{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0308386":{"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":"1914-12-03","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\/1.0308386\/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":" .t\nTHE   OLDEST   MIKING   CAMP   NEWSPAPER   IN   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\n^c _\nOrr<   ._\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%)\n-f\nVol.   XXI.\nGREENWOOD, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THURSDAY,  DECEMBER 3.  1914\nNo. 21\nwamssuuBBb\n1\nGreenwood's   Big   Furniture  Store\nGHKlSTMAS BOX\nClearing out Sale of\nFRAME PICTURES\nFrom December 1 to January l\/i, ii.ll Ira mo pictures will be sold\nFrom 1-3 to 1-2 off Regular Prices.\nT.\nOpposite Postoffice.\n3___{fS__-__B\n. (HJLLEY & Co.\n.    ;.. GREENWOOD, B. C. Phone 27\nrWALTER   G.   KENNEDY\nGREENWOOD,   B.   G.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nTOBACCOS,CIGARS, CONFECTIONERY, STATIONERY f\n|   A Full Stock of First Class Pipes.        Pipe Repairs  \ufffd\ufffd\nI a  Specialty. jl\n^jj i    m \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> -i-iHli-i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdimiiHi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdumililHIHIHI.H'l. I I h-Mllllll-llllllllllii tlUli\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Economists can\/learn a practical lesson by buying\ngoods at this 'store. Our Groceries, Provisions'\nBoots, Shoes, Hardware, Dry Goods, etc., are kept\non the move, and do not have to get rusty.\nDrop in and see what a nimble dollar will do in a\n,    live store.\nJAS. &. MoMYNN, MIDWAY, B.C.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nIf\nf\nIt\nS:\nDealers in.-Presli-and Salt Meats, Fish\naud Poiiltfy\/    Shops..in'nearly all,the       '\ntowns oE^the. Boundary and Kootenay.\nCOPPER STREET, GREENWOOD, B.C.\n^_s5>i_\ufffd\ufffdS->\nLate Clayton Casselman\nThe sad news of the death of\nClayton Casselman by drowning,\nhas lately been confirmed iu a letter from tlie government agent at\nPrince Rupert, B.C., to his brother\nJ. C. Casselman, of Boundary\nFalls. The first news to reach his\nrelatives here of the unhappy occurence, was conveyed in a letter\nwritten b}r Andy Shields, and\nwhich was later confirmed by the\nagent at'Prince Rupert, to tho effect that on October first of thiH\nyear, \"Casselman\" whilst n\ufffd\ufffdi his\nway to Prince Kupert, fell from a\nlaunch and was drowned in the\nwaters of the' Skeena River. A\nmost sorrowful act of bravery was\nperformed by an Indian, who, also\nlost, his life by jumping overboard\nto the rescue, and knowing the\ndangerous nature of tho river at\nthe time.\nClayton Casselman was well\nknown in the Boundary district,\nhaving been employed as black\nsmith for a number of years at the\nold Dominion Copper Co., at\nBoundary Falls, where lie made\nmany friends amongst the smelter-\nmen. Besides leaving a number of\nbrothers and sisters to ; mourn his\nuntimely death, the. saddest of all\nall will be his aged mother and\nfather who are old settler's of the\nTJ. E. Loyalist stock, of Dundas\ncounty, Ontario.\nI\nv\nAround Home\nNorcross was id town last j\nF. S\nwee...\nAlex Robinson\nweek.\nCharles Davey died in Portland\nlast week.\nwas in town last\nHarry Johns is spending' a\n'days in the city.\n\/?\n=^\nORDER YOUR\nXmas Cake\nEARLY\nWilliam C. Arthurs\nTHE .BREAD -'&?'CAKE.___AKER\n'.Vienna' Bakery. Greenwood !_\/\new\ndc-\n>fc.\nBank of Montreal\nr     ....       ,     v  .-,  ,KSTAT..L1SHE1> 1817\nCAPITAL AUTHORIZED S25.000.000.\nCapital, paid up, $16,000,000        Rest, $16,000,000.\nUNDIVIDED PROFITS,  tl,04C,S17.SO\nTotal Assets (October 1913) $242.263.219,60.\nPresident: II. V. lUKRRDtTn, Esq. ;W.\nGeneral .Malinger : Sir Frederick Will ianis-Taylor\nBranches in London, EngM c.t.J!,,e.u <_!!,\ufffd\ufffd.:...} New York, Chicago\nBuy and Sell Sterling Exchange and Cable Transfers.     Grant Commercial'and\n'.  , .       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .    Travellers'Credits, available in any part of the world. ,.-\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\n1 ill*.rust. Allowed\n\/     Current. J?;kt;<;\ufffd\ufffd,\nGreenwood JBrancli   -  C. B. Winter, Mgr.\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O,\nALEXANDER LAIRD. General Manager\nLL.D-, D.C.L.. President\nJOHN AIRD, Ass't General Manager\nCAPITAL, $15,000,000    RESERVE FUND, $13,500,000\nSAVINGS BANK ACCOUNTS\nInterest at tha current rate is allowed on all deposits of $1 'and\nupwards. Careful attention is given to every account. Small accounts\nare welcomed.    Accounts may be opened and operated by mail.\nAccounts may be opened in the names of two or more persons, withdrawals to be made by any on* of them or by the survivor. S21\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nA.  H, MARCON,  Manager,\nOYERGOATS\nThe present cold liven in gs  are\nbut gentle reminders that\nThe Worst is Yet to Come\nOrder   yours   early    aria\navoid the Christmas rush.\n$18, $20, $22, $25 andiip\nto $45.\nOtta Wirth is now in   tlie\nten tion camp at Vernon.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWauled to Rent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA piano.\nApply The Ledge.\nGrand Forks reorganized its\nhockey club last week.\nLight and heavy sleighs for\nsale.    C. Kinney, Greenwood.\nThere will be a turkey and\ngoose shoot in Midway on December 21.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Matthews returned last week from their visit\nto Grand Forks.\nThe stage at Franklin Camp\nmeets the train at Lynch Creek\nou Wednesdays.\nJames Pr est ley has joihed 'the\nGrand Forks sharpshooters, He\nis a South African- veteran.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Two carloads of material arrived at the smelter last week,;-from\nthe Victoria and Eureka mines.\nButtercups were gathered in\nGrand Forks last week. If .a few\nmore meal tickets can be found\nthat city will soon be a hummer.\nDr. Guy, dentist, of Grand\nForks will be at the Pacific hotel\nGreenwood, from Dec. 7 to 10,\nprepared to do all ikinds ot dentistry.\n. Judge Williams, formerly ol\nPhoenix, is now living in\"St.\nCatherines, Ont, He recently\nmade, a trip to Winnipeg to attend\nthe funeral of his father.\nAt the Star Theatre on Friday\nnight the latest war pictures will\nbe shown, also a two reel feature\nfi.lm; A good comedy picture\nis also oh the program.\nDavicl Oxley, of F^holt^dug\nsonie radishes in his garden, on\nMonday. , Since May last he, has\nhad lettuce and radishes every\nday.    Who can beat this?\nTbe sweet innocent children\nwere playing <. house. Mamma\nand papa scarcely less innocent,\nwere   watching   them.      I'll   be\nA. E. McKay has been oppoint--\ned delegate to attend the annual\nconvention of the B. C. Poultry\nAssociation to be held in Vancouver or Victoria.\n.Robert G. Hargreaves, of the\nB. C. Copper Co., who has been\ngazetted Lieutenant, is leaving\nGreenwood tomorrow (Thursday)\nfor Toronto, where he is detailed\nfor duty with the Divisional Ammunition Column at that point.\nSpeaking of advertising: There\nis no business that cannot be increased and benefitted by advertising. No class of advertising\npays as well as a well written\nnewspaper ad. There is no work\nyou could do what would bring\nyou as great returns as to use\nthirty minutes time each day in\nthe study of advertising, if you\nare in business: The great trouble with most advertisers in a\ncountry town is that they\nwrite an\/ad invoicing their stock\nin trade and expect by letting it\nstand week after week in tbe\ncountrj' newspaper to get direct\nreturns from it.\nSchool Report.\nW.Elson&Co\nFor Sale\nioo bogs, all ages. Y'ounjr thoroughbred Berkshire'pigs. Apply to N. I.use,\nEholt.\npapa,\" said\nlittle\nBob!\nHIGH SCHOOL\nPerfect attendance during month\nof November: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Clara Kruegar,\nCecilia Mcintosh, William Owen,\nThomas Taylor,'Wilson Pyper.\n1st. DIVISION\nNellie Axam, Adolph Krueger,\nRoy Lane, Georgina Lee, Josephine McE.ee, Vera Parker, Phyl-\nles Phillips, Ethel Royce, Ruby\nSmith, Eric Winter, Arthur Bales.\ndivision ii\nDaisy Axam, Ruth Axam, Marguerite Boyer, ReneOBoyer, Ernest\nCarlson, Bessie Cuddeford, May\nGibson, Sarah Jordan, Joe Klin-\nosky, James Lane, Roddy McLeod,\nEthel Parker. G. Phillips, Ralph\nPond, Sanford Pond, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGertrude\nChindler. \ufffd\ufffd..;\n-    DIVISION Til\nMabel Axam,' Selma Benson,\nGee Chew, Frank Chindler, Ruth\nDicker, Gordon Jenks, Robt Jenks,\nWilliam>Pl.illip8,. Ena Potts,, Ivor\nPotts, Hilda Smith, John Wilson,\nNellie Chindler, Charles Jordon.\nWithout an Enemy.,\nWestern Float!\nWilfrid Laurier is  7?>   years\nsupply\nopened  in\n\ufffd\ufffd__K>\n...ir.kly  stops   cmiclis.\n..ia threat and lungs.\ncolds,\nand   liealf\n25 cents\n00_-000000<H>->00<KH>00\ufffd\ufffd<XK><J-0<> &\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWTOOOOOOOO\nTHE BIG\nFok Sat_i.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Two Koken hydraulic barber chairs. Apply to\nSid Storer, Greenwood.\nChristian Science service will\nbe held in the Oddfellows Hall on\nSunday at LL a.m. All welcome.\nOn the the third Friday of each\nmonth at 8 p. m. testimonial\nmeetings will be held in the\nsame hall. Sunday school every\nSunday morning.\n.Vancouver aud Boundary Creek Developing and Mining Co. Limited.\n%\nROCK CREEK\nHAS A FINE LINE OF\nJol.at-.aii, Winesap,   Spit\/.onbur\nBlue Forma ins.\nkr>\n(.rimes   GoMen,\nPrices vary according to varieties |\nT.R.HANSON\nROCK  CREEK %\n<&00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<K>\ufffd\ufffd0<KKKX>\ufffd\ufffd0\ufffd\ufffd<K>0<KKK>ao>   )CHJOO<><>000<X>000<><KK>0<><KK--<>0<>\n-Notice is lierebj' given that tile Annual\ngeneral meeting of the Shareholders of\nthis Company will be held at the Oflice\nof,the Company, Robert Wood's residence\nGreenwood, B. C, on Monday, the 4th\ntHy of Ja.111.1ry. 19:5 al the hour of 3\no'ciirek in the afternoon.\nDated this .5th day of November, ly 14.\n:;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f M. J.'..I. WOOD, Secretary:\nI'll be\nthe new nurse,\" broke in ERie,\n\"and when you try to kiss me\nBobbie, I'll scratch your face and\nsay 'I'll tell mamma.    Tableau.\nForeign missionaries will be\npleased to hear that the King of\nthe Cannibal islands, who was\nwoiit to broil them on, coals in\nhis evening fire, has passed in his\nutensils. His last feast was an\nold editor who had turned missionary. The ex-editor's cheek proved\n.0 be indigestible and for the first\ntime in-his-life41.e king succumbed to the force of circumstances.\nA proposal to hold a public\nChristmas Tree for all the children of the city is to be discussed\nat the meeting of the Women's\nInstitute to be held on Friday\nnext at 3.30 p.m. in the Red Cross\nHall (opposite New Post' Oflice)\nand all women of the city are\ncordially invited to attend, to\nassist in making arrangements.\nIt is desired to make the treat\nnon-sectarian and all interested\niu children are requested to be\npresent.\nThe gratifying announcement\nhas been made that tbe Granby\nsmel'ter at Grand Forks and the\nmines at Phoenix are to resume\noperations this week, and preparations are now under way with\nthis object in view. The men\nhave agreed to accept a reduction\nin wages of 25 per cent until the\nprice of copper advances, believing, no doubt, that half a loaf is\nbetter than none at all. The\nwhole Boundary will be benefited\nand we believe it will not be long\nere business will again be booming.\nWe notice that people attending a public entertainment iu the\nhall have no hesitoncy in taking\nj front seats, in fact there is a gen-\njeral rush for them, and usually\nj'pav a higher price for the privii-\njege. We also notice in church\ni the custom is  right   the  reverse,.\nHeaven help the man who imagines he can dodge enemies by\ntrying to please everybody. If\nsuch an individual ever succeeded\nwe should be glad of it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot that\nwe believe in a man going\nthrough the world trying to find\nbeams to knock and thump his\npoor head against, disputing\nevery man's opinion,, fighting and\nelbowing, and crowding all who\ndiffer from him. That again is\nanother extreme. Other people\nhave a right to their opinion, so'\nhave you; dont fall into the error\nof supposing they will respect you\nless for maintaining it, or re-\nspect youL\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmore^fpr_. lurning yo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdur\ncoat every day to match the color\nof theirs. Wear your own colors\nin spite of wind or weather,\nstorm or sunshine. It costs the\nvacillating and irresolute ten\ntimes the trouble to wind and\nshuffle and twist, that it does\nhonest, manly independence to\nstand its ground.\nCITY COUNCIL\nSir\nold.\nPenticton has a plentiful\nof vags.\nThe  skating   season\nFernie last month.\nFresh eggs are scarce at 50 cents\na dozen in Cranbrook.\nThe seat of war should soon need\na few patches.\nFighting Joe Martin is willing to\nbe mayor of Vancouver.\nJohn Quinu, a barber, died suddenly in Chilliwack.\nAt Howser, Harry Hicks dug (iO\nspuds out of one hill.\nThe Latter Day Saints have\nmade a location in Creston.\nJohn Bradley died in Chase last\nmonth, aged 82 years.\n\" Ellen Terry, the great actress,\nwas in B.C. last week.\nAn Italian newspaper will soon\nbe printed in Fernie.'\nIn October the police payroll iu\nCranbrook amounted to $375.\nA. S. Farris, of Chase, is opening a dry goods store in  Rossland.\nThis year the Yukon river at\nDawson froze up ou November  15.\nCheap methods bring cheap results, even in patriotic concerts.\nAt Rossland the Josie mine has\nadded 25 men to its working force.\nPort Alberni is to have a new\nshingle factory that will employ 16\nmen.\nRevelstoke has cut dowu ite\npolice force by discharging two\nconstables.\nThomas Burley and Miss Mary\nBanks were married in Silverton\nlast week.\nThe Last Chance mine at Republic is shipping to the Tacoma\nsmelter.\nThe grading is nearly finished\non the Hope short line of the Kettle Valley railway.\nThe big fire at Fort George laBt\nmonth burned two' hotels and\neleven stores and offices.\nMexicaiu-mouey is being circulated in this province. It is worth\n50 cents on the dollar.\nAlready there are plenty in Nelson. J)ressed hogs are being\nshipped to that city from Creston. \"\nMany good towns are spoiled by\na few dwarfed and miserable souls\ntrying to put it into their pocket.\nIn the prairie districts the O.P.\nR. should give tlieir old -r&ihvaj'\nto the fanners, who can use them\nfor fuei.\nRecently in one night there were\n17 men in the lockup at .Quesnel.\nMost' of them had beeu arrested\nfor gambling.\nIn the Slocan the t forces have\nbeeu reduced at the 'Hewitt and\nStandard mines, but Silverton still\nhas a meal ticket.\nCK>0000<><>00<X>CK><K><>0<><X>00<><>0\nI    WAR NOTES   j\n,00O(K>O<>0<XX><X><MX>O0<K)<-KKKKX)\nWe do not think people in Toronto or other places within easy\nreach of the United States, border\nfeel at all uneasy regarding raids\nfrom Germans there. The secret\nservice men of both countries are\nj watching for possible developments\nand any suspicious gathering\nwould soon get to the ears of the\nAmerican authorities.\nBritish naval losses in the war\ndo not amount to more than five\nthousand men. The army has lost\nto date about seventy-five thousand men. Britain's power on the\nsea is a safeguard for the lives of\nthe men in the navy.\nGeneral von Stenger is badly\nwounded. Stenger is the general\nwho ordered that no prisoners be\ntaken. All British or French captured must be \"disposed of.\"\nThe movement \"on to Paris\" is\nis now under way, but it is by the\nFrench government at Bordeaux.\nThe delusion that the abolition\nof armament means the abolition\nof war is now voiced by President\nJordan, the eminent educator. It\nis pointed out that in 1861 the\nUnited. States was practically without armament, and yet there followed the most destructive civil\nwar iu history.\nNobody with the exception of a\nfew deluded South Americans supposes that the Munroe , doctrine\nwould protect any country in this\nhemisphere that violates neutrality.\nNor will the sentimeDt of the people of the United States support\nany South American country in\nassisting Germany.\nmot   on    Monday\nThe   council\nevening.\nMr. Cummins addressed council\nre lire alarm system and will give\nfull particulars and prices at the\nnext meeting\nThe council granted free water\nto the sk..t.ing and curling rink.\nM. D. White offered $10 for the\nbuildiug on lot 8, block 14, map 21\nLaid over until uext meeting,\nTheGP.R. were offered a ilat\nrate of S20 a month for water.\nThe following accounts were ordered to.be paid; McArthur & Co.,\n?3S; R. T. Lowery S2.\nThe chief of the. lire department\nwas instructer to test the fire\nalarm pystem every Thursday afternoon by ringing in an alarm.\nTenders for renting the city farm\nwere received from J. Williamson,\nF. Jenks and W. A. Thompson.\nXo action will be taken until the\nclerk receives further particulars\nre clearing ladd,\nThe by-law providing for the re\nBy the time the Dominion Government's plans for adding to the\nforces under training in Canada\nare carried out, this country will\nhave about a hundred thousand\nmen under artus* , We^shall _liave\na respectable standing army that\nsix months ago would have been\ndeemed an impossibility.\nThe question of the duration of\nthe war is now being decided in\nPoland. If the Russians succeed\nin driving back the Germans sorties toward Warsaw, they will be\nable to press so powerfully on the\nwhole of. the eastern front of Germany that the German people will\nsee that the game is up.\nThe distant mail order business\nin Chiiliwack is dying owing to the\nfact someof the 'merchants\" have\nlearned how to advertise.\nEdgar Miner dropped dead last\nweek on his homestead near Mc-\nMurdo. He was S6 years old and\na veteran of the American war.\nOwing to the foot and month\nembargo, J. P. Flood had to drive\n(55 steers from Curlew to Orient, in\norder to ship them to Spokane.\nIn new Denver last month James\nDraper and Miss Alice Walker\nwere married afc the residence of\nMr. and Mr?. Palma Angiignon.\nIn Lillooet the sidewalks have\nbeen extended. Some of the citizens still keep to the road when\ngoing home late at night. There\nis more leeway.\n.Near Penticton an old lady, Mrs.\nFeldtmau, fell and broke a leg\nwhile walking near her residence.\nN\"o one was near at tbe time. She\ncrawled back to the house and\nblew a horn until assistance arrived.\nSo far the editor of the Creston\nReview has not received a roast of\nvenisou this year. What more\ndoes he want. His subscribers\nhave loaded him up with wood and\nspuds, and now he is hollering for\ndeer moat.    Try Pat Burns.\nThe Penticton Herald has been\nenlarged to tea pages. It has a\ntwo page ad from a local store.\nThat town will sail right along in\nspite of hard times beeause its\nbusiness men are hustlers, and do\nnot sit around whining about hard j.\ntimes.    They go after business and \\ J-\"\nThe Marquis of Anglessey got\nleave of absence from his regiment\nat the front, arid returned to London to get a couple of khaki coats,\nhis own having been torn by shrapnel. There is an old saying that\ndandies and fops are ever good\nfighters.\nAn American university professor has explained that German\n\"kultur\" means something very\ndifferent from our culture. We\nhad suspected as much.\nWith an additional tax upon\nbeer, England may not so well deserve her name as the \"tight little\nisland.\"\nGreece is borrowing money from\nBritain, which probably means that\nshe is borrowing a bayonet for use\nupon the Turks.\nPro-German writers in the Unt-\nted States are now beginning to\nsuggest peace ideas. They have\nread the writing on the wall, of\nwhich a very important word is\nthe huge war loan of Great Britain.\nIt is to be noted that any firing\nheard is always \"heavy firing \"\nThis is a ieal war.\nIt has been decided to give thiB\nyear's Nobel Peace Prize, valued\nat 840,000 to the Belgians. It is\nto be hoped that the presentation\nwill be delayed until after the war,\nfor fear the Kaiser might requisition it.\nI'ductiou   of   retail   liquor licenses\nCorfJOration of tne City of Greenwood I everybody crowds into  the  back) from 8800   to   8400   a year;  aud\n  j seats ana if there are any  empty j wholesale liquor licenses from S300  ge* Jt.\npews they   arc   always  between ho S200 was read three .times,  and',    Three Turks  were  recently\nthe next j rested in Coleman as   prisoners  of j\neguiar meeting, Uee.   14. I war.    They were engaged insolic--\ntheir charms in having to  bound I ......_  Iiting money for an  orphanage  fori\nover empty   pews   to   reach   the |.   __. ,    ... . I the Turkish children.    The  editor\nCOURT OF REVISION.\nPublic notice is hereby given that on !\nthe 10th day of December next, the |\nCourt of Revision lor the purpose of cor- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nreeling ami revi&injr the vo.trrs' list of|\nthe Municipality ol the City of liree.i-.j\nwood for the ye.-ir 1915, will sit at the;\nMunicipal offices in the saiil city, .it the j\nhour ot 10.30 3.111. (local time.) i\nG. 15.TAVLOK, . j\nCi(v CU-rV j\nGrvt-auu*\/J-, I!.C, _Vuv. 2$, ivM- I\nl__>\ufffd\ufffd-. ..--.j .-.\ufffd\ufffd_ -n.-.,-^-, uti\ufffd\ufffdc-u j _t> ^.-i\/u \ufffd\ufffdv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1 caw uuietr , tin\nthe preacher and people, and the'will be finally passed at 1\nglad tidings of salvation lose half I regular meeting. Dec.  14.\nThe suggestion that Britain went\ninto this war in order   to capture\nermany\/s   markets   is   about as\n! reasonable as to ascribe the  same\nar\" j motive to Belgium.\nscripture. \"The lowest pi a re br^t j    Tbe W*J BOBie P\ufffd\ufffd>pl\ufffd\ufffd get around\nin order to be invited hight-i.\"      ' ao<>^\ufffd\ufffder *e to run *\ufffd\ufffdver him.\nin  South. Africa\nup.    Five Mars\nThe   rebellion\nhas beeu broken\naudience.    Why   this   should  be!     With the bank man it is more   \ufffd\ufffd j of the Bulletin savs that  the  only of British policy, with its principle*\nthe custom is not exactly clear to ! matter of figures than it u\ufffd\ufffd  of   dol- j -rafE that is oklerT thau thl>  Tnrk. oI BeM government, have done more\nus. unless in the   latter  instance ; ,anS Ush orphanage business is that men- *\" South Africa than  the  Gfrmau\nposition   is   taken   accord in \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:   to |    _ . j tinned in the Bible, where one man  p\ufffd\ufffdJicy of centralized authority   has\n_..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. * -\" \" *   * \" '    liirtb- accomplished in Alsaee-Lorraine in\n' half a century.\npuehen\ufffd\ufffdd another ont of\nright,\nhis\nSSI\n1\nill THE   LEDGE,   GREENWOOD,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA.\nTHE LEDGE    ]\n' a year in Canada,  and   $2.50   in the\nUnited States.\nR. T. LOWERY.\nEditor ani Financier.\nChisana Gold.\nThe  war\nAnanias.\nfailed    to    get\nCot out the square,  and take\nmore oxygen.\n\" The war in Europe will clean up\na job lot of crown princes and useless national bacteria.\nHis soldiers may get the iron\ncross, but the Kaiser is sure to get\nthe double cross.\nW-iBX all else fails, Kaifler Bill\ncould make his beer and pretzels\nby doing a vaudeville Btunt in\nAmerica.\nNo city amounts to much that is\nfilled with business men who are\ntoo poor, Btingy or ignorant to advertise.\nThkur are more land speculators\nin B.C. than farmers. That is\nwhy there is so much adamant in\nthese times.\nThe Banner says that Graven-\nhurst can support a volunteer\ncorpse. Back east that should be\ndead easy.\nThe Allies are slowly cutting the\ncancer of militarism from the face\nof Europe. It hurts but time will\ncure the pain.\nExtremes meet. In Canada\nthousands of men are out of work,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhile in Norway it is impossible to\nget men to work on the railways.\nOne half of the war is in Europe\nand the other half in our minds.\nDrive fear and imagination from\nyour mental stope and business will\nget better.\nThe Mormons believe in Adam\nas God. They do not follow hiB\nexample. Adam did not have ^a\nplurality of wives, but then, his\nchances were limited.\nThe Allies have received reinforcements and will soon smoke\nout the German?. A United States\nfirm has presented the boys at the\nfront with millions of cigarette...\nRussia has cut out the boose absolutely, and is now the moBfc sober\nnation in the world. Other nations\nwill have to follow suit if they wish\nto keep pace with a nation of non-\ndrinkers.\n\"We have plenty of railroads in\nB.C. Let us build more big summer hotels, and make this province\na greater Switzerland. \"We have\nthe scenery and climate awaiting\nthe coming of millions. Let us\nadvertise and make millions.\nMany merchants are like ostriches. They put in a stock of\ngoods, and think all the world\nknows ife because they do. The\nostrich buries his head in the sand,\nand thinks that nobody can see\nhim. Do not be an ostrich. Advertise.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_.- ,._..,\t\nTimes i.re bard in Switzerland\nand some of fehe people have had to\neat prize chickens worth 81000\neach. In some places cows are\nused to pack baggage to and from\nthe railway depots. In herding\ngoats and harvesting their crops\nthe Swiss have not yet used the\naeroplane.\nSome people can only see the\npoor through a telescope, whilst\noften in the shadow of our homes,\nsome needy soul is trying to live\nupon scenery, busted hopes, and\nthe sweat of a cookhouse window.\nCharity should stay at home, until\nit is strong enough to ramble amid\ndistant scenes.\nFor war use an agent of the British government has bought 10,-\n000,000 railway ties in Alabama,\nwhile in Canada thousands of men\ncannot find work making ties or\nanything else. Perhaps the British\nagent never heard of Canada, or\npreferred for financial reasons to\ndeal in the United States. Patrio\ntic consistency! Thou art radium.\nBilly Williams aud Charley Fog-\nelberg got in from Chisana recently\nvia Coffee. Williams, old-time\nYukon musher and miner, says\naccording to The Dawson Daily\nNews;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"We were nine days coming\ndown with horses. All work had\nBhut down for the season when we\nleft but that of Hamshaw, on No.\n4, Bonanza, and McKay aud McLennan, on No. 11.\n' 'The output of the camp for the\nseason will range from $200,000 to\n$250,000. Hamshaw will have 30\nmen working this winter, and\nthere probably will be 150 to 200\nmen in the camp. It is expected\nthat the benches will be prospected\nthoroughly. The pay on No. 1\nSkookum ran as high as $93 a pan,\nand out of nine pans the lowest\nwas $43. Of course, such was not\nthe average.\n\"The best pay averaged four ft.\nwide, while in places it was 1G ft.\nwide. The paystreak seemed to\nrun straight back along the gulch.\nSome think it will turn south into\nthe hill.\n\"I expect to be here until the\nthe river freezes, and then to go\nback' to gChisa_ia. I believe the\nroad houses along the Dawsou-Chis-\nana trail by way of White River\nwill be open at most places. I\nknow they are trying to keep open\nat the Boundary, Snag, Horsefelt,\nMouth-O-White and even not open\nthe cabins will bo there, affording\ngood shelter.''\nThere's a Fight to the Fore\nCome   all   ye   O'Connoll's!   Come\nhither O'Shea,\nLafferty,    Rafferty,    Hagan    and\nFlynn,\nHark ye! the bugles is startiu'   to\nta play\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHogarty,     Grogerty    Kelly    aud\nQ,uinn,\nThim  English   has   blundered  in\ntrouble agin!\nThey're helpless as childer in matters of war\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nExcipt for   the IriBh   what   wars\nwould they win?\nBut England be damned\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhere's a\nlight to the fore!\nRedheaded Ratigan! Burke! Come\naway!\nHere's the O'Toole that is trouble's\nown twin!\nCome all ye McCools, steppin' warlike and gay!\nWhelan and  Phelan  and   Roouey\nand Glynn,\nNolan and  Dolan,   ye   two fisted\nmini\nSure, its a shame   to  be sheddiu'\nour gore\nFor the Saxon bulcheens that have\nharried our kin\nBut England be damned\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd here's a\nfight to the forel\nCome all ye O'Briens! Come hither\nO'Dea!\nHere's the O'Dowd with his battle-field grin!\nRomp along Riley, the divil's to\npay\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe cannons is makin' a hell roar-\nin' din!\nAn' its no privut war\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdanny wan\ncan get in!\nOuld hypocrite England's in trouble\nonce more\nAnd faith, we're  the   fools to be\nsaving her skin\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBufe England be damned\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhere's a\nfight to the fore!\nTerry, the trumpets called out for\nus thin!\nHarry, me lad, we're the pride of\nthe corps!\n(TJs Irish! for Egnland, and never\nSinn Fein!)\nBut England by damned\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhere'B a\nfight to the fore!\nNew York Sun.\nIt is a well known fact that the\nAllies in Flanders are receiving a\nlot of plum puddings. This is\nhighly contraband of war, and may\ncause a serious loss of life. The\nGermans value plum puddings\nmore than they do the \"Iron Cross\"\nand will make every effort to capture the cache before Chrirtmae.\nAt last they have something worth\nfighting for.\nWhen the old farmer remarked:\n\"I see where the allies have attacked fehe Germans in the flank,\"\nhis wife who was sitting by knitting\nreplied; \"I'm glad of it. I alios\ndid say that the kaiser needed a\ngood spanking.\"\n\"I heard him behind tbe door\npleading for just one. They must\nbe engaged.\"\n\"Naw, they're just married. It\nwas a dollar he was pleading for.\"\n\"Jimmy, yer missed it not seein'\nde game dis afternoon.\" \"De boss\nwouldn't let me off.\" Why didn't\nyer work tha old gag on him?\"\n\"'Cause I'm savin up my grandmother for one of the decidin'\ngames in the fall.\"\nBrann on War.\nAbout 20 years ago Brann wrote\nthe following about war:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nUnless all signs fail, the world is\non the eve of a war such as was\nnever known in all the mighty\ncycles of human history. Lucky\nindeed will it be if the 20th contury\nis not born amid the shock of universal battle. Is our boasted civilization breaking down beneath its\nown ponderous weight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe rotting\nprops aud pillars unable to sustain\nthe gilded roof? Are the prophecies of Scripture about to be fulfilled\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe world rushing headlong\nto the final catastrophe? A mur-\nderouB mania hath everywhere\nseized upon the minds of men. The\npulse of the race is beating the reveille; the soul of the world is\nsounding \"boots and saddles.\"\nSavagery is reasserting itself\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe\nChristian nations are further than\never before from that age of gold.\nPeace? There is no peace\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwar\nis inevitable. The ostrich may\navoid seeing the approach of the\nfierce simoon by hiding his head in\ntho Band, but can not stay its onward march. The craze for slaughter, the lust for blood, is abroad iu\nthe land. The stars are evil, and\nAte, ranging hot from hell, plants\nher burning feet on every brow.\nFor years the brute passions of\nman have had no outlet\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda prolonged peace hath become that\ngood oiistom which doth corrupt,\nthe world. A new generation hath\narisen in Europe and America\nwhich knows naught of th<$ horrors\nof war, but is intoxicated by its\nglory. Its superfluous energy\nmust find expression, its pent up\npassions are ready for explosion.\nIt is all aweary these piping times\nof peace\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwildly eager for the glorious pomp and circumstance of\nwar.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe bullet's mad hiss aud\nthe crash of steel. Civilized man\nis but an educated savage\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsooner\nor later his natural ferocity will\ndemand its pound of flesh.\nSwam too Long.\nThe attorneys for the prosecution and defense had been allowed\nfifteen minutes each to argue the\ncase. The attorney for the defense\nhad \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcommenced his argument with\nan allusion to the swimming hole\nof his boyhood days. He told in\nflowery oratory of the balmy air,\nthe singing birds, the joy of youth,\nthe delights of the cool water. And\nin the midst of ife he was interrupted by the drawling voice of the\njudge. \"Come out, Chawncy,\" he\nsaid, \"and put on your clothes.\nYour fifteeu minutes are up.\"\nThe mail order house does the\nbusiness because it tells the people\nwhat it has to sell and what price\nit asks. The local merchant who\ndoes not advertise simply takes\nchances on an occasional call for\ncertain goods. In the meantime\nthe mail order house gets the business. Advertise in your local paper and prosper.\nWillie\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPaw, is a drawing room\na place where the artist works?\nPaw\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo. my son.    A drawing\nroom is the space partitioned off in\na dentists's office.\nTo man, money is like a train\nrunning through a tunnel. Itgoes\nin at one end and out at the other\nand leaves nothing.\nASSAY ER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Assayer and\nChemist, Bos B1108, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGold, Silver, Lead or Copper\n$1 each. Gold-Silver, or Silver-Lead,\n$1.50. Prices for other metals: Coal,\nCement, Fireclay analyses ou application. The largest custom assay office in\nBritish Columbia.\nOR. A. MILI-XT*\nDKNTIST\nAll   the   latest  methods   in   high-class\nDentistry.\nLOO BUILDING\nComer Ablvolt & Hastings Streets.\nVANCOUVER,   -   -   -   B.C.\nCANADIAN\nWinter Excursion Rates\nFrom all Kootenay Points\nTO\nAll Stations in\nOntario, Quebec, Maritime Provinces\nand Great Britain\nFIBST CLASS, ROUND TRIP, 90 DAY LIMIT\nTickets to Great Britain Limited to Five Months\nTICKETS, BERTH, RESERVATIONS; DETAILS    ^\nor write J. S. CARTER,\nDistrict Passenger Agent\nFrom J. McPHERSON,\nAgent\nGREENWOOD.\nNELSON. B.C.\nOUR\n1915 CATALOGUE\nWhich has just been Distributed\nWill aid you in making your selection of\nChristmas Gifts. Write for this- book if one\nhas not already reached you.\nSignet Rings\nNote the fine range ot Signet Rings on page 11\nand our assortment of Ebony, Silver and\nFrench Ivory Toiletware from pages 45 to  53\ninclusive,\nHENRY  BIRKS  &  SONS, LIMITED\nJEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS\nGeo. E Trorey, Man, Dir, VANCOUVER, B. C,\nI Windsor Hotel\nOKE\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nImperator and Kootenav Standard\nCigars.    Made bv\nJ. C. THELIN & Co., NELSON\nOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOfl\niT.   THOMAS\nCLOTHES CLEAHED\nPRESSED AND REPAIRED\nTAILOR - GREENWOOD\nOO*\ufffd\ufffdK><XKKK>00<>0OO<>0O0<K>0<>00\n<K\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd><SM>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfr\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mi C^^^fr^*****************\nTEMPERANCE\nis all right if shorn of humbuggery.\nToo much water drinking is just\nas injurious as too much liquor or\nanything else.\nOUR PURE WINES\nAND LIQUORS\nare medicinal if not abused. Every\nhousehold should have a moderate\nsupply of pure wines or liquors in\nthe closet for emergency\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeither\nunexpected visitors or sudden illness, when a drop of pure liquor\nin time may forestall all necessity\nforidrugs.\nereetiwooa Dquor Company, Importers, Greenwood, B. g.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.:..:..:\ufffd\ufffdx..>.:.<\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd._\"X<._-x\nV.\ns*\nV.\n%\nfc-\n<*\n5A\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nSTAY AT\njj.jj.j-jPjj.j^jg.jj.jPjPjPj-jy.jj.jf.jj,   jPj^trjPjPjififsfififfifififfrif a-\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\nfc\ntbe Strathcona Rote!\nWHEN IN NELSON\nUnder new management, JAMES &ARSHAIX. Prop\nNelson's best located and most popular hotel.    Rooms with\nprivate baths, steam heat in every room.\nCommercial Rates Given.,        1 Best Sample Rooms in Nelson\nBest attention given to tourist and Family Trade,\nHotel Brooklyn\nThe Only First Class and Up-t<vDate\nHotel in Phoenix, New from cellar\nto roof. Best Sample rooms in the\nBoundary, Opposite Great Northern\nDepot,   X   X   Modern Bathrooms\nSTEAM HEATED,\nO; D, Bush, Prop,\nELECTRIC LIGHTED\nPhoenix, B, C\nNotice to Delinquent Co Owner.\nTo J. W. Nelson, or to any person or\npersons to whom you may have tran-\nferred your interests, take notice that I,\nthe undersigned co-owner with you in\nthe Standard Fraction \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMineral claim,\nsituated on Wallace Mountain, about four\nmiles from Beaverdell, in the Greenwood\nMining Division of Yale-Cariboo district,\nprovince of British Columbia, have done\nthe required amount of work on the\nabove mentioned claims for the years\n1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, iorr, 1812, 1913,\nand 4914 in order to hold the same under\nsection 24 of the Mineral Act, and il\nwithin 90 days of the publication of this\nnotice you fail or refuse to contribute,\nJ300, your portion of such expenditure,\ntogether with the costs of this advertise\nment, your interest in the said mineral\nclaim will become the property of the\nundersigned under section 4 of the Mineral Act Amendment Act of 1900.\nDated at Greenwood,  B.C.   this iotli\nday of September, 1914.\nW. H. RAMBO,\nCo-Owner.\nMINERAL ACT\nCertiiicate of Improvements.\nNOTICE\nHidcleu Treasure Mineral Claim, situate in the\nGreenwood Mining- Division of Yale District\nWhere  located:   In Smith's Camp.\nTAKE NOTICE  that   I,   William Edward\nMcArthur\nFree Miner's Certiiicate No. 68986 B\nintend, 60 days Iron, date hereof, to apply\nto the M.ninf? Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, tinder\nSection 85, must be commenced before the\nissuance of such Certificate of.lmprorejnents-\nDated this 14th. day of Nover-itery'A. D. 1914.\nWILLIAM':EDWARD McARTHUR\nThe   family   remedy:, for   Coughs   and  Colds\nSlv.c>-. costs so  little  and does   so much!\nSynopsis of Coal Mining Regulations.\n\ufffd\ufffd\"*OAI. mining rights of the Dominion.\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^ in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories and in a portion of British\nColumbia, may be leased for a j.erm o(\ntwenty-one years at an annual rental of\n$1 an acre. Not more than 2,560 acres\nwill be leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lease must be made\nby the applicant in person to the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of the district in which the\nrights applied for are sitnated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must be\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, and in unsurveyed\nterritory the tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied\nby a fee of $5 which will be refunded il\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 with 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, bnt 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\ufffdUnauthorized publication of this\nadvertisement will .not be paid for.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd08782\nADVERTISE IN I LEI\n0\nTHOROUGHLY   RENOVATED AND SPECIALLY\nADAPTED FOR COMMERCIAL TRADE\nTHE WINDSOR HOTEL is one of the Best furnished\nhotels in the west. It is located in the heart of Greenwood and within easy reach of all the ficancial-'and\ncommercial institutions of the Copper Metropolis.\nHeated with Steam and Lit by Electricity\nCommodious sample rooms. The]|bar is replete with\nal) modern beverages and the meals are the best. Rooms\nreseived by telegraph.\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX\nX'\n<i*-\ufffd\ufffdd<H&<>44\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-<\ufffd\ufffdMfr.:M.M&<.<M^\n^4\ufffd\ufffd4*4<^^^4.\ufffd\ufffd^^4.*^4. $4\ufffd\ufffd4\ufffd\ufffd4<4\ufffd\ufffd4'4'4>4'\ufffd\ufffd$<\ufffd\ufffd}>4tK\nCbe Fnmic fiotel\nnelson. B.C.\nThe only up-'tovdate Hotel in the interior,\nin every respect.\nFirst-class\nCENTRALLY LOCATED\nHot and Cold Water; Steam Heat and Telephone in\neach room.\nROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS.\nCUISINE AND SERVICE THE BEST\nFirst Class Bar and Barber Shop\n15 FREE SAMPLE ROOMS\nSteam Heated; Electric Lighted.\nRATES $1.00 per day and up; European Plan.\n. Bus Meets all Trains and Boats.\n*\nHOTEL PRINCETON\nPrinceton, B.C., now completed on the\nsite of the old Great Northern. Only\nbrick hotel iu Similkameeu. A first\nclass house*\nSwanson & Broomfield, Props.\nTHK   KASEO   DOIKL\nRaslo, B. C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd is a comfortable\nhome for ali who travel to that\ncity .--.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nJ, W. COCKLE,! Prop.\nlU-IDKSV.U-Ll-    HOTBL,\nBridesville,   B. C.   This  hotel   is\nwithin easy reach of all the leading\nBoundary towns and the centre oi\n. a fine farming district.\n.    THOMAS; DONALD,   Proprietor.\nARLINGTON HOTEL\nTrail, B. C.--This hotel has been\nthoroughly renovated. It is heated\nby steam, and has hot and cold\nwater in all rooms. A pleasant\nhome for all who travel.\nJAMES WILLIAMSON, Proprietor\nTHE SIMILKAMEEN HOTEL\nPr'nicetou. This liotel is new, comfortable\nwell-furnished, a.nd is close to theijp.ilway\ndepot. Modern accommodation and sample rooms.   - -\nSUMMERS & WARDLE, Proprietors\nRIVERSIDE HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C.' This is one of\nthepldest^hotels in the Kettle Valley. ~J_.^eiieWaccbmi-'c^tic_'fbr''\nall travellers.\nS.aT. LARSEN, Proprietor.\nALGOMAHOTEL\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\nTULAMEEN HOTEL\nPrinceton,  B.  C,  is the   head-\nquarters   for   miners,   investors\nand railroad men.'   A fine location and everything first-class\nK.RKPATRICK & COULTHARD, Proprietors.\nROCK CREEK HOTEL\nRock Creek, B. C. This hotel is\nsituated on historic ground, and\nhas tasty meals and excellent\nrooms.\nT. R. HANSON, Proprietor.\nQUEEN'S   HOTEL,\n_PHOB31ST22_^    B.   O.\nThe Newest and Largest Hotel in\nthe City. Everything neat, clean\nand comfortable. Steam heat and\nelectric light. Meals and drinks at\nall hours. '    '\nHARTMAN & WALSH\nProps.\nI\nDirect from the Factory to the consumer\nBy PARCEL POST\nat  wholesale t prices    to advertise onr\nBrands.\nEvery cigar we make is absolutely guaranteed filled.with genuine Havana-\nFiller\nBox'of So's-J.C.  full weight,  five\ninches long $3.50.\nBox of 50's O.S    4  inches  long,\nConchas, $3 00.\nBox of \"Brillantes\" Clear  Havana\nWrapper, full weight, S inches\nlong, 50 S $5.00.\nSend money order, or certified\ncheqne. Do not send money unless registered.\nReferences:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdR. G.'DUNN&CO.    -\nWILBERG & WOU-\nNew Westminster.B.C.\nThe Knob Ml Hotel\nPHOENIX.\nOne of the largest hotels in\nthe city.   Beautiful location,\nfine rooms and tasty meals.*\nA. O. JOHNSON\nPROP.\nBUSINESS CARDS.\nContractor and Builder\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDEALER IN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDoors, Windows, Sash.\nAll kinds of carpenter work neatly done.\nBox 127      -     -, -     Greenwood.\nFRED A. STARKEY,\nNELSON, B. C.\nMINING\nBROKER\nPROSPECTS   BOUGHT   AND    SOLD\nJ. R. CAMERON,\nLeading Tailor of the Kootenays.\nKASLO      B.C\nGreenwood & Midway\nAUTO STAGE\nLeaves Greenwood for Spokane\nat 8:20 a.m., & for Oroville at 3:10\np. m. Leave orders at Terhune's\nCigar Btore.       Charles Russell.\nCOUNTY   COURT OF YALE\nA SITTING 01 the County Conrt of Yale will\nIm> holden at tlie Court House, Greenwood,\non Tuesday the 19.1iday of Jiumry w_5  , at\n\ufffd\ufffdleveu o'clock in tlitfforenoon.\nBy order,\nWALTER DEWDNEY,\nReelstrar C. O. of Y\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nyour Razors Honed %\nand Your Baths at\nFRAWLEY S\nBARBER SHOP\nGREENWOOD.\nHotpoint Electric Appliances\nAND-\nfflazda Tungsten Lamps\nPRICES REASONABLE\nGreenwood City Watenoiks Company\ns.\n1\nn\n*-y\\","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_1914_12_03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0308386","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"}]}}