{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0308317":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"2f75e3b7-144c-42c0-9382-219ca45980f0","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":"2016-07-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1916-06-29","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\/1.0308317\/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":" f ,>'*-\n:**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\nfl\n**&&*\n^**'-*\ufffd\ufffdx-^r__-pij_y_j_5_j\n...^ ,.\n- f*'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHE  OLDEST  MINING  CAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nVol.   XXII.\nGREENWOOD, B. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1916\nGreenwood's   Big   Furniture  Store\nSee Our New Lines In\nMattresses, Bedsteads and General\nHouse Furnishings\nWe Have It\nSfierwin-Williams\nPaints & Stains\nTurpentine\nBoiled and kaw Oils\n7&&g\ufffd\ufffd&s&&&&&$$3&\nI Around Home .\nNo. 51\nGoods Shipped in Any Direction\nT.M.OTJLLEYftOo.l\nPnnnrr Strnot __H..RNW_V.n   R   f. Dhnnn on   i\nKalsomine\nDecotint Wall Finish\nnot hold a fair\nwas in  Prince-\nand   Grease.\nCopper Street\nrWALTER   G.   KENNEDY^\nGREENWOOD,   B.  C.\n.    * WHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL f\nI TOBACCOS, CIGARS, CONFECTIONERY, STATIONERY I\nI A Full Stock of First Class Pipes. |\nA.  L. WHITE\n(New and Second. Hand Store\n(r \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nEVERYTHING\nHas gone up in price\nEXCEPT\nMy\nBREAD   Si  CAKES\nWilliam C. Arthurs\nTHE BREAD AND CAKE BAKER\nGreenwood City Bakery\n^\nThe Midway Store for Quality Goods\n;._. This store would like to reduce the number of\nbadly\/fed people In tnis district to such a minimum\nas to make them hard to find. For a badly\/fed per\/\nson isn't getting out of life half that's in it To eat\ngood food is to bid for good health\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand to lake long\nstrides towards personal efficiency in your life's\nwork,   Paste this ad on your kitchen mirror,\nJAS. G. McMYNN. MIDWAY, B. C\nFine Custom Tailoring\nWe are still showing All Wool Fast Dye\nBlue Serges\nGuaranteed not to Fade\nGet yours before they are all\ngone\nPrices Reasonable\nW.EIson&Co\nP. BeRNS & CO.\nDealers in Fresh and Salt Meats, Fish |j\nand Poultry.     Shops in nearly all the ^\ntown.s of the Boundary and Kootenay. u\nCOPPER STREET, GREENWOOD, B.C. I\nllk2*_^33*33H__*5--\ufffd\ufffdS-__^^\nCopper St.\nChristian Science\" service will be held\nin the MEI\/LOR BLOCK on Sunday at ri\na. m. All welcome. Every Wednesday\nat 8 p. in., testimonial meetings will be\nheld m_tlie same block. Sunday School\nevery Sunday morning. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nEnglish, Swiss and American watch\nand clock repairing. All work guaranteed.\nC. A. Adeneur, opposite Windsor Hotel,\nGreenwood.\nA4$^<_hQmSm(_\ufffd\ufffd^m_;m\ufffd\ufffd.4_\ufffd\ufffd^_^_Q_^_^_*_^h_:.\ufffd\ufffd^^^\nI Greenwood Liquor \ufffd\ufffdo* Greenwoodf\nx\nX\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nX\nX\nX\nX\nt\nImporters and Dealers in\nWines, Liquors\/ Beer, and Cigars    |\nA   FULL   LINE   OF   SOFT   DRINKS\nWANTS. Etc\nFor Sale.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHolstein Bulls,\napply, Frank Thompson, Midway, B. C.\nAll political parties, cau have,\ntheir announcements, and reports\nof meetings, printed in The\nLedge by paying the usual line\nrate for this kind  of advertising.\nOffice and Warerooms adjoining the Windsor Hotel\n......_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,..rr.r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I g.   Bargain Performance\nHalcyon   Mot  Springs\nSANITARIUM\nTHE MECCA FOR RHEUMATICS\nOPEN ALL THE YEAR\nIf you suffer from muscular, inflammatory, sciatic or\nany other form of rheumatism, or from metallic poison-\n' ing of any sort don't delay. Come at once and get cured.\nMost complete and best arranged bathing establishment\non the continent. AH departments under one roof steam\nheated and electric lighted.\nRATES $12.00 to I15.00 per week.\ni Wm. Boyd, Prop.       Halcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C. *\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-t\ufffd\ufffdBCB-EO-_igecB\ufffd\ufffd)-ia>eeafl\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffdac\ufffd\ufffdatt>(8a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaMoi\nStar Theatre\nTGNIGHT\nThe Hawaiian Singers\nand Instrumentalists\nFrom   the  land of inspired musicians\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D. D.C.L., President*\nJOHN AIRD, General ManacC-r. H. V. F. JOKES. Asw't Geoeral Manager\nCAPITAL, $15,000,000    RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000\nBANKING BY MAIL\nAccounts may be opened -sti every branch of The Canadian Bank\nof Commerce to be operated by mail, and will receive the same\ncareful attention as is given to all other departments of the Bank's\nbusiness. Money maty be deposited or withdrawn in this way as\nsatisfactorily as by a personal visit to the Bank. S53\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nJ. a MULLEN Manager\nAny Seat 50c. Children 25c.\nCome Early.      No Seats Reserved\nPerformance at 8:30 sharp\nSaturday, July I\nMary Pickford\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IN'\nA Girl of Yesterday\nThis is the oiie you j-ou have waited.for\nTuesday, July 4\n\"Chimmie Fadden\nGut West\"\nThe roaring comedy sensation 6! a\nParamount Programme\nNow!  What do you think of, what\nwe have to offer?\nEvidently Cupid never heard of\nthe eight hoar working day.\nPenticton will\nthis vear.\nNick Polorcia\nton last week.\nGasoline,    Oils\nHardware WLite.\nJ. H. Kayes of Rock Creek has\njoined the 225th.\nHome-cured ham  and bacon at\nBrown's Midway.\nThe Kettle Valley railway will\nsoon have 20 engines.\nH.  C.   Kerman   has   gone  to\nEngland lor two months.\nLast  winter'53  feet of  snow\nfell at Coquahalla summit.\nMrs. J. M. Wright of Princeton was in town last week.\nThere are  several cases belore\nthe Court of Revision this week.\nViko aluminum- ware   10  per\ncent, off for cash.    A. L. W.\nA million dollar silktrain went\nthrough Greenwood last Friday.\nFishing    Tackle.     Hardware\nWhite.\nOn Sunday, the Mother Lode\ndefeated Danville at baseball, by\n3 to 2.\nMrs. Charles Norris and two\ndaughters left this week for\nAlaska.\nConductor Newman has been\nseriously ill ib the Grand Forks\nhospital.\nViko aluminum ware 15 per\ncent, off for cash in 10 piece lots.\nA. L, W.\nThe B. C. Copper Co. is now\nusing machine drills at Copper\nMountain.\nE S. H. Winn antoed to Greenwood from Rossland on Monday,\niu six hours.\nChurch ot England service\nwill be held .Sunday, July 2nd,\nat 7:30 p. m.\nHarry Bryan fell off his bicycle\nlast Friday evening, and dislocated an elbow.\nService un the Presbyterian\nChurch, Sunday, July 2nd, at\n11 a.m.    All welcome. '\nR. Todrick has gone to Vancouver to enlist in the Western\nUniversities regiment,   r\nJohn McKellar has received\nword, that his elder brother died\nin Winnipeg last week from\nBrights disease,.\nIt is now stated that trains\nover the Kettle Valley, will be\nrunning to the coast via the Hope\n\"cut-off by July 25.\nF. S. Norcross is visiting his\nold home in Michigan. During\nhis absence Pat Crane is in command at Copper Mountain.\nJim Cameron and Jack Cropley\nhave formed a partnership, and\nare operating a wagon and blacksmith shop in Kinney's oldstand.\nMiss J. I, McKinnon left for\nher home in Vancouver on Monday, after being the guest of\nMrs. Charles Norris for two\nmonths.\nThe B. C. Copper Co. is running its machinery at Copper\nMountain, with electric power\ngenerated at the cement plant at\nEast Princeton.  \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\nDentistry.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDr, Guy, of Grand\nForks, will be at the Pacific\nHotel, Greenwood, from July\n10 to July 22, prepared to execute all kinds of dentistry.\nAlex Davidson and Sutherland\nSmith have resigned their posi:\nlions with the B. C. Copper Co.,\nand will leave for the coast next\nmonth to enlist for the war.\nOwing to tbe shortened hours\nfor doing bar business, the hotel-\nmen will probably ask for a reduction in the price of their\nlicenses, which are $500 a year.\nAll who are interested in having a Fair in Greenwood this\nfall,- are requested to attend a\npublic meeting to be held in the\nRink, Friday evening, June 30,\nat eight o'clock.\nJ. P. McLeod, deputy attorney-\ngeneral, is in the hospital at Victoria, havind recently undergone\na severe surgical operation that\nwill confine him to bed for some\ntime.\nThis week 43 carloads of coke\nwill arrive in Greenwood. This\nwill enable the smelter to blow\nin the furnace that has been idle\nfor ten days owing to lack of\ncoke.\nJ. W. Bengough, famous cartoonist, humorist, and unike artist, will give a chalk-talk on\nProhibition in the Star Theatre\non Monday 3rd July, at 8 p.m.\nDon't fail id hear him. Admission free-^Collection.\nThe Kicneys residence is For\nSale. Six rooms\/ bath, basement, Frost-proof cellar, and furnace, The gardens will pay for\nthe taxes. Make us a proposition now. We are going to sell\nbefore we leave,\nThere are no vacant houses at\nDenoro. The Emma mine will\nsoon be employing 70 men.\nJohn    Ludwig,    of   Christina\nLake, caught a  gold   fish   a\"\"foot\nlong in the  lake this week.    He\nhas presented it to Bill Beach for\nhis aquarium     The fish is shaped  like  a  hass,   but is a perfect\ngold fish, nevertheless,  although\nit   is    large    enough    to   make\ntwelve     ordinary    gold    fishes.\nAs a sequence lo this event, Mr.\nBeach is now  seriously contemplating staking the lake as a gold\nprospect.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrand Forks Sun.-\nAt  the Star Theatre, tonight,\n(Thursday), The Hawaiian Singers    and    Instrumentalists    will\ngive   a  high class performance\nin music and song from  tbe land\nof inspired   musicians.     In the\nsame  theatre  on Saturday, July\n1st, the  favorite  film star, Mary\nPickford, will appear in \"A Girl\nof Yest'erdv,\" while on Tuesday,\nJuly 4th, tbe roaring comedy sensation,    \"Chimmy    Fadden   out\nWest,\" will be seen on the screen.\nNews is urgently desired of the\nwhereabouts of Sir Claud James\nRivett-Carnac Bart.    He  might\nbe going under the name of Jack\nRivett.    Was last  heard of from\nBassano,   Alta.,   six   years   ago\nprevious to whick he  was in San\nFrancisco.    In all probability he\nhas enlisted in  a cavalry regiment.    He served  in  the South\nAfrican   war   as   a \"Galloper  to\nColonel  Lucan.    Information  of\ngreat interest and a large sum of\nmonev awaits him.    Will anyone\nknowing his present whereabouts\nkindlv notify Staff-Captain Sims,\n259 Fountain  Street,   Winnipeg,\nwho will pass on the information.\n5S^SW^s^\nWestern Float\nDogs and Little Children\nLook at a dog that has a good\nhome, and especially one thafe is\nthe friend and playmate of children.\nSee how proudly he carries his\nhead, how his plumy tail waves\nlike a banner, how eagerly he joins\nin their games!\nHe brings back the ball they\nhave thrown; plunges into the\nwater and swims after sticks, or\ntoy ships that have broken cable\nand drifted beyond reach of their\nowners.\nIf there are little children, see\nbow watchful and tender he is;\ngentle as a lamb and ready to pnt\nhimself between them and any real\nor fancied danger.\nDo yon know the trne story\nabont Greyfriars Bobby, the little\nSkye terrier of Edinburgh who\nstuck close to his master's grave\nfor fourteen years?\nTrench Owls\nThe following extract is from a\nletter from an English officer at\nthe fronfe, quoted in the London\nTimes: '^When X was up iu fehe\ntrenches recently I saw numerous\nowls. They used feo flap about\namong the trenches at night, quite\nregardless of shells and suipers,\ngetting a fine harvest of rats and\nmice, with which Jthe trenches literally swarm. They were the big\nbrown owls. The}' always disappear two hours before dawn. I\nnever could make out where to,\nbut I suppose to woods behind tlie\nlines.\"\nThe Editor's Big Day\nThe editor of a Kansas paper\nsays that he picked up a Winchester rifle recently and started op\nfehe street to deliver the weapon to\nits owner. The delinquent subscribers got it into their heads that\nhe was on the war path, and everyone he met insisted on paying all\nthey owed. One man wiped ont a\ndebt of ten years standing. Ou\nretorniDg to the office, lie found a\nload of hay, 11 bushels of corn, 10\nbushels of potatoes, a load of wood\nand a barrel Of turnips.\nIron loses its magnetic properties when heated to redness,  bat\nregains them when cooled to black\nness. 1\nSkagway, Alaska, is now a dry\ntown.\nA soap factory will be built in\nVancouver.\nRecruiting sergeants are not\nwanted at Anyox.\nOats are being shipped from\nFort Fraser to Alaska.\nHay is being shipped from Bulk-\nley Valley to Juneau, Alaska.\nIn Porfe Alberni the police are\nkept busy chasing stray cattle.\nProspectors might use fehe aeroplane to advantage in the Slocan.\nA new drugstore in Vanderhoof\ncelebrated its opening with a dance.\nLast year 27,000,000 p&uuds of\nhalibut were landed afe B. C. porfes.\nSpring salmon sells for a lifefele\nover seven cents a pound in Rupe.\nAlberta goes dry next week, and\nthe cow camps will lose their red\nlining.\nThere are 141 telephones in\nTrail, and 250 in Rossland. Nelson has 628.\nJust now there are not many\ncausa nl ties reported from the\nGranby front.\nThe hotel liquor licenses in Fernie havo been reduced from $400\nto \ufffd\ufffd300 a year.\nThe hotelmen in Prince Ruperfe\nwant their licenses reduced from\nSl,000ayear to $300.\nGeorge Hallam was killed afe\nMission while unloading a scow of\nrock for the wagon road.\nJohn Ryder died afe Cheam aged\nS4 years. He drove team on the\nCariboo road in early days.\nBanks in Vancouver pay a city\nlicense of $800 a year. Their\nbranches in the city pay $150.\nWhen conditions are normal the\nMaritime provinces of Canada ship\nyearly 40,000 cases of lobsters to\nFrance.\nThe lessee of the Main hotel in\nVancouver was fined 850, because\nhe sold a bottle of whiskey feo a\nsoldier on Sunday.\nAt Whitehorse, Charles Gravel\nwas fined $100, an d six months afe\nhard labor in the police barracks\nfor using seditious language.\nOn July 1st a large number of\nredskins will assemble afe Vanderhoof. , They should come to the\nBoundary. Whiskey is scarce in\nVanderhoof.\nThe Imperial Oil Co. imports\nlarge quantities of crude petroleum\nfrom Peru. It does nofe get any\nfrom Calgary.\nH. E. Porter died at the headwaters of the Stewart river, and\nwas buried in Dawson. He was\nfehe locator of the Pueblo mine,\nnear Whifeehorse.\nThe Duncan Leader has quit\nusing green paper owing feo the\nfact that dyes from Germany are\nout of the market. Canada should\nmake its own dyes.\nThe Railway Commission meets\nin Nelson on July 5.    Good chance j\nto have the two railways at Midway connected  by a spur.    Public\nmen should get busy.\nWm. Humphrey died in Victoria\nthis month, aged 81 years. He\ncame to Victoria in 1858. In\nearly days he led a party of prospectors into the Omineca country.\nThis month Joe Firth while\nassisting to survey some copper\nclaims near Quilchena was sun-\nstruck and died in a few hours.\nThis is a rare cause of death in\nB. C.\nThe telephone was conceived in\nBrantford, Ontario, and born in\nBoston, Mass. In 1874 Professor\nBoll devised the telephone in\nBrantford, which he made at Boston in IS75.\nThe cigar and fruit stores in\nVancouver must be closed on Sundays. An effort will be made in\nthat city to stop the selling of\ntiewnpapers on Sunday. Freedom\nis getting scarce at the coast.\nThis year in Canada 11,500,000\nacres are planted in wheat. The\nnumber of acres planted in oats is\na little les-s. Less acreage has been\nplanted this year in field crops,\nwith the exception of hay, clover\nand alfalfa.\nThis month the Rev. James\nTurner was reported to be dying\nin California. Tbe old-timers in\nKootenay will regret to learn fehat\nthis old pioneer Methodist parson\nis cashing in. He was very popular with the men who blazed the\ntrails in B. C.\nFernie has suffered from high\nwater. This cifey of calamity has\nsuffered from nearly everything,\nand its citizens have the sympathy\nof the world. There mnst be a\nfew good people in Fernie, or it\nwould have been destroyed before\nthis time. Through the war of\nelements and its inhabitants, it has\na closer resemblance to Dante's\nInferno than any other town in\nCanada.\nB. C. Mines\nPaint and gypsum are plentiful\nin the Similkameen.\nMachinery is now on the ground\nfor fehe Donohoe mines at Stomp\nlake.\nWork is being pushed on fehe\nNorman copper claims at Jervis\nInlet.\nTbe tailings from fehe Standard\nmill afe Silverton are allowed to go\ninto Slocan lake.\nThere, are 25 men working at\nfehe Aberdeen near Merritt. Jim\nKelly is foreman.\nFour mines in the Yokon, near\nWhifeehorse are shipping daily 350\ntons of copper ore.\nIfe is reported that Alaska men\nare buying a big free milling proposition near Houston.\nThe mines in the Coeur d' Alene\ndistrict, Idaho, are shipping 12000\ntons of zinc ore a month.\nThe Iron Mask at Kamloops, is\nshipping a carload of concentrates\ndaily feo the Greenwood smelter.\nThe streams in B. C. can develop 3,000,000 horse power. Less\nthan 10 per cent, of this power is\nbeing used.\nNext month motor tracks will\nbe nsed, to haul ore from the\nUnion mine in Franklin camp to\nLynch creek.\nIn the Yukon the Conrad, a\ngalena proposition onj Bennett lake\nis being re-opened by J. C. Harper\nand his partner.\nSince Jim. Wardner packed ont\nthe first ore in 1892, the Slocan\nbas produced $30,000,000 worth\nof lead silver and zinc.\nThe Silver Standard near Hazelton is shipping ore to Trail. This\nsummer it will ship 1000 tons of\nlow grade ore to Tacoma.\nThe Bluebell mine and mill at\nRiondel is closed down, owing to\nits water supply being damaged by\nthe floods.\nIfe is reported that Mika Stan-\nston has bonded his copper property in Summit camp, a few\nmiles from Tulameen, to the Consolidated for $25,000.\nIn the Bridge Biver district\nthree stamp mills are rnnning, and\nan electric light plant has been installed at the Pioneer mine. 0.\nL. Copp has gone to tbe war.\nOre is being hauled by motor\ntracks from the copper mine afe\nLoon Lake, Wash., to tbe railway\nnear there for shipment to the\nGreenwood smelter.\nThe Bullwhacker of Butte, Montana, will ship a large tonnage* to\nGreenwood, if satisfactory freight\nrates can be obtained. It has been\nshipping to Tacoma.\nIn Porcupine, Ontario, the\nDome and Hollinger gold minee\nhave already made $20,000,000,\nand still $34,000,000 worth of ore\nin eight. It costs $2 50 a ton to\nmine ore worth $6.20 a ton.\nIn the Sonth Belt at Rossland a\nrich body of ore has been struck on\nthe Deer Park. The l\ufffd\ufffdwl on the\nsnrfacflie ten feet wide and runs\ntowards the Richmond through\nother claims. The Consolidated\nwill do ranch diamond drilling on\nand aronnd the Deer Park.\nSeveral galena properties are being worked in Summit camp, not\nfar from Tulameen. Upon one of\nthese a Spokane company hue already expended $60,000 in development, and shipping a ill begin\nwhen the wagon road is finished.\nAbout $10,000 is now available\nfor the completion of the\nroad in Summit camp.\n*\\ THE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nTHE LEDGE\n$2 a year iu Cauatla,   and   $2.50   in  the\nUnited States.\nR. T. LOWEftY.\nEditor and Financier\nADVERTISING RATES\nDelinquent Co-Owner Notices $25.00\nCoal and Oil  Notices     6.00\nApplication Liquor Licenses      5.00\nTransfer Liquor Licenses    7.50\nI,stray Notices 3-00\nCards of Thanks     1.00\nCertificale of Improvement  10.00\n(Where more than one claim appears in notice, $2.50 for eacb\/ad-\nrlitional claim.)\nAll other legal advertising, 12 cents a\nline first insertion, and 8 cents a line for\neach subsequent insertion, nonpariel\nmeasurement.\nVentilate Yourself\nThe blue cross means that\nyour subscription is due, and\nthat the editor would be pleased\nto have more money.\nDo nob throw the gaff.   It may\nbe; ouif a boomerang.\n.So.mk become tyrants when\nclot-hod with authority, while\nothers go crazy.\nWiii_x men and nations observe\nthe Golden Rule, war and troubles\nwiii cease to exist.\nLitti-r village fights and squab-\nbl 1 .-.-appear small these days, when\nlinod up against the troubles\n_.io:!_u. Verdun.\nA.? a rule people think too little\nof what they say about others,\nai.<l too much about what others\nsay regarding themselves.\nIx all our observations of the\nanimal kingdom, we have never\nKeen a giraffe smoking a cigarette,\n.lor an elephant open his trunk and\nt.'-.l-.o out a bottle of booze.\nIs this province the law compels\nmi- chants to placard eggs, Fresh\nor Cold Storage. Each Chinese\nor preserved egg exposed for sale\nmust be marked. Reform in the\nright direction.\nHe who defames, boycotts and\nwillingly injures his neighbor without cause, should not weep when\nhe is handed a dose of the same\nstuff. He should swallow it'without weeping, and change his ways\nin the future.\n. All oyer the province the hotel-\nmen are getting their licenses reduced in price, owing to shortened\nhours. This is but fair, bnt hard\non some municipalities, that depend largely upon the booze traffic\nto pay municipal expenses.\nIt is just 40 years Bince Custer\nand his soldiers met the Indiahe\non the Little Big Horn in Montana,\nand were completely wiped out,\nnot one living to tell the tale.\nThe first news of this disaster, was\ngiven to the world by a man\nnow Jiving in Greenwood. Custer\nwas called Yellow Hair by the\nIndisiis.' He was a noted fighter,\nbut too rash to command soldiers\nwaning with redskins.\nMany people ventilate their\nrooms and neglect to ventilate\nthemselves. What I mean by self-\nventilation is breathing in fresh\nair, pure thoughts, and doing uplifting actions.\nSitting all days within doors is\nunhealthy. Each person to be\nhealthful and beautiful must get\nout into the open and walk. Even\nsitting in a carriage or motor and\nriding for hours in the air is far\nbetter than remaining in doors\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nbut it is far more healthful to\nwalk.\nOur feet and legs were given us\nto use, not only for going from\nroom to room, but for getting from\nplace to place, for stirring up our\nblood and making us active.\nVentilate your body by walking.\nA great German physician told me\nthat people should walk around\ntheir rooms when alone absolutely\nnnde for half an hour each day.\nHe advises mothers to put absolutely no night clothes upon their\nbabies.\nHis theory is that they get better ventilation of the bodies by\nsleeping absolutely nude, under\nlight but warm bed clothes.\nThis theory is in absolute practice in hundreds of cases with\nwonderful results of rosy cheeks\nand healthy bodies.\nVentilate your minds. Open\ntho windows of your thoughts,\ndrive out all jealousies, envy, and\nrevenge. They are the impure\nmicrobes which destroy your pnre\nthoughts of generosity, liberality,\nand gratitude.\nFill your brain cells full of\nfresh thoughts, of honest impulse.\nCrowd out fear of disease, anger,\nresentment, with fresh thoughts of\nlove, charity and faith.\nYou will by ventilating yonr\nmind find that you are cleansed\nand refreshed and ready to absorb\nfresh thoughts and store them in\nclean brain cells.\nRemember: Resentment and fear\nare the most dangerous microbes\nthat clog the brain.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLillian Russell. \t\n\"Fellow dropped into the oflice\nthe other day and ordered the\npaper, and we were pleased. Said\nit was a good paper, and we were\nglad. Said it was more than\nworth the money to any man of\nintelligence, and we were tickled.\nSaid it was the mainstay of the\ntown, and were supertickled. Said\nit was the greatest booster and the\nmost reliiable townbuilder and developer in the whole community,\naud we yelled with joy. Paid for\nhis paper, and\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwe slid gently to\nthe floor in blissful unconsciousness. Nature had reached its\nlimit.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEx.\nAn elderly lady on her first railway trip noticed the communication cord overhead, and was told\nby a mischievous boy that it was\nto ring when she wanted anything\nto eat. Shortly afterwards the old\nlady reached up with her umbrella\nand gave it a vigorous pull. The\nwhistle sounded, the breaks wen\nput together sharply in tbedriver'f-\nefforts to stop. Presently the Con\ncame rushing   along   and   asked:\n\"Who pulled the cord?\" \"I did,\"\nreplied the old lady meekly.\"\n\"Well, what do you want?\" snapped the official impatiently. \"You\nmay bring me some ham sandwiches and a cup of tea if you will.\nIt is not recorded what the Con\nsaid or did and a veil is drawn\nover the boy.\nMa yd a\nTungsten\nLamps\n15 to 40 Watt Lamps 40c each\n60 Watt Lamps - 5oc each\n100 Watt Lamps,  $100 each\nNitrogen  Lamps\n60 Watts    -. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   $1,10 each\n100    \"     ' \/   -    -     1,50  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n200   \"       \/   \/   \ufffd\ufffd    2.50 \"\nAll lamps sold by us are tested before\nleaving the factory\nGreenwood City Waterworks Company\nEverything Electrical\nMOTHER LODE STI\nCO., LT'D.\nLeaves Mother Lode\n9.30 a. m. 6.30 p. m.\nLeaves Greenwood .\n2.oo p. m.\n8.30 p. m.\nSaturday last stage leaves Mother\nLode 6 p. tn. Returning, leaves\nGreenwood ro p. m.\nOFFICE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPACIFIC HOTEL\nT__:_ other day a bishop said God\nhad .1 purpose in this war, and\ncould give the victory to Whom He\n\\vi.-_H_.]. The bishop thinks that\nit is better for the war to continue\nuntil the nations are humbled, and\ncome to Jesus in dead earnest. He\nbelieves that the non-observance\nof the principles of Christianity is\nreally the cause of the great war.\nIf alt nations followed these principles it is sure thafe war wonld\ncea.-;e, but if que nation refnBed,\nit would Xplace the* others in a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstrange position. They would lose\ntheir cheeks in a short time.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    :;:;\nLUMBER FOR SALE\nFlooring,  Shiplap,  Rustic, Casing, Dimension, and all kinds\nof lumber.\nMARK CHRISTENSEN & GO,\nBOUNDARY FALLS\nThere are said to be two periods\nin the average man,a life when he\ndoesn't understand a woman. The\ntwo periods are before and after\nmarriage.\nPACIFIC\nDominion Day\nJuly 1st\nFair and One Third\nTo And From All Stations\nOn Sale July 29th to July 1st\nGood To Return July 3rd\nTickets from   Agents or Pursers\nConductors will issne tickets from\nFlag Stations.\ni. S. CARTER. D. P. A., Nelson- B. C.\n$;\nDR. A. MILLOY\nDENTIST\nAll   the   latest  methods  in   high-class\nDentistry.\nLOO BUILDING\nCorner Abbott & Hastings Streets.\nVANCOUVER,   -   -   -   B.C.\nJ. K. CAMERON,\nLeading Tailor of the Kootenays.\nKASLO      B.C\nFloat\nFloat is not a periodical.\nIt is a book containing 86\nillustrations all told, and\nis filled with sketches and\nstories of western life. It\ntells how a gambler cashed\nin after the flush days of\nSandon ; how it rained in\nNew Denver long after\nNoah was dead; how a\nparson took a drink at\nBear Lake in early days ;\nhow InsM-ie was dealt in\nKaslo in '93; how the\nsaloon man outprayed the\nwomen in Kalamazoo, and\ngraphically depicts the\nroamings of a western\neditor among the tender-\nfeet in the cent belt. It\ncontains the early history\nof Nelson and a romance\nof the Silver King mine.\nIn it are printed three\nwestern poems, and dozens of articles too numerous to mention. Send for\none before it is too late.\nThe price is 25 cents,\npostpaid to any part of the\nworld. Address all let-\n;; ters to\nR. T. Lowery\nGREENWOOD, B. C.\nThe pleasing tang of its\nmellowfruitflavors alone\nwas always sufficient for\nyou to prefer\nADAMS'\nTUTTIFRDTTI\nGUM j\nBut now the outer\nwrapper of each package is a valuable coupon\nexplaining how you may\nsecure any of a delightful\nvariety  of  pleasing\nRegimental and College\nShields. Choose Tutti Frntti\nnow, not only for its appealing flavor or the safety of\nits new, convenient package,\nbut also for the beaufol shields\nits coupons will bring yon.\nAsk your dealer for any of\nthe five mellow Savors.\nORIGINATORS\nWESTERN - - HOTELS.\nTULAMEEN HOTEL\nPripceton, B.  C,  is the   headquarters   for   miners,   investors\nand railroad men.   A fine location and everything first-class\nJ. N. MacPHERSON, Proprietor.\nTHE   KASLO    HOTKI.\nKa9lo,  B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   is a   comfortable\nhome for all who travel to that\ncity     Under new management.\nWALSH & HAYDON, Proprietors.\nChick Food\nCracked Com\nCrushed Barley\n1 Oyster Shell\nS Greenwood Feed Store\nSynopsis of Coal Mining Regulations.\n\ufffd\ufffd^OAL mining rights of the Dominion\n^ in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories and in a portion of British\nColumbia, may be leased for a term of\ntwenty-one years at an annual rental of\n$1 an acre. Not more than 2,560 acres\nwill be leased to one applicant\nApplication for a lease must be made\nby the applicant in person to the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of the district inwhich the\nrights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land mnst be\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, and in unsurveyed\nterritory the tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied\nby a fee of $5 which will be refunded if\nthe rights applied for are not available\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid on the merchantable output of the\nmine at the rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the \"mine shall\nfurnish the Agent wth sworn returns\naccounting for the full quantity of merchantable coal mined and pay the royalty\nthereon: If the coal mining rights are\nnot being operated, such returns should\nbe furnished at least once a year.\nThe lease will include the coal mining\nrights' only, but the lessee may be permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may be considered necessary for the working of the mine at the\nrate of $10.00 an acre.\nFor full information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.  B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Unauthorized publication of\nthis advertisement will not be paid for.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n68782\nTHE COLDWATER HOTEL\nMerritt, B. C. The leading hotel\nin Merritt Hot and cold water in\nevery room. Steam heated throughout. Large sample rooms. Sales-\nmens headquarters.\nMURDOCH JVlclNTYRE.rProprletor.\nj Gasoline 33 cents a Gallon\n! On Tap at All Hours\ni   _\t\ni        All Summer Shoes at Cost\nSTORE OPEN FROM 7 A. M. TO 10 P. M.\nHOTEL PRINCETON\nPrinceton, B.C., now completed on the\nsite of the old Great Northern. Only\nbrick hotel in Similkameen. A first\nclass house,\nSwanson & Broomfield. Props.\nRIVERVIEW  FARM\nFERRY, WASH.\n.:~:..x\ufffd\ufffd:..:..:~:<kx^^^\nALGOMA HOTEL\nDeadwood, B. C. This hotel is\nwithin easy distance of Greenwood\nand provides a comfortable home\nfor travellers. The bar has the\nbest of wines, liquors and cigars.\nJAMES HENDERSON Proprietor\nRIVERSIDE HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C. This is one of\nthe oldest hotels in the Kettle Valley. Excellent accommodation for\nall travellers.\nS. T. LARSEN. Proprietor.\nHe Knob Hill Hotel\nPHOENIX.\nOne of the largest hotels in\nthe city.   Beautiful location,\nfine rooms and tasty meals.\nA. O. JOHNSON\nPROP.\nBUSINESS CARDS.\nASSAYBR\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayer and\nChemist, Box biio8, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Copper\n$1 each. Gold-Silver, (single assay)\n$1.00. Goid-Silver (duplicate assay)\nJ.1.50. Silver-Lead $1.50 Silver-Lead-\nZinc $3.00. Charges for oth\ufffd\ufffd>r metals etc\non application.\nTRANSFER OF LICENSE\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend\nto apply at the next sitting of the Board\nof License Commissioners of the City of\nPhoenix for a transfer of tie Liquor\nLicense held by me for the Brooklyn\nHotel to Messrs Bush & Marshall.\nPhoenix, B. C.June 19th, 1016.\n0. D. BUSH.\nAnnual Meeting\nThe Annual General Meeting of the\nGreenwood City Waterworks Co., will be\nheld, in the Company's office at Greenwood on Wednesday the 19th day of July\n1916 at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, for\nthe transaction of the general business\nof the company and the election of a\nBoard of Directors.\nDated June 27th, 1916.\nE. C.WALTERS,\nSec-Treas.\n\"WATER ACT. \\9U\"\nBEI'ORK THB BQARD OF INVESTIGATION\nWHEREAS application* are belt... constantly made to the Board for tbe ezteaslon of the\nperiods fixed for filing plans or for constructing1 works or for patting, to beneficial use\nwater held under water records issued before\nthe 12 March 1909. Among the reasons alleged\nin snpport of such applications are the absence\noverseas of persons Voiding water rights and\nthe financial conditions existing by reason of\nthe war.\nAN 0. WHEREAS Uis found necessary to\ninquire into the general principles on which\nany extension should be granted and into the\nobjections raised to the granting of an extension.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the\nBoard will hold meetings at tbe following times\nand places for tho above purposes:\nEnderby,\nVernon, Thursday,  13tn\nPeachtand, Saturdav. 15tb\nPenticton, Monday, 17th\nGreenwood, Tuesday, IRtb\nGrand Forks, Thursday, 20th\nNelson, Friday,       2lst\nCranbrook,      Monday,    24th\nAt these meetings lists of tbe water records\non each stream in the vicinity and the plana!\nprepared for the useof the Board will b\ufffd\ufffdopen\nfor inspection.\nA pplications for extension of time and objections thereto may be forwarded by letter addressed to the Chairman, Board of Investigation, Water Bights Branch. Victoria, B. C., or\nmay be filed at any of the above meetiiigs.\nDated at Victoria, 3. C-, this 23rd day of\nJune, 19K..\nForthe Board of Investigatioa,\nJ. F. A-RMSTRONS,\nChairman.\nWednesday, 12th July 1916,2 \ufffd\ufffd.m.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\"\"      \"   *'   2:30 p.m.\n' 10 a.m.\n' 10 a.n_.\n' 3 p.m.\n10am.\n' 10 __.\ufffd\ufffd__.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   10a.m.\nFRED A. STARKEY,\nNELSON, B. C.\nMINING\nBROKER\nPROSPECTS   BOUGHT   AND    SOLD\nPHONE   13\nAuto    and  Horse   Stages\nLeave    Greenwood    Twice\nDaily to Meet Spokane and\nOroville Trains\nAutos For Hire.   The Finest\nTurnouts in the Boundary.\nLight and Heavy Draying\nPalace   Livery  Anfl Stage\nGREENWOOOD. EC-\nF. C. BUCKLESS, Proprietor.\nMINERAL ACT\nCertificate of Itoproyements.\n. NOTICE:v ::y:.\nNumber 11 Mineral Claim, situate in the Greenwood Mining Division  of  Yale   District.\nWhere located:   In Central Camp.\nTAKE   NOTICE that   I,  Wellesley Fraser.\nFree  Miner's     Certificate    No.    69622    B\nintend,  60 days  from date  hereof,  to apply\nto the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for   the  purpose   of  obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under\nSection 85,  must  be commenced  before   the\nIssuance of such Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this 28th day of April, A. D. 1916.\nWEI.LESf.EY FRASER.\nWindsor\nTHOROUGHLY  RENOVATED AND SPECIALLY\nADAPTED FOR COMMERCIAL TRADE\nTHE WINDSOR HOTEL is or_e of the oesfc famished\nhotels in the west. It is located in the heart of Greenwood and within easy reach of all the financial and\ncommercial institutions of the Copper Metropolis.\nHeated with Steam and Lit by Electricity\nCommodious sample rooms. The bar is replete with\nall modern beverages and the meals are the best. Booms\nreseived by telegraph.\nnelson. B.C.\nThe only op4o\/date Hotel in the interior.   First-class\nin every respect\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nX'fr 4* \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 4* 4* if* 4* 4* 4* 4*4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4**1* 4* _K\nI Cbe Bume Botel f\nHot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\neach room.\nROOMS WITH PRIVA TEBA THS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THE BIST\nFirst Class Bar and Barber Shop\n15 FREE SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Healed; Electric lighted.\nRATES $1.00 per day and up; European Plan.\nBus Meets all Trains and Boats.\nst\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*f*,i^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd'^*^kf**^*l,,f,*^*J^'l,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,l, \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\ufffdf*'^\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department'\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper.and Lead Ores\nTRAII. BRAND PIG LEAD, BLUESTONE AND SPELTER\nWATER   NOTICE\n(DIVERSION AND USB)\nTAKE NOTICE that I, D. R. Mc-\nElmon, whose address is Eholt, B. C,\nwill apply for a licence to take and use\nwater out of the north branch of Eholt\ncreek which flows southerly to Eholt\ncreek, thence westerly to Boundary\nCreek. The water will be diverted from\nthe stream about 900 feet north of and\n300 feet west of the southeast corner of\nLot 4098, and will be used for domestic\nand garden irrigation purposes. The\nquantity applied for isone tenth (1-10) of\none (1) cubic foot per second and to be\nused on southern portion of Lot 4098.\nA copy of this notice and an application pursuant thereto and to tlie \"Water\nAct, 1914,\" will be filed in the office of\nthe Water Recorder at Grand Forks,\nB. C. Objections to the application may\nbe filed with the said Water Recorder or\nwith the Comptroller of Water Rights,\nParliament Buildings, Victoria, B. C,\nwithin thirty days after the first appearance of this notice in a local newspaper.\nThe date of the first publication of this\nnotice is Jnne 22nd, 1916.\nD. R. McELMON, Eholt, B. C\nCITY OF PHOENIX\nPUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that\nthe first Sitting of the annual Court of\nRevision for revising, correcting and\nhearing complaints against the assessment as made by the assessor for the year\n1916 will be held at the City Hall. Phoenix, B C, on Wednesday, July 12th,\n19.6 at 8 p. m.\nDated at Phoenix, B.C., June ist, 191$.\nW. X. PERKINS,\nCity Clerk.\nHotel Brooklyn\nThe Only First Class and Up\/to'Date\nHotel in Phoenix. New from cellar\nto roof, Best Sample Rooms in the\nBoundary. Opposite Great Northern\nDepot.   X   X   Modern Bathrooms\nSTEAM HEATED,\nMarshall & Bush,\nELECTRIC LIGHTED\nPhoenix, B.C.\nLAKE  STUDIO\nGRAND FORKS\nWILL   BE  IN  GREENWOOD\nJULY 14th, 15th, and 16th\nUp-to-Date and Best Appointed Studio\nin the Boundary\nAmateur  Finishing   Beautifully   Done,\nBest   Line of Portrait Frame Pictures in\nthe Boundary.\nJ. L. COLES, agent for amateur finishing and enlarging\nAgent for Ensign Cameras and Supplies\nP.   J.   LAI1E,\nWinnipeg Ave.. Grand Forks\nB    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSMOKE\nImperator and Kootenay Standard\nCigars.   Made by\nJ. C THELD. fc Co.. NELS0K\noooooooooooooooooooooooooo\nT.   THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEANED\nPRESSED AND REPAIRED\nTAILOR -GREENWOOD\nQ**o>+oomoo#ca9\ufffd\ufffdooaat>ooaoo6o\nDterffro-t-tbe Factory Wfl-eeonanser\nB_r.PA__.C_tl. POST\nat wholesale prices    to advertise oar\nBrands.\nErerr cIgarwe make is Uwolotelr guaranteed filled with _re\ufffd\ufffdaioe Havana*\nFiller\nBozo So's-B.C. foil weight, five\ninches long $3.50.\nBox      50's O.S   4  inches  long,\nConchas, $3 00.\nBote    'Brilh-htea\" Clear Havana\nWtapper, full lwrigtat, 5 inches\nlong, so S $5-00.\nSend money order, or certified\ncheqne.   DoCnot send money un-\nless Ttgiatered.\nReferences:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdR. G. DUNN * CO.\nwitiEK a itolz.\nr.B.C.\n*\nffl\n*\n*\n+\n*\n*\n*\n1\n*\n. 1\n*\n1\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\nIf\n*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"' I\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n'I\n1\n*\n*\ni\n*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>,\n#\n!j\n*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;i'","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_1916_06_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0308317","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. : R.T. Lowery","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 Ledge","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}