{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0306279":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"caaf7170-14fc-4cba-9f30-a30c872d9144","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2016-07-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1927-09-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"The oldest mining camp newspaper in British Columbia. ; The Ledge was published in Greenwood, in the Kootenay Boundary region of southern British Columbia. The Ledge was published by James W. Grier until 1907, and was subsequently published by R. T. Lowery (1907-1920) and G. W. A. Smith (1920-1929). The paper's longest-serving editor was R. T. Lowery (1906-1926), a prolific newspaper publisher, editor, and printer who was also widely acclaimed for his skill as a writer. The Ledge absorbed the Boundary Creek Times in April 1911, and was published under a variant title, the Greenwood Ledge, from August 1926 to May 1929.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/xledgreen\/items\/1.0306279\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" X&^i^y '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\nw-%..,'\nr-z-yy-'y\n^rovi^'ai libi\n^\nrarjr\nIf\nI\nft!\ni\n'4\n4\n-\ufffd\ufffd1\nVOL. II\nGRE^NWQOD, B.C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1927\nNo. 8\nWe Carry a Large Line of\nincluding\nMcLary's Enamel, Galvanized and Tinware\nMcLary's Heaters\ninspect our Stock\nT. M. GULLEY & CO.\nSchool Supplies\nExercise Books 5, 10, 15, and 20c each\nBigger than ever\nPens, Pencils, Rulers, Etc.\nPeaches, Pears, Prunes, Cantaloupes\nNOW IN\nFor quality and value order from\nPhone 46\nGREENWOOD GROCERY\n;.\nFresh Fish\nEvery Thursday Afternoon\nz  L\nPlace Standing Orders with us and\nbe sure of supply\nTAYLOR & SON\n\\\nPhone 17\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Under . New Management c\nPACIFIC HOTEL\nGREENWOOD, B.C\nFirst-Class Dining Room in Connection\nJ. H. Goodeve\nProprietor\nTel. 2\nMEAT MARKET\nGREENWOOD,  B.C. Box 39|\nHome killed  ... .\nBeef, Veal, Pork, Lamb, &c.\nNome Made Sausage\nWc  are closing out of\nMen's Furnishings\nand holding a\nBig Bargain Sale\nCome and get your, winter clothes\nMen's Heavy Mackinaw Shirts\nRegular \ufffd\ufffd8.00 now selling at $6.00\n-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\n$7.50 Tweed Pants now $5.00\nAH Shoes At A Sacrifice.\nChildrens Leckie Shoes\n' Regular $4.50 now $2.75\nLadies, Gents & Children's Rubbers\nPrices  From 75c to $1.25\nDon't Overlook These Bargains\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Look  For  Posters     -  v\nMrs.\ufffd\ufffd Ellen Trounson's Store\nPublic Auction\nThe Property of the late\nFred Madge\nConsisting of 15 head of young Draft\nHorses, Percherons, three quarter bred\nalso'logging outfit and.various articles\nSaturday, Sept. 24th, 2 p.m.\nFred Madge's Carol!, between\nRock Creek & Kettle Valley\nFor Full Particulars See Bills\nCharles King   -    Auctioneer\nReal Estate & Insurance\nFire, Accident & Sickness, Life,\n-Automobile. Bonds. Burglary.&c\nAuctioneer\nHouses for Rent or Sale\nCall at the Office of\nCHARLES KING\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\nAPPLES\nCome ahd pick them in your own\nboxes. From 50c. Falls 25c. Strawberries 10c \"a box.\ny T. A. Clark,_Midway._\nWILLIAM H. WOOD\nPH\"K$ICIAN AND SURGEON\nGREENWOOD\nRanchers Note:   Pigs and Sheep Wanted\nMcMYNN'S STORE, Midway, B.G.\nTHE SHOOTING SEASON IS HERE\nWe Have A Fresh Stock Of\nShot Gun Shells\nalso Large and Small Calibre Rifle Shells\nI Shot Gun For Sale, Special Value, $35.00\n__\n. If you are having trouble with your\n|7atch, jusfc bring it to us and we will\nput it right.\nOur long experience ih repairing\nVatches has made us experts along\niiat line, and we guarantee you satis-\niction, or there is no charge.\nLet  us  have  your. repairs,  either\nVatches, Clocks or Jewelry.\n'\nWe  make   over   old   Jewelry   and\nlailufacture Brooches or Pins out of\n!ative silver ahd they are quite a nov-\nIfr.\nA. A. WHITE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler    \"\nF. J. WHITE, J.___\nMgr.\nThe United Church of Canada\n;    REV. ANDREW WALKER, B.A.\nMinister in Charge, Greenwood.\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th\nBeaverdell 11 a.m.\nRock Creek 3 p.m.\nGreenwood, 7:30 p.m.\nJob Printing\nThe Greenwood Ledge\nOf Local Interest\nHospital Dance, in the Masonic Hall,\nGreenwood, Friday, September 23rd.\n. Miss Sarah McCalluum, of Grand\nForks, was a visitor in town Sunday.\n. The War Veterans will hold their\nannual Dance on Friday, .Nov. 11th.\nSalvatore Castano is still in the District Hospital, but expects to leave next\nweek.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* Harold Mellrud has returned to Pullman, Wash,, where he will resume his\nstudies. '        .\n-. Mrs. A. Blaine and daughter, Phyllis,\nof Rock Creek, were in town on Wednesday. , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n' Joe Klinosky, Sr., has bought Mrs.\nJoe Christian's house in the north end\nof town.\nMiss K. Hills, R.N., of Port Alberni,\nhas joined the staff of the District\nHospital. '   ,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Frank Fraser left ori Tuesday morning for Peniicton en route to the\nVancouver.\nDr. W. D. Smith, dentist, of Grand\nForks, will be in Greenwood on. Sunday, September 25th.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Welstead and Mrs.\nThorburn, of Kettle Valley, were visitors in town on Tuesday.\nMiss Mabel Axani, R.N., of Vernon,\narrived in town on Wednesday and is\nvisiting her mother, Mrs. M. Axam.\nMiss Ruth Collins, R.N., left on Monday for Beaverdell, where she will visit\nfriends for a week.\nJ. A. McCallum, relieving Government agent, spent the week-end at his\nhome in Grand Forks.\n; Mrs. J. Christian ahd son, Frank,\nof Christian Valley, were in town1 on\nbusiness, \"during\"^ the first-of-the-week.\nMi1, and Mrs. A. N. Docksteader,' of\nGrand Forks, were the guests of Mrs.\nEllen Trounson on Saturday evening.\n. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Hamilton, of\nGolden, and Mrs. P. Bubar, of Denver,\nColorado, are spending a few days in\ntown.\nThomas Taylor left for Terrace on\nSunday morning after a \"few days visit\nwith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. B.\nTaylor.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs.---Helen\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTliomasr-Mrsr_EUen\nHallett and Miss Gladys McCreath\nreturned on Sunday-from a week's visit\nin Spokane .\nG. Veneables, representing the La-\nwas in town on Monday to see A. E.\nMcDougall, agent for this well-known\nbuilding material. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWindsor Auction a Success\nThe Public Auction at the Windsor\nHotel, Greenwood, last Saturday attracted quite a numbers \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of buyers.\nThe bidding was lively and bright and\nthe whole sale went with a bang.\nPrices were good and everything was\nsold, many people securing bedroom\nfurniture at reasonable prices. The\nbilliard table and safe will remain in\ntown.\nGreenwood and\nDistrict Hospital\nThe Directors of the above Hospital\nvery thankfully acknowledge receipt of\nthe following subscriptions: ~\nPreviously acknowledged $3068.30\nAnonymous  '       50.00\nTotal\n$3116.30\nThe many friends of Mrs. C. W.\nBubar will be pleased to know that she\nis able each day to sit out on the porch\nat the District Hospital.\nRemember* the Madge Auction near\nKettle Valley on Saturday, Sept. 24th.\nThere are some useful farm implements and logging tools to be disposed\nof.\nMiss Ruth Anderson, R.N., returned\nto Bellingham, Wash., on Monday\nmorning after a three months holiday\nspent with her mother, Mrs. J. P.\nAnderson.\nRod and .Gun Club Dinner\nJ. D. Smith, acting manager of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce, motored\nto, Penticton during the week-end,\nreturning on Sunday accompanied by\nMrs. Smith.\nRemember the Hospital Dance in\nthe Masonic Hall, Greenwood, this\nFriday evening (September 23rd).\nBush's orchestra will supply the music\nand the ladies of the Hospital Auxiliary\nwill cater for the \"supper. Don't miss\nthis event, you are assured of a good\ntime.\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayer and\nChemist, Box L1108, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Copper or Lead\n$1.00 each. Gold-Silver $1.50. Silver-\nLead $2.00. Silver-Lead-Zinc $3.00.\nThese charges made only when cash is\nsent with sample. Charges for other\nmetals, etc, on application.\nCASHSPECIALS\nSaturday and Next Week\nBananas\nCoffee    ' Special\nMacaroni    - -\nBroken Cookies    -\nSingapore Pineapple\n15c per lb.\n40c per lb.\n3 lbs 35c.\n20c per lb.\n2 cans 50c.\nBROWN'S STORES\nMidway and Rock Creek\nArrangements for the Greenwood &\nDistrict Rod & Gun Club Dinner and\nSocial are well in v hand. Major R.\nGray is circularizing'all memfi'ers who\nare expected to reply not later than\nTuesday morning. An assessment of\ntwo dollars each will be levied to cover\ncost of-.-dinner and refreshments.\nMembers and guests are asked to\nassemble in,the Greenwood Theatre at\n7:30 p.m. and dinner will be served in\nthe Pacific Hotel at 8 p.m., after which\nthe theatre will be utilized for a social\nsmoker. Any member desiring to contribute game for the occasion please\nnotify either G. S. Walters or Major\nGray by Tuesday.\nPremier, the Hon. Dr. MacLean who\nwill be in the district on that day has\naccepted an . invitation to join the\nfestive board where he will be doubly\nwelcome owing to the fact that he was\nthe founder of the old Greenwood Gun\nClub and was always a keen competitor\nin all the local shoots.\nIt is not yet known of the extent of\nthe musical talent available among the\nmembers but there is no doubt some of\nthe fraternity from the west district\nwill avail themselves of the chance to\ndisplay their wares in that line and\nhelp out the town boys.\nAn Interesting Item\nVictoria.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs. Essie Brown will be\nthe new women's wage inspector \"for\nBritish Columbia, with headquarters\nin Vancouver, it was announced at the\nParliament Buildings on September 16.\nShe succeeds Miss Violet Smart, who\nhas resigned to become the bride of J.\nL. White, deputy provincial secretary.\nRally Day\nSunday, Sept. 25th, will be Rally\nDay in the United Church, Greenwood. There will be a special program for the Sunday School at 10:30\na.m., with Service at 7:30 p.m., at\nwhich there will be appropriate music.\nA hearty, invitation is extended to all\ntq attend. Make this a memorable\n\"Go To Church Sunday.\"\nMrs. F. Coates and Miss Alice Hopkins returned - to Trail on'- Saturday\nafter a~ several weeks vislt.in town the\nguests of their grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. Mark Christensen.\n.Mr. and Mrs. A. Legault have returned from a. very enjoyable motor\ntrip to Seattle, Wash. They were accompanied by Mrs. Chas. Gauvreau\nand Miss Alice Hingley.\nMrs. F. Werner, of Colville, Wash.,\nwho has been spending a few days\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mark\nChristensen, left on Tuesday accompanied by her mother to visit relatives\nin-Trail;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*** '~~~ \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~~\nRev. Nelson A. Harkness, B.A., B.D.,\nDistrict Secretary of the B.C. \"Auxiliary\nof the Canadian Bible Society, will\naddress a meeting in the United\nChurch, Greenwood, on Tuesday, Sept.\n27th at 7:30 p.m. The subject of the\naddress will be \"The Christ of the\nIndian Road.\" Everybody cordially\ninvited.'\nAn amendment to the game regulations for 1927, has been passed by\nOrder-in-Councll permitting an open\nseason for willow grouse in the Greenwood-Grand Forks Electoral district\nfrom Sept. 15th to Oct. 25th. This new\nruling has. been brought about by the\nrepresentations made to the\" Game\nBoard and Attorney-General by the\nlocal Rod and Gun Club backed up\nwith the strong support of Dougald\nMcPherson, M.L.A.\nGuests at the Pacific Hotel during\nthe week: K. Scheer, Grand Forks;\nA. J. Nanson, A. H. W. Crossley, Nelson; Fred Delanier, Seattle; E. Price,\nE. E, Jenks, L. F. Murray, Chicago; G.\nW. Evans, Cookson; J. D. Morrison, R.\nL., Clothier,\"\" Mr. and Mrs. F. Cousins,\nBeaverdell; W. S, Wilson, F. F. Dow-\nling, J. Hutchinson, Vancouver; Mrs.\nF. Bubar, Kettle Valley; F. Christian,\nChristian Valley; F. J. Wilson, Spokane; Mrs. P. Bubar, Denver, Col.;\nMr. and Mrs. A. C. Hamilton, Golden.\nKettle Valley and South\nOkanagan Pioneers' Society\nDue mainly to the efforts of Messrs.\nSpraggett, and Arthur Roberts! President and Secretary, respectively, of\nthe above old Association, it was decided to attempt to have a re-union\nand to bring together once more,\nsome, at least of the old stand by\nmembers.\nNo meeting had been held since the\nearly years of the* \"Great War\" though\nprior to that held' annually. ,\nAccordingly to responses, a dinner\nwas arranged for at the Grand .Forks\nHotel, Grand Forks on Sept. 15th,\nattended toy some 25 Old Timers. The'\nmenu was excellent and.the attendance\nalso most pleasant.\nMr. Spraggett made an admirable\nchairman and kept the ball rolling,\nevery-one, in turn, had to contribute\nsomething.or other to the entertainment of the evening.\nNotable among those who gave\nrecitations, songs, speeches and remi-\nniscenses were -Duncan Mcintosh of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBeaverdell fame, James' Kerr ,the\nshining light of Penticton, that worthy\nrepresentative of the oldest of all,\nJimmie Lynch and the genial Chief of\nPolice of Grand Forks.\nIt was decided that the holding over\nofficers should still exercise then-\nfunctions and no new officers were\nappointed.\nA resolution was passed that the\ndate of eligibility be advanced from\n1899 to 1904 and it was urged upon\nthose present that they endeavour to\nget in new members so as to keep this\nworthy association alive. The meeting\nwas adjourned to be again called at\nthe summons of the chairman 6 or 12\nmonths hereafter as might seem ex-.\npedient. It has always been kept in\nview to help those who are in need\nand indigent as the records will show.\nIt was decided that the next place of\nmeeting will be held at a more central\npoint either at Midway or Rock Creek\nto be hereafter decided upon.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA very pleasant evening and so to\nbed.   '\nPremier MacLean\nHere Next Week\n,.., Premier-Dr.. J.D. MacLean passed\nthrough Greenwood-yesterday on <hi3:\nway to East Kootenay.. He will return\nto the district next week and will be\nin Greenwood on Wednesday evening\nhaving accepted an invitation\" to attend the Rod and Gun Club Dinner\nand on Thursday night he will address\na meeting in Grand Forks. On Friday\nevening the Premier will \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd address a\nmeeting in Midway prior to the commencement of the Benefit Dance.\"\nJ-\nProvincial Police Court\nVJ\nChas. E. GilImore_appeared before.\n-J\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdArMcCallumrslM., ori Friday at the\nProvincial Court House, Greenwood,\ncharged under the Sheep Protection\nAct viz with having a dog in his possesion without a license.6 He pleaded\nguilty and-was fined $4.00 and costs.\nPaul Nelson was up before J. A.\nMcCallum,. S.M., on Monday at the\nCourt House, charged with being in\npossession qf unsealed- liquor, commonly termed moonshine. He was\nfined $50.00 and costs.\nThe case of Rex vs Adolph Sercu\ncame up before J. A. McCallum, S.M., at\nthe Greenwood Court House on Tuesday morning. Mr. Sercu was charged\nwith allowing bulls to run at large.\nAccording to the Animal Act, no bulls\nare allowed to run at large except bulls\nover one year old of a good beef type\nand in a district declared open by\nOrder-in-Council, said district being\ndesignated as in a bull district. The\ncase, was adjourned until Friday afternoon in order to obtain copy of the\nB. C. Gazette creating Grand Forks\nBull District. ,.      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIt's a great life if you don't weaken\nand it's \"A Dog's Life\" if you want to\nlaugh, for Charlie Chaplin's picture of\nthat name will be the feature of the\nprogram at the Greenwood Theatre on\nSaturday, Oct. 1st. People talk about\nthe great advance made in motion\npictures during the last few years, but\nCharlie is the immortal of the screen\nand his triumphs of yesterday are\nalways a delight, now as ever. The\nmanager sincerely believes that his\npatrons will thoroughly enjoy this\nreturn of the screen's greatest comedian in a.picture that has made millions\nlaugh. Included in the program-will\nbe Mabel Normand in \"The Nickel\nHopper.\"\nTunney Wins\nGene Tunney won the pugilistic\nbattle in Chicago this evening getting\nthe decision over Jack Dempsey.\nMidway News   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nR. A. Brown is on a business trip to\nWilliams Lake.\n)..\nMiss E. Clever returned from New\nDenver on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Eric Jackson, of Trail,\nare visitors to the former's home.\nMrs. R. A. Brown ahd son, Jim, returned from Spokane on Sunday.\nYour loyal support is asked to help\nthe Benefit Dance in the Farmer's Hall\non Friday, Sept. 30th. The - money\nderived from this dance is to help pay\nthe * medical and hospital expenses\nentailed through the serious accident\nof Joseph Johnston of Midway. Members\" of the Women's Institute are\nkindly asked through this medium to\ndonate cake and sandwiches. Music\nby Bush's orchestra.\nEnter Exhibit? Early\nExhibitors to the Rock Creek Fall\nFair to be held on Friday, Oct. 7th are\nasked to send in their entries to R. E.\n, Norris, secretary, Kettle Valley, as soon\nas possible, and not leave them' to the\nlast day. ^ .__. WE   GREENWOOD   JJED<m\nFor a Delightful Trcatl\n.WRSGLEY'SNSPS\nDelicious after smoking\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nsweetens the breath,\nsoothes thc throat and\n_ makes the next smoke\ntaste better.\nAir Base In Near East\n.6_.-itni.-i Planning .One At Malta To\nProtect Suez Canal\nTlie Uritish air ministry, is said to\nbo* planning development of a great\nall- baso at Malta wliicli will dominate tho Eastern 'Mediterranean and\nwill protect Egypt and the Suez\nCanal against attack.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThis also'is regarded .as a precaution in view of Premier .'Mussolini's\nplan of developing a great miliiao-\nrind naval base ai Hlib'dei..\nIt Ih also'teamed'thai the Nizam\noi Hyderabad, who is one of the greatest, semi-independent native princes,\nis planning to establish an air .service\niu his dominion and i-j sending a number of young men of'Lho leading families to be trained for air work in\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"England. Whilo o.f course, the service will l>o\" paitl 'Tb'17 out o'f the revenues of the Nizam;. it. will bo coordinated with the imperial service\nin India. W \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',:\ufffd\ufffd;;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;       .\nFrance Raises Tariff\nOn Canadian Wheat\nWORLD HAPPENINGS\nBRIEFLY TOLD\nThe - honey harvest ot Southern\nAlberta is expected to run to JtOO tons,\nworth about. $100,000.   .\nA remarkable and increasing demand for Canadian food product s in\nCireal Britain is reported\/ by Major\n0. 13. Johnson,-Canadian Government\ntrade commissioner for Glasgow.\nCanada's net debt decreased by\"\n$63,789,JJ>7 during the IlrstTive months\nof the present, fiscal year which open-\nfid ou April 1, according.io tlie monthly financial statement issued by the\nDepartment of I'inance. ':\nA. lotal of 5-13 commercial' vessels\npassed through the Panama' Canal\nduring the month of August, this being a new record. The previous record was 509 transits? made iu July,\n1927.\nAll the inhabitants of Turkey, in-\neluding foreigners, arc'to be confined\nto their homes for an entire day on\n.October 2S, according to official rcgiir\nIatio'ns issued at Constantinople, fixing Lhat, date for the national census.\nThc beam wireless service to India-\nhas heen opened to'*public trallic.-The\nCovernmenl program of 11)23 i'or linking up the Uritish Empire by wireless\nis now complete, beam communication\nto Canada, Australia andi South Africa\nbeing already in operation. -\nIt is reported that. Japanese divers\nat Sebastopol, Crimea, who \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd were\nsearching for a half-a-million sterling\nin gold $2,500,^)00) aboard the Uritish\ncruiser Black Prince, have discovered the'first gold coin; The coin bears\nthe inscription of Georgo 111. and the\n\ufffd\ufffd.!ate 1821.\nIt is expected that -within six weeks\nit will bc known whether or not oil\nin commercial quantities is 10 bc added to Northern Ontario's inventory of\nwealth, for by that time tests which\nthe provincial Government has been\n_eonduct.mg_In_ihe_Ma.t.taganil_Vallcy_\nwill.be completed and a. report upon\ntliem made. '.-\nNotice   Of   Increase   Has   Been   Received At Ottawa\nFrance lias increased the tariff ,pn\nCanadian wheat from 20 cents to 27\ncents, approximately, per bushel\/according to o'lliciaT advices 7 received\nfrom the Canadiau Trade Commissioner in Paris. The higher rale\ncomes into effect immediately.\nWhile' Canada's \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdexport-of wheat to\nFrance has''fluctuated' from year to\nyear, the present'Change oa the basis\nof last year's export of -l,L55,8tJ7 bushels Will mean an increase in the total\n'Preach duty collected on Canadian\nwheat of nearly ?2SO,000.\nCanada, under the 1922 treaty between the two countries, enjoys a\nminimum tariff and most favored) nations' treatment on exports to France\nand the increase now 'put into effect\nis .due to the raising ol: the minimum\ntariff rate to all countries by Prance.\nIf sometimes the tea you\nare using does not taste as\ngood as it used to\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjust see\nwhat kind of a package it is\nin. No chances are taken\nwith Red Rose. It is packed\nin clean, bright Aluminum.\n. *\"''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'*        3T\nClaiirjs Darwin Was Right\nMan -Descended   From  A^e-Lik?   Being Says 'Distinguished:..\n...   Scientist .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n\ufffd\ufffdarwin was right, declared Sir\nArthur Keith, the distinguished scientist in addressing tiie British Association for the Advancement of Science,\nat Leeds, England. 'Sir Arthur uot\nonly agreed that man had descended\nfrom an ape-like being, but lie gave\nmiuiiiind an . antiquity of 1,000,000\nyears.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.As we go backward in time,\" said\nSir  Arthur, \"we discover, that mankind, becomes broken   up,   no't   into\nseparate races as in tho world, of today, but luto numerous and separate\nspecies.    Wheu we go into    a    still I\nmore remote past they become so unlike that we have to regard them not\nas belonging to separate species but\ndifferent genera.  U  is amongst  this\nwelter of extinct fossil-formri which\nstrew the ancient, world.that we have'\nto trace the zigzag line of man's (les\ncent.\"\nHow Hospitals Care For Patients\nEight thousand hospitals in tne\nUnited States and Canada take care\nof 12,000,000\" patients a year or about\n(525,000 a day. It is estimated five\nbillion dollars arc invested in the hospital propcrty:_and ...iu the ^.opinion of\nDr. B. S. Gilmbre, head of tho American Hospital Association, it now, is\ndisgraceful ot criminal.to die Un&af\n75 years of age. Unfortunately many\npersons seem more or less reluctantly\nobliged to in spite of what hospitals\ncan do for them..-.-..\nRub It In F6r Lame Back.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA brisk\nrubbing with Dr. Thomas' Eclectric\nOil will relievo lame back lhe sHn\nwill Immediately absorb the oil and\nit will penetrate the tissue-, and bang\nspeedy'relief.' -Try it _.n<L be con\nvinced. As tho: liniment sinks in the\npain comes put and there aie trnple\ngrounds for saying that it i-- m o\\\ncellent article.\nMore Sleep Necessary\ntight Hours Required Under Strain\nOf Modern Life\nEight or ten hours, sleep arc necessary if you wish to keep.lit_ahd live\nto a good, old age.. This is iho prescription of Dr. A. T.! Xankevill,\nhealth ollicer at Plymouth, Mass.,\nwhere the- 'Mayflower .'.landed. We\ncrowd .into our days three times as\n-much as oui- grandparents did and\nthe strain of * modern-life is Jar givai-\ner,. yet \"it is doubtful if wo take as\nmuch'rest as they did. That may be\nthe reason more Americans die of\nheart disease than of anything else.\nIn bed the labor of the heart is reduced one-half. A man who has hart\na strenuous day's work undo- modern\nconditions-should sleep his eight or\nten hours, says Dr. Naukivcll, If he\nwishes to-keep,.his'youth, and keep\nhis arteries elastic.\nAlberta Sugar Beets\n.. .        i>        ..\t\nExpect Crop - This Year Will Be\nLargest In History\n.Officials of -the Canadian Sugar\nFactories, Limited, estimate the largest crop of sugar beets this year in\nthe history of the industry In Alberta. The crop will be from 45,000 to\n50,000 tons; in their.''Judgment, as\ncompared witli 11,000 tons last year.\nThe acreage has increased within the\nyear by 800.\nThc Alberta Sugar Company, which\nalready lias a refinery at llaymond,\ni.s planning the erection of a spcoiuI\nplant at llillsprings, in Southern Alberta, where conditions of sugar beet\ngrowing have been found! 0 bo most'\nsatisfactory.\nA Chic One-Piece Frock\n\\\nUnusually smart Is this modish\none-piece frock ot slenderizing lines.\nContrasting\" material;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd may vbo**; etcee-\ntively. used* for the front panel, ves-.\ntee, shield, long collar, and facings on\nllie dart-fitted or loose sleeves. An\ninverted plait at each side seani provides .'for, the necessary fulness, and\nthe narrow belt fastens with a-buckle.\nNo. 1644'is'in sizes;36,''SS, -10, 42,. 44\nand 4G inches bust. Size 38 requires\n'Alii yards\":39-inch,'.or .'2% yards 5It.\ninch material for the dress, and %\nyard 39-inch for collar, ves.teo, shield,\np'uicl \"\"*nd   ' lte'vo   fai ir^s''  Price   20\n'tints lh\ufffd\ufffd pat Inn\nI    O.U Tachion Book   illusti. ting the\n'newest md most pia'u<al &i\\ka   will\nbo of IntPtest to evnv 1 ome diess-\nmakpr     Pi ico of ihe book 10 pcnfi\nthc copv\nPlanes Replacing Dogs\nWith aeroplanes coming into use\nall over Alaska for freight trar-spoi\ntatton, dogs are being used lrs^ and\nless on tho trails. Consequently thore\nla an over-supply ii and bundled-, ot\nhuskies, abandoned, have umuuI to\nthe wild state and are becoming ihe\nmost dangerous kind -of mauiudeis\nHow To Order Patterns\nAddress\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\\\ innipeg Newspaper Unloo\n17r) McDeinot   V\\e    Winnipeg\nPattern   No\nSue\t\nBURNS\nMinard's soothes and. reduces\n.the inflammation-... Keep. it on\n- hand for sprains,  bruises and\nflesh wounds.\n^|BP\nw. n. u. ie\ufffd\ufffd\nName   \t\nTown\nSafety Device For;..Banks.\"\/..;;,..\nA new guardian,of the bank vault\nlias been perfected from an adaption\nof the microphone used during. the\nwar for submarine detection. The device \"-ao'e^'not.recori&^'oiscs or street\nvibrations,, but the \"Slightest tap upon\nthe safe\" it guards \"will send warning\nsignals to police stations.\nWhen a man acts like a mule the\nlatter would be justified in kicking\nbta> '\".'.-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/'\" \/\/\/,>V\nDepreciation Of Automobile\nI was lalkfng recently with, a big\nautomobile man in a. dull town. Wo\nwalked up a long street, and he \"made\nan estimate of the cost of aulomo'-\nbiles parked along the way. I have\nforgotten (ho figures, hut. thoy were\nenormous. J recall, however, ihat ho\nsaid the depreciation on the.inuiomo'-\nbilesWe saw during .flin walk amounted to ten thousand* dollars a day.\nThere are.millions of automobiles in\nthe United States. What is (he, depreciation of new ones sold every day,\nand of those previously sold.?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK \\V.\nHowe's Monthly.'\nA'Warning To Motorists\nPractice Of Giving Lifts To Strangers\nIs Dangerous   7\nThe American Automcbile Associ-'\nation has sent out a .nation-wide-\nwarning to motorists to abandon the\nprevalent practice of giving \"lifts to\nstrangers along the road. Pointing\nout that a serious natio'nal problem\nis being created by the kindly,driver\nwho picks up the youthful roadside\ntraveller because more than seventy\nper cent. of. these \"down and outers\"\nlater must bo cared .\"* for - in ' some\ncharitable institution,1 the association\nalso cautions (he motorist on the\nscore of his responsibility should an\naccident occur, inasmuch as tliere\nhavc been many cases in which (he\nfree-riding passenger collected heavy\ndamages from his host.\nNo better advice could be given the\nmotoring fraternity. All the dangers\nof \"giving lifts\" are not jmenlioncd in\ntho A.A.A. bulletin, however. There is\nthe \"stick-up\" man who, with a leer\non his face, holds up his finger to\n\"bum\" a ride. If the motorist is kind'\nlie stops and calls a cheery \"Hop in!\"\nThe bandit accepts with alacrity, and,\nbiding his time on the back seat until\nconditions are propitious, slug's the\ndriver and his companiou dumps the\nbodies alongside of the road, and\nspeeds away. In this connection it is\nonly necessary to recall the horrible\nmurder some years ago in New Jcr-\neey when a young couple returning\nfrom a dance graciously gave a lift to\ntwo men waiting on a street corner,\nlittle realizing, that they had but a\nfew minutes to live.\nIt is not. safe or wise to stop at-\nany timo or any place to give a lift\nto anyone. If it is a young boy who\nhails every car until he finds oue to\npick him up, the chances are a hundred to one that the motorist at the\nend of the ride, no matter how long or\nsow short, Svill get no' 1 hanks from\nthis modern type of beggar, and that\nthe motorist by his act is helping In\nihc stagnation of any character that\nthe youth might possess.\nAs ro tho question of thc passenger\nsuing his host if there is an accident,\nand ihe ease, of hold-ups under such\ncircumstances, there can be no' controversy. Motorists should realize\nthese things and stop for no one,\nwhether in the city or in the country,\nbecause under any circumstances\nthcy are either putting themselves in\ngvavo danger or contributing to tlie\ndelinquency of future citizens of this\ncountry.\nLooked Like a Certainty   N\n~ \" '1-h-e you are, ladies and gentlemen,\"    shouted , the    raucous-voiced\ntipster at the race-meeting.    \"'What\ndid I tell yer yesteiday?\"\nNobody made an answer lo this\nquestion, and once more the tipster\nbegan his shouting.\n\"Didn't I say (h'tr r.road Bean\nwasn't a runner?\" he yelled. \"And\ndidn't I say that Water Tap would-\nstill he running,.and ihat Dusty Carpet would lake, a lot of beating?\"\nStill there to no answer. Bur th.e\npowerful-voiced man was not a bit\ndismayed. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- =\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Now,\" he cried, \"I've a ceminty\nTot you today in lho next race. Back\nLoose Button, it's sure id come off:\"\nSUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON\nX'X.   SEPTEMBER 2E.     * **\" 7\n, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>    >7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ..'--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,:'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/-     .X\"...:>;\\\nTHE EARLY KINGS OF ISRAEL^\nGolden Text: \"Jehovah ha(h established his throne in tho heavens;'-. and\nHis kingdom ruleth'over all.\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPsalm\n10-1.19.'\/.,' \/..;.:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-77.:.:.y.yyiXiiy-'-y\nDevoHionol Reading: Psalm-105;l-S.\nA Review By Means Of, Allusions\nIh The 'fullness of spirit Nathan\nspoke to David, and so in a hundred\nvoices God ihVough that goodlv company of the prophet still speaks to1 us,\nand conv'inceV us of our sin and of\nHis presence.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDean,'Stanley.     v.\nI dare not hope with David's harp\nto chase the evil spirits from the\ntroubled bieast.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK(jble.\nWe think'of prayer ior others as a\nprivilege, but ho regarded it as a\nduty; not to pray for his people waa\nto him a sin.\"\n\"Latest > born of Jesse's race,\nWonder lights thy,bashful lace,\nWhile iho prophet's gifted oil\nSeals Ihee tor a path of toil.\"\n\"Becausfe you'caainot gain\nA wondrous Waterloo\nIn life's great battle, why remain\nUnarmed with foes in view?\"\nBe not^afl-aid, like David, take your\nsling,\nAnd do some humble part in conquer-\n- ing.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Julia H: Maiy.       \"   .\nAnd his next son, i'or wealth and wisdom famed,\nThe clouded ark of God, (ill (hen in\ntents  ; ,J ^\nWandering, shall in a glorious\" temple\nenshrine.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMilton.\nIf 1 am only an instrument of-gath-\nering materials and another shall\nbuild the house, I trust my joy will be\nnone the less.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWilliam Carey.\nHis life is tho tragedy of a, man\ncapable of nobility of character and\nof great service, who gave loose reins\nto his evil temper jjll his only ambition was to hunt and kill-\"a partridge\non a mountain.\"\nIt seems an almost Impossible state\nof self-deception which could let him\nflare out in indignant virtue against\nthe supposed culpiit, and never once\ndream that the case could apply,, to\nhimselJ.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHugh Black, '    \/\nIn the Way Of Trade  -\nMatter Of-Ninety-Five Dollars Meant\nw   Nothing To Texan\nIn the old haggling way of trade,\nwhich has, in Ihis country, at least,\nhappily gone out for tlie most part,\nand been replaced by'iho moro honest one-price system, in which a\ndealer puts a fair profit upon his\ngoods and sticks to that, it was\ncustomary to demand a great deal\nmore than the askcr hoped to get.\nOne lime on the Texas frontier a\nman camo info a camp riding an old\"\"\nmule.\n\"How much for the mule?\" asked\na bystander. X-\n\",11st a hundred dollars,\" answered\nthc rider.\n\"I'll give you five dollars,\" said the\nother.\nThc rider stopped short, as if in\namazement, and then slowly dismounted. .  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Stranger,\" said lie, \"1 ain't agoin'\nlo let .a littlo matter of ninety-five\ndollars stand between mc and a mule\ntrade.  The mule's yours.\nMinard's Liniment relieves backache.\nAir Patrol Covers Large Area \"\nApproximately 105,000,000 acres of\nforest bind in tho provinces of Ontario, .Manitoba,-ttad Alberia wero under a system of aerial protection during 192(1.\n: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Jt isn't the cost of living that worries the man behind the bars.\nGiant Icebergs\nGiant icebergs, 400 feet high and\neight miles in extent, wero-recently\nsighted by lho master of lho British\nSteamer Maiatua, hound from New\nZealand to Montevideo.\nMeaning Of London\nMany Theories Have Been Advanced\nAs To Its Derivation\nThe name London Is the subject\nof much discussion among 'philogists\nin Great Britain.\nOne theory is that it means \"the\nfo'rt by the lake,\" from the Welsh\n\"llyn,\" lake and \"din\" - a fortified\npace. Another is that it is derived\nfrom the Norse word \"Lund\" (diminutive \"Lunden\") a. sacred grove.\nThere Is a town in Yorkshire called Lund after Lund in Scan'diuavia,\nat oue tlmo one of the chief commercial cities in Sweden. Its merchants traded with Britain in .Roman\nlimes. It is thought that Lund ln\nYorkshire, Lund in Sweden and Lunden, or London were probably the\nsites of sacred groves, where the\nprieats of the Bronze Age offered human sacrifices to thc Sun God.\nNaming Mountain Peaks\nMount   Stanley   Baldwin    Is-, Named.\nAfter British Premier..\nBight Hon. Stanley Baldwin's namo\nIs to bo perpetuated in Canada by a\nmountain peak called after him.      >\nTlie'geography board has acted on\na suggest ion of the British Columbia\nGovernment and a peak in the Ho'ck-\nlos in that province with 1111 altitude\nof 10,900 feet is to bo called Mount\nStanley Baldwin. It ia visible from\nthe railway through tho Yellow Head\nPass.\nOther peaks in the samo Cariboo\nrange are to be named Ihe Premier\nGroup after Sir Wild id Laurier, Sir\nJohn Thompson, Sir John Abbott and\nRt. Hon..Mackenzie Bowell. The Laurier Peak, 11,750 feet is the highest.-\nPreviously, mountains were named\nafter,Sir John A: Macdonald, Alexander MacKenzie, Sir Charles Tupper\nand Sir Robert Borden.\nThe Planting Of Trees\nr\nArrangement  Should   Be  Studied   To\nObtain  Pleasing Results \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd j\nIndiscriminate planting o'f trees and\nshrubs around homes is \"an unfortun- )\nate fad,'! declares Miss-  Elsa  \"Ileh- )\n! I\nmann of the lecture staff of the New 1\nYork Botanical Garden. Says the ':\nGarden, in a recently Issued press 1\nbulletin: - -1\nMiscellaneous evergreens are beingi\noveremphasized, and a\" finer   under-^jl\nstanding is needed, shc says. Urging I\nthe importance of hedges and hedge-!;]\nrows, shc asserts that \"tho beauty ofl'jj\nthe small place depcndi upon its cn-l\nclosure, which separates it\" from its^\nneighbor and  makes it  complete ini\nItself.\"    Tree?,   shrubs,   vines,    and\ufffd\ufffd>\nflowers arc not to   be   planted   for,ri\nthemselves alone, according to Mis.c'i\nHehmann, but are to bc arranged andel\nadapted to the hou-30 against which'I\nthey are used. -x'J\nMothers Should Use'\nENGLISH LADY TENNIS TEAM\nThese are the smiling members of Iho famotis English lady tenuis team,\nwhich has been giving exhibition matches throughput Canada during the\npast few weeks, and which is soon to sail home after contesting tho Wight-\nman Cup. From left to right they are: Joap Fry, Bctty'Nuthall, Ennyntrude\nHarvey, Captain Hawkes, master of the Cunard Liner Ascanla, Mrs. D. A.\nHill, and Gweneth Jl. Sterry. They are shown on.-the ship in which they\nsailed from England to Quebec. V\nBears Make Friends With Miners\"\nA strong friendship has sprung up\nbetween wild bears and thc minors\nemployed at tho Barbara camp, B.C.,\n5,000 feet above sea level, whore copper deposits of the Britannia Mines\naro being worked. The bears wero\ndriven from their usual haunts by an\nunusually early snow storm. Wheu\nthcy appeared in c:uni*i thoy were\nstarving and eagerly devoured the\nfood offered by the miners. Tlio\nboars quickly gained \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd confidence and\nnow take scraps from tlie .men's\nhands \"without sign of fear or vicious-\nness.\nAre Cutting Teeth\nDuring the baby's teething time, in tin, J\nhot summer months, tlie bowels becom-J\nloosa and diarrhoea, dysentery, colic,,!\ncramps - and other bowel complaint 1\nmanifest themselves; the gums becomji\nswollen, cankers form in tho ifiouth, amj'J\nin many cases tho child wastes to J'r\nehadoji', and very often the termin.itioij\nia fatal. \" .   ;\n^~This\"~is-th\"e_time_-when_tho\"mGth('-J|\nfihould'uso \"Dr. Fowler's,\" and, pcijf\nheps, save the baby's life.\nIt-has. becn on tho market for th-\npast 80 years; pul up only by Tho ,'\"']\nMilbum Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. V*j\n1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Just What He Wanted\n. A story ls related of an old ten.Vi\nfanner, who, ron paying his rent, t<ij\nhis landlord that ho.wanted somo Uvj\nher lo build a house, and would .'\nmuch obliged if he would glvo hH\npermission to cut down what worj\nanswer for the purpose.\n\"No:\" said the landlord, sharply.'\n\"Well, then, sir,\" tho farmer w.|\non, \"will you give me enough to bi.'\nvi barn?\",\n\"No.\"\n\"To make a gate, then?\"\n\"Yes.\" '     ,\n\"That's, all   T   wanted,\"   said\nfarmer, \"aud more than l expect\/-.-'\nAfter all we don't work such M\nhours. They're lhe regulation GO '{|\nuic3 each. ,   \" j,j\n'The man with a grouch gets >,\nsympathy than he deserve.,. '\nThe happiness. of jnarried life depends upon tlie 'power of making\nsmall sacrifices with readiness ,and\"\ncheerfulness. One doesn't havo to\nbe married to know that either.\"\nGarrett: \"Do you think n. travelling\nman cau go to Heaven?\"\nMitchell: \"Not if the Recording\nAugel audits their expense, accounts J **\nwmmimim\nSend   $4.50, , n.cntfci *\nV-.. *. eoior and wtiotltcr rlgtit, .\nI left iyo, rooolv\ufffd\ufffd wm- . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj\npio aj?_r.m<m. ot 12 poitpiU,\nW\ufffd\ufffd save you i.'oncy. '\nFIT21AN   OFXXCAlT   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHOUSE\nCIS AV.  Hasting* St\nVarwajvo-, CauaJa\nIJ\n~- '- -.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - -    (1\nON  RECEIPT pi? $1.00  I  will ina.l'|\n^ o\/. Hox of     ,'       ff\nBALSAM   OINTMEi.\nNature's Oireit Ttcneflt for Cuts.' >i\nWounds, Boils, Corns, Cn.vtniuclcs.''.*\nflite.\". Mosquito ;uid other In__e..j\nAnimal Bltc.\ufffd\ufffd. Clood ToI-oit, S.'ff\nnactcaelie, (ltcliy Birth Marks ana 5-\nCold in Head tind CoUt Hoi-ps. 1 o5,\n25e. 8 oz. SOc, and 8 o\/. $1.00. AT 1\nDRUWTST. or. T. IT. SIHPWA\nWellington W.. Toronto.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   1\nTHH NEW FRENOH REMEDY. .\nSCTHERAPIONi\n~ H*. 1 for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)\ufffd\ufffd<_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd CMtn-h. Wo.\ufffd\ufffd far Bi.fi\n(Lkta__>_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. R*.a__M(___ireol\ufffd\ufffdW\ufffd\ufffdAkt_J I\nfoU Ir Utdlftj CMBUMia, m ntars \ufffd\ufffdo\ufffd\ufffdl' ^Jli\n\/\nTHE   GREENWOOD   LEDGE\n__*\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n!f\nLEAGUE COUNCIL\nCanada and U.S.\nNo   Room\nHon.\nFor   Distrust   Says\nWilliam Phillips-.        .,-   .\nOttawa.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere Js no place for distrust pr misgivings between Canada\nand the\" United States, declared-Hon.\nWilliam Phillips,    U.S.'   minister   .to\nCanada, in the  course of a stirring\naddress to members of thc Canadian\nClub, and delegates to the annual con-\nCuba and Finland will sit  ference of (lie Association ot Ca\nFor Outpost Work\nOcneva,~Canada and Cuba were\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtec^d to the League of-Nations'\nCouncil. Three Keats were to be filled,\nand Finland got the third. ~\nCanada\ntor three years on tho coundl, which\nnow is composed of 14 members. The\nother members are Great llritaln,\nJVaVice, Italy, Japan and Germany,\nwhich hold permanent scat in perpetuity, and- China, Colombia Chile\nRumania, Poland and Holland, who\ncro uon-perniaucnt members.\n.The  new  line-up means  that  the\ncouncil contains four countries representing tho American \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcontinent  and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas created special   interest   among\nMany delegales because \"ot Uie particularly friendly relations existing be-\nHbsorbing nature;   that   is,   because\ntween Canada, Cuba and, the United\nStates.   From another standpoint the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlection caused interest of an equally\nCanada In a member of the British\nEmpire. Hence, in the view of numerals delegates, tho Importance of the\n' Bnllsh Empire on the council is increased, although the general impresari exists that Canada will act absolutely independently,   insisting   upon\nher. sovereign  rights as an independent member' or the\"1 League of Na\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtions.\nllelgium,\n:'\n!\n- The three new \"niembers will take\nofficp immediately, replacing Czechoslovakia, Salvador \" aud\nwhose'term has expired.\nPresumably Senator Raoul Daudu-\ni-.und will represent Canada on ihe\ncouncil. lie'was president of the 1925\nAssembly; he speaks English and\nFrench with equal fluency and is popular in Geneva political circles.\nDr. Aristides Aguero IMhamcourt,\nMinister to Berlin, probably will ho\nlhe choice of Cuba. Ue has long been\nono of the motel prominent figures in\nleague activities and served <ls presf-\n'denl of tho recent Intel-national Conference on Tn^if_and_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCoimnuniea~\n\"tiotis.\" .\nCanada won her victory by a narrow .maagin, getting 2G votes or one\nmore than tho necessary maiority.\nCuba led tho poll wil if <K). votes, and\nFinland came second with 33.\n..  ..  Canadian Clubs, at a luncheon here.\n\"It is an easy matter for us to understand one another,\" he. said, \"because our interests touch at some\npoints and because already ye are\nthoroughly well acquainted AVe are in\nno sense foreigners to each other, yet\nwc still havc^much to learn, one from\nthe o'theiv Alreiftiy wo : have gone a\nlong way on tho road toward mutual\nco-operation but we still can go even\nfurther.      *\ufffd\ufffd   i\n\"Much of the ..sorrows and sufferings of the world' would have been\navoided-in the past If nations had\nonly found the courage to .approach\ntheir international problems in an\naltitude of reasonableness and fair\nplay.\n\"With, diplomatic relafions now es-)\nlablished.and with good-will- manifest everywhere, Canada and tlie U.S.\naro ready, I hope, to discuss all questions of mutual , concern, *as' they\narise, cheerfully and frankly, and Iri\na spirit of helpfulness. In so doing,we\nshall become the happiest illustration\nof what we hope civilization has in\nstore for the entire world. For between oi*' two countries there ls no\nplace for distrust or misgivings.\nWANE\nnier TIane\nService Is Planned\nWould   Cr\nlo  indicate\nthere would\nMiss  B\n. H.   Terry,  n.N,  Toronto,\nOntario, nurse, left recently to begin\nwork at the new medical outpost. All\nSaints' hospital, Aklavik, North Wes.\nlemtory, which\"has been opened under the auspices of, \"tlie Mackenzie\nRiver diocese of the Anglican church:\nEFIQT\nMALLER\nliable To Dumping Duty\nNew\nRuling On Imported Apples Has\nBeen Issued-\n-.Ottawa.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdImported apples have been\ndeclared Wablo to dumping duty.    A\nruling Issued  by the Department of\nNational Revenue holds that apples,  \" ,v-,u;i\n\"are to b\ufffd\ufffd_ considered as of a class or  tage from tliroe to   two    ceots\n..-inri r_..~.]..\ufffd\ufffd--' '    \"      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ounce iias  increased  the  volume of\nletters passing through the wails.\nOttawa. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Reduction of postage\nrates provided by the budget of 1920\nhas resulted in a deficit in the Post\nOflice Department, but it is about a\nmillion dollars less than was originally estimated.\nFor the fiscal year which ended\nMarch Cl last, thc returns are being\nmade up and tlie deficit is placed at\n$1,(500,000. Thc estimated shortage\nwas-about $2,500,000.\nIt would appear from these figures\nthat the reduction in the letter pos-\nI\nCoal For Ontario I\nWill\nFi?iding'*Of Rail Commissioner\nMake Price Prohibitive\nCalgary.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"The finding of the commission at ojice kills al hope of sending Alberta coal to tho Ontario market,\" said Jesse Gouge. DrumheUer\ncoal operator.\nMr. Gouge   said that to tho 512.20\nDor ton mentioned  as  the  Inclusive\ncost \"plus   the   element   of   profit,\"\nwould have  to  bo added  the actual\ncost of coal which at. $3.75 per ton\nwould- bring the figure up to .\"jilo.So.\nTo tha^agalnjiYQuld-havo-to-be-addcd\"\ntho profit of tho retailer in Ontario\nwliich would run from $2.50 to $3 per\nton.   That would mean, ho said, that\nAlberta coal would cost the Ontario\nconsumer $18.45 to $18.95 per-ton, at\nwhich figure il would be placed entirely out. of court, as American anthracite coal was being sold from ?J5 to\n$16 a ton.\nkind produced in Canada until other\nwise ordered.\n This-means \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- that \ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\" special  \"(or\nclumping duly) in addition to the regular duty, will be applied to imported\napples. The dumping duty will bo thc\ndifference between lhe appraised\nvalue aud the purchase price but not\nexecding 15 per cent, of the appraised\nvalue\nTyphoon Devastates Japan\nper\nSimultaneously, a marked increase\nin the parcels post is recorded and a\nbig business is being done. f Despite\nthe one third cut in the letter rate the\nresult of tho operations under the\nnev\/ conditions leads lo the belief\ntliat in a year or Iavo at least,\nequilibrium will be established\ntwoon postal revenues\nture;..\n'aiid.\nbe-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'xpendl-\nFour Hundred Dead and Many Injured\n'. By Tidal Wave\nTokio.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFour hundred   persons   are\ndead., 2,300  injured, and  700 houses\ndestroyed in Kumamota,   Island    of\nKiuslilu, In consequence of   the   typhoon and  tidal wave, according lo\nreporls to the Japanese home ofiice.\nIu Fukuoka, Nagasaki,   ami   Kana-\ngawa   prefectures    there   were   few\ncasualties, but numerous houses wern i\ninundated and d:unaged.'\n When\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthc-lyphoon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd struck    Tokio\nseveral thousand houses in the low-\nlying sections were flooded... Thirty\nchildren \"were Injured when the. roof\nof a schoolhousc was blown off.\nOliavra. - \"\\vQ have had fconie e\\i-\ndence brought before ur\nthat lu' corljun quarter\n\"e a revival of ilfogal practice* once\nour commission ceased io exist   Fc-r\ntbe bisnelit of such parlies and others\nsimilarly disposed I think ] can prom\nise lhat other moans will ho devised\nand rigidly    ..,iforced    for    detecting\nsuch frau A j, and that for the future\nwhen sucli frauds and illegal practises\nare discovered,  ihey  W..;1  bo  vJsiUjd\nwith swift aud relentless punishment.\nThe above was' one  of   the statements  made by Chief'Commissioner\nJ.   r. -Drown.' of the Royal  Customs\nCommission, in a brief address at the\nclose  of  the  public  sittings  of the\ncommission here.\n\"No doubt there have been sorae\nwho have been guilty of defrauding tlu?\nCrown or itsi.Just revenues and who\nhave escaped the scrutiny of our investigators,\" he continued. \"For such\nlet mc say that the mere fact that\nthey have thus far escaped exposure\nand prosecution .must not be taken as\nany assurance thai such practices can\nbe continued wiih impunity.:'\nThe chief   commissioner's    closing\naddress,\" which was concurred in by\nhis   fellow    commissioners,    W.    II.\nWright and Ernest   Roy,    expressed'\nsincere appreciation of the work done\nby counsel, auditors ami .others asso-\n. elated with llie work of the commission during the many months of, the\ninquiry. Irrespective   of   the   report\nwhich would prepared and, submitted\nlo1 the  Goyernor-in-Council,   the  investigation had   been   worth   while,\nsaid the\" chief commissioner.      ..\n\"Two things above all appear to\nhave been necessary under the circumstances,\" ho said, \"h, the first\nPlace, an exposure of conditions as\nthey actually existed both insula and\noutside the service, with an awakened and cnlighgiencd public-conscience\non customs matters as a result. The\nwork of the parliamentary committee\nand our commission has made the exposure fairly complete. In the second\nplace, it is essential to havo a head, to\n(he department with the .ability, will\nand determination lo bring about hie\nuece.s_.arj- reforms. There is every\nindication that the present head of\nthe (leparuiient is such a man\nross   From   New   York\nFrance In Four Days\nNew York.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe New York Herald-\ninbune nays  that plans are nearly\ncondoled lo launch an all-American\ncotobJnalion. steamship-aeroplane service between   Mon tank   Point,   Long\nIsland.     ^Plymouth,      England,    and\navre, France, v,lt]l fagl ocean ^^\nl\ufffd\ufffdat will make tho  crossing in four\ndays.\nThe proposed. Hue is to bo incorporated  as   the  New  York, London,\nI ans Steamship Company,   and   will\noperate a fleet of ten 20,000 ton liners.\nIhe ships, whicli wiH resemble United\nSI ales .naval  destroyers    hut    about\nIwicc their size, will\" be driven at an-\naverage speed of 3iy2 knots> but cap.\nable of attaining 33 knots. They will\nbo about SOO feet long with an SO-foot\nbeam and. a draft of 24 feet 9 inches.\n_ ,J 'ie new liners, to be used exclus-'\nivey  for passengers,  will carry    400\nfirst class, who will b3 accommodated\nn small cabins, slightly larger than\nI ullnian car drawing rooms.\nVictim Of Experiment\nScientist\"'Meets\" Death  While Testin\nEffect Of .Anaesthetic\nManchester, Eng.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA victim of his\nown scientific zeal, Dr. Disney Raw-\nson AVilson, surgeon and anaesthetist\nOttawa.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Renewal of tho agreement\nbetween the department of imm.'gia-\nlion and colonisation' and the Canadian railway and .steamship, companies by whicli the latter secure transport and place immigrants in Oan.-id't\nhas yet to be accomplished for Upcoming year. Negotiations aro still\nin progress, according to the officials\nof tlie department.\nWhile no oflicial declaration on (lie\nsubject is obtainable it is bclievc.1.\nthat thero will doveloj, considerable\nopposition to inclusion in Ihe coming\nyear's agreement conditions similar\nto (hose of tho agreement now about\nto lapse. 'The views ot\" tho present\nminister of life department, lion.\nRobert Forke, hJave heen frequently\nintimated.\nWholesale Immigration without regard to placement or to the capacity'\nof thc country\nand its JiidUhtrics for\ning\nassimilating those admitted to the\nDominion- is not viewed, with favor by\nMr. Forke. He is, rather, a believer\nin the maintenance of a close balance\nbetween inuuigratio'n and employment.\nHolding such views it is believed to\nbo  certain  that there will  he some\nt\nwith a Uritish and America!, reputa- modlt,C!U,on J\ufffd\ufffd *o next agreement\nlion, was found dead in his Jabora-'l \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Ul\ufffd\ufffd ^asportation companies,\ntory. His wife discovered the eipcri- I \ufffd\ufffd W,U ho more lnsisleiico upon\nthe ei'peri\nmentor with a mask over his face b\"e-\nfore  a  machine  which  administered\ngas mixtures.\nII, had been Dr. Wilson's great am-\nbilioii to obtain and prolong tho analgesic stale, .which is obtained momentarily when a person under an\nanaesthetic loses feeling yet retains\nconsciousness^\nDr. Wilson's brother said tho doctor believed' he had sufficient will\npower to prevent himself from losing\nconsciousness completely. Colleagues i\nare of the\" belief \"that, he met death\nexperimenting on himself to discover\nthe actual* effects of an anaesthetic,\nwhich it was his conviction was the\nonly'way to obtain essential data.\nExodus Not Serious\nOnly   Ten   Per   Cent.   Of   University\nGraduates  Go To States\nWinnipeg.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe exoduds   of   Cana-\ndiian-univerdity graduates (o tli\ned States is not\nProjected Flight Cancelled\nAmerican Globe Circling Tour To End\nu At Tokio\n_\ufffd\ufffd 77,_h   ' i ro,ua~The Projected High! of the\nas serious \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  if i   iAincr,can mo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdplano Pride of Detroit\noub .\ufffd\ufffd, it i,  acr0M lh0 1>aciJlc ou Ug globe.d   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTRABER0U1S\nTHE WEST\nVancouver. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"if\nHeld to bo in s\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdme quarters -uWi..* -         \" ^o Paciiic on Us globe-circling tlie  country  must  re\nto Sir liobcrt A. Falconer' mVJ,)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,' > T\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffdalle(l \ufffd\ufffdff hero  by its c\ufffd\ufffd- lratle roules nms* be\nof Toronto   Univorslly.  |n\" -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  inler  ']l         ^^^ ^ ScMce a,ul W,,1Iam h&My aey SOttIers-  u\nview here.                     '                        ,   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Bl'ock-                                    -     - their nationality\/ be hi\n'PI    .     j.     .    . -                                                                    *\n\"1 went atto ihe matter .jni.n\n\"There ls now no hope of capturing tho Ontario market for Alberta\ncoal,\" said Mr. Gouge, \"as this could\nr.ot be done unless there was a flat\nraj* of $7 a ton established.\"\nFlee From Earthquake Area\n\"fully at one time,\" Sir Robert .\ufffd\ufffdaid,\n\"and 1 found that, according to* figures I got from various universities\nin Canada, the emigration of graduates did not exceed 10 per cent.\"\nSir Robert added that this'exodus \"is\nnot such a terrible thing as some people imagine; it supplies an\nfl:e docihion to call off  ihe .'light\nfiarc--,'-followcd_a~lohgthy   conferenc\nInsured For Million\n137 Persons In U.S. and Canada Carry (that\nHeavy Policies\nNew York.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe lives of 187 portions residing in Canada and tho United Stales are worth $1,000,000 or\nmore each lo insurance companies,\naccording to a survey mado public by\ntho Spectator Company,.of New York.\nRodman Wanamnkor, merchant\nheads tho   list    with    s? >?\nTouris.ts    Along    Black    Sea    Coast |\n-   _       Crowd All Transports\nMosco.w.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Thousands   of panic\nstricken tourists along the Black Sea\ncoast were crowding   all   means   of\ntransportation in order lo escape from\ntho. district which has been shaken\nby earthquakes in the past few days,\ncausing death aud   injury   In   many\ndistricts. Late reports from Yalta say\n13 .persons   have   been   killed\nthero and. 358 Injured. Slighter shocks\nwore still continuing iu the* region,\ntlio advices'sai<U Relief measures aro\nunder way.\ne with\naviation experts here ?.nd others-interested in thc undertaking. Many\ncablegrams from America urging thc\nfliers to slop at Tokio also carried\nweight. Brock and Scliloe finally concluded the attempt to negotiate the\nPacific would bo suicide...\nThcy will lake\noutlet for ,     . ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.. ,,.,,, .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nour graduates.\" No    one     he    \ufffd\ufffd,n}li   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     ,,J.    U m\ufffd\ufffd :ia    ^V b<*-t for\n.would bother to obtain  , un\ufffd\ufffdTOS      *  \"^ *****   ^^\n'education if they   did   ---     -'   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"\"\"'oplane shipped home\"\no'pporluniiy to use it.\ntheir\nthe\nCommerce\n\ufffd\ufffd\"'    get   the\nSittings Of    Railway Commission\nOttawa.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe    Board    of   Railway\nCommissioners announced the following dates for    .witlings   in    Western   families there ihis Fall. One of the\nCanada:  Saskatoon, Ocl. 10; rMmon-  present settlers ha\nMore Settlers For Lethbridge\nLethbridge.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Canada , Coloni-i-\nation Association has been so successful in the Lethbridge district that Jt\nhas been decided lo place axiothc\nior\nton, Oct. J-; Vancouver, Oct, 19;\nVictoria Oct. 22; Nelson, Oct. 24;\nLclhbridgo, Oct. 27; Calgary, Oct. 2S;\nRegina, Oct. 31; Uramlon, - Nov. I;\nWinnipeg. Nov. A; Fort William, Nov.\n97,500,000 -In\npolicies. Several  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd persons\nDr. F. fl. Ranting, of   Toronto,   dis\ncoverer of insulin, are\n-5S.0O0.0OO- each.\nincluding\nn to,\ninsured    for\nFarmers  Seek   Representation ,    \ufffd\ufffd\nWinnipeg.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Appointment of a west- jl'ert-ja before\ncm' farmer to the Board of Railway\nsloner lioyce, whose term will o::p!r\ufffd\ufffd>\nIn October, is-- being 'urged   by   the\nCommissioners in place of   Comnfis-\nCanadlan Council of Agriculture in\n\"communications\"forwarded to the federal Government. Tho council also\nhas suggested the membership of the\nboard should\/ be enlarged lo seven,\nand that at least three members\n-fhould. be from Western Canada.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Should Lead the Way\nCeneva, Switzerland.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe United\nStates, Franco. Germany, Japan, Holland and the other drug manufacturing or producing countries should\nlead the way in curl ailing thc oulput\nof narcotics in! tho-opinion of Colonel\nDaniel W. jracCormack of Boston,\ntechnical adviser of lho Persian government, a.-_  expressed on  behalf of\ns. placed J 20 acres\niu sugar beets, 5S acres iu potatoes\nand 400 acres in wheat and other\nsmall grains from which his returns\nthis Fall should be close to $15,000\nThere are eight families now work\nfor him.\nCanada is to\nachieve her proper destiny as a great\nnation, fhe people of all seclions ol\n*,-~*'-'-* ealize  that new\nestablished and\nno matter what\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdought in to develop the vast \\veaIlh_stored _in_the-\ngrcat\"~northern hinterland,\" Premier\nJames (J. Gardiner of Saskatchewan\ndeclared in an address before\nCanadian Chamber of\nConvention here.\n\"All Canadians must got a vision\nof what the 20th century has 'in store\nfor us. then' put our shoulders to the\nwheel and push on to the destiny-\nthat is ours,\" said the Premier of\nSaskatchewan, 25 years ago a penniless homesteader from Ontario, thrilling his 200 auditors with his picture\nof tho Canada lo-cc'mc.\n\"The most disconcerting question\nwliich can hc introduced, into discus-\nsioii3, national    or   international,   is\nproper placement by those companies\nof the people they bring to Canada\nand probably some further restiiclion\nimposed upon the selection of prospective immigrants by the agents of\nihe companies.\nIn some quarters so much opposition\nhas developed to indiscriminate immigration that two well known instrti-\n-riients aro being discussed as of possible good for adoption by Canada. One\nis the quota law and'fiio other is the\nimposition of a heavy la* upon immigrants from countries other (ban the\nUritish Empire, tiie United States and\nFrance.\nThe September bulletin of 111*1\nRoyal Rank of Canada luis the \/following to say. in pari, on immigration:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Thc peoplo who aie granted admission will he Ihe fathers of the future. Wise selection is the only means\nfor controlling (lie future citizenship\nof the nation. It is a matter ot, balls-\nfaction lhat so large a proportion of\nthose wlio are aniviug should be of\nBritish stock. Naturally,   it    follows\nthat lhe best of opportuniflcfl^mtist bo\nprovided for the younger people who\nare\" alreadv here,  so that  they  will\nnot be interested In going elsewhere.\nUnder such circumstances, thc policy\nornadmitting people only as rapidly\nas they can find satisfactory employment is the one mosl likely to maintain a sleadyJ_JieaHh*vL\n_y]Ji_o>:p.'{us3on_o.'u\nthe'coun try.\nWoman Drowned At Sea\niy\nCarried   Over  Side   Of   British   Liner\n' By Huge..Wave\n- Philadelphia.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs. Cyiil n. Mum-\nford, 30, of Fair Acres Farm, near\nHamill on, Ontario, was wept overboard Trom the deck of the British\nliner London Mariner, whilo tho vessel was en route from England to this\ncity.\nI lie proposal to cha\nTho tragedy was revealed when thi.\nvessel docked here, bringing a tah-\nof a stormy voyage and the husband\nand threo'children of the woman.\nMr. JMumford, a former British army\nofflcei-, was returning with his family\nfrom a lour of England, Scotland and\nFrance when Mrs. IWumford, who had\ncine\nj   ...... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,. the League of Nations\nsocial welfare commit lee.\n_: Farmer Killed By Airplane\nPorfmouth. Ohio.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhen a -passenger aeroplane just taking off from\na new airport,'struck his farm wagon\nhere, Norman Hopkins, 20, farmer,\nwas killed. Hopkins' two sons, Glen!\nC and Oscar, !), who1 wero ridiiif\nthe wagon, were injured.\nTlie most illiterate country in (he\n**orld is Natal, Africa, where 94.8 per\ncent: of-the natives can neither read\nnor write. Egypt and Guatemala have\nfi2.7- per-cent.' illiteracy.\nNext Meeting At Edmonton\nSaint John. N.B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEdmonton, AUa.,'i\nwas chosen for the next annual meeting at' tiie\" close of lho ninth annual\nmeeting of the Associated Workmen's\nCompensation Boards of Canada here.\nJ. Sterling, of that \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'lly. was elected\nTice-Drestdent.\n. uise trade routes,\"\nIronuor Gardiner pointed out, \"Rome\nol the greatest wars in history have\nbeen fought on i hat'if.s\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdb. [ wouW\nsay to those interested in opening the  ,\n1 aciflc routc-and why should it not j beon 01i :m l,M>or <k\ufffd\ufffd& of tljo vessel,\nbe opened?-to those   inferos,-^    i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iTV0S Can'!\ufffd\ufffd(1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'er the rido by a huge\nwave. - * o\n... \ufffd\ufffd   jja.>. roui*f>.   n^> 1\nnot expect tbat th\non  the established\nthat\nthey   do\nredound to\no\nProposals To Outlaw War\n\".guc   Dy\ne   in to res ted    in j\nopening the Hudson's Ray route, do j\nioso now operating |\ntrade route, are '\ngoing to    admit    lightly    that   new\n;-outcs will not operate to their disadvantage   or  oven   should\nso that their opening will\nthe national interest.\nRailway development in Canada\nwas a thins; of the future, not of the\npast, despite tho great lines already\nconstructed, Air. Gardiner believed.    | pact created\ufffd\ufffdireniontiou3 interest an a\nSeven-eighteenths 'of all wheal en- '.wr\nNew Ider. Ptcsented To Le,~,f\nNorway Delagat--.-\nGeneva. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A \"voluntary univers.-.l\narbitration\" pact was introduced at a\nsession ot the Leaguo ol Nations assembly comniijsiou or. disarmament\nby Dr.  F. Nanse-i, cf\n.Norway.\nThe\nwas\nIndian-Paleface Romance\nThis' little  lady is evidently attracted to  the   small\nperhaps oven'mort\n.   M                                                        . Indian boy   and\ne to the gorgeous and unusual houso hP ihvs in ^ +,- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ,\nStony Indian Tepee.   So she has mastered her shvness and **\"*'\nwith a few* candies.    \"'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd _-,m,    _.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is t01\ufffd\ufffdPting him\nIhe little Chief is nothing loath to bo fPI,,ntJ 0. 1\nmeets her more than halfway. This pretty little Incident \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ?%5LT\ngreat Indian Day Celebrations at the Banff Spring., Hotel re ently ^d   \"\nduly registered by a C.P.R. photographer. * ^\n\/concrete doveloiHiieui of   lh<>   movc-\nIment 10 outlaw war.\nTho  P'lct  makes all  v,ai   bet,}-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;<>'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n'signatories  impossible   by   arraug'iv,'\nsettlement by an arbitration board of\nall oonflfcts which are not handled h.\nthe World Conn w are not sol -ni bj\nthe Council of lhe League of Nalio:n-\nRoyal Brothers Arrive  Koine   *\nSouthampton. Eng.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Prince of\nWales,  looking Miry broiiLCd and fit\nand    iii    excellent    bpirits.    stepped\n-   --- , ashore Irom tlio Empress of Scotland\nevery month it could remain open, he   here. ending\"\"hh> \"trip to Canada. Ue\npredicted, and Vancouver, ice-free all  v,-as accompanied by Prhce Gocrp-j.\nyear and sole outlet for a great nrn-  T!ic ^ayor of Southampton and o'her\ntering info international trade\nproduced in\" Canada al the present\ntime, he said - This meant, \" he explained, that the prairie provinces\nwith a population 01 less than 2,000,-\n000 were feeding 40.000,000. in other\ncoun ti ies. Vet only one:third of thc\nland capable of prtVueing grain had\nbeen' brought under cultivation so far.\nWhen the great remaining open\nspaces were populated there wotild be\nmore than enough business to keep\nevery port in  die , country busy -for\n.    . _     great pro\nducing region, would be one of the\ngreatest  conmion-ial   centres  In  the\n(Dominion.\ncity and county oflicials woloomrd -ji\ufffd\ufffd\ntwo \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprinces, who immoilb.ti-'-j- !.->--tt}.\nfd thc train.to Lotidon.\n1 THE   GREENWOOD   LEDGE\nThe Greenwood Ledge\nPublished every Thursday at\nGreenwood, B.C.\nG. W. A. SMITH\nEditor and Proprietor\nSubscription: In Canada and to Gt.\nBritain, $2.00 a year in advance; $2.50\nwhen not paid for three months or\nmore have passed. To the United\nStates $2.50, always in advance.\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(When more than one claim appears\nin notice, $5.00 for each additional\nclaim.\nAll other legal advertising 16 cents\na,line first insertion, and 12 cents a\nline for each subsequent insertion, nonpareil measurement.\nBusiness locals 12 %c a line each insertion.\nNo letter to the editor will be inserted except over the proper signature and address of the-writer. This\nrule admits of no exceptions.\nThe blue cross means that\n. your subscription is due, and\nthat .the   editor   would   be\npleased to have more money.\nBeaverdell Briefs\nMr.  and Mrs.  Chase Taylor spent\nSunday in Rhone visiting relatives.\nW. Mitchel has been spending a\ncouple of days in camp from Penticton.\nMrs.. J. Bell was a week-end visitor\nto Grand Porks, having made the trip\nby motor.\nNorman Sqwcrsby is operator at, the\nKettle Valley station during'Mr. Mc-\nHaffie's absence.\nMiss Katherine Warrington returned home on Wednesday after staying\na few days in the District Hospital.\nMr. and \ufffd\ufffdMrs. Geo. S; Walters, of\nGreenwood, have been spending a\ncouple of days in town visiting friends,\nJack Patterson is. leaving on Wednesday on a motor -trip to Vancouver\naprl Coast cities. Jack is trying to\nmake his friends believe he is going to\nbe married but they seem to be in\ndoubt on this point.\nEffective Gargle\nDr. James Collier, a well known\nBritish physician, says some striking\nthings about poliomyelitis, commonly\nknown as infantile paralysis. He avers\nit is conveyed by human contact only\nand usually by those .who, do not suffer\n.with symptoms of the malady, that is,\nby carriers.\nInvestigations of households showed\nthat where there was an acute case,\n30 per cent. * of the non-affected inmates were found to carry the virus.\nThe virus of poliomyelitis is instantly rendered impotent by hydrogen\nperoxide, or by a one per cent, solution\nof permangenate of potash.\nTherefore either of these would be\nvaluable solutions with which to.gargle\nthe children's nostrils and throats\nseveral times each day.\nA fine new strike has been made on\nthe Homestake claim this past day or\ntwo. The Homestake is situated about\nhalf way up Wallace Mountain at what\nis known, as the Spring, and directly\nunder the Wellington mine, which has\nbeer, showing up so splendidly this\npast year. Bob. Perry and George\nHambly are operating,.the claim for a\nPenticton Syndicate.\nTobacco Industry\nO. Brennan and K. McLaren motored in to'day to interview George S.\nWalters regarding his holdings in\nOsoyoos. Mr. Brennan is fathering.a\ntobacco industry in B.C. and has in-\naugerated a -tobacco growing industry\nin' Kelowna and South_ Okanagan.\nCasual observation of lands in the\nKettle Valley and Midway leads Mr.\nBrennan to think that possibilities\nfor tobacco growing in this district are\nfeasible. He intends to come over at a\nlater date to interview ranchers and\nowners of land and give them a talk\non the tobacco question.,. He unformed\nMr. Walters that he will be glad to\nreceive through him any analysis-,; of\nsoil that ranchers may have in their\npossession or are prepared to take and\nbe forwarded.,\ni\nThe fourteen young- horses to bc sold\nat the Madge Auction at Kettle Valley\non Saturday are well worth your\nattention. Thcy have been selected\nand are three-quarter bred perch-:\nerons.\nOpen Season Declared\non Willow Grouse\nVictoria, Sept. 19.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGame season' in\nseveral parts of British Columbia are\naltered by regulations approved at the\nParliament Buildings. An open season\nhas been declared on-willow grouse in\nthe Grand Forks -''Greenwood\"electoral\ndistrict from September 15 to October\n25.   -' ,.   :W\nThe cock pheasant season of the\nEastern game district has been extended to include certain carefully specified\nareas around Salmon Arm. The open\n. area for cock pheasants in the Creston-\nSldcan district has been extended.\nFormerly shooting was restricted on\nthe east to the .west- of. Kootenay\nLanding. It will be allowed now in a\nslightly enlarged territory , with a\nseason lasting from October 15 v to\nOctober 115, inclusive.\nThe open season will be -from\nOctober 15 to October 31, all over'the\nEastern district, the bag limit for\nEuropean partridge is increased from\nfour daily to 10 daily and from 15 for\nthe entire season to a total of 50.\n- P. P. Dowling, engineer for the, B.C.\nFire Underwriters Association, was in\ntown today making examination of\nAre apparatus, testing fire alarm system, hose and hydrants-and inspecting\nvalves and reservoirs.\nMany people in buying young\nhorses prefer to break them themselves.\nYou. will have this opportunity with\nsome of the young horses to be sold on\nSaturday at the Madge Auction near\nKettle Valley.\nSome Fish\nThe teacher was telling her open-\neyed class about^ the dolphin and its\nhabits.''-\/-'      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-. >-\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ,\n\"And, children,\" she said-impressively, \"just think, a single dolphin will\nhave, twqjthousand baby.dolphins.\" ......\n\"Goodness!\" exclaimed the bright\nlittle girl at the bottom of the class,\n\"and how many do the married ones\n-have?'' x   ;      '\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\nBridesville News\nJames Kerr was in \"town on Saturday on his way through to Penticton.\nEd. Robinson started in threshing\nagain on Monday,- it being his third\nattempt,1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-'\nClyde Billups, 3f Seattle, was visiting his nephew, Lue Billups, over the\nweek-end.\nDick Bozarth started threshing on\nMonday. He is handling his own\ngrain first.   :\nMr. and Mrs. John Turner and Miss\nEthel Robinson took in the Dance in\nRock Creek on Friday evening.\nCast of 20,000 in Quo Vadls\nA new and gigantic production of\n\"Quo Vadis\" has just being completed\nand is to be shown at the Greenwood\nTheatre on Saturday, Sept. 24th.\nFor stupenduous size, both in cast\nand scenes; for super-thrills and for\nrare beauty of photography, this film\nversion jof the Sienkiewicz classic is\nproclaimed an unequaled masterpiece\nof thS screen artistry.\nEmil Jannings, noted for his work in\n\"Passion,\" heads the cast, which is\nsaid to number more than 20,000 men,\nwomen and'children.\nThe scenes staged in Rome on the\nactyal site of Nero's tyrannies, are\nenormous. The Palastine, Circus Maxi-\nmiis and the Rome; itself of Nero's\ntime, half a century after the birth of\nChrist, form the background for the\n~dramift. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe historic debaucheries of Nero\nand his court and the terrible cruelties\nof the despot, as vividly pictured, are\ntempered by the tender love of the\npagan Vinicius for the beautiful\nChristian girl, Lygia, and the unyielding faith of the followers of Peter, the'\nApostle, even when burned at the stake\nand thrown to the lions in the arena\nof the.Circus.\nJannings, as Nero, has given an even\nmore impressive characterization than\nwas his in \"Passion.\" Nero was cruel,\nlustful, blood-thirsty, always. ,Yet he\nwas inordinately vain, foppish, childish\nin his self-admiration.; It was ' thus\nthat Jannings has portrayed him.\nNero, dead 1,900 years, lives again\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdon\nthe screen.\nYou cannot do without horses on the\nranch, reliable and well chosen breeds\"\nwiU - always have their place to fill.\nWhat you want is the right kind.\nLook over the horses on Saturday at\nthe Madge Auction near Kettle Valley.\nCousins-Pittendrigh Nuptials\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" -.-_\nThe United Church of Grand Forks\nwas the scene of a pretty wedding\non Wednesday morning when Miss\nIsabel Pittendrigh, second daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Pittendrigh, of this\ncity, became the bride of Mr. Francis\nCousins of Beaverdell, the Rev. W. T.\nBeattie officiating.\n'The groom was supported by Mr.\nStephen Pittendrigh, brother of the\nbride. The bride, who was given in\nmarriage by ner father\/\"was attired\nin a gown of sapphire blue lace with\nsilvewbead and lace trimmings and she\nwore, a picture hat of the same shade.\nShe also wore a platinum brooch, set\nwith sapphires and diamonds, the gift\nof the groom,, and she carried a\nbouquet of ophelia roses and fern.\nMiss Alice Spraggett, who attended-\nthe bride, wore, a gown of salmon\npink crepe de chine with sand trimming with picture hat to- match.,; She.)\ncarried a sheaf of gladioli and maiden\nhair fern. Little Mary_ WoGdward, as\nflower girl, looked very dainty in a\nfrock of white georgette and carried\na basket of white and pink -asters.\nMrs. Elmer Woodward played the\nWedding March', and during the signing of the register Mrs. Gowans sang\n\"G Promise Me.\" The groom's gift to\nthe bridesmaid was a pair of pearl\near rings, to; the organist and soloist\nhe gave silver bud vases, and to the\nbest man a silver cigarette case; \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-.\nAfter .the wedding a dainty lunch\nwas served at the home of the bride's\nparents. The table was decorated\nwith white satin streamers,' centred\nwith a three-tier wedding cake which\nwas surrounded. by baskets of ; pink\nand white\/sweet peas. ..*w\nThe many friends of the happy\ncouple will, join The .Gazette in wishing them bon \"voyage'\"\" on thej sea of\nmatrimony.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrand \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Forks Gazette,\nSept. 16th.\n3 years from today    You win Know\nYou will require three years of arduous day-to-day driving to know\nas much about Chevrolet performance and endurance as the General1\nMotors Proving Grounds brings out in a few months.\nThere's strength\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstability\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdruggedness built into every inch of the\nChevrolet Chassis; into its beautiful body by Fisher; into every detail\nof its powerful engine.\nAfter years of trouble free driving, you will know that Chevrolet\nhas added to its economy, its smoothness, its power and its Beauty,\nthe greatest measure of Strength and Endurance ever possessed by\nany low-priced car.\nAsk for a Demonstration.\nGRAND  FORKS  GARAGE\nJOHN R. MOOYBOER, Prop.\nGoodrich and Dominion, Tires\nGrand Forks, B.C.\nCleveland Bicycles.\nCANADIAN\nSummer Excursion Fares\n> *.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\nTO EASTERN DESTINATIONS\"\nOn Sale Daily Till September 30\nRETURN LIMIT OCT. 31\nProprietor of Travelling Menagerie:\n\"Are you used to looking after horses\nand other animals?\"\nApplicant for the job: \"Yes, sir. Been\nused to 'orses all my life.' '\nP. O. T.M. : .\"What steps would\nyou take if a lion got loose?\"\nA. F. J. : \"Good long 'tins, mister!\"\nAVinnipeg...\nToronto\t\nHamilton ...\nLondon \t\nQuebec ...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'...\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd St. John....\nSt.. Paul.....\niMinneapolis.\nDuluth :\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$ 75.00\n. -118.05\n. 118.05\n. 118.05\n.. 11(5.10\n. 152.20\n. 75.60\n. 75.00\n.   75.60\nFort\/William..\nNiagara Falls ..\nOtiawa\t\nMontreal \t\nMoncton\t\nHalifax\t\nChicago-:.-...\t\nNew York\t\nBoston...! _.\n.$90.00\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd124.82\n. 132.25\nj 137.05\n.. 152.20\n. 157.75\n. 90.30\n. 151.70\n. 157.70\nMANY ADDITIONAL DESTINATIONS .\nASK FOR RATES FROM AND TO ANY POINT\nMouLe via Alain Line or via Soo Line, through Winnipeg or Portal\nto St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. Marie, via Great Lakes;\nor via California ab an additional fare; or good to go via one of the\nabove routes, return another. \/\nSee Local Agent or Write for Details\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\namuMKntmiiuuiuMi __.m_m.iiro. \ufffd\ufffda __gf(g\ufffd\ufffd|pi-Py\nj^^j.^jiCTMM_s_i-ai__!_v__^R.i;_.'_\ufffd\ufffd.-.i^\ufffd\ufffd^^*.i^^yvr\ufffd\ufffd\n^   \"      Sometimes the informalityf\nof the spoken word\"\"\"\nis more effective\nthan a letter\n\"Long: Distance, please\"\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\n\ufffd\ufffd*>T>nvvvTT*r,>vfV'\ufffd\ufffdTVT,**TyTTTTW\"r'\ufffd\ufffdirv>\nTTfTfTfyyTV WW\ne New Gigantic\nI Ttie Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\n' of Canada, Limited\nOffice, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS ~\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\nProducers, of Gold, Silver,  Copper,  Pig Lead and Zinc\n\"TADANAC\"  BRAND\ntinting at Tlie Greenwod Ledge\nA. E. McDOUGALL\nContractor and Builder\nForeign and Domestic Monuments\nAsbestos Products Co. Roofing\nLamatco Wallboard ,\nSHOP AT GREENWOOD\nI\"\nBox332 Grand Forks. B.C.\nSEND  YOUR\nBOOTS and SHOES\n    To   \t\nHarry Armson, Grand Forks\nThe 20th Century Shoe Repairer\nAll work and material guaranteed\nWe pay postage one way.  Terms cash;\nOF\nLAND ACT AMENDMENTS\ni\nPRE-EMPTIONS ,\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \\\nVacant unreserved, surveyed Crown\nlands may be pre-empted by British\nsubjects over 18 years of\" age, and by\naliens on declaring intention to become British subjects, conditional\nupon residence;' occupation,' and improvement for agricultural purposes.\nPull information concerning relations regarding pre-emptions is given\nin Bulletin No. 1,. Land Series7 \"How\nto Pre-empt Land,\" copies of which\ncan be obtained free of charge\" by addressing the Department- of Lands,\ntoria, B. C, or to any Government\nAgent. . V .\nRecords will \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd granted covering,\nonly land suitable for agricultural purposes, and which is not timberland,\ni.e., carrying over 8,000 board feet per\nacre\", west of the Coast Range and\n5,000 feet per acre east of that Range.'\nApplications for pre-emptions are to\nbe addressed to the Land Commissioner of the Land Recording Division, in\nwhich the land applied for is situated,\nand are made on printed forms, copies\nof which can be obtained from the\nLand Commissioner.        ,\nPre-emptions must be,occupied for\nAve years and improvements made to\nthe value of $10 per acre, including -\nclearing.\" and cultivating at least five\nacres, before a Crown Grant can be\nreceived. *\nPor more detailed information see\nthe Bulletin \"How to Pre-empt Land.\"\nPURCHASE\nApplications are- received for- pur--\nchase of vacant, and unreserved Crown\nLands, not being timberland,-Jor agricultural purposes: minimum price for\nfirst-class (arable) land is $5 per\nacre. Further information regarding\npurchase or lease of Crown Lands is\ngiven in Bulletin No. 10, _Land Series,\n\"Purchase and Lease of Crown Lands!\"\nMill, factory, -or industrial sites on\ntimber land, >not exceeding 40 acres,\nmay be purchased or leased, the conditions including payment of stump-\nage.\nHOMESITE LEASES\nUnsurveyed areas not exceeding, 20\nacres, may be leased as homesites, conditional upon a dwelling being erected\nin the first year, title being obtainable\nafter residence-and improvement conditions are-fulfilled, ana landhasjjeen^\nsurveyedf =\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5 y~\nLEASES    .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd For grazing and industrial purposes \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nareas not exceeding 640 acres may be\nleased by one person or a company. -\nGRAZING\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province\nis divided into grazing districts and the\nrange administered under a Grazing\nCommissioner. Annual grazing permits are' issued based on numbers\nranged, priority given to established\nowners. Stock owners may form asso-- *\ufffd\ufffd\nciations for range' management. Free,\nor partly free, permits are available\nfor settlers, campers and travellers, up\n, to ten head.     \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\ni\nThe Gladiators      20,000 in cast\n' Men. of herculean stature\nhard, bold, reckles. They\nfought in the great\nRoman circuses for the\npleasure of Nero and his\ncourtiers and the people.\nCourage was their God\nand they, braved death\nwith a, smile. But life\ndepended .on the- fickle\nNero who saved them, or\nslew them at will\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith\n\"thumbs down.\"\nGreenwood Theatre\nSaturday, Sept. 24th, 8:15 p.m.\nAdmission:   Adults  50c   Childern  25c\nCharlie\nCOMING!   SATURDAY, OCT.,   1st\nChaplin in \"A Dog's Life\" and Mabel Normand in 'The Nickel Hopper'\nl****t4>\ufffd\ufffdAA\ufffd\ufffd*iAA_ti\nThe' Mineral Province of Western Canada\nTO THE END OF DECEMBER, 1926 .7\n. Aggregate Value of $988,1087470\nProduction for the year ending December, 1926, $67,188,842\n'   ^X&\ufffd\ufffd c^rS'SiS MSfffiM.\"\" fceS lower tton ttec \ufffd\ufffdJ W other Pro-\nMineral locations are granted to discoverers for nominal fees\nCro^Sln^168 are **-*?-* **>\ufffd\ufffd&* \ufffd\ufffduch properties, the. security of which is guaranteed by   .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Full.information, together with Mining Reports and Maps, may be obtained gratis by addressing:\nTHE HON. THE MINUTER OF MINES,\n.:     VICTORIA, British Columbia.\ndoK^eS^ work has been\nmining, investments should refer, to su^reports^e? are Shp li^ Those considering\nto the Department of Mines, Victoria, B.CReports of the GtoSwi ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd c^^ on application\nBuilding, Vancouver, are recommended as^SaSte^ of   Canada'   Winch\nabfeTn%BfeeaCh \ufffd\ufffdf the S* ^^ Surve* Dlstricts \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Published separately, and are avail-\n\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Greenwood (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Greenwood_Ledge_1927_09_22","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0306279","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.088333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-118.676389","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Greenwood, B.C. : G. W. A. Smith","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Greenwood Ledge","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}