s\nincreasing, and whereas a home sup\n' ply would materially reduce the cosi '\nof  fanning operations    and    corn's\npondingly stimulate agricultural     dc- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n^yelopmcnt,  therefore  bc  it    resolved\nthat  this convention  urge upon    the\nDominion government   thc    develop--\nmenl  of  Western   Canada's    oil    resources  as an    economic    measure.\"'\nThe torcgoing resolution was passed 1\t\nat the conven'ion of thc Saskalche- You seldom see a woman who is\nwan agricultural societies here and pale, dull-eyed, thin-checked, and ul-\nhas been sent    to    the    government, j tor'>'  worn   ont,   who  doesn't    suffer\nDiscussing the resolution Prof. R. D. ,'7.orc,.or lc\" fro,r' '\"-^dachc and con-\n'stipaiion.    Her poor looks a^e   more\nthe      Al  u meeting of representatives  of, of dividing    then)    among\nap jthc    national,    slate   and    municipal'having been abandoned,\nthe j employees  throughout the  Ruhr'district it was decided to strike if    the.\nSparlacan domination continues.\nWhat Mrs. Pankhurst\nSays of Electricity\ni\ni\nt\nI\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffdM\ufffd\ufffd..#.,B..t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-Women have been active   |              ihlh'\nhere  is   *.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWith the Fingers!\nSays Corns Lift Out j\nWithout Any Pain I\nIhey gathered some specimens of the\nfruit of the land. Two of them, perhaps Caleb ;tnd Joshua, bore a clu.slci\nof grapes upon a Ma IF between them\nas a witness that God had spoken tlu1\nthe alliesj tnith about thc  land.\nj    3.   Thc Spies Rendered\n! (13:26-33).\nOn lhcir return  this committee\ni I medicine  dealers or by mail    al    25\ncents a box' from The Dr.  William'-'\nMedicine Co., Brockviile, Out.\nRcpoit\nf\not\nreport  to   the\nJt    was    not\nHave I?osy Cheeks!\nLook Prettier!\nFeel Better!\nSimolest Th'ns: in the World to\nDo at the Small Cost of\na Quarter\nLondon\nin  thc   election   campaign. \" There  is   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd..!..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd... \ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.*,.\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd.,..\nintense livalry between     Mrs.   Lloyd,     bore  corns,  I .r<\\  corns, soil  corns\nGeorge aud   Mrs  MeKcnna,   wife ol\" or aily ki|id of a corn can shortly be\nthe former     chancellor    of   thc    ex-  liflMU ri}\\lu ?.ut w,kh lhe \"\"p1'1'\" h y0U\n, ,      .    ) , 'v.ni  appJ '  (l'rcctiy upon  tlie corn   a\nchociuer, who is a staunch supporter fcw drop; of frcezone, b.i\\\ufffd\ufffd a Cincin-\nof Former  Premier\nAsquith. Sup\nporters of Premier Lloyd George\nhavc conducted a vigorous campaign\nin South Wales recently, attacking\nMcRemia in thc hitter's own constil-\nucncy,~and those of MeKcnna in reply,'criticising the prime minister.\nnan aullioiitv\n. lt is claimed that at small cost one\ncan iret a cjuarler of an ounce of freezone at any drug stoic, which is siifli-\ncicnl to rid one's feel of eve:y i-orii\nor callus wi.Iiout pain or sorcner; oi\nthe danger of infection.\nThis new ding   is    an    eth^r com-\n>r     T        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,   .,    .   nr. .       c   oui\/ii'iuii.     iju   puui   iuiiks  ;irc   more   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*     \"\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-     w\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.*-.   ^1^1.1.111.0   mrti   m<\nMacLaunn said that  70 pcr cent, of largcly (hl0 to ncglcct tha\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd anythjngi electors   sometimes   made   candid  re\n...       ,,..    ,   ., . ,       ,   .        .pound, and   .Jiile sticky,    diies    the\nMiss    Llizabelli   Asqt.ith    admitted   moment it is aoplicd and does not in-\n111    some    of    her speeches that the  (lame or even irritate the surrounding\nthe world's oil  supply was produced 1 else.\nin thc United States, while, Canada j Most women can have spaiklhvt\nproduced only one fivc-himdrcdths of .\ufffd\ufffd>'es and rl,b>' chcrks if they, will\n1  ri-,- \/-rtit ' l',ut    usr rcgtilarlv a blood    cleansing\n1  p\ufffd\ufffd.r cent. ,u,c, ];,>a!jvc ,n<n!i...,-nf, ]ikc Dr   Ham\"-\n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ' <iUon's Pills.   Just follow these sim\ufffd\ufffdde\ndirections. Tonight tjike two Dr.\nDamilton's Pills and note how much\nfresher 3-011 t>el tomorrow morning.\nYour face will bc clearer, your ap-\nyour    spirits  brigh'er.\nfather, but,    she\ntissue.\nThis\n.      ,, j many women here, for it is said that\nmind.        Bonar'thc present    high-heel    foot-wear   is\nLiquid Air Plant\nVancouver, B. C. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The manufacture of that marvel of modern science\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdliquid air\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis to be one of the chief i petite^.l>ntter,\ncommodities turned out in a new in-! tffirt^nu-hl take one or perhaps two\ndustry  to  be established  in   Vancoii-'pi,!s aKa-!\"- Gradually reduce the.dose\n,       ,. , as mentioned-in th\nver very shortly.    Vancouver has    a ijorl.\nnumber of unique industries established on a fairly laigc scale, but\nwork is to bc commenced at once on\na new factory to house (he most novel and up-to-date irntjstry that has as\nyet located in the city. A permit for\nthc construction of this ncw factriry,-\nthe first unit of which is lo cost $25,-\n000 for the building alone, has ' ecu\nissued by thc city building inspector\ncompany's direc-\nIt Has Many Qualities.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe man\nwho  possesses-a-bottle of Dr.  Thomas'  Eclectric  Oil is  armed  against\nmany- ills.    It    will  cure    a    cough,\nbreak a cold, prevent sore throat;_it\nwill reduce the swelling from a sprain.\n'  cure   the  most  persistent  sores    and\nwill  speedily  heal  cuts  and    contusions.    It is a medicine chest in itself,\n. and  can be-got  for a quarter of  a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dollar. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    - -     _\nNew Income Tax\nWinnipeg. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Income tax, yrhich is\ncalculated will bring between $1,000.-\n000 and $1,500000 to the city cofTers\nwill be an established fact in Winnipeg by next fall, according to Leo\nW. Donley, assessment commissioner, speaking at thc special meeting.of\nthc city's legislation committee,\nCANADIAN\nBOOKS\nOf Impcrtance\nThree litres and Out.\nBy Nru.lli L. _McCI,UNC.\nThis ii the story of Private Simmons ami his three attcniiits to escape\nfrom (liflerrut German fVUous as' lie\ntohl it to Airs. MeCluutf. Vou will -\nenjoy readmit 011c of the movt tliniiinx\nstories oLlhc War. Clolh.    Price $1.S'J.\nThe I^t of Kin.\nBy NELLIK L. McCLUXG.\nThis Vus one of list year's h:g successes, and is still in popular demand.\nA copy of Mr\ufffd\ufffd. McClu. ? s Nett of\nKin should be in every Canadian home.\nCloth.    Price $1.25.\nWillow the Wisp.\nBy. ARCHIE. P.  McKISIIKIE.\nThis Rrcat Outdoor Story \ufffd\ufffd probably thc most .widely rev ewed book\nthis year. If you enjoy Gene Strattoa\nTorter's book-;, buy thij one at once.\nClotfi.    Price $1-35.\nLove cf the Wild.\nBy AKClirii P. McKISHNIE.\nThc title iiij.niies tlic atmosphere 01\nthis boofc. It is ono~6f Mr. McKtsh- '\nnie's earlier successes and lacks nonft\nof the qualities that has made his recent Willow Thc Wisp a success. Ask\nyonr Boot seller for a copy at once in\nthc rebound cd.itio.i. Cloth.    Price 75c.\nHarbor Tales Down North,\nAKD   ,\nBattles Roval Down North,\nRoth h\/ NOKMAS- DUNCAN*.\nThese two booVs arc the last manuscripts of Xorn.-m Duncan, ai\"l arc\nconsidered !u> ^eit l\ufffd\ufffdit<rador ' Tale^.\nPrice- $1X3   taih.\nFoi 3s.re at all Booksellers.\"\nThomas Allen\n.       ^LPBLISHER\n215 Victoria, St. Toronto\nDay by flay'yoti will note a steady\nt?.iin. You'll <i\ufffd\ufffdicklv 'have hack those\nhappy girlish looks you once were\nproud to think ahout. No o'licr medicine can do so much for you as Dr.\nHamilton's  Til's  of    Mandrake    and\nimuks    about    Imt -\nadued, \"he    doesn't\nLaw's daughter at Glasgow also toolc put tint' corns\npart in tlic campaign. Aliss Christabel, woman's feet.\nPankhnrsl, the noted suffragette, promised ihe voters that when thc woman's regime prevails in parliament\nevery iiousc, no matter how small,\nwill hc lighted, heated and served by\nclectiicily.\nThe \" British    parliament,  she\nscrted, will    be' \"responsible    for\nannounccmcpt    will    hitorcM\non    piactically  every\nThe Polish Question\nGermany    Says    Allied    Commission\nMust Remain Outside Frontier\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thc Rerlin\" government\nas_ wireless  states    tliat    a    note  'from\nt]lclCount von' Brockdorff-Ranlzan,     for\nMavimillian Haiden says the kaiser\nwas a mere tool in the war. He\nmight havc added thai the Crown\nPrince was a sort of monkey-wrench.\nChicago News.\nexplorers    rendered\n] whole congregation.\n,unanimous:\n1. Thc majority report (v. 26-29).\n(i) \"The land flowelh wilh milk and\nhoney\" (v. 27). As a proof of il thcy\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdexhibitcd tlic fruit. Thcy all bore\nwitness that this iu.! in accordance\nwilh wh;U God had said. (2) \"Thc\npeople who live there are btrong\" (v.\n28). They seemed to stress this fact,\nunbelief dwells mainly upon difficulties. (3) \"The people live in waljei! 1\ncities\" (v. 2G). They argued that il j\nwas impossible lo capture them in\n.such, sure defenses. (4) '\"The land\nwas inhabited by giants\" (\\\\ 28 cf. v.\n33). Thcy saw themselves as gross-\n\"toppcrs.    Furthermore, they saw  the\nAnother Case of Blood Poisoning\nPersisted in paring his corns wilh a\nrazor. Foolish when cure is so painless and sure wilh Putnam's Corn\nExtractor. Use Putnam'.-, only\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit's\nthe best\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdguaranteed and painless,\nprice 25e  al all  dealers.\nst;ite of collapse.\n'\"Don't lynch mel\" hc screamed to\nthe guards as hc was being led to thc\npolice superintendent by his captors.\n\"I have done nothing.\" At midiiignl\nthe slight, narrow shouldered figiuc\n{peering in tcrror through thick iuised\nglasses and supported by four powerful guards, vvas conducted through the\nsilent streets lo a heavily barred cell\nin thc Moabit prison.\n\"We havc with ns the germ of Rol-\nscvism,\". said thc captain of the\nguard as they passed us in thc ro;>d,\npointing to a little, trembling figure,\nbare headed with curly black hair and\na small Van Dyke of recent oiigin\nand dressed in a uniform of a German officer. \"Herr Sobelson, of Ga-\ngrown in Canada last year was oats, j licia, alias Herr Barabclum, of Switzerland, alias Herr Radek, of Russia,\nalias Dr. Richaidt, of Berlin, Bremen,\nWeimar and Hamburg,\" explained the\ncaptain as thc party passed on. I\nlearned thc details of Radck's capture.\nSince the death of Karl Licbkncchl\nand Rosa Luxbourg, the police and\nthe government soldiers havc constantly been hunting for him, 500 gcv-\nRecord Oats Production\nThe largest    grain crop in bushel:\nof which thc total ciop was 456.733,-\n900 bushels, harvested from 14,790,-\n.336 acres, as shown l.y the preliminary estimate nt ihe Dominion statistics bureau.\nA Real Asthma Relief.    Dr. J.   D.\nKellogg's Asthma Remedy has never\nbeen advertised by extravagant statements.      Its  claims  arc conservative,\npeople so distributed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe Amalekites i5nc,r,(;tl> wht-'n Judged  by    the    cures | eminent agents combing the  Sparta-\nin the south  country,    thc    Hittitcs. I ^V^,,,11, P\"10\"'18; , \ufffd\ufffdx^ct .ro:l1  rc\", c\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cc\ufffd\ufffdtr\ufffd\ufffd in Bremen,    Dusscldorff,\nU-busilcs -uul -Ymori'tes in the mom,-.      .  1  '   pcrmaycnt 1fncfit wIl\"1 y01 | Hamburg and Berlin.    The police in\njiijiishcs aim .u-ionith in un. iiiotin    i,Uy  this  remedy and you    will    not1,,, , ... ...'    .\ntains and  the  Cauaanitcs  along    the! have  cause   for'disappointment.      jt j Warsaw^and Vienna v\/cre likewise on\nsea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthai  it  was  impossible  to    lake j 8\\vcs V'-nnancnt relief in ma.ny cases , ajliunt for him and for a month  the\n: where other so called remedies havc\n1 utterly failed.\nelectricity that turns \"the mangles, j transmission to the allied repcesenta-\ncooks the meats, and warms ihe|tivcs\"at Spa, promises safe conduct\nhouses. Why should women drag ioT l,,c illlic(1 commission to Poland,]\ncoal scuttles about, asked she, s'and,out declares that the German govern-\nover steaming washtubs, spend hours'mcnt \"does not intend lo go beyond\nButternut.     Sold everywhere in    25c;over old-fashioned ranges, which not tJ,e  conditions imposed upon  her by\nboxes.\nArchangel Front Quiet\nChecked\nBolshcviki   Offensive   Was\nBy Allied Troops\nArchangel. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Since    Feb. 11     tlie\nBolshcviki havc    made    no    attacks\nagainst thc allied forces on any sector of  the Archangel front,\nairplanes which are continually aloft jARD'S LTN1_5.II\ufffd\ufffdNT a very sup'-rior\nonly cat up coal but cook thc cooks, !t5ic  armistice agreement.'*      In    this\nwhen  by   legislation    and   electricity connection, it  stipulates   rather,    lhe\nthc   burden\nlifted. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nof   thc    world rouhl be\nFairville. Sept. 30. 1902.\nMinard's  Liniment  Co.,   Limited.\nDear   Sirs,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWc     wish    to   inform'is exclusively    thc affair of the Gcr-\nnote continues, that thc activity of\nthe commission shall manifest its-lf\noutside thc state frontier laid down\nby the armistice agreement.\nApplication      of   sovereign    rights\nwithin those frontiers, the note adds,\nthem.    This,  no .doubt,  seemed   reasonable from lhc human side, but thcy\ndisplayed lhcir folly in that thcy left'    The blanket was first    made\nGod out of the question.    The   same | used by Thomas    Blanket,    r.\nGod who said to them, \"Go, possess | Flemish merchant, in 1640.\nthc hind,\"  would go  along -to    fight\nthe batiles.\n2.   Thc minority report  (v. 30-33).\nIn part,\nliist; it docs not ignore the difficulties, nor dispute the facts. It denies\nthe conclusion of thc majority. Thcy\ndid not minimise thc task before\nthem, but asserted that with     God's\nand\npoor\nTo Cure a Cold In One Day\nT.-l;e     LAXATIVE      BROWO      QUININE\niTablets).    Tt   stojis   the   Couch   and   Head-\n~     \"        \" '\" E.   W.\n30c.\ntliis  rfnnrf   -lp-rocc   wilVi   tli%   a{\"'lf   an<1   works   off     thc     Cold,\ntins  leport .igices  W UH  tlie   GROVE'S signature on  each  bo.t\nAllied 1 you  that   wc    consider  ycur    MTNT-\nman  government,    and    the latter i<-\nronort that there has been no'movc-!:lrf!fIe-   a\"^   wc   use it as'a sure re-ilmablc !\ufffd\ufffd, .rcc<^nizc   tI,a*   thcTC U0Vl\nicpott that were lus been no move ,ljcf fof sore .lhroat aml dicst_ w..eili<a,st within the    state  frontiers, any\nenemy  j  tej] you j woi,jj not i3C without it | Polish authorities   and   a public fife\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd if  ii,.  .!_:,._  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-..  ,i_ti.--_  1.-.HI.  !.-.-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     .    .-     ^ -\nlief for sore -throat\nDps  Dcmnu  uie     enemy\nlines since the Bolshcviki withdiawal; if lhe price was'one dollAfa bottle, j independent  of  thc  German   govern\nments of  troops behind  the\n1  rnryn  il.\nsouth from Sredmakrenga.\nWhile the 'Cessation of attacks has\nbeen coincidental with the Bolsheviki\noffer to attend the Prince's Islands\npeace-conference, their offensive was\nchecked by thc jillied   troops.      The  p C J\nallied military leaders do not behove j befHISflS  r6ai'Cu\nthat thcfBoIsheviki acceptance of the! - rt\ninvitation to thc conference caused\nthc Bolshcviki inactivity of thc last\nfour days.\nCommenting \" on the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Bolshcviki\nmessage of acceptance thc  Vozrosh-\nYours tru*-\nCHAS. F. T1LTONT.\nmcnt. The peace treaty will decide\n(the final nationality of the regions\nj which Marshal Foch designates as\n1 German Poland, and until then \"Ger-\n] many declines any directions on tin-\npart of her opponents regarding the\nattitude    of   her authorities in these\nTeims of\nArmistice    Were    Signed\nUnder Pretest\nBerlin. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The    German     govern-\nMinard's Lintmen* ^'tres  Ciplr.hrria-\n' May Become U.S. Citizen\nGeneva. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A'report received\nhere\nCharles of Auslii.i is a prisoner in the\ncastle outside Vienna, where hc is bc-\ndenic Sicvcra    (the   Resurrection    ofmyus reason ior accepting thc strm-  from Innsbruck says former Emperor\nthc North)'says:   \"From the note of,gcnt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd teims  for the  renewal 'of  tin\nMinister TchUchcrin it appears clear.-'armistice, as outlined in a Weimar dis\nly that    thc   Bolsheviki are ready to' patch  lo lhe    Kord  Deutsche Allge-jiug guarded by th.' Socialists\nsell  Russia at  auction., They   intend  n,ci,,c Zeitunir, is that a renewal    of'    I'1'*-' reports add that    Charles cle-\nlo arrange this nicely at the Piince's  military oper.uions  following  refusal  sires to emigrate to,America with his\nIslands.\" - , ; lo jjfg.,  would  le.ul  to  thc  coinplele 1 family as a eiviliiir.\nThe Holiheviki arc increasing their1 moral collapse of the German people, j tune'is said to h.ive been  placed\nefforts to    destroy the morale of the  Tlic    absolute    conviction    prevailed  the \"United Swte*..\nncw Russian conscript soldiers as well  that refusal to sign, or dilatory tuat-  ~\nas of the American and Briiish iroops.  mcnt  of   the  proposals,   would  meet   Tt! j Q    ilVsPI-PTfPQ\nBolsheviki propaganda, well   written | ^hb an immediate advance of thc al-   j ULL J    UlUrLrSlUU\nand printed iu English, has been jhs-, ]\ufffd\ufffdcd armies beyond the Rhine, involv-\ntribtited - mysteriously   .among\"    thc, i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdg the occupation  of thc  most im-\nvarious allied'units.   While there .has 1 portant ami  indispensable    industrial\nbeen no appreciable cfTcct because of f district's  of west Germany\nthe Bolsheviki piopaganda, thc allied\nhelp thcy weic well nble to get possession of land, ancl urged immediate\naction. The ten had their C3'es on\nthc- difficulties, but Caleb and Joshua\nfixed their eyes upon God. Caleb\nlived to see his suggestion 'made real.\nThc decisions of the majority are not\nalways right, just two men against\nmany  thousands, hut  the    thousands\nBrandon Winter Fair\nSeveral New Features for   Juveniles\nHave Been Added -\nWinnipeg, Man. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Prize lists for\nlhe Brandon winter, fair, which opens\nou Maich 3, show that this popular\nmid-winter exhibition has lost none of\nits popularity. Manager W. I. Sinale\"\nand his board of directors have lost\nno time in shaping their program to\ntakc_ care of aftcr-thc-war phases, and\nwhen the stockman     gels     to     thc\nofficers wcrc continually on his heels.\nSocialists Would\nMake Concessions\nwere wrong and the two were right, j Wheat  City he will find    added in-\nFeel Germans \"Should Not Suffer\nUnder Sense of Bitterness\nParis, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The question is now being\nasked what voice the Germans will\nhave in thc final peace treaty. Hitherto it has been assumed by well informed observers that thc allies, aftcr\ntin ashing out all the differences between-themselves, would simply summon thc enemy-states, place the program before them and ask them what\nthcy have to say before the program\nis put into execution. In other wo.ds,\nthe scene would resemble less a council chamber than a court room and\noccupy very little time.\nThc Germans, however, apparently\nconsider    that    the peace terms can\nIt is not always true thai the \"voice  duccment along thc lines of     mixed onIy be cllforcc<i if they accppt thcm\nof the., people i.s the voice of God\n4.    The    Rebellion    of thc  People\n(14:1-38).\"\nThis  rebellion  began    by    crying\nfarming and stock raising. Jn the\nboys' fat calf competition thc prize\nlist\" has~bccif~exten\"ded to allow of 22\nThcy   obviously ground their position\nupon, their-interpretations      of  -the\n! American fourteen points, which they\nawards being made.   Several ncw fca-1 acccplcd   Nov>  n> 191R> as the ^^\nHaving left God out of thc question lu.resJ\ufffd\ufffdr tl,e J\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1.*\" have been add-|of peiicc. Thcy %vi]] protest against\nthey now weep and howl. This weep-. cd; ^crc\" J2\" in P\"zcs for stcers {beinff deprived of their colonics,\ning aud howling   was    followed    by    , vccI m  i91.A -r 6? cnps'  mcd' j against    not    being consulted in  thc\nmurmuring against Moses and Aaron. als lmd sPCC!a,s aro oficrcd m the formation of thc league of nations\nThey even wished that they had died !pnM. hat tIus yotln    'J ,,c anm,al ln,il  And probably against other things.\nin  the wilderness or in Egypt.    God>ulc lb I)K('<1 l,\ufffd\ufffd t;ikc lv\"\ufffd\ufffd dn>'s' Tu\ufffd\ufffd-\nUlay and  Wednesday\nNo  date    h:\ntook them at their word; hc sent)\nthem back to wander iu the wilderness for thirty-ei^ht. years, during\nwhich time they all died except Caleb\nand Joshua. This was followed by a\nproposition lo organize lor thc return\nto Kgypt.. They proposed to select a; Bitterly Resent\nc;iplain as their leader.    Theprotestj -      Latest ArmiStlCC\nbeen set for the swine sale. -\nNo surgical operation is necessary\nin removing corns if llolloway's Corn\nCure be used.\nof Joshua and Caleb against this re _\nsuited-in  the proposition    to     stone'conditions Will Throw German Gen-',:iiil f \"W^'W'. 1-o\n'them.    At  this point Ged interposed\nI in  lhcir behalf.    Ife  nui 11 ifelted     his'\nMost of hi> for-'^ryJn u-re all lhc chihluis of Isiad\nin viudictition of the hnahy r..' Jt^bua\naiid Cahh.\nerals Out of Work\nWhile doubtless, thc allies will pay\nlittle heed to these enemy pro'ests,\nthcie is n certain current of socialist\n\"feOiiig.in France and perhaps in\nother allied countries which feels\nthat if thc peace terms leave Germany suffering under a sense of bitter injustice thc peace of the world\nmay again bc endangered. Thc .same:\nsocialists are inclined lo-makc ccr-\nthe Germans on\ntlie'colonial question.   Thcy consider\nLondon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Advices received  from ilI,:u ll,is    w\"ll,J h<i a' sn,a\" 1>rke >>\n!    The  representatives of  thc parties\nsoldiers are looking forward to some,wi,0  participated in-thc cabinet    dc-\nlri\" liberations  agreed unanimously   that\nthc people as a whole v.ouhl neither\nstatement as  to  what the allies\ntend to do with the force here\nMinard's Lh^.imcnt Cures   Garget\nCows.\nAvoid   Indigestion,   Sour   Aiid\nStomach, Heartburn, Gas on\nStomach, lite.\n\"Cars \\o:i keep a 'eerel, I\\gs_y?\"\n\"I eau;    but    it'> just my luck\ntell things to other girls who can't,\nipt.\nH    rBT'trl1 tllinSS to oth\n1]    f\"i! j   Boston  TraiKcii\nto\nCUT THIS OUT\nRegina,\nValue of Butter Exports\nSask.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Butter    exports\ni-rencliman  to compress air in a  -e-pinnies ol  occupation on  the  Rhine,\nscrvoir as doors arc opened and  ^,sc I     These condition-., it  is coinplaincd,\nil to wind clock.-, nvil throw out or woik thousands of\n.    ri;diK<:<=t!oi ainl pr.ifuea]ijj all.   fon:;^    cf   , Gciman ofiicrrs, from c-encrals d\ufffd\ufffdwv\nlindcrstand, nor approve  such an  cut-' stomach  trouMe, i.i>   medical autnoniics, arc;     n-.      Allanli\"    town of    \\i li'vftcUi    \ufffd\ufffd-.r.l    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.;i,.   il.,-  ,,m,-   -,.\" f(V i\\,-,-\\       1\ndue nine  time- out  af  ten   to  an  e\\re-s  ofi ' ^ <Yl,,tI!ll\ufffd\ufffd-    io.\\n Vt     iH.u>\\atcnj,   w.'rd,  Willie   lhc  a: niy 01  oU'sOUJ \\ol-\ncome, and  that, therefore, there was hydrMiiionc acid   in   the stoiaad..    Oiromc'on the bordcis oi Russia, is peopled unteerB   rtnorttd    1\ufffd\ufffd-    -he\n110 alternative  except to sign    under \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"\"SL;*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.?.?,., 'L^^l^ ^'V?!;0^:.:\"8:1 i hv n,r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rtn!r ; .      i-\ufffd\ufffd\nI protest.\nThc Berlin paper.- generally   <\nmen onlv.\nstiffens  <huulil i!o  cither one  of  tuo  tiling ! OV\nI      Wittier  thcy  rail   so 011  a  limited and  often I pnjranro   f},cr(.\nf dioKfttaWc d-ct, aioidtinr food^ that iii\ufffd\ufffd.-icrr.r I\n11I1   them,   th.<t   iriit^te   the   stomach     and 1\n_ - , ......   them,   tJi,.t   iriitite   the   stomach\nfrom Saskatchewan durine 1918 reach- *\ufffd\ufffd the   same    conclu.-,ion, except ihe'lc3ti ,to \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\";ces' aclJ s<-\ufffd\ufffdeti\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd or they can eat\ned a total value of $1,215,000 aftcr all  Conservative    organs,    such  as    the  tice to counteract the effect of the harmful\n   ...im 1 .\nBerlin by way of Basle are lo the Ti-1luy for Uu: chmlt!:l1101' of lasting bit-\nfeel   that  the     ran-Gcrman    milii.-ry ,'torn\"s from l,|,: finhl \ufffd\ufffd>cace-\nparty, headed by  Ktel.l  Mar.-ha!    vou   'xzi.xix \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -J. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=_-.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr-\ufffd\ufffd\nIlindcnhurg, bittnJy u senth. llu. new\ncl.iii'-es iu  tiie   ..irinistice-,    csptci.t'.iv\nthose* limitiir.;  the German arniy     to! \t\nthe s,i?c of a simple  police  force, llu - OLD ENGLISH RECIPE'FOR CATARRH,\nsnpenisio,, of control ol ammunition i         CATAnR\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnD^J^S AND     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfactories  anti   thc  demand  that   Ger-j \t\nI It jpu I.now ')f wn'o ope vho 15 troubled\nj \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM-itii C?tr.r.-h-d l)cafnc^\ufffd\ufffd, head noire or cdf.\nrary t^tanh cut out this formu'a and hand\nit ti\ufffd\ufffd tlicnt and yoa ma> ua\\e been ihs\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdniir.s ol -r\ufffd\ufffdm,' ioni; poor sufferer perhaps\niro.is total deafness. In Ens'ind scientiiU\n:o. .i Ions; ti-nc past have recoj;2i>'zeJ that\ncat.'rrli i^. i constitutional disey^e and ncccs-\n' -. 1 ilv ^p<qairc-  i-oristitutionr.I treatment.\nSj.ivs, mhalerv .Tid nobe dciche- are liable\nto trr.trfte the delicate air pas-apes and force\n; the   duca'C   into   tl.e   middle   e->r  -'.-Inch   \ufffd\ufffdre-\ni-iucnt'o   ncun total deaf:ic\ufffd\ufffd, or c!-e the drj-\n' e.i^e   jaaj   be   d'iven   dovn   the \"air  pas?.ic*3\nApparatus lias been    imented by a \"many pay thc expenses'of the    allied!\ntjcriiian\nWomen are forbidden ipre-s to\"havc bc. n organized, must be\nI disbiiiHii\"!.\ni home  requirements had    been\nmet. I Krcuse Zcitung- and   thc\nAiWiiipi,,\/.   acid and  p:e-.ent the  formaticn of gra=.  sour-\n\ufffd\ufffdv ,l  '\"^ , ncss   ot   premaiuic   *crn cntanon   h>   thc   u=e\nThis is an increase in exports of $300-, Zcitung, which declare that thc gov-  of a Utile ih-urated MaKnes.a at their r.:eais\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  _        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. . .' *     1.      1 1   t r        5 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'     There i- pmoablv in belter, >-a.er or niorc\n000 over 1917.      The production     of ernment should have refused to sign, rei,ai,\ufffd\ufffdc stomach antmid than r,.=Urated 5td\nbutter for export totalled 97 cars or\nabout 2.r64,000 pound*.'\n' -    No Ice on Thunder Bay       \t\nPort Arthur, Out. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Local ice\ndealers\" have' abandoned hope of get-\ntiny their, usual ice crop from .Tbim-\ndcr Bay this season as the bay is still\npractically open. iCai\/igation in and\nout of port would have been easily\nOQ5siblc rJi winter.\nthc terms, .thus forcincr the allie\nJO I !;c!\nIt  h:n no .d.rcct\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdine\nSaskatchewan ' Natural     Gas\nnd  it 1-  i\\u!el>   t.-ed  for this   p;ir;io-e.\n,        , ..... .1  ..... no.direct \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd c. on  thc  Momach  and\ntake the responsibility for a  renewal  is not'a dltrestmi.   liut a. icaspoorfui of the\nnf niilJtnrv  nn^niinnc . ,'pov.drr or a coi.p'e ci 'ive ffrain  tablet? talen\nOt  mii.tnrj   operations.        - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -u a l.ttle wlirv,-!; t';e food v.-,H neuti.-Iuc\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -1 - j the cue--  ,ic:dit>   wliii'i tnav  be pre\ufffd\ufffdn>t  and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdti-.p  <z**L-*trhn*.r*r. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd v.*,.,.i   r_..-,pTe^r'i,c- f:!'i'\". ivv'r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.''- ^i\" :c:>^^\nt^c  \ufffd\ufffd.no'e crA'.'-f- o- yy trotiO.p sud   tie  i,-ea'\n-d\"thfnii>   n-ithout  need\n<-te-M-=.\ngas at j-   Gci   a   fc-.\ufffd\ufffd   o'ji'.i-  <-,'   iii^urited   M$^nc\ufffd\ufffd.'.\ufffd\ufffd\nRegina thu year, according to 9a in- [ {^H \"'.^'f- \"   \"'rcc^  '\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ntimation that has beep, received from-, liqs'd. ^-.n  o- t f t--   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'__ m-tt* bi-ursted\n,1    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \/-   '.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     rr-. * \ufffd\ufffd    .. : form   'S   r.ot  .1  Iti-i.'f       *ry   th,s   p'.si,   rr,d\nAir,  Costs.        IJtC     company,  ,7o!rJS    a i tat   wait   }0-J-,tiii   3-   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-'iir   nest   wc.,;, and\ncompany which is hestled by Luerer.e ,a ^'eM'\" r,t'!\"1!> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,J     \"!'' ?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\n_ \"--.,,  ,'     -      . .,,-        . of per-m mil- c-  .-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'.  .i'ce\nCosts,    will begm dnslins tor easati-   G.-i a  fc-.\ufffd\ufffd   oup.i- <-,.  iii-an\ncompany\n, .charter from the city,      ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nte\"-\nti.i= is;\n't   tT-\n11 '.-.\nadvke\nioa\nNeeds Allied Help\nWashington, ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRoger E. Sini-\nmon=, who .recently relumed\nirom,-a mission to Russia for*\nthc bureau of commerce, told\nthc senate committee inycstifcai-\ninsT'lawless ac;it*uion In this-\ncountry' that if the American\nand allifJ forces v,rrc vv-jij-.\ndiawn from northern Russia the\nBul-hc\\ilt:. would engage in one\nof ili.e bioodics: massacre 1 thc\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdworld had '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".er scc->.\nhai    itldieiiatlQ'i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tivia^J- the  lung-;  which  is'equally  ss  dan-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,...,-, , '  'rciou^.    TI'c fnuowuig form-il-s which ib -j^cj\nagainst .\\tatluas i.rjbcrgcr OI1 the part   eiteu-.K-e!;-  in  the  dar-.p Englisl^cl-'mate K 3\nof the military authorities is incrcas-1 const-\ufffd\ufffdVi\"0\"'V- tT?atmcnl-3r-^    sh\ufffd\ufffda\\*    P\ufffd\ufffd\"ra\n.   _ . .y..^aa  ) rupj-ciallv   cineaciotis   to   iufTerers     here   who\nfltSr r\"Ore  faTorablt cliniate conditions\n1 Much success \" has rewarded the\nefforts of the, Saskatchewan employment .system, which <s operating\nlabor offices at principal points in\nthe'province, as- pa.t .of the De\nminion-wide scheme\" of co-ordinakd\n!ab.->v omcee. Aftcr a week's operation th.\"' Saskatchewan system w.is\nable to report- thri 37y2 pcr cen;,\nof the applicants for work had be. 11\nme        \t\n>et\"ire 11 om jmir dicg'^ict I mmrr of I'ar-\nmV.t tOouble \".tie-sfth). TaVe -h:s home ami\nadd io it 1-4 junt of hot vstT .-rd a tiftSe\nSrirul.ired suffar: ssir ant.l on.ohed. Take\nore tabl'-pooiifiil fo'ir times a day. This\nn ii: of'cn b'-mir quick rchef frcm 'hsJresv^\"-\nhzi.' r.rr^e*. Cl-->i?5cd postrds thoiild opt-n*\nt-rcaf-,;!,jr t'eoonic easy and iisanrc iir.p'Tc,\n-. lie .Hiram-nation in the custachisn tnbes\n1-- tt-iin^ci ' I'..^:m: used i.j th.s way a*l\ufffd\ufffd\nI r'ct!;.-j t,p--n 'he Vood snd rmrci.. -lurface?\nct the '*- -*e~.i and hes a tonic action that\nhelp' to oh'a-in <~.c dc-trcd tt\ufffd\ufffduiit>;. The pre-\nparatioa .s C2<v to -naVe, co_n* little aid iv\np!e\ufffd\ufffd=act tii tiVe,    Kicri?  pr-\ufffd\ufffdon  \".ho has ca-\ni?.K\nplaced.   Returned soieliers ar^\nj3 preference in all cases.\nrnc\nt-.r-b  or  bead   nei\ufffd\ufffde.-  or   i\ufffd\ufffd   h3--vl\nil'ould gife  th:s  treatment  a trial.\nif\ncariag.\nW.    N.    U.    l*?5!\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ '^p'^J WPW\nTHE LEDGE\nIs $2 a year strictly in  advance,  or $2.50\nwhen'not paid for three mouths.   If not\npaid for until the end of tlie year it is $3\nIt is always $7.50 a year to  the United\nStates in advance.\nR. T. LOWERY.\nEditor and Financier.\nTHE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nADVERTISING RATES\nDelinquent Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nCoal and Oil Notices     7 00\nEstray Notices 3.00\nCards of Thanks    1.00\nCertificate of Improvement  12.50\n(Where more  than one claim appears ir notice,  $5.00 for each ad-\"\nditional claim.)\nAll other legal advertising, 12 cents a\nline first insertion, and 8 cents a Hue for\neach subsequent' insertion, nonpariel\nmeasurement.\ntore going overseas he waB in the\nPort Coquitlam branch of the\nBank of Montreal.\nGunner Allison lived in Greenwood a number of yearB ago, leaving here wifeh hia parents for New\nWestminster.\nInternational Mining\nConvention, Vancouver\nThe blue cross! means that\nyour subscription is due, and\nthat the editor would be pleased\nto have morc'money.\nGranby Smelter Not Closing\nThe Grand Forks Gazette says:\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGranby 6melter afc Grand\nForks is operating, and will operate for roaoy moons to come\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ncountless dozens of rumors and\nsupposed authentic statements to\nthe contrary notwithstanding.\n.. At least this is the sum and substance of the best information\n.viiich the Gazette bas been able to\n'..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHain affecting the industry which\nhas put and has~ helped to keep\nGrand Forks prominently oa the\nmap during fehe past 20 years.\nAlthough miners were said to be\nleaving Phoenix like rats from a\nranking ship, that fehe existence of\nthe smelter was said to have been\neduced to a matter of bufe a few\ndays, fehat the mine had petered\nout and that costs were too high if\nthere were ore, forty dozen other\n.reasons that had given riso to sen:\nsational-: rumors, afloat; notwithstanding this and many other apparent clouds that hung, low, ..the\n. Granby smelter blew, in an additional furnace this -..week\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthree\nfurnaces now..' operating\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand a\nnotice was bulletined -at the reduc:\ntion. works that .it was the. intention of the Granby management to\n\"continue operations as long as\npossible.'-' While this statement is\nundoubtedly undefinifee, ife may be\nsafely; assumed thafe it: is not the\nintention of the Granby ^discontinue operations afe Grand Forks or\nPhoenix.for some time feo come at\nleast.\"'\"'\"   \"' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .:   -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.'-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd V'\"'::\";-.V.--'-\"\nDied in England\n'.... News ' Vwas received in New\n,Westminster   last V week .. of; the\n, death of Gunner \\WilliamKpderick\nAllison\/ youngest Eon .of William\nAllison, formerly! auditor-general\nof British Columbia, and a nephew\n..ofJthe lafee. Sir . Richard McBride.\n.He .was ; twenty-pine -years of age.\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" He went overseas  wifeh  fehe 68feh\n. Siege Battery ancl had served sixteen months in.France; His death\n\/occurred in Boxton; England.    Be-\nWhen the programme of the\nInternational Mining convention\nwhich is to be held in Vancouver\non March 17, IS and 19 is published it will be seen that the men\nwho have been, so to speak born\nin the mining game have signified\ntheir willingness to be present and\ndeliver addresses \"at^the different\nsessions. Chief among these is T.\nA. Richard editor of the Mining\nand Scientific Press of San Francisco. Mr. Richard is one of the\nhighest authorities iu the world on\nmining. He is perhaps the most\nwidely travelled mining engineer\nin the world and knows more about\n.the subject than most men. He\narrived in U. S. just about the\ntime the excitement was high in\nColorado and took part in the\noperations there between 1885 and\n1887.\nHe is a member of practically\nevery mining organization in Canada and the United States and he\nknows B. C. like a book having\ntravelled very extensively through\nthe province. In addition to being\na mining man he is an author of\nnote and his works are looked\nupon as standard books. Two of\nthem are: \"Across fehe San Juan\nMountains\" and \"Through the\nYukon and Alaska.\"\nHe is scheduled to speak on\n\"Mining as an Investment\" on\nthe first night of the convention\nand there are few. men better qualified, to handle this important* sub'\nject. The address, should be brimful of enlighfementahd information.\nThe detailed programme willbe\nannounced within a few days and\nin the meantime' the reports that\nhave been received from every district have.been fulL of enthusiasm\nfor the coming gathering.\nFood For Donkeys\nParliamentary Candidate\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWe\nmust grow more wheat and\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHeckler in crowd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Yes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut\nwhat aboufe hay?\nCandidate-I'm discussing human\nfood now\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut I'll come to your\nspecialty in a moment.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon\nOpinion.\nR, L. DOUGLAS\nROOM 18, k. W. C. BLOCK\nNELSON. B.C.\nOptometrist and Graduate Optician, certified by Provincial Board of Examiners.\nDr. A. MILLOY\nDENTIST\nAll   the   latest   methods   in   high-class\nDentistry.\nLOO BUILDING\nCorner Abbott & Hastings Streets.\nVANCOUVER.   -   -   -   BX.\nSend a $1 to The Ledge and\nget 10 different copies of Lowery's\nClaim.\nFinancial Cost of the War\nThis' direct cost of ,the; war is\nestimated at- $200,000,000,000, and\nthe.indirect cost, of .diminished\nkadeand of. financial disturbance\nafe 8225,b09,00O,pb0.;; VastSaariw\nhave: been used for sheer destruction, and vast public debts .have\nbeen incurred for which,fehere is no\ncorresponding property.. Throughout, two-thirds ioi 'the world the\nwork of useful production .has been\nsuspended during four .years -and\nits place. has; been taken by the\nslaughter of human lives and the\nannihilation of accumulated wealth.\nFive million pounds of corn\nmeal a mouth is being consumed\nby the army.\n\"II\n', i.\n- l)on!t.pass over the most important gathering of mining men ever held\nin British Columbia\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdone of the most representative gatherings of mining interests ever assembled in the Northwest\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nInternational     MI f\\l IINJ _Tt\nConvention        I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I HI I ^1 vJ\nHeld under nuspices of Chamber of Mines'of Rritish Columbia\n; Vancouver, March 17,18,19\nXXX\nPARTIAL OUTLINE OF\nPROGRAMME\nReport   on   development\nand projected work by. the .\nsix Government Mining En---\ngineers of B.C.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold min-.\ning   in   B.   C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLegislation\nmaking \"possible  reduction;\n. q\ufffd\ufffd ores in   B.C.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEstablish- :\n-\\njent \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of Smelter and ]&fin-\n\"ery:   on; southern'-'= coast .of.\nprovince.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--^-Taxation - :cf. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nmining, .properties: -^ The',\nprospector, ..and-' how _ to \"\n; epc6urage-hiin_\n\" Ful i display of Ores aud \ufffd\ufffdJ\ufffd\ufffd-t6--\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddate Mininjf M*cliliery.   Flow- .\ntion PUpt ani Coflccntrator; in.\n\"TnH.oceratioB-':-       .-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \" .Xi..'\nLeading mining experts from\nall parts of the continent will be-\npresent. Among the number who\nare expected are officials of the\n. Canadian Mining Institute arid\n. men from practically every min-\n: ing district of the Dominion.:.\n;-:   Fr;iui.\"_the. States,-will come\n-Deaii Thompson of the. Uniyer-\n. sity.of Idaho, and,, leading min-;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\"-ing engineers \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd from California, .-\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' Nevada, ,\\:.aiid    other *\"-, mining \"\nstates, as well as'.representatiyes,\n\"\\from-New.-York;';  .     ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. -.-'-XXX.\nBEi ON'vHANb^yO.u'.CAN'T.:\nV  AFFORD TO MISS. IT\nWrite J. D. Kearns\n-'.Convention Manager \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-Rogers Bufldin?\nVancouver for. full particulars\nand-'coricerning'arrange'ments  .\nExecutive Comffllrtse-A^M.WfiltesMe^Ch.v KIcol TtiociFsen, Dr. Edwin T.\nHodee::4. M. Lay.and H-P. McC\ufffd\ufffdney; Preerfmse Cpicsmtee^-Dr. E. T.Hodge.\n(C6-i,Exhiblt!on Coimafttee-S. * Crocker, (CIO. Putlicity Director^T. 1. MiHves;\nResoiatloiJ Cominittee-A.\"M:W65t\ufffd\ufffds.ide\ufffd\ufffd fCft-J; Transportation CommJttee^-B. C.\n:.Hawkins\ufffd\ufffd'!Cb.J.- -'..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,-.-.-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.-..--'   -.'.'-.. \\-\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .,. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,...'--.\nfr\n-FINANCE\nDEPARTMENT.\nDOMINION INCOME WAR TAX ACT\nTO WHOM APPLICABLE.\nEvery person who in 1918 resided or ordinarily resided in Canada or\nwas employed in Canada or carried on business in Canada, including\ncorporations and joint stock companies.\nWHO SHOULD FILE RETURNS.\n1. Every unmarried  person  or  widow or widower, without dependent\nchildren under twenty-one years of age, who during calendar year\n1918 received or earned $1,000 or more.\n2. All other individuals who during calendar year 1918 received or earned\n$2,000-or more.\n3. Every  corporation  and joint stock company whose profits exceeded\n$3,000, during the fiscal year ended in 1918.\nFORMS TO BE FILLED IN AND FILED.\nFORM Tl. By individuals, other than farmers and ranchers. ,\nFORM TIA. By farmers and ranchers. '\nFORM T2. By corporations and joint stock companies.\nFORM T3. By trustees, executors,'administrators of estates and assignees.\nFORM T4. By employers to make return of the names of all directors,\nofficials, agents or other employees to whom was paid $1,000\nor more in salaries, bonuses, commission or other remuneration during the calendar year 1918.\nFORM T5. By corporations, joint  stock  companies,  associations and\nsyndicates to make return of all dividends and bonuses paid\nto shareholders and members-during 1918.\n. Individuals comprising partnerships must file returns in their\nindividual capacity.\nGENERAL INFORMATION\nAll returnsjnust be filed IN DUPLICATE.        .\nForms may be obtained from the Inspectors and Assistant Inspectors\nof Taxation and from the Postmasters at all leading centres.\nReturns should be filed immediately. s\nPostage must be prepaid on letters and other documents forwarded\nby mail to Inspectors of Taxation.\nAddresses of Inspectors of Taxation for this District:\nVANCOUVER DISTRICT. s\nAssistant Inspector of Taxation.\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nAssistant Inspector of Taxation,\nNELSON, B.C.\nInspector of Taxation,\nMolsons Bank Bldg.,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nJ)\nSYNOPSIS   OF\nLAND ACT AMENDMENT*.\nPre-emption now conflned to survo.---'\nlands only. . _\nRecords will be granted covering only'\nland suitable  for agricultural  purposes\nand which is non-timber land.\nPartnership pre-emptions abolished,\nbut parties of not more than four may\narrange for adjacent pre-emptions, with\njoint residence, but each making necessary improvements on respective claims.\nPre-emptors must occupy claims for\nfive years and make improvements to\nvalue of $10 per acre, including clearing\nand cultivation of at least 5 acres, before receiving Crown Grant.\nY\/here pre-emptor in occupation not\nless than 3 years, and has made proportionate Improvements, he may, because\nof ill-health or other cause; be granted -\nintermediate certificate of improvement\nand transfer his claim.\nRecords without permanent residence\nmay be issued provided applicant makes^\nimprovements to extent of $300 per annum and records same each year. Failure to make improvements or record\nsame will operate as forfeiture. Title\ncannot be obtained on these claims tn\nless than 5 years, with improvements of\n$10 per acre, including 5 acres cleared\nand cultivated, and residence of at\nleast 2 years. *\nPre-emptor holding Crown Grant may\nrecord\" another pre-emption, if he requires land In conjunction with his\nfarm, without actual occupation, provided statutory improvements made and\nresidence maintained on Crown granted\nland. C\nUnsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20\nacres, may be leased as homesites;\ntitle to be obtained after fulfilling residential and improvement conditions.\nFor grazing and Industrial purposes,\nareas exceeding 640 acres may be leased\nby one person or company.\nPRE-EMPTORS' FREE GRANTS ACT.\nThe scope of this Act ts enlarged to\nInclude all persons joining and serving\nwith His Majesty's Forces. The time\nwithin which the helra or devisees of a\ndeceased pre-emptor may apply for\ntitle under this Act is extended from\none year from th.e death of such person,\nas formerly, -until one year after the\nconclusion of the present'war. This\nprivilege is also made retroactive.\nTOWNSITE PROPERTY ALLOTMENT\nACT.\nProvision Is made for the grant to\npersons holding uncompleted Agreements to Purchase from the Crown of\nsuch proportion of the land, lf divisible,\nas the payments already made will\ncover-in. proportion to the sale price of\nthe -whole parcel. Two or more persons\nholding such Agreements may group\ntheir interests and apply for a proportionate allotment Jointly. If it is not\nconsidered advisable to divide the land\ncovered by an application for a proportionate allotment, an allotment of land\nof equal value selected from available\nCrown lands in the locality may be\nmade. These allotments are conditional\nupon payment of all taxes due the\nCrown or to any municipality. The\nrights of persons to whom the purchaser from the Crown has agreed to\nsell are also protected. The decision of\nthe Minister of Lands in respect to the\nadjustment of a proportionate allotment\nIs final. The time for making application for these allotments is limited to\nthe 1st day of May, 1919. Any application made after this date will not be\nconsidered. These allotments apply to\ntown lots and laiyls of the Crow;* sold\nFor information apply toljauy Provincial Government Agent or to\nG. R. NADEN,\nDeputy Minister of Lands,\nVictoria, B. C.\n'\nPeace Is Here      \\\ni\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .--\nEverybody will want to celebrate and'unless\nyou have the Flu you can't do it in the old fashioned\nway. But we can. all\" celebrate * with a good\nNew Year and anticipating this we will have a ship\/\nment arrive in a few days ol Everything thats good\nall the trimmings for a good old holiday feed,\nIf an increase in Business of more than Double\nis a sign of Square Deals^and reasonable prices we\nare all there.   Come over and see for yourself.\nThe Myncaster Mercantile Company\nHotel Building -       -       - Myncaster, B.C.\nThe Ledge has always  room\nfor one more ad.\nP. BHRNS & CO.\nA    ADA FOOD BOARD LICENSE NO. 113\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. I\n}\ufffd\ufffd++\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&**4'4,'fr'fr4*ffc4\ufffd\ufffd **'fr*'fr'4''fr4\ufffd\ufffd'4'\ufffd\ufffdfr*4v\ufffd\ufffdfa\nnicRotc!\ntiels.onV'B\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...\n* Hot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\nThe only up4o\/date Hotel in the interior,\nin every respect,\nFirst-class\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nTo Solve Canada's Employment Problem\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *-     ' ' x    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -     .......    ...       --\"-...'\n:     X^VERYONE in Canada should: understand just what\n,]~ the:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.Government is doing to solve the unemployment\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.-; problems^ that  may arise through the demobilization of\n;   bur'fighting forces.' ;;       .     .; ;;   : :;.-f;\n-'-;,''- i,.(l) iEmployment Offieesixxi y \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd':\n';'. -      So   that. everyorie-^-male or\n_,.--.feniale,:'soldier-; or.. .civilian1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrcan\nget quickly  such. jpbs.; as :are '-.\nX 'available the Government is: cp-7,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:operating'with the Provinces in.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;' -.establishing:a .chain of  Fublic\n.    Employment Offices.   'Employ-:\n_.: .ersare being, urged to make use'\n.'of these offices to -secure any\n\/-';:.   help'-they heed:    FaLrmers,. for\".\n;    :..ex\ufffd\ufffdiniple, who need hired men\n. sh\"oukl   applj' . to.  tlie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd hearcst.\noffice.    There willbe, a  Public.\nEmployment,  Office   in   every\ntown   of   10J000   people\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand\nwherever the need for one exists.\nThere will be\"(B'Ofdiffererit offices\nin all\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-:one-half- are already in\noperation.\n(2)  Employment Opportunities.\nThe war held up much work\nthat will now be carried on at\nonce.    Public works, shipbuilding, roadbuilding, railway work\n,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdconstruction of bridges, improvement of road-bed, making\nof  new equipment\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthese   will\nprovide   new opportunities for\nemployment. In  addition,  the\n\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   Government has sent a Trade\n,. ISiission  overseas to. secure for\nCanada a share ih the business of\n:      providing * materials   and pro-''\n': ducts  required, for ;reconstruc-\nXX; tion work in Europe. It has,alsci\nXXxi.% :.'set'aside-^the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. X\/X .^iargeTsuml.\"of'\n$25,000,000 to be loaned through\n\/the Provinces to... encourage the\n.building of workmen's houses.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd This will mean much new work\n'v,in;th\"e;'sp>ing7rr'\"'vTT\":--\"--'-Xy   '\"\/if;\";\n,. (3)\\ Land.anci LoansXfor Spldiersx\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: y To help; soldiers, become far-\n'mers the . Government_has de-\/\nveloped ;a.   programme    that\n; includes the proyio^ing of landr;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the. granting .\"of loans, and .the.,\n, training   and ' supervision,   of\nthose inexperienced in farming.;\n.; At present, the soldier''is grant-.\n; ed, free,.in addition, to. his of- :\ndinary   homestead   right,\ufffd\ufffd one\nquarter-rsection-'-\"'of; ..Dominion .\nlands.   He also.receives a loan'\nup to the maximum of $2,500.\n. These original plans are how\nbeing broadenedi If Parliament\npasses the new proposals during\nthis session, the Soldier Settlement Board will be able to buy\nsuitable land and re-sell it to\nthe soldier at cost\nLand up to the value of\n$5,000. may be bougjht by this\nplan\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe money to be repaid\nin 20 years. The low interest\nrate   of  5   per   cent,   will be\nv charged.   These new proposals\n. will also permit the Soldier\nSettlement Board to loan the'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., soldier-farmer up to $2,500 for\npurchasing equipment,: etc., in\naddition to $5,000; loan on his\nCfarm.--  X x'X X.AXi-x.X 'r-X-Xxx. -.'\nftpLtwri Comn0ie&x\n1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=-'-.- \/ottMwai\neach rooni;\nROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THE BEST\nFirst Class Cafe and Barber Shop\n15   SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated; ^Electric Lighted.\nRATES 51.00 per day and up; European Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats.\nX\ufffd\ufffd\n'*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n*\n4\ufffd\ufffd\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\n\"  ...:. Officesi Smelting and Refining Department   - .\n--_._.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA    '''.-\" . .'.'\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper arid Lead Ores\n., Producers   of  Gold,   Silver,   Coppej;,. Blueslo'ne, - Pig Lead: and Spelter\n'  V    \"TADANAC\". BRAND    -     \"-\n.v..\nTHE TELEPHONE INFORMATION GiRL IS HUMAN\n:-- : -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:'\".-- We-had'a complaint the other day that \"Telephone.Information'-'\n.- -:;could,ii9t answer a question regarding a person's phone number,, she'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.-having replied that there were no'listingunder the name mentioned:\n-    It.'was finally ascertained from the enquirer, that the person, wanted\n.. Jived in p furnished house  and the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd telephone was listed-under the  .\n,-ownerVnanie,.not under7 the name.of  the-teuant. :: Consequently -la\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,_.\n.;. formation   could-uiot oblige, ;as. she-had no record showing who\noccupied;the house. .    - ,xl\n.;    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd If a person has a telephone, you will always.find that Information ;\n' can always, giyeybn the.nmnber.. Her aim is. to help you.\" ...\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY,   Lti\n9^>c<><>oooooooo<xkKK>oo<>oo6bo,\n.T^  THOMiVa\ufffd\ufffd\n'   CLOTHES CLEANED .\n; PRESSED AHD REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\n\ufffd\ufffd<>0'\ufffd\ufffd>o<>o<Hi<><H>oo\ufffd\ufffd6oe\ufffd\ufffd<i<>o<x>\ufffd\ufffdo\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON,,. Assayer and\nChemist, Box B1108, Nelson, B. -C.\nCharges:-^Gbld, Silver; Lead or Copper.\n$z each. Gold-Silver, (single assay)\n\ufffd\ufffd1.00. Goid-Silver . (duplicate assay)\n$1.50. Silver-Lead \ufffd\ufffd1.50 _ Silver-Leacl-\nZinc $3.00. Charges for oth\ufffd\ufffdr metals etc\non application.\nJ.^E,#MEip:';;\nLeading,Tailor of the'Kootenays.\n-:^;-.VKA:SL;G\":;'B^C.'\nFRE0 A^TARKEy,\ni-i\"' XX \ufffd\ufffd- \"-.-NELSON; B.\" c:-'---.--' X xi X\n:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ^.mining. -;- yX'y.-xx\nxiX-.. '\"-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;. '^BROKER, -,;;;.;:- X;i'_ Xr -x\nPROSPECTS   BOUGHT ;ANDr   SOLD\n.;Gopd:-.advertising;, has \/sayed\nnianyv a- .town and dfttdctfrom\nan early ..death.--.- ;; Xr .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd X'X-iXX\n;;;^;:;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnceton;'Xc;;-v;,.:';\n...;>.   One of. the largest hotels in\n1 the city.   Beautiful locatioia, >\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\nfine rooms and lasb^nealc.\nA. O. JOHNSON,^    PROPC\nAuto    and   Morse   Stages\nLeave    Greenwood    Twice\nDaiSy to. -Meet Spokane and\nOroviile Trains     -\nAutos For Hire. The finest\nTurnouts in the:Boundary.\n'Light and Heavy'braying  ,\n'ix 'XVGREEKWOOOb.^C'Vv; '.;;:;_\nWx $X. DOC^tEADER, PrbW :\nV.Oldt newspapers.;;, for :;.sale; at -\nThe Ledge; office, i,' Get some ber\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfore.they are all gpne. '..yXXy\/X--\nr.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1919_03_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0308572","@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":"1919-03-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1919-03-06 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\/1.0308572"}