{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0306326":{"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":"1927-06-23","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\/1.0306326\/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":" m\n[Provincial Library..-.\nt\\Jl i \/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nVOIv.-l\nGREENWOOD, B.C., THURSDAY, JUNE) 23, 1927\nNo.!V47\nWe Carry a Large .Line of\nincluding\nMcLary's Enamel, Galvanized and Tinware\nMcLary's Heaters\ninspect our Stock\nt. m: gulley & co.\n_^V-B_'!i_._^_^*^W*J^^^_^\nSJ    Ladies and Men's    5\ufffd\ufffd\nJ? furnishings Q\n^     Boots, Shoes and      ^\nX        Canvas Shoes  *     \ufffd\ufffdK\nJ5        for Men and Children        J5\nBuy your IVlotor Oil from us\nand Save Money\nWe carry\n'       Aristo, Castrol, Motoreze, and Mobil Oils\n.  in the right weight for your motor\nUnion Ethyl Gas in Drums\nFor quality and value order from *\" ' Phone 46\nGREENWOOD GROCERY\nJPlace your Orders for\nPreserving Strawberries\nwith us\nTAYLOR &SON\nPhone 17\nUnder New Management\nPACIFIC HOTEL\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\nFirst-Class Dining Room in Connection\nJ. H. Goodeve\nProprietor\nCg        Ladies Dresses \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      Q\n1\ufffd\ufffd Millinery 5t\nX-Ellen Trounson's Store |jj\nOf Local Interest\nReal Estate & Insurance\nFire. Accident & Sickness. Life,.\nAutomobile, Bonds, Burglary, &c\n,   Auctioneer\nHouses for Rent or Sale\nCall at the Office of\n- CHARLES KING\nGREENWOOD, B.C.\nWILLIAM   FOX   presents.\nTOM   MIX'\nin\nii\nHard Boiled\"\nRiding with Youth in the Wide-open\nSpaces with\nHelen Chadwick, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Charles Conklin\nPhyllis Haver\nTONY (the Wonder Horse)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlso an Imperial Comedy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"EIGHT CYLINDER BULL\"\nGreenwood Theatre\nFRIDAY, . JUNE  24TH\n ,_^~ Commencing at 8.15 pxci.\nAdults 50c. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Children 25c \":\nMEAT  MARKET\nGREENWOOD.  B.C.  ,\nSPECIAL THIS WEEK\nLocal fed Spring Lamb\nVeal, Beef, &c\nCorned Beef, Pickled Tongues\nBoiled Ham, head Cheese, &c\nrvaLnmnjimiwmmin^uuamm\nMcMYNN'S STORE, Midway, B.C.\nVan Camps Pork and0Beans. individual size. 10c each 3 for 25c\nMedium 18 oz can 15c each 7 fo. $1.00\n. 12 doz Thin Glass Tumblers 10c each, $1.00 per doz\nI doz Aluminum Coffee Percolators,\nReg price $2.00 each, Special price $1.25 each\nSweet Mixed Biscuits 35c per Ib\n' Try Union ETHYL Gasoline\nthe next lime you need Gas. More power and less carbon.   We give you\nVisible Pump Service.  You see what you get.   Also complete lines of\nDunlop and-Goodrich Tires and Tubes at your service\n\"wiiHi\/iyriw\ufffd\ufffdru'*wu',ff-L''>'1''tu-'-UIMgBI\nIf you are having trouble with your\nWatch, just bring.it to us and we will,\nput it right.\nOur   long   experience   in   repairing\nWatches has made us experts along\nthat line, and we guarantee you satis-\n1   faction, or there is no charge.\nLet \"us have your repairs, either\nWatches, Clocks or Jewelry.\nWe   make   over   old   Jewelry   and\n- manufacture Brooches or Pins out of\nnative silver and they are quite a novelty.\nA. A. WHITE\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\n\\ F. J. WHITE,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  . Mgr.\nThe United Church of Canada\nREV. ANDREW WALKER, B.A.\nMinister in Charge,\"* Greenwood.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSUNDAY, JUNE 26.\nBridesville, 11.00 a.m.\nMidway, 3:00 p.m.\nGreenwood, 7:30 p.m.\nASSAYER\n13. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayer and\nChemist, Box L.1108, Nelson, B.C.\nCharges\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Copper or Lead\nSt.00 each. Gold-Silver S1.50. 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.\nCOMING!      COMING!\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY, JULY 1st\nand 2nd        c'\nHAROLD    LLOYD in\nv  THE FRESHMAN\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Friday's Show at 7.30 p.m.      (\nSaturday's at 8.15 p.m.\nMidway News\nMrs. J. G. -McMynn returned from\nVancouver last week.\nMr. H. Strauss made a trip to Malo,\nWash.,.on Tuesday.\n* *   *\nThe school children received their\nConfederation Medals this week.\n* *   *\nMiss Lela Bush, of Spokane, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas.\nBush.\n* *   *\nThe Kettle River is receding, togs\nare coming down the Kettle River at\nMcArthur's mill.\n* *   *\nThe Institutes will meet in the Farmers' Hall on Saturday, July 7th.\nPlease take notice.\n* *   *\nMr. and' Mrs. G. Moll, of Rossland,\nspent a few days in town last week,\nreturning Sunday morning.\n* *   *\nHoward Henry, of Penticton, drove\na snappy model Chevrolet from Penticton last Sunday.. He resided in\nMidway several years ago.\nA new flag flies now from the local\npost office mast.\n* *   *\nJuly 2nd has been proclaimed a public ;holiday.\ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. S. Walters are\nspending the week in Vancouver.\n* #   *\nL. Portmann left for Nicholson\nCreek on Sunday to assist with the\nhaying.\n<! * #\nLOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCameo Brooch, on Anaconda\nflat on Sunday. Reward by returning\nto the Greenwood Ledge office.\n>\\t     ^     ,<_\nFOUND\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEye glasses and case. Owner can have same at The Greenwood\nLedge.\nMiss G. Lee left for Vernon on Mon-\n\"day,, having spent a three weeks' vacation at her home here.\n* . *   * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMrs. C. Johnson, of Tacoma, Wash.,\nis the guest of her sister,.Mrs. Chas.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGauvreau.\n.y #    *     *\nSt.' Jude's dhurch, Matins and Holy\nCommunion at 11 o'clock on'Sunday,\nJune 26th.\n* *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMaster Joe Gane was spending the\nweek-end as tlie guest of Master Oliver Newmarch.\n* *   *\nGeo. R. Inglis left on.Monday for a\nsix weeks' holiday at his home in New\nGlasgow, N. S.\n,,       *   *   *\nMrs. Hamon . and \"Mrs. De Guelle\nleft this morning for Hatzic, x where\nthey will reside.\n* *   *\n' Miss. McCoy, who was visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Lee, left last Friday for\nher home in Regina.  \"\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *   *\nHarold Mellind left on Tuesday for\nChelan, Wash., after a few days' visit\nwith his mother, Mrs. E. Mellrud.\n* #   *-\nMiss Cicely Newmarch, who was visiting Miss Elsie Gane at Kettle Valley,\nreturned to her home here on Sunday.\n* *   *\nDanny McKee left by car on Tuesday morning for Fort George. He was\naccompanied by Malcolm Williamson.\n- Allan Morrison ,of Pullman, Wash.,\nspent the week-end in town en route\nto the Wellington mine, Beaverdell.\n* *   *\nMrs. Dunnigan and son Francis, of\nPullman, Wash., spent a few days with\nthe former's sister; Mrs. J. Anderson.\n* *   *\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiss S. Kompan, of Myncaster, and\nMiss R. Porter, of Midway, are spending -the week with Miss Vera Kempston.\n* *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe Hudson car recently seized by\ntiie. Customs and stored in Rusch s\n.Garage, ,Rock Creek, was stolen on\n.'r^esdfty\/night... W.\nSpend the end of the week in Beaverdell and patronize the concert and\ndance which will be held there \"on Saturday night.\n* *   *\n. Jack Mulhern returned to Beaverdell on Saturday from Keremeos. Mrs.\nMulhern is visiting her daughter at\nChelan, Wash.\n* *   *\nHarold Lloyd will be shown,in \"The\nFreshman\" at the Greenwood Theatre\non-Friday and Saturday, July 1st and\n2nd.   Friday show at 7.30 p.m., and\nSaturday't at 8.15 p.m.\n, *   *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n' Every Sunday at 8 o'clock there will\nbe low mass in the Catholic Church,\nexcept\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe^second\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSunday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe\nmonth.   Service at 11 o'clock.\n* *   *\nThe management of the Greenwood\nTheatre announces Douglas Fairbanks\nin \"Don Q Son of Zoro,\". for Friday\nand Saturday, July 8th and 9th.\n* *   *\nArchie Aberdeen,'of Bridesville Road\nwas in town on Monday. Archie says\nthat the crops around Bridesville are\nlooking fine and they will be a record\nthis year.\n* * -. #\nAn agreeable surprise 'party was\nheld on June 14th by the Ladies of the\nAltar Society of the Catholic Church,\nat the home of Mrs. R. McKee. The\neve'ning was spent socially and dainty\nrefreshments were served.\n* *   * .\nMr. and Mrs:-John Hallstrom and\nfamily expect to.leave Thursday, morning by motor to bring Miss Cecilia\nHallstrom home from attending high\nschool in North'Vancouver.\nCASH SPECIALS\nSaturday and Next Week\nSave Money on Dishes\nPlates in Clover Leaf Pattern at about half regular prices\nTea Plates        -        15c each.   $1.75 per doz.\nSoup Plates and medium Dinner Plates\n20c each.   $2.25 per doz. .\nExtra'Large Dinner Plates. 25c each. $2.75 doz.\ny White Enamel Wash Basins\nPriced to sell at 49c and 59c each\nSun Visors, new assortment, big saving 35c each\nOh Boy Hand,Cleaner        - 2 for 25 cents\nAmerica, One Day Alarm Clocks - $1.50\nLadies Silk Hose - Special 2 pair for 95c\nSugar      -'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- 100 lbs $8.15. 20 lbs $1.65\nLots of Fresh Strawberries Saturday      Priced right\nJ\"-_-\ufffd\ufffd\nBROWN'S STORES\nMidway and Rock Creek\nGoodyear Tires and Tubes\nOur New Linotype\nWith this issue of the Greenwood\nLedge we have reached a long cherished hope, and the type this week is set\non our new' Linotype, installed on\nTuesday by Mr. Dugald Campbell, of\nVancouver, B. C. representative of the\nMergcnthaler Lintoype Company of\nNew York.\nIt is needless for us to say just what\nthe installation of this marvel of mechanism will mean to The Ledge, and\nwe sincerely hope our readers will find\nour columns increasingly interesting\nduring the clays that lie ahead. We\nhave no misgivings on our decision to\ninstall a Linotype, no printing shop today is complete without one, and while\nwe may have our own difficulties in\nmarstering the intricacy of the machine, on the face of it it looks simple\nenough. With this issue also we are introducing to our readers a brand new\nstyle of type face, Ionic No. 5, designed and cut by the Linotype Company\nespecially for making newspaper reading easy for those who have trouble\nwith their eyes.\n. We sincerely hope our readers will\nendorse our new venture, it means a\nbetter service to all concerned, a better and. more \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd progressive paper for\nGreenwood and district, and a staunch\nfaith in the future of our district.\nNext-week and following weeks we\nwill have a number of interesting articles on the evolution of type-setting\nsince the advent of the Linotype.\nJohn Desrosiers sto?e, warehouse and\ntwo cabins were completely destroyed\nby fire-in Osoyoos last week. Buildings and contents were fairly well covered by insurance. A truck was also\nlost in the blaze.\n* *   *\nAt Danville, Wn., on Monday, the\nAmerican authorities seized a Reo Flying Cloud Sedan which contained several bottles of liquor. A fine was imposed and the car-returned.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Wilson, of Rossland, are guests at the Pacific Hotel.\nMr. .Wilson is' relieving Chas. Nichols\nat the South Kootenay Power Station\nwhile the latter is on a holiday.\nMr. and Mrs. Chas. Nichols, Mrs.\nH. J. Purkis and E. A. Wanke left on\nMonday afternoon by motor on a trip\nto Vancouver and New Westminster.\nMr. Nichols and Mr. Wanke will attend Grand Lodge of the A. F. & A. M.\n. *   #   #\nMrs. R. McKee left on- Sunday\nmorning for North Vancouver. Mrs.\nMcKee has been a resident of Greenwood for many years, coming here as\na bride in 1897. The Greenwood Ledge\njoins with her many friends in wishing her success in her new home.\n* *   *\nIn' 1867 there were 6 post offices between the Great Lakes and Rocky\nMountains, and in 1927 there are\n3400 post offices. In \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1867 seventeen\nmillion letters and post cards were\ncarried and in 1927 the total number\ncarried was four hundred, and seventy-\nfive million.\n* *   *      ,  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   -\n\"On\"-'Tuesday '.\"afternoon->u' -tourist\ncoming from Grand Forks met with\na rather serious accident. A deer\njumped out of the brush in front of\nhim. In avoiding the animal the car\nwent over the bank and landed upside\ndown. The driver escaped with very\nslight injuries.\n* *   *\nThe roads are now in good condition, so follow the crowd on Saturday\nto 'Beaverdell... Take in the show and\ndance, also give the mines the once\nover. Right at ,our door is situated\none of the best'high grade camps in\nB. C. Get better acquainted with the\nresources of your own district.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMajor^M\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Furber\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdinspector-Game\nConservation Board, met a few members of the Greenwood District Rod &\nGun Club at Major Gray's residence\nat Kettle Valley on Wednesday evening and discussed the game situation\nin this district with them. He is on\na tour of' the province, going into the\nconservation of game and local conditions regarding same.\nDavid Oxley Dies Suddenly\nThere is sincere regret felt at the\nsudden death,of David Oxley. He was\nborn in Yorkshire 69 years ago. Coming to this district, to Phoenix, 27 years\nago from Phillipsburg, Mon., he was\ninterested in various mining deals and\nwas at one time partner with Jack\nHartman in the ownership of , the\nSummit Hotel, later known as the\nQueen's Hotel.\nDuring the time G. Rumberger was\nmayor of Phoenix Mr. Oxley was an\nalderman in his council. At the close\ndown\" of Phoenix Mr. Oxley moved to\nEholt, where he was postmaster at the\ntime of his death. ;\nMr. Oxley had,been ailing somewhat\nfor a time. He attended the McKee\nauction sale on Saturday. He was\nbrought, to the Greenwood and District\nHospital on Monday morning and died\ntwo hours later. He leaves to rilourn\nhis loss his wife. The funeral will be\nheld from the undertaking parlor this-\nafternoon at 2.30.\nHigh School and Entrance\nExaminations This Week\nThe High School and Entrance examinations ; are being held; here this\nweek. Mr. T.; Crowley is in charge of\nthe high school pupils, and Miss Vera\nKempston Tof the Entrance.\nGreenwood Sup. School  (High.\nGrade IX.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAndrew Anderson, John\nCampolieto, Irene Kingsley,; Vera\nWalmsley.<-   :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGrade X.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeo. _ Bryan, Edward\nJohnson, Pat Kempston, Leo Madden,\nJohn MacDonell, Jesse Puddy, Renie\nSkilton, Annie Swanlund.\nAnarchist Mountain\nGrade IX.^-Grace Kehoe.\nIngram Mountain\nGrade IX.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBeatrice Bubar, Margery\nBubar, Doris Clark, Ethel Thompson.\nMidway\nGrade IX.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLillian Ruth Porter.\nGrade X.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWilliam Edward McArthur.\nMyncaster\nGrade IX.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSophia Kompton.\nEntrance Examinations\nGreenwood \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEileen Bryan, Rosie\nBombini. Harry Hallstrom, Lewis Mitchell, Robert Mitchell, Helen McGrade, Edward Parry. Bertram Price.\nMarguerite Ritchie. Margaret Royce,\nKenneth Stewart. William Walmsley.\nBeaverdell\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGoldie .Saunders.\nMidway\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRosalie Brown, Mayneen\nBush, Verna Lenora Evans, Kathleen\nSalmon. Mae Sharp, Roy Sharp, Raymond Tippie, William Tippie.\nProvidence Mine  ;\nTo Operate\nJames Wilson and F. Loomis, of\nBurke, Idaho, have a lease and bond\non the Providence mine at Greenwood,\nowned by the Mary Agnes Mining Co.,\nof Chicago. It is their intention to\nstart unwatering the mine by July 1st.\nMr. Wilson and Mr. Loomis were in\ntown on Saturday and inspected the\nmine.    <>\nDominion Day\nSports Program\nThe District Jubilee Celebration\nCommittee met at Ingram Bridge on\nSaturday afternoon, Rock Creek, West-\nbridge, Kettle Valley, Myncaster, Midway and Greenwood being represented.\nWednesday, June 29th, was chosen\ncleanup day on the Kettle Valley\nhockey grounds near Ingram Bridge,\nwhere the celebration-will be held. Mr.\nC. H. Weed very kindly offered to\nbring horses to help with the work.\nThe grounds will be put in good order\nfor all events and Messrs. Brown and\nMcMynn will erect a refreshment\nstand and will cater to the needs of\nthe day.-\nThe subscription lists from the different towns were turned in and they\namounted to over $100, which was very\nencouraging. A further amount is expected.\n. The committee suggests that all car\nowners decorate their cars for the occasion. \" \ufffd\ufffd  .\nThe question of bringing children to\nthe grounds was thoroughly discussed\nand it was decided to asfi auto owners,\nthrough the medium of The Greenwood Ledge, who have available room\nin their cars to take any children that\nthey know who have no way-of getting to the celebration.\nIt was decided that a-charge of 50c\nfor adults, with children free, will be\nmade on the grounds. This is one way\nof raising funds to pay prize monies.\nThe following committees were appointed:\nReferee: Major R. Gray. '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnnouncer: R. E. Noris.\nStarters: Joe Richter and C. N. Bubar. ' --\nJudges: G. P. Harper and C. H.\nWeed.\nTrack Manager: T. Crowe.\nTape Men: T. W. Clarke and How-'\nard Smith.\nBaseball Manager: R. A. Brown.\nBaseball Umpire: G. H. Gray. .\nScore Keeper: N. E. Morrison.\nTaggers: A. Lander, S. Bender, G. B.'\nM. Gane, R. Forshaw and G. W. A.\nSmith.\nChilCren's races commence sharp at\n10 a.m. \" .\nThe sports program was arranged,\nand is as follows:\nBoys and girls race, 6 years and\nunder. * ^\nGirls, 8 years and under.        s\"^\nBoys, 8 years and under. . \\\n-Girls, 10-years and under.\nBoys, 10 years and' under.\nGirls, 12 years and under.-\nBoys, 12 years and under.\nGirls, 14 years and under!\nBoys, 14 years and under.\nGirls, 16 years and under.\nBoys, 16 years and under.\n' Men's Race, open, 100 yards.\nLadies' race, open, 100 yards.\nMen's race, open, quarter mile.\nPotato Race, boys, 16 years and under.\nPotato Race, Girls, i.6 years and under.,. '\nThree legged Race, 16 years and' under\n. Bicycle. Race, 18 years and under,\nfor boys.\nBicycle Race,'18 years and under, for\ngirls.\nLadies' Nail Driving Contest.\nPillow Fighting, Boys, 18 and under.\nRelay Race, quarter mile, team of 4,\nopen to each town in,district.\"\nBaseball Throwing, open.\nLunch 12 noon.\nSpeeches and Presentation of Medals 1 p.m.\nHorse Racing, 2 p.m. ,.   ,\nQuarter Mile Horse Race.\nStake Race.\nBaseball, 2.30 p.m. Republic vs Mid- _\nway.\nPicture Show, Greenwood, 7.30 p.m.\n, Dance, Masonic Hall, Greenwood.\n' Bush's  Orchestra,  immediate  after'\nthe show.\nKilled at Bridesville\nA sad Natality occurred at'Bridesville\non Saturday afternoon when , Alfred\nGausten met death, being struck by a\ncai\\ It-appears'.that young-'Gaustin\nwas running from the bunk house to\nthe hotel when W. G. Chahley, who\nwas returning from a motor-trip to\nVancouver appeared. He honked his\nhorn, but as the lad was deaf he was\nunable to heed the warning. ;        ^\nMr. Ghahley-tried his utmost to\navoid the boy by turning off the road,\nbut the youth kept on and was struck\non the right side of the head, fracturing his skull, by coming into contact\nwith the headlight; V\nCoroner Dr. A. Francis empaneled a\njury and visited the scene.of the accident on Monday and gave permission\nto bury the body. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd W'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nOwing to Constable D. A. McDonald\nof. Oliver, who was in charge of the\ncase, not being able to attend the inquest until Wednesday, it was postponed until that day in Greenwood.\nThe jurymen were: Foreman, W. B.\nFleming, J. C. Henderson, Geo. Ham-\nbly, A. D. McKenzie, L. Bryant and E.\nJ. White.   Their verdict follows:\n\"That Alfred Gauston' came to his\ndeath* on the 18th day of June at\nBridesville at about 3.30 tun. by being struck by an automobile driven bv\nW. G. Chakley, and' we find that W.\nG. Chahley used every reasonable\nprecaution to avoid an accident.\"\nThe jurors apDointed to investigate\nthe\"death of Alfred Gausten- recommended that there be placed a danger\nsiren about 100 yards from the railway trestle, -on-the\"west side of the\nsaid trestle, as we consider it a dangerous crossing:.\"\nAlfred Gaustin was seven yeacs old,\nand is survived by his mother and brother and sister in Bridesville.   -      \\\\\nCharlie Chaplin's lawyer says the\nfilm star hasn't\" enough cash now- to\nhire a taxi. Famous feet, do your\nduty! -,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> i-.-isrr*o'.-iKi2??:i*n'^nt'*'\nffiBJ   QjBEEN>YOOD   LEDGE\nIn clean, bright Aluminum\nWhen you serve RED ROSE ORANGE\nPEKOE to your family you are giving\nthem the best tea you can buy.\nThe Mosquito Pest\nCarry Out Death Sentences\nSeventeen   Persons   in   Canada. Sentenced to  Dea'th  and  Nine\nExecuted in One Year\nCanadian courts pronounced tlie\nsentence of death upon a total of 17\npersons charged'\"with murder during\nthe fiscal year ended March SI last.\nNine of these convicted murderers\nwero executed, according to oflicial\nrecords available here. In five cases\ncommutation of sentence to life im-\npri-ioiimout was granted, whilo new\ntrials were secured in the remaining\nthree instances.\nApproximately 759 persons incarcerated In ponilentiarlcs throughout\nthe country for various crimes wero\nreleased on ticket of leave. Approximately 8-1S applications for release\nfrom prison wore refused during thc\nperiod.\nTho people of Canada are slowly awakening to .lho necessity of concerted, aggressive action to destroy the breeding places of mosquitoes. Like so\nmany other things with which wo stupidly put up, tho mosquito pest can-ho\npractically eliminated if we go the right way about it, and become fully\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd convinced that prevention is worthwhile. The mosquito is not only a source\nof irritation and pain, but it is an actual menace not only to human beings\nbut to dumb animals as well.\nThcy United States succeeded in constructing the Panama Canal,Where\ntho French had failed, largely because tlie American engineers tackled the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'problem*of'first destroying tho mosquitoes and flies which made lite unbearable in the,Panama zone ancl were the prolific carriers of disease and fever\n'. among tho workmen. Panama had first lo be made a fit place in which to\nlive and worlc before ihe canal could be built. And the campaign which.was\nsuccessfully conducted there has been followed elsewhere in the southern\nelates. ,.\nApart altogether from the discomfort to humans, anctHhe communication\nof disease for which the mosquito is responsible, the fact is tliat the country\nsustains, an economic, loss\" as a result of the tortures endured by horses,\ncattle, and other animals in the open where mosquitoes thrive unmolested\nand those dumb creatures have no (means of-protecting-., themselves. The\nquestion has well been asked, how can animals upon wliich farmers rely for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwork and production yield normal production under such conditions? Anything that will eliminate the mosquito aud free horses and cattle from the\nirritation whicli they now must undergo would be repaid many times over.\nMosquito elimination campaigns aro now hi progress n Pan ff; Ottawa,\nWinnipeg, and in ihc Fraser River Valley, and every \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcommunity whicli suffers.\nfrom this pest would he well, advised to follow their example.; Inasmuch.as\nthe scientific facts upon.'whicli mosquito control is based are. of .general\npublic interest, we quote the following.from Toronto' Saturday Night, which\nis urging Governments to take the lead in these campaigns.* .'...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..'\nThc Ufc-history of the mosquito shows -that most of the eggs are laid\nthe previous summer in this latitude, either in stagnant pools or in places\nthat will become stagnant for ..a. sufficient-length of time in the spring.\nUarrels, old cans, broken bottles, or any water-containing, vessels lying in\nthe open arc also favorite breeding places. \".Rivers or running streams da not\nbreed, mosquito-os, hut flood waters and snow-pools may prove targe sources\nof thc pest. Lawns and golf courses, open.\" grass-and* shrubberies do'not\nbreed mosquitoes. The.eggs arc laid im stagnant water, or where there will\n. be stagnant water for a sufficient length of time.\nPools (hat dry up in'.two or three .weeks are of no' 'consequence.* The eggs\nare not affected in the least degree by. frost, *but'hatch oat about; April 15th,\nsometimes earlier, into \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwriggler's, or larvae,* as scientists call them. These\n1 wrigglers swim and feed in the stagnant pools, rising every two or three\nminutes to the surface, tail first. On the tail is a\" fine air tube, which'is\nthrust just above Ihe surface to take in \ufffd\ufffdair\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwithout whicli the wrigglers\ncannol. Jive. After-two or lliree weeks'of this existence the wrigglers change\n' into common shaped pupae,. which in'Jrom two to seven days come to the\nsurface, split ancl liberate the complete mosquito.\nThus,' in lho life cycle of the,mosquito it is most readily destroyed in the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwriggler stage by placing oil the 'surfaceof the pools a thin film of crude oil,\na cheap commodity, which chokes'*or poisons the fine air-tube at the end..of\n\" the wriggler's tail. This is applied either by watering cans or by knap-sack\nsprayers. Small areas may he successfully handled by individuals with coal-\noil: or crank-case waste oil from-automobiles.\" Rags, soaked in these substances, may bc weighted with stones and thrown into pool's.\nIn these days of machinery on the fann and I.he almost universal use of\nautomobile, there are oil soaked rags about, dirty .waste oil arter cleaning\n'   out automobile crank cases and parts of tractors and other machinery, and\nif these waste substances, instead of being burned, were thrown into stagnant pools of water and other brej^ing^Elacgg^JJlo^^\nNeuralgia Conquered\nIts Pain Destroyed\nMagical\nResults   Come\nApply\nWhen    You\nNERVILINE\nIt Acts Quickly\nMr. YV, T. Greouway, formerly\nconnected with the Guide newspaper\nstuff,,has written: \"For twenty years\nwe have used Nerviline in our home,\nand not for the world would we be\nwithout it. As a remedy for all pain,\nearache, toothache, cramps and disordered stomach, I know of no preparation 'so useful and quick to relieve as Nerviline.\" Remember this,\nwherever there is pain, rub on Nerviline, and you will got prompt results\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd35c, at all-dealers.\nHeart Secondary Motive Power\nActivity of! Cells Comes First Says\nGerman Professor\nProfessor Martin Mendelsohn, who\nhas occupied the chair of diseases oi\nthe heart in Berlin university since\n1S99. has put forward thc extraordinary theory' that the heari Is not the\nprime'motive power for life, but as\nan organ.plays only a secondary part.\nHis theory is thai, iho activity of the\ncells of the body, in absorbing and\n.eliminating', fluids, constitutes tlie\nchief motive power in forcing tho\nblood through the system.\nOppose Granting Subsidy\nObjection to   Proposal   That   Federal\nGovernment Should Subsidize\nSeed Growers\nAt the twenty-sixth annual convention of the Canadian Seed Growers'\nAssociation, at Victoria, President\nStrange objected to proposals that the\nfederal government should subsidize\nseed growers. He preferred, he said,\nsome system whereby -the product of\ntho expert growers should be identified, enabling such growers lo benefit\nfrom public demand for output of\nquality\"\n\"Thero Is no questioning lhat tho\nhigh place Canadian field crops hold\nabroad Ja duo in no sniall degree to\nthe fact that the producer has had,\nfor many years, seed of superior\npedigree. Those have allowed the\nCanadian fawner to compete in world\nmarkets despite the higher' Canadian\nscale of living ancl production costs,\"\nsaid Mr. Strange, in paying a tribute\nto the splendid work o'f past presidents and oflicials of the association,\nTiie directors' report presented by\nPeter Stewart, Ottawa, secretary-\ntreasurer, gave the following data as\nto major crop aud seed inspections\nduring tiie year:\nFields- inspected, 2,205;. registration\ncertificates issued, .1,609; wheal, 19,-\n511 acres yielding 472.5S!) bushels;\nquantity seed inspected and sealed\n85,79.1 bushels.\nOats, 5,076 acres, yielding 257.3S7\nbushels; quantity seed inspected and\nsealed 3-1,792 bushels; barley, 2,3-11\nacres yielding 94,275 bushels; quantity seed inspected and sealed, 13,353\nbushels; com 29S acres yielding 3.G05\nbushels; quantity seed inspected and\nscaled 170 bushels; alfalfa, ;2,S09\nacres-yielding 259,161 pounds; quantity seed inspected and sealed 2\"12,832\npounds, this beiug a record production, i\n'The assoelation has now a membership of 633 seed growers as follows: Prlnco Edward Island, 14;\nNova Scotia, 9; New Brunswick, 13;\nQuebec, 43; Ontario, IOC; Manitoba,\n3S; Saskatchewan, 173; Alberta, 228;\n.British Columbia, 9.\nThe directors were proud of lho\ncoming to' Canada of the championships in wheat and oats as a result\nof \"the outstanding performance of\na comparatively young member. Herman Trello, Wunibly, Alia.'1\nNugget White Dressing Is a real \"sticker.\"\nThe longest, fastest set can't shake off its\nsnowy whiteness. Whether your shoes be\ncanvas or buck, always use ''Nugget\"\nThtre'i a \" Nugget\" shade for every shoe made.\nJS\nReducing Canada's Debt\nin\nAfter. 10 Years of Asthma Dr. J. D,-'\nKellogg's Asthma llemedy proved the\nonly relief for one grateful user, and\nthis is but one   case   among   many.\nLittle wonder-that it lias now become\nthe..-one'recognized remedy    on    the\nmarket.   It has earned its fame by ita-\nnavcr failing effectiveness. Ifc is earn--\ning it.today, as it has done for years.\nU'. is. the   greatest   asthma   specific\nwithin tiie reach of suffering, human;\nity.\nForty-two   Millions   is   Reduction\nLast Fiscal Year\nCanada's net debt was reduced by\n$-12,000,000 during thc fiscal year\nending March 31st, 1927.\nWhen he delivered his budget\nspeech February 17 last, Hon. J. A.\nRobb, Minister of Finance,, could only\nestimate what tlie decrease would be,\nsince the Government's linancial year\nhad still another six weeks lo go. Mr,\nRobb erred on the side of^caution, and\nplaced the figure at $31,000,000. That\nho was well within the mark is indicated by the information that ho under-estimated the amount by eleven\n.million dollars,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd It is figured that in the last- four\nyears Uie national debt has been reduced by $106,000,000. -\nIn November oC .this year there are\nmaturing loans of $37,000,000, tho\nminister hopes to redeem one of them\nin-cash and at least apportion of tho\nother, while necessary .refinancing\nwill bo accomplished at a reduced rate\nof interest.\nFind Hug* Telescope Reflector\nMade by Sir William  Herschel  Cen-\n=\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tury and Half Ago -\nA telescope reflector weighing half\na ton was made by the great Sir William. Herschel at his observatory near  \"\nSlough 150 years ago. Later a heavier\none was substituted and the old one.'-?\nwas put away, but where il went nobody knew. Sir William's son died In ,\n1871, and the secret djed with- him. -\nThe0 reflector was supposed to havo\nbeen put in a cottage close by, but\nthere was no trace of it.\nNow the cottage lias been in tho\nmauds of the builders, and there, built\ninto the wall behind the stairs, the\nreflector, has been found in- its iron\ncase. Willi a.series of mirrors a ray\nor sunlight was cast on its beautiful- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nly-polished surface,\" leaving no doubt\nas to its identity. Tho historic reflector has been removed from its strauge\nhiding-place.\nV\nA\nPost War Adjustments\nOver\n^fcruIcTbc' beneficial. The general adoption by people of the policy of spraying oil ihlo stagnant pools in the vicinity of'their homes would in a few\nyears greatly reduce the mosquito'pesl In this country, adding I.o the pleasure\nof life .in the summer months, assisting to check the spread of fevers, and\nbring economic gain\/as well as relieving our-dumb animals of the suffering\nthey now undergo. .''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,'       .\n(Additional information   on   the   subject   of  mosquito   control   can   be\nobtained by writing thc Dominion Entomologist at Ottawa.     :\na  Million Europeans Are Without a Country\nPost war   developments,   including\nreadjustment of  frontiers,  havo  left\nmore thau a million people in Europe\nwithout a country, it was declared by\nDr. Fridtjof Nansen,    high    commis-\nj&io.n_aiu.QLJ*ho=international\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcommittee for Russian relief.\n' It is hoped to alleviate this condition, lie said, by extending tlie system   of. special' League   of  Nations\npassports. Progress has been achieved in the plan to settle Russian refugees in Argentine, Brazil and Paraguay.\nPrizes For Confederation Essay\nUniversity of Montreal Offers Three\nfor Competition\nThe commission of studies of lhe\nUniversity of Memtrcal has placed al\ndinpo.'-al of tho faculty of letters, three\nmedals, gold, silver, and bronze.'\nThese prizes are offered by the\ncommittee of the sixtieth anniversary\nof Confederation for an open competition cm tho history of Canada.\nThe faculty of loiters announces the\nsubject of tho essay to be: \"The\ngrowth of Canada's political liberties\nfrom the conquest. (1.7C0),to;, our. pros-,\nent slatus.\"\nManuscripts, either in English * or\nin French, must be in the hands of\nthe secretary of the faculty before\nNovember 1 and the prizes will .be,\nawarded before Dec. 31.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddoctors have been prescribing Eagle Brand as\nan infant food when\nmother's milk is not available.\n9\nUse it with confidence.\n.\ufffd\ufffd2527 '\n73vrdMtt\nEAGLE\nBRAID\nW.   N.   U.   16SC\nShould Select Immigrant?\nMore Care Should bc Taken in Admitting Undesirables   -'\nSpeaking a.s chairman of a banquet\ntendered to the Canadian Medical\nAssociation at Toronto, Sir William\nMiilock, elder justice of Ontario, and\nchancellor of Toronlo University, declared he did not share the longing of\nsome people for increased population\nin Canada.       ' yy ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.\n\"I* don't think,\" said Sir William,\n\"that our friends to tho south have\nbeen vastly enriched' by their in-\ncreased*-' population. A \"large portion\nof theiK population must now be\ncalled a source of; weakness.\"\nSir William said Canada should\nadmit none that are not of \"good\nfoundation stock.\" '*..\nIn his opinion, an empty house-was\nbetter than! a bad tenant.\n..The Also of Miller's .Worm Powders\ninsures healthy children so far as the\nailments attributable to worms are\nconcerned. A high .mortality, among\nchildren Is traccablo to worms. Those\nsap the strength of Infants so (hat\nthey are unable to maintain the baltle\nof life and succumb to weakness .This\npreparation gives promise of health\nancl keeps it.\nAirplanes Valuable In\nExploiting Resources\nService More Important in Canada\nThan in Other Countries\nThe question of aerial transport of\nmail, freight aiul passengers is probably of more vital importance and\ninterest iu tho future of Canada than\nin any oilier country, except Russia,\nwrites. Ellwood Wilson, president of\nThe Fairchild Aerial Survey, Limited, in The Financial Post. Wc have\nvery olarge areas y,-hcro mining and\nperhaps other industries could bc\ncarried on, but'which, would not pay\nfor the .building o'f railroads, and in\nany  case  their  development- cannot\nwait until a railrc'ad could b_o_bu.ilI.\t\nThe arooplanc offers a safe and\nreasonably cheap means of transportation, wiih rapidity far superior to\nlhat of trains. It may be said, however, tliat no un-subsidlzcd transport\nline has as yet made money; .all the\nEuropean services receive government subsidies, and in the United\nStates air mail contracts are being\nlooked to to carry tlio burden of\nestablishing and operating costs in\nthe hope that freight aud passenger\nservices will develop. No line can\nbe started unless there is some assurance that there will be enough travel\nto pay for operating expensed.\nFruit Growing in British Columbia\n43,569 Acres Now Dcvtfted to This\n--Industry\nIn British Columbia commercial\nfruit'growing is of comparatively recent origin, but the development oi\ncommercial orcharding has been very\nrapid, especially during tho last ten\nyears. The first, apple trees wero\nplanted about 1850, but not until several years later were numerous trees\nplanted for commercial purposes, Tho\ncensus of 1891 gave the area devoted\nto all kinds of fruit as 6,500 acres; in\n1921 the census showed a total,fruit,'\nacreage In British C6lumbia of 43,-\n569 acres. The most noted fruit district in thc. province is tlie Okanagan\nvalley, where some of the finest\norchards in the province and in tho\nDominion are to bo found. Tho boxed\napples from British Columbia are in\ndemand on all the Important markets\nin tho British Isles and-Europe.\nPears, plums, peaches, apricots, cherries and small Traits are grown on a\nlarge scale throughout British Columbia.\nFeldspar on Lake of the Woods'\nU.S. Syndicate Opening Crushing and\n = --Grinding-Plant^ '- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe. merchant who won't advertise\ntill he can advertise big usually\nnever advertises.\nOne of the commonest complaints\nof Infants is worms, and the most\neffective application for them is\nMother Graves' Worm Exterminator.\nAn interesting mining development\nIs faking place at the Northwest\nAngle, Lake of the Woods. A uniied\nStates Syndicate is opening up a\nfedspar mine on thc U.S. side if .the\nborder. This is the first enterprise of\nthe kind in the northwest. The feldspar, will bo shipped'south for treatment at first, but It is the intention\nof tlie syndicate lo erect a crushing\nand grinding plant at the mine, if the\nquality of tho rock proves satisfactory. A deposit of mica is also lo he\nexploited. A cojjipany is also developing a feldspar and mica claim on\nthe Canadian side of the border. If\nthe mica is found to be unsuited for\ncommercial purposes, attention will bo\ngiven solely to the feldspar.\nA  Welland  Lady Tells  of'the\nValue of Dr. Williams' Pink\"\" .\nPills in Her Home\n\".-have many reasons for praising\nDr. Williams' Pink-Pills,\" says Mrs.\nGeorge L. Swick, R.R. No. 2, Welland,\nOut. \"My first experience with this\nmedicine was in my girlhood, when,\nfollowing an attack of scarlet fever,\nI was left in a badly run down condition, and the pills roslxfred mc to good\nhealth. Later in my married life I\nhad a severe attack of rheumatism.\nTlie pain in my right arm and shoulder was so bad that I could not dress .\nmyself without help. Again I resorted lo Dr. Williams* Pink Pills, and\nagain tliey proved a blessing to me.\nas soon the rheumatic pains and stiffness disappeared and there has been\nno return of tho trouble. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills havo also been of\ngreat benefit to my children. One of\nmy boys was threatened \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"<!> s*--\nVitus uanue. irio. lm-us and face\nwould twitch and jerk. I gave, him,\nthe pills, and again they did \"not fall,\nas under Ihe treatment thc trouble\nceased. T have also given tlie pills\nto niy little girl, who was aneaemic,\nand in this case also with lhe greatest\nbenefit. Naturally when I hear any-,\none complaining of not\" feeling well T\nrecommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills\nas 1 know of no other medicine to\nequal Ihcm in building up the blood\nand restoring health.\".\nTake Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills for\nanaemia, rheumatism, Indigestion,\nneuralgia and other nervous troubles.\nTake, ihcm as a tonic IT you are not in\nthe best physical ^condition, and cul-\ntivatc~a\"rosistance'-tharwiirk=eb\"p \"you\"\nwell and s'trong. You can gel, those\npills from any dealer in medicine, or\nby mail al 50\nDr. Williams'\nvllle, Out.\ncents a box from The\nMedicino   Co.,   Brock-\nMahogany trees do .not reach their\nfull height until thoy are 200 years\nold.\nThe man who is'waiting,for some-'\nfiling to turn -up usually has his eyes\nfixed on his toes. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\nMany a man's phenomenal success\nis a surprise to him.\nCHOLERA, CRAMPS,\nPA8NS IN THE STOMACH\nRELIEVED BY\norrowLEfe\n'*yfytiit&;y'\nAir Service to Mining Area7\n\"An .airship passenger service has\nbeen established between Winnipeg\nand the mineral area east of Lake\nWinnipeg and north of the Winnipeg\nriver.\nIf you can't do anything about it\ndon't talk about it.\nCampers\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTake Minard's with you.\nMrs. D. Leavitt, Back Bay, N.B.,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwrites:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Last summer my children\nwere very ill with cholora and suffered\nseverely from cramps and pains in their\nstomachs; I tried several remedies, but\nnothing seemed to do them any good.\nA friend of mine told mo to try Dr.\nFowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. I;\ngot a bottle and gave them a few doses,\nand they soon found relief. Now I will\nnever bo without it in tho summer'\nmonths.\"\nDorTt Accept a Substitute\nThis preparation has been on the market for 80 years: put up only by The T\nMilbura Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nWorld Poultry Congress\nInteresting   Exhibit From  India Will\nBe Shown at Ottawa\nThe model of a duck egg incubator\nin minature showing .how from 5,000\nto-10,000 duck eggs aro hatched In\nRangoon,  India, will  bo  Included in\nthe Indian National Educational Exhibit at the World's    Poultry   Congress. This exhibit will bo shown by\nthc United Provinces Poultry Association with headquarters at Lucknow,\nIndia. The exhibit- will also contain\nthe model of   an   Indian   peasant's\nlio.me showing liow the low caste Indian keeps his poultry; also clay colored models of different types of Indian people and photographs of work\nbeing done    to    encourage    poultry\nbreeding, and of the Iudian Egg Lay*\ning Test. A motion picture 1750 feet\nin length entitled   \"Poultry   Farming\nIn India\" is also, available for display.\nMrs. A..-ft. Fawkes., will be Uie oftlcial\nIndian delegate.\nThird Rail Stops Engine\nBy means of a third rail that develops electricity during tho movement of tho train, a\"*devdco recently\ninvented by an Italian, stops trains\nwithout the action of the engineer.\nWhen, anything obstructs the track\na light shows in the engine cab. If\ntills is ignored a bell rings, and\nshould the ringing escape attention\nRELIABLE!\nMinard's has been a household\nremedy for generations. Doctors recommend it.\nAGENTS   TO '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd INTRODUCE   OUR\nimr\nDIAMOND ''JUBILEE    CELEBRA.-\ntio'n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmake ?20 per day, selling\nimproved utility garment. Clolh-\nIng   experience  unnecessary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddemon--\nthe engine is automatically stopped by I stratlon sells' it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd full or , part   tlmo.\ntho device  that applies tho brakes. Nogar Manufacturing Co., loronto 2.\nThe third- rail can also be usel for a\ntelephone service for drivers. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAutomobilel owners our Flag Holder\n-New Government Land Office with five \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd flags.     Agents,    Garages,\n*'*\"\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd'- **y\ufffd\ufffdJK53S3.S-.SS4I\ufffd\ufffd'*SE\nhas been opened at Rabbit Lake on,paicl 75c   Jllbjiee Fiag Co., 101 Queen\nthe Turtleford-Hafford   line   of   thc '_ st., West, Toronto.\nCanadian National Railways in Cen-  . \t\ntral Saskatchewan, for recording en-J\ntries for homesteads in that part of\nthe Country. Rabbit Lake is north of\nNorth Battleford.\nNo matter how big a man' may be,\nthere is at least one woman somewhere In the world who can make\nhim feel small.\nfrom\nbe-\n\"Bill   is    going    to    retire\nbusiness for Ave years.\"\n\"Oh, I've heard him say that\nfore.\"\n\"Ves, but this time the judge saia\nit.\"\nMinard's Liniment for Insect bites.\nNo Uacation Kit\nIs complete unless .it contains\nprotection from sudden attacks\nof cramps or colic, pon't forget\nChamberlain's Colic &\nTO* MEW FRENCH RZMF.DV. Ns.t\npTHERAPION&S\nWe. 1 for Bl\ufffd\ufffdda\ufffd\ufffdr Catarrh. Ko.3 for Blootf -_\nSkin Dlaaaaaa, *Ra,\ufffd\ufffdto\ufffd\ufffdC-_ra__lcWaal-natM\ufffd\ufffd\n0*14 ir lu-laf Gut-Mi i\ufffd\ufffd,'ar ratura mall fra*\nSia.SCL*\ufffd\ufffdC)l*<-C\ufffd\ufffdllam\ufffd\ufffdIMkMJNWAL\ufffd\ufffd_HlcO\n1\ufffd\ufffd\n'# o\n>o\n5SE   GEEENWood   LEDGE\n$\n*'i\nInsect Pests\/\n&8R BBS s'T Baa^iijlmiiuMijiii ' ,--    -v r\nKillsi'fZies-Mosquitoes ~\nRoaches SedBugs *Fleos\nPredicts Use\nOf Dirigibles\nAsbestos a Strange Mineral\nScientists Say Norse\nDiscovered America\nRemains of Old Sd.tlement Found* o'n\nIsland Off Labrador\n' The existence of ancient ruins on'\nSculpin island, 20 miles off Naiu, Labrador, is o'f interest, since there is no\nother instance in Canada of the occurrence of archaeological remains of\nEuropean origin antedating the arrival of the French.\nDonald 13. MacMiilan, tho Arctic\nexplorer, and the associates of the\nField Museum scientific party, arc of\nExperiments of more than 30\nyears have proven that Aluminum is the best container\nfor tea, and paper the poorest.\nRed Rosie Tea is now. packed\nonly in Aluminum, and every\npackage is' guaranteed to be\nih perfect condition. < b\nLaughs at Superstition\nWill   Steal   March   on   Airplane,   for\nTrans-A'Jantic Passenger Service\n''    Major (r, H. Scott, wlio predicted at-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-a dinner-in Toronto that .there would\nbo a daily-dirigible service between\nGreat Uritain and    Canada   in    ten\nyears,   commanded   I.-3-1   when   she\nmade a voyage from England to the\nUnited States and back in 191!).   In\nhis address, Major Scott pointed out\nthat before the Great War 42,000 persons were carried in dirigibles without\ninjury to any of them. Since 19IS the\nairplane has been rapidly developed,\nbut the high  cost  of manufacturing\nand\" sucli disasters as the burning of\n1 Z R-2 in England, destruction of the\n1 Roma al Hampton Roads air base and\n_ wrecking of the United Slates navy\ndirigible Shenandoah in  a storm in\nOhio, with great loss of life in each\ncase, havc retarded improvement of\nthe Zeppelin, type of airship. \"While\nIthe airplane has been forging steadily\nlahead  in the  commercial field  and\nproving itself   capable   of   becoming\nprofitable for the operator, the United\nElates,\"   says    thb ' Aircraft     .'ear\n|t3ook (1927)  \"has witnessed no real\ncommercial development in  \"Jightcr-\nfhari-air.'\"\nIn 1921 the British Government set\nlisido five, hundred thousand  pounds\nfor an airship program that called for\nresearch work as a    preliminary \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to\nbuilding two great I'abiics for imperial\nranspo'rlation.   One is nearing com-\nletion. '\"The intention is to send it\nut to-Canada early next year.   Major\nicotl  says that it should make the\noyage west in three days.\" His mis-\nion was to prepare Canadians for the\nanting of the'improved airship and\ny ask them to   provide- a   terminal\nilh mooring   mast   200   feet   high.\n-100, which is planned, will be 730\ntci long and 130 focUin diameter, li\nto have a maximum speed  of 70\nijes.an_.hgur. There will boiicconv\nodalions for 100 passengers' and for\nu tons of nii-T.il.   'J'he sister ship will'\n\ufffd\ufffd known as R-.10.1.   One is to be sent\nCanada, the oilier to Australia, bul\n!>l until voyages   havo\nNothitiq      in      Qtrt-,_       ,\na      in     story.   0f     Mummy\nVengeance Says Howard Carter\nMuch has been .'written and said re-\nwarding tho curses and evil influences\nsurrounding.'ancient Egyptian tombs,\nabout curses supposed to\nfall   upon\nthe opinion, after a careful cxamina\nCan be. Spun Like Flax and Nothing  (ion, that the   rock   foundations   of . __    ul,<,u\nCan Destroy It what appear to   bo   ten   or   twelve  those who disturbed the slumbers of\nAsbestos, noted for its resistance houses are tlie remains of a Norse   tlio dead,\nof fire, is ono of tlie strangest of nilu- settlement at least a thousand years\nold. The i.eientists are in no doubt,\nregarding the purpose of the ro'ck\nstructure. While tliere are. no inscriptions to prove conclusively that they\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd had been built by the Vikings, nevertheless they bear a striking resemblance to those explored recently by\nthe same party in' Greenland. There\nis every similarity,\nerals.\nIt is born, says an article in the\nNew York Times, in the volcanic iires\nof earth's creation; formed under the\nterrific pressure of this planet's cooling crust. Asbestos is Nature's paradox.\nThe raw substance, as found in\ngreat striatums in serpentine rock is\nsoft, fibrous, and when properly\ncleaned and milled can be woven and\n\"spun like wonl^ or llax-. Yet it i\nscnlially a mineral\n'Mr. Howard Carter, who figured so\nprominently In connection. wiih the\ntomb of Tut-ank-Amen, has soma\ncaustic remarks to make on this in\nthe second volume of \"The Tomb of\nTut-'ankh-Amen,\" which has just been\npublished by Messrs. Cassell. He\nlaughs at the idea that \"mysterious\nforces, called into\ns es-\na rock. Steel I';\nt,fte sublimation of siroiigth, yet rust\nin a few years can utterly destroy it.\nWood rots.\n\"Asbestos, it is said, lasts forever.\nThe dissolving influences of - lime\nseem to have no effect'upon it. The\naction of numberless ' centuries,'by\nwliich tho hardest minerals known to\ngeologists are worn away, has left no\nperceptible imprint on this patently\nimperishable substance that is found\nembedded iii thc-im.\nThe ancients were familiar wiih its\nuncanny properties, and ils great\nheal-resifrling qualities gave rise\namoug them lo innumerable stories ot\nsupposed magic powers. The\nGreeks and-Romans\nin- its fire-lhwariing\n_.   \ufffd\ufffd _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' aiKi  0,1'v the in-  malefic power\" wnJ\ufffd\ufffd!I!-n.^ , *\ufffd\ufffdf?\ufffd\ufffd\nscrlptions wanting to give proof post-  tomb \"to Jb'veI 1 1   T   .\ntive. ' -  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd KL vengeance on whomso\never should dare tc, pass its portals.\"\nAs a matter of fact, he says that\nThe\ndown f\nEskimo'  traditions,    handed\nrom   father   to   son   through\nmany generations, is that the sfono\n\"igloos\" were built by men who camo\nj frcan the sea in boats.   They call the\ni place Tunitvlk, which in tht) Eskimo\n'tongue signifies \"the   place   of   the  \ufffd\ufffd\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" iumui-d n mummy, even after\nNorsemen.\"    The scientists  are sat-  the lapse of thousands of years, Is an\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ' - old one, and lm inspii'ed more than\none thrilling story.    When we come\nto the realm cf fact, as distinct from\nihere was, perhaps, no place in the\nworld freer froin risks than the tomb.\nW Hen It was opened, scientific research proved it to bc sterile.\"\nThe Idea thai a curse may rest on\nad who disturb a mummy, even nrt_.,.\nbeen   made\nmcient\nwere inl.eresl.ecl\nproperties,   but\nmade little practical use of it except\nas a burial shroud for their dead.  .\nUif-lory says the Emperor Charlemagne possessed a cloth of asbestos\nwith which he' often astonished hi.--'\nguests.\n-After  having  partaken  heavily   of\nthe .meal before. U\\eni aud having im\nbibed freely of tlio wnperor's wine;'., i\nthe senses of his banqueting friends\nwould be keyed to the proper 'degree\nof credulity.\nTrten the emperor, rising, 'would\ngrasp a corner of ihe tablecloth.\nSweeping the cloth  from  the .rough-\nli\ufffd\ufffd.ivn-tn-lflo-lit\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-ivciuWllUVI   U'lUl'd\" tlle\nfire. Startled Tho rude- warriors\nwould gal her around and in amazement watch tlie flames vainly lick the\ncoverlet-   Stooping down quickly, the\nisfiod that   the ruins have been thero\nperhaps a thoiisand years.\n! To the average adult it comes with\n' something of a shock when he finds il\nnecessary to scrap certain long-\ncherished tags of 'knowledge. That\none daLe, for instance, that iias long\nboon regarded as the epitome of all\nNorth American history, crystallized\nquite respectably in the phrase, \"Col-\nSays. Prison Reforms\nCarried to Extreme\nJails as Comfortable as  Hotels Says\n.Chief of Dtectlves in Quebec'\n, Asserting that criminals of Canada\nand the United States no\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlonger fear\nprison terms, George S. Rioux, chief\nof detectives ' in Quebec, rapped\n\"mollycoddling\" of criminals in a paper,road at the convention of police\nchiefs In Windsor.\nRioux went on to say that prison\nreforms had ,beeu carried to a ridicii'\nlous extreme, and that many prisons\nnow contain comforts not to be found\nin homes\n\"The crook gets a better 'break'\nthan victims of his violence,\" the\nQuebec chief detective said. \"He is\nlet loose on society after his sentence is completed, and the worst\nthat happens to him when he outrages society again is'that he returns to\n'a place thai is as comfortable as a\nhotel.\"\nSaying that records prove that 70\nper cent, of the criminals who have\nbeen convicted three times or more\ngo back to- their' crooked devices\nwhen thoy are freed, Detective\nRioux declared (hat no amount of\nsentimentalism or \"sob stuff\" is going to save the misfits of the world.\"\nfiction, however, the most we can find\nis. a curious coincidence or two.\nEven the famous mummy in thc\nUritish Museum, which is said to havc\nbrought disaster to all who had anything to' do with it, has perhaps been\nsomewhat overrated.    Possibly-smaii>\nFirst Electric Street Car\nFirst. Electric   Car    in    the-   World\nOperated at St. Catherines, Ont\nGeorge E. \"\nfirst electric   car   operated\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBbE. Patterson, builder of the\nin    the\nCalif.   In 1871 he' established a carriage building business\nines,    Ont.    and\numbus discovered America in 1-192,\" I of the stories told <,__o\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf _,  ..\nis  so firmly imbedded  in ,his store-'1-\" \" \ufffd\ufffd n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd>ouse of facts, that he hesitates to\ndislodge it. That it. occurs in print\n,iu all school histories seems a sum-\nwent justification for ils uiuiuestion-\nicceptance\ned\nThe Norsemen of today, particularly  those  In  Canada and  the United\nStates, while admitting the historical\nsignificance of Columbus direct attention to the devastating consenuencos\nthat followed  in  his train,  averring\nwith unshakcable conviction that ihe\n125,000,000 ou   this    continent   have\nmore reason to be interested in Lei I'\nEricsou and the settlement of America by Nordic stock than in the.destructive \"forces' setTlooso in ihe New\nWorld by the Spanish 'Buccaneers.\nbetter foundation than the oue ^circulated after (he Titanic disaster..'-'\nIt was said that the mummy had\nbeen secretly sold to an American\ncollector, who sailed for home with\nhis prize on the doomed liner\nfortunately for a\nUn-\npiciuresque   varn,\nthe mummy is not at the bottom of\nthe Atlantic\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit is,still   part\nproperty of the nation.\nin St. Calhar-\nlatcr constructed\nstreet cars, the firm being known as\nPatterson and Corbon. Ii was one of\nhis street cars, converted into an\nelectric car, that was operated in 18S7\nbetween St. Catharines and *Thorold.\nFive years ago hc retired from active\nbusiness at the age of S3.\nGREAT PUZZLE\nTO CAREFUL PARENTS\nGum-Dipping   is   an ' exclusive Firestone process.\n* *  \"       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *\nIt  insulates  and  impregnates every strand of. every\ncord with rubber.    Internal\nfriction and heat are reduced\nto   a   minimum\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe   side\nwalls  are  greatly  strengthened.      Firestone   Full-Size\nBalloons absorb road irregur\nIarities\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmaking driving easier and riding more comfortable.\nFirestone Dealers are in a\nposition to save you money\nand serve you better. See\nyour nearest dealer to-day.,\nFIKESTONE TIRE &s* RUBBER CO.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\n:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- Hamilton, Ont.\nMOST MILES PER DOLLAR\nFirestone Builds the Only Gum-Dipped Tixet\nHelps For This Week\nof   the\nVouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this\nday without sin.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTc Deuni.\n0n\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.g-eat09' Puzzles to thelDcar Lord,  Thou  br\nQueer Ceremony in India\nChief\nSkulls    to\ni j emperor, thrusting lu his 1\n'jra London to Karachi aud back, ;o|r,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,   _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       .   -\nn|'il..'\n!st-their staunchness.\nWhile Major Scott's prediction of .i\nfily service between\nfiiadfi in ten\nEngland ancl\nyears may be too opli-\nstic, there-seenis to be Hi He doubl\nit the dirigibles now building in\neat -.Britain will steal a .marcli upon\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*; airplane as a medium of Atlantic\nsseuge'r____transportalion.- Itegina\nlily Post.\nland, would\npull the. cloth clear of the blazing\ncoals, which had bleached it. to a\nsnowy whiteness, and reiuru it lo the\ntuble intact.\" A miracle, everyone\nwould exclaim, and even Charlemagne\nhimself woncTercd.\now^that. musical whistles have\nn placed on locomolives\nlit play a few bars of a funeral\nthe engineer sees the\n'i lo beat the train to\ncrossing.\nMake Best Teachers\nTypes Disappearing\nSays British Writer\nEasy, at   One  Time  to Guess   Man's\nOcccpation by\" His Appearance\nUnder the    caption    'People   You\nNever See  Now,*'  YV*. Uadpaih-Scolt,\n!ii Ihe London Daily Mail, calls\nnon  to  the\nWomen Havo Been Doin\nBeginning\nStudent's'at Oxford\n3 it Since the\nill en\nlypcs of iiriti-her, com\nmon not so many years ago, who\ngrajlualijijUsaiipeariiig.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd=\t\nThirty years ago, h\nare\n[rch   when\n-rider tryin\n, ,,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,. worry because\n,I,ey, \\o._ien are to leach n,erPf IsiSj       d\nj by    the    Ox-f01-d    young   gentlemen,\nIScij.  that  will  eventually  lead  to a\nsos war   and is \"a social'revolufion\nol Inc uimosf\nSome of thc charity that begins at\nm> makes a ha sly getaway.\ni- business Irani\nteaching    children,\nuiathcmatician\nthan   lier    father,\n**>\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\njead Mrs. Menard's Letter.\n|er Experience May Help\n.hat-ham. Ontario.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I want to tell\n|i how much good your medicine\n\"   '   ' \"1 has done me. Be-\n: fore my baby\ncamel'fclt so\nweak and rundown that 1 could\nhardly do my'\nwork.     My head\nached continually\nand'.I wa_s, so vdis-\ncouraged'that I\ncould cry from\nmorning till night.\nI had another\n HI baby justoncyear\n[a half old and it gave me a lot lo\n\\ So I thought I would try Lydia\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound,\nhad read so milch about it in the\n'} books. I found a difference right\ny as my head .was relieved and\ntired feelings gone.   My sister\nbeen doing my washing and she\ninued doing it,  as-she said  it\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt set me back if J started to do\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin.   It sure did help me and I\nken just two bottles when my\ncame.   He is a fine big boy,\nrly five months old.   I am\nig your medicine again and I am\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdx) do mjr work all by myself now.\nays recommend the Vegetable\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbund to women, and especially\npectant mothers, aa I believe\nneed help at those times.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nliver Menard, 24 Harvey St.,\nun. Ontario. ^\niguifidnnce.'\"\nWomen    are\"' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd natural     l^aohprs\nteaching has been thoi\nthe : beginning;\nteaching husbands\n-Jypatia, a    better\nand,  philosopher\nTJieon,    was   one   of   thc   greatest\nteachers  that  over  liyod,  until  fan;\natical - early   Christian: -monks-.tore\nher   fronr her   chariot,   as   she  was\ngoing   to  lier  ychool\nher, more than .1.500 years ago.\nWomen make good    teachers\nexcellent judge.1; as shown .by .Judge\nMary TJart.olmo in Chicago.   AH Chicago admires -the   .administration   of\njustice in  lier courL,  especially  her\nwise,    just, , womanly    handling   of\ncases affecting   wayward   girls   and\nwomen and airjuvenilc cases.\n-The college boy   or   adult   citizen\nlacking respect for woman or confidence in their power, judgment and\ngoodness, pays a poor compliment lo\nIds' own riiother.\ne writes, it used\nio bc fairly  easy Lo guess  a man'?\noccupation by his appearance. \"Dut today appearance is a poor guide. Many\nof (ho distinct types of people have\nvanished  and  the  few  that arc  left\nare fast disappearing.    The siik-lial-\nted clly clerk is as rare now as the\nsmock-weariug    farm    laborer.    -The\nosller at the wayside inn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the horsy-\nfaced man Who wore riding breeches\nand sucked  :i  straw has  practically\ndisappeared .    The ostler has  been\nreplaced by tho -garage'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdman,, and the\ngarage man is not yet a'*' type. r\nEven  the navvy has lost a lot of\nhis individuality in  the general process of fitaiidardizallou. Once he used\nlo wear a white felt hat, a velveteen\naid   murdered-I coal, square cut.,a spatted-waistcoat,\nand  a   bright-colored  kerchief  round\nhis neck, and'was seldom without a\nblackened putty    clay   pipe   i:i    his\nnioul.li.    Today the kerchief   Is   the\nonly survival of (hat piclurescjue get\nnp, and even that is more subdued.\nPresents. Human\nBritish Officer\n'J'he presentation q\ufffd\ufffd.__2 human skulls\nto a Jiritish political oflicer formed\npari of a ceremony described by the\nPioneer's special correspondent with\nthe expedition despatched to the Naga\nHills, Burma, which has for its object the persuading of native rulers\nto abandon tho practice of human\nsacrifice.\nFive hundred chiefs, who had already beeu visited find had now had\ntime to' consider theii\nabolis.li slavery and\ned a manau (festival) atjrhich _\nen buffaloes were killed._lp._provide\ncareful parent is to'kno\nmedicine to   give    the\nw just what\n\" Ltle oues.\n.._.. v..u -Ji.iu i.ius Ul with griping\npains; is seized with cold or fever,\nrefuses food or vomits what, he has\ntaken, when ho cries a grefctt deal\nand cannot get the sleep so necessary to the growing child, the parent\nis in a quandary. What is to be dene\ncm such occasions? As oft\n(here is not\n(he house\nriugest  hack  (he\nmorn;\nThy- children wake;   Thy  children\npray;\nOh! make our souls divinely yearn,\nPour Thy best beauty on the day.\nLend   our   slow   feet  that  speed   of\nThine;'\nOur busy hands from evil\nen as not j\nt suitable medicine iuL.,\nThe puzzle   Is   what   to |i',c\ngive him to set him right quickly.\nU is to    meet    such   emergencies\nthat  Baby's  Own  \t\nL^lielp-usstlil^^k^^'\niu |_. \ufffd\ufffdCp us In the heavenly-way.\nTablets  were  de\nPlead;   the   sinners\nweaklings\nPray;\nBul.j.ord, Thy grace exceeds\nour\n, .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,          ,     -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyy   \"^\"-   ,ie- We cannot ask too bright a day;\nsigned. 1 hose pleasant liule Tablets                    ,  q\ufffd\ufffd t,            6          wln>\nquickly reduce fever, break up colds,                -Thomas Hornblowor niii\nrelievo constipation   f-nd   indigestion\npromise    to\nsacrifice, attond-\nsev-\nand allay teething\"\" ^  ^f ^\nho    nerves    aud    promote    re tfu\nhealth-restoring -sleep..    Thev\nlblower Gill.\nLet ir. be our happiness this dav to\nare\nand\n\"niglit'sT'foasting\nThree tall posls, painted black aud\nwhite and decorated with (lowers,\nwere erected in tho centre of a cleared ring, and round these women\ndanced to the music of crude gongs.\nThe leader, carrying a basket and a\nsheaf, portrayed \"ihc sowing and har-\nvesling o'f crops.\nMeanwhile a priest retired .and\n\"communed with the spirii a\" in a\nIon?-clrawn-out monotone. Tlio first\nbuffalo, was then led to tlie manau\nposts and despatched by 'fhe priest\nwith spear-thrusts, having been\nanointed with holy water.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nU was definitely   decided   that   in i\nfuture the chiefs will sacrifice bulls\nlo  tlie spirits instead'of human * bo:*'\nings.\nForty Naga.sJ.hon presented the S2\nskulls of human victims of sacrifice\nto the civil o.(llecr.\nare\nsold  bv\n-at=_25\nIllianis'\nUaby's Own Tablets _..c .-,\nmedicine deaIers_or__b.v_jnail\nconfs_a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbax~fro\"m The Dr. W\nMedicine Co., Brockville, Ont.\nRefuses to Pay Fees\nReason  Elevation of Lord  Byng Has\nNot Been Gazetted\nThe viscounty conferred   on   Lord\nByng in October last on   his   retirement from the governor-ship of Canada,  has not yet boon gazetted and\nthc delay'is believed lo be due to tho\nhigh cost of fees lot- gazetting a peerage or elevation therein, which Lord\nByng refuses to pay.   This runs any\nthing between\nno\nde-\nour neighbors virtue.\n.      .    ,W\"liam EilcryChannmg\nFor Burns and Scalds. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dr.\nThomas' Eclectric Oit will take the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfire out of a burn or sea ldMt should\nbo, at hand in every_ kitchen so' that\nit may be available af any time. There\nis no preparation required, .fust apply the oil to the burn or scald and\nthe pain will abate and in a short\ntime cease altogether.\nRoads to Scenic Wonders\nThe Banff-Windermere highway and\nthe Lake Louise-Field road in the\nCanadian Ilocky Mountains wore officially'opened to' the public for thc\n1927 season on. June 1st.\npected that the number\n\ufffd\ufffd330  and   \ufffd\ufffd730\ncording to the grade.- Lord Byng is !viewing \"the   scenic\nfollowing the  example of other sol-   these routes -this se.asou w:\ndiers   who 'received honors in recog-  or than 0V'\nnition  of  their war services  in\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dining to' pay for his elevalion.\nver before.\nIt is ex-\nof   tourists'\nwonders   along\nill bo Iarg-\nCorns\nFor\nWhat Russia .Owes\nPrivate   British     investors\nciaims against i.h0   Russian\nGovernment amounting to0 .\ufffd\ufffd510 000-\n000, and Russia's war debt io Britain\nIs about   \ufffd\ufffd705,000,000\nhavo\nSoviet\nChange Grading Service\nDominion   Department of Agriculture\nTakec Over Work in Alberta\nButter grading in Alberta which in\nthe past has been carried on by the\nprovincial government, has from June\n1, been handled by the dairy branch\nof lhe Dominion Depaitmcnf of Agriculture, according to an arrangement\nrecently, reached. Dominion graders\nhave''been stationed at Calgary and\nEdmonton, aud    creamery,   operators\ns are caused by tho pressuro'of\nlight boots, but no one need bo troii\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .Wed with them long when so sinnle t\nForst Bites and Chilblains. - j \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.(;|jaJJ \"o\ufffd\ufffdoway's Corn Iloniov\nEase sunburn with Minard's Lin\nChilblains como from undue exposure\nto susli and cold and frost-bite from\nthe icy wuuls of winter. In the treatment of either an excellent preparation is Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, as\nit. counteracts the. inflammation and\nrelieves the pain. The action of the\noil is prompt and its application is\nextremely simple.   - '\ner\n  iment.\n\"Have you  some of thaL gasoline\nthat stops knocking?\"    \"Ves.\" \"Then\nlass. \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLife.\ngive my wife a\nThere arq^ 2,130,000 .licensed  radio\nlisteners in .'England; ; -3,337;]22    in\nGermany;.-'238,000 'in Sweden vind 114\n132 in Denmark.     **   \" '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nlam\nneai\nIto\nmor_. than j will find practically no' change in the\n$(i,0U0,OO0,00O altogether,  l.us.sian in- j regulations which have prevailed  in\nthe. past. Tho educational as well as\nthe commercial features of the service will bo continued and It is felt\nthat the'new.-.move will avoid any\nover-lapping in this phase of.the dairy\nindustry.\ndobtodness to   France   Is   qilUo   as\ngreat.    Kussians appear  to be\nmasters in the   art   of   the\ntouch. '\npast-\ngolden\nW.\n1GSC\nIn the little town of Lyme Centre, N.H.. with a population of 900,\ntwo in every hundred are over 80\nyears of age. Thirty residents are -between 70 and 80.\nA woman's tears and,a-*-.man's grins\nare not always oa the level.\nOther     \"people's      self-adniiralion\nproves that there is no accounting for\ntastes\nTlie straight aim narrow, path isn't\nwide enough for crooked people.\nRecord of'War Service\nThe devotion of the Prussian \"steel\nhelmets',' to: the Hohenzollerns is\nreally very hard to understand.. The\nfamily's record of war services is a\nvery poor one. The Kaiser ran away.\nThe Crown Prince earned the reputation of a gay Lothario. Eitel stole\nfurniture from the country houses of\nj private   citizens. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  London \"Sunday\nI-Pictorial.\nLived 30,000,000 Years Ago\nOne of the   world's   largest   dino-\nl-saurs  (Tornieria), whicli died about\nI 30,000,000 yeariTagoV is-to be put on\nits legs again at the Natural History\nMuseum,    South    Kensington.     The\nTornieria lived in the estuaries of riv-\ni ers, laid egg?, and ate floating vegetation.    It was about fifty feet long\nand thirty feet   high,   and   weighed\nsomething like  ten tons.    Its bones\nwero found in Tanganyika.\nAmong those* who didn't see the big\npolice parade was the man who robD-\ned a store while it was taking place.\n-__-_-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_____\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd---\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd____.       x\nMinard's Liniment is reliable.\nAnd every, man has a right Jo keep\nIhis opinions to himself.\".\nEczema Covered\nEntire Body\nCuticura Heals\n\"As far. back as I can remember\nI had eczema. Ptacrieally my entire\nbody was cbvered with-it. It broke\nout in a fine rash which as I grew\nolder developed into pimples and\nblisters. As a child I used to scratch\nit until it would bleed, and the burning and smarting; were terrible.\" My\nface was a sight and I was. kept\nhome froni school. I was kept awake\nat night and the torture was terrible.\n\" I sent for a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after\nusing it I got relief.   I purchased\nmore and in three months Iiv\/as\ncompletely healed.\" (Signed) Miss\nEdith E. Hunter, R. R. 3, Brockville, Ont.\nKeep your skin clear by using\nCuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for dally toilet purposes. Touch\npimples and itching, if any. with\nCuticura Ointment, bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water.- -\n|B-mp.t ttok Ttm br li*)].   Aidrn. Ctn*<-i\ufffd\ufffd__\niDcpet: \"StuJwMs, tWL, Mo-treaL\" Price, Soap\nOfatm-ru _- and {*c. Talcum 25_.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- Catjcora SlutTine Stick 25c\n-xy- THE   GREENWOOD   LEDGE   .\na mil ii __\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__?i n\"in ir ii r v liid'iiiin\nThe Greenwood Ledge\nPublished every Thursday at\nGreenwood, B.C.\n'     G. W. A. SMITH\nEditor and Proprietor\nBridesville News\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 :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   7.00\nEstray Notices       3-00\nCards of Thanks    I-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\nyour subscription is.due, and\nthat the editor would be\npleased-to have more money.\nNew Coyote Bounty\nWord has come from Victoria that\non account of the fact that\" so many\nchickens and other barnyard stock in\nvarious parts of the province have\nbeen disappearing as coyote food recently, that Attorney-General Manson\nhad a special order-in-council put\nthrough to increase from-$2 to $5 the\nbounty on coyotes. The bounty swill\nbe paid on the surrender of the pelt\nto the government officer. During the\nlast year coyotes have been unusually\nbold and have been helping themselves to whatever took their fancy, settlers have complained.\nThis -; increased bounty ought to\nprove a splendid incentive to some of\nour crack shots, who enjoy the sport\nand who will be enriched thereby.\nD\/C. McKeeY Auction\nBORN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo Mr. and Mrs. Edmunds,\na son, on June 21st.\n* *   *\nMiss Faickney, of Sidley, spent the\nweek-end in Greenwood, the guest, of\nMiss Kempston.\n* *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\nMiss Grace Kehoe went to Greenwood on Sunday to take the 1st year\nHigh School examination. Miss Kehoe\nis the pupil of Miss Faickney,. of Anarchist Mountain School. >\nThe funeral of little Alfred Gausten, who met with a fatal accident\nlast Saturday, took place on Monday at\n2.30 p.m. The pall-bearers were school\nchildren, Josie Billups, Helen Davidson, Nelson McDonald, Leonard Billups.   Many floral tributes were sent.\n* A   *\nMiss Lenora Kehoe and Miss Annie\nGausten have gone to Rock Creek to\ntake the Entrance Examinations, both\npupils from Anarchist Mountain. The\nBridesville. pupils attending the Entrance Examinations, at Rock Creek\nare: Freddy Schorn, Nelson McDonald, and Helen Davidson.\nThe selection of Greenwood men for\nthe jury empaneled for the recent fatality in Bridesville is meeting with\ndisfavor here. It is felt that men could\nbe secured- here and in this case save\nthe government the unnecessary expense of conveying jurymen ..and witnesses back and forth between Greenwood and Bridesville.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Editor's Note\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn view of the fact\nthat the provincial constable was not\navailable until Wednesday afternoon,\nalso that an interpreter and a- stenographer had to be brought from Grand\nForks, it was less expensive to hold the\ninquest in Greenwood. Jurymen on a\ncoroner's-inquest within a distance of\nthree miles do not receive any remuneration.\nD. C. McKee's Auction proved a successful one. There was a large attendance, people coming from Bridesville, Beaverdell, Penticton, and other\ndistant towns. Prices generally were\ngood, the auction realizing $900, this\nbeing all cash.\nR. Forshaw purchased the ranch as\nalso the blacksmith shop and weigh\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdscales, aivdnt'is expected that R. Forshaw, will continue the wood and coal\nbusiness lately operated by p. C. McKee. The blacksmith and carpenters'\ntools were well distributed, the purchasers securing just what they wanted at reasonable prices. There will be\nanother auction in Greenwood about\nthe: month of August, principally\nhousehold furniture, Notice will be\ngiven in due course.\nRepublic Swamps Midway\nThe Midway baseball nine met defeat at the hands of Republic by a\none-sided score on Sunday on the Midway diamond. The visitors showed\ngood team work, while the locals appeared to be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd suffering from lack of\npractice. Republic\" is now in the lead\nin the league and will be a hard team\nto beat.\nMidway plays in Orient on Sunday.\nThe Marketing Bill\nThe United Farmers will hold their\nmonthly meeting in the Farmers' Hall,\nMidway, on Saturday, July 9th, at 2\np.m. Mr. D. McPherson, the local\nmember, will be present and will give\nan address on the,marketing bill. Mr.\nPaul C. Black, of* Grand Forks, district horticulturist, will also give an\naddress on dairying. It is hoped that\nall the'! farmers in the district avill\nmake an effort to be present.\nDr. S.F, Tolmie, M.P.,\nVisits .Grand Forks\nHon. S. F. Tolmie, leader of the Conservative party in British Columbia,\nreceived a splendid reception in Grand\nForks on the occasion of his visit on\nFriday last. The Davis hall was filled to capacity and Mr. Arthur F.\nCrowe presided. Dr. Tolmie gave a\nlengthy address, reviewing the political situation, in the province, and\nwas warmly received.\nAt the conclusion of the address a\nsocial time was spent, followed by\ndancing.\nHOW THE JUNIOR RED CROSS\nTAMED A WILD BOY\n\"No man can say that he is not interested in his local- hospital or that\nhe does not need it. A thousand possibilities may send him to it tomorrow.\nAnd unless he has helped to build and\nto maintain it, -he is just as much a\ncharity patient as the man in the\nward who cannot afford to pay for\ntreatment. The difference is simply\none of degree.. Every man should eon-\ntribute to his local hospital, both as\ninsurance against sickness and as a\nthankoffering for good health.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSaturday Evening Post.\nThe whims of fashion are responsible for many business disasters. The\ncotton business has been hard hit, because the women have taken to wearing silk to a great extent and firms\nwhich formerly engaged in the manufacture of hairpins have been in many\ncases forced to the wall by reason of\nthe fact that comparatively few women now have any use for hairpins.\nThe same is true of shoe strings. Because of the change in women's head-\nwear, the ostrich farms of South 'Africa are being put out of business and\nthe birds are being slaughtered ir:\ndroves and their plumage, which once\nentered so extensively into millinery\nnow finds its way into the feather\nduster.\nLOVELY HELENE IS  SEEN WITH\nMR. MIX\nHelene Ghadwick,' one of the most\nbeautiful girls in the moving picture\ncolony, plays the leading feminine role\nin \"Hard Boiled,\" Fox Films Western\nstarring Tom Mix, which will be\nshown at the Greenwood Theatre on\nFriday, Jdne 24th. There will be no\nshow on Saturday this week.\nMiss Chadwick, cast as Marjorie\nGregg, is made the victim of a group\nof eastern crooks. Tom, appearing as\na physician, not only assumes management of a dude ranch, but proves that\nhe can out-battle a dozen thugs. He\nfights single-handed, except for the\nremarkable assistance given by the\nfaithful Tony. The cast includes\nPhyllis Haver, Emily Fitzroy, Dan\nMason, Ethel. Gray Terry, '-'Spec\"\nO'Donnell, Charles Conklin and others.\nJack Blystone directed. The scenario\nis by Charles Darnton and John Stone.'\n\"WILLIAM\" II. WOOD\n1>UYS1CIA.N AMI) SURG1CO.V\nGUUK.NWOOD\n'GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\nNotice of Application for Beer Licence ,\n_N'0'_riCl_. is hereby __iven thai ou Lin\nStli Day-of July next, llie undcrsiirncd iiil-iu\"\nlo apply lo the '-I_iiiimr Control Hoard for i\nlicence iii respect of ])i-oiiiisL-i bcinir pari of Ilu\nl.tiildiilj.' Unnwil as 111- llridesville Hotel, oi\nSlain Sttvi't.-'-.ridcsville. upon tlie lands tic\nscribed as Lot 491, Osoyoos Division of Yali\nDistrict, iu tlie Province of llriLisli Columbia\nfor tlie sale of beer by ilie l'Uiss or by llie opiy.\nbottle for consumption on lhe premises.\nDated this Ullli Day of .lime. A.D. 1927,\nSTA1) & KOY,\nApplicant!-\nMINERAL ACT-\nCertificate of Improvements.\nNOTICE\nACME MINERAL CLAIM\nSituate in the Greemvoad Mining Division ol\nYale District,\ni Where located:   Near Bridesville.\nTAKE NOTTCK lhal 1. C. AK. Shaw, ajrcul\nfor Joseph l'rinjrle, Free Miner's Certilicati\nNo. 335D, in lend, sixty days from tbe da.li\nhereof, to apply to\" the Miiiiiitr Kecorder for ;\nCertilicaleof Improvements, for the purpose nl\nobtaining a Crown (irant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, untie:\nsection S5, must be commenced before tin\nissuance of suchCerlilicale of Improvements.\nDated this 4tli day of J line. I'll'.\nTHAT splendid appearance of Dunlop\nBalloons is no guess*\nwork That rugged\nroad resistance is not\nthere by chance. That\nadequate resiliency was\nno blind selection.\nYou receive the\nbenefit\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of- thirty--\nthree years of\nhonest thinking,\ncareful planning,\njudicious experimentation when\nyou buy\nDWLOP TIRES\nto-day.\niree Years' Merit\nDUINLOP OmCIAL SERVICE DEPOTS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Greenwood Grocery, Greenwood McMynn's Store, Midway\nr     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nRusch's Garage, Rock Creek\nIn the northern part of the province\nof Quebec, in a remote paper and pulp\ncentre where there are a large number\nof foreigners among the workers, a\nteacher in one of the schools intro\nduced the Junior Red Cross in order\nto inculcate the health rules among\nher pupils. In her class ,she had a\nvery difficult pupil,\"a Russian boy of\nability but who was very ungovernable, and always in the lead of class\nmischief.' To her surprise-he at once\ntook an interest in the Junior cult, and\none day himself suggested that the\nboys of the class should start a car-,\npentry shop in which to make toys for\npoorer children. So he was given an\nempty room that was available, the\nnecessary tools, and as he was a born\nleader was left to.work.out his own\norganization. All the boys in that\nschool have now enrolled in the shop,\n- and 'f-the children are making aeroplanes, jumping jacks boats, dolls,\nships and many other toys. The carpenters themselves, acting under the\nurge supplied by Peter, have set a\nvery high standard for workmanship\nand, meantime, he himself has become\na \"tamed\" lad in the school room and\nsuch a disciplinarian among the Juniors that the teacher says \"the whole\nspirit of my school is changed with\nboth work and play moving along easily and satisfactorily.\"\nWife: \"Doesn't it seem strange\nJohn, that after all these years I've\nnever thought of a tfet name for you?\"\nHusband (meekly):-\"Yes, dear, why\nnot 'Job'?\"\nI~\nCANADIAN\nwiiliiitSi.isi\nSummer Excursion Fares\nTO EASTERN DESTINATIONS\nON SALE DAILY. MAY 22 TO SEPT. 15\nWinnipeg.!\"-. _....._$ 75.00\nToronto... ______.__.._ 118.05\nHamilton ______________ 118.05\nLondon ._;.____._._. 118.05\nQuebec z,..X................ 140.10\nSt. John..  152.20\nSt. Pauh....,,._..........   75.(50\nMinneapolis 7    75.60\n\"Duluth:.....LT............   75.00\nMANY ADDITIONAL DESTINATIONS\nASK FOR RATES FROM AND TO ANY POINT\nRoute via Main Line, or via Soo Lino, through Winnipeg or Portal\nto St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. -Marie, via Great Lakes;\nor via California at an additional fare; or good to go \\ya one of tRe\nabove routes, return another. W  \";..: * .' -. \"'[.X: i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd XX\nSee Local Asrent or Write for Details >\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\nT. 15-RETURN\nLIMIT OCT.   3\nFort-.Williani ...\n __.$ 00.00\nNiagara Falls ...\n 124.02\nOttawa\t\n  1H2.25\nMontreal\n 137.05\nMoncton \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\n 152.20\nHalifax-.-...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--.\n-_ 157.75\nChicago.._.____-\n     00.30\nNew York._._\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n 151.70\nBoston _.._\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIT..\n 157.70\nIngram Bridge, July Is\nDance in the Masonic Hall, Greenwood, in evening\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Under Auspicos of District Celebration CoumiiUec)\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Go.\nof 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\nE_8__SB!5____**E\nA. E. McDOUGALL\nContractor and Builder\nForeign and Domestic Monuments\nAsbestos' Products Co. Roofing\nLamatco Wallboard\nSHOP AT GREENWOOD\nlk\n.tf\nBox 332 Grand Forks, B.C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\nCAMP-FI\nPERMIT\nSEND YOUR\nBOOTS and SHOES\n\"''To\n;:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'<,\" :.-:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nHarry Armson, Grand Forks.\nThe 2Oth Century Shoe Refiairer\n.._. .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * -. '*.f..\nAll work and material guaranteed ,,\nWe pay postage one way. Terms cash:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm\nSYNOPSIS OF\nLID ACT AMENDMENTS\nThis year it is necessary to have a permit\nfrom some Forest Officer before any camp-\nfire may be set in any forest or woodland\nBe sure to get a permit for your camp-fire\nand follow the instructions printed on the\nback of it\nBRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST SERVICE\nPrevent Forest Fire\nYou Can Help\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVacant unreserved, surveyed Crown lands may\nbe pre-empted by British subjects over 18 years\nof aire, and by aliens on dec]ari_ig_intontion to\nbecome British subjects, conditional upon residence, occupation, and improvement for agricultural purposes. ..   >\nFull information concerning regulations regarding pre-emptions is fciven in Bulletin No. 1, Land\nSeries, \"How to Pre-empt Land,\" copies of.\nwhich can be obtained free of charge by address- .\ning the Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., or\nlo any Government Agent. \"\nRecords  will  bc granted  covering only land\nsuitable for agricultural purposes, and which is\nnot timberland,   i.e.,  carrying over 8.000 board '\nfeet per acre west of the Coast Range and 5,000\nfeci per acre east of lhat Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to be addressed to thc Land Commissioner of the Land\nRecording Division, in which the land applied for\nis situated, and are made on printed forms, copies\nof which can be obtained from the Land Commissioner,        , ,..\n1're-emptions must be occupied for five years\nand improvements made lo the value of $10 per\nacre, including clearing and cultivating at\nleast five acres, before a Crown Grant can be\nreceived.\n' For more detailed information see the Bulletin\n''How to Pre-empt Land.\" ' . -   '\nr\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwtmiriWl\nSometimes the informality\nof the spoken word\n\" is more effective\nthan a letter\n<\ufffd\ufffd\nLong Distance, please\"\nBRITISH-COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nPURCHASE\nApplications are received for purchase of\nvacant and unreserved Crown Lands, not being\ntimbeiland, for agricultural purposes; minimum\nprice for first-class (arable) land is S3 per acre,'\nand second-class (grazing) land J2.50 per acre.\nFurther information regarding purchase or lease\nof Crown iTands is given in Bulletin No. 10, Land\nSeries, \"Purchase and Lease of Crown Lands.\"\nMill, factory, or industrial sites on timber land,\nnot exceeding '10 acres, may   be purchased  or  II\nleased,   the\nstumpage,\nconditions  including   payment of\nHOMESITE LEASES\nV\nUnsurveye\"d areas' not exceeding 20 acres,\nmay be leased as homesites, conditional upon a\ndwelling-being-erected\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin-tbe-}ir3t-year,-title-|\nbeing obtainable after residence and improvo-\nment conditions are fulfilled and land has been\nsurveyed.\nLEASES\nFor grazing and industrial purposes areas not\nexceeding 0-10 acres mi>y be leased by one person ,\nor a company.\nGRAZING\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province is divided j\ninto grazing districts and the range administered,!\nunder a Grazing Commissioner. Annual grazingH\npermits arc issued based on numbers ranged, (\npriority given to established owners. Stock-'j\nowners may form associations for range manage-|\nment. Free, or partly free, permits are available for settlers, campers and travellers, up toj\nten head.\nR.T.SH   COLU\nThe Mineral Province of Western Canada\nTO THEEND OF DECEMBER, 1926\nHas produced Minerals as follows: Placer Gold, $78,018,518; Lode Gold,\n$120,972,318; Silver, $80,787,003; Lead, $100,970,412;' Copper, : $209,007,008;\nZinc, $50,512,557; Coal and Coke, $284,099,133; Structural Materials and\nMiscellaneous Minerals, $50,175,407; making its luiueial production to the\nend of 1920, show an    _\nAggregate Value of $988,108,470\nProduction for the year ending December, 1926, $67,188,842\nThe Mining Laws of this Province are more liberal, and-the fees lower, than those of   any   other\nProvince in the Dominion, or any colony in the British Empire. '.   .,   .\nMineral locations are granted to discoverers  for nominal fees.\nAbsolute Titles are obtained by developing such properties, the security of which is guaranteed\nby Crown Grants.\nFull information . together with Mining Reports and Maps, may be obtained gratis by addressing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHE HON. THE MINISTER OF MINES,\nVICTORIA, British Columbia.\nN.B.   Practically all British Columbia Mineral Properties upon which development work has\n'   been done are described in some one of the Annual Reports of the Minister of Mines.   Those considering mining investments  should!refer to such reports.   They are available without charge on\napplication to the Department of Mines, Victoria, B.C.   \ufffd\ufffd-     Reports of the Geological Survey of\nCanada,  Winch Building, Vancouver,  are  recommended as valuable sources of information.\".\nReports covering each of the six Mineral Survey Districts are published separately; and are\navailable on application.","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_06_23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0306326","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"}]}}