J. I*" ��������� -W' - ���������4 **' *��������� *''���������*- **\ ' *i -- t***^ * ^''. '*' .' ***** >, -' * t ^ - -if;-v "l" \ / - 1 I/; ;*> ���������m * ��������� / 1 Kettle Valley Orchardist AOt\i SIXTEENTH' YEAtt-No; "3 aRANI) FORKS, B.' 'C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1910 j������. ^-<������. ^*-<-w "fcfcOQtBEB YEAR t I- '"I J* ���������" Resolution Endorsed- Favoring Completion of^ All- Canadian highway Mayor Acres and Aid McArdle, McCdllum,Schniter and Sheads'were -present at the legular meeting of thet city counciPou, .Monday even- Ing. , - J '- Mr. Kirkpatrick,-ot the Kettle , Valley hue^ was present, and asked -what objection the* council liad to Vant Bros erecting coal bunkers near the down-town depot. The mayor explained that the original resolution ou<- this ^subject adopted by the ocuncil was still m force. This gives the firm the privilege to built the bunkers at the station; provided'they are removed at the direction of the council ii they^ become a nuisance and proviped, also, - that the firm obtains the consent of the interested pioperty, owneis in the neighborhood. .-* f 'A communication from the chiet oi (he volunteer fire department s *��������� ^ ��������� recommended that one window, in the rear.of the Grand Forks'hospi-' tal be, con verted-UHo a door, and a , -stairway built to connect with "it," to -'- a-flord^' heLtwc.^xk^\-S j ��������� t was lufetf noted to 'notify. ,Ds, 'King- ; - ston th'at, irisoiuch^as'tbe^ attention % ot "ttie/council h'ad/been* calied to the amount, of $3500, held by an Ontario party , The-pasl month's hills weie ordered to be paid. " The chairman of the boaid of works ������������������ repoited that Water street had< been regraded and the grade widened, and that the old harness had been sold. The repot t was accepted ,/The, chairman of .the..health and telief cnrhmiltee recommended that Mis. Green's bill for city water be charged to Mr. Rashleigh in futuie, and on motion the recommendation was concurred in by the coungil. The mayor and clerk weie authorized to sign tbe deed of lot 10, block'12,whioh^aB eold'by the city to Mr. Wilson some time ago. Mrs E E W.-Mills this week received the news of the death at her brother, Alexander S. Smith, at Moosomin, Sask., 'on the 10th inst Mr. Smith was member for Mooso > min in tbe Saskatchewan legislatuie at the time ot his death, and he had held that office for a great number of years. He was abouCGO years of age. He came west from Ontario in 1882. "November 15, King-Albert's day The subject of the evening service" of the Metbodist church-on Sunday will' be ."The King- Who,*Would Not Sell HisSoiii/'"aa'apjireoiatiou 'of King Albert -ot. 'Belgium.-^."Song service at 7:15 p'. m.- - ' - -V^> .-Mis. Hearn,' jvho has\been ^ vi&it- Valued at $3500; Insurance, $2400���������Origin of Fire Unknown "F. W. Russell's big ranch house, two miles south of1, the city, was burned to the ground at about 9 o'clock last Monday night JThe furnishings of the bouse" were also destroyed. The'prompt arrival of neighbors was the only thing that s..ived the barn and other outbuild mgs from the flames Loss, 83500; insurance, $^400 The origin of the fire is unknown, but it is supposed to have caught from the stove At the time it broke out there was no one in the house but the hired man, \Vm.~ Cl/ir, who was asleep, and when he awoke the tire had too much of a start to be extinguished. Mr. Russell made.a quick run out there in his motor car from his hotel in the city, but when he arrived on the ground nil he could do was to assist in raving the other buildings on the place. METEOROLOGICAL The following is the minimum and maximum temperature for each day during the past week, as re corded by the government thermometer on E. F. Laws' ranch: Min. Max Nov. 10���������Friday 29 36 11���������Saturday .... 17 30 12���������Snndsy 6 20 , ' 13���������Monday 6 21 14���������Tuesday 15 28 15���������Wednebday ..10 26 16���������Thuisday 9 - 27 Inches ilainrall ..~ 0 00 Snowfall ��������� 0 0 If the weather does not model ate, the sporting editor of The Sun will soon be able to challenge all comers to a game of hockey for patnotic purposes. Former Grand Forks Citizen Loses Life,in Big Auto Accident - LOCATIONS. ���������. ' - pite-of- " f-j--; , y-* *���������-_,..-..* ;���������;"-; w'-* ----^ '���������-' .' /-->-_----���������"*��������� .��������� --_-* * llefirjl. ~ Name of'Claim. ��������� - Situation "' - Loaitor March 10 Gipsey Girl .' :. Deep'1' Creek....... Mutt Oairoll.* A'piil 10 v.".. .Parrott, relocation-....: ......Brown's camp ..D. W. Trace v. J/(" 11 Magpie..,'.....A...*���������-: \ ..V...Lot 493 M. M lOrraan. : " 13 ."...'.Copper Fay...: '. HucklebervymtTA. Cameron ,.. "/ 18, .-.".iCopppr King ..,..:._..] ~ Gloucester camp.S. G. Etull '*' - ' l8x:.'.v.jJackpot ~ i Gloucester.camp C.��������� A. S 'Atwood f1j?^^-^tfi&t{tue.re6ue'at*--beA",'couj plied "'with a '^S'^y aTbncti," and', -thei'chairiuau*-* of" the lx^������> -��������� * board ot 'works said- the vvdfk would be'done Mu a day'"or Hyo.-*On'mo- tiou," the clerk was instructed to an- S'vei the letter, aud the request ol Mr. Atwood *vas granted. A letter from Mr. Kirkpatnck, of the Kettle Valley line, in answer " to a" communication iroin the city council complaining of the high rate ot speed the railway company's speeder was driven through the city, stated that in future the council would have' no further . occasion lo complain on this score, at least as far as the-Kettle-Valley line speeder was concerned. - A commuuicaliori from the- city clerk of Vancouver asked the council,to .endorse a resolution adopted by the Vancouver city council urging the provincial government to complete the all-Canadian highway in this province, especially the sections over the Hope rnountaius and from Cascade to llossland. The liis hired- man,-->w boj-happ-enecl-to-be a "young Doufi���������onihe docket. ���������-,���������������*- K *--. c - -V f~" ' '"/-- ,:-",. ' -~- .-r'W./J. Montgomery-Skilled" a ������ Big idur-point buck, deer, on "the flat three miles east "of the city last Friday. He thinks it was big enough to take tbe first prize for hugenebs of the season's hunt A dispatch from Vancouver on Monday gave the details of an acci-, dent in which George Smith, a former Grand Forks resident and-a brother in-law of Aid. Donaldson, lost his life. Mr Smith lett this city for Vaucouver_ a little over two years ago The telegraphic account of the accident says that nine people weie diowned at 8 o'clock Saturday evening at the Fraser avenue bridge across "the North Arm of tne Fraser nver, live miles from the center of Vancouver. They were aboard a laige coveied automobile,which wab on one of Us legular trips from Lad- ner into that city. Twelve persons, including the driver, George Smith, were aboard tbe car. The draw swing was open to allow a tug to pass up the Fraser and-the big au- mobile plunged through the gates aud ovei into the tideway twenty teet below. Three of the passengers were im-' mediately picked up, two ot them by the, .ciew.-~.They,, were. Thomas _^ Bnoitreed,' H. Hutchison and a frvW: ' year-old daughter ot Henry Evans, r ot North Vancouver. During Sun- - - day till but' two ot the _ bodies weie lecovered.. The known dead aie: Thomas Marshall.andL. A;'"Stewartr / managV/and eiiginfer,,respectively,!..-*- ^1 s?\ ') 4 1&m 1 A>(.%y������/| n-B _���������'J ^ r -,-': ^J.^^ \1 F. W. Russell wishes to tender his sincere thanks to his neighbors for the valuable services they rendered him at the fire of his lanch residence on Monday night last.. . Frache Bros, are building a 50x f)0 addition to their greenhouses. The new building . will practically be constructed of nothing but steel and glass. ^i-^29'^^^yVHif^ilv���������y.A^^:.r;^:^^Fjfe^:������������������:r::.'.^.M. Archibald. June 2;\:���������VGdlden Blutuier.".....'.;."..i.:iFranklin camp ���������C & L -Hansen ;", - 2^..y.^Quray'fraction, relocation:..'Franklin camp ..B Bainbridge. 8 ....:. Good Luck,'relocation \..\ Smiles n.ofG.F Jas. Donaldson. -8r....'..Eurek'a,- relocation *. 5 mile*? n.of G F. Jas. Donaldson. 9 - Brtnnoclc '. Near Cascade .. J. T. Brunskill. 14 Last Chance, relocation'... Summit camp....Jos Burnn. tl Buttercup frac , relocation . Franklin mtn....A FePctWBraniff 23 Dollar, relocation ..-. Summit c.imp...C. M. Tobiassen. 28 Butte fraction, relocation...Phoenix camp ..A Cravel 6 . . . Monte Cristo, relocation.. ..Seattle camp R,oy D Cns<*. v6 Silver Knott, relocation .. .Seattle camp ....Itoy D. Cass. 14 .... Jumbo, relocation '.. Fianklin camp ..Pat Magmnis. 14 Walhu-c, relocation Franklin camp...M McITale. 13 Dominion _ Cascade R E Wolverton 15 .... Pure Gold Cascide R. 1C Wolverton 20 .* Britton, relocation .....Seattle camp.....Robert Clark. 20 Bunker Hill, relocation Seattle camp.....Robert Clark. 20 Link.fraction Seattle camp Robert Clark. 20 ......Comstock, relocation Seattle camp Robert Clark. Aug. 1 Cityof Paris Gloucester camp. C. A. S. Vtwood " '3 ..... Dreadnaught,relocation Franklin camp ..Joe Gclinas. 8 ......Leader fraction ..Franklin camp ..R. Wolverton. 11 ......Tiger, relocation Summit camp...E. Bailey. 12 ...... Frisco, relocation Gloucester.camp. B. Bainbridge. Audrey ...Cascade -..M. Carroll. Iron King Baker creek J W ttR.Graham &G. Wilson. 24 Iron Queen Baker creek J.W.&R.Graham & G. Wilson. it u it it" ii ii July it ii it ,A ii ii ii ii ii ii ii ii 23 24 liul'e girl'who*was Ba^ed/'R&Wilco^ "-, s-s ^*r" - 57'-- ���������-. r>. ���������**��������� J,������\- ' . -r *> . ^ > ���������������������������''(-' - ." * w* %'udjlKbn" Ritchie^ j(oung.menppt.v i>'*/\ ,��������� ,i Layner^Mrs/Aunie"Brqwn[of North; - yV.jV- ^Vancouver, and> Chioamab.* There������ -' ,^r ,*t. ���������was^some-doUDt as to fthe identity., r ���������&? I :j *. of^lhe'two otheis. '��������� - "%\ J( ~* It was a fine, clear night, and the v red hghis warning that the s%ying c ' , was opfcn weie, it is claimed, burn nig bngutly This claim, however, tias biuce been contradicted by one ot the survivors. James Rooke still has three or four cars of apples to ship. The total fruit shipments from the valley thi������ year will reach nearly ninety'! Sept. lC Granite, relocation Gloucester camp.W. Minion carloads. The east*bound CP.R. passenger resolution was endorsed, and the. train arrived in the city on time last1 clerk was directed to bring tbe matter to the attention of our member, J.E. W. Thompson. On motion, the clerk was authorized to make an offer of 97{r and interest for city debentures of 1919 to Monday. Mrs. J. Willis, of Cascade, was a visitor in the city on Monday. 18 Bulmus....;. '. Mcltae creek....'.J. R. Cranston. " 22 Buster.... .Brown's camp ..Pete Santure. " 29 Verdun McRae creek ...11. Brcakell. Oct. 3 Dalton McRae crock ...G. A. Jackson 3 Lancashire Lad ...;.. McRae creek ...G. A.Jackson. 13 Little Belle". Welsher min;....J. M. Paulson. 23 Fargo, relocation ., Franklin camp .-.G. M. Pell. 25 Hill 00 .McRae creek ...J. T. Brunskill. 30 North Star, relocation Franklin camp ���������B. Bainbridge. 30 Summit, relocation ..Franklin camp ..B. Bainbridge. it a ii it ii ii W. Orr, of Spokane, was a visitor-Nov. 7 Standard McRae crock ...A. Cameron. in the city on Tuesday. (Continued on Pmjc ���������">.) Death of Mrs- Morrison Mrb. Malcolm Morrison, better known to tbe cm-sens of Grand Folks a0 Mis. M. F. Krau&, died in Mid wo-) last Sunday night of heait tailure. The icmuins weie brought lo this city on Monday,and the l'utieral was held from the Catholic cnurcb on Tuesday afternoon. . Mrs. Morrison was one of the pioneers ot Grand Forks, and she resided here continuously from the first settlement of the city until about six months ago, when she re moved to Midway with her husband. She was an aged lady of admirable qualities, and all wbo knew her esteemed her friendship and respected her very highly. John Donaldson lett on Monday for Vancouver to uttend the funeral of his brother-in law, who was drowned in the automobile accident near that city on'Saturday night. There hap been some ekating during the past week. \A* rm. >V'i''V.T-':V������ii;:i-.-!,.-';.i,,i p:r'n^.:yisl:;i; -, A BRIGHT TOBACCO OF THE FINEST QUALITY 10 CENTS PER PLUG Seamanship in Naval Warfare Absolute Excellence of Seamanship Is a Fundamental Requisite "It has' sometimes been said," ' writes a retired admiral, "that while llie battles of olden clays were won by sheer 'superiority of seamanship, llie actions of today arc; fought'-'(Hit and decided by artillerists. "But wc have seen at Jutland that the effectiveness of the ship's artil- ��������� lery depends on the skill of the handling of the ship; and even outside the limits of fire tactics, in the larger sphere of strategic disposition of the fleet in action, absolute excellence of seamanship is a fundamental requisite. ��������� Particularly is this the case when the strength of the naval force is not concentrated under ' the immediate control of the Admiral. "The necessity of forcing the Germans to fight compelled Jcllicoc to separate his fastest heavy ships from the main. fleet; and these ships, under Bcatty and Evan Thomas, were engaged wilh the enemy's total forces for two hours before Jellicoc could come up himself, and lake part i i the action. "'Seamanship enters here in the ability of the navigating officers to estimate as accurately as possible the position and course of the vessel at any moment, so as to keep the Admiral in touch with all their move- -nients. This is more than ever ncccs-, sary in fog or in the dark���������in all cases, indeed, where the ships arc out of visual touch, either touch direct or touch through "repeating ships." "Commander Charles M. Forbes, my .Flag Commander, and Commander Roger M. Bellairs, of my staff, plotted the movements of the two fleets with rapidity and accuracy as reports were received. ..... To the Master of the Fleet, Capt. Oliver E. Leggctt, I am indebted for the accuracy with which he kept the reckoning throughout U16 operations." -��������� The parts played-by these officers may be explained as follows: The approximate position of a ship" at any time of the clay or night is known lo a captain by "reckoning." That is to say, hc has taken his bearings from the sun at midday so as lo establish accurately his position at that time, and has subsequently noted carefully his speed and all its variations, his. direction, and 'all changes of direction. These plotted out accurately on a chart give him approximately his position - at any subsequent lime. Now this'.performance is particularly necessary when two sections of a fleet are making a junction in the open* sea, and it is clear'that the calculations of "each party' may fail to coincide with those of the other. Thus the influence of tides ��������� and currents may have carried one'"' or both somewhat off .the line in which they thought tliey were travelling, and an error, sof even one point of -the compass when , pilot- ted out. on a straight course might put a ship eight miles out of its course in two hours' steaming. - Good Farm Machinery Arguments Show Direct Benefits From Use of Improved Machines The following ten arguments show the effects resulting from' the use of improved farm machinery: 1. The reduction .of human labor by increasing the number of horses, one man being able to do '-'more "-with a large machine using more horses than was possible years ago when smaller machinery was used and hand labor resorted to.. 2. Reducing cost of production. By reducing the labor and permitting the handling of larger areas and more products in the same time resulted in the lower cost per unit production. 3. Increases the acre, effectiveness of man. 4. Decreases number of farm laborers. This factor is very important in that labor 'is becoming more scarce every year, is'- higher priced, and the problem of caring for these laborers is also an important consideration lo the r.vcrage farmer's wife. ��������� 5. Decreases the producing element. 6. Increases total crop production by increasing the acreage per farmer. 7. Decreases acre production. We find that the greatest decrease in production is in the states where, machinery is used mostly. This fac-j tor is not very important as it seems to hold true mostly in the states where diversified farming is not carried on, but the single crop system is followed,-- as for instance, in the wheat sections of the Northwest. 8. Delays divisions into small farms until decrease in crop production brings gross income down to cost production. .We- will then have greater intensity. The principle of supplying demand will regulate this. The principle of what the traffic will bear cannot be carried on in the agricultural productions. 9. Dispenses with hard labor. 10. The certainty of getting work done by concentrating the operations during the per'iocl when the t most favorable conditions prevail. ' This last factor is by no means the least important. Il is always to the" advantage of a farmer to do as much of his work as possible when the conditions are just right. The Kaiser's Tantrums Britain Cannot Compete With Barbarians in Uncivilised Reprisals Whenever the Germans arc suffering especial severe punishment they return .to* wild words and to deeds which violate the conscience of the world. The Kaiser's��������� armies, 'and those of his confederates, arc being hurlcdback on the Russian and Italian frontiers, and in Asia Minor. The British"- and ' French arc. breaking through his impregnable lines on the Somme. He can get nowhere, to Calais, or Paris, or even Verdun. His once all-conquering warfmachinc, which was to place "Germany over all," is held tight in a steadily contracting vise. -Therefore in impotent Best Roads in the World Value of Good Roads to a Farming Community Is Shown in France ��������� ' In France, where they have the best roads of any country in the world, the highways are divided into several classes, but all of them arc supervised by the national government, which maintains a bureau of roads and bridges, and supports a school for the education of the engineers and inspectors who are employed in this bureau. This method of building and maintaining roads in France was started by the firsU Napoleon, who appears to have been the first European statesman who clearly saw the economic advantage of proper highways, and who al the same lime had the power to carry out -what he wished. The effect of these good roads 'in France has been wonderful. They have, brought all of the various parts of the country nearer together; they have made country life less lonesome, and they have reduced the cost of transportation of country produce to a .minimum. France is the only country in Europe where the agricultural classes arc not' dissatisfied, and where they do^ not feel that they have a harder lime than those who labor in other fields. * Civilized nations have good roads { ���������savage and unenlightened countries > do not. The highways of travel are a gauge ��������� of* progress a people have made front barbarism to civilization. The price at which a farm will sell for is regulated by its nearness to market, and ,the quality of its neighborhood roads. To increase the selling price of your farm, work for good roads. Good roads will benefit the farmer more than he ever dreams of. On an average, the farm products of this country must be hauled by wagon, miles' lo market. There is more room for saving in this ^wagon haul than in a railroad haul of one thousand miles. -The railroads of the country charge only eight-tenths of a cent Tor hauling a ton a mile. Capturing- a Mine Layer How a German Mine-Layer Was Taken By the British British papers just to hand give details of the capture of the UC-S, the German submarine mine layer now on view on the Thames. In April last a torpedo-boat destroyer was out ������������������exercising off the east-coast. When she sighted the enemy she was in difficulties, and from the deck of the destroyer, then some distance away, a flag could be seen at llie masthead of the submarine, and in the mist iL was at first taken lo be the Union Jack. i Closer inspection proved it to be the German naval ensign, and then it was noticed that the whole of the crew of the submarine appeared to be on-deck. The comic side of the , , . ,* situation was not lost on the men of - .strcn������ttir the destroyer, and once apprised of the enemy character of the -distressed vessel they set" to work to make her a prize. The commander hailed the crew with" a brusque invitation to surrender. The submarine men saw the guns trained on them, and they hauled down their flag and put their hands above their heads in the approved "Kamcrad" style. At a word from the commander they jumped jinto the water and swam for dear [life away from llie ship. Internal ex- 1 plosions followed, and al the last and heaviest a cascade of hammocks and other debris shot out of the open conning tower to a height of forty feet. That there was a vent for the explosive forces probably saved the ship, but, as il was, the bottom of the vessel was punctured in two places and rivets were ^started, so that the craft made water quickly. An aUempt lo investigate the .damage was frustrated by the presence of thick black gases and about two feet of water, but later expert-examination showed that, although the submarine had laid no mines, two had Germany Cannot Yet Divide the Earth Maxmilien Harden Issues a Grim. Warning to His Country Maxmilien Harden, writing in* Die Zukunft, says: What pressure could force a quick conlcusion of peace? "If Russia lost all her Polish territories- she would go back and* invite the conqueror lo follow her perhaps even to Vladivostock. It is said that France could be forced to lodge and feed our armies and to suffer German authority, but ^thcrc arc her colonics. You can **only take them when you have (deprived England of her strength. "How can you deprive England" of :r" strength? Favor of heaven, * or accident might bring about a revolution in India, a Turkish invasion at Suez, damage by fire, mass strikes* in Britain, or a sea, battle which would not leave so much to England that she would be able'with the ships-of France and Japan to patch" up 'something like a.fleet of a great power. "But-Britain is not even suffering, yet. London's face has shown no fear. Her ships sail from "America. England does not need to giv"e'-u'p anything and can barricade all roads by which we could fetch raw materials for our industries. "Resign yourselves to the'different times. Do not imagine that you are already at the beginning" or nearly at the beginning of the end joyfully dividing ' up the earth. A decision can only be had by challenging the* cool-blooded English men. "Russian armies stand again .* in Galicia and in the Bukowina close to the Carpathians. Even if they arc beaten into a second retreat, who will give the guarantee that, the rivers once more freed of ice, there will not flow a third wave still stronger than the two which have been 11111 ���������. . . . -i. - What Britain Has Done Defrauding fhe Farmers Farmers Victimized Through Dealing With Fakirs During the last outbreak of fool and mouth disease a man trading on the name of a fake cattlemen's association persuaded farmers that for a consideration he could keep the state and other authorities from killing their cattle. He fought the law for more than a year, but recently a judge and jury found him guilty of lalsc pretense. During the trial it'was disclosed that he had collected more than $9,000 from his victims, and the report was that sums not counted would carrv the total to $20,000. In the same region an ancient veterinarian with an "infallible" cure examined cattle with an old fur glove, rubbing it over their tongues and nostrils and gathering germs which lie distributed wholesale. The amount of mischief he did was incalculable. At the same time hc collected tribute^ for his stupendous ignorance. These two fakers for "a time baffled the officers, and by their activities spread contagion over many miles, caused losses that ran into tens of thousands of dollars, and in addition swindled their victims. It ought to tc a lesson. In any matter of health or communication disease the only course is to accept and to invite the help of the officers, whether they be local, state, or national. They may not know everything, but they know enough to be useful.-���������Country Gentleman. _ Msu-J' Is this paper from Mr. Scribblers rooiii waste paper, mum? Landlady: No, hc hasn't written anything on it yet.���������Judge. W. N. U. 1121 fury the All-Highest War ' Lord sneers at the "ice-cold haberdashers from -the Thames." Captain Fryalt is murdered in cold blood by order of a Prussian court. The foul deed shows that the Huns have lost nothing of their Hunnishncss since Edith Cavell was.brutally done to death by the Kaiser's pompous thugs. There is indignation in neutral as in<*ally countries over the legalized assassination of a brave British captain, who saved his merchant ship from a German torpedo by trying to ram the submarine. Who would suggest that an unarmed civilian should not in self-defence strike r.t a highwayman who was trying to run him through? Knowing that they were perpetrating another dastardly outrage on humanity, the naval court hurried the execution to forestall .neutral intervention. Amongst the prisoners in England are ( officers of German submarines who I fired upon''merchant ships without t warning and Zeppelin' captains who dropped death from the clouds upon helpless women and children. The (British could take vengeance on these prisoners, but that would be lo descend toward Prussian degradation. We cannot compete with barbarians in uncivilized reprisals. ��������� Toronto News Sir Gilbert Parker Tells of Work Accomplished Since War Began In a recent article Sir Gilbert Parker tells, in the following sentences, of a few things that Great Britain has done since August, 1914. Great Britain has, in fact, provided an army and navv personnel of nearly '5,000,000 arid' has trebled the personnel of her fleet. Could any other nation in the world' furnish over 4,- 000,000^ men on a voluntary .basis, as Great Britain has do'ne?- Americans should 'understand that it is not alone in the field of battle that Great Britain has proved1 its capacity for - organization. It has proved it "in the" civil field. It "has nationalized the'raHways of the country and has protected\ the regular" dividends: It secured the sugar crop of the world at the very beginning of the war, through which sugar is cheaper today in Great Britain than in the United States, and at the same time has got out of it a revenue of nearly $34,000,000. It rescued the British people from being done by'"meat-trusts by seizing all ships which could -carry chilled meat and, having the ships, could get her meat on.fair terms, and has done so���������50,000 tons*a month for Great Britain and FYance, and 10,000 for Italy. Those who think that Great Britain has cither not done much, or not as much as she ought to have done in this war base their remarks on their ignorance, rather than on actual knowledge. been released by tlie force'of the ex-ipf, V"} th.e - "'",������������������;./V~'ri i plosions, and were foul of the hot- !hcl4 baflck ���������th so much difficulty-and toil! Of the V---SH fnrHirt h,-t,v,.,.n ��������� Rga,n HOOCl-OV A Profitable Mystery "How did you leave all the folks at home?" "First rale," replied Senator Sorghum, "I told them I was going to see if I couldn't straighten out. a few problems for- the government between now and spring. That cheered them up a great deal." "To what problems did you have reference." "Oh, nothing in particular. I never go into details with my constituents. If you get to explaining thing/., vou arc liable :������.��������� make them sound so easy that the voters get to thinking they don't ������--ftd you."��������� Washington Star, He seemed fearfully downcast as hc came clown the street, but for all that Mosc Johnson, colored gentleman of all work, whom everybody in town knew, stopped him with a cheery hail. "Huh!" grunted the other. "It's a dark day." And then the old negro said: "Hit's cs you look at it, Cunncl, Jones. But why don't you unlock de sunshine? Ain't you, got some hid 'round de house some'rs ���������in somc_ ol' co'ncr what you clciu forgot? Stir rouu', an' lu'u de sunshine loose. It's dar���������in yo' house and heart.'' "Here," the dark-day mourner said, "here's a quarter for you, old man." VBrcss heaven!" Mosc responded. "I knowed you'd turn loose de sunshine. Hit wuz in yo' pocket all de time!" lorn of the vessel. Contact between the horns, which jutted out all around the mines, and the plates of the vessel'would have exploded enough T.N.T. to sink,"a battleship, arid il was an act of real heroism on the part of-a"young* officer that rendered the- submarine capable of being brought in as a prize. The officer went down in a driving suit and made the mines* safe by detaching the detonator's, afterwards securing them i.i such a position that ihc salvers could work in comparative safety. After seventeen days she was brought into an east coast port, '. ���������'"'", UC-5_is one of��������� the boats built in sections in Germany-:���������in five sections in all���������and brought to Zeebrugge to be put together and,completed- for sea: 'She is a curious craft, -dis--. placing'about 195."tons, and as she' has little reserve buoyancy she might not displace- mor,e than 210 -tons cub-- merged. She is about 110 feet long, and in sea-going trim she, had some six feet displacement.' She' submerg-- ed by blowing out'certain-tanks'and the use of- hydroplanes. Amidships is the conning tower, with .periscope and-the wireless mast. Forward'of'the conning tower arc^six* shoots or air locks -, in- which the twelve mines .were." stored, ��������� two in each shoot, and' 'from which they were discharged electrically from, the conning lower. These mines are formidable engines of destruction, and- in order that they may be seen to advantage two of them have been placed .oh the deck of the submarine with their sinkers and framework. They are very line pieces of mechanism," and it is estimated' that each of,them would cost about $800. Let one of their horns be jarred by the impact of a ship's hull and a glass phial or tube in the interior is broken, letting loose a liquid which energizes a battery, and the mine explodes with terrific violence. As the mines are exhibited, they arc shown with their hinged legs lifted vertically against the sides, but when let go these would fall out flat and form a tripod base with a ring, and constitute the anchorage of the mine. The mine rises by flotation from the base, attached to a cable lo any desired level, usually so that it may be just below the surface at low tide. The weight of each mine, with charge and sinker, is about 1,200 pounds. gain injuu- over the country? "Will the admirable upward swing of the French power of resistance be paralyzed shortly? .Do not indulge in vain prophecies. That torn country still "carries the colors of unbending- determination and ��������� energy. "Britain has great embattled arm-' ics in the-field. Both. Western pow-' crs have said that their present -offensive is not their highest effort and according to _ our experience, ? still more furious offensive will .follow. No,, the earth- is not to be di vided yet." Strength of Enemy Defences Elaborateness of German Defences ir ���������^Occupied- Territory The.special correspondent of'the Loridpn' TJmes- at British -Hcadquaf- ' ters,'writes:JWhat--*;impresses one in all the places_ which "we have-taken in these^ last-fiw days is the - immense" strength of the/* German defences." - One does not wonder that-they-be-- lievedthem to be.impregnable themselves. Nor is'it only, the^actual po--,,' sitions ��������� in ' the front line trenches ' - which arc so strong. '.All the'little villages and . - wpods,_each' , eminence ' and hollow, in -all this area between - the first and second .lines has' .been . converted into a_ fortress as formidable as the - character of the ground , makes ' possible. In the*' year and ~'a . half for'which he has becn'in-pos- scssion of this country the German' has labored assiduously, omitting nothing which could protect" him against such-a day as this. Continuously one hears new stories of some trickery on the part :of the enemy. To many of these- tales I am inclined to pay-little attention. A s.tory, however, was told me today, by ah eye-witness, which, I understand, has been officially; reported by others, to the effect that in the couVse of the fighting about Thiep- val a German' appeared above a battered parapet Waving a Red Cros< | flag. He was allowed to come down, and was seen to lift something baclr into the trench,. It was not until toe late that wc saw that wdiat he.lifted was not a dead or wounded man, but a machine gun. One of the. members of a committee of inspection on its tour of a certain penitentiary found himself in conversation with one of the convicts. The latter was disposed to be confidential, and thus unburdened himself: "It is a terrible thing to be known by a number instead of a name, and to feci that all my life I shall be an object of suspicion among the police." "But you will not be alone, my friend," said the visitor, consolingly. The same thing happens to people j who own automobiles.'' Walter Winans, of the millionaire Baltimore family, is a champion revolver shot, and oh his estate in ���������..������..,. I England hc has been training sharp- This. strange-looking boat, which I shooters for the allies since the bc- had its precurscr in a Russian mine-j ginning of the war. laying submarine named the Krab, I Mr. Winans was not always : had a crab-like speed of something [ good shot. He tcHs a story, in fact, like six knots. She was propelled by of a time when he was such a-poor Diesel engines and electric accumu-ishot that a boy, after watching hi* lators, charged before leaving port In the Thames she will-, be seen in what may be called sea-going trim. The preliminary to submersion was to go down to a "level in which the conning tower was awash, the hydroplanes completing the operation. It will be understood that this submarine differs entirely from the big torpedoing submarines, which have great range and also carry guns. She appears to have had about- sixteen people on board, and they must have lived in close and unwholesome performance for an hour or so, touched his cap to him and said: "Say, mister, gimme a dime -and s start as far as the fence, and you can let go both barrels at me."���������Washington Star. German Research In a glossary of terms in common use in the British army a Gcrmar, comic paper says that "Tipperary if a comparatively _unimportant town irv Ireland, interesting only for the pc- 7----. ;- ���������"-"���������*���������������"- culiarity that it is a long way front proximity to one another in the very .every other place on the map." ��������� -exiguous interior of the vessel. London T>aily News. tWBffffl|HB|MBEB8ffi c. , ���������'* tffiHE"' SUN, GBANIT. FORKS, j T! BnCK-SORENESS GOES! LUMBAGO CUBED BY "fiERVILINE" This Wonderful Curative . Liniment Has Almost Magical Powers You can compare a congestive pain \> a 'little fire. -* When congestion jnioulders, pain romes and goes. ' Congestion grows cato inflammation, . :ense, grows ex- !>ut pain, now in- ���������~������_*^-* ' :*ruciating, and slays, too. -There is itj absolute antidote of pain���������it .is -Nerviline. New to you, perhaps is Nerviline, hut known well,in many lands'as the aost penetrating and pain-subduing pain remedy ever discovered. Not Mly" or ill-smelling, but pleasant���������it .nibs on. Not tcmpoiary action, but permanent in its control of pain. . Not an ache or a pain anywhere that it cannot reach. No soreness or strain that il has not the power to relieve. Nerviline is the only remedy in the fworld sold under guarantee���������if it idocs not relieve you, you get your money back. Proof . enough that Nerviline is a remedy ���������that will fulfill ab- ��������� solutcly every rc- l=a-~~������������������ quircment of a pain-rclicvcr, both for internal and external use. Backache it cures like magic. For rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, stiffness, sprains or strains, it is the only thing. Large bottle, SO cents; trial size, 25 cents; at druggists, or The Catarrhozonc Co., Kingston, Canada. Aid-For Farmers in Devastated Areas Canadians to Organize to Help Belgians, Poles and Serbians ������������������ Last year the agricultural relief of 'he Allies committee was formed in England under the immediate patron- nge. of the King and the presidency '">>f the Duke of Portland.' The fund ���������vhich is being raised is for the ptir- i'dsc of assisting in the restoration of ���������griculturc in the countries of our vllies which have been devastated by ..ar. The British farmers desire to help hese/peoplc to make a fresh start. A general ^committee thoroughly representative of British agriculture has >>cen formed, and county agricultural ���������ocictics have unanimously formed -���������ommittees to arrange for contributions. Last spring considerable qualifies of seed grain, livestock and implements were furnished .to farmers - !i the regions of France from which ������������������'���������ie enemy had been driven back at . 1'ie battle of the Marnc. Some of the ' implements were of Canadian make . nd have given much satisfaction. It ;i intended to extend similar aid to '. irmers in Belgium, Poland and Serbia when the time comes. New Zealand zcl Australia have loincd in the movement. It is now ilesired to have a Canadian commit- : :e formed under the patronage of i-LR.H. the Duke of Connaught and with the sympathetic goodwill and io-operation of the Dominion and' ��������� rovincial governments. Through it ���������anadian farmers and others will be ��������� ble to give very much needed and ��������� ery highly deserved help in prac- ;ical and economical ways. After ���������orrespondence, the Duke of Port* !ind, on behalf of the British com* ������������������littce, cabled .inviting Dr.'James W." Robertson "to visit England and ('���������'ranee to see at first'hand the char- ��������� --'ctcr of the needs and to discuss the '������������������leans, by which Canadian farmers ?nd their families could most "effec- 'ively and advantageously help their brethren in this time of their distress. Russia's Growing Greatness The Democracy of Russia Which Has Made Such Wonderful^ Progress Russia seems to be coming out of the war very big. One reads that she is lo have the Dardanelles. It is prudent to wait and see, but as to her being the greatest power in Europe, surely it is better, at" least, that Ihc dominant power of the Continent of Europe should be one that has already a sufficient estate " than one thai must incessantly conspire to rot- its neighbors. After Germany's opening exhibition in Belgium and Northern France it takes some assurance for a pro- German to speak of "Russian tyranny and cruelly." The Cossacks were cruel in East Prussia; the Russian bureaucracy' has been cruel; but the Russian people arc not by nature cruel. What they will be in another generation one would like to live and sec. Dr. Rauschenbusch argues that success in the war will strengthen the Romanoffs and Russian autocracy, but thai conclusion will not be generally accepted. It is the Russian people���������democracy in Russia ��������� that has made such wonderful progress in the last year and made observers feel that there is but one country on earth, if any, in which the prospects for human life arc better than in Russia. It will be impossible to get up any effectual fright about Russian domination until the fear of German domination is thoroughly allavcd. ��������� Life, New York. ' " Looking Into the Sky Physical Comfort' Combined With the Enjoyment of the Beautiful and Mysterious ��������� It is pleasant to lie on the earth and look at the sky. The dreams you have had on the bank .of the'creek where you caught no fish and where you watched the sleepy clouds in the blue through the leaves that hung closc.abovc you are pleasant even as memories. Sometimes the leaves danced and you could hear the fairies whispering among them; sometimes the leaves were still and you knew that a fairy was peeping at you from behind each one. You believed in fairies then���������at_least you believed in them a little���������but you were begin- mug to dream of things beyond, things more real and more mysterious, and it was when you looked into the sky through the leaves that you best understood your dreams. Even more pleasant perhaps arc the memories of the hours when you lay onir the lull among the daisies and look-(i ed straight into the sky "���������'��������� -��������� ' ' Co Under the control of the Department of Agriculture of Ontario-Established 18S2 Affiliated WK1 Tie U-urcruty .{ftronto. Colleee will reopen on Monday tic 2nd of Octobor. 1916. 110 /University Avenue, Toronto, Canada. Calendar on Application E^A. A. Grange, V.S., M.S., Principal In An Enemy Trench Twenty-five Feet Below Ground With the Germans What life in an enemy trench is like may be gleaned from the personal description of a Tommy's brief taste of captivity in one: "There were eight or nine other Englishmen, all wounded, lying there; an' I was in front; right in the mouth of the dug-out, where I could sec the trench, where a lot o' Bodies was sitting, smoking cigarettes an' talking in their own lingo. By an' bye a German officer comes along. I knew Vc was coming, by the way those WATERPROOF COLLARS AND CUFFS Something better than linen and big Iaunclrj Dins. Hash it with soap and water All stores or d-recr. State style aud size. For Zac. we will mail you. THK ARLINGTON COMPANY OV CANADA, Liuiitod bd 1**->J!*SS������S*-.jlal P referred by l-*-������JW������iS^*'M*������', western stoclc- men, because .,.,.., protect v/lisro other y<3 . ' vaccines fall. ff ������ nj6 ,or boo������I<:t *"id rcsli'moa'afc " 10-*los8pks.BlacKlef* Pills, $1.������������������ 50.dcse pke. Blacklog Pllis, $4.00 Use -my injector, but Cutter's simplest and stron-rejr. The superiority of Cutter products is due to o\er IS years of specializing in vacci.vks and sfiiiims o.nly. Insist on Cutter's. If unobtainable order direct. Tha Cutter Laboratory, Borkeloy, California JJ America's - Pioneer BOOK OX |DOG DISEASES And How to Eeed | Mailed free to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc DDg Remedies g 118 West 31st Street, New York Dull eyes, blotches and- other skin blemishes result from a disordered digestion. Purify the blood, tone the stomach, gently stimulate the liver-and regulate the bowels and bile with Worth a Guinea a Box Direction! with Every B������ of Special Vain* to Y/eem Sold everywhere. Ia boxe**, 25 cents. The Lights ars Ago Are still doing: duty in the shape of "Yes," said the man whose room is on the fifth floor of the Royal Alexandra, "I'd buy a Ford if I bad a room on the ground floor; but it's such a botlicr bringing it up and down in the elevator, don't you know." Minard's Liniment Cures Garget Cows. in Sixty - five years ago the firstCanadian-madc Matches were.made at Hull by Eddy and since that time, for materials and striking qualities, Eddy's have been the acknowledged best. When Buying Matches Specify "Eddy's." More Women in German Universities One of the results of the present world war is the astonishing increase of woman students in all German universities. Even tlie University of Mucnstcr, which formerly did not encourage the feminists, now has 271 women among its students. Some of them arc widows of soldiers. Before the war the women only in rare cases studied anything but medicine, languages, philosophy, literature andart, but now they arc taking up all kinds of scientific professions, even engineering, architecture and theology. The greatest attraction for them is law, however. In a few years Germany will "have more women attorneys than any other country in the world, Keeping Newspapers. When the daily newspapers ara neither destroyed nor used at once for household purposes, but arc laid aside for future packing, or some charitable organization, it pays to make each lot of them into a flat, square bundle, and tic the package with a_ string stout enough to lift it by. Such packages can be stored in less space than loose papers require, can be shifted and handled, when houscclcaning lime comes, and the papers arc always clean and ready for any need, or for sale. When Your Eyes Need Care ciSf v Act9 ?"������������������������-���������J'- Try It for Red. Weak Sore Kjresand Grannlntert Eyellda. M irlu?l* compounded by our OciillHt'-iiot a"p������t������t Practice for many reari. WnwHi.,!i,.������i.T. ������he Publlo and Bold by ^DriiwrUti"li $E ��������������� ~Y- ft.nt* ������0e. Write for book of tlif Kvo trllV Miirin. Ey. R.me-iy Oomp.n?; OWcfiS. 44* I'.:'**- '���������'���������',U-V-1 - - m : 1 THE .SUTS, GRAND , FORKS, B. .C. ate not, we will frankly Lei 1 you so will run cor- recbly. ^iDoes your watch run ^.���������correctly? If you experience any difficulty .with it, leave' it with us. We will give it an expert examination. If it needs repairs we can supply them at a modern ate cost. If it does A watch repaired by us Ai Ui MunnlSON ghandfo"������ksT which is reduced to 100 degrees by means in this city for the purpose of raising funds to; 0������ fans, help in caring for the dependents of Canadian soldiers at the front. The demands in this connection are so urgent that it is imperative that everyone in the district should render the committee, which is composed of leading citizens, all the support they possibly can. The local branch of the society has undertaken to , Besjcl^s being read by all the intelligent peo- - . , ,,. , . - . -, . ., t , pie of-Grand I-orks, Ihe bun goes to every raise by public subscription during the twelve ^ home iu tRe 'Ketfcle an(f 3^ Fork months commencing January 1st the sum of vauGys. No other Boundary paper can give $12,000. The dates set for this canvass are the advertisers this guarantee. f>th, 6th and 7th of December. The Canadian ���������������������������;������������������ Patriotic fund is the most practical organization in the Dominion in connection with the titanic struggle of the allies. The empire must, have more soldiers, but married men will not enlist unless they are assured that their families will be provided for while they are at the front. This the Patriotic fund guarantees, and it is this fact that makes the organization a potent factor in winning battles for the cause of liberty. The local branch has set itself a very difficult task for the coming year, but if every: body in the city anil valley subscribe as liberally as they can afford there is no reason why the anticipations of the committee should not ' ���������" " For further information' be realized. - "' call at "In the Grand Ports Valley 18 acres in alfalfa; 2-acre orchard; good house and barn and other buildings. . The resignation of Gen. Sir Sam Hughes as minister of militia will lighten to a consirl- SOUR, ACID STOMACHS. GASES OR INDIGESTION Each "Pape's Diapepsin" digests 3000 grains food, ending all stomach misery In five minutes. Time it! In five minutes all stomach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It Is the surest, quickest stomach remedy in the whole world and besides it is harmless. Put an end to stomach trouble forever by getting a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how' needless It Is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder.. It's the ciuiekcst, surest and most harmless atomach doctor in tho world. Death of fV-r ���������, Oerkness Bridget (.!.-��������� : -,-1 kr-ess, wife of J. W. HaiUi <��������� ii������'(.l al her home in this on Tuesday, November IS, of cancer, from which she had been a patient sufferer for a number of yeMrs Sin- wns -1!) years, 8 months and 12 days of a������e it the her death. The funeral was held on Wendesday morning at 9 o'clock from the Cath olic church, where service* were held, interment being made at Evergreen cemetery. The family have resided in this city for a number of years, and their friends here extend sincere sympathies in their sad bereavement. , Twelve Great Serials in 1916 Some of these are story groups like those inimitable stories of pioneer life in the New Brunswick wilderness in which Theodore Roberts shows himself a master. There-will be serials for "iris, serials for boys, serials that hold the rapt attention of all readers of either sex and all ages. And tin- fiction is only a corner of The Companion. It is brimful and running over with all manner of good things. There is not a better $2,2b worth of periodical redding anywhere. Send for the Forecast, for 1917, which discloses some of the delightful secrets of the new volume. New subscribers for 1917 who send 82.25 now will,receive all the issues for the remaining weeks of 1916 free; nlso The Companion Home Calendar for 1917. Our offer includes: 1. Tlie Youth's Companion���������52 issues of 1917. 2, All remaining November and December issues of The Companion free. 3 The Companion Home Calendar for 1917. The Youth's Companion, i0 St. Paul St, Boston, Vass. New sub scriptions received at this otlice. City Clerk Hutton is hunting deer in the North Fork country this week, Lieut. Peat, who was at Ypres with tbe first contingent, assisted by Mrs. Peat and Trooper Jerrett.,g'ive a good entertainment at the Empress Wednesday night. IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS, FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED t|fe British Columbia Nursery Co., Ltd. .������/; Vancouver <^Are now booking orders for spring, 1917/ delivery of their well-known, hardy Fruit and Ornamental Stock Prices include packing and delivery to customer's nearest station. Write at once for 70-page Catalogue, also artistic Rose Catalogue, free. We always have room for an energetic, honest salesman. \J\.ttractive proposition for the right man. in your'favor is good printing, it starts things off in your favor. ��������� PeopSe read your arguments, reasons, conclusions', when attractively presented, It carries weight. Enterprising' men use GOOD PRINTING because it gets BUSINESS..-r If yrou don't already^ know our kind.of printing," let us showyou. it's a certainty that we can save* you money, too. i vi - 'i i i The Sun is the largest and best newspaper printed in the Boundary country, and the price is only one- half that of its local contemporaries. It is a valuable advertising-medium because its large "subscription list has been obtained, and is maintained, merely on its merits as a newspaper. It uses no indirect or questionable methods to secure subscribers. Look Mother! If tongue Is coated, cleanse little bowels with "California Syrup of Figs.',' . Mothers can rest easy after giving "California Syrup of Figs," because in a few hours all the clogged-up waste, sour bile and fermenting food gently' moves out of the bowels, and you have a well; playful child again. Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless "fruit laxative." Millions of mothers keep It handy be-' cause they know its action on ihe stomach, liver and bowols fs prompt and sure. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Flgs,"/whlch contains directions for babies, children of all ages and for growh-upa. PICTURES AND PICTURE FRAMING urniUire. Made to Order. Also Repairing of all Kinds. Upholstering Neatly Done. K.CMcCUTCHrXON WINNIPEG AVENUP AT YOUR SERVICE Modern lligs and Good Horses cat All Hours at the odel Livery Barn M.-H. Burns, Prop. Phone 68 Second Street Pays for The Sun for an entire year. It is the 'brightest paper in the Boundary country John Wanamaker says in Judicious Advertising: "Advertising doesn't jerk; it pulls. It begins very gently at first, but the pull is steady. It increases flay by day and year by year, until it exerts an irresistible po ver." aaaaasaa-^^ m j.u.uuuji.i ii MLm^u'JAj^jjiuuBaaae BWSS68B! ���������m ir-** 1) THE SUN, GRAND FORKS, B.C., THOSE WHO, FROM TIME TO TIME, HAVE FUNDS REQUIRING INVESTMENT, MAY PURCHASE AT PAR DOMINION OF CANADA DEBENTURE STOCK IN SUMS OF $500 OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF. Principal repayable 1st October, 1919. Interest.payable half-yearly, 1st April and 1st October by cheque (free of exchange.'at any chartered Bank in Canada) at the rate of five per cent per annum from the date of purchase. Holders of-this stock will have the privilege of surrendering at par and accrued interest, as the equivalent of cash, in payment of any allotment ' made under any future war loan issue in Canada other than an issue of Treasury Bills or other like short date security. Proceeds of this stock are for war purposes only. A commission of one-quarter of one per cent'will be allowed, to recognized bond and stock brokers on allotments made in respect of applications for this stock which bear their,- stamp. For application forms apply to the Deputy Minister of Finance, Ottawa. DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE, OTTAWA, _ OCTOBER 7th, 1916. MINING RECORDS FOR 1916 (Continued from Page 1 ���������) CERTIFICATES OF WORK. Feb. 5���������--Gradstone, Wellington c;-mp, J. J. Bassfctt. Feb. 5���������Mhv, Wellington" camp, J. J. "Bassett. March 11���������Gladstone, survey," Wellington camp, F. Al. Kerby. March 11���������Alay, survey,' F. . M. ,.., Kerby. ;. .March 14���������Copper Cliff, Franklin ; _ camp, Elmer Rice. ���������March 14���������Monica, Franklin camp, ������������������ Elmer Rice." Alarch 15���������Loony, Summit camp, ' ' N/Luse. March 20���������Saddleback, Burnt Ba sin, H. P. Jackson. ���������.March 20���������Saddleback fraction, Burnt Basin, H. P. Jackson. Alarch"28���������Katie, Franklin" camp, VV F. Branffi. March 28���������John D:,Franklin camp, W. F/Braniff. . - - ��������� April 6���������Diamond -Hitch, Gloucester camp, Wm, Alinion. April G���������Copper, Franklin camp, J. Gelinas, April 6���������Riverside, Franklin camp,* J.. Gelinas. : April 13���������K. of K. fraction, Wei- ington camp, J, J. Bassett. April 20���������--Mohawk, Christina, J. W. Graham. April 25���������Snow , Bird, Franklin camp, A. Sercu. April 27���������Comet, Summit camp, D R. McElmon. April 28���������Carlton, BurnLBasin, H. Breakell. April 28���������Lone Hand fraction, Burnt Basin, H. Breakell. May 12���������Victor, Welcher camp, - J. W. Shaw. Alay 12���������C P.R., Welcher camp, J. VV. Shaw. Alay 13���������Beaver,* Franklin camp, A. J. Fee. May 13���������Climax, E'ranklin'camp, A. A. J. . Fee. " Alay 18���������Rosa, Burnt Basin, F. F. Kettner May IS���������All fraction, Burnt Basin. F. Kettner.' May 18���������Tunnel, Burnt Basin, F. Kettner. ' , '���������."Thousands at his bidding spee'.d; ���������" ��������� ���������' "; And post o'er land and ocean without rest; ;;-, .- They also serve who only stand and wait." --..���������Was the'spirit-of prophecy upon John Milton when,.niore "than two hundred and fifty-years ago, he. dictated these words- to his daughter? ' "They also serve who only stand:and wait." The telephone is your servant, even while it "only stands and waits." The whole system is always-prepared and ready for your instant command. Every wire and switchboard and telephone instrument is kept alive and respeusive by an army of telephone workers. BRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY, LTD. Dealers in Fresh and Salt Meats Fish and Poultry Our cTHotto: "Quality^ and Service Markets in Nearly All the Boundary and Kootenay Towns >? First Street Grand Forks H. W..Breen, pTWanager May 18���������Nero, Burnt Basin, F. Kettner. Alay 18���������Togo, Barnt Basin, F, Kettner. Alay 25���������Leo, Summit camp, Nor man Luse. Alav 27���������Crescent fraction,Franklin camp, Jas AicDonald Alay 30���������Alma, Franklin camp, Chas Aleek. Alay 30���������Silver King, Gloucester camp, Wm. Minion. Alay 30���������Shipper, Gloucester camp, Wm. Alinion. Alay 30���������Yellow Stone fraction,Sum mitcamp, P. Bolduc. Alay 31���������Copper CliS No. 2, Franklin camp, B. Bainbridge. Alay 31���������Riverside. Franklin camp, B. Bainbridge. June 5���������Black Bear, AlcKinley S. Bonnacci. June 6���������Humming Bird, Franklin camp, J.. Johnson. June 6���������Humming Bird fraction, Franklin camp, J. Johnson. June 8���������Alagpie, AlcKinley camp, J. Morrell. June S���������leta, AlcKinley camp, J. k Alorrell. June 12���������Deer, Burnt Basin, EL. M oiler. June 13���������Union fraction, Gloucester camp, L Johnson. June 14���������Golden Star, Deer creek, .- A. Langford. June 16���������Leader, Franklin ' camp, Leo Aladf-r,-" June 16���������Edna, Franklin camp.Leo Alader. <. ' - June 19���������-Blackstone,Franklin camp B. J. Averill. June 19���������Bluestoue.Franklih camp, ' B. J. Averill. June 20���������Alpine fraction, Franklin camp, C. Al. Tobiassen. June 20���������0. K., Franklin camp, C. M. Tobiassen. June 23���������Gem, Frankl n camp, C. AL Tobiassen. June 23���������Alaryland, Summit camp, Carl Helmer. June 27���������Alinnie, Summit camp, Norman Luse June 27���������Nellie, Summit camp, Norman Luse. June 30���������Orient, Summit camp, D. R. AlcElmon. July 3���������Golden Axe, ,Wellington camp, John Holm. July 10���������Canadian, Burnt Basin, Phil Reilly. July 10���������Emilie Annie, Reilly creek, Phil Reilly. July 10���������Airs. Noyes, Reilly creek, Phil Reilly. July 10���������Elsie, Franklin camp, C. Al. Tobiassen. July 10���������Lundee, Franklin camp, Ben Sweezey. July 11���������Tango, Franklin camp, Ben Sweezey. July 12���������Lake, Summit camp, J. Trombley. July 3���������Log Cabin, North Fork, J. A. O'Reilly. July 3���������Winnifred fraction, North Fork, J. A. O'Reilly, June 3���������Alargarite, Lightning Peak tunnel, J. A. O'Reilly. July 13���������Hope, Franklin camp, K. Scheer. July 14���������Alorrell, AlcKinley camp, John Morrell. July 20���������Center Eagle,Hardy creek, C. E. Anderson. July 24���������Diamond Hitch fraction, Brown's camp, A. E. Savage. ( Concluded on Page S.) ssurmg usmess A policy of advertising is a policy of life assurance, and the protection thus secured is well worth its annual cost. Old Customers die or move away���������they must be replaced. Old customers are subject to the influence of tempation��������� they may be induced to divide . their custom���������to do some of their shopping at a competitor's. New customers to this community will shop with you��������� become regular customers���������if they are invited to do so. Your .competitor's advertising is an influence "which must be offset if you are to maintain your trade. Not to advertise regularly to the readers'of. - ��������� -" THE GRAND FORKS SUN Is to leave your business un- - protected. H It is no sign of weakness to follow the lead of advertising. You owe it to yourself to get the most for your money, the best goods and the best service. And if you find that your inclination is to shop where you are invited to shop rather than continue to be a customer of. the shop which never solicits your good will, you need have no compunction of conscience. Shop Where You Are Invited to Shop THE SUN. GRAND FORKS, B. G Russian Flyers Drop ^Huge Bombs New System of Air-Tactics Adopted for Russian Aeroplanes A new system of air tactics has been worked out for Russian big aeroplanes. The giant Uya Muro- mctz, the aeroplane in question, has at last come into its own. As a result of an improvement in phototcchnique, the airmen even when travelling at full speed can drop . bombs with amazing accuracy. This solves the problem of bombing trenches. Manned by four men, the , Ilya Muromctzes can carry bombs nearly as heavy and deadly as the Krupp 42-ccntimctrc mortars can shoot. They drop. these bombs, it is claimed, more accurately than the Krupp" guns, and tliey are infinitely more mobile. High spouts of flame can be seen rising from the enemy's lines, and the explosions arc so terrific that when the enemy trenches are close Russians 'have to crouch and stop, their ears against the effects of the concussion. Corns .cripple the feet and make walking a torture, yet sure relief in the shape of Holloway's Corn Cure is within reach of all. How to Drink Milk Sip milk slowly. Take four minutes at least to finish a tumblerful, and take only a good tcaspoonful at one sip. This is the ideal way in which to drink milk. When milk finds its way into the stomach, it is instantly curdled. If you drink a large quantity at once it is curdled into one big mass, only on the out- , --.side of which the juices of the stom- -4c ach can ..work. If you drink it in little sips, each sip is curdled up by itself, and the whole glassful finally finds itself in a loose lump, made up of little lumps, upon which the stomach's juices may act'readily. Many people who like milk, and know its value as a strength-giver, think they cannot use it .because il gives them indigestion. Most of them could use it freely if they would drink it in the manner suggested.. In Tropical Countries Liver Chill Very Common In Northern latitudes also the liver is a very unruly organ and re quires careful watching. The con- . centrated vegetable juices in Dr. Hamilton's Pills act directly upon ([Cthe liver and stimulate its action to a 'normal basis. The blood is purified, the skin "grows clear, headaches disappear and robust health is firmly established. No medicine for" the stomach, liver or kidneys can compare with Dr. Hamilton's Pills, 25c box at all dealers. The Only Peace Possible When Germany Has Sacrificed It's Dream of Universal Domination Today the only peace possible is with a Germany having sacrificed its dream of universal domination and having-declared willingness to conform with the general conditions which must govern the society of nations. When the German people, either with or without i its present government, comes to ' adopt this view, then the possibility of coming to an agreement will exist. The peace will impose itself unhindered by any criminal intent. It was the kind of peace of which Vandervelde spoke recently in the name of the Belgian people. It is this -kind of peace which the French Socialist party has not ceased to outline. It is this kind of peace which France and her allies intend to secure ��������� a peace which has already been indicated with increasing clearness by several of the- allied governments, notably that of Great Britain.���������L'Hu- manitc, Paris. Preservation of Fences An experiment covering twenty years to determine, the value of post treatment was recently completed. The posts were treated by the following methods: 1. By charring. 2. By filling rock-around the post when set. 3..Putting on the preservation with a ���������brush._ 4. By the open tank method of treatment, which consisted in keeping the post and treating 'fluid heated up to the boiling point for two to three hours and then letting them cool down in the fluid. - The conclusions reached are as follows : 1. That charring' the parts placed under ground does not add to their durability. 2. That filling in around the post williyfitonc or brickbats docs not increase the durability. 3. That creosote is a better preservative than coal tar or petroleum. 4. That brush treatment is not nearly, as effective as opcii tank treatment. 5. That cheap woods like cotton- wood, when treated by Ihc open tank method, are cheaper and just as durable as the high-priced cedar posts. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. Discoverer's Reward Long had he worshipped her at a distance, but his shyness prevented him from proposing. - Then, one evening, for the sweet sake of charity, a theatrical performance took place, in which the charmer was leading lady and more adorable than ever. Afterwards the shy admirer drew near, his love made valiant by the sight of her beauty.. "You are tlie star of the evening," he said as they stood alone in a corner. "You are the first one to tell me The German Character Henry Ward Beecher Knew Germany as a Nation of Hypocrites More Than Forty Years Ago More than forty years ago Henry Ward Beecher wrote Germany down as a nation of hypocrites. In the light of German lies and deceit in this war, what the great' preacher said in 1875 can be keenly appreciated now: "It is wonderful what bad neighbors poor Germany seems to have. There is that great hectoring Belgium trying to pick a quarrel with her. There is France, recovering from her great defeat with a rapidity which shows very little consideration for Germany's feelings. Austria, too, retains her sovereignty over twelve million subjects of German race, which, of course, is exasperating to the great empire. And don't Holland and Denmark persist in holding on to their nice bits of sea- coast with an obstinacy as annoying as Nabolh's of old? And isn't there the Pope, who, as everyone knows, has countless armies at his back ready to march to Berlin? It really looks as if poor Germany might feel obliged to go to war.with somebody, just to keep the peace! And to make her case harder, the unsympathizing persist in thinking that if there is a war in Europe at present it will probably be because Germany���������or the group of soldiers who rule Germany ���������chooses it."���������Ottawa Journal/ In scrubbing* floors makes the brush go _a lot easier AN ANXIOUS TIM Children Often Seem to Pine Away and Ordinary Medicine Does Not Help Them The health of children between the India is Helping Men and Money Continue to Be Forthcoming to Assist Britain in Struggle -An official dcspaLch from Simla, India, says: "Interest in the war grows keener with each, success of the allies, and strenuous efforts to assist towards final victory continue unabated:" The people of Bengal organized a stationary field hospital for service in Mesopotamia. This hospital, with the exception of the officer command ages of twelve and eighteen vears,!������-g. was staffed entirely by Bengali particularly in the case of girls, is a'medical-graduates and the personnel source of serious worry to nearly'was entirely Bengali. Further scope ro1 - ������������������- ���������' -i~ f������->r ihp national and patriotic aspir- evcry mother. The growth and development- lakes so much of their strength that in many cases thej for the national and patriotic aspir ations of the Bengalis has been af forded by the raising of a double company of these men to be trained. actually seem to be going into a de-i company ol .... cline. ,Thc appetite is fickle, bright- on the frontier, and, when fit for ser Dynamiting Mosquitoes Dynamiting stagnant water holes is the new remedy discovered by citizens of West Haddonfield, N.J., -for the wiping out of mosquito-breeding places. ' ��������� For years past a number of pools lying between the railroad and Had- don avenue 'have furnished a bountiful crop of the big Jersey "skecters." .These stagnant lagoons, could not be drained into" the city sewerage because they lay lower than the sewers, and even if drained, would fill again with the first rain. Someone suggested dynamiting the holes, and an expert was sent for. Hc drilled holes twenty feet in depth in the centre of each pool, then dropped a heavy charge of dynamite into them and fired it. The result was the destruction of veins of clay or rock in such a manner that the surface water soon disappeared into the earth. The holes arc now, dry spots and the supply of mosquitoes has considerably diminished-in the neighborhood.���������Philadelphia North American News. so," said the damsel, with a happy blush. "Then," he retorted promptly, "may I claim my reward as an astronomer?" , "' ' The lady looked puzzled. ' "What reward?" she asked." "Why, the right to give my name to the star I have-discovered!" said the young man, speaking boldly at last, and successfully. ness -gives way to depression, there are headaches, fits of dizziness,' palpitation of the heart at the least exertion, and sometimes fainting. The blood has become thin and watery and the sufferer must have something that will bring the blood back to its normal condition. At this stage no other medicine can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Their whole mission is to make new, rich blood which reaches.' every part of the body," bringing back health, strength and energy. Miss Helena Taylor, West Toronto, says': "Two years ago I was so badly run down with anaemia that some of my friends did not believe I would get better. I could not go upstairs without stopping lo rest, suffered from headaches, loss of appetite, and for two months of the lime was confined lo the house. I was under the care of a doctor, but the. medicine I took did not help me in the least. A frien"d .advised my mother to give me Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and although I did not expect they .would help me after the doctor's medicine - had failed,_ I thought they might be worth trying. 'After taking two boxes there-was such a marked change for the better that people asked me if I had chang- > ���������* i-t . i i ii I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $54. MOISE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. ��������� Phillippc, Que, vice, sent to the front for active op erations. Besides the Bengalis, three double companies of Indian Christians recruited from the Punjab have rccentlv been raised and arc doing well. No less than six Indian officers and soldiers have now earned the Victoria Cross and 27 have gained the military cross. " ��������� Relations between the Government of India and the Ameer of Afghan ��������� ��������� ������������������ ��������� j- t.- -* ti,. f..:������������������,n;���������c Maddening Calendar Turkish System of Keeping Account of Time Leads to Many Difficulties The Turks count their day from one sunset to the next sunset, dividing the twenty-four hours into twelve as we do. This is plain sailing, but unfortunately sunset does not fall at the same hour day after day, and there ensue horrible complications-to the innocent European. By way presumably of jest the Turkish steamers " follow Turkish and their railways Prankish time. The rich have watches specially constructed with two 'dials, one showing each time. _ -- Apparently some enterprising Os- manli thought that the Turkish calendar erred on the side of simplicity and kindly invented a new complication. The Mohammedan year dates from the flight of the1 prophet in the seventeenth .century.. Each year the first month, Mahairan, comes eleven days earlier, so the -months do not "mark the seasons like ours. . There is-onc more section for'the- benefit of the Turkish peasant,, who in his rural retreats knows nothing of months. For him the year* is composed of two seasons���������hidralis, beginning on May 6, and kassin, _bc- neutrality^.which he promised at the beginning of the war. The northwest frontier, partly owing to the Ameer's friendly attitude, partly to the- punishment inflicted last year on recalcitrant sections, and partly to the exposure of -German attempts to introduce the religious clement into the war, is enjoying, unprecedented peace. The Afridis, the strongest and most important tribe, have remained staunch throughout to their" engagements, .thereby setting an example of loyalty to their neighbors. The only ..troublesome factors are the Mah Suds, a tribe of hereditary robbers - and raiders. Other- that people asked me it l nao. cnang-t*"isc the# restless borderland is. quiet-- ed doctors, and"! readily told theni|Cr than, it has been tor many years the mediline that was . helping mc ' ��������� -. . . -ii ,-in of India and the Ameer ot Atgnan-!**���������:���������*":"���������=��������� --- ---';- ,. . -., 0rt islan continue to be of the friendliest 'ginning Nov. /���������so to him April 20 character, .and the latter is scru- " 1,w- "'* ������������������"���������'������������������"��������� -*���������"���������*��������� -"^tv-fourth piilously maintaining an attitude of 'is the one hundred and sixty-fourth day of kassin. .������> ������-*B-*l3ES3---taM)ftra^ ��������� -������r a r ti a ������ -H-*k SOID BY AtC^GOOD SHOE DEAtERS W. N. U. 1121 "It's a Great Shame One of the ladies of the Post Office Department recently approached the head of her branch and asked in tones of noticeable indignation, "Is it true, Mr. Smith, that the Department publishes a book in which all our ages arc shown?" Repressing an inclination to reply that only one age for each person was shown, Mr. Smith told the lady that there was such a book published, for official purposes, but that there was no occasion for distress as the book was confidential. "I don't care," she burst out, "it's very wrong, and I'm very angry; it ought not to be allowed; it's a great shame," and so on. Eventually, however, she calmed down and said, "Well, of course, I know you can't help it, Mr. Smith," and then, "Would you mind telling mc how old Miss So-and-so is?"���������St. Martins lc Grand Magazine. A Bawbee Problem Sandy was walking along the road in deep thought, and it was his minister who brought him to earth again with���������"Halloa, Sandy! Thinking of the future, eh?" "No," replied Sandy, moodily, "Tomorrow's the v ife's birthday, and |A'tu thinking o' the present." I continued taking the pills until I had used e'ight boxes,- when my health was fully restored; and I have since enjoyed the best of health.' I hope my experience may be the means of convincing some sickly person thai Dr." Williams' Pink Pills can restore them to. health." You'can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Minister (who has kindly offered to write to parishioner's son at the front): Now, Mrs.. Mcintosh, is there anything else.you'd like to say? Mrs. Mcintosh: Ye micht just finish wi' "Excuse the bad writin' an' spellin'," and that'll dac fine, sir. ��������� London Opinion. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. "Now, children," said the. teacher, "I have been talking about cultivating a kindly disposition, and I will now tell you a little story. Henry had a nice little dog, gentle as a .amb. lie would not bark at passers by or at strange dogs, and would never bite. William's dog, on the contrary, was always fighting other dogs, or flying at the hens and cats, and several times hc seized a cow. He barked at strangers. Now, boys; which dog would you like to own��������� Henry's or William's?" The answer came instantly, in one eager shout, "William's!"���������Everybody's Magazine. ��������� "Look at 'cm!" exclaimed the burglar. "Look at what?" asked the pocket- book snatchcr. "Them black an* while stripes that's all the style! I kin remember when they put 'cm on us wc thought wc was disgraced!" ���������Washington Star. "Can you tell mc what a smile is?" asked a gentleman of a little girl. "Yes, sir; it's the whisper of a laugh."���������Answers,, For Asthma* and Catarrh.���������It is one "of the chief recommendations of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil that.it can be used internally with as much success as -it can outwardly. Sufferers from asthma and catarrh will find that the Oil when used according to directions will give immediate *rehcf. Many sufferers from these ailments have found relief in the Oil and have sent testimonials. Must Be a Bad Lot. The English are a people of hypocrites, .liars and ruffianly, thieves. The Russians are barbarians, who.se sole idea of warfare is to commit tlie most horrible atrocities. The Italians arc an absolutely putrid nation. The French, whom their government for the moment holds udder the knout, arc, according to Voltaire, half tiger and half monkey. Dirty and ignorant in time of peace, they have distinguished themselves in the course of. this war by savagely maltreating German women and children and innumerable prisoners. ��������� Nachrichten, Berlin. Health cannot be looked for in Hit child -that is subject to worms, because worms destroy health by,creating internal disturbances that retard development and cause serious'weak- ness. Miller's Worm ^Powders expel worms and are so beneficial in their action that the systems of the little _ sufferers . are restored to healthful- l.ess, all the 'discomforts and dangers., of worm infection are removed, _ and- satisfactory -growth is -assured . . _; Process of Making Tapioca ��������� The origin^of tapioca which'is becoming very expensive ..under the' war demands is probably the least known of any" article on'the-'market. "' It is manufactured from .tapioca flour- on the Islands of ��������� Singapore, Penang and Java.' This flour is made from the-tapioca potato,, the root of the cassava or manioc plant. These potatoes often weigh over twenty ' pounds.- They arc washed," skinned,,- cut into small pieces and put into a grater, where small circular saws reduce them to pulp. The fine flour>is separated by a revolving drum, and after being washed six times is dried oii heated trays. It is then made into dough and pressed'through sieves and baked. M. Clemlnceau's Tribute The British troops, previously dcs������ pised by William, are now giving his generals a sample of their strength, before which, in 'the. long run, the Bosches will have to turn^tail. The superior quality of .'.the British army has got the better of all the Boschc counter-attacks, and the magnificent success "of the little army, now grown big, has already made the invader feel the first effect of a military force upon whose intervention hc had not reckoned. ��������� L'Hommc Enchainc (Paris). Tr You _^ freely indulge where Cowan's Maple Buds are concerned��������� they are made from the best products and contain no injurious substances���������safety first in chocolate as well as other things. - ������ : SSBaBSn LEKMtf3ffi������fiSEBau5MuffiBi SBfflBI&KS 3������3b2sRz3&Ii SSHRHjjJS DUE/SUN. GRAND FORKS, IS. & DOMINION IS. RICHEST GEM IN" BRITISH CROWN Lord Rhondda Believes THat Canada Is Richer Than The United States In Agricultural Possibilities, and That This Country Is * Destined To Be The Granary Of The World Lord, Rhondda, belter known in Canada as D. A. Thomas, the great Welsh, coal king, has added one more huge asset lo his already* colossal interests, namely, the-collieries of Da- ���������vis & Sons, Limited, in "South Wales. The Consolidated Cambrian Limited, of which Lord Rhondda is chairman; control and own six" collieries, with an output of 3,000,000 tons of coal per annum, which,- with the additional output now acquired, will be increased to 5,000,000 .tons per annum. The amount of money involved in this deal will be'virtually $io,ooo;ooo. , Besides being the .chairman of a score of companies in Great'Britain -���������--nearly all allied to mineral' industries ��������� the capital of which is equal to the wealth of a nation of -some .pretension, Lord Rhondda has, in , recent' years", devoted ^special attention "to the development of the material resources of the Empire. ,��������� 'Some years ago, he sent.agents ��������� .expert in. coal, iron and oilier minerals���������lo various parts of the Empire, including South Africa, India, and Australia, and il is believed that he has shown his confidence in the future of. several industries in these countries by allowing his name to be indirectly connected wilh certain ventures. But ten years ago -he came , to. the conclusion that the Dominion of Canada would eventually turn out to be the richest gem in the British "Crown. In an interview he then summed up his faith in Canada in these words: "Canada is richer than the United Stales., in agricultural possibilities, and its mineral resources are il- .limilablc. Climatically, while it has no Florida, Canada has by far the best man-making climate in the Empire. "In a ,few years, its eastern ports will be within easier reach of- the great imperial emporiums and manufacturing industries in .Great Britain. When the. Hudson's Bay is opened for commerce, and the Wclland Canal is. completed Canada will not feel the competitive strength of its great neighbor lo the ' south. She wilPbecomc . the " granary for the world, and-when Ihc statesmen of Australia and Canada get together on a business basis for their mutual' commercial advantage, Canada will find its place as a big-Pacific influence, and aided by the Homeland she may become as ,grcat a mercantile power , as is Norway. "She needs people,, of course, but that desideratum'-will' not be wanting. She will succeed because"she-is -British. -". The'-instinct ��������� the best instincts���������of the British .arc with "her.'.'. ''" Lord Rhondda has his eye/upon. .the Northwest of Canada/ When he built a-powerful; but .light-draught, steamer -for * the -��������� Peace River, " in Northern Alberta, at-a cost of $250,- 000, old half-breed- servants" ,6f-. the Hudson's' Bay Company, - and - .old- timers,' looked -upon the undertaking "*s ridiculous.' . They predicted-that she .would never reach Fort Vermil- lion.and others askedJ'"Whcre is the trade by which she is to pay a divi- ' dend?". .Hcr first voyage, a few weeks ago, was a record in speed" and for handling merchandise. Simultaneous, however, with her departure from the Peace River Crossing, Mr. C. F. Law, Lord Rhondda's chief representative in Canada, announced that the great amalgamator had built ; the steamer to bring oil" down from, the upper reaches of the river, and-to meet new traffic that would arise when he had tapped the potash deposits that he believes are "somewhere up in" the North." ���������-���������';��������� . / . It should not be assumed, however, that Lord Rhondda is taking a leap in the dark by these developments. PIc is following advice based on the reports of eminent geologists, min- cralogists, and Government reports, all of which he has studied in conference with the best men that he could gather around him. Some two years ago. he bought a charter for constructing 'a railroad between' Athabasca Landing and Fort Vermillion, traversing country believed to be saturated with minerals. Hc is building a car line on the' north banks of the Peace River, where there arc treacherous rapids, so as to facilitate traffic. Hc owns several coal mines in British Columbia, and but for the war, which had the effect of discouraging the Alberta Government from lending Lord Rhondda the help that they otherwise would have extended to him, many of his subsidiary projects would have been launched by this time. His great dream, however, is to find potash, so as to make it impossible for Germany to retain the monopoly in that article. Lord Rhondda with his daughter, Lady Marget, had a narrow escape from- drowning when the Lusitania I was torpedoed, and as a mark of' his gratitude to Divine Providence for his deliverance he made a contribution to Red Cross and other funds of $250,000. Formidable Defenses "Along Belgian Coast No Spot Is Left Unguarded A correspondent who has just been permitted lo visit the Belgian coast reports on the formidable defences that have been raised there. A long line of barbed wire 'entanglement stretches along Ihe coast, and an endless scries of long slender ship's guns protrude from the coarse grass of the dunes, and behind the dunes crouch the heavy howitzers. Underground dwellings of bombproof concrete form part of the great trench along the entire coast, he says. "No 'spot is unguarded. Everywhere the endless line is occupied by sailors, who endeavor to find relief from the monotony of their life in gardening and in the care of their pigs, goats, rabbits and birds. '���������'Here and there one comes across an enormous unexplodcd shell, hurled ashore by one of the big Britisli warships, and which now forms the- ornamental'centre of a flower garden. "What'one sees in .the way of destruction is the work of the fast torpedo destroyers, which have on occasion hailed smaller shells on the coastal towns with1 their quick-firing guns. The corners of houses arc gnawed away." But the damage is not very great, at least not in Ostend and Zcebruggc, much less than one would have supposed. Even on the seaside the towns appear to be little damaged. A few big buildings by Zecbruggc have been levelled to the ground, but that was the work of the Germans, owing lo the fact that these buildings helped to direct the enemy's fire on the occasions when he sought to destroy the most " susceptible feature of the harbor, 'the big lock. "The real work of destruction begins where the French land guns have been able to have their say. Middk- kerke is a mass of ruins. It is a remarkable fact that -600 persons continue to crouch there." The school is even still attended by eighty children. But every "house has its underground refuge, such as llie soldiers construct in the front lines. Shells still fall in the place almost' daily. ��������� "Middlckcrke is now. in such a state that the Germans no longer take up quarters ihere, but prefer to live in dwelling holes " burrowed in the dunes. Some streets.always"lie open to the French observers and gunners. Long walks ' can -be taken in the southern part of the place by winding cover 'ways that have beem broken and dug out,, half in, half under the earth, through garden walls, houses and cellars. In. the village of Wcstcnde, which is, if possible, even more * thoroughly- knocked to pieces than the watering-place, I noticed that the enemy's " shells had spared thepart of,a wall "of an inn on which was inscribed "the -name 'In deu Vrede' (The Peace Tavern)." ���������"���������*, ������������������������������������������������������������������������, ..,' . . .. . Canoe. Gum Wanted Samples Sent to Belgium for Piecing Parts of Artificial Limbs This world war is producing calls for some very strange articles little known in modern commerce, far- reaching as it is, but one would imagine that almost the limit.is reached by -a request received by Dr. C. N. Bell from Dr. Blanchard, of Winnipeg, officer commanding a casualty clearing hospital in. Belgium. The article asked for is sought by the'���������Belgian Red Cross officials in charge of. the artificial limbs branch, and curiously enough is the native gum or "pitch" used by the Indians in making watertight the sewn scams of their birch bark" canoes. The Belgian officers have been told that this pitch would be an admirable glue for piecing together the parts of artificial limbs, as it would be insoluble in water or under moist conditions, but local experts say that while the canoe gum makes a good filler it is not a proper glue. However, after a good deal of correspondence and work, Dr. Bell has secured two large samples through the kindness of Dr. Moore, of Fort Frances and A. McNaughton, of Fort William, and lias forwarded1 them to Col. Blanchard to be handed over to the_ Belgian authorities with a full description of the composition of the gum and how it is secured and preserved.���������Winnipeg Free Press. At a Bohemian dinner a composer sat beside a society woman, who asked him if hc had ever written anything that would live after he had gone. His reply was: "Madam, I am trying to write .something that will enable mc" to live while I am here." She: You promised to buy me a sealskin jacket. . Hc: Yes, my dear, I did, but I have had such a bad day in the market that I could not afford to buy you e.vrxx an incandescent mantle. Great Britain Making Supplies for Allies Minister of Munitions Tells of the Great Increase in British Output Reviewing the work of the government munitions department in the House of Commons, Edwin . Sam Montague, Minister of Munitions, after .telling of the immense .increase in output in all kinds of guns and munitions, informed the House that all rifles and machine guns were being supplied from home factories. TJie artillery had during the recent fighting acquitted itself to the entire satisfaction of the British army 'and had won the praise of the French Ministry of Munitions. 'This statement, he added, was particularly true of the heavy guns and howitzers. Mr. Montague said that half of the engineering resources of'thc country are .required for the navy. Very shortly Great Britain, he said, would have provided for her own requirements and be able lo devote, herself exclusively to the wants of her allies in regard to machinc/guns. Already, he said, she was sending large amounts of guns and ammunition to her allies; was sending to France one- third of her production of shell steel and transferring to her allies mclals necessary for munitions. The production of heavy shells, said the minister, was now 94 per cent, greater than in 1914. There was ,now being produced in four days, hc declared, as much howitzer ammunition as was produced during the whole of last year, while there were being turned out' every month as many heavy guns as were in existence when the Ministry of Munitions was formed, and this number would soon be nearly doubled. " The output of machine guns had increased -fourtecnfold, continued the minister, and there could be turned out in four weeks as many as existed at the formation of the Ministry. The output of high explosives was sixty times as great as a year ago, but Uie amount required was 11,000 to 12,000 as great as al the beginning of the war. The output of heavy ammunition, however, now covered the expenditure. N Referring to German press reports that the present offensive had made irreparable inroads upon the Allies' stocks of ammunition, Mr. Montague said it w,as true that the last month's expenditure of ammunition was more than double the amount than would have been considered adequate eight' months ago, and that in ,the week preceding the July offensive the amount of ammunition-consumed exceeded the entire British production during the first eleven months of war. Saline Irrigation To Heal Wounds PRESERVING THE IDEALS OF WORLD FREEDOM A. J. Balfour, In An Address To The Overseas Parliamentary Delegates, Analyses The Bond Which Holds Together The Greatest Empire In The World's History ��������� ���������������������������'..'.���������'��������������������������� * o . . New Methods Are Adopted in the . Military -'"Hospitals- of . Britain Surgical dressings, says The Lancet,* arc ' -now things ��������� of the past. Wounded soldiers in military hospitals are'being treated by "saline irrigation," as the doctors call it, recently invented by Sir Almroth Wright. This saline irrigation consists of a solution- of warm water ���������with from five to ten'per cent, of salt in "it. It can",be kept at a normal standard of .warmth in an' ordinary Thermos .flask,' suspended. above I the bed, with a rubber tube conveying the fluid to a small glass .tube. The" officer in question, who has been -treating wounded bluejackets from the battle of Jutland, told the writer: "We on no account apply a dressing. Surgical dressings���������lint, bandage and wool ��������� are not being used, except, of course, during the transportation of a wounded soldier from the field of battle, when his wound must be.covered up in the old way with lint and antiseptics. "Take, for instance, the case I have here of a soldier who' has a severe shrapnel'wound in the knee. You see that, while the bedclothes, are arranged in the usual way over the upper part of his body, a sort of 'cradle' is formed over the lower part so as to keep the wound quite clear from any possibility of contact with the coverings. Here the salt water is trickling clown all the time, drop by drop, from the glass tube on to the wound, running day and night without intermission, and carrying off the poison from the wound and helping to cleanse and heal it." The "saline irrigation" undertakes to clean _ up and heal most septic wounds in three or four days. The salt penetrates the scat of the poisoning and carries it off. Sir Almroth Wright says of it: "The salt draws out from the infected tissues the lymph which has spent all its power of resistance to the poisonous bacteria, while it draws into the tissue from the blood stream the lymph which is the enemy of the microbe." On the other hand, Sir Almroth argues that the ordinary dressing inclines to become a barrier to the free discharge qf lymph from the wound, though it is contrary to truth to, say that nurses allow dressings to stick and cause bleeding on removal. "As regards burns," the doctor concluded, "the French have discovered a most efficacious method of spraying severe burns with paraffin." Wc admit that we arc superstitious, but not to the extent of preferring twelve dollars to thirteen. Before Ihe year 1914 probably all who were present had discussed the future of the British Empire, analysed the bonds which held tocther that great political organization which had no parallel in the world's history, and perhaps each man had asked himself whether, when the moment of stress, of difficulty and of danger occurred Ihe bonds would stand the ^strain of any future world catastrophe. Perhaps those who thus meditated had little notion that within a few years, perhaps a few months, a strain would have been put on the British Empire which might well have destroyed a more closely knit organization. They all knew how it had stood the lest. (Cheers.) It would-be one of the marvels of history that in the early days of this year the empire as one man showed its resolve to join with.the Mother Country in the great effort to main- lain the ideals of world freedom which it was the boast of our race to have spread throughout the world, and each of its own impulse, moved by its own sentiments of patriotism, without pressure, without persuasion,, sent of its best in men and resources to help in the common cause. No greater triumph of our race had ever occurred. (Cheers.) It was said the other da}-, perhaps wilh some truth/ that we had not powers of organization of which more artificial communities (laughter) had shown themselves capable; but there was a natural growth which, if born of (he best things of the human spirit, might produce belter results than any mechanical organization, and such a natural growth was the British Empire. German writers of great repute and great learning, deeming themselves inspired by the profound- est philosophical wisdom, had with an air of triumph announced to the world that the true bond of union which kept Germany together was not the representative . assembly which Germans elected to meet in Berlin, but the German army. In one sense it might be said at this moment' that one of'thc. bonds of ..the British Empire was the British army, but in a very different sense. The British army was a bond of empire because it was spontaneously co nposcd of elements, of each of the self-governing Dominions, not fulfilling their own conceptions of their national destinies,.but���������whether from Australia, Canada," South Africa, New Zealand, India, or wherever they came from���������forming an army united with one will and purpose. (Chee/s.) He did not trouble his head much, especially at a moment like-this, with the future constitution of the empire. He did not ask himself whether it Would be wise, and-if wise, easy, -to modify the constitutional ,relations between the'several parts of the empire. He looked forward to that problem- with confidence, because whether we changed the constitution of the empore or left it as it was, whether if we changed the constitution we did so in *a far-reaching sense or otherwise, it must always remain the fact that We were bound together essential!}' and fundamentally because all; shared one common ideal of freedom, liberty and good government. That was. ;the true basis on which empire.was founded, and if wc were altogether ,now engaged in the present tremendous struggle it' was because wc were animated by a sens-j that we were sprung from one language, and, broadly speaking, one set of laws���������one spirit of law in any case���������had one idea of political freedom, and were determined that these should not be broken into by another nation, however well organized, and that what w;e meant to preserve for ourselves wc would preserve also for other nations. (Cheers.) Think Casualties Are Few What a Salient Is In reports and records of the war there are few words more frequently met with than "salient." Yet as a noun it is quite modern, and is only to be found in the most modern dictionaries, but as an adjective it was in use centuries ago in' its. original sense of "leaping." Now that which leaps is prominent, and so this became the secondary meaning. Then as that which projects is also prominent, a projecting angle was called a salient angle, and the expression passed into use by military authori-,] ties. Short as it is, however, they found 'it too long, and, dropping the "angle," gave us the new term with which wc arc all familiar. Visitor (at penitentiary): But whatever induced you to take up safecracking for a living? Prisoner: Oh, I dunno, lady. I guess I had a natural gift for it. Mrs. Jiggs: So your daughter married a surgeon? Mrs. Noggess: Yes, I'm so glad. At last 1 can afford to have appendicitis, Officers Assert Losses in Men Suffered; Arc Small Price to Pay for Gains To the civilian who notes the figures in the casually lists issued every 24 hours, and sees fresh convoys of wounded arriving daily al the big London railway stations, it seems that England is paying a terrible and ghastly price for whatever she is gaining by the "big push." ''���������On that point'tlie opinions of the fighting men themselves arc of interest. Chance afforded a London reporter an opportunity to obtain the views of two officers on the question of casualties. It was when a hospital ship laden with wounded reached the landing stage al Southampton, and he was permitted to go aboard. "What do you think of the British casualties?" he asked the wounded major of a battalion"which played its part at Fricourt, Montauban, and Bazcntin. He was sitting with another bfficcr,; the adjutant of a battalion which fought its way through La Boiscllc to Contalmaison. ..���������': One had*the experience of Loos for, a standard of comparison; the other has been at the front since ���������the early days of 1915. "Well, there's a good many of them of course. Seeing the whole lot in a narrow funnel, as you do here, it must seem tremendous. Yo'u can't move hand or foot" on the western front without casualties. But I'm bound, to say it wasn't the number, but the fewness of them that impressed mc out there.��������� ; ��������� I mean, of course, for the fire we've had to face. What do you think?" . He turned to the adjutant. . " "I think the proportion of casualties is pretty much the same as it's been in all the offensives on this fion't; but the balance will prove -totally different. This Avar is just buying and selling; $250,000 is a lump of money to _ .spend;". but in business, people don't worry about the laying out of $250,000 if they sec a good and sr.fe return for it. It's always' a good investment if you can buy sixty, or seventy, or a hundred thousand for it, isn't it." The major said, "Perhaps you've heard of those documents found on prisoners, sent by German companies in the line to their headquarters in the rear; begging for reinforcements: 'Company reduced to nine men and one officer, battalion reduced to 20 men and 3 officers,' and that sort of thing. .That's worth paying for,"you know. The whole thing is very different from Loos; I know that. We're getting an infinitely better run for our money. "Wc arc gaining in ground; but that's a small thing to the enormous gain in man power and morale. You lake it from mc, our new armies ,can stand a lot of this, a deuced sight more of it than Germany could'possibly stand. Our chaps are in better heart today' than they've ever been since 1914. "In the early days it was a case of pitting flesh and blood against^ metal. The German .had the over-' whelming advantage of us at every turn, and in every mortal way; except in the spirit, of his men. But the hoot's on the other foot now, and will be still more so when we've got a few more German positions. For, in addition to everything else, mind,- they'had us beaten out of sight in the matter of relative positions, fields of fire, cover from fire, field of view, and all that. But the greatest difference is in the matter of guns and ammunition, "Why, it wouldn't worry mc much if our casualties were twice as heavy as they are; no, three or four times." "Nor mc. Not a bit," agreed the adjutant. "Wc all know there must hc big fighting and lots of it, to finish this war; and there can't be big fighting without proportionately big casualties. On the basis which we're fighting just now, I wouldn't care if our casualties were ten times as numerous; and do you know why? Because, on the present relation of gains to losses, of what wc sell to what we're getting for it; if our casualties were ten times what they arc, the war would be over before the summer is over and Germany would be down and out." "And I'll tell you another thing," said the other officer. "A rare lot of these present casualties will be fighting fit again within a month from tlie time of landing; and you watch their smoke when they get out again." Without Ice To keep the butter cool in hot weather without the help of ice, soak an ordinary building brick in cold water for some time, then wrap it in a wet cloth and put it in the coolest place that can be found. The evaporation of the water will keep the brick cold, and butter placed on it will fare as well as if ice were used. N. THE, SUN. GRAND ,EORKS, B.C. , I.1' '���������*���������*< *: Tho secret of the success of our WantAde. Is that they arc short and snappy. Pcoplo like a plain business story told In a few words ���������nd If they want anythlnc-thcy refer to tho placo whero they will find It with tho least trouble, viz., tho Classified Want Ads. Is your business represented there. FOR SALE MARE���������Four >ears old; wiight about 1300 lbs, Call at Hotel Province. pONY���������Chen-*;^i\* years old: gentl Gloucester Mo Kin ley to saddle and buggy broke Apply" Hotel Prov ince. AGENTS WANTED 1, W MOO 00 per month and oxpen-'es, sollm-j our products to {armors. Must h-ivo some means foi starting expenses and furnish contracts ������������������ittnotl b\ two responsible men Audi ess Tho W. T. Rauleigli Co., Ud.. Winnipeg, '''an., gnmgago, occupation nnd -erorence5!. FARM PRODUCE WANTED Franklin Franklin VV Kanchei shaving quantit'ei of produce foi ,ale this full, Uinali send list of same mid prices wanted to C. V Mugjritt. August 2���������Duplex fraction, Franklin camp, A. J. Fee. - .AuSust 2���������Eureka fraction, Franklin camp, A J. Fee. August 2���������Silver Horde fraction, Franklin camp, A J. Fee. August 2���������Evening Star, Gloucester camp, A. J. Fee. August 3���������Viking, Baker creek, W. II Beach. August -J-���������Flora, Summit camp, D. R. McElmon August 4���������Ruby fraction, Franklin camp, John Morrell. August 4���������Cooper, Burnt Basin, J. h. Singer. August 4���������Iron Hill, Burnt Basin. J. B. Singer. August 5���������Garnet No 2, Christina Lake, J. W. Gaaham. August 7���������Christina fraction, Wei lington camp, J. J. B.issett August 12���������Gold Bug, Franklin camp, B. Bainbridge. August 12���������Pollard, camp, B. Bainbridge, August 14���������Jupiter, camp, W. A. Snyder, August 16���������Black Prince, Franklin camp, T. Funkley. August 16���������Alary No camp, T. Funkley August 16���������Mary No. camp, T. Funkley. August 16���������Dundee fraction,Franklin camp, T Funkley. August 16���������Gray Eagle, Franklin camp, T. Funkley. August 17���������Meiritnack. Fife, P Racey. August 17���������Monitor, Fife, P. t Racey. August 17���������Blacktail, Fife, P Racey. August 17���������Dreadnaught fraction, Fife, 2 years, P. W Racey. August 17���������Whitetail, Fife, P. W. Racey. August 17���������Cottontail, F fe, P W. 10 CENT "CASCARETS" I Racey. IF BILIOUS OR COSTIVE 'August 22���������Blackbird, McRae creek, T. H Paulson. August 22���������Grand Forks, 3 years, Giand Forks. F C. Anderson. August 24���������Iron Chief,Baker creek, J W. Graham. August 25���������Jumbo.Goat mountain, Leo Netf. August 25���������Haitford, Goat mountain, Leo IS eft. Augu&i '������&���������iuka, Goat mountain, Leo Neff. August 25���������L.&t- Chance, Goal mountain, Leo Neff August 26���������Twenty-one, Summit camp,-J. A McMasler. August 2d���������Gold Nugget, Brown's camp, A. E Savage. August 28���������Sum cm t, Brown's camp, .A. E. Savage. August 29���������Silver Butte, .Franklin camp, John Holm. September���������Edith, Summit, camp, - ���������Norman Lu^e. September 5���������Jenny,Sum'mit camp, * Norman Luse. * - * September 11���������Gray-Eagle, Burnt -Basin,-J. B Singer -. -';. ~, ' -,. September, 11���������Manchuria; Burnt" Basin,'"J. B. Singer. .'.'<���������' Septeuiher 15^-L*X L., 'File* J... W." "��������� Graham ;' .* '.���������"������������������ -" .: .' ���������.. ''..:. ' .���������*��������� * TAK1 Boot puirei BOOT REPAIRING jour repairs to Armson. shoe re The Hub. Look tor the Big SECOND-HAND GOODS JICtHEST C \Sfi PRICES paid for old Sinvos a'id Ki li iiid Store. H a'^id kangos. 1*-. C. Peckhum, second- w w. w October 3���������Copper King, Gloucester camp, VV. Minion. October 3���������Mineral Hill, Gloucester . camp, W. Minion. October 3���������Enterprise, Gloucester camp, W. Minion. October 5���������Robison.McKinley camp John Morrell. - October 10���������Molly 'Gibson, Burnt Basin, J. B. Singer. October 10���������Molly Gibson fraction, Burnt Basin, J B. Singer. October 10���������Irish Nellie, Burnt Basin, J. B. Singer. October 19���������Conquest, camp, T. A.- Chew., Franklin Franklin For Sick Headache, Soup Stomach, Sluggish Liver and Bowels���������They work while you sleep. Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indigestion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Headaches come from a torpid liver and clogged bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undigested food, which sours and ferments like garbage in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery���������indigestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret to-night will give your constipated bowels a thorough cleansing and straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep���������a 10-cent box from your druggist will keep you feeling good for months. MINING RECORDS FOR .1916 i \Zj*y *��������� i s,? j*:;.' -������ .-' ~* p- ; .- ���������A-" -., - * - ''���������������������������-��������� - ,' (Continued from Page 5 ) CERTIFICATES OP WORK. - ' ':"Ju!y*24���������Bluebird fraction,-' Frank- "-"Vlin-camp,'Jaa.-^McDonaldj. *"-- '- ' July. ,24-r=*L6ne-.V,-Star, -'Fcanklin i .-*+������������������' ���������.���������������'. J u 1 y" 24-^-Ro n_e^ S ta r;f ractmrf;-;Fja n kj- / lin("ca'm pp'JasTlMcDonalrl'^'^^^V,', J u 1 y- 24���������Q tt aia - f raction'/'Fra n k'l i n -. can)p/Jas"M.cDohal3} >"''-, _":\ ���������July 31���������North"Star, .Central canop* >"* J. dVStutz.';-."" \) , ���������; :\;������\~'- July 31������������������Ruby-,'-: Burnt-Basin, J.^B. Singer. Sepvte in b*erl2 2-^Viol'a,, Pa rter'8 "cam p,. . Leo N Co. Newest Styles Choicest Patterns 'Lowest Prices RVjgBlll m HMfl IP* 1 M6 HI oli& . Tne Quality Jewellers Bridge Street,-Next Telephone Exclianjie, Grand Forts mineral Brown's Brown's TAKES OFF DANDRUFF. HAD2 STOPS FALLING Save your Hair! Get a 25 cent bottle of Danderine right-now���������Also stops itching scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair is mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff���������that awful scurf. There is nothing so destructive to the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life; eventually producing a feverish- ness and itching of the scalp, -which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die���������then the hair falls out fast. A" little Danderine tonight���������now���������any time���������will surely save your hair. Get a 25 cent, bottle of Enowlton's ,Danderir*3 from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Danderine. Save" your hair! Try it! , INSTANr ACTION SURPRISES MANY HERt This grocer's story-supnses"local people:.- "I had had stomach trouble 'All food seemed to sour andlorrrTgas Was always constipated..- Nothing helped until 1 tried hupkthorn bark7 glycerine, etc , as mixed In Adler-i l������i ONE'SPOONFUL astonished me ' The San,"at.SI a yearj-'is-'supenoi* to any $2 a year paper printed in the Boundary. This is the reason why we do not have to resoit to wimbling schemes to stain new subscribers or to hold those we aheadv have. CITY BAGGAGE AND TRANSFER Buy Your a oai Now Office! F. Downey's Cigar Sture TbiiKphonkh: omen,* km ��������� first Sirppt Hansen1* Ukswkscr K38 rM������- ���������������������������**������������ Poultry men Improve Your Flocks For Sat;e���������Fifty S.U.White Leghorn Cockerels. Bred for egg production only. Your choice at $2.00 each. Butter Wrappers Neatly printed with special Butter Wrapper - Ink. Also imprinted.wrappers. Our prices arc right. We SUN PRINT SHOP Addressing Mail to Soldiers In order lo facilitate the handling of mail at- the front and to insure piompt delivery it is requested that all mail be addressed as follows: (a) Regimented number. (b) Rank. (c) Name, (d) Squadron, battery or company. (e) Battalion, regiment -(oi other unit), stall' appointment or department. (f) Canadian Contingent. (g) British Expeditionary Force, (h) Aimy Post, London, England. Unnecessary ^mention of Higher formations, such as brigades, d visions, is strictly forbidden, and causes delay. Advertise in The Sun. It has the largest local circulation. The Sun is always a live-issue*-in" Crand Forks. - A Sun ''want" ad. always brings results. - You can not reach The Sun's numerous readeis except through 1 the columns of The Sun. Yale Barber Shop Razor Honing a Specialty* Independent Brand ecK ������OOKS Made in -Toronto. * -The b^st counter check books on the market today. '.-._- P. A. Z. PARE, Proprietor ; Yale Hotel, First Strkkt * ~ - ' THE * " * " LONDONDIREGTOP asterir Erices , ", (Published Annually) . ���������- . Enables traders throughout tho'-world t������ - ,**��������� ���������"communicato direot *H*,ith English --* ij-j> -' MANUFACTURERS &"DEALERSX K~-4 .' ^ '*- - ..���������";- ^"- r ,"i - -"C,r - In each class of goods. Besides being a-com- -t-^ plete commercial' guide to.London and>Its * 1^. suburbs, the directory corttaius lists or <_., "��������� -, .��������� ���������.; ' EXPdRT%ERCHANTS3-l^r^^^;', S.-*>������-4wHh^he Goods' they.ship, and the-Colonial ���������i-**"~-_ '] ^ *f^-"^an*d Foreign Markets tboy "supply r-." ^ .^ ..--.- 1 ^ >!-r * ��������� ;;STEArMSHIP' LINES .-^ arraSiged under the Ports to which they sall.^ - Jij THE LONDON DIRECTORY CO/rLTD?/ "), Abchurch Lane, London, E.C. J. A. cTVIcCALLUM, GRAND FORKS, .li. C. eimimiwmmsws^maegaMm